Statutes of 2001
AB 173 (Chavez)--Solid Waste: Fees--AB 173 will extend the sunset
date on the provision of law providing that the use, disposal, or placement of
inert waste (rock, concrete, brick, sand, soil, and cured asphalt) for purposes
of surface mining reclamation is not subject to a tipping fee. The sunset date
will be extended from January 1, 2002, until the operative date of CIWMB
regulations. This bill requires that the CIWMB promulgate regulations by
January 1, 2004. (Chapter 811)
AB 192 (Canciamilla)--Public Records: State Bodies: Open Meetings--AB 192 will require
additional public notice under the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act and make
various changes relative to meetings of State bodies. (Chapter 243)
AB 414 (Dutra)--Hazardous Waste Disposal: Lead: Nickel: Copper--AB
414 will restore the ability of Caltrans and other public transportation
entities to be granted variances by the DTSC to reuse lead-contaminated soils
in highway improvement projects. This bill also extends the sunset date of the
statute specifying that certain wastes must be disposed of at a Class I
hazardous waste facility unless certain exemptions apply. The original sunset
date of July 1, 2003, is now July 1, 2006. This bill was an urgency measure
that took effect on October 14, 2001. (Chapter 861)
AB 560 (Jackson)--Oil: Local Used Oil Collection Programs: Stormwater
Runoff Pollution--AB 560 will allow local governments to use the
CIWMB’s Used Oil Block Grant Program to address stormwater runoff pollution
from oil and oil by-products if the local government has already complied with
existing statutory uses of the program. The local government must have also
adopted and be implementing an approved stormwater management program. This is
in keeping with the intent of the California Oil Recycling Act. It also
provides another facet of used oil management for local governments. (Chapter 500)
AB 1187 (Simitian)--Solid Waste: Recycling: Tires: Permits: Used Oil--AB
1187 will make technical clarifying changes to sections of the Public Resources
Code. It removes the gallon limit from the Certified Used Oil Collection Center
requirements to encourage more centers to collect oil from small generators. AB
1187 also clarifies that all tire haulers, not just registered haulers, must
comply with the manifest system. It also allows tire haulers to submit their
manifests electronically. AB 1187 also clarifies that the involvement of
district attorneys and county counsels in the tire remediation process—when a
violator fails to respond to a CIWMB cleanup or abatement order—should be permissive.
This would take place only if the Attorney General is unable to file the
petition. Lastly, under current law the CIWMB is permitted to award no more
than $3 million for household hazardous waste grants. AB 1187 increased that
limit to $5 million per year, if sufficient funds are appropriated in the
annual budget from the Integrated Waste Management Account for this purpose. (Chapter 316)
AB 1201 (Pavley)--Oil: Stormwater Pollution: Used Oil Recycling Fund--AB
1201 will add stormwater pollution mitigation and education projects to the
activities considered as eligible projects for the various competitive grant
programs funded through the California Used Oil Recycling Fund, upon approval
of the CIWMB. (Chapter 317)
AB 1553 (Keeley)--Environmental Justice: Guidelines--AB 1553 will require
OPR to adopt guidelines for addressing environmental justice
matters in city and county general plans. This may be beneficial to local
governments that are interested in incorporating environmental justice into
their planning but are unsure of how to do so. This bill does not require any
jurisdiction to adopt the guidelines. (Chapter 762)
SB 88 (Costa)--Air Pollution: Odors--SB 88 will extend
the January 1, 2002, sunset date on a provision of law stating that odors
emanating from a composting operation fall within the jurisdiction of a local
enforcement agency and not the local air quality management district. The
sunset will be extended until April 1, 2003, or until the CIWMB adopts
regulations governing the operation of compost facilities. (Chapter 424)
SB 373 (Torlakson)--School Districts: Solid Waste Recycling--SB
373 will codify and provide additional direction to existing efforts to ensure
that the children of California learn the valuable lessons of resource
conservation. SB 373 will strengthen the education framework in science by
including environmental concepts. It will also provide for incentives to
schools to assist in the development and implementation of environmental education
programs through a $1.5 million grant program funded through the Integrated
Waste Management Account. SB 373 will codify the existing Office of Integrated
Environmental Education at the CIWMB and requires it to develop and implement a
unified environmental education strategy on the environment for elementary and
secondary schools in the state. SB 373 contains other related provisions. (Chapter 926)
SB 470 (Sher)--Hazardous Waste Control--SB 470 will correct a number of
technical issues in the hazardous waste law overseen by DTSC and exempt an engine oil management technology from
regulation under the hazardous waste law. It will also raise the limit on the number of gallons of
used oil that may be transported by a person per day from 20 to
50 gallons. (Chapter 605)
SB 481 (Speier)--Vehicle: Dealers: Licenses--SB
481 will exclude the cost of the California Tire Fee from the advertised price
of a new car. (Chapter 441)
SB 624 (Soto)--Vehicle Cover--SB 624 will clarify that waste
being transported must be covered. The bill adds cardboard to the definition of
waste, pursuant to this provision. (Chapter 279)
SB 633 (Sher)--Hazardous and Solid Waste: Mercury--SB
633, the California Mercury Reduction Act of 2001, will set forth provisions to
reduce the amount of mercury added to the environment by broken and discarded
fever thermometers, by discarded novelty products, and by school science
materials. It will add penalties for failure to comply with existing law
regarding removal of hazardous materials from appliances, and it will establish
a program to encourage replacement and recycling of mercury-containing motor
vehicle light switches. Finally, it will prohibit the sale in California of
mercury-containing motor vehicle light switches after January 1, 2005. (Chapter 656)
SB 828 (Alarcon)--Environmental Justice--SB 828 will create deadlines for the
Work Group on Environmental Justice. The bill requires all boards, departments,
and offices within the Cal/EPA to review their programs, policies, and
activities and identify and address any gaps relating to environmental
justice. (Chapter 765)
SB 1127 (Karnette)--Rigid Plastic Packaging--SB
1127 will require the CIWMB to conduct a study regarding the use and disposal
of polystyrene in California. The report will be submitted to the Legislature
and the Governor by January 1, 2003. (Chapter 406)
SB 1158 (Knight)--Aerosol Can Recycling--SB 1158 will allow on-site
aerosol can hazardous waste treatment to fall under the universal waste rule.
This will allow household hazardous waste collection centers, as well as other
on-site hazardous waste generators, to bypass the certification process and
adopt the inspection requirements that come with the universal waste rule
instead. (Chapter 450)
SBX1 5 (Sher)--State Energy Projects--SBX1 5 will enhance the existing
low-income energy assistance programs, established a variety of energy
efficiency programs, and create a program to increase distributed electric
generation capacity, particularly with respect to State and municipal
buildings. (Chapter 7)

Statutes of 2002
AB 467 (Strom-Martin)--Integrated Waste Management: Landfill Closure Loan Program--AB 467 will create the Landfill Closure Loan Program (LCLP), which gives the CIWMB
authority to offer loans to small rural landfill operators and assist them in
closing their facility early to prevent potential threats to the environment.
This program creates a zero-interest loan for operators of older-technology,
unlined landfills. The LCLP is a continuation of the Facility Compliance Loan
Program (FCLP), which uses funds from the Integrated Waste Management Account
to address this issue. (Chapter 587)
AB 498 (Chan)--Environmentally Preferable Purchasing--AB 498 will require
DGS, in consultation with Cal/EPA, members of the public, industry, and public
health and environmental organizations, to provide State agencies with
information and assistance regarding environmentally preferable
purchasing. (Chapter 575)
AB 709 (Wayne)--Codisposal Sites: Cleanup--AB 709 will establish
that burn dump sites be eligible for cleanup funding from the CIWMB’s Solid
Waste Disposal and Codisposal Site Cleanup Program. The bill would prescribe a
method for determining whether the CIWMB, Department of Toxic Substances Control,
or a regional water quality control board should have oversight authority. (Chapter 589)
AB 1400 (Cogdill)--Mixed Solid Waste Composting Facility: Pilot Project--AB
1400 will require Mariposa County to submit a report to the CIWMB regarding the county’s progress in
funding, constructing, and operating a mixed solid waste composting facility in
cooperation with Yosemite National Park. (Chapter 381)
AB 1482 (Richman)--Solid Waste Diversion--AB 1482 will encourage the
formation of regional agencies, which are formed by agreement to work as a
group to meet the requirements of the Integrated Waste Management Act, by
permitting the regional agency to equitably distribute fines levied among its
members. (Chapter 359)
AB 2166 (Lowenthal)--Hazardous Waste: Used Oil Recycling: Transportation--AB
2166 will require a hazardous waste transporter who transports used oil to
provide a written acknowledgment to each generator of used oil from whom the
transporter receives used oil, with specified exceptions. The bill will provide
that a person who makes a material misrepresentation implementing these
requirements is in violation of the hazardous waste control laws. (Chapter 992)
AB 2214 (Keeley)--Low-Level Radioactive Waste Disposal Facility--AB
2214 will prohibit the Department of Health Services (DHS) from issuing or
renewing a license for the disposal of low-level radioactive waste (LLRW)
unless the siting, design, and operation of the facility complies with Nuclear
Regulatory Commission requirements and meets specified minimum standards. This
bill will also require DHS to promote the reductions of LLRW generated using
specified practices. Finally, this bill specifies that Ward Valley cannot serve
as California’s low-level radioactive waste disposal site for purposes of the
Southwestern Low-Level Radioactive Waste Disposal Compact. (Chapter 513)
AB 2251 (Nation)--Sudden Oak Death--AB 2251 will require DFFP to
implement a program to detect, remove, and treat, if possible, trees infected
with Phytophthora Ramorum and will require that the program encourage tree
management and replanting, as specified. The bill will require DFFP and DFA to
cooperate in enforcing quarantine and pest abatement provisions as they may
relate to the program. In addition, the bill requires DFFP to provide
information and technical assistance to local agencies, and authorizes DFFP and
other State agencies to assist local tree maintenance programs by making
surplus equipment available on loan. The bill authorizes DFFP to contract to
provide assistance for project costs associated with program implementation.
The bill was an urgency measure and took effect on September 25, 2002. (Chapter 854)
AB 2308 (Chavez)--Solid Waste: Inert Waste--This bill will address inequities
in the way that inert waste (rock, concrete, brick, sand, soil, ceramics, and
cured asphalt) is counted as it relates to diversion from landfills and the
State’s 50 percent diversion goal. It would exclude inert waste sent to
CIWMB-permitted mine reclamation facilities from disposal reporting. As a
result, this bill will directly affect local jurisdictions’ diversion rates.
This bill will be implemented retroactively to require that all jurisdictions
that disposed of inert waste into one of the three CIWMB-permitted mine
reclamation facilities in 2001 remove those tons from their disposal numbers
when calculating their diversion rate. This bill will also require that they
remove a corresponding amount from their base-year numbers. (Chapter 993)
AB 2312 (Chu)--Environmental Justice: Grant Program--AB 2312 will establish the
Environmental Justice Small Grant Program to fund environmental justice
projects and would require Cal/EPA to adopt regulations to administer the
program. The grants will be available to community-based, grassroots, and
nonprofit organizations with a focus on community-based environmental issues.
Federally-recognized tribal governments that are located in areas adversely
affected by environmental pollution and hazards are also eligible. Eligible
organizations must be involved in work to address environmental justice issues. (Chapter 994)
AB 2356 (Keeley)--Solid Waste: Compost Market--AB
2356 will make findings and declarations regarding the potential threat to
composting programs posed by the herbicide clopyralid. The bill requires the
DPR to cancel any lawn and turf use if DPR finds that the use of any herbicide
may result in residues in compost that are likely to be toxic or injurious to
plants. (Chapter 591)
AB 2472 (Simitian)--Pesticides: State Property--AB
2472 will state various findings and declarations of the Legislature relating
to pesticide use in State buildings and lands and would state the intent of the
Legislature to enact legislation to protect public and environmental health
through the use of Integrated Pest Management techniques. This bill will define
Integrated Pest Management and will require, upon receipt of appropriate grant
funds, that DGS implement a demonstration project to study the use of
Integrated Pest Management techniques at the State Capitol Park and its
associated grounds, as specified. This bill will also require DGS to present a
report to the Legislature on this demonstration project within six months of
its implementation. (Chapter 242)
AB 2474 (Simitian)--Automotive Products--AB 2474 will require antifreeze
manufacturers to add a bittering agent to ethylene glycol-based antifreeze sold
in the State of California—with the exception of bulk sales—to reduce the
number of individuals, wildlife, and domestic animals that are poisoned by this
product. (Chapter 998)
AB 2486 (Keeley)--Environmental Prosecution--AB 2486 will enact the
Environmental Enforcement and Training Act of 2002, and codify the
Environmental Circuit Prosecutor Project (ECPP) as a joint project of Cal/EPA
and the California District Attorney’s Association. This project will provide
experienced prosecutors, particularly in rural areas, to assist local district
attorneys in the prosecution of environmental crimes. The funds to implement
this program will be derived from public and private contributions, and from
the proceeds of any contributed State or federal court judgments. The funds
would be deposited into the Environmental Enforcement and Training Account
within the General Fund. (Chapter 1000)
AB 2683 (Pavley)--California Environmental Protection Agency:
Reorganization--As introduced, AB 2683 would have codified provisions
and statutes that created Cal/EPA and would have moved sections of the Health
and Safety Code and the Government Code to the Public Resources Code. However,
this bill was gutted and amended to reflect a new author and unrelated subject
matter. (Chapter 955)
AB 2770 (Matthews)--Solid Waste: Conversion Technologies--AB
2770 will require the CIWMB to conduct research on and prepare a report about
new and emerging technologies that can convert solid waste residuals otherwise
destined for landfills into electricity, alternative fuels, and industrial
chemicals. Further, this bill defines the term “gasification” as a technology
that uses a noncombustion thermal process to convert solid waste to a clean
burning fuel for the purpose of generating electricity. (Chapter 740)
SB 648 (Senate Environmental Quality Committee)--Public
Contracts: Preferences: Recycled Products--SB 648 will require DGS to revise the
list of available recycled products as needed and to include the list in the
annual report to the Legislature. This bill will also require State agencies to
continually review their procedures for the purchase of lubricating and
industrial oils to eliminate any exclusion of recycled oils. (Chapter 408)
SB 649 (Senate Environmental Quality Committee)--Solid Waste
Management--SB 649, a noncontroversial cleanup bill, will allow a lien to be
attached to affected property that has been cleaned up by the Waste Tire
Enforcement Program or the Solid Waste Disposal and Codisposal Cleanup Program.
This will reduce court costs because it could obviate the need to file a cost
recovery action with the Attorney General’s Office. It will also make several
changes to the CIWMB’s local government planning law under the Integrated Waste
Management Act and would clarify several changes in waste tire management law made
by SB 876 (Escutia, Chapter 838) of 2000. This bill was an urgency measure and
took effect on September 17, 2002. (Chapter 625)
SB 1011 (Sher)--Household Hazardous Waste:
Environmental Quality Assessment: Mercury-Containing Light Switches--As introduced, SB 1011 would have
codified provisions and statutes that created Cal/EPA. It would have moved
sections of law from the Health and Safety Code to the Public Resources Code
and required Cal/EPA to develop and implement a policy to ensure that Cal/EPA’s
budget—as well as the budgets of all boards, departments, and offices—address
cross-media environmental issues. This bill was subsequently
amended to expand the substances that can be collected under a HHW collection
curbside program to include “universal wastes,” or wastes that pose lesser
threats to public health and the environment. It will also prohibit curbside
HHW collection programs from collecting unpackaged hazardous waste containing mercury
and fluorescent light tubes that are 4 feet or longer. (Chapter 626)
SB 1038 (Sher)--Renewable Energy--SB 1038 will reinstate, continue,
and modify components of the Renewable Energy Program Investment Plan, and the
Public Interest Energy Research Investment Plan. As it relates to solid waste
and activities that affect the CIWMB, this bill includes intent language to
increase the amount of renewable electricity generated per year to 17 percent
of the total electricity generated for consumption by 2006. Landfill gas and
digester gas generation technologies are included in the definition of
“in-state renewable electricity generation facility” and will thus count
towards this goal. The bill also will newly define “solid waste conversion” to
refer specifically to non-combustion thermal processes and include these in the
definition of “in-state renewable electricity generation facility.” Waste tire
and municipal solid waste combustion processes would be excluded. (Chapter 515)
SB 1170 (Sher)--State Vehicle Fleet--SB 1170 will establish a
structure to minimize the use of petroleum-based fuels and other transportation
fuels by State agencies to encourage the purchase of ultra-low emission
vehicles and zero-emission vehicles and fuel-efficient replacement tires for
the State fleet. (Chapter 912)
SB 1328 (Chesbro)--Solid Waste: Illegal Disposal: Abatement Grants--SB
1328 will make several changes that are likely to increase the number of
participants in the Farm and Ranch Solid Waste Cleanup and Abatement Grant
Program. It will expand eligibility from cities and counties to include
resource conservation districts and Native American Tribes, and increase grant
award limits. This bill also makes technical and clarifying changes to existing
law. (Chapter 628)
SB 1346 (Kuehl)--Solid Waste: Tire Recycling Program: Rubberized
Asphalt Concrete: Public Works Projects--SB 1346 will authorize, but not
require, the CIWMB to implement a program to award grants to local government
entities for funding of public works projects that use rubberized asphalt
concrete (RAC). The bill will specify the size of project and the level of
crumb rubber use required for grant eligibility, as well as the size of the
grants. The bill will specify, to the extent possible, that total grants per
year be equal to 16 percent of the funds budgeted for market development and
new technology activities for used and waste tires. (Chapter 671)
SB 1374 (Kuehl)--Solid Waste: Construction and Demolition Waste
Materials: Diversion Requirements: Model Ordinance--SB
1374 will require the CIWMB, by March 1, 2004, to adopt a model ordinance
suitable for adoption by any local agency to require 50 to 75 percent diversion
of construction and demolition (C&D) waste materials from landfills. It
will require jurisdictions to summarize progress made in diversion of C&D
waste materials in their annual progress reports to the CIWMB. In determining
penalties for a jurisdiction’s failure to implement its source reduction and
recycling element or its household hazardous waste element, the bill requires
CIWMB to determine the following: 1) if the jurisdiction has provided
information on whether C&D waste materials are at least a moderately
significant portion of the waste stream; 2) if so, whether the jurisdiction has
adopted a local C&D ordinance, adopted the CIWMB’s model ordinance, or
implemented another C&D diversion program. (Chapter 501)
SB 1393 (Romero)--Hazardous Wood Waste:
Playground Equipment: Arsenical Preservatives--As introduced, SB 1393 would
have enacted new requirements and prohibitions concerning the sale and use of
wood, and the management and disposal of wood waste that is pressure-treated
with specified wood preservatives. Prior to being chaptered, this bill was
amended to change author and subject matter. (Chapter 628)

AB 923 (Firebaugh)--Air Pollution--AB 923 established various funding mechanisms for air pollution control efforts throughout the state. As it pertains to the Integrated Waste Management Board, it increased the Tire Recycling Fee from $1.00 to $1.75 with the increase earmarked for the Air Pollution Control Fund administered by the Air Resources Board. (Chapter 707)
AB 1353 (Matthews)--Treated Wood Waste Disposal--AB 1353 required treated wood waste, as defined, to be disposed of in either a Class I hazardous waste landfill or in a composite-lined portion of a solid waste landfill unit. The bill required the Department of Toxic Substances Control to adopt regulations establishing management standards for treated wood waste as an alternative to the requirements specified in the hazardous waste control laws by January 1, 2007. (Chapter 597)
AB 1802 (Bogh)--Illegal Dumping: Penalties--AB 1802 increased the amounts for fines imposed for illegally dumping waste matter in commercial quantities. Additionally, this bill added asphalt and concrete to the types of materials that may not be dumped in certain locations. (Chapter 137)
AB 1873 (Hancock)--Solid Waste: Recycling Market Development--AB 1873 extended the sunset on the CIWMB’s Recycling Market Development Revolving Loan Program from July 1, 2006 until July 1, 2011. (Chapter 500)
AB 2159 (Reyes)--Solid Waste Facilities: Orders--AB 2159 specified that the prohibition on operating a solid waste facility without a permit includes the operation of a solid waste facility without a required solid waste facilities permit or the operation of a solid waste facility outside the permitted boundaries specified in a solid waste facilities permit. This bill required an enforcement agency to issue a cease and desist order to a person who owns a solid waste disposal site, who is disposing of solid waste, who is operating a solid waste facility, or who is engaged in solid waste handling activities, if the enforcement agency finds that the person does not hold a full solid waste facilities permit authorizing that activity or is not authorized to engage in that activity. The bill required the order issued by an enforcement agency to require the cessation of all activities for which a permit is required until the permit or other authorization is obtained. (Chapter 448)
AB 2176 (Montañez)--Large Venue and Event Recycling Programs--AB 2176 requires the CIWMB, by April 1, 2005, to make available one or more model local agency ordinances to facilitate solid waste reduction, reuse, and recycling programs at large venues and large events, consult with specified entities while developing the model ordinances, and post specified information on the CIWMB’s website. This bill additionally required each local agency to provide specified information to operators of large venues and large events when issuing a permit and, by January 1, 2006, and annually thereafter, until January 1, 2008, provide the CIWMB with an estimate and description of the top 10% of large venues and large events within its jurisdiction, based upon amount of solid waste generated, as submitted by operators at large venues and large events. The CIWMB was required, by December 1, 2008, to evaluate the waste diversion rates and implementation of waste reduction, reuse and recycling plans in the top 10% of large venues and large events as reported by each local agency, and, if it determines that less than 75% of the plans have been prepared or implemented, to recommend to the Legislature those statutory changes needed to require operators of large venues and large events to implement solid waste reduction, reuse, and recycling plans. This bill prohibited a local agency from issuing any building permit to a development project, unless the development project provides adequate areas for collecting and loading recyclable materials. The bill authorized a local agency to collect a fee from the operator of a large venue or large event in order to recover the local agency’s estimated costs incurred in complying with the provisions of this bill. (Chapter 879)
AB 2277 (Dymally)--Hazardous Waste--AB 2277 changed the definition of "materials that require special handling” and prohibited the disposal of those materials at a solid waste facility. This bill additionally required those materials to be removed from major appliances in which they are contained before the appliance is crushed, baled, shredded, or sawed or sheared apart, or otherwise processed in a manner that could result in the release or prevent the removal of materials that require special handling. The bill required a person who transports, delivers, or sells discarded major appliances to a scrap recycling facility, after January 1, 2006, to provide evidence that the person is a certified appliance recycler, except as specified, and prohibited a scrap recycling facility from accepting a discarded major appliance, after January 1, 2006, from any person who is not a certified appliance recycler. (Chapter 880)
AB 2701 (Runner)--Environmental Protection: Reports--AB 2701 established a process for converting reports and other documents that state agencies are required to develop and disseminate from paper to electronic means and compact discs, and eliminated various outdated reporting requirements and regulatory adoption requirements. (Chapter 644)
AB 2901 (Pavley)--Cell Phones: Recycling--AB 2901 enacted the Cell Phone Recycling Act of 2004, which made it unlawful to sell, on or after July 1, 2006, a cell phone in this state to a consumer unless the retailer of the cell phone complies with the Act. The bill required a retailer selling a cell phone to have in place, by July 1, 2006, a system for the acceptance and collection of used cell phones for reuse, recycling, or proper disposal. (Chapter 891)
SB 50 (Sher)--Solid Waste: Hazardous Electronic Waste--SB 50 made a number of technical changes to the Electronic Waste Recycling Act of 2003, as enacted by SB 20 (Sher), Chapter 526, Statutes of 2003. In addition, it moved the date for collection of the E-Waste Fee from November 1, 2004 to January 1, 2005. (Chapter 863)
SB 1362 (Figueroa)--Solid Waste: Household Hypodermic Needles, Syringes, and Lancets: Disposal--SB 1362 stated legislative findings and declarations relating to the disposal of hypodermic needles, syringes, and lancets. This bill specified that a household hazardous waste collection facility may accept sharps waste under specified conditions and define the term "sharps waste." Additionally, this bill would specify that a household hazardous waste element may include a program for the safe collection and disposal of sharps waste. (Chapter 157)
SB 1729 (Chesbro)--Plastic Containers: Recycling--SB 1729 narrowed the definition of recycling rate in the Rigid Plastic Packaging Container Program, administered by the CIWMB. It also deleted the requirement that RPPCs that contain cosmetics and food and are recycled be included in calculating recycling rates. (Chapter 561)
SB 1749 (Karnette)--Composting--SB 1749 prohibits the sale of plastic bags within the state, which are labeled "compostable" or "degradable" or "biodegradable" unless the bags conform to standards set by the American Society for Testing and Materials. (Chapter 619)
