Senate Bill 0244e2
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CS for SB 244 Second Engrossed
1 A bill to be entitled
2 An act relating to drycleaning solvent cleanup;
3 creating s. 199.1055, F.S.; providing for a
4 contaminated site rehabilitation tax credit
5 against the intangible personal property tax;
6 authorizing the Department of Revenue to adopt
7 rules; amending s. 220.02, F.S.; providing for
8 an additional cross-reference; creating s.
9 220.1845, F.S.; providing for a contaminated
10 site rehabilitation tax credit against the
11 corporate income tax; authorizing the
12 Department of Revenue to adopt rules; creating
13 s. 376.30781, F.S.; providing for a partial tax
14 credit for the rehabilitation of
15 drycleaning-solvent-contaminated sites and
16 brownfield sites; providing for the Department
17 of Environmental Protection to allocate such
18 partial credits; providing procedures for
19 application for tax credits; providing for a
20 nonrefundable review fee; providing
21 verification requirements; authorizing the
22 Department of Environmental Protection to adopt
23 rules; providing for revocation or modification
24 of eligibility for tax credit under certain
25 conditions; amending s. 213.053, F.S.;
26 providing for information-sharing; reducing
27 appropriation provisions for fiscal year
28 1998-1999 for brownfield redevelopment
29 activities; amending s. 376.30, F.S.; providing
30 legislative intent regarding drycleaning
31 solvents; amending s. 376.301, F.S.; providing
1
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CS for SB 244 Second Engrossed
1 definitions; amending s. 376.303, F.S.;
2 providing for late fees for registration
3 renewals; amending s. 376.3078, F.S.; providing
4 legislative intent regarding voluntary cleanup;
5 providing that certain deductibles must be
6 deposited into the Water Quality Assurance
7 Trust Fund; clarifying circumstances under
8 which drycleaning restoration fund may not be
9 used; providing additional criteria for
10 determining eligibility for rehabilitation;
11 specifying when certain deductibles must be
12 paid; amending the date after which no
13 restoration funds may be used for drycleaning
14 site rehabilitation; clarifying who may apply
15 jointly for participation in the program;
16 providing certain liability immunity for
17 certain adjacent landowners; providing for
18 contamination cleanup criteria that incorporate
19 risk-based corrective action principles to be
20 adopted by rule; requiring certain third-party
21 liability insurance coverage for each operating
22 facility; eliminating a tax credit for small
23 spills at drycleaning facilities; allowing
24 certain group coverage policies; specifying the
25 circumstances under which work may proceed on
26 the next site rehabilitation task without prior
27 approval; requiring the Department of
28 Environmental Protection to give priority
29 consideration to the processing and approval of
30 permits for voluntary cleanup projects;
31 providing the conditions under which further
2
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CS for SB 244 Second Engrossed
1 rehabilitation may be required; providing for
2 continuing application of certain immunity for
3 real property owners; requiring the Department
4 of Environmental Protection to attempt to
5 negotiate certain agreements with the U.S.
6 Environmental Protection Agency; amending s.
7 376.308, F.S.; protecting certain immunity for
8 real property owners; amending s. 376.313,
9 F.S.; correcting a statutory cross-reference;
10 amending s. 376.70, F.S.; clarifying certain
11 registration provisions; requiring certain
12 facilities to pay the gross receipts tax;
13 providing for the payment of taxes and the
14 determination of eligibility in the program;
15 amending s. 376.75, F.S.; providing that the
16 tax on perchloroethylene is not subject to
17 sales tax; amending ss. 287.0595, 316.302,
18 F.S.; correcting statutory cross-references;
19 amending s. 213.053, F.S.; authorizing the
20 Department of Revenue to release certain
21 information to certain persons; providing an
22 effective date.
23
24 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
25
26 Section 1. Section 199.1055, Florida Statutes, is
27 created to read:
28 199.1055 Contaminated site rehabilitation tax
29 credit.--
30 (1) AUTHORIZATION FOR TAX CREDIT; LIMITATIONS.--
31
3
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1 (a) A credit in the amount of 35 percent of the costs
2 of voluntary cleanup activity that is integral to site
3 rehabilitation at the following sites is allowed against any
4 tax due for a taxable year under s. 199.032, less any credit
5 allowed by s. 220.68 for that year:
6 1. A drycleaning-solvent-contaminated site eligible
7 for state-funded site rehabilitation under s. 376.3078(3);
8 2. A drycleaning-solvent-contaminated site at which
9 cleanup is undertaken by the real property owner pursuant to
10 s. 376.3078(11), if the real property owner is not also, and
11 has never been, the owner or operator of the drycleaning
12 facility where the contamination exists; or
13 3. A brownfield site in a designated brownfield area
14 under s. 376.80.
15 (b) A taxpayer, or multiple taxpayers working jointly
16 to clean up a single site, may not receive more than $250,000
17 per year in tax credits for each site voluntarily
18 rehabilitated. Multiple taxpayers shall receive tax credits in
19 the same proportion as their contribution to payment of
20 cleanup costs. Subject to the same conditions and limitations
21 as provided in this section a municipality or county which
22 voluntarily rehabilitates a site may receive not more than
23 $250,000 per year in tax credits which it can subsequently
24 transfer subject to the provisions in (g).
25 (c) If the credit granted under this section is not
26 fully used in any one year because of insufficient tax
27 liability on the part of the taxpayer, the unused amount may
28 be carried forward for a period not to exceed 5 years.
29 (d) A taxpayer that receives a credit under s.
30 220.1845 is ineligible to receive credit under this section in
31 a given tax year.
4
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1 (e) A taxpayer that receives state-funded site
2 rehabilitation pursuant to s. 376.3078(3) for rehabilitation
3 of a drycleaning-solvent-contaminated site is ineligible to
4 receive credit under this section for costs incurred by the
5 taxpayer in conjunction with the rehabilitation of that site
6 during the same time period that state-administered site
7 rehabilitation was underway.
8 (f) The total amount of the tax credits which may be
9 granted under this section and s. 220.1845 is $5 million
10 annually.
11 (g)1. Tax credits that may be available under this
12 section to an entity eligible under s. 376.30781 may be
13 transferred after a merger or acquisition to the surviving or
14 acquiring entity and used in the same manner with the same
15 limitations.
16 2. The entity or its surviving or acquiring entity as
17 described in (g)1., may transfer any unused credit in whole or
18 in units of no less than 25 percent of the remaining credit.
19 The entity acquiring such credit may use it in the same manner
20 and with the same limitation as described in this section.
21 Such transferred credits may not be transferred again although
22 they may succeed to a surviving or acquiring entity subject to
23 the same conditions and limitations as described in this
24 section.
25 3. In the event the credit provided for under this
26 section is reduced either as a result of a determination by
27 the Department of Environmental Protection or an examination
28 or audit by the Department of Revenue, such tax deficiency
29 shall be recovered from the first entity, or the surviving or
30 acquiring entity, to have claimed such credit up to the amount
31 of credit taken. Any subsequent deficiencies shall be
5
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1 assessed against any entity acquiring and claiming such
2 credit, or in the case of multiple succeeding entities in the
3 order of credit succession.
4 (h) In order to encourage completion of site
5 rehabilitation at contaminated sites being voluntarily cleaned
6 up and eligible for a tax credit under this section, the
7 taxpayer may claim an additional 10 percent of the total
8 cleanup costs, not to exceed $50,000, in the final year of
9 cleanup as evidenced by the Department of Environmental
10 Protection issuing a "No Further Action" order for that site.
11 (2) FILING REQUIREMENTS.--Any taxpayer that wishes to
12 obtain credit under this section must submit with its return a
13 tax credit certificate approving partial tax credits issued by
14 the Department of Environmental Protection under s. 376.30781.
15 (3) ADMINISTRATION; AUDIT AUTHORITY; TAX CREDIT
16 FORFEITURE.--
17 (a) The Department of Revenue may adopt rules to
18 prescribe any necessary forms required to claim a tax credit
19 under this section and to provide the administrative
20 guidelines and procedures required to administer this section.
21 (b) In addition to its existing audit and
22 investigation authority relating to chapters 199 and 220, the
23 Department of Revenue may perform any additional financial and
24 technical audits and investigations, including examining the
25 accounts, books, or records of the tax credit applicant, which
26 are necessary to verify the site-rehabilitation costs included
27 in a tax credit return and to ensure compliance with this
28 section. The Department of Environmental Protection shall
29 provide technical assistance, when requested by the Department
30 of Revenue, on any technical audits performed under this
31 section.
6
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1 (c) It is grounds for forfeiture of previously claimed
2 and received tax credits if the Department of Revenue
3 determines, as a result of either an audit or information
4 received from the Department of Environmental Protection, that
5 a taxpayer received tax credits under this section to which
6 the taxpayer was not entitled. In the case of fraud, the
7 taxpayer shall be prohibited from claiming any future tax
8 credits under this section or s. 220.1845.
9 1. The taxpayer is responsible for returning forfeited
10 tax credits to the Department of Revenue and such funds shall
11 be paid into the General Revenue Fund of the state.
12 2. The taxpayer shall file with the Department of
13 Revenue an amended tax return or such other report as the
14 Department of Revenue prescribes by rule and shall pay any
15 required tax within 60 days after the taxpayer receives
16 notification from the Department of Environmental Protection
17 pursuant to s. 376.30781 that previously approved tax credits
18 have been revoked or modified, if uncontested, or within 60
19 days after a final order is issued following proceedings
20 involving a contested revocation or modification order.
21 3. A notice of deficiency may be issued by the
22 Department of Revenue at any time within 5 years after the
23 date the taxpayer receives notification from the Department of
24 Environmental Protection pursuant to s. 376.30781 that
25 previously approved tax credits have been revoked or modified.
26 If a taxpayer fails to notify the Department of Revenue of any
27 change in its tax credit claimed, a notice of deficiency may
28 be issued at any time. In either case, the amount of any
29 proposed assessment set forth in such notice of deficiency
30 shall be limited to the amount of any deficiency resulting
31
7
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1 under this section from the recomputation of the taxpayer's
2 tax for the taxable year.
3 4. Any taxpayer that fails to report and timely pay
4 any tax due as a result of the forfeiture of its tax credit is
5 in violation of this section and is subject to applicable
6 penalty and interest.
7 Section 2. Subsection (10) of section 220.02, Florida
8 Statutes, is amended to read:
9 220.02 Legislative intent.--
10 (10) It is the intent of the Legislature that credits
11 against either the corporate income tax or the franchise tax
12 be applied in the following order: those enumerated in s.
13 220.68, those enumerated in s. 631.719(1), those enumerated in
14 s. 631.705, those enumerated in s. 220.18, those enumerated in
15 s. 631.828, those enumerated in s. 220.181, those enumerated
16 in s. 220.183, those enumerated in s. 220.182, those
17 enumerated in s. 220.1895, those enumerated in s. 221.02,
18 those enumerated in s. 220.184, those enumerated in s.
19 220.186, and those enumerated in s. 220.188, and those
20 enumerated in s. 220.1845.
21 Section 3. Section 220.1845, Florida Statutes, is
22 created to read:
23 220.1845 Contaminated site rehabilitation tax
24 credit.--
25 (1) AUTHORIZATION FOR TAX CREDIT; LIMITATIONS.--
26 (a) A credit in the amount of 35 percent of the costs
27 of voluntary cleanup activity that is integral to site
28 rehabilitation at the following sites is allowed against any
29 tax due for a taxable year under this chapter:
30 1. A drycleaning-solvent-contaminated site eligible
31 for state-funded site rehabilitation under s. 376.3078(3);
8
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1 2. A drycleaning-solvent-contaminated site at which
2 cleanup is undertaken by the real property owner pursuant to
3 s. 376.3078(11), if the real property owner is not also, and
4 has never been, the owner or operator of the drycleaning
5 facility where the contamination exists; or
6 3. A brownfield site in a designated brownfield area
7 under s. 376.80.
8 (b) A taxpayer, or multiple taxpayers working jointly
9 to clean up a single site, may not receive more than $250,000
10 per year in tax credits for each site voluntarily
11 rehabilitated. Multiple taxpayers shall receive tax credits in
12 the same proportion as their contribution to payment of
13 cleanup costs. Subject to the same conditions and limitations
14 as provided in this section a municipality or county which
15 voluntarily rehabilitates a site may receive not more than
16 $250,000 per year in tax credits which it can subsequently
17 transfer subject to the provisions in (h).
18 (c) If the credit granted under this section is not
19 fully used in any one year because of insufficient tax
20 liability on the part of the corporation, the unused amount
21 may be carried forward for a period not to exceed 5 years. The
22 carryover credit may be used in a subsequent year when the tax
23 imposed by this chapter for that year exceeds the credit for
24 which the corporation is eligible in that year under this
25 section after applying the other credits and unused carryovers
26 in the order provided by s. 220.02(10).
27 (d) A taxpayer that files a consolidated return in
28 this state as a member of an affiliated group under s.
29 220.131(1) may be allowed the credit on a consolidated return
30 basis up to the amount of tax imposed upon and paid by the
31 taxpayer that incurred the rehabilitation costs.
9
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1 (e) A taxpayer that receives credit under s. 199.1055
2 is ineligible to receive credit under this section in a given
3 tax year.
4 (f) A taxpayer that receives state-funded site
5 rehabilitation under s. 376.3078(3) for rehabilitation of a
6 drycleaning-solvent-contaminated site is ineligible to receive
7 credit under this section for costs incurred by the taxpayer
8 in conjunction with the rehabilitation of that site during the
9 same time period that state-administered site rehabilitation
10 was underway.
11 (g) The total amount of the tax credits which may be
12 granted under this section and s. 199.1055 is $2 million
13 annually.
14 (h)1. Tax credits that may be available under this
15 section to an entity eligible under s. 376.30781 may be
16 transferred after a merger or acquisition to the surviving or
17 acquiring entity and used in the same manner and with the same
18 limitations.
19 2. The entity or its surviving or acquiring entity as
20 described in (h)1., may transfer any unused credit in whole or
21 in units of no less than 25 percent of the remaining credit.
22 The entity acquiring such credit may use it in the same manner
23 and with the same limitation as described in this section.
24 Such transferred credits may not be transferred again although
25 they may succeed to a surviving or acquiring entity subject to
26 the same conditions and limitations as described in this
27 section.
28 3. In the event the credit provided for under this
29 section is reduced either as a result of a determination by
30 the Department of Environmental Protection or an examination
31 or audit by the Department of Revenue, such tax deficiency
10
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1 shall be recovered from the first entity, or the surviving or
2 acquiring entity, to have claimed such credit up to the amount
3 of credit taken. Any subsequent deficiencies shall be
4 assessed against any entity acquiring and claiming such
5 credit, or in the case of multiple succeeding entities in the
6 order of credit succession.
7 (i) In order to encourage completion of site
8 rehabilitation at contaminated sites being voluntarily cleaned
9 up and eligible for a tax credit under this section, the
10 taxpayer may claim an additional 10 percent of the total
11 cleanup costs, not to exceed $50,000, in the final year of
12 cleanup as evidenced by the Department of Environmental
13 Protection issuing a "No Further Action" order for that site.
14 (2) FILING REQUIREMENTS.--Any corporation that wishes
15 to obtain credit under this section must submit with its
16 return a tax credit certificate approving partial tax credits
17 issued by the Department of Environmental Protection under s.
18 376.30781.
19 (3) ADMINISTRATION; AUDIT AUTHORITY; TAX CREDIT
20 FORFEITURE.--
21 (a) The Department of Revenue may adopt rules to
22 prescribe any necessary forms required to claim a tax credit
23 under this section and to provide the administrative
24 guidelines and procedures required to administer this section.
25 (b) In addition to its existing audit and
26 investigation authority relating to chapters 199 and 220, the
27 Department of Revenue may perform any additional financial and
28 technical audits and investigations, including examining the
29 accounts, books, or records of the tax credit applicant, which
30 are necessary to verify the site-rehabilitation costs included
31 in a tax credit return and to ensure compliance with this
11
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1 section. The Department of Environmental Protection shall
2 provide technical assistance, when requested by the Department
3 of Revenue, on any technical audits performed pursuant to this
4 section.
5 (c) It is grounds for forfeiture of previously claimed
6 and received tax credits if the Department of Revenue
7 determines, as a result of either an audit or information
8 received from the Department of Environmental Protection, that
9 a taxpayer received tax credits pursuant to this section to
10 which the taxpayer was not entitled. In the case of fraud, the
11 taxpayer shall be prohibited from claiming any future tax
12 credits under this section or s. 199.1055.
13 1. The taxpayer is responsible for returning forfeited
14 tax credits to the Department of Revenue and such funds shall
15 be paid into the General Revenue Fund of the state.
16 2. The taxpayer shall file with the Department of
17 Revenue an amended tax return or such other report as the
18 Department of Revenue prescribes by rule and shall pay any
19 required tax within 60 days after the taxpayer receives
20 notification from the Department of Environmental Protection
21 pursuant to s. 376.30781 that previously approved tax credits
22 have been revoked or modified, if uncontested, or within 60
23 days after a final order is issued following proceedings
24 involving a contested revocation or modification order.
25 3. A notice of deficiency may be issued by the
26 Department of Revenue at any time within 5 years after the
27 date the taxpayer receives notification from the Department of
28 Environmental Protection pursuant to s. 376.30781 that
29 previously approved tax credits have been revoked or modified.
30 If a taxpayer fails to notify the Department of Revenue of any
31 change in its tax credit claimed, a notice of deficiency may
12
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1 be issued at any time. In either case, the amount of any
2 proposed assessment set forth in such notice of deficiency
3 shall be limited to the amount of any deficiency resulting
4 under this section from the recomputation of the taxpayer's
5 tax for the taxable year.
6 4. Any taxpayer that fails to report and timely pay
7 any tax due as a result of the forfeiture of its tax credit is
8 in violation of this section and is subject to applicable
9 penalty and interest.
10 Section 4. Section 376.30781, Florida Statutes, is
11 created to read:
12 376.30781 Partial tax credits for rehabilitation of
13 drycleaning-solvent-contaminated sites and brownfield sites in
14 designated brownfield areas; application process; rulemaking
15 authority; revocation authority.--
16 (1) The Legislature finds that:
17 (a) To facilitate property transactions and economic
18 growth and development, it is in the interest of the state to
19 encourage the cleanup, at the earliest possible time, of
20 drycleaning-solvent-contaminated sites and brownfield sites in
21 designated brownfield areas.
22 (b) It is the intent of the Legislature to encourage
23 the voluntary cleanup of drycleaning-solvent-contaminated
24 sites and brownfield sites in designated brownfield areas by
25 providing a partial tax credit for the restoration of such
26 property in specified circumstances.
27 (2)(a) A credit in the amount of 35 percent of the
28 costs of voluntary cleanup activity that is integral to site
29 rehabilitation at the following sites is allowed pursuant to
30 ss. 199.1055 and 220.1845:
31
13
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1 1. A drycleaning-solvent-contaminated site eligible
2 for state-funded site rehabilitation under s. 376.3078(3);
3 2. A drycleaning-solvent-contaminated site at which
4 cleanup is undertaken by the real property owner pursuant to
5 s. 376.3078(10), if the real property owner is not also, and
6 has never been, the owner or operator of the drycleaning
7 facility where the contamination exists; or
8 3. A brownfield site in a designated brownfield area
9 under s. 376.80.
10 (b) A taxpayer, or multiple taxpayers working jointly
11 to clean up a single site, may not receive more than $250,000
12 per year in tax credits for each site voluntarily
13 rehabilitated. Multiple taxpayers shall receive tax credits in
14 the same proportion as their contribution to payment of
15 cleanup costs. Tax credits are available only for site
16 rehabilitation conducted during the tax year in which the tax
17 credit application is submitted.
18 (c) In order to encourage completion of site
19 rehabilitation at contaminated sites that are being
20 voluntarily cleaned up and that are eligible for a tax credit
21 under this section, the tax credit applicant may claim an
22 additional 10 percent of the total cleanup costs, not to
23 exceed $50,000, in the final year of cleanup as evidenced by
24 the Department of Environmental Protection issuing a "No
25 Further Action" order for that site.
26 (3) The Department of Environmental Protection shall
27 be responsible for allocating the tax credits provided for in
28 ss. 199.1055 and 220.1845, not to exceed a total of $5 million
29 in tax credits annually.
30 (4) To claim the credit, each applicant must apply to
31 the Department of Environmental Protection for an allocation
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1 of the $5 million annual credit by December 31 on a form
2 developed by the Department of Environmental Protection in
3 cooperation with the Department of Revenue. The form shall
4 include an affidavit from each applicant certifying that all
5 information contained in the application, including all
6 records of costs incurred and claimed in the tax credit
7 application, are true and correct. If the application is
8 submitted pursuant to subparagraph (2)(a)2., the form must
9 include an affidavit signed by the real property owner stating
10 that it is not, and has never been, the owner or operator of
11 the drycleaning facility where the contamination exists.
12 Approval of partial tax credits must be accomplished on a
13 first-come, first-served basis based upon the date complete
14 applications are received by the Division of Waste Management.
15 An applicant shall submit only one application per site per
16 year. To be eligible for a tax credit the applicant must:
17 (a) Have entered into a voluntary cleanup agreement
18 with the Department of Environmental Protection for a
19 drycleaning-solvent-contaminated site or a Brownfield Site
20 Rehabilitation Agreement, as applicable; and
21 (b) Have paid all deductibles pursuant to s.
22 376.3078(3)(d) for eligible drycleaning-solvent-cleanup
23 program sites.
24 (5) To obtain the tax credit certificate, an applicant
25 must annually file an application for certification, which
26 must be received by the Department of Environmental Protection
27 by December 31. The applicant must provide all pertinent
28 information requested on the tax credit application form,
29 including, at a minimum, the name and address of the applicant
30 and the address and tracking identification number of the
31
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1 eligible site. Along with the application form, the applicant
2 must submit the following:
3 (a) A nonrefundable review fee of $250 made payable to
4 the Water Quality Assurance Trust Fund to cover the
5 administrative costs associated with the department's review
6 of the tax credit application;
7 (b) Copies of contracts and documentation of contract
8 negotiations, accounts, invoices, sales tickets, or other
9 payment records from purchases, sales, leases, or other
10 transactions involving actual costs incurred for that tax year
11 related to site rehabilitation, as that term is defined in ss.
12 376.301 and 376.79;
13 (c) Proof that the documentation submitted pursuant to
14 paragraph (b) has been reviewed and verified by an independent
15 certified public accountant in accordance with standards
16 established by the American Institute of Certified Public
17 Accountants. Specifically, the certified public accountant
18 must attest to the accuracy and validity of the costs incurred
19 and paid by conducting an independent review of the data
20 presented by the applicant. Accuracy and validity of costs
21 incurred and paid would be determined once the level of effort
22 was certified by an appropriate professional registered in
23 this state in each contributing technical discipline. The
24 certified public accountant's report would also attest that
25 the costs included in the application form are not duplicated
26 within the application. A copy of the accountant's report
27 shall be submitted to the Department of Environmental
28 Protection with the tax credit application; and
29 (d) A certification form stating that site
30 rehabilitation activities associated with the documentation
31 submitted pursuant to paragraph (b) have been conducted under
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1 the observation of, and related technical documents have been
2 signed and sealed by, an appropriate professional registered
3 in this state in each contributing technical discipline. The
4 certification form shall be signed and sealed by the
5 appropriate registered professionals stating that the costs
6 incurred were integral, necessary, and required for site
7 rehabilitation, as that term is defined in ss. 376.301 and
8 376.79.
9 (6) The certified public accountant and appropriate
10 registered professionals submitting forms as part of a tax
11 credit application must verify such forms. Verification must
12 be accomplished as provided in s. 92.525(1)(b) and subject to
13 the provisions of s. 92.525(3).
14 (7) The Department of Environmental Protection shall
15 review the tax credit application and any supplemental
16 documentation submitted by each applicant, for the purpose of
17 verifying that the applicant has met the qualifying criteria
18 in subsections (2) and (4) and has submitted all required
19 documentation listed in subsection (5). Upon verification that
20 the applicant has met these requirements, the department shall
21 issue a written decision granting eligibility for partial tax
22 credits (a tax credit certificate) in the amount of 35 percent
23 of the total costs claimed, subject to the $250,000
24 limitation, for the tax year in which the tax credit
25 application is submitted based on the report of the certified
26 public accountant and the certifications from the appropriate
27 registered technical professionals.
28 (8) On or before March 1, the Department of
29 Environmental Protection shall inform each eligible applicant
30 of the amount of its partial tax credit and provide each
31 eligible applicant with a tax credit certificate that must be
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1 submitted with its tax return to the Department of Revenue to
2 claim the tax credit. Credits will not result in the payment
3 of refunds if total credits exceed the amount of tax owed.
4 (9) If an applicant does not receive a tax credit
5 allocation due to an exhaustion of the $5-million annual tax
6 credit authorization, such application will then be included
7 in the same first-come, first-served order in the next year's
8 annual tax credit allocation, if any, based on the prior year
9 application.
10 (10) The Department of Environmental Protection may
11 adopt rules to prescribe the necessary forms required to claim
12 tax credits under this section and to provide the
13 administrative guidelines and procedures required to
14 administer this section. Prior to the adoption of rules
15 regulating the tax credit application, the department shall,
16 by September 1, 1998, establish reasonable interim application
17 requirements and forms.
18 (11) The Department of Environmental Protection may
19 revoke or modify any written decision granting eligibility for
20 partial tax credits under this section if it is discovered
21 that the tax credit applicant submitted any false statement,
22 representation, or certification in any application, record,
23 report, plan, or other document filed in an attempt to receive
24 partial tax credits under this section. The Department of
25 Environmental Protection shall immediately notify the
26 Department of Revenue of any revoked or modified orders
27 affecting previously granted partial tax credits.
28 Additionally, the taxpayer must notify the Department of
29 Revenue of any change in its tax credit claimed.
30 (12) An owner, operator, or real property owner who
31 receives state-funded site rehabilitation under s. 376.3078(3)
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1 for rehabilitation of a drycleaning-solvent-contaminated site
2 is ineligible to receive a tax credit under s. 199.1055 or s.
3 220.1845 for costs incurred by the taxpayer in conjunction
4 with the rehabilitation of that site during the same time
5 period that state-administered site rehabilitation was
6 underway.
7 Section 5. Paragraph (o) is added to subsection (7) of
8 section 213.053, Florida Statutes, to read:
9 213.053 Confidentiality and information sharing.--
10 (7) Notwithstanding any other provision of this
11 section, the department may provide:
12 (o) Information relative to ss. 199.1055, 220.1845,
13 and 376.30781 to the Department of Environmental Protection in
14 the conduct of its official business.
15
16 Disclosure of information under this subsection shall be
17 pursuant to a written agreement between the executive director
18 and the agency. Such agencies, governmental or
19 nongovernmental, shall be bound by the same requirements of
20 confidentiality as the Department of Revenue. Breach of
21 confidentiality is a misdemeanor of the first degree,
22 punishable as provided by s. 775.082 or s. 775.083.
23 Section 6. The $4,000,000 appropriated from the
24 General Revenue Fund Specific Appropriation 1727 for
25 Brownfield Redevelopment in the Conference Report on House
26 Bill 4201 is hereby reduced by $1 million and the $1 million
27 is to cover the cost of tax credit provisions authorized by
28 this act.
29 Section 7. Subsection (2) of section 376.30, Florida
30 Statutes, is amended to read:
31
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1 376.30 Legislative intent with respect to pollution of
2 surface and ground waters.--
3 (2) The Legislature further finds and declares that:
4 (a) The storage, transportation, and disposal of
5 pollutants, drycleaning solvents, and hazardous substances
6 within the jurisdiction of the state and state waters is a
7 hazardous undertaking;
8 (b) Spills, discharges, and escapes of pollutants,
9 drycleaning solvents, and hazardous substances that occur as a
10 result of procedures taken by private and governmental
11 entities involving the storage, transportation, and disposal
12 of such products pose threats of great danger and damage to
13 the environment of the state, to citizens of the state, and to
14 other interests deriving livelihood from the state;
15 (c) Such hazards have occurred in the past, are
16 occurring now, and present future threats of potentially
17 catastrophic proportions, all of which are expressly declared
18 to be inimical to the paramount interests of the state as set
19 forth in this section; and
20 (d) Such state interests outweigh any economic burdens
21 imposed by the Legislature upon those engaged in storing,
22 transporting, or disposing of pollutants, drycleaning
23 solvents, and hazardous substances and related activities.
24 Section 8. Section 376.301, Florida Statutes, is
25 amended to read:
26 376.301 Definitions of terms used in ss.
27 376.30-376.319, 376.70, and 376.75.--When used in ss.
28 376.30-376.319, 376.70, and 376.75, unless the context clearly
29 requires otherwise, the term:
30 (1) "Aboveground hazardous substance tank" means any
31 stationary aboveground storage tank and onsite integral piping
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1 that contains hazardous substances which are liquid at
2 standard temperature and pressure and has an individual
3 storage capacity greater than 110 gallons.
4 (2) "Additive effects" means a scientific principle
5 that theory under which the toxicity that occurs as a result
6 of exposure is the sum of the toxicities of the individual
7 chemicals to which the individual is exposed of chemicals
8 increases in linear proportion to the increase in the number
9 of substances.
10 (3) "Antagonistic effects" means a scientific
11 principle that the toxicity that occurs is less than the sum
12 of the toxicities of the individual chemicals to which the
13 individual is exposed.
14 (4)(3) "Backlog" means reimbursement obligations
15 incurred pursuant to s. 376.3071(12), prior to March 29, 1995,
16 or authorized for reimbursement under the provisions of s.
17 376.3071(12), pursuant to chapter 95-2, Laws of Florida.
18 Claims within the backlog are subject to adjustment, where
19 appropriate.
20 (5)(4) "Barrel" means 42 U.S. gallons at 60 degrees
21 Fahrenheit.
22 (6)(5) "Bulk product facility" means a waterfront
23 location with at least one aboveground tank with a capacity
24 greater than 30,000 gallons which is used for the storage of
25 pollutants.
26 (7)(6) "Cattle-dipping vat" means any structure,
27 excavation, or other facility constructed by any person, or
28 the site where such structure, excavation, or other facility
29 once existed, for the purpose of treating cattle or other
30 livestock with a chemical solution pursuant to or in
31 compliance with any local, state, or federal governmental
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1 program for the prevention, suppression, control, or
2 eradication of any dangerous, contagious, or infectious
3 diseases.
4 (8)(7) "Compression vessel" means any stationary
5 container, tank, or onsite integral piping system, or
6 combination thereof, which has a capacity of greater than 110
7 gallons, that is primarily used to store pollutants or
8 hazardous substances above atmospheric pressure or at a
9 reduced temperature in order to lower the vapor pressure of
10 the contents. Manifold compression vessels that function as a
11 single vessel shall be considered as one vessel.
12 (9) "Contaminant" means any physical, chemical,
13 biological, or radiological substance present in any medium
14 which may result in adverse effects to human health or the
15 environment or which creates an adverse nuisance,
16 organoleptic, or aesthetic condition in groundwater.
17 (10) "Contaminated site" means any contiguous land,
18 sediment, surface water, or groundwater areas that contain
19 contaminants that may be harmful to human health or the
20 environment.
21 (11)(8) "Department" means the Department of
22 Environmental Protection.
23 (12)(9) "Discharge" includes, but is not limited to,
24 any spilling, leaking, seeping, pouring, misapplying,
25 emitting, emptying, or dumping of any pollutant which occurs
26 and which affects lands and the surface and ground waters of
27 the state not regulated by ss. 376.011-376.21.
28 (13)(10) "Drycleaning facility" means a commercial
29 establishment that operates or has at some time in the past
30 operated for the primary purpose of drycleaning clothing and
31 other fabrics utilizing a process that involves any use of
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1 drycleaning solvents. The term "drycleaning facility" includes
2 laundry facilities that use drycleaning solvents as part of
3 their cleaning process. The term does not include a facility
4 that operates or has at some time in the past operated as a
5 uniform rental company or a companies, and linen supply
6 company companies regardless of whether the facility operates
7 as or was previously operated as a drycleaning facility.
8 (14)(11) "Drycleaning solvents" means any and all
9 nonaqueous solvents used in the cleaning of clothing and other
10 fabrics and includes perchloroethylene (also known as
11 tetrachloroethylene) and petroleum-based solvents, and their
12 breakdown products. For purposes of this definition,
13 "drycleaning solvents" only includes those drycleaning
14 solvents originating from use at a drycleaning facility or by
15 a wholesale supply facility.
16 (15)(12) "Dry drop-off facility" means any commercial
17 retail store that receives from customers clothing and other
18 fabrics for drycleaning or laundering at an offsite
19 drycleaning facility and that does not clean the clothing or
20 fabrics at the store utilizing drycleaning solvents.
21 (16)(13) "Engineering controls" means modifications to
22 a site to reduce or eliminate the potential for exposure to
23 petroleum products' chemicals of concern, drycleaning
24 solvents, or other contaminants. Such modifications may
25 include, but are not limited to, physical or hydraulic control
26 measures, capping, point of use treatments, or slurry walls.
27 (17)(14) "Wholesale supply facility" means a
28 commercial establishment that supplies drycleaning solvents to
29 drycleaning facilities.
30 (18)(15) "Facility" means a nonresidential location
31 containing, or which contained, any underground stationary
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1 tank or tanks which contain hazardous substances or pollutants
2 and have individual storage capacities greater than 110
3 gallons, or any aboveground stationary tank or tanks which
4 contain pollutants which are liquids at standard ambient
5 temperature and pressure and have individual storage
6 capacities greater than 550 gallons. This subsection shall not
7 apply to facilities covered by chapter 377, or containers
8 storing solid or gaseous pollutants, and agricultural tanks
9 having storage capacities of less than 550 gallons.
10 (19)(16) "Flow-through process tank" means an
11 aboveground tank that contains hazardous substances or
12 specified mineral acids as defined in s. 376.321 and that
13 forms an integral part of a production process through which
14 there is a steady, variable, recurring, or intermittent flow
15 of materials during the operation of the process.
16 Flow-through process tanks include, but are not limited to,
17 seal tanks, vapor recovery units, surge tanks, blend tanks,
18 feed tanks, check and delay tanks, batch tanks, oil-water
19 separators, or tanks in which mechanical, physical, or
20 chemical change of a material is accomplished.
21 (20)(17) "Hazardous substances" means those substances
22 defined as hazardous substances in the Comprehensive
23 Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act of
24 1980, Pub. L. No. 96-510, 94 Stat. 2767, as amended by the
25 Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of 1986.
26 (21)(18) "Institutional controls" means the
27 restriction on use or access to a site to eliminate or
28 minimize exposure to petroleum products' chemicals of concern,
29 drycleaning solvents, or other contaminants. Such
30 restrictions may include, but are not limited to, deed
31 restrictions, use restrictions, or restrictive zoning.
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1 (22) "Laundering on a wash, dry, and fold basis" means
2 the service provided by the owner or operator of a
3 coin-operated laundry to its customers whereby an employee of
4 the laundry washes, dries, and folds laundry for its
5 customers.
6 (23)(19) "Marine fueling facility" means a commercial
7 or recreational coastal facility, excluding a bulk product
8 facility, providing fuel to vessels.
9 (24)(20) "Natural attenuation" means an approach to
10 site rehabilitation that allows natural processes to contain
11 the spread of contamination and reduce the concentrations of
12 contaminants in contaminated groundwater and soil. Natural
13 attenuation processes may include the following: sorption,
14 biodegradation, chemical reactions with subsurface materials,
15 diffusion, dispersion, and volatilization. the verifiable
16 reduction of petroleum products' chemicals of concern through
17 natural processes which may include diffusion, dispersion,
18 absorption, and biodegradation.
19 (25)(21) "Operator" means any person operating a
20 facility, whether by lease, contract, or other form of
21 agreement.
22 (26)(22) "Owner" means any person owning a facility.
23 (27)(23) "Person" means any individual, partner, joint
24 venture, or corporation; any group of the foregoing, organized
25 or united for a business purpose; or any governmental entity.
26 (28)(24) "Person in charge" means the person on the
27 scene who is in direct, responsible charge of a facility from
28 which pollutants are discharged, when the discharge occurs.
29 (29)(25) "Person responsible for conducting site
30 rehabilitation" means the site owner, operator, or the person
31 designated by the site owner or operator on the reimbursement
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1 application. Mortgage holders and trust holders may be
2 eligible to participate in the reimbursement program pursuant
3 to s. 376.3071(12).
4 (30)(26) "Petroleum" includes:
5 (a) Oil, including crude petroleum oil and other
6 hydrocarbons, regardless of gravity, which are produced at the
7 well in liquid form by ordinary methods and which are not the
8 result of condensation of gas after it leaves the reservoir;
9 and
10 (b) All natural gas, including casinghead gas, and all
11 other hydrocarbons not defined as oil in paragraph (a).
12 (31)(27) "Petroleum product" means any liquid fuel
13 commodity made from petroleum, including, but not limited to,
14 all forms of fuel known or sold as diesel fuel, kerosene, all
15 forms of fuel known or sold as gasoline, and fuels containing
16 a mixture of gasoline and other products, excluding liquefied
17 petroleum gas and American Society for Testing and Materials
18 (ASTM) grades no. 5 and no. 6 residual oils, bunker C residual
19 oils, intermediate fuel oils (IFO) used for marine bunkering
20 with a viscosity of 30 and higher, asphalt oils, and
21 petrochemical feedstocks.
22 (32)(28) "Petroleum products' chemicals of concern"
23 means the constituents of petroleum products, including, but
24 not limited to, xylene, benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene,
25 naphthalene, and similar chemicals, and constituents in
26 petroleum products, including, but not limited to, methyl
27 tert-butyl ether (MTBE), lead, and similar chemicals found in
28 additives, provided the chemicals of concern are present as a
29 result of a discharge of petroleum products.
30 (33)(29) "Petroleum storage system" means a stationary
31 tank not covered under the provisions of chapter 377, together
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1 with any onsite integral piping or dispensing system
2 associated therewith, which is used, or intended to be used,
3 for the storage or supply of any petroleum product. Petroleum
4 storage systems may also include oil/water separators, and
5 other pollution control devices installed at petroleum product
6 terminals as defined in this chapter and bulk product
7 facilities pursuant to, or required by, permits or best
8 management practices in an effort to control surface discharge
9 of pollutants. Nothing herein shall be construed to allow a
10 continuing discharge in violation of department rules.
11 (34)(30) "Pollutants" includes any "product" as
12 defined in s. 377.19(11), pesticides, ammonia, chlorine, and
13 derivatives thereof, excluding liquefied petroleum gas.
14 (35)(31) "Pollution" means the presence on the land or
15 in the waters of the state of pollutants in quantities which
16 are or may be potentially harmful or injurious to human health
17 or welfare, animal or plant life, or property or which may
18 unreasonably interfere with the enjoyment of life or property,
19 including outdoor recreation.
20 (36)(32) "Real property owner" means the individual or
21 entity that is vested with ownership, dominion, or legal or
22 rightful title to the real property, or which has a ground
23 lease interest in the real property, on which a drycleaning
24 facility or wholesale supply facility is or has ever been
25 located.
26 (37)(33) "Response action" means any activity,
27 including evaluation, planning, design, engineering,
28 construction, and ancillary services, which is carried out in
29 response to any discharge, release, or threatened release of a
30 hazardous substance, pollutant, or other contaminant from a
31
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1 facility or site identified by the department under the
2 provisions of ss. 376.30-376.319.
3 (38)(34) "Response action contractor" means a person
4 who is carrying out any response action, including a person
5 retained or hired by such person to provide services relating
6 to a response action.
7 (39)(35) "Secretary" means the Secretary of
8 Environmental Protection.
9 (40)(36) "Site rehabilitation" means the assessment of
10 site contamination and the remediation activities that reduce
11 the levels of contaminants at a site through accepted
12 treatment methods to meet the cleanup target levels
13 established for that site.
14 (41)(37) "Source removal" means the removal of free
15 product, or the removal of contaminants from soil or sediment
16 that has been contaminated by petroleum or petroleum products
17 to the extent that leaching to groundwater or surface water
18 has occurred or is occurring petroleum products' chemicals of
19 concern leach into groundwater.
20 (42)(38) "Storage system" means a stationary tank not
21 covered under the provisions of chapter 377, together with any
22 onsite integral piping or dispensing system associated
23 therewith, which is or has been used for the storage or supply
24 of any petroleum product, pollutant, or hazardous substance as
25 defined herein, and which is registered with the Department of
26 Environmental Protection under this chapter or any rule
27 adopted pursuant hereto.
28 (43)(39) "Synergistic effects" means a scientific
29 principle that the toxicity that occurs as a result of
30 exposure is more than the sum of the toxicities of the
31 individual chemicals to which the individual is exposed theory
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1 under which the toxicity of chemicals exponentially increases
2 as the number of chemicals in a combination increases.
3 (44)(40) "Terminal facility" means any structure,
4 group of structures, motor vehicle, rolling stock, pipeline,
5 equipment, or related appurtenances which are used or capable
6 of being used for one or more of the following purposes:
7 pumping, refining, drilling for, producing, storing, handling,
8 transferring, or processing pollutants, provided such
9 pollutants are transferred over, under, or across any water,
10 estuaries, tidal flats, beaches, or waterfront lands,
11 including, but not limited to, any such facility and related
12 appurtenances owned or operated by a public utility or a
13 governmental or quasi-governmental body. In the event of a
14 ship-to-ship transfer of pollutants, the vessel going to or
15 coming from the place of transfer and a terminal facility
16 shall also be considered a terminal facility. For the
17 purposes of ss. 376.30-376.319, the term "terminal facility"
18 shall not be construed to include spill response vessels
19 engaged in response activities related to removal of
20 pollutants, or temporary storage facilities created to
21 temporarily store recovered pollutants and matter, or
22 waterfront facilities owned and operated by governmental
23 entities acting as agents of public convenience for persons
24 engaged in the drilling for or pumping, storing, handling,
25 transferring, processing, or refining of pollutants. However,
26 each person engaged in the drilling for or pumping, storing,
27 handling, transferring, processing, or refining of pollutants
28 through a waterfront facility owned and operated by such a
29 governmental entity shall be construed as a terminal facility.
30 (45)(41) "Transfer" or "transferred" includes
31 onloading, offloading, fueling, bunkering, lightering, removal
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1 of waste pollutants, or other similar transfers, between
2 terminal facility and vessel or vessel and vessel.
3 Section 9. Paragraph (d) of subsection (1) of section
4 376.303, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
5 376.303 Powers and duties of the Department of
6 Environmental Protection.--
7 (1) The department has the power and the duty to:
8 (d) Establish a registration program for drycleaning
9 facilities and wholesale supply facilities.
10 1. Owners or operators of drycleaning facilities and
11 wholesale supply facilities and real property owners suppliers
12 shall jointly register each facility owned and in operation
13 with the department by June 30, 1995, pay initial registration
14 fees by December 31, 1995, and pay annual renewal registration
15 fees by December 31, 1996, and each year thereafter, in
16 accordance with this subsection. If the registration form
17 cannot be jointly submitted, then the applicant shall provide
18 notice of the registration to other interested parties. The
19 department shall establish reasonable requirements for the
20 registration of such facilities. The department shall use
21 reasonable efforts to identify and notify drycleaning
22 facilities and wholesale supply facilities of the registration
23 requirements by certified mail, return receipt requested. The
24 department shall provide to the Department of Revenue a copy
25 of each applicant's registration materials, within 30 working
26 days of the receipt of the materials. This copy may be in such
27 electronic format as the two agencies mutually designate.
28 2.a. The department shall issue an invoice for annual
29 registration fees to each registered drycleaning facility or
30 wholesale supply facility by December 31 of each year. Owners
31 of drycleaning facilities and wholesale supply facilities
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1 shall submit to the department an initial fee of $100 and an
2 annual renewal registration fee of $100 for each drycleaning
3 facility or wholesale supply facility owned and in operation.
4 The fee shall be paid within 30 days after receipt of billing
5 by the department. Facilities that fail to pay their renewal
6 fee within 30 days after receipt of billing are subject to a
7 late fee of $75.
8 b. Revenues derived from registration, and renewal,
9 and late fees shall be deposited into the Water Quality
10 Assurance Trust Fund to be used as provided in s. 376.3078.
11 Section 10. Section 376.3078, Florida Statutes, is
12 amended to read:
13 376.3078 Drycleaning facility restoration; funds;
14 uses; liability; recovery of expenditures.--
15 (1) FINDINGS.--In addition to the legislative findings
16 set forth in s. 376.30, the Legislature finds and declares
17 that:
18 (a) Significant quantities of drycleaning solvents
19 have been discharged in the past at drycleaning facilities as
20 part of the normal operation of these facilities.
21 (b) Discharges of drycleaning solvents at such
22 drycleaning facilities have occurred and are occurring, and
23 pose a significant threat to the quality of the groundwaters
24 and inland surface waters of this state.
25 (c) Where contamination of the groundwater or surface
26 water has occurred, remedial measures have often been delayed
27 for long periods while determinations as to liability and the
28 extent of liability are made, and such delays result in the
29 continuation and intensification of the threat to the public
30 health, safety, and welfare; in greater damage to the
31
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1 environment; and in significantly higher costs to contain and
2 remove the contamination.
3 (d) Adequate financial resources must be readily
4 available to provide for the expeditious supply of safe and
5 reliable alternative sources of potable water to affected
6 persons and to provide a means for investigation and
7 rehabilitation of contaminated sites without delay.
8 (e) It is the intent of the Legislature to encourage
9 real property owners to undertake the voluntary cleanup of
10 property contaminated with drycleaning solvents and that the
11 immunity provisions of this section and all other available
12 defenses be construed in favor of real property owners.
13 (2) FUNDS; USES.--
14 (a) All penalties, judgments, recoveries,
15 reimbursements, loans, and other fees and charges related to
16 the implementation of this section and the tax revenues
17 levied, collected, and credited pursuant to ss. 376.70 and
18 376.75, and registration fees collected pursuant to s.
19 376.303(1)(d), and deductibles collected pursuant to paragraph
20 (3)(d), shall be deposited into the Water Quality Assurance
21 Trust Fund, to be used upon appropriation as provided in this
22 section. Charges against the funds for drycleaning facility
23 or wholesale supply site rehabilitation shall be made in
24 accordance with the provisions of this section.
25 (b) Whenever, in its determination, incidents of
26 contamination by drycleaning solvents related to the operation
27 of drycleaning facilities and wholesale supply facilities may
28 pose a threat to the environment or the public health, safety,
29 or welfare, the department shall obligate moneys available
30 pursuant to this section to provide for:
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1 1. Prompt investigation and assessment of the
2 contaminated drycleaning facility or wholesale supply facility
3 sites.
4 2. Expeditious treatment, restoration, or replacement
5 of potable water supplies as provided in s. 376.30(3)(c)1.
6 3. Rehabilitation of contaminated drycleaning facility
7 or wholesale supply facility sites, which shall consist of
8 rehabilitation of affected soil, groundwater, and surface
9 waters, using the most cost-effective alternative that is
10 technologically feasible and reliable and that provides
11 adequate protection of the public health, safety, and welfare
12 and minimizes environmental damage, in accordance with the
13 site selection and rehabilitation criteria established by the
14 department under subsection (4), except that nothing in this
15 subsection shall be construed to authorize the department to
16 obligate drycleaning facility restoration funds for payment of
17 costs that may be associated with, but are not integral to,
18 drycleaning facility or wholesale supply facility site
19 rehabilitation.
20 4. Maintenance and monitoring of contaminated
21 drycleaning facility or wholesale supply facility sites.
22 5. Inspection and supervision of activities described
23 in this subsection.
24 6. Payment of expenses incurred by the department in
25 its efforts to obtain from responsible parties the payment or
26 recovery of reasonable costs resulting from the activities
27 described in this subsection.
28 7. Payment of any other reasonable costs of
29 administration, including those administrative costs incurred
30 by the Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services in
31 providing field and laboratory services, toxicological risk
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1 assessment, and other assistance to the department in the
2 investigation of drinking water contamination complaints and
3 costs associated with public information and education
4 activities.
5 8. Reasonable costs of restoring property as nearly as
6 practicable to the conditions that existed prior to activities
7 associated with contamination assessment or remedial action.
8
9 The department shall not obligate funds in excess of the
10 annual appropriation.
11 (c) Drycleaning facility restoration funds may not be
12 used to:
13 1. Restore sites that are contaminated by solvents
14 normally used in drycleaning operations where the
15 contamination at such sites did not result from the operation
16 of a drycleaning facility or wholesale supply facility.
17 2. Restore sites that are contaminated by drycleaning
18 solvents being transported to or from a drycleaning facility
19 or wholesale supply facility.
20 3. Fund any costs related to the restoration of any
21 site that has been identified to qualify for listing, or is
22 listed, on the National Priority List pursuant to the
23 Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and
24 Liability Act of 1980 as amended by the Superfund Amendments
25 and Reauthorization Act of 1986, or that is under an order
26 from the United States Environmental Protection Agency
27 pursuant to s. 3008(h) of the Resource Conservation and
28 Recovery Act as amended, or has obtained, or is required to
29 obtain a permit for the operation of a hazardous waste
30 treatment, storage, or disposal facility, a postclosure
31
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1 permit, or a permit pursuant to the federal Hazardous and
2 Solid Waste Amendments of 1984.
3 4. Pay any costs associated with any fine, penalty, or
4 action brought against a drycleaning facility owner or
5 operator or wholesale supply facility or real property owner
6 under local, state, or federal law.
7 5. Pay any costs related to the restoration of any
8 site that is operated or has at some time in the past operated
9 as a uniform rental or linen supply facility, regardless of
10 whether the site operates as or was previously operated as a
11 drycleaning facility or wholesale supply facility.
12 (3) REHABILITATION LIABILITY.--In accordance with the
13 eligibility provisions of this section, no real property owner
14 or no person who owns or operates, or who otherwise could be
15 liable as a result of the operation of, a drycleaning facility
16 or a wholesale supply facility shall be subject to
17 administrative or judicial action brought by or on behalf of
18 any state or local government or agency thereof or by or on
19 behalf of any person to compel rehabilitation or pay for the
20 costs of rehabilitation of environmental contamination
21 resulting from the discharge of drycleaning solvents. Subject
22 to the delays that may occur as a result of the prioritization
23 of sites under this section for any qualified site, costs for
24 activities described in paragraph (2)(b) shall be absorbed at
25 the expense of the drycleaning facility restoration funds,
26 without recourse to reimbursement or recovery from the real
27 property owner or the owner or operator of the drycleaning
28 facility or the wholesale supply facility.
29 (a) With regard to drycleaning facilities or wholesale
30 supply facilities that have operated as drycleaning facilities
31 or wholesale supply facilities on or after October 1, 1994,
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1 any such drycleaning facility or wholesale supply facility at
2 which there exists contamination by drycleaning solvents shall
3 be eligible under this subsection regardless of when the
4 drycleaning contamination was discovered, provided that the
5 drycleaning facility or the wholesale supply facility:
6 1. Has been registered with the department;
7 2. Is determined by the department to be in compliance
8 with the department's rules regulating drycleaning solvents,
9 drycleaning facilities, or wholesale supply facilities on or
10 after November 19, 1980;
11 3. Has not been operated in a grossly negligent manner
12 at any time on or after November 19, 1980;
13 4. Has not been identified to qualify for listing, nor
14 is listed, on the National Priority List pursuant to the
15 Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and
16 Liability Act of 1980 as amended by the Superfund Amendments
17 and Reauthorization Act of 1986, and as subsequently amended;
18 5. Is not under an order from the United States
19 Environmental Protection Agency pursuant to s. 3008(h) of the
20 Resource Conservation and Recovery Act as amended (42 U.S.C.A.
21 s. 6928(h)), or has not obtained and is not required to obtain
22 a permit for the operation of a hazardous waste treatment,
23 storage, or disposal facility, a postclosure permit, or a
24 permit pursuant to the federal Hazardous and Solid Waste
25 Amendments of 1984;
26
27 and provided that the real property owner or the owner or
28 operator of the drycleaning facility or the wholesale supply
29 facility has not willfully concealed the discharge of
30 drycleaning solvents and has remitted all taxes due pursuant
31 to ss. 376.70 and 376.75, has provided documented evidence of
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1 contamination by drycleaning solvents as required by the rules
2 developed pursuant to this section, has reported the
3 contamination prior to December 31, 1998 2005, and has not
4 denied the department access to the site.
5 (b) With regard to drycleaning facilities or wholesale
6 supply facilities that cease to be operated as drycleaning
7 facilities or wholesale supply facilities prior to October 1,
8 1994, such facilities, at which there exists contamination by
9 drycleaning solvents, shall be eligible under this subsection
10 regardless of when the contamination was discovered, provided
11 that the drycleaning facility or wholesale supply facility:
12 1. Was not determined by the department, within a
13 reasonable time after the department's discovery, to have been
14 out of compliance with the department rules regulating
15 drycleaning solvents, drycleaning facilities, or wholesale
16 supply facilities implemented which were in effect at the time
17 of operation at any time on or after November 19, 1980;
18 2. Was not operated in a grossly negligent manner at
19 any time on or after November 19, 1980;
20 3. Has not been identified to qualify for listing, nor
21 is listed, on the National Priority List pursuant to the
22 Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and
23 Liability Act of 1980, as amended by the Superfund Amendments
24 and Reauthorization Act of 1986, and as subsequently amended;
25 and
26 4. Is not under an order from the United States
27 Environmental Protection Agency pursuant to s. 3008(h) of the
28 Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, as amended, or has not
29 obtained and is not required to obtain a permit for the
30 operation of a hazardous waste treatment, storage, or disposal
31
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1 facility, a postclosure permit, or a permit pursuant to the
2 federal Hazardous and Solid Waste Amendments of 1984;
3
4 and provided that the real property owner or the owner or
5 operator of the drycleaning facility or the wholesale supply
6 facility has not willfully concealed the discharge of
7 drycleaning solvents, has provided documented evidence of
8 contamination by drycleaning solvents as required by the rules
9 developed pursuant to this section, has reported the
10 contamination prior to December 31, 1998, December 31, 2005,
11 and has not denied the department access to the site.
12 (c) For purposes of determining eligibility, a
13 drycleaning facility or wholesale supply facility was operated
14 in a grossly negligent manner if the department determines
15 that the owner or operator of the drycleaning facility or the
16 wholesale supply facility:
17 1. Willfully discharged drycleaning solvents onto the
18 soils or into the waters of the state after November 19, 1980,
19 with the knowledge, intent, and purpose that the discharge
20 would result in harm to the environment or to public health or
21 result in a violation of the law;
22 2. Willfully concealed a discharge of drycleaning
23 solvents with the knowledge, intent, and purpose that the
24 concealment would result in harm to the environment or to
25 public health or result in a violation of the law; or
26 3. Willfully violated a local, state, or federal law
27 or rule regulating the operation of drycleaning facilities or
28 wholesale supply facilities with the knowledge, intent, and
29 purpose that the act would result in harm to the environment
30 or to public health or result in a violation of the law. For
31 purposes of this subsection, the willful discharge of
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1 drycleaning solvents onto the soils or into the waters of the
2 state after November 19, 1980, or the willful concealment of a
3 discharge of drycleaning solvents, or a willful violation of
4 local, state, or federal law or rule regulating the operation
5 of drycleaning facilities or wholesale supply facilities shall
6 be construed to be gross negligence in the operation of a
7 drycleaning facility or wholesale supply facility.
8 (d)1. With respect to eligible drycleaning solvent
9 contamination reported to the department as part of a
10 completed application as required by the rules developed
11 pursuant to this section by June 30, 1997, the costs of
12 activities described in paragraph (2)(b) shall be absorbed at
13 the expense of the drycleaning facility restoration funds,
14 less a $1,000 deductible per incident, which shall be paid by
15 the applicant or current property owner. The deductible shall
16 be paid within 60 days after receipt of billing by the
17 department.
18 2. For contamination reported to the department as
19 part of a completed application as required by the rules
20 developed under this section, from July 1, 1997, through
21 September 30, 1998 June 30, 2001, the costs shall be absorbed
22 at the expense of the drycleaning facility restoration funds,
23 less a $5,000 deductible per incident. The deductible shall be
24 paid within 60 days after receipt of billing by the
25 department.
26 3. For contamination reported to the department as
27 part of a completed application as required by the rules
28 developed pursuant to this section from October 1, 1998 July
29 1, 2001, through December 31, 1998 2005, the costs shall be
30 absorbed at the expense of the drycleaning facility
31 restoration funds, less a $10,000 deductible per incident. The
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1 deductible shall be paid within 60 days after receipt of
2 billing by the department.
3 4. For contamination reported after December 31, 1998
4 2005, no costs will be absorbed at the expense of the
5 drycleaning facility restoration funds.
6 (e) The provisions of this subsection shall not apply
7 to any site where the department has been denied site access
8 to implement the provisions of this section.
9 (f) In order to identify those drycleaning facilities
10 and wholesale supply facilities that have experienced
11 contamination resulting from the discharge of drycleaning
12 solvents and to ensure the most expedient rehabilitation of
13 such sites, the owners and operators of drycleaning facilities
14 and wholesale supply facilities are encouraged to detect and
15 report contamination from drycleaning solvents related to the
16 operation of drycleaning facilities and wholesale supply
17 facilities. The department shall establish reasonable
18 guidelines for the written reporting of drycleaning
19 contamination and shall distribute forms to registrants under
20 s. 376.303(1)(d), and to other interested parties upon
21 request, to be used for such purpose.
22 (g) A report of drycleaning solvent contamination at a
23 drycleaning facility or wholesale supply facility made to the
24 department by any person in accordance with this subsection,
25 or any rules promulgated pursuant hereto, may not be used
26 directly as evidence of liability for such discharge in any
27 civil or criminal trial arising out of the discharge.
28 (h) The provisions of this subsection shall not apply
29 to drycleaning facilities owned or operated by the state or
30 Federal Government.
31
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1 (i) Due to the value of Florida's potable water, it is
2 the intent of the Legislature that the department initiate and
3 facilitate as many cleanups as possible utilizing the
4 resources of the state, local governments, and the private
5 sector. The department is authorized to adopt necessary rules
6 and enter into contracts to carry out the intent of this
7 subsection and to limit or prevent future contamination from
8 the operation of drycleaning facilities and wholesale supply
9 facilities.
10 (j) It is not the intent of the Legislature that the
11 state become the owner or operator of a drycleaning facility
12 or wholesale supply facility by engaging in state-conducted
13 cleanup.
14 (k) The owner, operator, and either the real property
15 owner or agent of the real property owner may apply for the
16 Drycleaning Contamination Cleanup Program by jointly
17 submitting a completed application package to the department
18 pursuant to the rules that shall be adopted by the department.
19 If the application cannot be jointly submitted, then the
20 applicant shall provide notice of the application to other
21 interested parties. After reviewing the completed application
22 package, the department shall notify the applicant in writing
23 as to whether the drycleaning facility or wholesale supply
24 facility is eligible for the program. If the department denies
25 eligibility for a completed application package, the notice of
26 denial shall specify the reasons for the denial, including
27 specific and substantive findings of fact, and shall
28 constitute agency action subject to the provisions of chapter
29 120. For the purposes of ss. 120.569 and 120.57, the real
30 property owner and the owner and operator of a drycleaning
31 facility or wholesale supply facility which is the subject of
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1 a decision by the department with regard to eligibility shall
2 be deemed to be parties whose substantial interests are
3 determined by the department's decision to approve or deny
4 eligibility.
5 (l) Eligibility under this subsection applies to the
6 drycleaning facility or wholesale supply facility. A
7 determination of eligibility or ineligibility shall not be
8 affected by any conveyance of the ownership of the drycleaning
9 facility, wholesale supply facility, or the real property on
10 which such facility is located. Nothing contained in this
11 chapter shall be construed to allow a drycleaning facility or
12 wholesale supply facility which would not be eligible under
13 this subsection to become eligible as a result of the
14 conveyance of the ownership of the ineligible drycleaning
15 facility or wholesale supply facility to another owner.
16 (m) If funding for the drycleaning contamination
17 rehabilitation program is eliminated, the provisions of this
18 subsection shall not apply.
19 (n)1. The department shall have the authority to
20 cancel the eligibility of any drycleaning facility or
21 wholesale supply facility that submits fraudulent information
22 in the application package or that fails to continuously
23 comply with the conditions of eligibility set forth in this
24 subsection, or has not remitted all fees pursuant to s.
25 376.303(1)(d), or has not remitted the deductible payments
26 pursuant to paragraph (d).
27 2. If the program eligibility of a drycleaning
28 facility or wholesale supply facility is subject to
29 cancellation pursuant to this section, then the department
30 shall notify the applicant in writing of its intent to cancel
31 program eligibility and shall state the reason or reasons for
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1 cancellation. The applicant shall have 45 days to resolve the
2 reason or reasons for cancellation to the satisfaction of the
3 department. If, after 45 days, the applicant has not resolved
4 the reason or reasons for cancellation to the satisfaction of
5 the department, the order of cancellation shall become final
6 and shall be subject to the provisions of chapter 120.
7 (o) A real property owner shall not be subject to
8 administrative or judicial action brought by or on behalf of
9 any person or local or state government, or agency thereof,
10 for gross negligence or violations of department rules prior
11 to January 1, 1990, which resulted from the operation of a
12 drycleaning facility, provided that the real property owner
13 demonstrates that:
14 1. The real property owner had ownership in the
15 property at the time of the gross negligence or violation of
16 department rules and did not cause or contribute to
17 contamination on the property;
18 2. The real property owner was a distinct and separate
19 entity from the owner and operator of the drycleaning
20 facility, and did not have an ownership interest in or share
21 in the profits of the drycleaning facility;
22 3. The real property owner did not participate in the
23 operation or management of the drycleaning facility;
24 4. The real property owner complied with all discharge
25 reporting requirements, and did not conceal any contamination;
26 and
27 5. The department has not been denied access.
28
29 The This defense provided by this paragraph does shall not
30 apply to any liability under pursuant to a federally delegated
31 program.
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1 (p) A person whose property becomes contaminated due
2 to geophysical or hydrologic reasons from the operation of a
3 nearby drycleaning or wholesale supply facility and whose
4 property has never been occupied by a business that utilized
5 or stored drycleaning solvents or similar constituents is not
6 subject to administrative or judicial action brought by or on
7 behalf of another to compel the rehabilitation of or the
8 payment of the costs for the rehabilitation of sites
9 contaminated by drycleaning solvents, provided that the
10 person:
11 1. Does not own and has never held an ownership
12 interest in, or shared in the profits of, the drycleaning
13 facility operated at the source location;
14 2. Did not participate in the operation or management
15 of the drycleaning facility at the source location; and
16 3. Did not cause, contribute to, or exacerbate the
17 release or threat of release of any hazardous substance
18 through any act or omission.
19
20 The defense provided by this paragraph does not apply to any
21 liability under a federally delegated program.
22 (q) Nothing in this subsection precludes the
23 department from considering information and documentation
24 provided by private consultants, local government programs,
25 federal agencies, or any individual which is relevant to an
26 eligibility determination if the department provides the
27 applicant with reasonable access to the information and its
28 origin.
29 (4) SITE SELECTION AND REHABILITATION CRITERIA.--It is
30 the intent of the Legislature to protect the health of all
31 people under actual circumstances of exposure. By July 1,
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1 1999, the secretary of the department shall establish criteria
2 by rule for the purpose of determining, on a site-specific
3 basis, the rehabilitation program tasks that comprise a site
4 rehabilitation program, including a voluntary site
5 rehabilitation program, and the level at which a
6 rehabilitation program task and a site rehabilitation program
7 may be deemed completed. In establishing the rule, the
8 department shall incorporate, to the maximum extent feasible,
9 risk-based corrective action principles to achieve protection
10 of human health and safety and the environment in a
11 cost-effective manner as provided in this subsection. The
12 rule shall also include protocols for the use of natural
13 attenuation and the issuance of "no further action" letters.
14 The criteria for determining what constitutes a rehabilitation
15 program task or completion of a site rehabilitation program
16 task or site rehabilitation program, including a voluntary
17 site rehabilitation program, must:
18 (a) Consider the current exposure and potential risk
19 of exposure to humans and the environment, including multiple
20 pathways of exposure. The physical, chemical, and biological
21 characteristics of each contaminant must be considered in
22 order to determine the feasibility of risk-based corrective
23 action assessment.
24 (b) Establish the point of compliance at the source of
25 the contamination. However, the department is authorized to
26 temporarily move the point of compliance to the boundary of
27 the property, or to the edge of the plume when the plume is
28 within the property boundary, while cleanup, including cleanup
29 through natural attenuation processes in conjunction with
30 appropriate monitoring, is proceeding. The department also is
31 authorized, pursuant to criteria provided for in this section,
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1 to temporarily extend the point of compliance beyond the
2 property boundary with appropriate monitoring, if such
3 extension is needed to facilitate natural attenuation or to
4 address the current conditions of the plume, provided human
5 health, public safety, and the environment are protected.
6 When temporarily extending the point of compliance beyond the
7 property boundary, it cannot be extended further than the
8 lateral extent of the plume at the time of execution of the
9 voluntary cleanup agreement, if known, or the lateral extent
10 of the plume as defined at the time of site assessment.
11 Temporary extension of the point of compliance beyond the
12 property boundary, as provided in this paragraph, must include
13 actual notice by the person responsible for site
14 rehabilitation to local governments and the owners of any
15 property into which the point of compliance is allowed to
16 extend and constructive notice to residents and business
17 tenants of the property into which the point of compliance is
18 allowed to extend. Persons receiving notice pursuant to this
19 paragraph shall have the opportunity to comment within 30 days
20 of receipt of the notice.
21 (c) Ensure that the site-specific cleanup goal is that
22 all sites contaminated with drycleaning solvents ultimately
23 achieve the applicable cleanup target levels provided in this
24 section. In the circumstances provided below, and after
25 constructive notice and opportunity to comment within 30 days
26 from receipt of the notice to local government, to owners of
27 any property into which the point of compliance is allowed to
28 extend, and to residents on any property into which the point
29 of compliance is allowed to extend, the department may allow
30 concentrations of contaminants to temporarily exceed the
31 applicable cleanup target levels while cleanup, including
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1 cleanup through natural attenuation processes in conjunction
2 with appropriate monitoring, is proceeding, if human health,
3 public safety, and the environment are protected.
4 (d) Allow the use of institutional or engineering
5 controls at sites contaminated with drycleaning solvents,
6 where appropriate, to eliminate or control the potential
7 exposure to contaminants of humans or the environment. The use
8 of controls must be preapproved by the department and only
9 after constructive notice and opportunity to comment within 30
10 days from receipt of notice is provided to local governments,
11 to owners of any property into which the point of compliance
12 is allowed to extend, and to residents on any property into
13 which the point of compliance is allowed to extend. When
14 institutional or engineering controls are implemented to
15 control exposure, the removal of the controls must have prior
16 department approval and must be accompanied by the resumption
17 of active cleanup, or other approved controls, unless cleanup
18 target levels under this section have been achieved.
19 (e) Consider the additive effects of contaminants.
20 The synergistic and antagonistic effects shall also be
21 considered when the scientific data become available.
22 (f) Take into consideration individual site
23 characteristics, which shall include, but not be limited to,
24 the current and projected use of the affected groundwater and
25 surface water in the vicinity of the site, current and
26 projected land uses of the area affected by the contamination,
27 the exposed population, the degree and extent of
28 contamination, the rate of contaminant migration, the apparent
29 or potential rate of contaminant degradation through natural
30 attenuation processes, the location of the plume, and the
31
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1 potential for further migration in relation to site property
2 boundaries.
3 (g) Apply state water quality standards as follows:
4 1. Cleanup target levels for each contaminant found in
5 groundwater shall be the applicable state water quality
6 standards. Where such standards do not exist, the cleanup
7 target levels for groundwater shall be based on the minimum
8 criteria specified in department rule. The department shall
9 consider the following, as appropriate, in establishing the
10 applicable minimum criteria: calculations using a lifetime
11 cancer risk level of 1.0E-6; a hazard index of 1 or less; the
12 best achievable detection limit; the naturally occurring
13 background concentration; or nuisance, organoleptic, and
14 aesthetic considerations.
15 2. Where surface waters are exposed to contaminated
16 groundwater, the cleanup target levels for the contaminants
17 shall be based on the lower of the groundwater or surface
18 water standards as established by department rule. The point
19 of measuring compliance with the surface water standards shall
20 be in the groundwater immediately adjacent to the surface
21 water body.
22 3. The department may set alternative cleanup target
23 levels based upon the person responsible for site
24 rehabilitation demonstrating, using site-specific modeling and
25 risk assessment studies, that human health, public safety, and
26 the environment are protected to the same degree as provided
27 in subparagraphs 1. and 2. Where a state water quality
28 standard is applicable, a deviation may not result in the
29 application of cleanup target levels more stringent than the
30 standard. In determining whether it is appropriate to
31 establish alternative cleanup target levels at a site, the
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1 department must consider the effectiveness of source removal
2 that has been completed at the site and the practical
3 likelihood of the use of low yield or poor quality
4 groundwater, the use of groundwater near marine surface water
5 bodies, the current and projected use of the affected
6 groundwater in the vicinity of the site, or the use of
7 groundwater in the immediate vicinity of the contaminated
8 area, where it has been demonstrated that the groundwater
9 contamination is not migrating away from such localized
10 source, provided human health, public safety, and the
11 environment are protected.
12 (h) Provide for the department to issue a "no further
13 action order," with conditions where appropriate, when
14 alternative cleanup target levels established pursuant to
15 subparagraph (g)3. have been achieved, or when the person
16 responsible for site rehabilitation can demonstrate that the
17 cleanup target level is unachievable within available
18 technologies. Prior to issuing such an order, the department
19 shall consider the feasibility of an alternative site
20 rehabilitation technology in the area.
21 (i) Establish appropriate cleanup target levels for
22 soils.
23 1. In establishing soil cleanup target levels for
24 human exposure to each contaminant found in soils from the
25 land surface to 2 feet below land surface, the department
26 shall consider the following, as appropriate: calculations
27 using a lifetime cancer risk level of 1.0E-6; a hazard index
28 of 1 or less; the best achievable detection limit; or the
29 naturally occurring background concentration. Institutional
30 controls or other methods shall be used to prevent human
31 exposure to contaminated soils more than 2 feet below the land
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1 surface. Any removal of such institutional controls shall
2 require such contaminated soils to be remediated.
3 2. Leachability-based soil target levels shall be
4 based on protection of the groundwater cleanup target levels
5 or the alternate cleanup target levels for groundwater
6 established pursuant to this paragraph, as appropriate. Source
7 removal and other cost-effective alternatives that are
8 technologically feasible shall be considered in achieving the
9 leachability soil target levels established by the department.
10 The leachability goals shall not be applicable if the
11 department determines, based upon individual site
12 characteristics, that contaminants will not leach into the
13 groundwater at levels which pose a threat to human health,
14 public safety, and the environment.
15 3. The department may set alternative cleanup target
16 levels based upon the person responsible for site
17 rehabilitation using site-specific modeling and risk
18 assessment studies, that human health, public safety, and the
19 environment are protected.
20
21 The department shall require source removal, if warranted and
22 cost-effective. Once source removal at a site is complete,
23 the department shall reevaluate the site to determine the
24 degree of active cleanup needed to continue. Further, the
25 department shall determine if the reevaluated site qualifies
26 for monitoring only or if no further action is required to
27 rehabilitate the site. If additional site rehabilitation is
28 necessary to reach "no further action" status, the department
29 is encouraged to utilize natural attenuation and monitoring
30 where site conditions warrant.
31
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1 (5) DISPOSAL OR REUSE.--The cleanup criteria
2 established pursuant to subsection (4) do not constitute
3 disposal or reuse criteria. Offsite disposal or relocation
4 must be in accordance with all applicable federal, state, and
5 local regulations. that drycleaning facility restoration funds
6 in the Water Quality Assurance Trust Fund be used to fund the
7 rehabilitation of sites that pose a significant threat to the
8 public health, safety, or welfare.
9 (a) The department shall adopt rules to establish
10 priorities for state-conducted rehabilitation at contaminated
11 drycleaning facility or wholesale supply facility sites based
12 upon factors that include, but need not be limited to:
13 1. The degree to which human health, safety, or
14 welfare may be affected by exposure to the contamination.
15 2. The size of the population or area affected by the
16 contamination.
17 3. The present and future uses of the affected aquifer
18 or surface waters, with particular consideration as to the
19 probability that the contamination is substantially affecting,
20 or will migrate to and substantially affect, a known public or
21 private source of potable water.
22 4. The effect of the contamination on the environment.
23
24 Drycleaning facility restoration funds shall then be obligated
25 for activities described in paragraph (2)(b) at individual
26 sites in accordance with the criteria established in this
27 subsection. However, nothing in this paragraph shall be
28 construed to restrict the department from modifying the
29 priority status of a drycleaning facility or wholesale supply
30 facility rehabilitation site where conditions warrant.
31
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1 (b) Criteria for determining completion of site
2 rehabilitation program tasks and site rehabilitation programs
3 shall be based upon the factors set forth in paragraph (a) and
4 the following additional factors:
5 1. Individual site characteristics, including natural
6 rehabilitation processes.
7 2. Applicable state water quality standards.
8 3. Whether deviation from state water quality
9 standards or from established criteria is appropriate, based
10 upon the degree to which the desired rehabilitation level is
11 achievable and can be reasonably and cost-effectively
12 implemented within available technologies or control
13 strategies; except that, where a state water quality standard
14 is applicable, such deviation may not result in the
15 application of standards more stringent than said standard.
16 (6) INTENT; APPLICATION.--
17 (a)(c) It is recognized that restoration of
18 groundwater resources contaminated with certain drycleaning
19 solvents, such as perchloroethylene, may not be achievable
20 using currently available technology. In situations where the
21 use of available technology is not anticipated to achieve
22 water quality standards, the department, at its discretion,
23 may use innovative technology that has been field-tested
24 through a federal innovative technology program and that has
25 engineering and cost data available.
26 (b)(d) Nothing in this subsection shall be construed
27 to restrict the department from temporarily postponing
28 completion of any site rehabilitation program for which
29 drycleaning facility restoration funds are being expended
30 whenever such postponement is deemed necessary in order to
31 make funds available for rehabilitation of a drycleaning
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1 facility or wholesale supply facility contamination site with
2 a higher priority status.
3 (c)(e) The department shall provide the rehabilitation
4 of eligible drycleaning facilities and wholesale supply
5 facilities consistent with this subsection. Nothing in this
6 chapter shall subject the department to liability for any
7 action that may be required of the owner, operator, or real
8 property owner by any private party or any local, state, or
9 federal government entity.
10 (6)(5) SCORING SYSTEM.--The department shall use the
11 following scoring system to rank and prioritize sites for
12 rehabilitation that have been determined to be eligible for
13 the program pursuant to subsection (3). If the application
14 package documents that a site has one of the following
15 characteristics, then the site shall be allocated the
16 corresponding number of points.
17 (a) Any site having a condition that exhibits a fire
18 or explosion hazard shall be of highest priority.
19 (b) Threat to drinking water supply wells.
20 1. Capacity:
21 a. A site shall be awarded points based on the
22 permitted capacity of the largest uncontaminated public water
23 supply well or the capacity of the largest uncontaminated
24 private drinking water well constructed prior to the date of
25 contamination discovery that is located within 1 mile of the
26 site. If multiple uncontaminated wells of the same capacity
27 are present within 1 mile, then select the uncontaminated well
28 closest to the site. Points shall be awarded as follows:
29 For uncontaminated wells (only one shall apply):
30
31 Capacity (gallons per day) Points
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1 greater than 1,000,000 90
2 100,000 to 1,000,000 60
3 less than 100,000 30
4
5 b. If no points were awarded from sub-subparagraph a.,
6 and contaminated wells are present, then the site shall be
7 awarded points based on the permitted capacity of the largest
8 contaminated public water supply well or the capacity of the
9 largest contaminated private drinking water well constructed
10 prior to the date of contamination discovery that is located
11 within 1 mile of the site. If multiple contaminated wells of
12 the same capacity are present within 1 mile, then select the
13 contaminated well closest to the site. Points shall be
14 awarded as follows:
15 For contaminated wells (only one shall apply):
16
17 Capacity (gallons per day) Points
18 greater than 1,000,000 25
19 100,000 to 1,000,000 15
20 less than 100,000 5
21
22 2. A site shall be awarded points based on the
23 proximity of the public water supply well or private well
24 selected in subparagraph 1. as follows. If the well selected
25 is an uncontaminated well, then select only one from
26 sub-subparagraph a. below. If the well selected is a
27 contaminated well, then select only one from sub-subparagraph
28 b. below:
29 a. For uncontaminated wells:
30
31 Distance Points
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1 within 500 feet 40
2 within 1/4 mile 30
3 within 1/2 mile 20
4 within 1 mile 10
5
6 b. For contaminated wells:
7
8 Distance Points
9 within 500 feet 15
10 within 1/4 mile 10
11 within 1/2 mile 8
12 within 1 mile 5
13
14 (c) A site shall be awarded points based on
15 groundwater vulnerability to contamination using the
16 department's current DRASTIC Index (only one shall apply):
17
18 DRASTIC Index Points
19 79 and below 3
20 80 to 99 6
21 100 to 119 9
22 120 to 139 12
23 140 to 159 15
24 160 to 179 18
25 180 to 199 21
26 200 to 266 24
27
28 (d) Aquifer Classification (select all that apply):
29 1. A site located in a G-I or F-I aquifer area shall
30 be awarded 3 points.
31
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1 2. A site located in a G-II aquifer area shall be
2 awarded 2 points.
3 3. A site located in a United States Environmental
4 Protection Agency designated sole source aquifer area shall be
5 awarded 1 point.
6 (e) Conditions favoring a continual source (only one
7 shall apply):
8 1. If a site has chlorinated drycleaning solvents in
9 the soil at concentrations greater than or equal to 1
10 milligram per kilogram or in the groundwater at concentrations
11 greater than or equal to 1,500 micrograms per liter, then the
12 site shall be awarded 7 points.
13 2. If the site has chlorinated drycleaning solvents in
14 the soil at concentrations less than 1 milligram per kilogram
15 or in the groundwater at concentrations less than 1,500
16 micrograms per liter, then the site shall be awarded 2 points.
17 (f) Environmental Setting (select all that apply):
18 1. A site located within 1/2 mile of an
19 uncontaminated surface water body used as a permitted public
20 water system shall be awarded 10 points.
21 2. A site located within 1/2 mile of an Outstanding
22 Florida Water body shall be awarded 2 points.
23 3. A site located within 1/4 mile of a surface water
24 body shall be awarded 1 point.
25 4. A site located within 1/4 mile of an area of
26 critical state concern as defined in chapter 380 shall be
27 awarded 2 points.
28 (7)(6) SCORING SYSTEM APPLICATION.--
29 (a) If the department determines that a site is
30 eligible for the program, pursuant to this section, then the
31
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1 department shall develop a score for the site in accordance
2 with provisions of subsection (5).
3 (b) A priority list of eligible sites shall be
4 developed, by the department, based on an ordering of scored
5 sites such that the highest-scored sites shall be of highest
6 priority for rehabilitation.
7 (c) Scored sites shall be incorporated into the
8 priority list on a quarterly basis with the ranking of all
9 sites previously on the list being adjusted accordingly.
10 (d) Assignments for program tasks to be conducted by
11 state contractors shall be made according to the current
12 priority list and shall be based on the department
13 determination of contractor logistics, geographical
14 considerations, and other criteria the department determines
15 are necessary to achieve cost-effective site rehabilitation.
16 (e) Assignments for the program tasks shall be made
17 beginning with the highest-ranked sites on the priority list
18 at the effective date the assignment is made and proceed
19 through lower-ranked sites.
20 (f) All scored sites will be added to the priority
21 list on a quarterly basis until all the sites have been
22 assigned.
23 (g) Once an assignment is made, a subsequent quarterly
24 adjustment to the priority list shall not alter that
25 assignment unless a more cost-effective approach can be
26 achieved by reassignment, a compelling public health condition
27 or an environmental condition warrants a reassignment, or the
28 reassignment is otherwise in the public interest.
29 (h) Regardless of the score of a site, the department
30 may initiate emergency action for those sites that, in the
31 judgment of the department, are a threat to human health and
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1 safety, or where failure to prevent migration of drycleaning
2 solvents would cause irreversible damage to the environment.
3 (8)(7) REQUIREMENT FOR DRYCLEANING FACILITIES.--It is
4 the intent of the Legislature that the following drycleaning
5 solvent containment shall be required of the owners or
6 operators of drycleaning facilities, as follows:
7 (a) Owners or operators of drycleaning facilities
8 shall by January 1, 1997, install dikes or other containment
9 structures around each machine or item of equipment in which
10 drycleaning solvents are used and around any area in which
11 solvents or waste-containing solvents are stored. Such dikes
12 or containment structures shall be capable of containing 110
13 percent of the capacity of each such machine and each such
14 storage area. To the extent practicable, each owner or
15 operator of a drycleaning facility shall seal or otherwise
16 render impervious those portions of all dikes' floor surfaces
17 upon which any drycleaning solvents may leak, spill, or
18 otherwise be released.
19 (b) For drycleaning facilities that commence operating
20 subsequent to January 1, 1996, the owners or operators of such
21 facilities shall, prior to the commencement of operations,
22 install beneath each machine or item of equipment in which
23 drycleaning solvents are used a rigid and impermeable
24 containment vessel capable of containing 110 percent of the
25 total tank capacity of each machine.
26 (c) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (3),
27 the owner or operator of a drycleaning facility or wholesale
28 supply facility at which there is a spill of more than 1 quart
29 of drycleaning solvent outside of a containment structure, on
30 or after July 1, 1995, shall report the spill to the state
31 through the State Warning Point pursuant to s. 403.161(1)(d)
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1 immediately upon the discovery of such spill, and immediately
2 initiate and complete actions to abate the source of the
3 spill, remove product from all indoor and outdoor surface
4 areas, remove product and dissolved product from any septic
5 tank or catch basin in which the solvent has accumulated, and
6 remove affected soils, if any. Costs incurred by an owner or
7 operator for such response actions, up to a maximum of $10,000
8 in the aggregate for all spills at a single facility, shall be
9 credited to the owner or operator against the future gross
10 receipts tax set forth in s. 376.70 and, in the case of a
11 wholesale supply facility, against the future tax on
12 production or importation of perchloroethylene, as set forth
13 in s. 376.75.
14 (d) Failure to comply with the requirements of this
15 subsection shall constitute gross negligence with regard to
16 determining site eligibility in subsection (3).
17 (9)(8) INSURANCE REQUIREMENTS.--The owner or operator
18 of an operating drycleaning facility or wholesale supply
19 facility shall, by January 1, 1999 180 days after October 1,
20 1995, have purchased third-party liability insurance for $1
21 million of coverage for each operating facility. The owner or
22 operator shall maintain such insurance while operating as a
23 drycleaning facility or wholesale supply facility and provide
24 proof of such insurance to the department upon registration
25 renewal each year thereafter. Such requirement applies only if
26 such insurance becomes available to the owner or operator at a
27 reasonable rate and covers liability for contamination
28 subsequent to the effective date of the policy and prior to
29 the effective date, retroactive to the commencement of
30 operations at the drycleaning facility or wholesale supply
31 facility. Such insurance may be offered in group coverage
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1 policies with a minimum coverage of $1 million for each member
2 of the group per year that occurred both before and after the
3 effective date of the policy. For the purposes of this
4 subsection, reasonable rate means the rate developed based on
5 exposure to loss and underwriting and administrative costs as
6 determined by the Department of Insurance, in consultation
7 with representatives of the drycleaning industry. Failure to
8 comply with this subsection shall subject the owner and
9 operator to the provisions of s. 376.302.
10 (10)(9) VOLUNTARY CLEANUP.--A real property owner is
11 authorized to conduct site rehabilitation activities at any
12 time pursuant to department rules, either through agents of
13 the real property owner or through responsible response action
14 contractors or subcontractors, whether or not the facility has
15 been determined by the department to be eligible for the
16 drycleaning solvent cleanup program. A real property owner or
17 any other person party that conducts site rehabilitation may
18 not seek cost recovery from the department or the Water
19 Quality Assurance Trust Fund for any such rehabilitation
20 activities. A real property owner that voluntarily conducts
21 such site rehabilitation, whether commenced before or on or
22 after October 1, 1995, shall be immune from liability to any
23 person, state or local government, or agency thereof to compel
24 or enjoin site rehabilitation or pay for the cost of
25 rehabilitation of environmental contamination, or to pay any
26 fines or penalties regarding rehabilitation, as soon so long
27 as the real property owner:
28 (a) Conducts contamination assessment and site
29 rehabilitation consistent with state and federal laws and
30 rules;
31
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1 (b) Conducts such site rehabilitation in a timely
2 manner according to a rehabilitation schedule approved by the
3 department; and
4 (c) Does not deny the department access to the site.
5 Upon completion of such site rehabilitation activities in
6 accordance with the requirements of this subsection, the
7 department shall render a site rehabilitation completion
8 order.
9
10 This immunity shall continue to apply to any real property
11 owner who transfers, conveys, leases, or sells property on
12 which a drycleaning facility is located so long as the
13 voluntary cleanup activities continue.
14 (11) REOPENERS.--Upon completion of site
15 rehabilitation in compliance with subsection (10), additional
16 site rehabilitation is not required unless it is demonstrated:
17 (a) That fraud was committed in demonstrating site
18 conditions or completion of site rehabilitation;
19 (b) That new information confirms the existence of an
20 area of previously unknown contamination which exceeds the
21 site-specific rehabilitation levels established in accordance
22 with s. 376.3078(4), or which otherwise poses the threat of
23 real and substantial harm to public health, safety, or the
24 environment;
25 (c) That the remediation efforts failed to achieve the
26 site rehabilitation criteria established under this section;
27 (d) That the level of risk is increased beyond the
28 acceptable risk established under s. 376.3078(4) due to
29 substantial changes in exposure conditions, such as a change
30 in land use from nonresidential to residential use. Any person
31 who changes the land use of the site thus causing the level of
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1 risk to increase beyond the acceptable risk level may be
2 required by the department to undertake additional remediation
3 measures to assure that human health, public safety, and the
4 environment are protected consistent with this section; or
5 (e) That a new discharge occurs at the drycleaning
6 site subsequent to a determination of eligibility for
7 participation in the drycleaning program established under
8 this section.
9 (12)(10) DEPARTMENTAL DUTY TO SEEK RECOVERY AND
10 REIMBURSEMENT.--
11 (a) Except as provided in subsection (3) and as
12 otherwise provided by law, the department shall recover from
13 any person causing or having caused the discharge of
14 drycleaning solvents in relation to the operation of a
15 drycleaning facility or wholesale supply facility, jointly and
16 severally, all sums owed or expended from drycleaning facility
17 restoration funds, pursuant to s. 376.308, except that the
18 department may decline to pursue such recovery if it finds the
19 amount involved to be too small or the likelihood of recovery
20 too uncertain.
21 (b) Except as provided in subsection (3) and as
22 otherwise provided by law, it is the duty of the department in
23 administering the drycleaning facility restoration funds to
24 diligently pursue the reimbursement to the Water Quality
25 Assurance Trust Fund of any sum expended from the fund for
26 rehabilitation in accordance with the provisions of this
27 section, unless the department finds the amount involved to be
28 too small or the likelihood of recovery too uncertain. For
29 the purposes of s. 95.11, the limitation period within which
30 to institute an action to recover such sums shall commence on
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1 the last date on which any such sums were expended, and not
2 the date that the discharge occurred.
3 (c) The Legislature recognizes its limitations in
4 addressing cleanup liability under federal pollution control
5 programs. In an effort to secure federal liability protection
6 for persons willing to undertake remediation responsibility at
7 a drycleaning site, the department shall attempt to negotiate
8 a memorandum of agreement or similar document with the United
9 States Environmental Protection Agency, whereby the United
10 States Environmental Protection Agency agrees to forego
11 enforcement of federal corrective action authority at
12 drycleaning sites that have received a site rehabilitation
13 completion or "no further action" determination from the
14 department or that are in the process of implementing a
15 voluntary cleanup agreement in accordance with this section.
16 Section 11. Subsection (6) of section 376.308, Florida
17 Statutes, is amended to read:
18 376.308 Liabilities and defenses of facilities.--
19 (6) Nothing herein shall be construed to affect
20 cleanup program eligibility under ss. 376.305(6), 376.3071,
21 376.3072, 376.3078, and 376.3079. Except as otherwise
22 expressly provided in this chapter, nothing in this chapter
23 shall affect, void, or defeat any immunity of any real
24 property under s. 376.3078.
25 Section 12. Paragraph (a) of subsection (5) of section
26 376.313, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
27 376.313 Nonexclusiveness of remedies and individual
28 cause of action for damages under ss. 376.30-376.319.--
29 (5)(a) In any civil action against the owner or
30 operator of a drycleaning facility or a wholesale supply
31 facility, or the owner of the real property on which such
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1 facility is located, if such facility is not eligible under s.
2 376.3078(3) s. 376.3978(3), for damages arising from the
3 discharge of drycleaning solvents from a drycleaning facility
4 or wholesale supply facility, the provisions of subsection (3)
5 shall not apply if it can be proven that, at the time of the
6 discharge the alleged damages resulted solely from a discharge
7 from a drycleaning facility or wholesale supply facility that
8 was in compliance with department rules regulating drycleaning
9 facilities or wholesale supply facilities.
10 Section 13. Section 376.70, Florida Statutes, is
11 amended to read:
12 376.70 Tax on gross receipts of drycleaning
13 facilities.--
14 (1) There is levied a gross receipts tax on each
15 drycleaning facility and dry drop-off facility, as defined in
16 s. 376.301, for the privilege of engaging in the business of
17 laundering and drycleaning clothing and other fabrics in this
18 state. The tax shall be at a rate of 2 1.5 percent of all
19 charges imposed by the drycleaning facility or the dry
20 drop-off facility for the drycleaning or laundering of
21 clothing or other fabrics. Beginning January 1, 1996, the tax
22 rate shall be 2 percent of such charges. Gross receipts from
23 coin-operated laundry machines and from laundry done on a
24 wash, dry, and fold basis shall not be subject to tax.
25 (2) Each drycleaning facility or dry drop-off facility
26 imposing a charge for the drycleaning or laundering of
27 clothing or other fabrics is required to register with the
28 Department of Revenue and become licensed for the purposes of
29 this section. The owner or operator of the facility shall
30 register the facility with the Department of Revenue.
31 Drycleaning facilities or dry drop-off facilities operating at
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1 more than one location are only required to have a single
2 registration. The fee for registration is $30. The owner or
3 operator of the facility shall pay the registration fee to the
4 Department of Revenue.
5 (3) The tax imposed by this section is due on the 1st
6 day of the month succeeding the month in which the charge is
7 imposed and shall be paid on or before the 20th day of each
8 month. The tax shall be reported on forms and in the manner
9 prescribed by the Department of Revenue by rule. The proceeds
10 of the taxes, after deducting the administrative costs
11 incurred by the Department of Revenue in administering,
12 auditing, collecting, distributing, and enforcing the tax,
13 shall be transferred by the Department of Revenue into the
14 Water Quality Assurance Trust Fund and shall be used as
15 provided in s. 376.3078. For the purposes of this section,
16 the proceeds of the tax include all funds collected and
17 received by the Department of Revenue, including interest and
18 penalties on delinquent taxes.
19 (4) Any drycleaning facility which includes in the
20 total retail charge to a consumer of drycleaning services any
21 portion of the tax imposed pursuant to this section shall
22 disclose on the receipt for the amount charged for such
23 services the amount of such tax and a statement that the
24 imposition of the tax was requested by the Florida Dry
25 Cleaners Coalition.
26 (5) Gross receipts arising from charges for services
27 taxable pursuant to this section to persons who also impose
28 charges to others for those same services are exempt from the
29 tax imposed pursuant to this section.
30 (6)(5)(a) The Department of Revenue shall administer,
31 collect, and enforce the tax imposed under this section
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1 pursuant to the procedures for administration, collection, and
2 enforcement of the general state sales tax imposed under
3 chapter 212, except as provided in this subsection. Such
4 procedures include, but are not limited to, those regarding
5 the filing of consolidated returns, the granting of sale for
6 resale exemptions, and the interest and penalties on
7 delinquent taxes. The tax shall not be included in the
8 computation of estimated taxes pursuant to s. 212.11, nor
9 shall the dealer's credit for collecting taxes or fees in s.
10 212.12 apply. The provisions of s. 212.07(4) shall not apply
11 to the tax imposed by this section.
12 (b) The Department of Revenue, under the applicable
13 rules of the Public Employees Relations Commission, is
14 authorized to employ persons and incur other expenses for
15 which funds are appropriated by the Legislature. The
16 Department of Revenue is empowered to adopt such rules and
17 shall prescribe and publish such forms as may be necessary to
18 effectuate the purposes of this section.
19 (c) The Department of Revenue is authorized to
20 establish audit procedures and to assess delinquent taxes.
21 (7) The department shall not deny eligibility in the
22 drycleaning solvent cleanup program because of the facility
23 owner's, the facility operator's and the real property owner's
24 failure to remit all taxes due pursuant to ss. 376.70 and
25 376.75, unless the Department of Revenue:
26 (a) Ascertains the amount of the delinquent tax, if
27 any, and communicates this amount in writing to the
28 drycleaning solvent cleanup program applicant and the real
29 property owner; and
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1 (b) Provides a method to the facility owner, the
2 facility operator, and the real property owner for the payment
3 of the taxes.
4
5 Pursuant to subsection (7), the owner or operator of a
6 drycleaning facility must demonstrate to the satisfaction of
7 the Department of Revenue that failure to remit all taxes due
8 in a timely manner was not due to willful and overt actions to
9 avoid payment of taxes.
10 (8)(6) The Legislature declares that the failure to
11 promptly implement the provisions of this section would
12 present an immediate threat to the welfare of the state.
13 Therefore, the executive director of the Department of Revenue
14 is authorized to adopt emergency rules pursuant to s.
15 120.54(4) to implement this section. Notwithstanding any other
16 provision of law, such emergency rules shall remain effective
17 for 180 days from the date of adoption. Other rules of the
18 Department of Revenue related to and in furtherance of the
19 orderly implementation of this section shall not be subject to
20 a s. 120.56(2) rule challenge or a s. 120.54(3)(c)2. drawout
21 proceeding, but, once adopted, shall be subject to a s.
22 120.56(3) invalidity challenge. Such rules shall be adopted by
23 the Governor and Cabinet and shall become effective upon
24 filing with the Department of State, notwithstanding the
25 provisions of s. 120.54(3)(e)6.
26 Section 14. Subsections (1) and (12) of section
27 376.75, Florida Statutes, are amended to read:
28 376.75 Tax on production or importation of
29 perchloroethylene.--
30 (1) Beginning October 1, 1994, a tax of $5 per gallon
31 is levied on the sale of perchloroethylene
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1 (tetrachloroethylene) in this state to a drycleaning facility
2 located in this state or the import of perchloroethylene into
3 this state by a drycleaning facility. This tax is not subject
4 to sales and use tax pursuant to ch. 212.
5 (12) Any drycleaning facility which includes in the
6 total retail charge to a consumer of drycleaning services any
7 portion of the tax imposed pursuant to this section shall
8 disclose on the receipt for the amount charged for such
9 services the amount of such tax and a statement that the
10 imposition of the tax was requested by the Florida Dry
11 Cleaners Coalition.
12 Section 15. Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of section
13 287.0595, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
14 287.0595 Pollution response action contracts;
15 department rules.--
16 (1) The Department of Environmental Protection shall
17 establish, through the promulgation of administrative rules as
18 provided in chapter 120:
19 (a) Procedures for determining the qualifications of
20 responsible potential bidders prior to advertisement for and
21 receipt of bids for pollution response action contracts,
22 including procedures for the rejection of unqualified bidders.
23 Response actions are those activities described in s.
24 376.301(35) s. 376.301(33).
25 Section 16. Paragraph (f) of subsection (2) of section
26 316.302, Florida Statutes, is amended to read:
27 316.302 Commercial motor vehicles; safety regulations;
28 transporters and shippers of hazardous materials;
29 enforcement.--
30 (2)
31
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1 (f) A person who operates a commercial motor vehicle
2 having a declared gross vehicle weight of less than 26,000
3 pounds solely in intrastate commerce and who is not
4 transporting hazardous materials, or who is transporting
5 petroleum products as defined in s. 376.301(29) s.
6 376.301(27), is exempt from subsection (1). However, such
7 person must comply with 49 C.F.R. parts 382, 392, 393, and 49
8 C.F.R. s. 396.9.
9 Section 17. Paragraph (o) is added to subsection (7)
10 of section 213.053, Florida Statutes, to read:
11 213.053 Confidentiality and information sharing.--
12 (7) Notwithstanding any other provision of this
13 section, the department may provide:
14 (o) Information relative to ss. 376.70 and 376.75 to
15 the Department of Environmental Protection in the conduct of
16 its official business and to the facility owner, facility
17 operator, and real property owners as defined in s. 376.301.
18 Section 18. This act shall take effect July 1, 1998.
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