Bill Text: CA SB124 | 2009-2010 | Regular Session | Amended

NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Air pollution: schoolbus idling and idling at schools.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 2-0)

Status: (Passed) 2009-10-11 - Chaptered by Secretary of State. Chapter 561, Statutes of 2009. [SB124 Detail]

Download: California-2009-SB124-Amended.html
BILL NUMBER: SB 124	AMENDED
	BILL TEXT

	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  AUGUST 27, 2009
	AMENDED IN SENATE  APRIL 30, 2009
	AMENDED IN SENATE  APRIL 13, 2009

INTRODUCED BY   Senator Oropeza
    (   Coauthor:   Assembly Member  
Blumenfield   ) 

                        FEBRUARY 4, 2009

   An act to amend Section 42407 of, and to add Chapter 3.4
(commencing with Section 39640) to Part 2 of Division 26 of, the
Health and Safety Code, relating to air pollution.


	LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


   SB 124, as amended, Oropeza. Air pollution: schoolbus idling and
idling at schools.
   Existing law designates the State Air Resources Board as the state
agency charged with coordinating efforts to attain and maintain
ambient air quality standards. Existing law also designates the state
board as the state agency with the primary responsibility for the
control of vehicular air pollution. Existing law requires the state
board to identify toxic air contaminants that are emitted into the
ambient air of the state, and requires the state board to establish
toxic control measures for toxic air contaminants. Existing
regulations adopted by the state board establish toxic control
measures to limit schoolbus idling and idling at schools. Those
existing regulations require drivers of schoolbuses, transit buses,
school pupil activity buses, youth buses, general public paratransit
vehicles, as those terms are defined in the regulations, and
specified transit buses and commercial motor vehicles to, among other
things, turn off the bus or vehicle engine upon stopping at or
within 100 feet of a school, prohibits those drivers from turning the
bus or vehicle engine on more than 30 seconds before beginning to
depart from a school or within 100 feet of a school, and prohibits
those drivers from causing the bus or vehicle to idle for more than 5
consecutive minutes or 5 aggregate minutes in any one hour at any
location greater than 100 feet from a school. Those existing
regulations provide that any violation of those requirements subjects
the driver or the motor carrier to a minimum civil penalty of $100
and to criminal penalties. Those existing regulations authorize the
state board, peace officers and the authorized representatives of
their law enforcement agencies, and air quality management districts
and air pollution control districts, to enforce those provisions.
   This bill  would codify those regulations, and 
would increase the minimum civil penalty for a violation to $300 and
authorize additional civil penalties.
   Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: no.
State-mandated local program: no.


THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

  SECTION 1.  Chapter 3.4 (commencing with Section 39640) is added to
Part 2 of Division 26 of the Health and Safety Code, to read:
      CHAPTER 3.4.  SCHOOLBUS IDLING AND IDLING AT SCHOOLS


   39640.  The purpose of this chapter is to reduce public exposure,
especially schoolage children's exposure, to diesel exhaust
particulate matter and other toxic air contaminants by limiting
unnecessary idling of  specified  vehicular sources.

   39641.  (a) A driver of a schoolbus, school pupil activity bus,
youth bus, or general public paratransit vehicle shall comply with
both of the following:
   (1) Turn off the bus or vehicle engine upon stopping at a school
or within 100 feet of a school, and do not turn the bus or vehicle
engine on more than 30 seconds before beginning to depart from a
school or from within 100 feet of a school.
   (2) Do not cause or allow a bus or vehicle to idle at a single
location greater than 100 feet from a school for either of the
following:
   (A) More than five consecutive minutes.
   (B) A period or periods aggregating more than five minutes in any
one hour.
   (b) A driver of a transit bus or of a commercial motor vehicle not
described in subdivision (a) shall comply with both of the
following:
   (1) Turn off the bus or vehicle engine upon stopping at a school
and do not turn the bus or vehicle engine on more than 30 seconds
before beginning to depart from a school.
   (2) Do not cause or allow a bus or vehicle to idle at any location
within 100 feet of, but not at, a school for either of the
following:
   (A) More than five consecutive minutes.
   (B) A period or periods aggregating more than five minutes in any
one hour.
   (c) A motor carrier of a schoolbus, school pupil activity bus,
youth bus, or general public paratransit vehicle shall ensure all of
the following:
   (1) The driver of the bus or vehicle, upon initial employment and
at least once per year thereafter, is informed of the requirements
described in subdivision (a), and of the consequences, under this
chapter and the motor carrier's terms of employment, of not complying
with those requirements.
   (2) All complaints of noncompliance with, and enforcement actions
related to, the requirements of subdivision (a) are reviewed and
remedial action is taken as necessary.
   (3) Records of paragraphs (1) and (2) are kept for at least three
years and made available or accessible to enforcement personnel
within three business days of their request.
   (d) A motor carrier of a transit bus or of a commercial motor
vehicle not described in subdivision (a) shall ensure all of the
following:
   (1) The driver of the bus or vehicle, upon initial employment and
at least once per year thereafter, is informed of the requirements
described in subdivision (b), and of the consequences, under this
chapter and the motor carrier's terms of employment, of not complying
with those requirements.
   (2) All complaints of noncompliance with, and enforcement actions
related to, the requirements of subdivision (b) are reviewed and
remedial action is taken as necessary.
   (3) Records of paragraphs (1) and (2) are kept for at least three
years and made available or accessible to enforcement personnel
within three business days of their request.  
   39642.  This chapter applies to the operation of every schoolbus,
transit bus, school pupil activity bus, youth bus, general public
paratransit vehicle, and other commercial motor vehicle. This chapter
does not apply for the period during which:
   (a) Idling is necessary while stopped at any of the following
times:
   (1) For an official traffic control device.
   (2) For an official traffic control signal.
   (3) For traffic conditions over which the driver has no control,
including, but not limited to, being stopped in a line of traffic.
   (4) At the direction of a peace officer.
   (b) Idling is necessary to ascertain that the schoolbus, transit
bus, school pupil activity bus, youth bus, general public paratransit
vehicle, or other commercial motor vehicle is in safe operating
condition and equipped as required by other provisions of law, and
all equipment is in good working order, either as part of the driver'
s daily vehicle inspection, or as otherwise needed.
   (c) Idling is necessary for testing, servicing, repairing, or
diagnostic purposes.
   (d) Idling is necessary, for a period not to exceed three to five
minutes, based on the recommendation of the manufacturer, to cool
down a turbo-charged diesel engine before turning the engine off.
   (e) Idling is necessary to accomplish work for which the vehicle
was designed, other than transporting passengers, including, but not
limited to:
   (1) Collection of solid waste or recyclable material by an entity
authorized by contract, license, or permit by a school or local
government.
   (2) Controlling cargo temperature.
   (3) Operating a lift, crane, pump, drill, hoist, mixer, or other
auxiliary equipment other than a heater or air-conditioner.
   (f) Idling is necessary to operate:
   (1) A lift or other piece of equipment designed to ensure safe
loading, unloading, or transport of persons with disabilities.
   (2) A heater or an air-conditioner of a bus or vehicle that has,
or will have, one or more children with exceptional needs aboard.
   (g) Idling is necessary to operate defrosters, heaters,
air-conditioners, or other equipment to ensure the safety or health
of the driver or passengers, or as otherwise required by federal or
state motor carrier safety regulations.
   (h) Idling is necessary solely to recharge a battery or other
energy storage unit of a hybrid electric bus or vehicle. 

   39643.  This chapter does not allow idling in excess of other
applicable law, including, but not limited to:
   (a) Section 1226 of Title 13 of the California Code of
Regulations.
   (b) Section 22515 of the Vehicle Code.
   (c) Any local ordinance or requirement that is as stringent as, or
more stringent than, this chapter.  
   39641.  The state board has adopted regulations establishing toxic
control measures to limit schoolbus idling and idling at schools.
 
   39644.  This chapter 
    39642.    The regulations described in Section 39641
 may be enforced by the state board, peace officers, as defined
in Chapter 4.5 (commencing with Section 830) of Title 3 of the Penal
Code, and their respective law enforcement agencies' authorized
representatives, and the air districts. A violation of any provision
of  the regulations described in  Section 39641 is subject
to a minimum civil penalty of three hundred dollars ($300),
additional civil penalties as provided in Section 39674, and to
criminal penalties as provided in Article 3 (commencing with Section
42400) of Chapter 4 of Part 4. 
   39645.  For the purposes of this chapter, the following terms have
the following meanings:
   (a) "Children with exceptional needs" means children meeting
eligibility criteria described in Section 56026 of the Education
Code.
   (b) "Commercial motor vehicle" means any vehicle or combination of
vehicles as defined in subdivision (b) of Section 15210 of the
Vehicle Code, and any other motor truck with a gross vehicle weight
rating of 10,001 pounds or more, except either of the following:
   (1) A zero-emission vehicle.
   (2) A pickup truck, as defined in Section 471 of the Vehicle Code.

   (c) "Driver" means any person who drives or is in actual physical
control of a vehicle.
   (d) "General public paratransit vehicle" means any motor vehicle
as defined in Section 336 of the Vehicle Code, other than a
zero-emission general public paratransit vehicle, that is
transporting school pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12,
inclusive, to or from public or private schools, or public or private
school activities.
   (e) "Gross vehicle weight rating" means the weight specified by
the manufacturer as the loaded weight of a single vehicle.
   (f) "Hybrid electric bus or vehicle" means any schoolbus, transit
bus, school pupil activity bus, youth bus, general public paratransit
vehicle, or other commercial motor vehicle equipped with at least
the following two sources of motive energy on board:
   (1) An electric drive motor that must be used to partially or
fully drive the bus or vehicle wheels.
   (2) One of the following:
   (A) An internal combustion engine.
   (B) A turbine.
   (C) A fuel cell.
   (g) "Idling" means the engine of a bus or vehicle is running while
the bus or vehicle is stationary.
   (h) "Motor carrier" means the registered owner, lessee, licensee,
school district superintendent, or bailee of any schoolbus, transit
bus, school pupil activity bus, youth bus, general public paratransit
vehicle, or other commercial motor vehicle who operates or directs
the operation of any such bus or vehicle on either a for-hire or
not-for-hire basis.
   (i) "Motor truck" means a motor vehicle designed, used, or
maintained primarily for the transportation of property.
   (j) "Official traffic control device" means any sign, signal,
marking or device, consistent with Section 21400 of the Vehicle Code,
placed or erected by authority of a public body or official having
jurisdiction, for the purpose of regulating, warning, or guiding
traffic, but does not include islands, curbs, traffic barriers, speed
humps, speed bumps, or other roadway design features.
   (k) "Official traffic control signal" means any device that is
manually, electrically, or mechanically operated, by which traffic is
alternately directed to stop and proceed and that is erected by
authority of a public body or official having jurisdiction.
   () "School" means any public or private school used for the
purposes of education and instruction of more than 12 school pupils
in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, but does not include
any private school in which education and instruction is primarily
conducted in private homes. "School" includes any building or
structure, playground, athletic field, or other area of school
property. The term excludes unimproved school property.
   (m) "Schoolbus" means any schoolbus defined in Section 545 of the
Vehicle Code, except a zero-emission schoolbus.
   (n) "School pupil activity bus" means any bus defined in Section
546 of the Vehicle Code, except a zero-emission school pupil activity
bus.
   (o) "Transit bus" means any bus defined in Section 642 of the
Vehicle Code, except a zero-emission transit bus.
   (p) "Youth bus" means any bus defined in Section 680 of the
Vehicle Code, except a zero-emission youth bus.
   (q) A "zero-emission schoolbus, transit bus, school pupil activity
bus, youth bus, general public paratransit vehicle, or other
commercial motor vehicle" means any bus or vehicle certified to
zero-emission standards by the state board. 
  SEC. 2.  Section 42407 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to
read:
   42407.  Except as provided in Chapter 3.4 (commencing with Section
39640) of Part 2 and Sections 40720 and 42403.5, this article is not
applicable to vehicular sources.
    
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