Bill Text: NY S02129 | 2023-2024 | General Assembly | Introduced
NOTE: There are more recent revisions of this legislation. Read Latest Draft
Bill Title: Establishes the climate change adaptation cost recovery program to require companies that have contributed significantly to the buildup of climate-warming greenhouse gases in the atmosphere to bear a share of the costs of needed infrastructure investments to adapt to climate change; mandates that projects funded by the program require compliance with prevailing wage requirements; requires that contracts for funded projects contain a provision that the structural iron and structural steel used or supplied in the performance of the contract or any subcontract thereto shall be produced or made in whole or substantial part in the United States, its territories or possessions; makes additional provisions; establishes the climate change adaptation fund.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 29-0)
Status: (Engrossed) 2024-06-07 - returned to senate [S02129 Detail]
Download: New_York-2023-S02129-Introduced.html
Bill Title: Establishes the climate change adaptation cost recovery program to require companies that have contributed significantly to the buildup of climate-warming greenhouse gases in the atmosphere to bear a share of the costs of needed infrastructure investments to adapt to climate change; mandates that projects funded by the program require compliance with prevailing wage requirements; requires that contracts for funded projects contain a provision that the structural iron and structural steel used or supplied in the performance of the contract or any subcontract thereto shall be produced or made in whole or substantial part in the United States, its territories or possessions; makes additional provisions; establishes the climate change adaptation fund.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 29-0)
Status: (Engrossed) 2024-06-07 - returned to senate [S02129 Detail]
Download: New_York-2023-S02129-Introduced.html
STATE OF NEW YORK ________________________________________________________________________ 2129 2023-2024 Regular Sessions IN SENATE January 18, 2023 ___________ Introduced by Sens. KRUEGER, HOYLMAN-SIGAL, MAY, RAMOS, RIVERA, STAVISKY -- read twice and ordered printed, and when printed to be committed to the Committee on Environmental Conservation AN ACT to amend the environmental conservation law, in relation to establishing the climate change adaptation cost recovery program; and to amend the state finance law, in relation to establishing the climate change adaptation fund The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem- bly, do enact as follows: 1 Section 1. This act shall be known and may be cited as the "climate 2 change superfund act". 3 § 2. Legislative findings. The legislature finds and declares the 4 following: 5 1. Climate change, resulting primarily from the combustion of fossil 6 fuels, is an immediate, grave threat to the state's communities, envi- 7 ronment, and economy. In addition to mitigating the further buildup of 8 greenhouse gases, the state must take action to adapt to certain conse- 9 quences of climate change that are irreversible, including rising sea 10 levels, increasing temperatures, extreme weather events, flooding, heat 11 waves, toxic algal blooms and other climate-change-driven threats. 12 Maintaining New York's quality of life into the future, particularly for 13 young people, who will experience greater impacts from climate change 14 over their lifetimes, will be one of the state's greatest challenges 15 over the next three decades. Meeting that challenge will require a 16 shared commitment of purpose and huge investments in new or upgraded 17 infrastructure. 18 2. New York has previously adopted programs now in place - the inac- 19 tive hazardous waste disposal site (state superfund) program and the oil 20 spill fund - to remediate environmental damage to lands and waters based 21 on the principle that, where possible, the entities responsible for 22 environmental damage should pay for its cleanup. No similar program EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets [] is old law to be omitted. LBD02710-03-3S. 2129 2 1 exists yet for the pollution of the atmosphere by greenhouse gas buildup 2 as a result of burning fossil fuels. 3 3. Based on decades of research it is now possible to determine with 4 great accuracy the share of greenhouse gases released into the atmos- 5 phere by specific fossil fuel companies over the last 70 years or more, 6 making it possible to assign liability to and require compensation from 7 companies commensurate with their emissions during a given time period. 8 4. It is the intent of the legislature to establish a climate change 9 adaptation cost recovery program that will require companies that have 10 contributed significantly to the buildup of climate change-driving 11 greenhouse gases in the atmosphere to bear a proportionate share of the 12 cost of infrastructure investments required to adapt to the impacts of 13 climate change in New York state. 14 5. a. The obligation to pay under the program is based on the fossil 15 fuel companies' historic contribution to the buildup of greenhouse gases 16 that is largely responsible for climate change. The program operates 17 under a standard of strict liability; companies are required to pay into 18 the fund because the use of their products caused the pollution. No 19 finding of wrongdoing is required. 20 b. Nonetheless, the legislature recognizes that the actions of many of 21 the biggest fossil fuel companies have been unconscionable, closely 22 reflecting the strategy of denial, deflection, and delay used by the 23 tobacco industry. In spite of the information provided by their own 24 scientists that the continued burning of fossil fuels would have 25 catastrophic results, these companies hid the truth from the public and 26 actively spread false information that the science of climate change was 27 uncertain when in fact it was beyond controversy. This breach of the 28 public trust was breathtaking in its scope and consequences, and it 29 continues to this day. 30 c. Since 2022, the fossil fuel industry has taken advantage of several 31 overlapping global crises to earn immense profits, charging record high 32 prices while aggressively rejecting any responsibility for the costs of 33 its business activities. While all the profits accrue to the companies, 34 all of the costs of climate change are paid by taxpayers and individ- 35 uals. This is a market failure that needs to be addressed through policy 36 change. 37 6. Payments by historical polluters into the climate change adaptation 38 cost recovery program would be used for new or upgraded infrastructure 39 needs such as coastal wetlands restoration, storm water drainage system 40 upgrades, and energy efficient cooling systems in public and private 41 buildings, including schools and public housing, all of which are neces- 42 sary to protect the public safety and welfare in the face of the growing 43 impacts of climate change. At least 35%, with a goal of at least 40% of 44 the overall benefits of program spending would go to climate change 45 adaptive infrastructure projects that directly benefit disadvantaged 46 communities. 47 7. This act is not intended to intrude on the authority of the federal 48 government in areas where it has preempted the right of the states to 49 legislate. This act is remedial in nature, seeking compensation for 50 damages resulting from the past actions of polluters. 51 § 3. The environmental conservation law is amended by adding a new 52 article 76 to read as follows: 53 ARTICLE 76 54 CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION COST RECOVERY PROGRAM 55 Section 76-0101. Definitions. 56 76-0103. The climate change adaptation cost recovery program.S. 2129 3 1 § 76-0101. Definitions. 2 For the purposes of this article the following terms shall have the 3 following meanings: 4 1. "Applicable payment date" means September thirtieth of the second 5 calendar year following the year in which this article is enacted into 6 law. 7 2. "Climate change adaptive infrastructure project" means an infras- 8 tructure project designed to avoid, moderate, repair, or adapt to nega- 9 tive impacts caused by climate change, and to assist communities, house- 10 holds, and businesses in preparing for future climate change-driven 11 disruptions. Such projects include but are not limited to restoring 12 coastal wetlands and developing other nature-based solutions and coastal 13 protections; upgrading storm water drainage systems; making defensive 14 upgrades to roads, bridges, subways, and transit systems; preparing for 15 and recovering from hurricanes and other extreme weather events; under- 16 taking preventive health care programs and providing medical care to 17 treat illness or injury caused by the effects of climate change; relo- 18 cating, elevating, or retrofitting sewage treatment plants vulnerable to 19 flooding; installing energy efficient cooling systems and other weather- 20 ization and energy efficiency upgrades and retrofits in public and 21 private buildings, including schools and public housing; upgrading parts 22 of the electrical grid to increase stability and resilience, including 23 supporting the creation of self-sufficient clean energy microgrids; 24 addressing urban heat island effects through green spaces, urban fores- 25 try, and other interventions; and responding to toxic algae blooms, loss 26 of agricultural topsoil, and other climate-driven ecosystem threats to 27 forests, farms, fisheries, and food systems. 28 3. "Coal" shall have the same definition as in section 1-103 of the 29 energy law. 30 4. "Controlled group" means two or more entities treated as a single 31 employer under section 52(a) or (b) or section 414(m) or (o) of the 32 Internal Revenue Code. In applying subsections (a) and (b) of section 33 52, section 1563 of the Internal Revenue Code shall be applied without 34 regard to subsection(b)(2)(C). For purposes of this article, entities in 35 a controlled group are treated as a single entity for purposes of meet- 36 ing the definition of responsible party and are jointly and severally 37 liable for payment of any cost recovery demand owed by any entity in the 38 controlled group. 39 5. "Cost recovery demand" means a charge asserted against a responsi- 40 ble party for cost recovery payments under the program for payment to 41 the fund. 42 6. "Covered greenhouse gas emissions" means, with respect to any enti- 43 ty, the total quantity of greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere 44 during the covered period, expressed in metric tons of carbon dioxide 45 equivalent, resulting from the use of fossil fuels or petroleum products 46 extracted, produced, refined, or sold by such entity. 47 7. "Covered period" means the period that began January first, two 48 thousand and ended on December thirty-first, two thousand eighteen. 49 8. "Crude oil" means oil or petroleum of any kind and in any form, 50 including bitumen, oil sands, heavy oil, conventional and unconventional 51 oil, shale oil, natural gas liquids, condensates, and related fossil 52 fuels. 53 9. "Entity" means any individual, trustee, agent, partnership, associ- 54 ation, corporation, company, municipality, political subdivision, or 55 other legal organization, including a foreign nation, that holds or heldS. 2129 4 1 an ownership interest in a fossil fuel business during the covered peri- 2 od. 3 10. "Fossil fuel" shall have the same definition as in section 1-103 4 of the energy law. 5 11. "Fossil fuel business" means a business engaging in the extraction 6 of fossil fuels or the refining of petroleum products. 7 12. "Fuel gases" shall have the same definition as in section 1-103 of 8 the energy law. 9 13. "Fund" means the climate change adaptation fund established pursu- 10 ant to section ninety-seven-m of the state finance law. 11 14. "Greenhouse gas" shall have the same definition as in section 12 75-0101 of this chapter. 13 15. "Nature-based solutions" shall mean projects that utilize or mimic 14 nature or natural processes and functions and that may also offer envi- 15 ronmental, economic, and social benefits, while increasing resilience. 16 Nature-based solutions include both green and natural infrastructure. 17 16. "Notice of cost recovery demand" means the written communication 18 informing a responsible party of the amount of the cost recovery demand 19 payable to the fund. 20 17. "Petroleum products" shall have the same definition as in section 21 1-103 of the energy law. 22 18. "Program" means the climate change adaptation cost recovery 23 program established under section 76-0103 of this article. 24 19. "Qualifying expenditure" means an authorized payment from the fund 25 in support of a climate change adaptive infrastructure project, includ- 26 ing its operation and maintenance, as defined by the department. 27 20. "Responsible party" means any entity (or a successor in interest 28 to such entity described herein), which, during any part of the covered 29 period, was engaged in the trade or business of extracting fossil fuel 30 or refining crude oil and is determined by the department to be respon- 31 sible for more than one billion tons of covered greenhouse gas emis- 32 sions. The term responsible party shall not include any person who lacks 33 sufficient connection with the state to satisfy the nexus requirements 34 of the United States Constitution. 35 § 76-0103. The climate change adaptation cost recovery program. 36 1. There is hereby established a climate change adaptation cost recov- 37 ery program administered by the department. 38 2. The purposes of the program shall be the following: 39 a. To secure compensatory payments from responsible parties based on a 40 standard of strict liability to provide a source of revenue for climate 41 change adaptive infrastructure projects within the state. 42 b. To determine proportional liability of responsible parties pursuant 43 to subdivision three of this section; 44 c. To impose cost recovery demands on responsible parties and issue 45 notices of cost recovery demands; 46 d. To accept and collect payment from responsible parties; 47 e. To identify climate change adaptive infrastructure projects; 48 f. To disperse funds to climate change adaptive infrastructure 49 projects; and 50 g. To allocate funds in such a way as to achieve a goal that at least 51 forty percent of the qualified expenditures from the program, but not 52 less than thirty-five percent of such expenditures, shall go to climate 53 change adaptive infrastructure projects that benefit disadvantaged 54 communities as defined in section 75-0101 of this chapter. 55 3. a. A responsible party shall be strictly liable, without regard to 56 fault, for a share of the costs of climate change adaptive infrastruc-S. 2129 5 1 ture projects, including their operation and maintenance, supported by 2 the fund. 3 b. With respect to each responsible party, the cost recovery demand 4 shall be equal to an amount that bears the same ratio to seventy-five 5 billion dollars as the responsible party's applicable share of covered 6 greenhouse gas emissions bears to the aggregate applicable shares of 7 covered greenhouse gas emissions of all responsible parties. 8 c. The applicable share of covered greenhouse gas emissions taken into 9 account under this section for any responsible party shall be the amount 10 by which the covered greenhouse gas emissions attributable to such 11 responsible party exceeds one billion metric tons. 12 d. Where an entity owns a minority interest in another entity of ten 13 percent or more, the calculation of the entity's applicable share of 14 greenhouse gas emissions taken into account under this section shall 15 include the applicable share of greenhouse gas emissions taken into 16 account under this section by the entity in which the responsible party 17 holds a minority interest, multiplied by the percentage of the minority 18 interest held. 19 e. In determining the amount of greenhouse gas emissions attributable 20 to any entity, an amount equivalent to nine hundred forty-two and one- 21 half metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent shall be treated as 22 released for every million pounds of coal attributable to such entity; 23 an amount equivalent to four hundred thirty-two thousand one hundred 24 eighty metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent shall be treated as 25 released for every million barrels of crude oil attributable to such 26 entity; and an amount equivalent to fifty-three thousand four hundred 27 forty metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent shall be treated as 28 released for every million cubic feet of fuel gases attributable to such 29 entity. 30 f. The commissioner may adjust the cost recovery demand amount of a 31 responsible party refining petroleum products (or who is a successor in 32 interest to such an entity) if such responsible party establishes to the 33 satisfaction of the commissioner that a portion of the cost recovery 34 demand amount was attributable to the refining of crude oil extracted by 35 another responsible party (or who is a successor in interest to such an 36 entity) that accounted for such crude oil in determining its cost recov- 37 ery demand amount. 38 g. Payment of a cost recovery demand shall be made in full on the 39 applicable payment date unless a responsible party elects to pay in 40 installments pursuant to paragraph h of this subdivision. 41 h. A responsible party may elect to pay the cost recovery demand 42 amount in twenty-four annual installments, eight percent of the total 43 due in the first installment and four percent of the total due in each 44 of the following eight installments. If an election is made under this 45 paragraph, the first installment shall be paid on the applicable payment 46 date and each subsequent installment shall be paid on the same date as 47 the applicable payment date in each succeeding year. 48 i. If there is any addition to the original amount of the cost recov- 49 ery demand for failure to timely pay any installment required under this 50 subdivision, a liquidation or sale of substantially all the assets of 51 the responsible party (including in a proceeding under U.S. Code: Title 52 11 or similar case), a cessation of business by the responsible party, 53 or any similar circumstance, then the unpaid balance of all remaining 54 installments shall be due on the date of such event (or in the case of a 55 proceeding under U.S. Code: Title 11 or similar case, on the day before 56 the petition is filed). The preceding sentence shall not apply to theS. 2129 6 1 sale of substantially all of the assets of a responsible party to a 2 buyer if such buyer enters into an agreement with the department under 3 which such buyer is liable for the remaining installments due under this 4 subdivision in the same manner as if such buyer were the responsible 5 party. 6 4. a. Within one year of the effective date of this article, the 7 department shall promulgate such regulations as are necessary to carry 8 out this article, including but not limited to: 9 i. adopting methodologies using the best available science to deter- 10 mine responsible parties and their applicable share of covered green- 11 house gas emissions consistent with the provisions of this article; 12 ii. registering entities that are responsible parties under the 13 program; 14 iii. issuing notices of cost recovery demand to responsible parties 15 informing them of the cost recovery demand amount; how and where cost 16 recovery demands can be paid; the potential consequences of nonpayment 17 and late payment; and information regarding their rights to contest an 18 assessment; 19 iv. accepting payments from, pursuing collection efforts against, and 20 negotiating settlements with responsible parties; and 21 v. adopting procedures for identifying and selecting climate change 22 adaptive infrastructure projects eligible to receive qualifying expendi- 23 tures, including legislative budget appropriations, issuance of requests 24 for proposals from localities and not-for-profit and community organiza- 25 tions, grants to private individuals, or other methods as determined by 26 the department, and for dispersing moneys from the fund for qualifying 27 expenditures. When considering projects intended to stabilize tidal 28 shorelines, the department shall encourage the use of nature-based 29 solutions. Total qualifying expenditures shall be allocated in such a 30 way as to achieve a goal that at least forty percent of the qualified 31 expenditures from the program, but not less than thirty-five percent of 32 such expenditures, shall go to climate change adaptive infrastructure 33 projects that benefit disadvantaged communities as defined in section 34 75-0101 of this chapter. 35 b. The department shall hold at least two public hearings, one in-per- 36 son and one virtual, on proposed regulations, with a minimum of thirty 37 days' public notice. 38 5. Within two years of the effective date of this article, the depart- 39 ment shall complete a statewide climate change adaptation master plan 40 for the purpose of guiding the dispersal of funds in a timely, effi- 41 cient, and equitable manner to all regions of the state in accordance 42 with the provisions of this chapter. In completing such plan, the 43 department shall: 44 a. collaborate with the department of state, empire state development, 45 the department of agriculture and markets, the New York state energy 46 research and development authority, the department of public service, 47 and the New York independent systems operator; 48 b. assess the adaptation needs and vulnerabilities of various areas 49 vital to the state's economy, normal functioning, and the health and 50 well-being of New Yorkers, including but not limited to: agriculture, 51 biodiversity, ecosystem services, education, finance, healthcare, manu- 52 facturing, housing and real estate, retail, tourism (including state and 53 municipal parks), transportation, and municipal and local government. 54 c. identify major potential, proposed, and ongoing climate change 55 adaptive infrastructure projects throughout the state;S. 2129 7 1 d. identify opportunities for alignment with existing federal, state, 2 and local funding streams; 3 e. consult with stakeholders, including local governments, businesses, 4 environmental advocates, relevant subject area experts, and represen- 5 tatives of disadvantaged communities; and 6 f. provide opportunities for public engagement in all regions of the 7 state. 8 6. The department, the department of taxation and finance, and the 9 attorney general are hereby authorized to enforce the provisions of this 10 article. 11 7. The department or the department of taxation and finance shall 12 provide an opportunity to be heard to any responsible parties that seek 13 to contest a cost recovery demand. Determinations made in favor of a 14 petitioner after such hearing shall be final and conclusive. A determi- 15 nation in favor of the state may be appealed under article seventy-eight 16 of the civil practice law and rules. 17 8. Moneys received from cost recovery demands shall be deposited in 18 the climate change adaptation fund established pursuant to section nine- 19 ty-seven-m of the state finance law. 20 9. a. Projects funded pursuant to this article shall require compli- 21 ance with prevailing wage requirements pursuant to section two hundred 22 twenty of the labor law. 23 b. Any state entity or municipality receiving at least twenty-five 24 million dollars ($25,000,000) from funds allocated pursuant to this 25 article for a project costing greater than fifty million dollars 26 ($50,000,000) shall require use of apprenticeship agreements as defined 27 by article twenty-three of the labor law, with pre-apprenticeship direct 28 entry providers registered with the department of labor. 29 c. i. Any state entity or municipality receiving at least twenty-five 30 million dollars ($25,000,000) from funds allocated pursuant to this 31 article for a project which involves the construction, reconstruction, 32 alteration, maintenance, moving, demolition, excavation, development or 33 other improvement of any building, structure or land, shall be subject 34 to section two hundred twenty-two of the labor law. 35 ii. Any privately owned project receiving funds allocated pursuant to 36 this title which utilizes a project labor agreement on such project 37 shall not be subject to article eight of the labor law. 38 d. If determined applicable, a municipality or state entity may 39 require that the private owner of a project, or a third party acting on 40 the owner's behalf, enter into a labor peace agreement with at least one 41 bona fide labor organization either: 42 i. where such bona fide labor organization is actively representing 43 non-construction employees; or 44 ii. upon notice by a bona fide labor organization that is attempting 45 to represent non-construction employees. For purposes of this section 46 "labor peace agreement" means an agreement between an entity and labor 47 organization that, at a minimum, protects the state's proprietary inter- 48 ests by prohibiting labor organizations and members from engaging in 49 picketing, work stoppages, boycotts, and any other economic interfer- 50 ence. 51 e. i. Any municipality or state entity, or a third party acting on 52 behalf and for the benefit of the municipality or state entity, in each 53 contract for construction, reconstruction, alteration, repair, improve- 54 ment or maintenance of a project receiving funds under this article that 55 is a public work, shall ensure that such contract contains a provision 56 that the structural iron and structural steel used or supplied in theS. 2129 8 1 performance of the contract or any subcontract thereto and that is 2 permanently incorporated into the public work, shall be produced or made 3 in whole or substantial part in the United States, its territories or 4 possessions. In the case of a structural iron or structural steel prod- 5 uct, all manufacturing must take place in the United States, from the 6 initial melting stage through the application of coatings, except metal- 7 lurgical processes involving the refinement of steel additives. For the 8 purposes of this subdivision, "permanently incorporated" shall mean an 9 iron or steel product that is required to remain in place at the end of 10 the project contract, in a fixed location, affixed to the public work to 11 which it was incorporated. Iron and steel products that are capable of 12 being moved from one location to another are not permanently incorpo- 13 rated into a public work. 14 ii. The provisions of paragraph a of this subdivision shall not apply 15 if the head of the department, agency, or municipal entity constructing 16 the public work, in his or her sole discretion, determines that the 17 provisions would not be in the public interest, would result in unrea- 18 sonable costs, or that obtaining such steel or iron in the United States 19 would increase the cost of the contract by an unreasonable amount, or 20 such iron or steel, including without limitation structural iron and 21 structural steel, cannot be produced or made in the United States in 22 sufficient and reasonably available quantities and of satisfactory qual- 23 ity. 24 10. a. The department shall conduct an independent evaluation of the 25 climate change adaptation cost recovery program. The purpose of this 26 evaluation is to determine the effectiveness of the program in achieving 27 its purposes as defined in subdivision two of this section. 28 b. Such evaluation shall be provided to the governor, the temporary 29 president of the senate and the speaker of the assembly on or before 30 January first of the second calendar year following the year in which 31 this article is enacted into law, and annually on or before September 32 thirtieth thereafter. 33 c. Any entity contracted by the department to conduct such evaluation 34 shall receive prompt payment of all moneys due upon completion of such 35 evaluation. 36 § 4. The state finance law is amended by adding a new section 97-m to 37 read as follows: 38 § 97-m. Climate change adaptation fund. 1. There is hereby established 39 in the custody of the comptroller and the commissioner of taxation and 40 finance a special revolving fund to be known as the "climate change 41 adaptation fund" for the purpose of receiving moneys through cost recov- 42 ery demands and issuing funds for qualifying expenditures pursuant to 43 the climate change adaptation cost recovery program established in arti- 44 cle seventy-six of the environmental conservation law. 45 2. No monies shall be expended from the fund for any project except 46 qualifying expenditures pursuant to the program, including their opera- 47 tion and maintenance, as well as reasonable costs incurred by the 48 department of environmental conservation for administering the program. 49 3. Revenues in the fund shall be kept separate and shall not be 50 commingled with any other moneys in the custody of the comptroller or 51 the commissioner of taxation and finance. All deposits of such revenues 52 shall, if required by the comptroller, be secured by obligations of the 53 United States or of the state having a market value equal at all times 54 to the amount of such deposits and all banks and trust companies are 55 authorized to give security for such deposits. Any such revenues in such 56 fund may, upon the discretion of the comptroller, be invested in obli-S. 2129 9 1 gations in which the comptroller is authorized to invest pursuant to 2 section ninety-eight-a of this article. 3 4. All payments of moneys from the fund shall be made on the audit and 4 warrant of the comptroller. 5 § 5. Availability of additional remedies. Nothing in this act shall be 6 deemed to preclude the pursuit of a civil action or other remedy by any 7 person. The remedies provided in this act are in addition to those 8 provided by existing statutory or common law. 9 § 6. Severability. If any word, phrase, clause, sentence, paragraph, 10 section, or part of this act shall be adjudged by any court of competent 11 jurisdiction to be invalid, such judgment shall not affect, impair, or 12 invalidate the remainder thereof, but shall be confined in its operation 13 to the word, phrase, clause, sentence, paragraph, section, or part ther- 14 eof directly involved in the controversy in which such judgment shall 15 have been rendered. 16 § 7. Construction. This act, being necessary for the general health, 17 safety, and welfare of the people of this state, shall be liberally 18 construed to effect its purpose. 19 § 8. This act shall take effect immediately.