SPONSOR: Rep. Caulk & Rep. West
& Sen. Bunting & Rep. Carey & Sen. Adams & Rep. Quillen & Sen. Vaughn & Sen. Venables & Rep. Spence & Sen. Simpson & Sen. Cook & Sen. Bonini; Reps. Boulden, Brady, Buckworth, Capano, Cathcart, Cloutier, DiLiberto, DiPinto, B. Ennis, D. Ennis, Ewing, Fallon, Gilligan, Houghton, Keeley, Lee, Lofink, Maier, Miro, Mulrooney, Oberle, Plant, Reynolds, Roy, Scott, Smith, Stone, Ulbrich, Valihura, Van Sant, Wagner, Welch, Williams; Sens. Amick, Bair, Connor, McDowell, Sorenson, Still, Winslow
FOR
HOUSE BILL NO. 250
AN ACT TO AMEND TITLE 3 OF THE DELAWARE CODE RELATING TO NUTRIENT MANAGEMENT.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE:
(Two-Thirds of all members elected to each house thereof concurring therein):
Section 1. Amend Title 3 of the Delaware Code by adding a new chapter thereto, designated as Chapter 22, to read as follows:
"Chapter 22. Nutrient Management.
Subchapter I. General Provisions.
§ 2201. Declaration of purpose.
The purposes of this chapter are:
§ 2202. Definitions.
For the purposes of this chapter:
Subchapter II. Delaware Nutrient Management Commission.
§ 2220. Delaware Nutrient Management Commission; general powers and duties.
(a) The Delaware Nutrient Management Commission is hereby established. The Commission shall have the power to develop, review, approve and enforce regulations governing the certification of individuals engaged in the business of land application of nutrients and the development of nutrient management plans as set forth in this Chapter. In addition, the Commission shall:
(b) The Commission, in carrying out its duties under this Chapter, shall consider comments from affected stakeholders and others interested in the activities of the Commission, including, but not limited to, the University of Delaware and other state and federal agencies, non-profit groups and others with an interest in nutrient management. In addition, the Commission shall consider prior work of the Governor’s Agricultural Industry Advisory Committee on Nutrient Management.
(c) Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Commission shall not hold any person or persons certified pursuant to this Chapter responsible for violations committed by another person.
§ 2221. Adoption of regulations; voting; considerations.
§ 2222. Composition; appointment; qualifications and term; compensation; vacancies; civil liability.
Subchapter III. State Nutrient Management Program.
§ 2240. State Nutrient Management Program; powers and duties of the Commission.
The State Nutrient Management Program (SNMP) shall consist of:
§ 2241. Requirement for certification; classifications.
§ 2242. Certification; applications.
§ 2243. Same – Denial.
§ 2244. Same; Suspension, modification; revocation.
§ 2245. Same – Renewal.
§ 2246. Commercial Processors.
(a) On or before July 1, 2000, or prior to commencing operations, each commercial processor operating in the State shall file with the Commission a plan under which the commercial processor either directly or under contract with a third party shall:
§ 2247. Nutrient Management Plans.
(a) All animal feeding operations with greater than 8 animal units or any person who owns, leases or otherwise controls property in excess of 10 acres upon which nutrients are applied, shall develop and implement a nutrient management plan in accordance with the schedule outlined in this section. All Nutrient Management Plans shall include, but not be limited to:
§2250. Confined Animal Feeding Operations Subject to Clean Water Act Section 402 Requirements
(a) Section 301(a) of the Clean Water Act (CWA) establishes statutory requirements for the discharge of pollutants from point sources to waters of the United States. Under the CWA Section 502(14) and implementing regulations at 40 CFR Section 122.23 and 40 CFR Part 122, Appendix B, and "concentrated animal feeding operations" are point sources subject to the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) program. Generally, these regulations define a CAFO as an animal feeding operation where more than 1000 animal units are confined at the facility.
(b) Within six months of the enactment of this Act the Secretary, in consultation with the Commission and the Secretary of the Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control, shall prepare and submit for approval a State NPDES program for Confined Animal Feeding Operations in accordance with 40 CFR Part 123.21 to the Administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
(c) In preparing the State's NPDES program submission for CAFOs, the Secretary shall rely to the maximum extent practicable on the authorities, requirements, and procedures established in this Act. The State NPDES Program submission shall include the following provisions in addition to those specified in this Act:
(1) Each person covered by this section shall develop a nutrient management plan (NMP) which is signed and kept under their control. This NMP shall be developed per §2247 and shall also include, as necessary, the following additional site specific handling and storage considerations: diverting clean water from contacting animal waste or litter; preventing storage, collection, and conveyance systems from leaking organic matter, nutrients, and pathogens to ground or surface water; providing adequate storage to prevent polluted runoff; handling manure and litter to reduce nutrient losses; managing dead animals to protect ground and surface waters; and tillage and crop residue management practices.
(2) The NMP shall be amended per §2247(d) or whenever there is any significant change in the design, construction, or operation which has a significant effect on the potential for the discharge of pollutants to State waters.
(3) NMPs developed under this Subsection shall be made available per §2247(c).
d) Upon approval of the State NPDES program for Confined Animal Feeding Operations, the Secretary shall give first priority to the issuance of statewide or watershed general permits for operations covered by subsection (a). With the guidance, advice and consent of the Commission, the Secretary may use individual NPDES permits for exceptionally large operations, new operations or those undergoing significant expansion, operations with historical compliance problems, or operations with significant environmental concerns.
e) With the guidance, advice and consent of the Commission, the Secretary is hereby authorized to require any person otherwise covered by this Act to apply for and obtain an NPDES permit if that person:
(1) is in significant noncompliance with the provisions of the SNMP; and
(2) there is evidence indicating that person is a significant contributor of a pollutant to waters of the State.
The Secretary shall notify a person in writing that an NPDES permit is required. Such notice shall include a brief statement of the reasons for the decision, an application form, a deadline for submission of the application and a statement regarding the effective date of coverage. A person's obligation to independently seek and secure an NPDES permit is not conditioned upon or qualified by the Secretary's duty to notify a person that an NPDES permit is required.
Subchapter IV. Complaints, Hearings and Appeals
§ 2260. Complaints; investigations; enforcement.
§ 2261. Hearings; procedural requirements.
§ 2262. Certification Appeals.
§2263 Appeals to the Secretary.
Subchapter V. Enforcement, Suits for Enforcement, and Incentives.
§ 2280. Enforcement; fines and penalties
§ 2281. Suits for Enforcement.
Any person may file suit in Chancery Court for injunctive relief against:
§ 2282. Protection From Enforcement.
The Commission shall establish a list of best management practices for which funding is available from the Department and/or other local, state or federal agencies. Should any person be required under this Chapter or regulations promulgated hereunder to undertake any of the activities for which funding is available and fail to receive funding due to insufficient funds available through those local, state or federal agencies, the Commission shall not begin any enforcement action under §2280 of this Chapter until such funding becomes available. Provided, however that the owner-operator must accept the first available funding after a period of three years dated from nutrient management plan acceptance.
Subchapter VI. Program Reports
§ 2290. Annual reports.
(a) The Commission shall prepare and submit an annual report of its activities and the environmental results that have accrued during the previous year for the Governor and the General Assembly by the first day of April each year. Each annual report shall include: specific recommendations for incentives to promote best management practices within the industry; a complete list and delineation of all critical areas identified jointly with the Secretary of the Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control that will be targeted for action and the reasons therefor; a listing of all nutrient management training and education opportunities that were available in the State or within a reasonable travel distance and any records of participation in those events; and best management practices implemented and the amount of acres under nutrient management plans by watershed.
All reports submitted under this subsection, shall not be considered public records under Delaware’s Freedom Of Information Act and shall not be disclosed. Such data may be used for data compilation."
Section 4. Within 6 months of enactment of this Act, the Department of Agriculture shall develop a comprehensive list of entities and industries within this State who may be required to become certified or required to develop nutrient management plans pursuant to this Act and shall provide such list to the Commission.
Section 5. The Commission shall select, by a random method to be determined by the Commission, those persons who shall report a Nutrient Management Plan to the Commission in the years 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 and 2007. Except those persons already in possession of nutrient management plans which meet or exceed Commission standards, one fifth (1/5) of these plans shall be reported by January 1, 2003, 1/5 by January 1, 2004, 1/5 by January 1, 2005, 1/5 by January 1, 2006, and 1/5 by January 1, 2007. Contingent upon adequate funding the Commission shall have fully implemented the SNMP by the year 2007.
Section 6. Continuation of the SNMP is dependent upon continued adequate funding.
Section 7. If any provision of this Act or the application thereof to any person or circumstances is held invalid, such invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications of this Act which can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of this Act are severable.
Section 8. This Act shall become effective upon the date of its enactment into law.
With the goal and intention of improving water quality in the State of Delaware through the regulation of the generation and application of nutrients, this Act establishes the Delaware Nutrient Management Commission and directs it to establish a Statewide Nutrient Management Program. Pursuant to this Act, the Commission is empowered to promulgate regulations relating to certification of nutrient applicators and the development of nutrient management plans. The Commission is further empowered to enforce it's regulations, develop incentive based programs to achieve early and full compliance and report on its activities to the General Assembly on an annual basis.