PERMANENT RULES
Date of Adoption: February 15, 2002.
Purpose: The purpose of this rule is to provide the administrative structure to distribute grant funds to local government for the purpose of implementing local solid and hazardous waste plans and programs. These rule amendments are to clean up existing language that is no longer applicable, streamline the administrative process, and specifically identify local matching requirements for CPG grants.
Citation of Existing Rules Affected by this Order: Amending WAC 173-312-010 through 173-312-100.
Statutory Authority for Adoption: Chapter 70.105D RCW, Model Toxics Control Act.
Other Authority: Chapter 43.21 RCW.
Adopted under notice filed as WSR 01-24-088 on December 4, 2001.
Number of Sections Adopted in Order to Comply with Federal Statute: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; Federal Rules or Standards: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; or Recently Enacted State Statutes: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0.
Number of Sections Adopted at Request of a Nongovernmental Entity: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0.
Number of Sections Adopted on the Agency's Own Initiative: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0.
Number of Sections Adopted in Order to Clarify, Streamline, or Reform Agency Procedures: New 0, Amended 9, Repealed 0.
Number of Sections Adopted Using Negotiated Rule Making:
New 0,
Amended 0,
Repealed 0;
Pilot Rule Making:
New 0,
Amended 0,
Repealed 0;
or Other Alternative Rule Making:
New 0,
Amended 9,
Repealed 0.
Effective Date of Rule:
Thirty-one days after filing.
February 15, 2002
Tom Fitzsimmons
Director
OTS-5321.1
AMENDATORY SECTION(Amending Order 00-19, filed 9/8/00, effective
10/9/00)
WAC 173-312-010
Purpose and authority.
(1) The purpose of
this chapter is to set forth requirements for the conduct of a
financial assistance program to provide grants to local
governments for local hazardous waste plans and programs and
solid waste plans and programs, under the Model Toxics Control
Act, RCW 70.105D.070(3). The plans and programs referenced in
RCW 70.105D.070(3) are designed to prevent or minimize
environmental contamination. Therefor, the grants are designated
"coordinated prevention grants" under this chapter.
(2) A further purpose of this chapter is to establish a
structure for the administration of coordinated prevention grants
funded from the local toxics control account authorized by RCW 82.21.030. The administrative structure may be extended to other
waste management grant programs using other funding sources
including ((the 1972 waste disposal facilities bonds authorized
by chapter 43.83A RCW, the 1980 waste disposal facilities bonds
authorized by chapter 43.99 RCW,)) the litter control account
authorized by chapter 70.93 RCW, ((the vehicle tire recycling
account authorized by chapter 70.95 RCW, the solid waste
management account authorized by chapter 70.95 RCW,)) the
hazardous waste assistance account authorized by chapter 70.95E RCW, and other waste management funding sources that may be
established in the future by the legislature.
(3) The purposes of the coordinated prevention grants program are to:
(a) Consolidate all grant programs funded from the local toxics control account, and other programs in subsection (2) of this section that may be selected, into a single program, except for remedial action, public participation, and citizen proponent negotiations grants.
(b) Promote regional solutions and intergovernmental cooperation.
(c) Prevent or minimize environmental contamination by providing financial assistance to local governments to help them comply with state solid and hazardous waste laws and rules.
(d) Provide funding assistance for local solid and hazardous waste planning and for implementation of some programs and projects in those plans.
(e) Encourage local responsibility for solid and hazardous waste management.
(f) Improve efficiency, consistency, reliability, and accountability of grant administration.
Note: | Copies of all cited statutes, rules, and guidelines are available at the Department of Ecology, Records Management, P.O. Box 47600, Olympia, Washington 98504-7600. |
[Statutory Authority: RCW 70.105D.070(3). 00-19-016 (Order 00-19), § 173-312-010, filed 9/8/00, effective 10/9/00. Statutory Authority: RCW 43.21A.080. 91-11-090 (Order 90-65), § 173-312-010, filed 5/21/91, effective 6/21/91. Statutory Authority: RCW 43.21A.080 and chapter 70.105D RCW. 90-18-064 (Order 90-17), § 173-312-010, filed 9/4/90, effective 10/5/90. Statutory Authority: RCW 70.105B.220 and 70.95.220. 88-17-001 (Order 88-26), § 173-312-010, filed 8/4/88.]
(("Class one areas" means the counties of Spokane,
Snohomish, King, Pierce, and Kitsap and all the cities therein.
"Class two areas" means the counties located west of the crest of the Cascade Mountains and all the cities therein, except Snohomish, King, Pierce, and Kitsap counties.
"Class three areas" means the counties east of the crest of the Cascade Mountains and all the cities therein, except Spokane County.))
"Department" means the department of ecology.
"Grant" means the portion of the project costs borne by the department.
"In-kind contributions" are property or services that benefit a project and that are contributed by a third party, without direct monetary compensation, to the recipient (or to any contractor under the agreement). In-kind contributions include donated or loaned real or personal property, volunteer services, and employee services donated by a third party.
"Incineration" means a process of reducing the volume of solid waste by use of an enclosed device using controlled flame combustion, operating under federal and state environmental laws and rules.
"Interlocal costs" are in-kind contributions made to a project by another local government under a valid written agreement between the recipient and the other government that details the work to be accomplished, the goods and services to be provided, and the value thereof. If the recipient reimburses another governmental entity for any portion of its contributions, the amount paid to the other entity is not an interlocal cost. It is a cash expenditure on the part of the recipient. Only the nonreimbursed portion of the other governmental entity's contributions is an interlocal cost.
"Landfill" means a disposal facility or part of a facility at which solid waste is permanently placed in or on land and which is not a landspreading disposal facility.
"Lead implementation agency" means the agency designated in the adopted local solid or hazardous waste plan as having the principal responsibility for the execution of all or most of the plan, and/or the coordinating agency that delegates responsibility to other agencies to execute portions of the plan.
"Local government" means any political subdivision, regional governmental unit, district, municipal or public corporation, including cities, towns, and counties. The term encompasses but does not refer specifically to the departments within a city, town, or county.
"Local hazardous waste plan" means the plan to manage moderate-risk waste that a local government is required to prepare under RCW 70.105.220.
"Match" means that portion of the cash expenditures borne by recipient funds and interlocal costs.
"Moderate-risk waste" means (a) any waste that exhibits any of the properties of hazardous waste but is exempt from regulation under chapter 70.105 RCW solely because the waste is generated in quantities below the threshold for regulation, and (b) any household wastes that are generated from the disposal of substances identified by the department as hazardous household substances or substances that exhibit any of the properties of hazardous waste.
"Recipient" means the entity to which the funding is awarded and that is accountable for the use of the funds provided. The recipient is the entire legal entity even if only one component or department is designated in the agreement document.
"Recyclable materials" means those solid wastes separated for recycling or reuse, such as papers, metals and glass, that are identified as recyclable material under a local comprehensive solid waste plan.
"Recycling" means transforming or remanufacturing waste materials into usable or marketable materials for use other than landfill disposal or incineration.
"Solid waste" or "wastes" means all putrescible and nonputrescible solid and semisolid wastes including, but not limited to, garbage, rubbish, ashes, industrial wastes, swill, demolition and construction wastes, abandoned vehicles or parts thereof, and recyclable materials.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 70.105D.070(3). 00-19-016 (Order 00-19), § 173-312-020, filed 9/8/00, effective 10/9/00. Statutory Authority: RCW 43.21A.080. 91-11-090 (Order 90-65), § 173-312-020, filed 5/21/91, effective 6/21/91. Statutory Authority: RCW 43.21A.080 and chapter 70.105D RCW. 90-18-064 (Order 90-17), § 173-312-020, filed 9/4/90, effective 10/5/90. Statutory Authority: RCW 70.105B.220 and 70.95.220. 88-17-001 (Order 88-26), § 173-312-020, filed 8/4/88.]
(2) Eligibility for solid waste enforcement grants. Jurisdictional health departments/districts are eligible to apply for coordinated prevention grants to pay for the enforcement of rules adopted under chapter 70.95 RCW.
(3) Eligibility for solid waste implementation grants. Counties whose solid waste plans are adopted((,)) and approved((,
and updated)) by the department as required by chapter 70.95 RCW
are eligible to apply for coordinated prevention grants to help
pay for the implementation of waste reduction and recycling
projects in the most recently approved and adopted plan:
Provided, That those projects are eligible as defined in WAC 173-312-050. This eligibility also extends to cities that are
eligible for funding to do local solid waste plans or updates as
provided by subsection (1) of this section.
If the adopted plans designate lead implementation agencies to implement the plans, those agencies are also eligible to apply for coordinated prevention grants.
((Solid waste plan updates must be submitted to the
department no later than July 1, 1991, for class one areas; July
1, 1992, for class two areas; and July 1, 1994, for class three
areas; unless an extension is granted by the department. Local
governments that do not comply will not be eligible for
coordinated prevention grant funding for solid waste project
implementation until the required plan updates are submitted to
the department.))
(4) Eligibility for hazardous waste planning grants. Local governments that are required by chapter 70.105 RCW to adopt or update local hazardous waste plans are eligible to apply for coordinated prevention grants to help pay for those plans.
(5) Eligibility for hazardous waste plan implementation grants. Local governments with department-approved local hazardous waste plans as required by chapter 70.105 RCW are eligible to apply for coordinated prevention grants to help pay for the implementation of projects in the plan. If the plans designate lead implementation agencies to implement the plans, those agencies are also eligible to apply for coordinated prevention grants.
(6) Any grant-eligible entities as defined in this section
may submit their requests in a ((unified)) coordinated
application as described in WAC 173-312-060 (4)(a), or may submit
separate applications ((in a package application)) as provided in
WAC 173-312-060 (4)(b).
[Statutory Authority: RCW 70.105D.070(3). 00-19-016 (Order 00-19), § 173-312-040, filed 9/8/00, effective 10/9/00. Statutory Authority: RCW 43.21A.080. 91-11-090 (Order 90-65), § 173-312-040, filed 5/21/91, effective 6/21/91. Statutory Authority: RCW 43.21A.080 and chapter 70.105D RCW. 90-18-064 (Order 90-17), § 173-312-040, filed 9/4/90, effective 10/5/90. Statutory Authority: RCW 70.105B.220 and 70.95.220. 88-17-001 (Order 88-26), § 173-312-040, filed 8/4/88.]
(a) Local hazardous waste planning as required by chapter 70.105 RCW.
(b) Local solid waste planning as required by chapter 70.95 RCW.
(c) Local hazardous waste plan implementation projects.
(d) Local solid waste enforcement by the jurisdictional health departments and districts.
(e) Local solid waste plan implementation projects, which
are limited to((:
(i) Projects that implement the requirements of chapter 173-304 WAC for closure of publicly-owned municipal solid waste landfills will be eligible for grant funding if all of the following criteria are met:
(A) The jurisdictional health department/district has required the landfill to reach post-closure no later than September 30, 1995;
(B) Financial assurance accounts for closure and post-closure have been established and maintained as required by chapter 173-304 WAC for landfills closed after November 27, 1989;
(C) The landfill has an approved closure plan as required by chapter 173-304 WAC;
(D) Local governments that have disposed of significant quantities of waste at the landfill make reasonable financial contribution to the costs of closure and post-closure; and
(E) The landfill is not eligible for remedial action grants under chapter 173-322 WAC or identified by the department as potentially requiring remedial action.
The total amount expended from the local toxics control account for solid waste landfill closure may not exceed fifteen million dollars and no funds may be expended for this purpose after December 31, 1995. No single landfill closure project may receive more than five hundred thousand dollars from the local toxics control account.
(ii) Ground water monitoring well projects to meet the requirements of WAC 173-304-490.
(iii))) waste reduction and recycling projects and programs.
(2) Eligible project costs do not include:
(a) Solid waste incinerator feasibility studies, construction, maintenance, or operation.
(b) ((Landfill closure as required by chapter 173-304 WAC,
except for ground water monitoring wells or projects that meet
the requirements of subsection (1)(e)(i) of this section.
(c))) New landfill construction or landfill expansion, or
landfill upgrading at an operating facility to meet the
requirements of chapters ((173-304)) 173-350 and 173-351 WAC.
(c) Landfill closure as required by chapters 173-350 and 173-351 WAC.
(d) Garbage collection and disposal, except start-up and operational costs for waste reduction and recycling programs.
(e) Solid and hazardous waste expenses not directly related to compliance with state solid and hazardous waste laws and rules.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 70.105D.070(3). 00-19-016 (Order 00-19), § 173-312-050, filed 9/8/00, effective 10/9/00. Statutory Authority: RCW 43.21A.080. 91-11-090 (Order 90-65), § 173-312-050, filed 5/21/91, effective 6/21/91. Statutory Authority: RCW 43.21A.080 and chapter 70.105D RCW. 90-18-064 (Order 90-17), § 173-312-050, filed 9/4/90, effective 10/5/90. Statutory Authority: RCW 70.105B.220 and 70.95.220. 88-17-001 (Order 88-26), § 173-312-050, filed 8/4/88.]
(2) The application must be submitted by the county agency or department having responsibility for solid waste, unless the county executive department selects another agency or department to submit the application.
(3) Coordinated prevention grant applications must:
(a) Include a commitment by the applicants to use local funds to match grant funds according to the requirements of WAC 173-312-090.
(b) Be for eligible projects as defined in WAC 173-312-050.
(c) Include a scope of work that is sufficiently detailed for the department to monitor grant performance.
(d) Include documentation that all cities in the county and lead implementation agencies that have approved the adopted local hazardous waste plan or solid waste plan have had the opportunity to request that projects that meet the requirements of WAC 173-312-050 be included in the application.
(4) To obtain coordinated prevention grant funding, a county
shall submit ((either a unified)) an application ((or a package
application)), as defined herein:
(a) A ((unified)) coordinated grant application means that
the county, the health department or district and any other grant
eligible entities as defined in WAC 173-312-040 have reached
agreement regarding the requested projects and funding
allocations for both local solid and local hazardous waste plans
and projects. ((The submittal will consist of a single county
application with specific projects identified to be executed by
the county and other local governments. Unified)) Coordinated
applications will receive financial incentives for administrative
coordination set forth in WAC ((173-312-090)) 173-312-080.
The ((unified)) coordinated application shall include a
maximum grant request for no more than the base funding level for
the county, plus the ((selected)) financial incentive.
(b) In the event a county fails to submit a coordinated application, indicating grant eligible entities have not reached agreement regarding projects and funding allocations, they will lose the incentive as set forth in WAC 173-312-080. This money shall be made available for supplemental funding as specified in WAC 173-312-080.
(5) The application must be signed, indicating approval by responsible officials from the county, local health department or district and any other grant-eligible entities as defined in WAC 173-312-040.
(((b) A package application means that the county, the local
health department or district and any other grant-eligible
entities as defined in WAC 173-312-040 have not reached agreement
regarding the requested projects and funding allocations, or
choose to submit individual applications. The maximum grant
request may exceed the base funding level. A package application
is not eligible for the financial incentives for administrative
coordination set forth in WAC 173-312-090. A package application
must be submitted by the county. A package application may
consist of individual signed applications from the county, the
health department or district and other grant-eligible entities
as defined in WAC 173-312-040; requests from other cities will be
submitted as part of the county application.))
[Statutory Authority: RCW 70.105D.070(3). 00-19-016 (Order 00-19), § 173-312-060, filed 9/8/00, effective 10/9/00. Statutory Authority: RCW 43.21A.080. 91-11-090 (Order 90-65), § 173-312-060, filed 5/21/91, effective 6/21/91.]
(a) Required hazardous waste planning under chapter 70.105 RCW and required solid waste planning under chapter 70.95 RCW.
(b) Programs and projects to implement adopted local hazardous waste plans, including waste reduction and recycling.
(c) Solid waste enforcement programs.
(d) Programs and projects to implement adopted local solid
waste plans, including waste reduction and recycling((, ground
water monitoring wells meeting the requirements of WAC 173-304-490, and publicly owned municipal solid waste landfill
closure meeting the requirements of WAC 173-312-050 (1)(e)(i))).
(2) The department will evaluate each application according to the extent to which it:
(a) Conforms to the adopted local hazardous waste and solid waste plans.
(b) Advances regional solutions and intergovernmental cooperation.
(c) Supports the state's goal to achieve a fifty percent
recycling rate ((by 1995)).
(d) Confers broad benefit on residents of the county, whether they reside in incorporated areas or unincorporated areas.
(e) Meets the needs of local government for projects that prevent environmental contamination from solid and hazardous waste.
(f) Uses the state's resources efficiently.
(g) For solid waste enforcement funding, takes into account the number of disposal sites and the geographic area requiring enforcement activity.
(3) The department may fund all or portions of a coordinated prevention grant application.
(4) The department may award grants to any local government in order to execute all or portions of a coordinated prevention grant program.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 43.21A.080. 91-11-090 (Order 90-65), § 173-312-070, filed 5/21/91, effective 6/21/91.]
(a) Projected and actual revenue to the local toxics control account, and other funding sources cited in WAC 173-312-010(2), as determined by the department.
(b) The number of people served by a local government.
(2) Grants that may be awarded to eligible cities under WAC 173-312-040 may not exceed a city's proportionate share, based on population, of a county's base funding level as defined in subsection (3)(a) of this section, unless the department, the county, the health department or district and the grant-eligible entities as defined in WAC 173-312-040 agree otherwise.
(3) Projected revenues to the local toxics control account
that are available each biennium for coordinated prevention grant
purposes must be divided into two portions, one for solid waste
enforcement grants, and one for solid and hazardous waste
implementation grants. ((After administrative costs have been
deducted,)) Allocations will be calculated as follows:
(a) ((The base funding level must be calculated for each
county)) For solid waste enforcement grants, an amount sufficient
to provide each single-county jurisdictional health department
with one hundred thousand dollars and each multi-county
jurisdictional health department with one hundred fifty thousand
dollars will be set aside. In future biennia the amount set
aside for solid waste enforcement will be twenty percent of the
total coordinated prevention grant allocation, and the
single-county and multi-county solid waste enforcement grant
allocation will be increased or decreased proportionately.
(b) For solid and hazardous waste implementation grants, the remaining eighty percent is divided among counties by means of a formula that shall consist of two elements:
(i) A fixed amount for each county, regardless of size; and
(ii) A per capita amount based on county population size as determined by the United States census data or by the official estimates of the state office of financial management.
(((b) The smaller portion, as well as unused funds in (a) of
this subsection,)) (c) Counties that submit a coordinated
application as defined in WAC 173-312-060 shall receive a ten
percent increase if base level funding as defined in (b) of this
subsection is an incentive.
(d) After initial grant amounts have been determined for
both categories of coordinated prevention grants based upon the
applications, the unallocated funds shall become supplemental
funds ((and must be)) used ((for the following purposes:
(i) Financial incentives to local governments for administrative centralization and efficiency;
(ii) Remedial action grants issued under chapter 173-322 WAC, if the need exceeds administrative allocations;
(iii) Landfill closure projects that meet the requirements of WAC 173-312-050 (1)(e)(i);
(iv) Reserve funds for grants to deal with unanticipated or immediate threats to human health and the environment; and
(v) Supplemental grants, to be awarded based on the criteria set forth in WAC 173-312-070(2))) to promote strategic initiatives that meet needs defined by the state solid waste planning process. Supplemental funds for solid and hazardous waste implementation grants will first be awarded within the initial solid and hazardous waste implementation coordinated prevention grant portion. Supplemental funds for solid waste enforcement grants will first be awarded within the initial solid waste enforcement coordinated prevention grant portion. Only when supplemental funds still remain in either category after the initial supplemental awards have been given shall the funds be awarded to the other portion.
(4) Applicants must meet the requirements of this chapter to the satisfaction of the department in order to secure grant awards.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 70.105D.070(3). 00-19-016 (Order 00-19), § 173-312-080, filed 9/8/00, effective 10/9/00. Statutory Authority: RCW 43.21A.080. 91-11-090 (Order 90-65), § 173-312-080, filed 5/21/91, effective 6/21/91.]
(2) Counties, and grant-eligible jurisdictions within counties, that are determined to be economically disadvantaged will be eligible for an increased state share and a reduced local cash match. For projects proposed by those jurisdictions, costs eligible under WAC 173-312-050 will be considered for grant funding of up to seventy-five percent. At least twenty-five percent of eligible costs must be provided as local cash match.
Economically disadvantaged counties that submit unified grant applications as defined in WAC 173-312-060 (4)(a) will be eligible for a grant amount ten percent greater than the base funding level.
(3) A county is considered economically disadvantaged if it meets both of the following criteria:
(a) Per capita income, as measured by the latest official estimate of the state office of financial management, is in the lower twenty counties in the state; and
(b) Economic distress exists as defined by chapter 43.165 RCW.
(4) The department will include a list of economically disadvantaged counties as defined in this section in the guidelines for coordinated prevention grants.
(5))) (2) Local cash match may be met by cash expenditures and interlocal costs. Interlocal costs are the only type of in-kind contributions that may be used for local cash match.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 70.105D.070(3). 00-19-016 (Order 00-19), § 173-312-090, filed 9/8/00, effective 10/9/00. Statutory Authority: RCW 43.21A.080. 91-11-090 (Order 90-65), § 173-312-090, filed 5/21/91, effective 6/21/91.]
(2) ((The)) Coordinated prevention grants shall operate on a
biennial funding cycle. ((That cycle will consist of:
(a) A base grant phase, during which eligible applicant governments apply for grant funds up to the base funding level set forth in WAC 173-312-080 (3)(a) plus the selected administrative incentives; and
(b) A supplemental grant phase, during which grant recipients request grant amendments including supplemental funding requests for additional funds to assist ongoing or new projects. The supplemental grant phase will be contingent on the availability of funds to the local toxics control account.)) Applications will be due in the first quarter of the biennium. Eligible applicant governments will apply for grant funds up to the base funding level set forth in WAC 173-312-080 plus the incentive, and at the same time shall submit requests for additional funds to assist ongoing or new projects. Supplemental funds, if awarded, shall be supplied as part of the new grant. New grants will begin in the third quarter of the biennium, and will run for two calendar years.
(3) The department will obligate coordinated prevention grant funds to a recipient for a maximum period of two years. If the recipient has not accomplished the scope of work in the time period set forth in the agreement, the recipient must use a portion of its next biennial base funding level to complete the project(s).
(4) No costs incurred before the effective date of a grant agreement are eligible unless specific provision is made in the grant agreement for those costs.
(5) All grants under this chapter must be consistent with Administrative Requirements for Ecology Grants and Loans WDOE #91-18 (Revised October 2000).
[Statutory Authority: RCW 70.105D.070(3). 00-19-016 (Order 00-19), § 173-312-100, filed 9/8/00, effective 10/9/00. Statutory Authority: RCW 43.21A.080. 91-11-090 (Order 90-65), § 173-312-100, filed 5/21/91, effective 6/21/91.]