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For Immediate Release:
04/08/2008
For More Information:
Contact Dan Jacobson
(916) 446-8062 x 105

The California Natural Resources Committee in the Assembly passed 7 bills to protect the coast of California.

Sacramento, CA.  The California Natural Resources Committee in the Assembly passed 7 bills to protect the coast of California. These bills are in response to the oil spilled from a South Korea-bound container ship when it struck a tower supporting the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge in dense fog in November 2007.

Scientists say that wildlife will be threatened for years to come. After the accident dozens of dead and injured seabirds were found coated in the bunker fuel being transported.

“This is the first step in a long process to protect our coast from dangerous tankers,” said Dan Jacobson, Legislative Director for Environment California. “Now we need the rest of the Assembly to follow the leadership of our coastal advocates.”

The bills will now go to various committees in the legislature and will have to move through the powerful appropriations committee. From there they will go to the floor of the Assembly and then they will receive similar hearings in the Senate. In order for the bills to become law they will need to survive this process and be signed by the Governor this year.

Here is synopsis of the bills:


AB 2031   (Hancock)
The Lempert-Keene-Seastrand Oil Spill Prevention and Response Act generally requires the administrator for oil spill response, acting at the direction of the Governor, to implement activities relating to oil spill response, including emergency drills and preparedness, and oil spill containment and cleanup, and to represent the state in any coordinated response efforts with the federal government. This bill would require the administrator, upon request, to provide a program for training and certification of a local emergency responder designated as a local spill response manager by a local government with jurisdiction over or directly adjacent to marine waters. The bill would require the administrator as part of the training and certification program, to authorize a local spill response manager to train and certify volunteers to work under his or her direction. This bill contains other related provisions and other existing laws.



AB 2032   (Hancock)
The Lempert-Keene-Seastrand Oil Spill Prevention and Response Act generally requires the administrator for oil spill response, acting at the direction of the Governor, to implement activities relating to oil spill response. The act defines "nontank vessel" as a vessel of 300 gross tons or greater that carries oil, but does not carry that oil as cargo. The act defines "tank ship" as any self-propelled vessel that is constructed or adapted for the carriage of oil in bulk or in commercial quantities as cargo. This bill would, for purposes of the act, revise the definition of "nontank vessel" to exclude a vessel that carries oil in a single tank with a capacity greater than 50,000 gallons, and revise the definition of "tank ship" to include a vessel that carries oil in a single tank with a capacity greater than 50,000 gallons. This bill contains other related provisions and other existing laws.



AB 2441   (Lieber)
The Lempert-Keene-Seastrand Oil Spill Prevention and Response Act requires the administrator for oil spill response to adopt regulations governing tugboat escorts for tank ships and tank barges entering, leaving, or navigating in the harbors of the state, as prescribed. This bill would additionally require the administrator to adopt regulations governing tugboat escorts for vessels carrying hazardous materials that are entering, leaving, or navigating in the harbors of the state.



AB 2547   (Leno)
This bill would require the administrator for oil spill response to require rated oil spill response organizations (OSROs) to satisfactorily complete one unannounced drill prior to modifying, renewing, or reinstating a rating and to require that OSROs demonstrate response resource deployment capability. AB 2547 would also require the administrator to award and administer competitive grants for the development of improved processes and technologies for oil spill prevention, containment, and cleanup, and require the administrator to expend Oil Spill Response Trust Fund monies to cover the uncompensated response and cleanup costs resulting from providing resources through the use of a universal mutual aid agreement and to pay for technology grants. This bill would also require the administrator to adopt and implement regulations for the mandated minimum containment response required for oil spills that occur during low visibility conditions and for marine groundings and collisions.



AB 2911   (Wolk)
This bill would expand the focus of the oiled wildlife care network to include proactive oiled wildlife search and rescue in addition to rehabilitative care. It would also improve the state's ability to prevent and treat oiled wildlife by providing for the recruitment and training of a larger field team of specialists and volunteers, developing an emergency equipment deployment plan, and including inland areas in the rescue network.



AB 2912   (Wolk)
The Lempert-Keene-Seastrand Oil Spill Prevention and Response Act, among other things, governs the prevention of and response to oil spills into marine waters, as defined. Existing law defines various terms for purposes of the act. A "spill" or "discharge" is defined to mean any unauthorized release of at least one barrel (42 gallons) of oil into marine waters. This bill would define a "spill" or "discharge" instead to mean any release of oil into marine waters or into waters, of the state other than marine waters without specifying a minimum amount of oil. The bill would make related changes. The bill would define the term "waters of the state" for purposes of the act, and for purposes of spills or discharges of oil into nonmarine waters of the state, the bill would limit the definition of the term "person" under the act to specified owners and operators. This bill contains other related provisions and other existing laws.



AB 2935   (Huffman)
The Lempert-Keene-Seastrand Oil Spill Prevention and Response Act generally requires the administrator for oil spill response, acting at the direction of the Governor, to implement activities relating to oil spill response, including emergency drills and preparedness, and oil spill containment and cleanup, and to represent the state in any coordinated response efforts with the federal government. Existing law provides that the administrator may use volunteer workers in response, containment, restoration, wildlife rehabilitation, and cleanup efforts for oil spills, and may offer training to these volunteers. This bill would require the administrator to develop a hazardous materials training program, no more than 4 hours in length, for those volunteers. The bill would require the administrator to solicit the cooperation, and maintain a list, of local agencies responsible for emergency response and management of public lands that may be impacted by oil spills. These local agencies would be required to have available at least one trainer capable of presenting the hazardous materials training program to the volunteers and facilities for the training. The administrator would be required to update each oil spill contingency plan to provide for this training. This bill contains other related provisions and other existing laws.

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