Bill Text: MA S388 | 2009-2010 | 186th General Court | Introduced
Bill Title: Promote healthy communities and the environment
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2010-04-12 - Bill reported favorably by committee and referred to the Senate Committee on Ways and Means [S388 Detail]
Download: Massachusetts-2009-S388-Introduced.html
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts
_______________
PRESENTED BY:
Sonia Chang-Díaz
_______________
To the
Honorable Senate and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts in General
Court assembled:
The undersigned legislators and/or citizens respectfully petition for the passage of the accompanying bill:
An Act to Promote Healthy Communities and the Environment.
_______________
PETITION OF:
Name: |
District/Address: |
Sonia Chang-Díaz |
Second Suffolk |
Bruce E. Tarr |
First Essex and Middlesex |
Ellen Story |
3rd Hampshire |
James B. Eldridge |
Middlesex and Worcester |
Denise Provost |
27th Middlesex |
William N. Brownsberger |
24th Middlesex |
Sean Garballey |
23rd Middlesex |
Mark C. Montigny |
Second Bristol and Plymouth |
[SIMILAR MATTER FILED IN PREVIOUS
SESSION
SEE SENATE, NO. S02572 OF 2007-2008.]
The Commonwealth of
Massachusetts
_______________
In the Year Two Thousand and Nine
_______________
An Act to Promote Healthy Communities and the Environment.
Be
it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court
assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows:
SECTION 1. The General Laws, as appearing in
the 2004 Official Edition, are hereby amended by inserting after chapter 111K
chapter 111L:
Chapter 111L: Section 1.Definitions.
Section 1. As used in this chapter the following words shall have the following
meanings:
“Communities Health Index,” a cumulative evaluation of the health of
communities based on specific health outcome indicators that ranks communities
based on their health status so as to identify communities whose residents
suffer disproportionately high rates of disease and premature death.
“Department,” the department of public health.
“Environmental notification,” an environmental notification prepared pursuant
to section 62A of chapter 30 of the Massachusetts Environmental Policy Act.
“Health Impact Assessment” or “HIA,” a combination of procedures, methods, and
tools by which a regulation, program, or other project is assessed as to its
potential effects on the health of a population, and the distribution of those
effects within the population. A HIA evaluates objectively the potential health
effects of a project before it is built or implemented. A HIA encompasses a
heterogeneous array of qualitative and quantitative methods and tools to focus
on health impacts and outcomes such as, but not limited to, obesity, physical
inactivity, asthma, injuries, and social equity. Health impacts and
outcomes are the overall effects of a regulation, program, or other project,
directly and indirectly, on the health of a population. A HIA may provide
recommendations to increase positive health outcomes and minimize adverse
health outcomes.
“Most vulnerable community,” a community identified in the communities health
index as being in the percentiles having the worst health outcomes.
“Person,” any state, public, or private corporation or authority, any
individual, trust, firm, joint stock company, partnership, association, or
other entity, or any group thereof, and any officer, employee, or agent of such
person, any group of persons, and any agency or political subdivision of the
Commonwealth or of the federal government.
“Project,” work, project, or activity, either directly or indirectly undertaken
by a person, including the adoption of a regulation or program by an agency or
authority of the Commonwealth.
Section 2. Expedited and Enhanced Massachusetts Environmental Policy Act
Review.
The secretary of environmental affairs shall:
(a) develop enhanced public participation for any project that requires an
environmental notification for air, solid and hazardous waste, other than
remediation projects, or wastewater and sewage sludge treatment and disposal,
if the project is located within 1 mile of a most vulnerable community, or in
the case of projects exceeding said threshold for air, within 5 miles of a most
vulnerable community; and require enhanced analysis of impacts and mitigation
in the scope of an environmental impact report required by sections 62A or 62B
of chapter 30 of the Massachusetts Environmental Policy Act if the project is
located within 1 mile of a most vulnerable community, or in the case of
projects exceeding a mandatory threshold for air, within 5 miles of a most
vulnerable community.
(b) exempt site assessment grants and loans granted under the Brownfields
Redevelopment Fund, as well as investment tax credits for equipment, tenant
fit-ups, and other post-development activities administered under chapter 206
of the acts of 1998 from the category of state financial assistance for the
purposes of triggering Massachusetts environmental policy act review. Projects
undertaken under chapter 206 of the acts of 1998 that otherwise trigger
Massachusetts environmental policy act review may be considered environmental
restoration projects and subject to expedited review. In making a decision, the
secretary of environmental affairs shall consider the extent to which the new
proposal would prevent pollution and eliminate or minimize risks to public
health and the environment.
Section 3. Community Environmental Health Disparities Program.
There is hereby established in the department a community environmental health
disparities program. The purpose of the program is to establish a
communities health index and require certain proposed projects to complete a
health impact assessment to help protect the health of community residents.
The department shall adopt regulations to implement the community health
disparities program and create a communities health index within six months of
the passage of this act.
Section 4. Communities Health Index.
(a) No less often than once every five years the department
shall create and publish a communities health index using the most recent three
years of health data it has available.
(b) The communities health index shall be based on the following:
(1) Primary indicators for a most vulnerable community:
(i) Total age adjusted mortality, 25% or more
above the commonwealth rate;
(ii) Total age adjusted emergency room visits,
10% or more above the commonwealth rate;
(iii) Elevated blood lead levels in children
age13 and younger, 10% or more above the commonwealth rate;
(iv) Asthma and asthma-related hospital
admissions or prevalence in children age 14 and younger, 10% or more above the
commonwealth rate; and
(v) Infant mortality 10% or more above the
commonwealth rate
(2) Secondary indictors for a community:
(i) Total age adjusted non-congenital
cardiovascular disease and stroke morbidity, 10% or more above the commonwealth
rate;
(ii) Total age adjusted heart attack
hospitalizations, 10% or more above the commonwealth rate;
(iii) Total age adjusted stroke and
stroke-related hospitalizations, 10% or more above the commonwealth rate; and
(iv) Bronchitis and bronchitis-related
hospitalizations in children age 14 and younger and adults age 65 and older,
10% or more above the commonwealth rate
(3) Other indicators for a community:
(i) Other health outcome indicators, if any,
chosen by the department to compare community health; and
(ii) Environmental indicators (such as elevated
levels of particulate matter in the air), if any, chosen by the department as
predictive of negative health outcomes
(c) The department shall weight the indicators, giving more
weight to the primary indicators than to the secondary indicators, to determine
which communities’ residents suffer disproportionately high levels of serious
disease, disability, and premature death and shall index the communities from
worst to best health outcomes. A community in the top 50th percentile of
the index for poor health outcomes is determined to have the worst health
outcomes and deemed to be most vulnerable. The department may adjust the
percentile up or down by no more than 10 percent to identify the communities
with the worst health outcomes in the commonwealth.
(d) For purposes of creating the communities health index:
(1) A community shall include at least 10,000
residents. If a municipality has fewer than 10,000 residents, the
department shall cluster the municipality with one or more contiguous
municipalities to create a combined community with at least 10,000 and no more
than 100,000 residents.
(2) A community shall not exceed 100,000
residents. If a municipality has more than 100,000 residents, the
department shall divide the municipality into geographically contiguous
communities of 10,000-50,000 residents.
(3) The department may divide municipalities of
50,000-100,000 residents into geographically contiguous communities of
10,000-50,000 residents if there are distinct differences in indicators within
areas of the municipality.
Section 5. Notice to the department.
(a) A person required to file an environmental notification
shall provide a copy to the department simultaneous with filing the
environmental notification with the secretary of environmental affairs.
(b) The department may designate areas near vulnerable populations
where certain projects, or the cumulative impact of projects, require notice to
the department when an environmental notification is not required. A
person proposing such a project shall notify the department on forms required
by the department.
Section 6. Health Impact Assessment
(a) Within 30 days after the department receives a copy of
the environmental notification or notice of a project it shall inform the
person if a health impact assessment is required. A health impact
assessment is required if the proposed project is in or might affect a most
vulnerable community, unless the department waives the requirement upon a
finding that the project would have no potential impact on any of the
indicators used to create the communities health index. If the department
intends to waive the requirement for a project in a most vulnerable
community, it first shall provide notice to the public and the opportunity for
written public comment within 30 days after the notice, and shall provide its
decision of whether a health impact assessment is required within 30 days of
the close of the public comment period.
(b) The department, on petition of ten or more persons, may require
a health impact assessment for a project in a most vulnerable community, or
that may affect a most vulnerable community, that does not require an
environmental notification. The department shall respond to such petition
within 30 days.
(c) Whenever a health impact assessment is required, the
department shall provide public notice of the proposed scope for the assessment
within 30 days after its determination that an assessment is required.
The person and public shall have 30 days to provide written comments on the
proposed scope. The department shall issue the scope within 30 days of
the close of the comment period. The scope shall identify which effects
and health outcomes to assess and at a minimum shall require:
(1) consideration of evidence about the
anticipated relationships between the proposed project and the health of the
population, including which people in the population might be affected and how
they might be affected;
(2) consideration of the opinions, experience,
and expectations of those who may be affected by the proposed project;
(3) information and analysis regarding the
potential effects of the proposed project on health;
(4) proposals for mitigation and offsets to
maximize the positive and minimize the potential negative health impacts, if
any;
(5) other information and analysis identified in
the scope; and
(6) a submission deadline for the HIA.
(d) The person proposing the project shall complete and file a
health impact assessment with the department according to the scope and the
department is required to provide the HIA on the department’s website within
ten days of it being filed.
(e) The Department of Environmental Protection cannot approve
a project until the department has approved the HIA and required any additional
mitigation to minimize the potential negative health impacts.
(f) Any person aggrieved by a decision of the
department may, within thirty days of the publication of notice of such
decision, appeal under the provisions of section fourteen of chapter thirty A.
The department’s proceedings and decision shall be deemed to be a final
decision in an adjudicatory proceeding.
Section 7. Evaluating the Health Impact Assessment.
(a) The department shall provide public notice of and an opportunity
for public comment on a health impact assessment.
(b) Within 30 days of the close of the public comment period, the
department, with input from the board of health in the municipality where the
project would be located if one exists, shall determine whether the health
impact assessment is adequate, whether mitigation or offsets are necessary, and
whether the mitigation and offsets identified in the assessment would be
adequate.
(c) If the health impact assessment is adequate and no mitigation
or offsets are required the process is completed.
(d) If the health impact assessment is adequate and appropriate
mitigation and offsets are identified and required, the process is completed,
subject to the person completing the mitigation and offsets identified in the
assessment and required by the department. The department may require
monitoring and evaluation after completion to determine whether the mitigation
and offsets were adequate.
(e) If the health impact assessment is inadequate, the
department shall provide an opportunity to supplement the assessment to remedy
the inadequacies.
(f) If a health impact assessment is required, a person
shall not begin a project until the department approves the health impact
assessment.
(g) The department may require a fee be paid for its
evaluation of an assessment.
(h) A person whose health impact assessment has been approved
must notify the department of any substantial change in the proposal so that
the department may determine whether a supplemental assessment or other
mitigation or offsets are required.
Section 8. Emergencies.
The hazard abatement provisions of a project in a most vulnerable community may
begin before approval of a health impact assessment if emergency action is
essential to avoid or eliminate a threat to public health or safety, or a
threat to any natural resources; provided, that wherever practicable, the
person shall obtain the prior approval of the department. Following beginning
any such project, the person shall promptly, but in any case within sixty days,
begin compliance with the provisions of section 4.
Section 9. Action or proceeding alleging improper determination of need
for a health impact assessment or approval of such assessment or noncompliance
with law.
(a) A person intending to commence an action or proceeding
alleging an improper determination of whether a project requires the
preparation of a health impact assessment shall first provide notice of
intention to commence such action or proceeding within sixty days of issuance
of notice of such determination. A person intending to commence an action or
proceeding alleging that a health impact assessment fails to comply with the
requirements of this chapter shall first provide notice of intention to
commence such action or proceeding within sixty days of approval of such
assessment. Said notices of intention shall be in such form as the
department shall prescribe, shall identify with particularity the issues to be
considered in any such action or proceeding, shall be in lieu of the notice and
waiting period required by section seven A of chapter two hundred and fourteen,
and shall be provided to the attorney general, the person proposing the
project, and the department.
(b) An action or proceeding noticed as provided in subsection (a)
of this section shall be filed within sixty days after providing such notice.
(c) No allegation shall be made in any action or proceeding
under this chapter unless the matter complained of was raised at the
appropriate point in the administrative review procedures; provided that a
matter may be raised upon a showing that it is material and that it was not
reasonably possible with due diligence to have raised it during such procedures
or that the matter sought to be raised is of critical importance to the
environmental impact of the project.
(d) If a court determines that a person proposing a project has
knowingly concealed a material fact or knowingly submitted false information in
any form or report required under this chapter, limits on the manner and time
in which actions or proceedings may be commenced shall not apply and the
department may require the preparation and review of such assessments as may be
necessary to correct any deficient assessment.
(e) Ten or more persons residing in a most vulnerable
community may commence an action or proceeding alleging that a project in said
community or an approval of a health impact assessment for a project in said
community fails to comply with the requirements of this chapter.
SECTION 2. The Department of Public Health shall adopt regulations
to implement this act within one year after the effective date of this act.