Bill Text: FL S0702 | 2020 | Regular Session | Enrolled
Bill Title: Petroleum Cleanup
Spectrum: Bipartisan Bill
Status: (Passed) 2020-06-22 - Chapter No. 2020-56 [S0702 Detail]
Download: Florida-2020-S0702-Enrolled.html
ENROLLED 2020 Legislature CS for SB 702, 1st Engrossed 2020702er 1 2 An act relating to petroleum cleanup; amending s. 3 376.3071, F.S.; providing legislative findings, 4 declarations, and intent; authorizing the Department 5 of Environmental Protection to use funds from the 6 Inland Protection Trust Fund to pay for specified 7 activities related to removal and replacement of 8 petroleum storage systems; providing for petroleum 9 storage system repair or replacement due to damage 10 caused by ethanol or biodiesel and for preventive 11 measures to reduce the potential for such damage; 12 revising requirements for a limited contamination 13 assessment report required to be provided by a 14 property owner, an operator, or a person otherwise 15 responsible for site rehabilitation to the Department 16 of Environmental Protection under the Petroleum 17 Cleanup Participation Program; providing requirements 18 for requesting and receiving payments for such repair, 19 replacement, and measures; providing construction; 20 prohibiting payments for certain costs; limiting the 21 payment amount a petroleum storage system owner or 22 operator is eligible to receive annually; requiring 23 the department, after a specified date, to only 24 register storage system equipment that meets certain 25 fuel standards; amending s. 376.30713, F.S.; revising 26 the contents of an advanced cleanup application to 27 include a specified property owner or responsible 28 party agreement; requiring an applicant to submit a 29 scope of work after the department has accepted the 30 applicant’s advanced cleanup application; requiring 31 the department to issue a purchase order for a certain 32 contamination assessment; providing an effective date. 33 34 Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida: 35 36 Section 1. Paragraph (a) of subsection (2) and subsections 37 (4) and (13) of section 376.3071, Florida Statutes, are amended, 38 and paragraph (h) is added to subsection (1) and subsection (15) 39 is added to that section, to read: 40 376.3071 Inland Protection Trust Fund; creation; purposes; 41 funding.— 42 (1) FINDINGS.—In addition to the legislative findings set 43 forth in s. 376.30, the Legislature finds and declares: 44 (h) That Congress enacted the Energy Policy Act of 2005, 45 amending the Clean Water Act, and that the state enacted the 46 Renewable Fuels Standard, to establish a renewable fuel standard 47 requiring the use of ethanol as an oxygenate additive for 48 gasoline and biodiesel as an additive for ultra-low sulfur 49 diesel fuel. An unintended consequence of the inclusion of 50 ethanol in gasoline and biodiesel in diesel fuel has been to 51 cause, and potentially cause, significant corrosion and other 52 damage to storage tanks, piping, and storage tank system 53 components regulated under this chapter. The Legislature further 54 finds that storage tanks, piping, and storage tank system 55 components have been found by the department in its equipment 56 approval process to meet compatibility standards, however, these 57 standards may have subsequently changed due to the introduction 58 of ethanol and biodiesel. The state enacted secondary 59 containment requirements before the mandated introduction of 60 ethanol into gasoline and biodiesel into ultra-low sulfur diesel 61 fuel. Therefore, owners and operators of petroleum storage 62 facilities in the state that complied with the state’s secondary 63 containment requirements and installed approved equipment that 64 may not have been evaluated for compatibility with ethanol and 65 biodiesel, cross-contamination due to the storage of gasoline 66 and diesel fuel, and the effects of condensation and minimal 67 amounts of water in storage tanks are at a particular risk for 68 having to repair or replace equipment or take other preventive 69 measures in advance of the equipment’s expected useful life in 70 order to prevent releases or discharges of pollutants. 71 (2) INTENT AND PURPOSE.— 72 (a) It is the intent of the Legislature to establish the 73 Inland Protection Trust Fund to serve as a repository for funds 74 which will enable the department to respond without delay to 75 incidents of inland contamination, and damage or potential 76 damage to storage tank systems caused by ethanol or biodiesel as 77 described in subsection (15) which may result in such incidents, 78 related to the storage of petroleum and petroleum products in 79 order to protect the public health, safety, and welfare and to 80 minimize environmental damage. 81 (4) USES.—Whenever, in its determination, incidents of 82 inland contamination, or potential incidents as provided in 83 subsection (15), related to the storage of petroleum or 84 petroleum products may pose a threat to the public health, 85 safety, or welfare, water resources, or the environment, the 86 department shall obligate moneys available in the fund to 87 provide for: 88 (a) Prompt investigation and assessment of contamination 89 sites. 90 (b) Expeditious restoration or replacement of potable water 91 supplies as provided in s. 376.30(3)(c)1. 92 (c) Rehabilitation of contamination sites, which shall 93 consist of cleanup of affected soil, groundwater, and inland 94 surface waters, using the most cost-effective alternative that 95 is technologically feasible and reliable and that provides 96 adequate protection of the public health, safety, and welfare, 97 and water resources, and that minimizes environmental damage, 98 pursuant to the site selection and cleanup criteria established 99 by the department under subsection (5), except that this 100 paragraph does not authorize the department to obligate funds 101 for payment of costs which may be associated with, but are not 102 integral to, site rehabilitation, such as the cost for 103 retrofitting or replacing petroleum storage systems. 104 (d) Maintenance and monitoring of contamination sites. 105 (e) Inspection and supervision of activities described in 106 this subsection. 107 (f) Payment of expenses incurred by the department in its 108 efforts to obtain from responsible parties the payment or 109 recovery of reasonable costs resulting from the activities 110 described in this subsection. 111 (g) Payment of any other reasonable costs of 112 administration, including those administrative costs incurred by 113 the Department of Health in providing field and laboratory 114 services, toxicological risk assessment, and other assistance to 115 the department in the investigation of drinking water 116 contamination complaints and costs associated with public 117 information and education activities. 118 (h) Establishment and implementation of the compliance 119 verification program as authorized in s. 376.303(1)(a), 120 including contracting with local governments or state agencies 121 to provide for the administration of such program through 122 locally administered programs, to minimize the potential for 123 further contamination sites. 124 (i) Funding of the provisions of ss. 376.305(6) and 125 376.3072. 126 (j) Activities related to removal and replacement of 127 petroleum storage systems, if repair, replacement, or other 128 preventive measures are authorized under subsection (15), or 129 exclusive of costs of any tank, piping, dispensing unit, or 130 related hardware, if soil removal is approved as a component of 131 site rehabilitation and requires removal of the tank where 132 remediation is conducted under this section, or if such 133 activities were justified in an approved remedial action plan. 134 (k) Reasonable costs of restoring property as nearly as 135 practicable to the conditions which existed before activities 136 associated with contamination assessment or remedial action 137 taken under s. 376.303(4). 138 (l) Repayment of loans to the fund. 139 (m) Expenditure of sums from the fund to cover ineligible 140 sites or costs as set forth in subsection (13), if the 141 department in its discretion deems it necessary to do so. In 142 such cases, the department may seek recovery and reimbursement 143 of costs in the same manner and pursuant to the same procedures 144 established for recovery and reimbursement of sums otherwise 145 owed to or expended from the fund. 146 (n) Payment of amounts payable under any service contract 147 entered into by the department pursuant to s. 376.3075, subject 148 to annual appropriation by the Legislature. 149 (o) Petroleum remediation pursuant to this section 150 throughout a state fiscal year. The department shall establish a 151 process to uniformly encumber appropriated funds throughout a 152 state fiscal year and shall allow for emergencies and imminent 153 threats to public health, safety, and welfare, water resources, 154 and the environment as provided in paragraph (5)(a). This 155 paragraph does not apply to appropriations associated with the 156 free product recovery initiative provided in paragraph (5)(c) or 157 the advanced cleanup program provided in s. 376.30713. 158 (p) Enforcement of this section and ss. 376.30-376.317 by 159 the Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission and the Department 160 of Environmental Protection. The department shallmaydisburse 161 moneys to the commission for such purpose. 162 (q) Payments for program deductibles, copayments, and 163 limited contamination assessment reports that otherwise would be 164 paid by another state agency for state-funded petroleum 165 contamination site rehabilitation. 166 (r) Payments for the repair or replacement of, or other 167 preventive measures for, storage tanks, piping, or system 168 components as provided in subsection (15). Such costs may 169 include equipment, excavation, electrical work, and site 170 restoration. 171 172 The issuance of a site rehabilitation completion order pursuant 173 to subsection (5) or paragraph (12)(b) for contamination 174 eligible for programs funded by this section does not alter the 175 project’s eligibility for state-funded remediation if the 176 department determines that site conditions are not protective of 177 human health under actual or proposed circumstances of exposure 178 under subsection (5). The Inland Protection Trust Fund may be 179 used only to fund the activities in ss. 376.30-376.317 except 180 ss. 376.3078 and 376.3079. Amounts on deposit in the fund in 181 each fiscal year must first be applied or allocated for the 182 payment of amounts payable by the department pursuant to 183 paragraph (n) under a service contract entered into by the 184 department pursuant to s. 376.3075 and appropriated in each year 185 by the Legislature before making or providing for other 186 disbursements from the fund. This subsection does not authorize 187 the use of the fund for cleanup of contamination caused 188 primarily by a discharge of solvents as defined in s. 189 206.9925(6), or polychlorinated biphenyls when their presence 190 causes them to be hazardous wastes, except solvent contamination 191 which is the result of chemical or physical breakdown of 192 petroleum products and is otherwise eligible. Facilities used 193 primarily for the storage of motor or diesel fuels as defined in 194 ss. 206.01 and 206.86 are not excluded from eligibility pursuant 195 to this section. 196 (13) PETROLEUM CLEANUP PARTICIPATION PROGRAM.—To encourage 197 detection, reporting, and cleanup of contamination caused by 198 discharges of petroleum or petroleum products, the department 199 shall, within the guidelines established in this subsection, 200 implement acost-sharingcleanup program to provide 201 rehabilitation funding assistance for all property contaminated 202 by discharges of petroleum or petroleum products from a 203 petroleum storage system occurring before January 1, 1995,204subject to a copayment provided for in a Petroleum Cleanup205Participation Program site rehabilitation agreement. Eligibility 206 is subject to an annual appropriation from the fund. 207 Additionally, funding for eligible sites is contingent upon 208 annual appropriation in subsequent years. Such continued state 209 funding is not an entitlement or a vested right under this 210 subsection. Eligibility shall be determined in the program, 211 notwithstanding any other provision of law, consent order, 212 order, judgment, or ordinance to the contrary. 213 (a)1. The department shall accept any discharge reporting 214 form received before January 1, 1995, as an application for this 215 program, and the facility owner or operator need not reapply. 216 2. Regardless of whether ownership has changed, owners or 217 operators of property that is contaminated by petroleum or 218 petroleum products from a petroleum storage system may apply for 219 such program by filing a written report of the contamination 220 incident, including evidence that such incident occurred before 221 January 1, 1995, with the department. Incidents of petroleum 222 contamination discovered after December 31, 1994, at sites which 223 have not stored petroleum or petroleum products for consumption, 224 use, or sale after such date shall be presumed to have occurred 225 before January 1, 1995. An operator’s filed report shall be an 226 application of the owner for all purposes. 227 (b) Subject to annual appropriation from the fund, sites 228 meeting the criteria of this subsection are eligible for up to 229 $400,000 of site rehabilitation funding assistance in priority 230 order pursuant to subsections (5) and (6). Sites meeting the 231 criteria of this subsection for which a site rehabilitation 232 completion order was issued before June 1, 2008, do not qualify 233 for the 2008 increase in site rehabilitation funding assistance 234 and are bound by the pre-June 1, 2008, limits. Sites meeting the 235 criteria of this subsection for which a site rehabilitation 236 completion order was not issued before June 1, 2008, regardless 237 of whether they have previously transitioned to nonstate-funded 238 cleanup status, may continue state-funded cleanup pursuant to 239 this section until a site rehabilitation completion order is 240 issued or the increased site rehabilitation funding assistance 241 limit is reached, whichever occurs first. The department may not 242 pay expenses incurred beyond the scope of an approved contract. 243 (c) The department may also approve supplemental funding of 244 up to $100,000 for additional remediation and monitoring if such 245 remediation and monitoring is necessary to achieve a 246 determination of “No Further Action.” 247 (d) Upon notification by the department that rehabilitation 248 funding assistance is available for the site pursuant to 249 subsections (5) and (6), the property owner, operator, or person 250 otherwise responsible for site rehabilitation shall provide the 251 department with a limited contamination assessment report and 252 shall enter into a Petroleum Cleanup Participation Program site 253 rehabilitation agreement with the department. The limited 254 contamination assessment report must be sufficient to support 255 the proposed course of action and to estimate the cost of the 256 proposed course of action. The agreement must provide for a 25 257 percent cost savings to the department, a copayment by the 258 owner, operator, or person otherwise responsible for conducting 259 site rehabilitation, or a combination of cost savings and a 260 copayment. Cost savings to the department may be demonstrated in 261 the form of reduced rates by the proposed agency term contractor 262 or the difference in cost associated with a Risk Management 263 Options Level I closure versus a Risk Management Options Level 264 II closure. For the purpose of this paragraph, the term: 265 1. “Risk Management Options Level I” means a “No Further 266 Action” closure without institutional controls or without 267 institutional and engineering controls. This closure option 268 applies subject to conditions in department rules and 269 agreements. 270 2. “Risk Management Options Level II” means a “No Further 271 Action” closure where institutional controls and, if 272 appropriate, engineering controls apply if the controls are 273 protective of human health, public safety, and the environment. 274 This closure option applies subject to conditions in department 275 rules and agreementsThe owner, operator, or person otherwise276responsible for conducting site rehabilitation shall adequately277demonstrate the ability to meet the copayment obligation. The278limited contamination assessment report and the copayment costs279may be reduced or eliminated if the owner and all operators280responsible for restoration under s. 376.308 demonstrate that281they cannot financially comply with the copayment and limited282contamination assessment report requirements. The department283shall take into consideration the owner’s and operator’s net284worth in making the determination of financial ability. In the285event the department and the owner, operator, or person286otherwise responsible for site rehabilitation cannot complete287negotiation of the cost-sharing agreement within 120 days after288beginning negotiations, the department shall terminate289negotiations and the site shall be ineligible for state funding290under this subsection and all liability protections provided for291in this subsection shall be revoked. 292 (e) A report of a discharge made to the department by a 293 person pursuant to this subsection or any rules adopted pursuant 294 to this subsection may not be used directly as evidence of 295 liability for such discharge in any civil or criminal trial 296 arising out of the discharge. 297 (f) This subsection does not preclude the department from 298 pursuing penalties under s. 403.141 for violations of any law or 299 any rule, order, permit, registration, or certification adopted 300 or issued by the department pursuant to its lawful authority. 301 (g) Upon the filing of a discharge reporting form under 302 paragraph (a), the department or local government may not pursue 303 any judicial or enforcement action to compel rehabilitation of 304 the discharge. This paragraph does not prevent any such action 305 with respect to discharges determined ineligible under this 306 subsection or to sites for which rehabilitation funding 307 assistance is available pursuant to subsections (5) and (6). 308 (h) The following are excluded from participation in the 309 program: 310 1. Sites at which the department has been denied reasonable 311 site access to implement this section. 312 2. Sites that were active facilities when owned or operated 313 by the Federal Government. 314 3. Sites that are identified by the United States 315 Environmental Protection Agency to be on, or which qualify for 316 listing on, the National Priorities List under Superfund. This 317 exception does not apply to those sites for which eligibility 318 has been requested or granted as of the effective date of this 319 act under the Early Detection Incentive Program established 320 pursuant to s. 15, chapter 86-159, Laws of Florida. 321 4. Sites for which contamination is covered under the Early 322 Detection Incentive Program, the Abandoned Tank Restoration 323 Program, or the Petroleum Liability and Restoration Insurance 324 Program, in which case site rehabilitation funding assistance 325 shall continue under the respective program. 326 (15) ETHANOL OR BIODIESEL DAMAGE; PREVENTIVE MEASURES.—The 327 department shall pay, pursuant to this subsection, up to $10 328 million each fiscal year from the fund for the costs of labor 329 and equipment to repair or replace petroleum storage systems 330 that may have been damaged due to the storage of fuels blended 331 with ethanol or biodiesel, or for preventive measures to reduce 332 the potential for such damage. 333 (a) A petroleum storage system owner or operator may 334 request payment from the department for the repair or 335 replacement of petroleum storage tanks, integral piping, or 336 ancillary equipment that may have been damaged, or is subject to 337 damage, by the storage of fuels blended with ethanol or 338 biodiesel or for other preventive measures to ensure 339 compatibility with ethanol or biodiesel in accordance with the 340 following procedures: 341 1. The petroleum storage system owner or operator may 342 submit a request for payment to the department along with the 343 following information: 344 a. An affidavit from a petroleum storage system specialty 345 contractor attesting to an opinion that the petroleum storage 346 system may have been damaged as a result of the storage of fuel 347 blended with ethanol or biodiesel or may not be compatible with 348 fuels containing ethanol or biodiesel, or a combination of both. 349 The affidavit must also include a proposal from the specialty 350 contractor for repair or replacement of the equipment, or for 351 the implementation of other preventive measures to reduce the 352 probability of damage. If the specialty contractor proposes 353 replacement of any equipment, the affidavit must include the 354 reasons that repair or other preventive measures are not 355 technically or economically feasible or practical. 356 b. Copies of any inspection reports, including photographs, 357 prepared by the specialty contractor or department or local 358 program inspectors documenting the damage or potential for 359 damage to the petroleum storage system. 360 c. A proposal from the specialty contractor showing the 361 proposed scope of the repair, replacement, or other preventive 362 measures, including a detailed list of labor, equipment, and 363 other associated costs. In the case of replacement or repair, 364 the proposal must also include provisions for any preventive 365 measures needed to prevent a recurrence of the damage, such as 366 the use of corrosion inhibitors, the application of coatings 367 compatible with ethanol or biodiesel, as appropriate, and the 368 adoption of a maintenance plan. 369 d. For proposals to replace storage tanks or piping, a 370 statement from a certified public accountant indicating the 371 depreciated value of the tanks or piping proposed for 372 replacement. Applications for such proposals must also include 373 documentation of the age of the storage tank or piping. 374 Historical tank registration records may be used to determine 375 the age of the storage tank and piping. The depreciated value 376 shall be the maximum allowable replacement cost for the storage 377 tank and piping, exclusive of labor costs. For the purposes of 378 this paragraph, tanks that are 20 years old or older are deemed 379 to be fully depreciated and have no replacement value. 380 2. The department shall review applications for 381 completeness, accuracy, and the reasonableness of costs and 382 scope of work. Within 30 days after receipt of an application, 383 the department must approve or deny the application, propose 384 modification to the application, or request additional 385 information. 386 (b) If an application is approved, the department shall 387 issue a purchase order to the petroleum storage system owner or 388 operator. The purchase order shall: 389 1. Reflect a payment due to the owner for the cost of the 390 scope of work approved by the department, less a deductible of 391 25 percent. 392 2. State that a payment is not due to the owner pursuant to 393 the purchase order until the scope of work authorized by the 394 department has been completed in substantial conformity with the 395 purchase order. 396 3. Except for preventive maintenance contracts, specify 397 that the work authorized in the purchase order must be 398 substantially completed and paid for by the petroleum storage 399 system owner or operator within 180 days after the date of the 400 purchase order. After such time, the purchase order is void. 401 4. For preventive maintenance contracts, the department 402 shall develop a maintenance completion and payment schedule for 403 approved applicants. The failure of an owner or operator to meet 404 scheduled payments shall invalidate the purchase order for all 405 future payments due pursuant to the order. 406 (c)1. Except for maintenance contracts, the applicant may 407 request that the department make payment following completion of 408 the work authorized by the department, in accordance with the 409 terms of the purchase order. The request must include a 410 sufficient demonstration that the work has been completed in 411 substantial compliance with the purchase order and that the 412 costs have been fully paid. Upon such a showing, the department 413 must issue the payment pursuant to the terms of the purchase 414 order. 415 2. For maintenance contracts, the department must make 416 periodic payments pursuant to the schedule specified in the 417 purchase order upon satisfactory showing that maintenance work 418 has been completed and costs have been paid by the owner or 419 operator as specified in the purchase order. 420 (d) The department may develop forms to be used for 421 application and payment procedures. Until such forms are 422 developed, an applicant may submit the required information in 423 any format, as long as the documentation is complete. 424 (e) The department may request the assistance of the 425 Department of Management Services or a third-party administrator 426 to assist in the administration of the application and payment 427 process. Any costs associated with this administration shall be 428 paid from the funds identified in this section. 429 (f) This subsection does not affect the obligations of 430 facility owners or operators or petroleum storage system owners 431 or operators to timely comply with department rules regarding 432 the maintenance, replacement, and repair of petroleum storage 433 systems in order to prevent a release or discharge of 434 pollutants. 435 (g) Payments may not be made for the following: 436 1. Proposal costs or costs related to preparation of the 437 application and required documentation; 438 2. Certified public accountant costs; 439 3. Except as provided in subsection (k), any costs in 440 excess of the amount approved by the department under paragraph 441 (b) or which are not in substantial compliance with the purchase 442 order; 443 4. Costs associated with storage tanks, piping, or 444 ancillary equipment that has previously been repaired or 445 replaced for which costs have been paid under this section; 446 5. Facilities that are not in compliance with department 447 storage tank rules, until the noncompliance issues have been 448 resolved; or 449 6. Costs associated with damage to petroleum storage 450 systems caused in whole or in part by causes other than the 451 storage of fuels blended with ethanol or biodiesel. 452 (h) Applications may be submitted on a first-come, first 453 served basis. However, the department may not issue purchase 454 orders unless funds remain for the current fiscal year. 455 (i) A petroleum storage system owner or operator may not 456 receive more than $200,000 annually for equipment replacement, 457 repair, or preventive measures at any single facility, or 458 $500,000 annually in aggregate for all facilities owned or 459 operated by the owner or operator it owns or operates. 460 (j) Owners or operators that have incurred costs for 461 repair, replacement, or other preventive measures as described 462 in this subsection during the period of July 1, 2015, through 463 June 30, 2019, may apply to request payment for such costs from 464 the department using the procedure in paragraphs (b), (c), and 465 (d). The department may not disburse payment for approved 466 applications for such work until all purchase orders for 467 previously approved applications have been paid and unless funds 468 remain available for the fiscal year. Such payment is subject to 469 a deductible of 25 percent of the cost of the scope of work 470 approved by the department under this paragraph. 471 (k) For new petroleum requirement registrations after July 472 1, 2019, the department shall only register equipment that meets 473 applicable standards for compatibility for ethanol blends, 474 biodiesel blends, and other alternative fuels that are likely to 475 be stored in such systems. 476 Section 2. Subsection (2) of section 376.30713, Florida 477 Statutes, is amended to read: 478 376.30713 Advanced cleanup.— 479 (2) The department may approve an application for advanced 480 cleanup at eligible sites, including applications submitted 481 pursuant to paragraph (c), notwithstanding the site’s priority 482 ranking established pursuant to s. 376.3071(5)(a), pursuant to 483 this section. Only the facility owner or operator or the person 484 otherwise responsible for site rehabilitation qualifies as an 485 applicant under this section. 486 (a) Advanced cleanup applications may be submitted between 487 May 1 and June 30 and between November 1 and December 31 of each 488 fiscal year. Applications submitted between May 1 and June 30 489 shall be for the fiscal year beginning July 1. An application 490 must consist of: 491 1. A commitment to pay 25 percent or more of the total 492 cleanup cost deemed recoverable under this section along with 493 proof of the ability to pay the cost share. The department shall 494 determine whether the cost savings demonstration is acceptable. 495 Such determination is not subject to chapter 120. 496 a. Applications for the aggregate cleanup of five or more 497 sites may be submitted in one of two formats to meet the cost 498 share requirement: 499 (I) For an aggregate application proposing that the 500 department enter into a performance-based contract, the 501 applicant may use a commitment to pay, a demonstrated cost 502 savings to the department, or both to meet the requirement. 503 (II) For an aggregate application relying on a demonstrated 504 cost savings to the department, the applicant shall, in 505 conjunction with the proposed agency term contractor, establish 506 and provide in the application the percentage of cost savings in 507 the aggregate that is being provided to the department for 508 cleanup of the sites under the application compared to the cost 509 of cleanup of those same sites using the current rates provided 510 to the department by the proposed agency term contractor. 511 b. Applications for the cleanup of individual sites may be 512 submitted in one of two formats to meet the cost-share 513 requirement: 514 (I) For an individual application proposing that the 515 department enter into a performance-based contract, the 516 applicant may use a commitment to pay, a demonstrated cost 517 savings to the department, or both to meet the requirement. 518 (II) For an individual application relying on a 519 demonstrated cost savings to the department, the applicant 520 shall, in conjunction with the proposed agency term contractor, 521 establish and provide in the application a 25-percent cost 522 savings to the department for cleanup of the site under the 523 application compared to the cost of cleanup of the same site 524 using the current rates provided to the department by the 525 proposed agency term contractor. 526 2. A nonrefundable review fee of $250 to cover the 527 administrative costs associated with the department’s review of 528 the application. 529 3. A property owner or responsible party agreement in which 530 the property owner or responsible party commits to continue to 531 participate in the advanced cleanup program upon completion of 532 the limited contamination assessment and finalization of the 533 proposed course of actionlimited contamination assessment534report. 535 4. A conceptual proposed course of action. 536 5. A department site access agreement, or similar 537 agreements approved by the department that do not violate state 538 law, entered into with the property owner or owners, as 539 applicable, and evidence of authorization from such owner or 540 owners for petroleum site rehabilitation program tasks 541 consistent with the proposed course of action where the 542 applicant is not the property owner for any of the sites 543 contained in the application. 544 545The limited contamination assessment report must be sufficient546to support the proposed course of action and to estimate the547cost of the proposed course of action. Costs incurred related to548conducting the limited contamination assessment report are not549refundable from the Inland Protection Trust Fund.Site550eligibility under this subsection or any other provision of this551section is not an entitlement to advanced cleanup or continued552restoration funding.553 6. A certificationThe applicant shall certify tothe554departmentthat the applicant has the prerequisite authority to 555 enter into an advanced cleanup contract with the department. The 556 certification must be submitted with the application. 557 (b) The department shall rank the applications based on the 558 percentage of cost-sharing commitment proposed by the applicant, 559 with the highest ranking given to the applicant who proposes the 560 highest percentage of cost sharing. If the department receives 561 applications that propose identical cost-sharing commitments and 562 that exceed the funds available to commit to all such proposals 563 during the advanced cleanup application period, the department 564 shall proceed to rerank those applicants. Those applicants 565 submitting identical cost-sharing proposals that exceed funding 566 availability must be so notified by the department and offered 567 the opportunity to raise their individual cost-share 568 commitments, in a period specified in the notice. At the close 569 of the period, the department shall proceed to rerank the 570 applications pursuant to this paragraph. 571 (c) Applications for the advanced cleanup of individual 572 sites scheduled for redevelopment are not subject to the 573 application period limitations or the requirement to pay 25 574 percent of the total cleanup cost specified in paragraph (a) or 575 to the cost-sharing commitment specified in paragraph (1)(d). 576 Applications must be accepted on a first-come, first-served 577 basis and are not subject to the ranking provisions of paragraph 578 (b). Applications for the advanced cleanup of individual sites 579 scheduled for redevelopment must include: 580 1. A nonrefundable review fee of $250 to cover the 581 administrative costs associated with the department’s review of 582 the application. 583 2. A limited contamination assessment report. The report 584 must be sufficient to support the proposed course of action and 585 to estimate the cost of the proposed course of action. Costs 586 incurred related to conducting and preparing the report are not 587 refundable from the Inland Protection Trust Fund. 588 3. A proposed course of action for cleanup of the site. 589 4. If the applicant is not the property owner for any of 590 the sites contained in the application, a department site access 591 agreement, or a similar agreement approved by the department and 592 not in violation of state law, entered into with the property 593 owner or owners, as applicable, and evidence of authorization 594 from such owner or owners for petroleum site rehabilitation 595 program tasks consistent with the proposed course of action. 596 5. A certification to the department stating that the 597 applicant has the prerequisite authority to enter into an 598 advanced cleanup contract with the department. The advanced 599 cleanup contract must include redevelopment and site 600 rehabilitation milestones. 601 6. Documentation, in the form of a letter from the local 602 government having jurisdiction over the area where the site is 603 located, which states that the local government is in agreement 604 with or approves the proposed redevelopment and that the 605 proposed redevelopment complies with applicable law and 606 requirements for such redevelopment. 607 7. A demonstrated reasonable assurance that the applicant 608 has sufficient financial resources to implement and complete the 609 redevelopment project. 610 (d) Upon acceptance of an advanced cleanup application, the 611 applicant’s selected agency term contractor shall submit to the 612 department a scope of work for a limited contamination 613 assessment. When the scope of work is negotiated and agreed 614 upon, the department shall issue one or more purchase orders of 615 up to $35,000 each for the limited contamination assessment. The 616 limited contamination assessment report must be sufficient to 617 support the proposed course of action and to estimate the cost 618 of the proposed course of action. 619 (e) Site eligibility under this section is not an 620 entitlement to advanced cleanup funding or continued restoration 621 funding. 622 Section 3. This act shall take effect July 1, 2020.