HP1610
LD 2249
Signed on 2008-04-10 - First Special Session - 123rd Legislature - Text: MS-Word, RTF or PDF LR 3531
Item 1
Bill Tracking Chamber Status

An Act To Protect Lake Water Quality

Be it enacted by the People of the State of Maine as follows:

Sec. 1. 23 MRSA §3106  is enacted to read:

§ 3106 Road impact fees assessed by a municipality

To ensure that private roads in lake watersheds are properly constructed and maintained to prevent degrading lake water quality due to storm water runoff, a municipality may adopt an ordinance that includes an assessment of an annual fee to property owners whose properties are accessed by a private road if the private road:

1 Three or more dwellings.   Services 3 or more seasonal or year-round dwellings;
2 Within lake watershed.   Is located in whole or in part within a lake watershed; and
3 Not in accordance with road standards.   Is not constructed or maintained in accordance with road standards for the protection of lake water quality as provided for in the municipal ordinance.

The Department of Environmental Protection shall develop guidance on appropriate road standards pursuant to subsection 3. The amount assessed per lot under this section must be based on the estimated cost to upgrade the road to meet municipal standards. Funds generated by the assessment must be held in a municipal account and used to pay for upgrading private roads that were the basis for the assessment authorized by this section and for the municipality's administrative costs, including the cost of inspecting the private roads.

Sec. 2. 38 MRSA §420-D, sub-§11, ¶A,  as enacted by PL 1997, c. 502, §4, is amended to read:

A.  The department may allow an applicant with a project in the direct watershed of a lake to address certain on-site phosphorus reduction requirements through payment of a compensation fee as provided in this paragraph. The commissioner shall determine the appropriate compensation fee for each project. The compensation fee must be paid either into a compensation fund or to an organization authorized by the department and must be a condition of the permit.

(1) The department may establish a storm water compensation fund for the purpose of receiving compensation fees, grants and other related income. The fund must be a nonlapsing fund dedicated to payment of the costs and related expenses of compensation projects. Income received under this subsection must be deposited with the Treasurer of State to the credit of the fund and may be invested as provided by statute. Interest on these investments must be credited to the fund. The department may make payments from the fund consistent with the purpose of the fund.

(2) The department may enter into a written agreement with a public, quasi-public or private, nonprofit organization for purposes of receiving compensation fees and implementing compensation projects. If the authorized agency is a state agency other than the department, it shall establish a fund meeting the requirements specified in subparagraph (1). The authorized organization shall maintain records of expenditures and provide an annual summary report to the department. If the organization does not perform in accordance with this section or with the requirements of the written agreement, the department may revoke the organization's authority to conduct activities in accordance with this paragraph. If an organization's authorization is revoked, any remaining funds must be provided to the department.

(3) The commissioner may set a fee rate of no more than $10,000 $25,000 per pound of available phosphorus , except that the commissioner may set a rate up to $20,000 per pound for a project located in the direct watershed of a severely blooming lake.

(4) Except in an urbanized part of a designated growth area, best management practices must be incorporated on site that, by design, will reduce phosphorus export by at least 50%, and a phosphorus compensation fee must be paid to address the remaining phosphorus reduction required to meet the parcel's phosphorus allocation. In an urbanized part of a designated growth area, an applicant may pay a phosphorus compensation fee in lieu of part or all of the on-site phosphorus reduction requirement. The commissioner shall identify urbanized parts of designated growth areas in the direct watersheds of lakes most at risk, in consultation with the State Planning Office.

(5) Projects funded through compensation fees as provided in this paragraph must be located in the same watershed as the project with respect to which the compensation fee is paid.

(6) As an alternative to paying a compensation fee, the department may allow an applicant to meet a municipally required mitigation option if the department determines that the local mitigation option will provide at least as much long-term reduction in phosphorus loading to the lake as likely would have occurred under payment of the compensation fee.

Sec. 3. 38 MRSA §439-B  is enacted to read:

§ 439-B Contractors certified in erosion control

An excavation contractor conducting excavation activity in a shoreland area shall ensure that a person certified in erosion control practices by the department is responsible for management of erosion and sediment control practices at the site. A person certified by the department must be physically present at the site each day earth-moving activity occurs until the site is permanently stabilized to prevent soil erosion. For purposes of this section, "excavation contractor" means an individual or firm engaged in a business that causes the disturbance of soil, including grading, filling and removal, or in a business in which the disturbance of soil results from an activity that the individual or firm is retained to perform.

This section takes effect January 1, 2013.

summary

This bill is submitted by the Joint Standing Committee on Natural Resources pursuant to Public Law 2007, chapter 65. It authorizes municipalities to assess annual fees under certain conditions to property owners whose properties are accessed by a private road. It requires excavation contractors working in the shoreland zone to ensure that a person certified in erosion control practices is in charge of erosion control practices at the site. It changes the phosphorous compensation fee. It authorizes the Department of Environmental Protection to allow applicants to meet municipal mitigation requirements in lieu of paying a compensation fee.


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