Bill Text: CA AB1462 | 2019-2020 | Regular Session | Amended
Bill Title: Hazardous substances: lead: cleanup: Exide Technologies facility.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Failed) 2020-02-03 - From committee: Filed with the Chief Clerk pursuant to Joint Rule 56. [AB1462 Detail]
Download: California-2019-AB1462-Amended.html
Amended
IN
Assembly
April 11, 2019 |
Amended
IN
Assembly
April 01, 2019 |
Amended
IN
Assembly
March 25, 2019 |
CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE—
2019–2020 REGULAR SESSION
Assembly Bill | No. 1462 |
Introduced by Assembly Member Santiago |
February 22, 2019 |
An act to add Section 25215.60 to the Health and Safety Code, relating to hazardous substances, and making an appropriation therefor.
LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
AB 1462, as amended, Santiago.
Hazardous substances: lead: cleanup: Exide Technologies facility.
Existing law, the Lead-Acid Battery Recycling Act of 2016, prohibits a person from disposing of, or attempting to dispose of, a lead-acid battery at a solid waste facility or on or in any land, surface waters, watercourses, or marine waters, but authorizes a person to dispose of a lead-acid battery at certain locations. The act imposes a fee on manufacturers of lead-acid batteries for each lead-acid battery sold at retail to a person in California, or sold to a dealer, wholesaler, distributor, or other person for retail sale in California, and imposes a fee on a person who purchases a replacement lead-acid battery from a dealer, as provided.
The act creates in the State Treasury the Lead-Acid Battery Cleanup Fund and requires that the fees collected pursuant to the act, except for specified administrative expenses,
be deposited into the fund. The act requires that moneys in the fund be expended for specified purposes, including for investigation, site evaluation, cleanup, remedial action, removal, monitoring, or other response actions at any area of the state that is reasonably suspected to have been contaminated by the operation of a lead-acid battery recycling facility.
This bill would appropriate transfer $100,000,000 as a loan from the General Fund to the Toxic Substances Control Account and would appropriate these funds to the Department of
Toxic Substances Control for activities related to accelerating the investigation and cleanup of homes and communities in a specified area that have lead contamination levels that exceed 80 parts per million. The bill would require the appropriated amount to be available for expenditure until July 1, 2021.