| LEAN Rates the Legislative Session |
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LEAN REPORT ON THE REGULAR
LEGISLATIVE SESSION 2007 (FISCAL) by B. DODDS AND K. WASCOM
This
Fiscal Session provided many opportunities for energy conservation, coastal
restoration, and small but significant encouragements to local governments to
handle some environmental issues. by B. DODDS AND K. WASCOM
July 13, 2007
This
Fiscal Session provided many opportunities for energy conservation, coastal
restoration, and small but significant encouragements to local governments to
handle some environmental issues. LEAN also monitored bills that dealt with
Coastal Restoration and issues relating to rebuilding
VERY
FEW BILLS IN THE ENERGY CONSERVATION REALM
MADE IT THROUGH THE PROCESS.
There
were more than a dozen bills filed dealing with the new building codes. Most
would have significantly scaled back the new building requirements or do away
with them altogether. Others would have given tax credits to those retrofitting
or rebuilding to the new codes. Most
credits were left on the
SB240/ACT270
- Amedee which will push for more energy conservation construction in public
buildings did pass. More ambitious bills, HB543/Barrow and one by Rep. Gray
(HB548) both of which had LEED standards failed in committee. HB543 and HB548 were opposed by the Forestry Association and
by the Vinyl Institute. These two groups
along with the Louisiana Chemical Association helped craft the Amedee bill
which will not do as much to assure “green” construction as the Barrow bill.
The environmental community was not a part of this process until the bills were
heard in committee. LEAN supported all these
bills. HR97/Barrow asks the Commerce Committee to study construction
under the LEED standards.
SB90/ACT
37 - N. Gautreaux passed in the very last minutes of the session by a strange
confluence of events. It will give a tax
credit up to 50% of the first $25,000 cost of installation of solar or wind
energy systems for a residential use starting in 2008. If the tax credit exceeds the taxpayer’s tax
liability, the balance is refundable to the filer. LEAN supported this bill. Three amendments were added in Conference
Committee: rescinding the State Gift Tax
starting in 2008; Inheritance Tax relief, and starting in 2008, tax relief from
insurance premiums. We feared the Governor wouldn’t sign it but she finally
did. This bill may encourage the strengthening of a start-up industry in the
state. Two other bills encouraging solar
energy, HB885/Carter and HB933/Williams died in committee.
Only
one bill that actually changed the language in the laws passed regarding
Building Codes made it through the process, HB704/ACT334 - Pinac. It seems to have satisfied all parties...
including the Insurance industry which fought to keep the Codes intact. There was one small change in the Energy
Conservation section that lowered from R-8 to R-6 the insulation rating on
ductwork.
HB187/ACT428-Pierre
and Daniel While its goal is laudable...
reuse of carbon dioxide in manufacturing processes and enhanced recovery
processes, it unfortunately allows the expropriation of property in Bills to encourage ethanol and other alternate fuel manufacture (HB551/Strain)(HB852/Daniel) died in committee. A bill that would have given a tax credit for purchase of hybrid vehicles (HB181-Richmond) died on the Senate calendar. The bill had languished on the House Calendar and had been attached to SB313/Adley that dealt with vehicles reconfigured for the handicapped. The Conference Committee report was adopted by the House but not the Senate and so both bills died.
OILFIELD WASTE
Given
the new “push” by DEQ to allow some Oilfield Exploration and Production wastes
into Type I landfills, LEAN was very cognizant of related legislation.
Two
bills filed regarding Exploration and Production Wastes were very troubling.
SB133/Adley would have allowed the “offsite beneficial use” of these materials
to be spread on sites other than the production site (which is regulated by
DNR). HB337/Morrish “exempts motor
carriers of nonhazardous oilfield waste from proving public convenience and
necessity and certain taxation.” This
would have lessened PSC oversight on the haulers. Both bills were involuntarily deferred in
committee. It appeared that the Oil and Gas Industry did not back Sen.Adley’s
bill and the truck drivers opposed Rep. Morrish’s bill... our good
fortune. LEAN did testify and send up
cards in opposition.
Another
bill was converted into Mr. Morrish’s bill, but was not moved from the Senate
calendar and was removed from the files of the legislature. (SB283/Fontenot)
DRILLING AND SALT DOMES
There
were three bills that showed serious concern about punching holes through areas
near and around
COASTAL BILLS
Many
good bills and resolutions were filed.
Only a few made it through. There
was money in the Administration’s supplemental funding bill for the Coastal
Restoration Fund... $147.3 million, with 52.7 million for DOTD to use in
hurricane protection projects. LEAN closely monitored this appropriation. It was moved three times into different
bills, finally coming to rest in HB 765/ACT203-Alario. Supplemental funding (Waste Tire Fund $3.245
million and $8.552 million) for DEQ passed in HB615/ACT208-Alario. Four other bills allocating money for Coastal
Restoration did not move. (HB104 and HB255/Scalise)(HB620/Trahan) (HB811and
HB812/Dove) SB76/Dupre that would have exempted payment of monies to the Dept.
of Wildlife and Fisheries for dredged material used for coastal restoration
projects also did not move.
SB53/ACT249
- Dupre creates the Louisiana Coastal Protection and Restoration Financing
Corporation that will act as a repository to accept money from various sources
until the money is designated to some other fund for coastal restoration
projects. It may also issue bonds.
****SB146/Dupre
creates the Windfall of Highway, Infrastructure and Protection (WHIP)
Fund. It initially required the deposit
in the fund of 50% of mineral revenues in excess of the amount required to be
deposited in the Budget Stabilization Fund excluding the Outer Continental
Shelf revenues, dedicated to certain infrastructure, hurricane protection, and
coastal restoration projects. As the
bill cleared Conference Committee and was sent to the Governor, the numbers
apportioning the money changed. In the
new bill, a very complex formula is presented. As of this report, the Governor
has not yet signed the bill. SB146/Dupre has been vetoed by the Governor.
SCR11/Dupre/Rep.Pitre
approves the CPRA Comprehensive Master Plan for Coastal Protection. SCR12/Dupre approves the CPRA annual Coastal
Protection Plan for Fiscal Year 2007-2008.
SCR34/B.Gautreaux
and Dupre is an urge and request to agencies to consider using slurry pipelines
to accelerate coastal restoration.
WASTE AND LITTER
Sen.
Duplessis bill (SB166) to prohibit solid waste landfills in
HCR56/Badon
requests all agencies of LA government not to allow a landfill at the
intersection of Bayou Bienvenue and the MRGO.
HB378/ACT149
- Baldone creates an “Adopt a Water Body” program similar to one in place for
roads and highways. It will be under
DOTD.
HB430/
ACT233- Burns will impose further requirements on covering garbage truck loads.
Sen.
B. Gautreaux had a bill (SB288) that would “create regional litter abatement
study groups to evaluate the state’s litter laws, rules and regulations.” It met its untimely demise in the House
Environment committee. The director of
the Keep Louisiana Beautiful organization testified against it and the
committee seemed predisposed to vote to defer.
Sen. Gautreaux voluntarily deferred the bill with some distress. One dollar of everyone’s drivers license
renewals/fees is allocated to the Office of Environmental Education in the
Executive office... about $800,000 per year (HB407/ACT190-K.Carter (renewal).
LOCAL GOVERNMENT EMPOWERMENT
The
legislature gave local governments a little additional power over their own
areas this session. Since Police Juries
come under state laws and DEQ has primary responsibility for some environmental
sectors, bills must be passed to allow local government to handle their
problems if DEQ will not step up.
One
such instance is HB758/ACT340 - HB718/ACT238 - Baylor “authorizes any mayor and any police chief of a municipality to petition for an injunction or order of abatement of a nuisance.” This provision already allows certain parish authorities to do the same, all at no court costs to the government and both include a provision “for any 10 residents of the election precinct wherein any nuisance described in this Subpart exists.”
BROWNFIELDS
Legislation
to encourage the cleanup of contaminated sites by increasing the percentage of
tax credit for the cleanup and making the credits transferable was passed. LEAN
supported SB339/ACT392 - Fontenot. Getting these sites cleaned up is important
to the health of citizens in the vicinity of the site. The site can then be
used for office or manufacturing purposes, both of which can revitalize a
depressed neighborhood.
OTHER RESOLUTIONS FILED WITH THE
SECRETARY OF STATE - LEAN SUPPORTED
SCR49/
N. Gautreaux “To urge and request the federal Department of Interior, U.S, Fish
and Wildlife Serve to reestablish migratory and nonmigratory flocks of the
endangered whooping crane in Louisiana.” ....Historically, both migratory and
nonmigratory flocks inhabited the coastal marshes of southwest Louisiana,
including a migratory flock that wintered on the Louisiana coast and a
nonmigratory flock that inhabited the wetlands near White Lake in Vermillion
Parish.
SCR94/McPherson Requests the Department of Natural Resources
to study the establishment of a state coastal land trust to acquire, accept and
manage coastal lands consistent with the state’s coastal protection and
restoration plan....
SR146/Jackson
“Request the Senate Health and Welfare Committee to study current status of
chronic disease of asthma in
HCR67/Odinet
Memorializes the U.S. Congress to take such actions as are necessary to
expedite the repair and rebuilding of the St. Bernard Parish levee system by
all appropriate federal agencies and to immediately close the Mississippi River
Gulf Outlet.
HCR79/Farrar
“To urge and request the commissioner of conservation to require public water
systems to conduct periodic water loss audits.” ...performance of water audits
by public water systems would prevent waste of water resources and greatly
enhance the evaluation of both water demands and any conservation program
implemented by the commissioner.
HCR80/Pitre
“To memorialize the U.S. Congress, the president of the
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