Court Opinion

ID: 4051463
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-09-29 01:39:33.353717+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:03:50.517013
License: Public Domain

ACCEPTED
                                                                             03-14-00667-CV
                                                                                     4324209
                                                                    THIRD COURT OF APPEALS
                                                                              AUSTIN, TEXAS
                                                                         3/2/2015 8:23:31 AM
                                                                            JEFFREY D. KYLE
                                                                                       CLERK
                          No. 03-14-00667-CV

                                                              FILED IN
                                 IN THE                3rd COURT OF APPEALS
                                                           AUSTIN, TEXAS
                                                       3/2/2015 8:23:31 AM
                     THIRD COURT OF APPEALS              JEFFREY D. KYLE
                                                               Clerk

                              AT AUSTIN

    TEXAS COMMISSION ON ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY,
                       Appellant,
                          v.
EXXON MOBIL CORPORATION, EXXONMOBIL OIL CORPORATION,
PENNZOIL-QUAKER STATE COMPANY AND SHELL OIL COMPANY,
                       Appellees.

           Appealed from the 345th Judicial District Court of
                        Travis County, Texas

                    APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF

KEN PAXTON                             JON NIERMANN
   Attorney General of Texas              Chief, Environmental
CHARLES E. ROY                            Protection Division
   First Assistant Attorney            THOMAS H. EDWARDS
   General                                Lead Counsel
JAMES E. DAVIS                            Assistant Attorney General
   Deputy Attorney General for            Tex. Bar No. 06461800
   Civil Litigation                    Thomas.Edwards@TexasAttorney
                                       General.gov
                                               (cont’d)

            APPELLANT REQUESTS ORAL ARGUMENT
       CRAIG J. PRITZLAFF
           Assistant Attorney General
           Tex. Bar No. 24046658
       Craig.Pritzlaff@TexasAttorney
       General.gov

       LINDA SECORD
           Assistant Attorney General
           Tex. Bar No. 17973400
       Linda.Secord@TexasAttorney
       General.gov

       Office of the Attorney General
       Environmental Protection
            Division
       P.O. Box 12548, Capitol Station
       Austin, Texas 78711-2548
       Tel: (512) 463-2012
       Fax: (512) 320-0911

       ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT,
       TEXAS COMMISSION ON
       ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY

-ii-
                                      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      INDEX OF AUTHORITIES. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -vi-

      ARGUMENT AND AUTHORITIES. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1

I.    STATEMENTS OF FACTS.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
      A. Appellant’s Statement of Facts is not Controverted. . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
      B. Appellees’ Statement of Facts Focuses on Irrelevancies. . . . . . . . . . 1

II.   REPLY TO APPELLEES’ SUMMARY OF THE ARGUMENT.. . . . . . . . 3

III. REPLY TO APPELLEES’ STATEMENT OF JURISDICTION. . . . . . . . . 3

IV. REPLY CONCERNING ISSUE ONE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
    A. The plain language of § 361.322 limits that section to appeals
       of § 361.272 orders.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
    B. The language and structure of the SWDA create separate
       orders and separate appeals. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
       1. The current language of the statute correctly reflects the
            intent of the Legislature. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
       2. The pre-codification statutory history shows separate
            orders and separate appeals. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
    C. Cross-references between subchapters do not merge the
       ordering sections. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
       1. Section 361.188(b) merely incorporates provisions from
            other subchapters into § 361.188 orders. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
       2. Section 361.322(e) does not merge the orders. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
    D. The term “person affected” does not limit § 361.321 to permit
       appeals. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
       1. The definition of “person affected” is broad enough to
            cover persons named in Superfund orders. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13

                                                       -iii-
             2. Under Appellees’ interpretation, there might be no appeal
                for § 361.188 orders. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
             3. Under Appellees’ interpretation, only permit matters and
                § 361.272 orders could be appealed. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
      E.     Conclusion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

V. REPLY CONCERNING ISSUE TWO.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .                                16
   A. The content of the Order shows that it was issued under
      Subchapter F.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .         18
   B. Contrary statements did not change the essential nature of the
      Order. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   19
   C. The State’s prior pleadings did not waive, agree to, or confer
      jurisdiction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .      21
      1. The State’s pleadings did not create waivers of sovereign
           immunity. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .         21
      2. Prior judgments and motions did not create waivers of
           sovereign immunity. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .               23
      3. The State did not seek to obtain the advantages of a
           § 361.272 order by saying that it issued the Order under
           both sections. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .        25
   D. Section 361.322(e) does not merge § 361.188 and § 361.272
      orders.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   25
   E. Reviewing this Order under § 361.322 would make
      Subchapter F redundant.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .                   26
   F. The Order was properly issued under § 361.188. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .                                     28
   G. Conclusion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .        29

VI. REPLY CONCERNING ISSUE THREE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
    A. The constitutionality of § 361.322 is not at issue. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
       1. Tex. Gov’t Code § 2001.174 restates existing law. . . . . . . . . . . . . 31

                                                        -iv-
             2.
             The Legislature’s decision to allow the review of this
             § 361.188 order under the “invalid, arbitrary or
             unreasonable” standard is consistent with the emerging
             law in this area. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .       33
      B. The Texas Supreme Court’s decision in City of Waco is
         pertinent to this SWDA appeal. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .                    34
         1. City of Waco did not merely make a “threshhold
             determination”. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .         35
      C. The “invalid, arbitrary or unreasonable” standard of
         § 361.321(e) equates to the standard of Tex. Gov’t Code
         § 2001.174. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   39
         1. Tex. Gov’t Code § 2001.174 was intended to be a
             restatement of the law. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .             39
         2. Review under the substantial evidence standard does not
             require a contested case hearing.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .                  40

VII. CONCLUSION. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44

VIII. PRAYER. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44

      CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46

      CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47

      APPENDIX

                                                        -v-
                                     INDEX OF AUTHORITIES

                                                      CASES

Berry v. Tex. Democratic Party, 449 S.W.3d 633 (Tex. App.—Austin 2014,
    no pet. h.). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4, 33

City of Waco v. Tex. Comm’n on Envtl. Quality, 346 S.W.3d 781 (Tex.
     App.—Austin 2011), rev’d, 413 S.W.3d 409 (Tex. 2013).. . . . . . . 19, 34, 40

Commercial Life Ins. Co. v. Tex. State Bd. of Ins., 808 S.W.2d 552 (Tex.
   App.—Austin 1991, writ denied). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32

Comptroller v. Landsfeld, 352 S.W.3d 171 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2011,
   pet. denied). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21

Fed. Sign v. Tex. S. Univ., 951 S.W.2d 401 (Tex. 1997). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23

G.E. Am. Commc’n v. Galveston Cent. Appraisal Dist., 979 S.W.2d 761
    (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1998, no pet.). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41

Gerst v. Nixon, 411 S.W.2d 350 (Tex.1966). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34

Gilder v. Meno, 926 S.W.2d 357 (Tex. App.—Austin 1996, writ denied).. . . 41

Hosner v. DeYoung, 1 Tex. 764 (1847). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33

Macias v. Rylander, 995 S.W.2d 829 (Tex. App.—Austin 1999, no pet.). . . . 32

McLane Co., Inc. v. Strayhorn, 148 S.W.3d 644 (Tex. App.—Austin 2004,
   pet. denied). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22

                                                         -vi-
Metzger v. Metzger, No. 01-04-00893-CV, 2007 WL 1633445 (Tex.
    App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2007, pet. denied) (mem. op.). . . . . . . . . . . 22

Mid-Century Ins. Co. of Tex. v. Kidd, 997 S.W.2d 265 (Tex. 1999). . . . . . . . . . . 6

Prairie View A&M Univ. v. Chatha, 381 S.W.3d 500 (Tex. 2012). . . . . . . . . . . 33

Ramirez v. Tex. State Bd. of Med. Exam’rs, 927 S.W.2d 770 (Tex. App.—
   Austin 1996, no writ). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40, 41

S. Canal Co. v. State Bd. of Water Eng’rs, 318 S.W.2d 619 (Tex. 1958)). . . . . . 34

Saudi v. Brieven, 176 S.W.3d 108 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2004,
    pet. denied). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22

Sierra Club v. Tex. Comm’n on Envtl. Quality, No. 03–11–00102–CV, 2014
WL 7463875 (Tex. App.—Austin Dec. 30, 2014, no pet. h.). . . . . . . . . . 38

Smith v. Houston Chem. Servs., Inc., 872 S.W.2d 252 (Tex. App.—Austin
    1994, writ denied). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42, 43

Tex. Ass’n of Bus. v. Tex. Air Control Bd., 852 S.W.2d 440 (Tex. 1993). . . . . . 15

Tex. Comm’n on Envtl. Quality v. City of Waco, 413 S.W.3d 409 (Tex.
     2013). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34-39, 41

Tex. Comm’n on Envtl. Quality v. Kelsoe, 286 S.W.3d 91 (Tex. App.—
     Austin 2009, pet. denied). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42, 43

Tex. Comm’n on Envtl. Quality v. Sierra Club, No. 03-12-00335-CV, 2014
WL 7464085 (Tex. App.—Austin Dec. 30, 2014, no pet. h.). . . . . . . 36-38

                                                        -vii-
Tex. Dep’t of Ins. v. State Farm Lloyds, 260 S.W.3d 233 (Tex. App.—
     Austin 2008, no pet.). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40

Tex. Natural Res. Conserv. Comm’n v. IT-Davy, 74 S.W.3d 849 (Tex. 2002)
     . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22

Tex. Water Comm'n v. Lindsey, 855 S.W.2d 750 (Tex. App.—Beaumont
     1993, writ denied). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15

Tooke v. City of Mexia, 197 S.W.3d 325 (Tex. 2006). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33

Tourneau Houston, Inc. v. Harris Cnty. Appraisal Dist., 24 S.W.3d 907
    (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2000, no pet.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22

United Copper Indus., Inc. v. Grissom, 17 S.W.3d 797 (Tex. App.—Austin
    2000, pet. dism’d). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43

United Servs. Auto. Ass’n v. Brite, 215 S.W.3d 400 (Tex. 2007). . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

Van Indep. Sch. Dist. v. McCarty, 165 S.W.3d 351 (Tex. 2005). . . . . . . . . . . . . 21

                                                      STATUTES

Act of June 6, 1990, 71st Leg., 6th C.S., ch. 10, art. 2, § 29, 1990 Tex. Gen.
    Laws 47, 66-80 (amended 1997) (current version at Tex. Health &
    Safety Code §§ 361.181-.202). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

Act of May 18, 1989, 71st Leg., R.S., ch. 678, § 1, 1989 Tex. Gen. Laws
    2230, 2616-64. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

Act of May 24, 1989, 71st Leg., R.S., ch. 703, § 5, 1989 Tex. Gen. Laws
    3212, 3218-32. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

                                                            -viii-
Tex. Gov’t Code § 2001.001-.902.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42

Tex. Gov’t Code § 2001.174. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31, 32, 39, 42

Tex. Gov’t Code § 311.034. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4, 33

Tex. Health & Safety Code ch. 361, subch. F. . 1, 7, 8, 10-12, 16-18, 26, 28, 29

Tex. Health & Safety Code ch. 361, subch. I, K and L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5, 11, 17

Tex. Health & Safety Code § 361.003. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14

Tex. Health & Safety Code § 361.003(24). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13, 14

Tex. Health & Safety Code § 361.188. . . . . 3, 8, 10-12, 14-19, 21, 25, 26, 28-30,
                                                                         32, 33, 44

Tex. Health & Safety Code § 361.188(b). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5, 11, 17, 18, 25

Tex. Health & Safety Code § 361.252. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15

Tex. Health & Safety Code § 361.271. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14

Tex. Health & Safety Code § 361.272. . 6, 8, 10-12, 14-17, 19-21, 25, 26, 28-30,
                                                                             44

Tex. Health & Safety Code § 361.274. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20

Tex. Health & Safety Code § 361.276. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25

Tex. Health & Safety Code § 361.321. . . . . . . . . 4, 6, 9-16, 21, 24, 29, 32, 42-44

                                                    -ix-
Tex. Health & Safety Code § 361.321(a). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42

Tex. Health & Safety Code § 361.321(c).. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

Tex. Health & Safety Code § 361.321(e). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6, 25, 32, 39, 42

Tex. Health & Safety Code § 361.322. . . . . . 4-6, 8, 10, 11, 14, 17, 24, 26, 30, 31

Tex. Health & Safety Code § 361.322(a). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6, 8

Tex. Health & Safety Code § 361.322(e). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6, 10-12, 25, 26

Tex. Health & Safety Code § 361.322(g). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6, 31

Tex. Health & Safety Code § 361.322(h). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

Tex. Health & Safety Code §§ 361.181-.188.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2, 7, 16, 26

Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat. Ann. art. 4477-7, § 13. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8, 10

Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat. Ann. art. 4477-7, § 8(g).. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10

Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat. Ann. art. 4477-7, § 9. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10

Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat. Ann. art. 4477-7, § 9(b).. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8, 10

Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat. Ann. art. 4477-7, § 9(c). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10

Texas Solid Waste Disposal Act, Tex. Health & Safety Code § 361.001-
    .966 (West 2010).. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1

                                                       -x-
                                                    RULES

Tex. R. App. P. 38.1(g). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1

                                                       -xi-
                    ARGUMENT AND AUTHORITIES

     This case involves issues of first impression under the Texas Solid

Waste Disposal Act, Tex. Health & Safety Code § 361.001-.966 (West 2010)

(hereinafter “SWDA”).

I.   STATEMENTS OF FACTS

     A. Appellant’s Statement of Facts is not Controverted

     Appellant showed the steps the TCEQ took in investigating, listing,

preparing to remediate the Voda Site and issuing the Order (Appellant’s

Br. 1-5), in accordance with Subchapter F of the SWDA. (Appellant’s Br.

23). Appellees do not contradict these facts, and they must be accepted as

true. Tex. R. App. P. 38.1(g).

     B.   Appellees’ Statement of Facts Focuses on Irrelevancies

     Appellees focus on three areas in their Statement of Facts. Although

none are relevant to this appeal, the State will address them to clarify the

record.

     Appellees describe response actions by the U.S. Environmental Protec-

                                      1
tion Agency (“EPA”) at the Voda Site, with the implication that the TCEQ

need not have taken any further remedial action. (Appellees Br. 1-3.)

However, Appellees ignore the fact that EPA contemplated a subsequent

State-led investigation and remedial action to address soil contamination at

depth, and groundwater contamination on and migrating off of the Site.

(AR 61923-24, AR 943, AR 59594-60117 and AR 60253-83.)

    Second, Appellees complain that they lacked the opportunity to be

heard before the Commission. (Appellees Br. 3-5.) Appellees had many

opportunities to present information to the TCEQ during the 15-year

Superfund process, see Tex. Health & Safety Code §§ 361.181-.188, and they

submitted detailed input. (See, e.g., CR 910-12, with references to the

administrative record.) Appellees chose not to appear at the Commission

meeting regarding approval of the Order (AR 50382; video file), and not to

join Luminant’s Motion for Rehearing (AR 50864-89).

    Finally, Appellees address the subsequent history of the appeal in the

District Court, with the implication that the TCEQ’s pleadings and state-

                                      2
ments there are relevant to the issue of subject-matter jurisdiction. (Appel-

lees Br. 6-8.) They are not relevant, however, because the TCEQ cannot

confer jurisdiction by such statements. (See infra at sec. V.C.1.)

II. REPLY TO APPELLEES’ SUMMARY OF THE ARGUMENT

       Appellees make various conclusory statements, none of which deny

that the Order was issued under Subchapter F procedures and contained

the “laundry list” of items required of a § 361.188 order. (Appellees’ Br. 9-

11.)

       Appellees assert that, “Potentially responsible parties are entitled to

their day in court.…” (Appellees’ Br. 11.) This, together with statements in

their Statement of Facts, suggests a Due Process argument. But this inter-

locutory appeal is only about subject-matter jurisdiction. The District Court

can consider issues of equity and Due Process after this Court determines

subject-matter jurisdiction.

III. REPLY TO APPELLEES’ STATEMENT OF JURISDICTION

       Appellees’ argument rests on an inference that a waiver of sovereign

                                         3
immunity anywhere in a statute applies to all causes of action (or, in this

case, appellate provisions) in the statute. To the contrary, waivers of

sovereign immunity are strictly construed and must be expressed in clear

and unequivocal terms. See Berry v. Tex. Democratic Party, 449 S.W.3d 633,

640 (Tex. App.—Austin 2014, no pet. h.) (citations omitted); see also Tex.

Gov’t Code § 311.034. Thus, a waiver limited to one action is inapplicable

to other actions, even in the same statute.

    Appellees argue that, “What the parties actually dispute is precisely

what evidence the trial court may consider in reviewing the Order.… The

State’s plea is not a challenge to the trial court’s subject matter jurisdic-

tion.…” (Appellees’ Br. 11-12.) To the contrary, the State is asserting that,

for this type of order, the District Court has subject-matter jurisdiction

under § 361.321 but not under § 361.322. (Appellant’s Br. 32-38.) This is a

plea to the jurisdiction, therefore, not merely a dispute over the evidence.

Essentially, this Court is being asked to decide whether the District Court

will exercise its original fact-finding jurisdiction or its appellate jurisdiction

                                        4
over the Order.

    Appellees further assert that, “the State cannot maintain a plea to the

jurisdiction in this case because its own pleadings defeat its claim.” (Appel-

lees’ Br. 12.) However, the State’s pleadings cannot confer jurisdiction by

consent, waiver or estoppel. (See sec. V.C.1, infra.)

IV. REPLY CONCERNING ISSUE ONE

    Appellees attempt to show that the two types of order, despite being in

different sections of the statute and having different elements and proce-

dures, are “not mutually exclusive.” (Appellees’ Br. 14.) They reason that

“both types of orders share elements outlined in Subchapters I, K, and L of

the Act, including but not limited to: … [a]n appellate provision. Id. at

§ 361.322.” (Appellees’ Br. 14-15.) To the contrary, while the orders have

some elements in common (due to § 361.188(b)), they cannot both be

appealed under § 361.322.

    A. The plain language of § 361.322 limits that section to
       appeals of § 361.272 orders

    The plain language of the statute says that § 361.322 is limited to the

                                       5
appeals of § 361.272 orders: “Any person subject to an administrative order

under Section 361.272 may appeal the order by filing a petition.…” SWDA

§ 361.322(a) (emphasis added). See also id. §§ 361.322(g) and (h) (referring to

“the administrative order.”)

    Conversely, § 361.321 applies generally to a “ruling, order, decision, or

other act of the commission,” but contains the following exclusion: “Except

as provided by Section 361.322(e) [read 361.322(g)], in an appeal from an

action of the commission … the issue is whether the action is invalid,

arbitrary, or unreasonable.” Id. § 361.321(e). (See Appellant’s Br. 13 con-

cerning the outdated reference to § 361.322(e).) Thus, the two appellate

sections are separate and have different standards of review.

    The fact that § 361.322 refers to § 361.272 orders, and does not mention

any others, indicates that the Legislature did not intend for it to apply to

any other type of order. See United Servs. Auto. Ass’n v. Brite, 215 S.W.3d
400, 403 (Tex. 2007), citing Mid-Century Ins. Co. of Tex. v. Kidd, 997 S.W.2d
265, 273–74 (Tex. 1999) (referring to the “doctrine of expressio unius est

                                       6
exclusio alterius—the inclusion of a specific limitation excludes all others—a

statutory interpretation tool of some use under [certain] circumstances.”).

Each appellate section stands alone.

    B.   The language and structure of the SWDA create separate
         orders and separate appeals

         1.   The current language of the statute correctly reflects the
              intent of the Legislature

    Appellees refer to the statutory history in an attempt to show that both

types of order have always been subject to the same appellate standards.

(Appellees’ Br. 15-29.) One problem with this analysis is that what is now

Subchapter F, including §§ 361.181-.188, was substantially rewritten in

1989-90, and the appellate cross-references were codified at the same time.

    The Legislature codified the SWDA in the Regular Session of 1989. See

Act of May 18, 1989, 71st Leg., R.S., ch. 678, § 1, 1989 Tex. Gen. Laws 2230,

2616-64. (App. 1:2616-64.) In that same session, it enacted amendments

that were not codified. See Act of May 24, 1989, 71st Leg., R.S., ch. 703, § 5,

1989 Tex. Gen. Laws 3212, 3218-32. (App. 2:3218-32.) Those amendments

                                         7
included a substantial rewriting of § 13 (now Subchapter F), to the extent

that they practically created a new program. Id. (App. 2:3218-32.) The next

year, in the Sixth Called Session, the Legislature codified the new amend-

ments. See Act of June 6, 1990, 71st Leg., 6th C.S., ch. 10, art. 2, § 29, 1990

Tex. Gen. Laws 47, 66-80 (amended 1997) (current version at Tex. Health &

Safety Code §§ 361.181-.202). (App. 3:66-80.)

    In the same act that codified the new Subchapter F, the Legislature also

incorporated the uncodified amendment to § 9(b) (now § 361.322(a)) and

included this reference: “Any person subject to an administrative order

under Section 361.272 may appeal the order by filing a petition.…” Id. § 28,

1990 Tex. Gen. Laws 64-65 (current version at Tex. Health & Safety Code

§ 361.322(a)). (App. 3:64-65.) They also amended § 361.321(c) with the

cross-reference, “[e]xcept as provided by Section 361.322(a)....” Id. at 64

(current version at Tex. Health & Safety Code § 361.321(c)).

    If the Legislature had wanted § 361.188 orders to be appealed under

§ 361.322, this was the perfect opportunity to say so. But they did not, and

                                        8
instead left § 361.188 orders to be appealed under § 361.321, the general

appellate section. The relevant language has not changed in the interven-

ing 25 years.

    The legislative intent is clear from the text, and the statutory history

does not show a different intent before codification. The plain language

shows that each separate ordering section has an independent appellate

section.

           2.   The pre-codification statutory history shows separate
                orders and separate appeals

    Even if there were some ambiguity in the current text, and a review of

the statutory history were necessary, that history does not support the

conclusions Appellees attempt to draw.

    First, Appellees provide an extensive statutory history (Appellees’ Br.

13-22), only to draw the same conclusions, as to the pre-codification

statute, that they drew regarding the current statute (compare Appellees’ Br.

15 with id. at 21). That history does not alter any conclusions about the

meaning of the statute.

                                          9
    For example, after the 1985 amendments, the “preponderance of the

evidence” clause of § 9(c) (now § 361.322(e)) was made applicable only to

§ 8(g) (now § 361.272) orders; the “invalid, arbitrary or unreasonable”

standard of § 9 (now § 361.321) applied to all the rest (e.g., to § 361.188).

That language carries forward to the present statute. In other words, the

codifiers correctly carried forward the prior meaning to the current statute.

    Appellees acknowledge that the 1989 amendments limited the applica-

bility of § 9(b) (now § 361.322) appeals to “any person subject to an admin-

istrative order under 8(g)” (now § 361.272). (Appellees’ Br. 21.) The same

bill, they acknowledge, allowed the TCEQ to continue the remedial action

program under § 13 (now Subchapter F), unless enjoined, and added the

other provisions now found at § 361.322. (Appellees’ Br. 22.) However,

they do not acknowledge the obvious conclusion: that the pre-codified

statute, like the current version, had separate appellate provisions for the

different types of orders.

                                       10
    C. Cross-references between subchapters do not merge the
       ordering sections

        1.   Section 361.188(b) merely incorporates provisions from
             other subchapters into § 361.188 orders

    Appellees argue that § 361.188 and § 361.272 orders are not mutually

exclusive, although they appear in different sections and use different

language. (Appellees’ Br. 23.) One reason, they say, is that § 361.188(b)

incorporates the provisions of Subchapters I, K and L into § 361.188 orders,

“including the same appellate provisions.” (Appellees’ Br. 23-24.) This is

illogical, however, since both §§ 361.321 and 361.322 are in Subchapter K—

and both cannot apply to the same § 361.188 order. The difference is that

§ 361.322 appeals are expressly limited to § 361.272 orders, while § 361.321

appeals are applicable generally.

        2.   Section 361.322(e) does not merge the orders

    Appellees point out that § 361.322(e) allows the Subchapter F process

to continue even after a § 361.272 order is appealed (unless enjoined).

(Appellees’ Br. 24.) However, this clause does not make the orders any less

                                      11
separate or distinct.

    Section 361.272 orders are useful in certain circumstances:

        (1) When an order is needed quickly to address exigent circum-
    stances, and there is insufficient time to complete the exhaustive
    Subchapter F procedures;

         (2) When the remedy is fairly obvious and straightforward (such
    as the removal of all contaminated material), because a full-blown
    remedial investigation would be unnecessary; and

         (3) When a stopgap is needed initially to stabilize the site while
    the full Superfund process is carried out under Subchapter F.

    Section 361.322(e) is designed to facilitate option (3). The fact that the

TCEQ can conduct a full investigation and issue a § 361.188 order, while a

§ 361.272 order is on appeal, does not make the orders any less separate or

distinct. In fact, it shows that they are separate orders.

    D. The term “person affected” does not limit § 361.321 to
       permit appeals

    Appellees assert that the SWDA appellate provisions distinguish

between Superfund and permitting orders, not between different kinds of

Superfund orders. (Appellees’ Br. 25.) The reason, they say, is that the

                                       12
term “person affected” in § 361.321 limits that section to permitting ap-

peals. (Appellees’ Br. 25-27.) They say, “[b]oth its statutory history and its

current role in the SWDA demonstrate clear legislative intent that § 361.321

is the appellate provision for the permitting program, not the Superfund

program.” (Appellees’ Br. 27, citations omitted.)

    To the contrary, while it is undoubtedly true that the definition of

“person affected” in § 361.003(24) applies to permitting decisions, it does

not follow that the same term in § 361.321 limits that section to the appeals

of permit matters.

         1.   The definition of “person affected” is broad enough to
              cover persons named in Superfund orders

    A person named in a Superfund order is affected by the order. That

person is required to be responsible for a share of the response costs

incurred at the site, and thus has an economic interest in the outcome. That

person can “demonstrate[] that the person has suffered or will suffer actual

injury or economic damage,” within the meaning of id. § 361.003(24).

Likewise, the person named in the Superfund order was determined to

                                        13
have done business at the site (see definition of “Person Responsible for

Solid Waste” at id. § 361.271), and was therefore “doing business … in the

county” within the meaning of id. § 361.003(24)(B).

    Definitions in the SWDA apply “unless the context requires a different

definition.” Id. § 361.003. In context, this definition is broad enough to

encompass persons named in Superfund orders, for purposes of appeals

under § 361.321.

         2.   Under Appellees’ interpretation, there might be no appeal
              for § 361.188 orders

    Appeals under § 361.322 are limited, by the plain language of that

section, to orders issued under § 361.272. If § 361.321 were restricted to

non-Superfund matters, then there would be no clear, unambiguous

waiver of immunity for § 361.188 orders. Since this Order was procedurally

and substantively a § 361.188 order (see Issue Two, sec. V, infra), Appellees

would have no appeal in the present case.

    The TCEQ does not argue that the Legislature intended for there to be

no appeal for a § 361.188 order. The most reasonable interpretation is that

                                       14
“persons affected,” in the case of a § 361.188 order, is meant to include the

persons named in the order.

         3.   Under Appellees’ interpretation, only permit matters and
              § 361.272 orders could be appealed

    Appellees undoubtedly overstate their argument in saying that

“§ 361.321 is the appellate provision for the permitting program… .”

(Appellees’ Br. 27.) In fact, § 361.321 is the general appellate provision for

the SWDA.

    Matters other than permitting decisions have been appealed under

§ 361.321. See, e.g., Tex. Water Comm’n v. Lindsey, 855 S.W.2d 750, 752 (Tex.

App.—Beaumont 1993, writ denied) (appeal of an agency letter determin-

ing PRP status; appeal may be taken under § 361.321 and venue is proper

in Travis County.) See also, Tex. Ass’n of Bus. v. Tex. Air Control Bd., 852
S.W.2d 440, 441, n.2 at 442, 450 (Tex. 1993) (a constitutional review of

administrative penalty sections in several statutes, including the then-

existing § 361.252 of the SWDA; assuming that such orders could be

appealed, but holding that prepayment procedures violated the Open

                                       15
Courts doctrine.)

    E.   Conclusion

    The Legislature contemplated, considered, and enacted two different

types of administrative orders for Superfund actions. Section 361.188

orders are issued when the TCEQ completes the procedures set forth in

Subchapter F, whereas § 361.272 orders are reserved for situations where

circumstances demand quicker action. Each order has its own independent

mechanism for appeal. Appellees’ arguments that the appellate remedies

set forth in § 361.321 are restricted to non-Superfund actions are erroneous.

V. REPLY CONCERNING ISSUE TWO

    Appellees’ response to Issue Two is notable for what it does not say. It

does not assert that the TCEQ failed to do any of the things required under

§§ 361.181-.188, or that the Order is missing any of the “laundry list” of

requirements in § 361.188. It does not contradict the facts the TCEQ set out

in this regard (Appellant’s Br. 1-5). The TCEQ asserts that this is a § 361.188

order because it was issued in accordance with all the procedural and

                                      16
substantive requirements of Subchapter F of the SWDA. Appellees do not

controvert this argument.

    Appellees’ argument is otherwise, and somewhat contradictory. First,

they assert that the Order “was issued under both § 361.188 and § 361.272

of the SWDA.” (Appellees’ Br. 29.) Then they say, “the AO for the Voda

Site was issued under § 361.272, making application of § 361.322 appropri-

ate for this Order.” (Appellees’ Br. 30.)

    Their reasoning depends on two arguments: First, that the TCEQ made

various statements, both at the agency level and before the District Court,

to the effect that the Order was issued under both sections. Second, they

say that certain provisions of Subchapters I, K and L have been incorpo-

rated into the Order pursuant to § 361.188(b), and this converts the Order

to a § 361.272 order. However, neither of these arguments challenges the

essential nature of the Order or affects the subject-matter jurisdiction of the

courts.

                                       17
    A. The content of the Order shows that it was issued under
       Subchapter F

    Appellees assert that several parts of the Order incorporate authorities

from subchapters other that Subchapter F. (Appellees’ Br. 30.) These

include the definition of “solid waste” as well as “hazardous substances”

among the materials at the Site, the definition of “responsible parties,” the

divisibility of the release, the list of Chemicals of Concern, etc. (Appellees’

Br. 30-32.) They conclude that “these provisions flatly contradict the

State’s position that the AO was issued solely under § 361.188.” (Appellees’

Br. 31.)

    This argument, however, ignores the language of § 361.188(b)—that

“[t]he provisions in Subchapters I, K, and L relating to administrative

orders apply to orders issued under this section.” SWDA § 361.188(b).

Appellees have admitted that this clause “is open ended and inclusive, and

demonstrates that the Legislature intended all ‘administrative orders’ of

the SWDA to share common procedural attributes.…” (Appellees’ Br. 24.)

The fact that § 361.188(b) incorporates elements from other subchapters

                                       18
does not turn the Order into a § 361.272 order.

    B.   Contrary statements did not change the essential nature of
         the Order

    Appellees refer to various statements by the TCEQ to the effect that the

Order was issued under both sections. These statements all relate back to a

boilerplate clause in the preamble to the Order itself, which said that the

Executive Director’s requested relief included a Superfund order “as

authorized by Sections 361.188 and 361.272 of the Act.” (AR 50383.)

    Prior to the Supreme Court’s opinion in City of Waco, Texas case law

held that, “substantial-evidence review on an agency record is simply ‘not

possible’ absent the opportunity to develop that record through a con-

tested-case or adjudicative hearing.” City of Waco v. Tex. Comm’n on Envtl.

Quality, 346 S.W.3d 781, 818 (Tex. App.—Austin 2011), rev’d, 413 S.W.3d
409 (Tex. 2013). The parties believed that, if the matter were appealed,

some judicial fact-finding was inevitable in the trial court. The agenda

notice and the statement by the staff attorney simply reflected the boiler-

plate in the preamble to the Order, and were not statements about the

                                     19
anticipated standard of review on appeal. In presenting the Order to the

Commission, the staff attorney summarized the actions the TCEQ took in

compliance with the Subchapter F program. (AR 50382; video file, oral

statement at 1:18.)

    The TCEQ’s statement in its Reply to Luminant’s Motion for Rehearing

(concerning the lack of need for an adjudicative hearing) did not affect

substantive rights. (See Appellees’ Br. 32-33; AR 49650.) The TCEQ rea-

soned that no hearing was required for a § 361.272 order, by virtue of Tex.

Health & Safety Code § 361.274—however, no hearing was required for

either type of order. (AR 49650.) The TCEQ was not saying that a hearing

was precluded by the combined effects of both ordering sections, simply

that no hearing was required under either section. Substantive rights were

not affected by any assertion about the Order being issued under both

sections.

    The TCEQ cannot waive sovereign immunity though its own state-

ments. (See sec. V.C.1, infra.) The Order is defined by its substance and the

                                      20
procedures used to create it, and the Appellees do not contest that it has all

the characteristics of a § 361.188 order. It follows from the plain language

of the statute that appeal is under § 361.321. The TCEQ lacks the power to

waive sovereign immunity and admit that the Order is something that it is

not, or that appeal is proper under a different section.

    C. The State’s prior pleadings did not waive, agree to, or confer
       jurisdiction

    Appellees refer to various pleadings and agreed judgments in which

the State said that the Order was issued under both §§ 361.188 and 361.272.

(Appellees’ Br. 33-34.) However, the State’s prior pleadings cannot defeat

this plea.

         1.   The State’s pleadings did not create waivers of sovereign
              immunity

    The parties to lawsuits—in their pleadings or otherwise—cannot

waive, agree to, or confer jurisdiction. See, e.g., Comptroller v. Landsfeld, 352
S.W.3d 171, 174 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2011, pet. denied) (subject matter

jurisdiction “may not be conferred by waiver or estoppel.”) (citing Van

                                       21
Indep. Sch. Dist. v. McCarty, 165 S.W.3d 351, 354 (Tex. 2005)). See also

Metzger v. Metzger, No. 01-04-00893-CV, 2007 WL 1633445, *7 (Tex.

App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2007, pet. denied) (mem. op.) (“Subject-matter

jurisdiction cannot be conferred by consent, waiver, or estoppel at any

stage of a proceeding.”), citing Saudi v. Brieven, 176 S.W.3d 108, 113 (Tex.

App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2004, pet. denied) (quoting Tourneau Houston,

Inc. v. Harris Cnty. Appraisal Dist., 24 S.W.3d 907, 910 (Tex. App.—Houston

[1st Dist.] 2000, no pet.)).

    Only the Texas Legislature, and not an agency, can waive sovereign

immunity:

    This Court has long recognized that it is the Legislature’s sole prov-
    ince to waive or abrogate sovereign immunity.… The Legislature
    may consent to suits against the State by statute or by resolu-
    tion.… Legislative consent to sue the State must be expressed in
    clear and unambiguous language.

Tex. Natural Res. Conserv. Comm’n v. IT-Davy, 74 S.W.3d 849, 853-54 (Tex.

2002) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted, emphasis added).

See also McLane Co., Inc. v. Strayhorn, 148 S.W.3d 644, 649 (Tex. App.—

                                      22
Austin 2004, pet. denied) (“It is for the legislature alone ‘to waive or abrogate

sovereign immunity.’”) (emphasis added), citing Fed. Sign v. Tex. S. Univ.,

951 S.W.2d 401, 409 (Tex. 1997).

         2.   Prior judgments and motions did not create waivers of
              sovereign immunity

    Appellees refer to two agreed final judgments and two motions for

default judgment, which recited that the Order was issued under both

sections. (Appellees’ Br. 34-35.) However, Appellees do not say how the

parties to those judgments were affected by those statements, nor how

Appellees themselves were affected. In fact, those statements simply

reflected the boilerplate statement in the preamble to the Order. The scope

and type of order, and the appellate provisions applicable to each type of

order, were not at issue in any of those proceedings.

    Neither the identity of the Order nor the language it contains has ever

been in dispute. In the agreed final judgments, all causes of action related

to the Order were being compromised and settled. (The judgments were

severed and filed in separate cases. However, the text of each can be seen

                                       23
with the TCEQ’s notices of lodging. (See CR 275-436, 458-556.)) All claims

related to the Order were being dismissed. Neither the settling parties’ nor

Appellees’ rights were affected by the boilerplate statements.

    Appellees also refer to a statement in the TCEQ’s Third Amended

Original Answer that the “sole method for appealing the Order” is at Tex.

Health & Safety Code § 361.322. (Appellees’ Br. 35, CR 678.) That state-

ment was in the context of a plea to the jurisdiction seeking to dismiss a

claim under the Uniform Declaratory Judgment Act on the grounds of

redundancy. (CR 677-79.) The motion should have said that the “sole

method” of appeal was under § 361.321. However, the underlying argu-

ment was still sound—that the UDJA action offered nothing but redundant

remedies. In context, the statement did not draw a distinction between two

different sections of the SWDA, but between remedies offered in the UDJA

versus the SWDA. Moreover, the statement did not create a waiver of

sovereign immunity.

    If any party’s pleadings are to be binding, it is those of Appellees—

                                     24
who expressly limited their prayer for relief to whether “the TCEQ’s

Administrative Order is invalid, arbitrary, or unreasonable and therefore

must be overturned pursuant to Texas Health & Safety Code § 361.321(e).”

(CR 25.)

           3.   The State did not seek to obtain the advantages of a
                § 361.272 order by saying that it issued the Order under
                both sections

    Appellees assert that, “the Commission invoked § 361.272 in an

attempt to hold the [potentially responsible parties (“PRP’s”)] for the Voda

Site jointly and severally liable under the SWDA.” (Appellees’ Br. 37.) To

the contrary, the TCEQ did not invoke § 361.272 for that reason, because it

was not necessary to do so. Section 361.276 (“Apportionment of Liability”)

is made applicable to § 361.188 orders by virtue of § 361.188(b). The fact

that the TCEQ asserted there is joint and several liability for this Order

does not make it a § 361.272 order.

    D. Section 361.322(e) does not merge § 361.188 and § 361.272
       orders

    Appellees say that, “the issuance of an order under § 361.272 does not

                                         25
preclude the Commission from the listing process of § 361.181-188.” (Ap-

pellees’ Br. 37, citing § 361.322(e).) While this is true, it does not lead to the

conclusion that the ordering sections are somehow merged. (See discussion

of § 361.322(e) at sec. IV.C.2, supra.)

    The TCEQ may work through the Subchapter F process, and even

issue a § 361.188 order, after the issuance and appeal of a § 361.272 order.

Appellees imply that this has some relevance to the current situation, but it

does not. In the present case, the TCEQ did the Subchapter F process first,

and then issued the § 361.188 Order. Section 361.322(e) is irrelevant.

    E.   Reviewing this Order under § 361.322 would make
         Subchapter F redundant

    In a trial court brief, the TCEQ asserted that “[r]eview under Section

361.322 would render Subchapter F redundant.” (CR 1091.) The reason

was that the TCEQ would not go through the “elaborate, time-consuming

and expensive,” Subchapter F process if it had to re-prove liability at trial

by preponderance of the evidence anyway. (CR 1092.) “That practical

consideration would turn Subchapter F into surplusage, which would be

                                          26
contrary to the intent of the Legislature.” Id. In the present case, it would

mean that the TCEQ had wasted 15 years, and a lot of money, establishing

findings that would have to be re-established by a preponderance of the

evidence.

    Appellees do not address this argument directly. Instead, they respond

by complaining that they were not offered a contested-case hearing before

the agency, and did not have the opportunity to show that they were not

“persons responsible for solid waste.” (Appellees’ Br. 38-39.) However,

Appellees had numerous opportunities to show that they were not PRP’s

and present other information to the TCEQ. The Legislature did not

provide a redundant contested-case hearing as part of that process.

    Appellees do not address the question of subject-matter jurisdiction;

instead, they complain about the supposed effects of a substantial evidence

review. When they suggest that the Order will be “the final word on

liability,” (Appellees’ Br. 39), they grossly overstate the applicable standard

of review. Appellees’ arguments about their own liability are premature in

                                      27
this interlocutory appeal.

    Further, their distinction between agency expertise on liability versus

remedy selection is misplaced. (See Appellees’ Br. 38-39.) Essentially, they

are saying that they question the agency’s expertise when it comes to

determining their own liability. However, the agency has expertise in

determining PRP status; it must go through the relevant procedures set out

in Subchapter F, and did so for this Order in detail. (AR 12512-16706.)

    F.   The Order was properly issued under § 361.188

    The TCEQ asserted that: “[a] single order cannot arise under both

Sections 361.188 and 361.272.” (Appellant’s Br. 18.) The rationale was that,

“[t]he orders must be separate and distinct because they have different

deadlines for appeal,” and “each appellate section provides for a different

standard of review.” Id.

    From this, Appellants illogically conclude that the remedy is “to

overturn the Order as a violation of law.” (Appellees’ Br. 40.) They arrive

at this conclusion only by assuming that the TCEQ issued the Order

                                     28
“under both § 361.188 and § 361.272.” (Appellees’ Br. 41.) Since that is the

matter in controversy, their argument lacks logic and must fail. This Order

was properly issued under § 361.188—not § 361.272, and not both.

    G. Conclusion

    The TCEQ’s boilerplate language in the preamble to the Order is not

controlling or dispositive as to the nature of the Order, nor are the TCEQ’s

statements or pleadings. What is controlling is the substance of the Order

and the process the TCEQ followed leading up to its entry. Appellees do

not dispute that the TCEQ completed the procedures set forth in Sub-

chapter F. If the TCEQ had intended to issue a § 361.272 order, it would

have done so early in the process rather than at the end. The Order was

properly issued under § 361.188 and is properly reviewed under § 361.321.

VI. REPLY CONCERNING ISSUE THREE

    The TCEQ asserted that “[b]ecause of the doctrine of Sovereign Immu-

nity, the courts lack jurisdiction to review the Order under any section

other than Section 361.321.” (Appellant’s Br. 32.) The premises of that

                                     29
argument were that (a) the ordering sections are mutually exclusive, and

(b) this Order was issued under § 361.188. (Appellant’s Br. 32.)

    Appellees respond that “[j]udicial review of the Administrative Order

for the Voda Site is constitutional and appropriate under § 361.322 of the

[SWDA].” (Appellees’ Br. -ix-.) However, they start with different pre-

mises. They posit that “the substantial evidence review procedures found

in the APA are not applicable to this appeal” (Appellees’ Br. 41), and then

argue that “judicial review under § 361.322 does not violate the separation

of powers doctrine.” (Appellees’ Br. 42.)

    In other words, Appellees are saying that an order issued under

§ 361.272 is properly appealed under § 361.322, and there is no constitu-

tional impediment to doing so. Even assuming that argument to be sound,

it is irrelevant here because the present case involves a § 361.188 order—as

established in Issues One and Two, above. Appellees do not controvert the

essence of the TCEQ’s jurisdictional argument.

                                     30
       A. The constitutionality of § 361.322 is not at issue

           1.   Tex. Gov’t Code § 2001.174 restates existing law

       The TCEQ asserted that “[u]nder the Separation of Powers Doctrine,

the courts review administrative orders only as to matters of law.” (Appel-

lant’s Br. 35.) That was in the context of an argument showing that the

Texas Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”) (specifically, Tex. Gov’t

Code § 2001.174) codified the Legislature’s understanding of the existing

law of judicial review of state agency actions. (Appellant’s Br. 35-37.)

       Appellees do not controvert the proposition that Tex. Gov’t Code

§ 2001.174 restated existing law. Instead, they argued that “the separation

of powers doctrine only prohibits the Legislature from authorizing de novo

judicial review of quasi-legislative acts that address broad questions of

public policy or promulgate rules for future application.” (Appellees’ Br.

42.)

       However, issues concerning the constitutionality of the “preponder-

ance of the evidence” requirement in § 361.322(g) are irrelevant here. Given

                                         31
that this Order was issued under § 361.188, it is properly reviewed under

the “invalid, arbitrary or unreasonable” standard of § 361.321(e). (See also,

argument and authorities at sec. VI.C.1, infra.)

    Appellees cite cases in which statutes required trials de novo for

certain agency decisions. (Appellees’ Br. 43-46, citing Commercial Life Ins.

Co. v. Tex. State Bd. of Ins., 808 S.W.2d 552 (Tex. App.—Austin 1991, writ

denied) and Macias v. Rylander, 995 S.W.2d 829 (Tex. App.—Austin 1999,

no pet.). The issue in each case was whether those requirements violated

the Separation of Powers doctrine (they did not). See Commercial Life, 808
S.W.2d at 554-55; Macias, 995 S.W.2d at 832-33. Again, however, that is

irrelevant here because § 361.321 does not require a trial de novo.

    Meanwhile, in the present case, the TCEQ has shown that the review

of this Order under the “invalid, arbitrary or unreasonable” standard of

§ 361.321(e) is conducted in the same manner as review under the provi-

sions of Tex. Gov’t Code § 2001.174. (Appellant’s Br. 37-38.)

                                      32
         2.   The Legislature’s decision to allow the review of this
              § 361.188 order under the “invalid, arbitrary or unreason-
              able” standard is consistent with the emerging law in this
              area

    The issue in this interlocutory appeal is whether the courts have

subject-matter jurisdiction to consider an appeal of an agency order under

one section of a statute, when the only proper appeal is under a different

section. This raises a question of Sovereign Immunity, since the State has

not waived its immunity generally. Each waiver must be in “express and

unequivocal terms.” See Berry, 449 S.W.3d at 640, quoting Prairie View A&M

Univ. v. Chatha, 381 S.W.3d 500, 512 (Tex. 2012); see Tex. Gov’t Code

§ 311.034. “‘[N]o state can be sued in her own courts without her consent,

and then only in the manner indicated by that consent.’” Tooke v. City of

Mexia, 197 S.W.3d 325, 331 (Tex. 2006) quoting Hosner v. DeYoung, 1 Tex.
764, 769 (1847).

    The Separation of Powers doctrine, which is similar but not identical,

holds that judicial review (when authorized) may not re-determine the

facts found by the agency. The distinction was explained by this Court, as

                                       33
follows:

    [A]n administrative agency’s order made within its discretionary
    statutory and constitutional authority is ordinarily shielded by
    sovereign immunity from suit, such that there is no right to judi-
    cial review, unless and until the Legislature has waived that
    immunity by conferring a right of judicial review.… However,
    even while the Legislature generally has the prerogative to waive
    sovereign immunity to permit judicial review, Texas courts have
    long held separation-of-powers principles bar the judiciary—even
    where the Legislature has purported to grant such broad review
    powers—from redetermining the fact findings of agencies exercis-
    ing their administrative functions.

City of Waco, 346 S.W.3d at 815 (Tex. App.—Austin 2011), rev’d on other

grounds, 413 S.W.3d 409 (Tex. 2013) (citing Gerst v. Nixon, 411 S.W.2d 350,

353–54 (Tex.1966) and S. Canal Co. v. State Bd. of Water Eng’rs, 318 S.W.2d
619, 622-24 (Tex. 1958)) (other citations omitted). That distinction is still

valid.

    B.     The Texas Supreme Court’s decision in City of Waco is
           pertinent to this SWDA appeal

    The TCEQ asserted that “[a] contested case hearing is not required for

review of this Order under substantial evidence,” referring to the Supreme

Court’s City of Waco decision. (Appellant’s Br. 38-39, citing Tex. Comm’n on

                                       34
Envtl. Quality v. City of Waco, 413 S.W.3d 409 (Tex. 2013).) Appellees

responded that “[t]he Texas Supreme Court’s decision in City of Waco is not

controlling in this SWDA appeal.” (Appellees’ Br. 48.) To the contrary, the

Supreme Courts rulings in that case—and this Court’s subsequent applica-

tions of those rulings—define the proper approach here.

         1.   City of Waco did not merely make a “threshhold determina-
              tion”

    Appellees would limit the applicability of City of Waco by saying that

the case “is limited to a threshold determination of whether a third-party

seeking to intervene in a permitting case is an ‘affected person’ sufficient to

trigger a contested-case hearing.” (Appellees’ Br. 10, 48.) However, that

was not the relevant characteristic of the case. The case actually turned on

the finding that the amended permit would not “significantly increase or

materially change the authorized discharge of waste” and would therefore

qualify for a statutory exemption from the contested-case requirement. City

of Waco, 413 S.W.3d at 424-25 (Tex. 2013). The TCEQ made a fact-based

determination from the information, evidence, documents, and arguments

                                      35
that interested parties presented to the agency, and the Court upheld that

determination. Id. (“We conclude that there is evidence in the record to

support the Commission’s determination.…”) In the present case, the

TCEQ made a similar determination respecting the Site remedy and Appel-

lees’ status as PRP’s.

    In City of Waco, the Texas Supreme Court upheld TCEQ’s decision

because there was reasonable support in the agency record for the decision.

Id. at 424-25. Ultimately, that is what the TCEQ is requesting in the present

case. When applying the Supreme Court’s holding and analysis, this Court

has recognized that an agency’s decision is often found not to be arbitrary

or capricious if the factual basis for the decision is supported by substantial

evidence in the agency record. See Tex. Comm’n on Envtl. Quality v. Sierra

Club, No. 03-12-00335-CV, 2014 WL 7464085, *5 (Tex. App.—Austin Dec.

30, 2014, no pet. h.)

    Appellees attempt to distinguish City of Waco by saying that, “the

present case has no connection to the Texas Water Code, permitting, or the

                                      36
standing of third parties.…” (Appellees’ Br. 51.) However, these distinc-

tions are irrelevant. Appellees are still making the assumption that the

“preponderance of the evidence” burden of proof applies. (Appellees’ Br.

51.) But it does not, and such analysis is beside the point. After City of

Waco, the courts can review an agency order by the “abuse of discretion”

standard (including the substantial evidence component), even in the

absence of a contested case or adjudicative hearing below. The relevant

provision, § 361.321, mandates such a standard of review. That is the

holding and the relevance of City of Waco.

    Appellees attempt to distinguish the recent Sierra Club case, which

follows the City of Waco precedent. (See Appellees’ Br. 52-53, citing Sierra

Club, 2014 WL 7464085.) Appellees admit that, “[a]pplying the holding

from City of Waco, [this Court] held it must review ‘a TCEQ determination

regarding affected-person status for an abuse of discretion.’” (Appellees’

Br. 52, citing Sierra Club, 2014 WL 7464085 at *4.) Appellees do not say why

that case is distinguishable from the present case—presumably because it

                                      37
involves party standing in a permit matter. But this Court cited City of

Waco throughout the opinion and noted that, “[i]n making a decision

regarding affected-person status, TCEQ enjoys the discretion to weigh and

resolve matters that may go to the merits of the underlying application.…”

Sierra Club, 2014 WL 7464085 at *5, citing Sierra Club v. Tex. Comm’n on

Envtl. Quality, No. 03–11–00102–CV, 2014 WL 7463875 at *12 (Tex. App.—

Austin Dec. 30, 2014, no pet. h.) (other citations omitted).

    To summarize, this Court has recently considered two different TCEQ

decisions—each within the agency’s discretion, on the substance of the

applications, without contested case hearings—and reviewed them on the

administrative record based on the abuse of discretion standard. These

precedents support the TCEQ’s interpretation of City of Waco.

    Finally, Appellees mischaracterize the State’s position as saying that

“all TCEQ decisions—including those with specific statutory appellate

provisions to the contrary—are subject to review only through pure

substantial evidence.” (Appellees’ Br. 53.) By contrast, the State’s actual

                                      38
position is that City of Waco and its progeny allow a substantial evidence

review on appeal, even without a contested case hearing before the agency,

when the relevant statute provides for such review. That is entirely consis-

tent with precedent, and describes the present situation.

    C. The “invalid, arbitrary or unreasonable” standard of
       § 361.321(e) equates to the standard of Tex. Gov’t Code
       § 2001.174

        1.   Tex. Gov’t Code § 2001.174 was intended to be a restate-
             ment of the law

    Appellees argue that the provisions of the APA contained at Tex.

Gov’t Code § 2001.174 do not apply here, because of the express terms of

that section. (Appellees’ Br. 53-54.) But this ignores the TCEQ’s actual

argument: that the Legislature intended the APA to be a restatement of

existing law, not a new form of judicial review of agency actions. (Appel-

lant’s Br. 36.) Following this argument, the “invalid, arbitrary or unreason-

able” standard of § 361.321(e) simply means that the Order must be re-

viewed under the standards of APA § 2001.174, of which substantial

evidence is an important part. (Appellant’s Br. 37.) Appellees do not

                                      39
controvert the TCEQ’s actual argument.

         2.   Review under the substantial evidence standard does not
              require a contested case hearing

    Appellees argue that “Outside of threshold standing questions, pure

substantial evidence requires a true contested-case record under the APA.”

(Appellees’ Br. 55-59.) However, they cite several cases that have been

effectively overruled. One is Ramirez v. Tex. State Bd. of Med. Exam’rs, 927
S.W.2d 770, 773 (Tex. App.—Austin 1996, no writ), which rejected the

argument that the Legislature created a right of judicial review under the

substantial evidence rule while depriving parties of an opportunity for a

contested case hearing. However, that case was cited in this Court’s

opinion in City of Waco, 346 S.W.3d at 818, and was thus effectively over-

ruled by the Supreme Court’s subsequent opinion. (See Appellant’s argu-

ment at CR 1099-1100.)

    Appellees also cite Tex. Dep’t of Ins. v. State Farm Lloyds, 260 S.W.3d
233, 245 (Tex. App.—Austin 2008, no pet.) (“Absent an administrative

record, no substantial evidence review is required or even possible.”).

                                      40
(Appellees’ Br. 59.) Like Ramirez, that case has been effectively overruled

by City of Waco.

    Appellees then cite G.E. Am. Commc’n v. Galveston Cent. Appraisal Dist.,

979 S.W.2d 761, 767 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1998, no pet.), and

quote: “Substantial evidence review cannot have been the proper standard

because there is no record from the appraisal review board hearing.”

(Appellees’ Br. 56.) The Fourteenth Court of Appeals concluded that,

because there was no record to review, the correct standard of review was

substantial evidence de novo—so that the court could create a record. G.E.

Am., 979 S.W.2d 767. However, substantial evidence de novo has been

rejected by this Court as the default standard of review. See Gilder v. Meno,

926 S.W.2d 357, 361 (Tex. App.—Austin 1996, writ denied). In addition, like

the Ramirez case, the holding has been effectively overruled by the Su-

preme Court in City of Waco. Finally, the TCEQ has compiled an exhaustive

record in this case, and thus the rationale of G.E. American does not apply.

G.E. American is simply not a good precedent here. (See CR 1101.)

                                     41
    Appellees attempt to distinguish various cases that are, in fact, good

law. See, e.g., Smith v. Houston Chem. Servs., Inc., 872 S.W.2d 252, 257 n.2

(Tex. App.—Austin 1994, writ denied). Smith interprets § 361.321—the

same section that defines the standard of review in the present case—and

found that the language of § 361.321(e) implies substantial evidence review

under the provisions of § 2001.174 of the APA. Smith is on point because it

interprets the exact section that is at issue in the present case. Smith, 872
S.W.2d at 257 n.2 (“To render [this statute] understandable, and to protect

against its possible violation of the separation-of-powers mandate of the

Constitution of the State of Texas, we construe subsection (a) [of § 361.321]

as authorizing suits for judicial review in a district court of Travis County

in accordance with APA § 2001.001-.902.).

    Appellees also argue that the Kelsoe case was not decided on substan-

tive grounds. (Appellees’ Br. 57, citing Tex. Comm’n on Envtl. Quality v.

Kelsoe, 286 S.W.3d 91, 97 (Tex. App.—Austin 2009, pet. denied) (petitioner

asserted that “section 361.321 of the health and safety code only appl[ies]

                                       42
after a contested case hearing, but the plain language of the statute[] does

not support that conclusion; the statute[] speak[s] of seeking review of any

‘ruling, order, decision, or other act.’”). Kelsoe, 286 S.W.3d at 95. Even so,

the case shows this Court’s recent interpretation of the section that is at

issue here; thus, it has precedential value.

    Smith and Kelso are not distinguishable on the basis of contested case

hearing because those appeals were filed under the broad language of

§ 361.321.

    Appellees attempt to distinguish United Copper Indus., Inc. v. Grissom,

17 S.W.3d 797 (Tex. App.—Austin 2000, pet. dism’d), principally on the

grounds that it is limited to “affected person” issues. (Appellees’ Br. 57-

58.) However, the TCEQ cited that case for various propositions—

principally, that “the APA, interpreting existing law, supports the proposi-

tion that the Order must [be] reviewed under the substantial evidence

standard.” (Appellant’s Br. 37.) This is a general interpretation of the

statute, and is not limited to issues of party status.

                                       43
VII.       CONCLUSION

       Appellant has shown that there are two separate ordering provisions

within the SWDA, and that each has a separate appellate provision. The

proposition that these sections are merged is not supported by the plain

language of the statute, its history, or by case law.

       Appellees essentially admit that the order was procedurally and

substantively issued under § 361.188, but then argue that it was also issued

under § 361.272 because those sections were merged. This proposition is

likewise unsupported by statutory interpretation or existing precedents.

       Given that this Order was issued under § 361.188, and that the statute

provides for appeal under § 361.321, it follows that appeal under any other

section is beyond the subject-matter jurisdiction of the courts. This conclu-

sion is entirely consistent with emerging precedents in administrative law.

VIII.      PRAYER

       Appellant prays that the District Court’s denial of its Plea to the

Jurisdiction be reversed, for the reasons stated in its initial brief and this

                                        44
Reply Brief.

    Respectfully submitted this 2nd day of March, 2015.

                                    KEN PAXTON
                                    Attorney General of Texas

                                    CHARLES E. ROY
                                    First Assistant Attorney General

                                    JAMES E. DAVIS
                                    Deputy Attorney General for Civil
                                    Litigation

                                    JON NIERMANN
                                    Chief, Environmental Protection
                                    Division

                                     /s/ Thomas H. Edwards
                                    THOMAS H. EDWARDS
                                    Assistant Attorney General
                                    Tex. Bar No. 06461800
                                    Thomas.Edwards@TexasAttorney
                                    General.gov

                                    CRAIG J. PRITZLAFF
                                    Assistant Attorney General
                                    Tex. Bar No. 24046658
                                    Craig.Pritzlaff@TexasAttorney
                                    General.gov

                                   45
                                    LINDA SECORD
                                    Assistant Attorney General
                                    Tex. Bar No. 17973400
                                    Linda.Secord@TexasAttorney
                                    General.gov

                                    Office of the Attorney General
                                    Environmental Protection Division
                                    P.O. Box 12548, Capitol Station
                                    Austin, Texas 78711-2548
                                    Tel: (512) 463-2012
                                    Fax: (512) 320-0911

                                    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT,
                                    THE TEXAS COMMISSION ON
                                    ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY

                   CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE

     I certify that this document was produced on a computer using Word
Perfect 13.0 and contains 7,471 words, as determined by the computer
software’s word-count function, excluding the sections of the document
listed in Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 9.4(i)(1).

                                     /s/ Thomas H. Edwards
                                    THOMAS H. EDWARDS

                                   46
                       CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE

    I certify that a true and correct copy of the foregoing document was
served by electronic service on the following parties or attorneys of record
on the 2nd day of March, 2015, and by email the same day.

Attorneys                                 Parties

John R. Eldridge                          Exxon Mobil Corporation,
HAYNES AND BOONE, L.L.P.                  ExxonMobil Oil Corporation,
1221 McKinney St., Ste. 2100              Pennzoil-Quaker State Company
Houston TX 77010-2020                     and Shell Oil Company
Telephone: (713) 547-2000
Facsimile: (713) 547-2600
John.Eldridge@haynesboone.com

Adam H. Sencenbaugh                                 “
HAYNES AND BOONE, L.L.P.
600 Congress Ave., Ste. 1300
Austin TX 78701-2579
Telephone: (512) 867-8489
Telecopier: (512) 867-8606
Adam.Sencenbaugh@
haynesboone.com

Janessa M. Glenn                          Cabot Norit Americas, Inc.
R. Steven Morton
MOLTZ MORTON & GLENN, LLP
5113 Southwest Pkwy, Ste. 120
Austin TX 78735-8969
jglenn@mmandg.com

                                     47
John E. Leslie                       Howard Freilich, d/b/a Quick Stop
JOHN LESLIE * PLLC                   Brake and Muffler
1216 Florida Dr., Ste. 140
Arlington TX 76015-2393
Tel: (817) 505-1291
Arlingtonlaw@aol.com

Cynthia J. Bishop                    Baxter Oil Service
C BISHOP LAW PC
P.O. Box 612994
Dallas TX 75261-2994
cbishop@cbishoplaw.com

Paul Craig Laird II                  Frank Kosar, d/b/a Rite Way
ASHLEY & LAIRD, L.C.                 Truck Rental
800 W. Airport Fwy., Ste. 880
Irving TX 75062-6274
pcl880@aim.com

George E. Kuehn                      SBC Holdings, Inc., f/k/a The Stroh
BUTZEL LONG                          Brewery Company
301 E. Liberty St., Ste 500
Ann Arbor MI 48104-2283
Tel: 734-213-3257
Fax: 734-995-1777
kuehn@butzel.com

                                  /s/ Thomas H. Edwards
                                 THOMAS H. EDWARDS

                                48
APPENDIX

   49
               APPENDIX TO APPELLANT’S REPLY BRIEF
                       TABLE OF CONTENTS

Tab

1     Act of May 18, 1989, 71st Leg., R.S., ch. 678, § 1, 1989 Tex. Gen. Laws
      2230, 2616-64

2     Act of May 24, 1989, 71st Leg., R.S., ch. 703, § 5, 1989 Tex. Gen. Laws
      3212, 3216-32

3     Act of June 6, 1990, 71st Leg., 6th C.S., ch. 10, art. 2, §§ 28, 29, 1990
      Tex. Gen. Laws 47, 64-80 (amended 1997) (current version at Tex.
      Health & Safety Code §§ 361.181-.202, 361.322(a))
TAB 1
                                                71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION

                                        CHAPTER 678
                                         H.B. No. 2136
                                             AN ACT
relating to the adoption of a nonsubstantlve revision of the statutes relating to health and safety,
Including conforming amendments, repeals, and penalties.
  Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Texas:
  SECTION 1. ADOPTION OF CODE. The Health and Safety Code is adopted to read
as follows:
                          HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE
                                      Contents
                        TITLE 1. GENERAL PROVISIONS
                           Chapter 1. General Provisions
                       [Chapters 2-10 reserved for expansion]
                                TITLE 2. HEALTH
               SUBTITLE A. TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
             Chapter 11. Organization of Texas Department of Health
          Chapter 12. Powers and Duties of Texas Department of Health
         Chapter 18. Health Department Hospitals and Respiratory Facilities
                      [Chapters 14-80 reserved for expansion]
         SUBTITLE B. TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH PROGRAMS
                         Chapter 81. Primary Health Care
               Chapter 82. Maternal and Infant Health Improvement
            Chapter 88. Phenylketonuria and Other Heritable Diseases
                            Chapter 84. Hypothyroidism
            Chapter 85. Chronically Ill and Disabled Children's Services
             Chapter 86. Special Senses and Communication Disorders
                Chapter 87. Abnormal Si->al Curvature in Children
                         Chapter 88. Pediculosis of Minors
                  Chapter 89. Children's Outreach Heart Program
                               Chapter 40. Epilepsy
                              Chapter 41. Hemophilia
                          Chapter 42. Kidney Health Care
                       Chapter 48. Oral Health Improvement
                      [Chapters 44-60 reserved for expansion]
                    SUBTITLE C. INDIGENT HEALTH CARE
               Chapter 61. Indigent Health Care and Treatment Act
                      [Chapters 62-80 reserved for expansion]
      SUBTITLE D. PREVENTION, CONTROL, AND REPORTS OF DISEASES
                                               2230
Ch. 678, § 1                                71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION

                     [Sections 361.258-361.270 reserved for expansion]
 SUBCHAPTER I. ENFORCEMENT; ADMINISTRATIVE ORDERS CONCERNING
             . IMMINENT AND SUBSTANTIAL ENDANGERMENT
Sec. 361.271. PERSONS RESPONSIBLE FO-R SOLID WASTE
Sec. 361.272. ADMINISTRATIVE ORDERS CONCERNING IMMINENT AND SUB-
               STANTIAL ENDANGERMENT
Sec. 361.273. INJUNCTION AS ALTERNATIVE TO ADMINISTRATIVE ORDER
Sec. 361.274. NO PRIOR NOTICE CONCERNING ADMINISTRATIVE ORDER
Sec. 361.275. DEFENSES
Sec. 361.276. APPORTIONMENT OF LIABILITY
Sec. 361.277. JUDGMENT BY STATE AGAINST NONSETTLING PARTY; ACTION
FOR CONTRIBUTION BY NONSETTLING PARTY
Sec. 361.278. LIABILITY OF ENGINEER OR CONTRACTOR
Sec. 361.279. CONTRACTS WITH STATE
Sec. 361.280. REMEDIES CUMULATIVE
                     [Sections 361.281-361.300 reserved for expansion]
             SUBCHAPTER J. ENFORCEMENT; EMERGENCY ORDER;
                           CORRECTIVE ACTION
Sec. 361.301. EMERGENCY ORDER
Sec. 361.302. ISSUANCE OF ORDER BY COMMISSION
Sec. 361.303. CORRECTIVE ACTION
                     [Sections 361.304-361.320 reserved for expansion]
               SUBCHAPTER K. APPEALS; JOINDER OF PARTIES
Sec. 361.321. APPEALS
Sec. 361.322. APPEAL OF ADMINISTRATIVE ORDER ISSUED UNDER SECTION
361.272; JOINDER OF PARTIES
Sec. 361.323. JOINDER OF PARTIES IN ACTION FILED BY STATE
                     [Sections 361.324-361.340 reserved for expansion]
                         SUBCHAPTER L. COST RECOVERY
Sec.   361.341.   COST RECOVERY BY STATE
Sec.   361.342.   COST RECOVERY BY APPEALING OR CONTESTING PARTY
Sec.   361.343.   APPORTIONMENT OF COSTS
Sec.   361.344.   COST RECOVERY BY LIABLE PARTY OR THIRD PARTY
Sec.   361.345.   CREATION OF RIGHTS

                    CHAPTER 361. SOLID WASTE DISPOSAL ACT
                      SUBCHAPTER A. GENERAL PROVISIONS
  Sec. 361.001. SHORT TITLE. This chapter may be cited as the Solid Waste Disposal
Act. (V.A,C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 1 (part).)
  Sec. 361.002. POLICY. It is this state's policy and the purpose of this chapter to
safeguard the health, welfare, and physical property of the people and to protect the
environment by controlling the management of solid waste, including accounting for
hazardous waste that is generated. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 1 (part).)
  Sec. 361.003. DEFINITIONS. Unless the context requires a different definition, in
this chapter:
     (1) "Apparent recharge zone" means that recharge zone designated on maps pre-
  pared or compiled by, and located in the offices of, the commission.
     (2) "Board of health" means the Texas Board of Health.
                                           2616
HEALTH A"i:O SAFETY CODE                                                  Ch. 678, § 1
                                                                                t 361.003
    (3) "Class I industrial solid waste" means an industrial solid waste or mixture of
 industrial solid waste, including hazardous industrial waste, that because of its concen-
 tration or physical or chemical characteristics:
       (A) is toxic, corrosive, flammable, a strong sensitizer or irritant, or a generator of
    sudden pressure by decomposition, heat, or other means; and
       (B) poses or may pose a substantial present or potential danger to human health or
    the environment if improperly processed, stored, transported, or otherwise managed.
    (4) "Commission" means the Texas Water Commission.
    (5) "Commissioner" means the commissioner of health.
    (6) "Composting" means the controlled biological decomposition of organic solid
 waste under aerobic conditions.
    (7) "Department" means the Texas Department of Health.
    (8) "Disposal" means the discharging, depositing, injecting, dumping, spilling, leak-
 ing, or placing of solid waste or hazardous waste, whether containerized or uncontainer-
 ized, into or on land or water so that the solid waste or hazardous waste or any
 constituent thereof may be emitted into the air, discharged into surface water or
 groundwater, or introduced into the environment in any other manner.
   (9) "Executive director" means the executive director of the commission.
   (10) "Garbage" means solid waste that is putrescible animal and vegetable waste
 materials from the handling, preparation, cooking, or consumption of food, including
 waste materials from markets, storage facilities, and the handling and sale of produce
 and other food products.
   (11) "Hazardous waste" means solid waste identified or listed as a hazardous waste
 by the administrator of the United States Environmental Protection Agency under the
 federal Solid Waste Disposal Act, as amended by the Resource Conservation and
 Recovery Act of 1976, as amended (42 U.S.C. Section 6901 et seq.).
   (12) "Industrial solid waste" means solid waste resulting from or incidental to a
 process of industry or manufacturing, or mining or agricultural operations.
   (13) "l..-Ocal government" means:
      (A) a county;
       (B) a municipality; or
       (C) a political subdivision exercising the authority granted under Section 361.165.
   (14) "Management" means the systematic control of the activities of generation,
 source separation, collection, handling, storage, transportation, processing, treatment,
 recovery, or disposal of solid waste.
   (15) "Municipal solid ·waste" means solid waste resulting from or incidental to
 municipal, community, commercial, institutional, or recreational activities, and includes
 garbage, rubbish, ashes, street cleanings, dead animals, abandoned automobiles, and
 other solid waste other than industrial solid waste.
   (16) "Notice of intent to file an application" means the notice filed under Section
 361.063.
   (17) "Person" means an individual, corporation, organization, government or govern-
 mental subdivision or agency, business trust, partnership, association, or any other
 legal entity.
   (18) "Person affected" means a person who demonstrates that the person has
 suffered or will suffer actual injury or economic damage and, if the person is not a local
 government:
       (A) is a resident of a county, or a county adjacent or contiguous to the county, in
   which a solid waste facility is to be located; or
       (B) is doing business or owns land in the county or adjacent or contiguous county.
   (19) "Processing" means the extraction of materials from or the transfer, volume
 reduction, conversion to energy, or other separation and preparation of solid waste for
                                           2617
Ch. 678, § 1                               71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION
1361.003
 reuse or disposal. The term includes the treatment or neutralization of hazardous
 waste designed to change the physical, chemical, or biological character or composition
 of a hazardous waste so as to neutralize the waste, recover energy or material from the
 waste, render the waste nonhazardous or less hazardous, make it safer to transport,
 store, or dispose of, or render it amenable for recovery or storage, or reduce its volume.
 The term does not include activitieP. concerning those materials exempted by the
 administrator of the United States Environmental Protection Agency under the federal
 Solid Waste Disposal Act, as amended by the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
 of 1976, as amended (42 U.S.C. Section 6901 et seq.), unless the commission or
 department determines that regulation of the activity under this chapter is necessary to
 protect human health or the environment.
   (20) "Radioactive waste" means waste that requires specifi..! licensing under Chapter
 401 and the rules adopted by the board of health under that law.
   (21) "Release" means any spilling, leaking, pumping, pouring, emitting, emptying,
 discharging, escaping, leaching, dumping, or disposing into the environment. The term
 does not include:
      (A) a release that results in an exposure to a person solely within a workplace,
   concerning a claim that the person may assert against the person's employer;
      (B) an emission from the engine exhaust of a motor vehicle, rolling stock, aircraft,
   vessel, or pipeline pumping station engine;
      (C) a release of source, by-product, or special nuclear material from a nuclear
   incident, as those terms are defined by the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended
   (42 U.S.C. Section 2011 et seq.), if the release is subject to requirements concerning
   financial protection established by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission under Section
   170 of that Act;
      (D) for the purposes of Section 104 of the federal Comprehensive Environmental
   Response, Compensation and Liability Act of 1980 (42 U.S.C. Section 9601 et seq.), or
   other response action, a release of source, by-product, or special nuclear material
   from a processing site designated under Section 102(a)(l) or 302(a) of the Uranium
   Mill Tailings Radiation Control Act of 1978 (42 U.S.C. Sections 7912 and 7942); and
      (E) the normal application of fertilizer.
   (22) "Remedial action" means an action consistent with a permanent remedy taken
 instead of or in addition to a removal action in the event of a release or threatened
 release of a hazardous waste into the environment to prevent or minimize the release of
 hazardous waste so that the hazardous waste does not mi~ rate to cause an imminent
 and substantial danger to present or future public health .,nd safety or the environ·
 ment. The term includes:
      (A) actions at the location of the release, including storage, confinement, perimeter
   protection using dikes, trenches, or ditches, clay cover, neutralization, cleanup of
   released hazardous waste or contaminated materials, recycling or reuPe, diversion,
   destruction, segregation of reactive waste, dredging or excavations, repair or replace-
   ment of leaking containers, collection of leachate and runoff, on-site treatment or
   incineration, provision of alternate water supplies, and any monitoring reasonably
   required to assure that those actions protect the public health and safety or the
   environment; and
      (B) the costs of permanent relocation of residents, businesses, and community
   facilities if the administrator of the United States Environmental Protection Agency
   or the executive director determines that, alone or in combination with other mea-
   sures, the relocation:
         (i) is more cost-effective than and environmentally preferable to the transporta·
      tion, storage, treatment, destruction, or secure disposition off-site of hazardous
      waste; or
         (ii) may otherwise be necessary to protect the public health or safety.
    (23) "Removal" includes:
      (A) cleaning up or removing released hazardous waste from the environment;
                                          2618
HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE                                                      Ch. 678, § 1
                                                                                     1381.003
       (B) taking necessary action in the event of the threat of release of hazardous waste
    into the environment;
       (C) taking necessary act.ion to monitor, assess, and evaluate the release or threat of
    release of hazardous waste;
       (D) disposing of removed material;
       (E) erecting· a security fence or other measure to limit access;
       (F) providing alternate water supplies, temporary evacuation, and housing for
    threatened individuals not otherwise provided for;
       (G) acting under Section 104(b) of th~ federal Comprehensive Environmental Re-
    sponse, Compensation and Liability Act of 1980 (42 U.S.C. Section 9601 et seq.);
       (H) providing emergency assistance under the federal Disaster Relief Act of 1974
    (42 U.S.C. Section 5121 et seq.); or
       (I) taking any other necessary action to prevent, ·,ninimize, or mitigate damage to
    the public health and welfare or the environment that may otherwise result from a
    release or threat of release.
    (24) "Rubbish" means nonputrescible solid waste, excluding ashes, that consists of:
       (A) combustible waste materials, including paper, rags, cartons, wood, excelsior,
    furniture, rubber, plastics, yard trimmings, leaves, and similar materials; and
       (B) noncombustible waste materials, including glass, crockery, tin cans, aluminum
    cans, metal furniture, and similar materials that do not burn at ordinary incinerator
    temperatures (1,600 to 1,800 degrees Fahrenheit).
    (25) "Sanitary landfill" means a controlled area of land on which solid waste is
 disposed of in a'!cordance with standards, rules, or orders established by the board of
 health or the rummission.
    (26) "Sludge" means solid, semisolid, or liquid waste generated from a municipal,
 commercial, or industrial wastewater treatment plant, water supply treatment plant, or·
 air pollution control facility, excluding the treated effluent from a wastewater treat-
 ment plant.
    (27) This subdivision expires on delegation of the Resource Conservation and Recov-
 ery Act authority to the Railroad Commission of Texas. "Solid waste" means garbage,
 rubbish, refuse, sludge from a waste treatment plant, water supply treatment plant, or
 air pollution control facility, and other discarded material, including solid, liquid,
 semisolid, or contained gaseous material resulting from industrial, municipal, commer-
 cial, mining, and agricultural operations and from community and institutional activi-
 ties. The term does not include:
       (A) solid or dissolved material in domestic sewage, or solid or dissolved material in
    irrigation return flows, or industrial discharges subject to regulation by permit issued
    under Chapter 26, Water Code;
       (B) soil, dirt, rock, sand, and other natural or man-made inert solid materials used
    to fill land if the object of the fill is to make the land suitable for the construction of
    surface improvements; or
       (C) waste materials that result from activities associated with the exploration,
    development, or production of oil or gas or geothermal resources and other substance
    or material regulated by the Railroad Commission of Texas under Section 91.101,
    Natural Resources Code, unless the waste, substance, or material results from
    activities associated with gasoline plants, natural gas or natural gas liquids process-
    ing plants, pressure maintenance plants, or repressurizing plants and is hazardous
    waste as defined by the administrator of the United States Environmental Protection
    Agency under the federal Solid Waste Disposal Act, as amended by the Resource
    Conservation and Recovery Act, as amended (42 U.S.C. Section 6901 et seq.).
    (28) This subdivision is effective on delegation of the Resource Conservation and
 Recovery Act authority to the Railroad Commission of Texas. "Solid waste" means
 garbage, rubbish, refuse, sludge from a waste treatment plant, water supply treatment
 plant, or air pollution control facility, and other discarded material, including solid,
                                            2619
Ch. 678, § 1                                 71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION
1381.003
  liquid, semisolid, .or contained gaseous material resulting from industrial, municipal,
  commercial, mining, and agricultural operations and from community and institutional
  activities. The term does not include:
        (A) solid or dissolved material in ,domestic sewage, or solid or dissolved material in
     irrigation return flows, or industrial discharges subject to regulation by permit issued
     under Chapter 26, Water Code;
        (B) soil, dirt, rock, sand, and other natural or man-made inert solid materials used
     to fill land if the object of the fill is to make the land suitable for the construction of
     surface improvements; or
        (C) waste materials that result from activities associated with the exploration,
     development, or production of oil or gas or geothermal resources and other substance
     or material regulated by the Railroad Commission of Texas under Section 91.101,
     Natural Resources Code.
     (29) "Solid waste facility" means all contiguous land, including structures, appurte-
  nances, and other improvements on the land, used for processing, storing, or disposing
  of solid waste. The term includes a publicly or privately owned solid waste facility
  consisting of several processing, storage, or disposal operational units such as one or
  more landfills, surface impoundments, or a combination of units.
     (30) "Solid waste technician" means an individual who is trained in the practical
  aspects of the design, operation, and maintenance of a solid waste facility in accordance
  with standards, rules, or orders established by the board of health or commission.
     (31) "Storage" means the temporary holding of solid waste, after which the solid
  waste is processed, disposed of, or stored elsewhere. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 2
  (part).) .
                    [Sections 361.004-361.010 reserved for expansion]

SUBCHAPTER B. POWERS AND DUTIES OF TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
                 AND TEXAS WATER COMMISSION
  Sec. 361.011. DEPARTMENT'S JURISDICTION: MUNICIPAL SOLID WASTE. (a)
The department is responsible for the management of municipal solid waste, excluding
hazardous municipal waste, and shall coordinate municipal solid waste activities, exclud-
ing activities concerning hazardous municipal waste.
  (b) The board of health shall guide the department in its mana'gement of municipal solid
waste, excluding hazardous municipal waste.
  (c) 'l'he department shall accomplish the purposes of this chapter by controlling all
aspects of the management of municipal solid waste, excluding management of hazardous
municipal waste, by all practical and economically feasible methods consistent with its
powers and duties under this chapter and other law.
  (d) The department has the powers and duties specifically prescribed by this chapter
and all other powers necessary or convenient to carry out its responsibilities under this
chapter.
  (e) In matters under the department's jurisdiction, the department shall consult with:
     (1) the commission concerning water pollution control and water quality aspects; and
     (2) the Texas Air Control Board concerning air pollution control and ambient air
  quality aspects. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 3(a).)                          ·
  Sec. 361.012. DEPARTMENT'S JURISDICTION: MUNICIPAL SOLID WASTE
AND INDUSTRIAL SOLID WASTE. When both municipal solid waste and industrial
solid waste, except Class I industrial solid waste that is not routinely collected with
municipal solid waste and hazardous waste, are involved in any activity of management of
solid waste, the department has jurisdiction over the activity. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec.
3(c) (part).)                                                         ,,
                                             2620
HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE                                                   Ch. 678, § 1
                                                                                  1381.018
  Sec. 361.013. SOLID WASTE FACILITY FEE. (a) The department shall charge an
annual fee for each solid waste facility authorized by the department to be operated or
maintained under this chapter.
  (b) The board of health shall adopt fees according to a schedule in which the amount of
the fees is reasonably related to one or more of the following factors:
     (1) the population served by the facility;
     (2) the volume of waste handled by the facility; or
     (3) the type and size of the facility.
  (c) The board of health shall set the amount of fees under this section and Sections
361.014 and 361.065 to collect enough revenue to meet the expenses of performing the
solid waste management, control, and permit duties of the department.
  (d) The fees collected under this section shall be deposited to the credit of the general
revenue fund. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Secs. 4(k)(2), (4).)
  Sec. 361.014. SOLID WASTE TRANSPORTATION FEE. (a) The department shall
charge an annual fee to transporters of solid waste who are required to register with the
department by rule adopted under this chapter.
  (b) The board of health by rule shall adopt fees according to a schedule in which the
amount of the fees is reasonably related to:
     (1) the volume or the type of waste transported; or
     (2) both the volume and type of waste.
  (c) The board of health shall set the amount of the fees under this section and Sections
361.013 and 361.065 to collect enough revenue to meet the expenses of performing the
solid waste management, control, and permit duties of the department. (V.A.C.S. Art.
4477-7, Secs. 4(k)(3), (4) (part).)
  Sec. 361.015. DEPARTMENT'S JURISDICTION: RADIOACTIVE WASTE. The de-
partment is the state agency under Chapter 401 that regulates radioactive waste activities
not preemptively regulated by the federal government. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 3(d)
(part).)
  Sec. 361.016. MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING BY BOARD OF HEALTH.
The board of health by rule shall adopt:
     (1) any memorandum of understanding between the department and any other state
  agency; and
     (2) any revision of a memorandum of understanding. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec.
  3(i).)
  Sec. 361.017. COMMISSION'S JURISDICTION: INDUSTRIAL SOLID WASTE
AND HAZARDOUS MUNICIPAL WASTE. (a) The commission is responsible for the
management of industrial solid waste and hazardous municipal waste and shall coordinate
industrial solid waste activities and hazardous municipal waste activities.
  (b) The commission shall accomplish the purposes of this chapter by controlling all
aspects of the management of industrial solid waste and hazardous municipal waste by all
practical and economically feasible methods consistent with its powers and duties under
this chapter and other law.
  (c) The commission has the powers and duties specifically prescribed by this chapter
and all other powers necessary or convenient to carry out its responsibilities under this
chapter.
  (d) In matters under the commission's jurisdiction, the commission shall consult with:
     (1) the department concerning the public health aspects; and
     (2) the Texas Air Control Board concerning the air pollution control and ambient air
  quality aspects. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 3(b).)
  Sec. 361.018. COMMISSION'S JURISDICTION OVER HAZARDOUS WASTE COM-
PONENTS OF RADIOACTIVE WASTE. (a) The commission has the powers under this
chapter necessary or convenient to carry out its responsibilities concerning the regulation
                                           2621
Ch. 678, § 1                                 7lst LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION
1381.018
of the management of hazardous waste components of radioactive waste under the
department's jurisdiction.
  (b) The commission shall consult with the department concerning regulation and
management under this section.
  (c) The commission may not adopt rules or engage in management activities under this
section that conflict with state or federal laws and rules concerning the regulation of
radioactive waste. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 3(d) (part).)
  Sec. 361.019. APPROVAL BY APPROPRIATE STATE AGENCY IF MIXING CER·
TAIN WASTES. (a) Class I industrial solid waste and hazardous waste may be accepted in
a municipal solid waste facility if authorized in writing by the department with the
written approval of the commission.
  (b) Solid waste under the department's jurisdiction may be accepted in an industrial
solid waste facility if authorized in writing by the commission with the written approval
of the department. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. B(c) (part).)
  Sec. 361.020. STATE SOLID WASTE PLANS. (a) The department and the commission
are each authorized to develop a state solid waste plan for solid waste under their
respective jurisdictions and the state agencies shall coordinate the solid waste plans.
  (b) In developing a solid waste plan for solid waste under its jurisdiction, the depart-
ment shall consider the preference of municipal solid waste management methods under
Section 36!.022.
  (c) Before the department or the commission adopts its solid waste plan or makes
significant amendments to the plan, the Texas Air Control Board must have the opportu-
nity to comment and make recommendations on the proposed plan or amendments and
shall be given such reasonable time to do so as specified by the agency. (V.A.C.S. Art.
4477-7, Sec. 4(b).)
  Sec. 361.021. INTERAGENCY COORDINATION COUNCIL. (a) The interagency
coordination council shall coordinate the activities of its member agencies concerning the
regulation of solid waste and solid waste management facilities and the enforcement of
the applicable solid waste laws and rules.
  (b) The council is composed of the executive head, or the executive head's designated
representative, of the following agencies:
     (1) the commission;
     (2) the department;
     (3) the Texas Air Control Board; and
     (4) the Railroad Commission of Texas.
  (c) The commission's representative is the council chairman.
  (d) The council shall meet at least quarterly to review the solid waste regulatory and
enforcement activities of the previous quarter and coordinate planned activities in the
interest of efficiency and cooperation, including:
     (1) the consideration of the use of waste exchange programs;
     (2) the establishment of a clearinghouse for scientific and engineering information
  concerning hazardous waste management;
     (3) the coordination of hazardous waste research and development activities;
     (4) the coordination and development of consistent agency rules relevant to the
  regulation of hazardous waste activities;
     (5) the evaluation of means to assist small quantity hazardous waste generators and
  ~ffected communities in the effective and safe management an.:: tiisposal of their
  regulated waste;
     (6) the assessment of any preapplication public interactions with applicants to evalu-
   ate their effectiveness and to consider developing rules to incorporate those activities if
   appropriate;
                                            2622
HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE                                                      Ch. 678, § 1
                                                                                     1381.023
      (7) the consideration of the use of incentives to er.courage waste minimization and
   reusing and recycling waste, and the use of resource recovery and detoxification
   equipment; and '
      (8) the evaluation of the feasibility of household hazardous waste collection and
   disposal programs.
   (e) The chairman shall prepare a report summarizing each quarterly meeting. The
report shall be submitted for approval by a majority of agencies represented on the
council. The report is a public document. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Secs. 8(g)(l), (2).)
   Sec. 861.022. PUBLIC POLICY CONCERNING MUNICIPAL SOLID WASTE AND
SLUDGE. (a) To protect the public health and environment, it is the state's public policy
that, in generating, treating, storing, and disposing of municipal solid waste or municipal
sludge, the methods listed under Subsections (b) and (c) are preferred to the extent
economically and technologically feasible and considering the appropriateness of the
method to the type of solid waste material or sludge generated, treated, disposed of, or
stored.
   (b) For municipal solid waste, not including sludge, the following methods are pre-
ferred, in the order listed:
      (1) minimization of waste produ1..tion;
      (2) reuse or recycling of waste;
      (8) treatment to destroy or reprocess waste to recover energy or other beneficial
   resources if the treatment does not threaten public health, safety, or the environment;
  or
      (4) land disposal.
  (c) For municipal sludge, the following methods are preferred, in the order listed:
      (1) minimization of sludge production and concentrations of heavy metals and other
  toxins in sludge;
      (2) treatment of sludge to reduce pathogens and recover energy, produce beneficial
  by-products, or reduce the quantity of sludge;
      (8) marketing and distribution of sludge and sludge products if the marketing and
  distribution do not threaten public health, safety, or the environment;
      (4) applying sludge to land for beneficial use;
      (5) land treatment; or
      (6) landfilling.
  (d) In adopting rules to implement public policy concerning municipal solid waste
management, the board of health shall consider the preference of municipal solid waste
management methods under this section. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Secs. 8(e)(8), (4); 4(c)
(part).)
  Sec. 861.028. PUBLIC POLICY CONCERNING HAZARDOUS WASTE. (a) To pro-
tect the public health and environment, it is the state's public policy that, in generating,
treating, storing, and disposing of hazardous waste, the following methods are preferred
to the extent economically and technologically feasible, in the order listed:
      (1) minimization of waste production;
      (2) reuse or recycling of waste, or both;
      (8) treatment to destroy hazardous characteristics;
      (4) treatment to reduce hazardous characteristics;
      (5) underground injection; and
      (6) land disposal.
   (b) Under Subsection (a)(8), on-site destruction is preferred, but it shall be evaluated in
the context of other relevant factors such as transportation hazard, distribution of risk,
quality of destruction, operator capability, and site suitability. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7,
Secs. 8(e)(l), (2).)
                                            2623
Ch. 678, § 1                                  71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION
I 381.024
   Sec. 361.024. RULES AND STANDARDS. (a) The board of health and the commission
may each adopt rules consistent with this chapter and establish minimum standards of
operation for the management and control of the solid waste under their respective
jurisdictions under this chapter.
   (b) In developing rules concerning hazardous waste, the commission shall consult with
the State Soil and Water Conservation Board, the Bureau of Economic Geology of The
University of Texas at Austin, and other appropriate state sources.
   (c) The minimum standards set by the commission for on-site storage of hazardous
waste must be at least the minimum standards set by the manufacturer of the chemical.
   (d) Rules adopted by the commission under Section 361.036 and Sections
361.097-361.108 for solid waste facilities may differ according to the type or hazard of
hazardous waste managed and the type of waste management method used. (V.A.C.S.
Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(c) (part).)
 · Sec. 361.025. EXEMPT ACTIVITIES. (a) The commission and the Railroad Commis·
sion of Texas shall jointly prepare an exclusive list of activities that are associated with oil
and gas exploration, development, and production and are therefore exempt from regula·
tion under this chapter.
   (b) 'lhe list shall be adopted by rule and amended as necessary. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7,
Sec. 3(f) (part).)
   Sec. 361.026. ASSISTANCE PROVIDED BY DEPARTMENT AND COMMISSION.
(a) The department and the commission may individually or jointly:
      (1) provide educational, advisory, and technical services concerning solid waste
   management to other state agencies, regional planning agencies, local governments,
   special districts, institutions, and individuals; and
      (2) assist other state agencies, regional planning agencies, local governments, special
   districts, and institutions in acquiring federal grants for:
         (A) the development of solid waste facilities and management programs; and
         (B) research to improve solid waste management.
   (b) The department or the commission individually may engage in the programs and
activities under this section only as the participation by it concerns the management and
control of the solid waste under its jurisdiction.
   (c) If the department and the commission do not participate jointly, each shall coor·
dinate efforts undertaken individually so that separate but similar programs and activities
are compatible. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(h) (part).)
   Sec. 361.027. TRAINING OF SOLID WASTE TECHNICIANS. (a) The department
and the commission may each:
      (1) develop a program to train solid waste technicians to improve the competency of
   those technicians; and
      (2) issu~ letters of competency.
   (b) The owner or operator of a solid waste facility is encouraged to employ as site
manager a solid waste technician holding a letter of competency from the appropriate
agency.
   (c) The department and the commission may each:
      (1) prescribe standards of training required for the program;
      (2) determine the duration of the letter of competency;
      (3) award one or more categories of letters of competency with each category
   reflecting a different degree of training or skill;
      (4) require a reasonable, nonrefundable fee, in an amount determined from time to
   time. by the agency, to be paid by participants, deposited to the credit of the general
   revenue fund, and used to administer the program;
      (5) extend or renew letters of competency issued by the agency; and
                                             2624
HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE                                                     Ch. 678, § 1
                                                                                     1381.031
      (6) withdraw a letter of competency for good cause, which may include a violation of
   this chapter or a rule of the agency concerning the technician's duties and responsibili-
   ties. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(g).)
   Sec. 361.028. INDUSTRIAL SOLID AND HAZARDOUS WASTE MATERIALS EX·
CHANGE. (a) The commission shall establish an industrial solid and hazardous waste
materials exchange that provides for the exchange, between interested persons, of
information concerning:
      (1) particular quantities of industrial solid or hazardous waste available in this state
   for recovery;       .
      (2) persons interested in acquiring certain types of industrial solid or hazardous
   waste for purposes of recovery; and
      (3) methods for the treatment and recovery of industrbl solid or hazardous waste.
   (b) The industrial solid and hazardous waste materials exchange may be operated under
one or more reciprocity agreements providing for the exchange of information described
by Subsection (a) for similar information from a program operated in another state.
  (c) The commission may ~1ntract for a private person or public entity to establish or
operate the industrial solid and hazardous waste materials exchange.
  (d) The commission may prescribe rules concerning the establishment and operation of
the industrial solid and hazardous waste exchange, including the setting of a necessary
subscription fee to offset the cost of participation in the program.
  (e) The commission may seek grants and contract support from federal and other
sources to the extent possible and may accept gifts to support its purposes and programs.
(V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4A, as added by Ch. 139, Acts 70th Leg., Reg. Sess., 1987.)
  Sec. 361.029. COLLECTION AND DISPOSAL OF HOUSEHOLD MATERIALS
THAT COULD BE CLASSIFIED AS HAZARDOUS WASTE. (a) The board of health and
the commission shall provide by rule for interested persons to engage in activities that
involve the collection and disposal of household materials that could be classified as
hazardous waste.
  (b) The rules must specify the necessary requirements concerning the training of
persons involved in the collection and disposal of those household materials.
  (c) A person is not liable for damages as a result of any act or omission in the course of
advertising, promoting, or distributing educational materials concerning the collection or
disposal of those household materials in accordance with the rules. This subsection does
not preclude liability for damages as a result of gross negligence of or intentional
misconduct by the person. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(n).)
  Sec. 361.030. FEDERAL FUNDS. The department or commission may individually or
jointly accept funds from the federal government for purposes concerning solid waste
management and spend money received from the federal government for those purposes
in the manner prescribed by law and in accordance with agreements as are necessary and
appropriate between the federal government and the agency. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec.
4(h) (part).)
  Sec. 361.031. FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE TO LOCAL GOVERNMENTS. (a)-The de-
partment and the commission may administer and spend state funds provided to them by
legislative appropriations, or otherwise, to make grants to local governments for:
      (1) solid waste planning;
      (2) installation of solid waste facilities; and
      (3) administration of solid waste programs.
  (b) The grants made under this chapter shall be distributed in a manner determined by
the state agency to which the appropriation is made.
   (c) The amount of financial assistance granted by the state through the department or
commission to a local government under this chapter must be matched by local govern·
ment funds at least in equal amounts. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(i).)
                                            2625
Ch. 678, § 1                                 71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION
1361.032
  Sec. 361.032. INSPECTIONS; RIGHT OF ENTRY. (a) The department and the com-
mission are each authorized to inspect and approve solid waste facilities used or proposed
to be used to store, process, or dispose of the solid waste under the agency's jurisdiction.
  (b) Agents or employees of the department, the commission, or local governments have
the right to enter at any reasonable time public or private property in the govornmental
entity's jurisdiction, including a municipality's extraterritorial jurisdiction, to inspect and
investigate conditions concerning solid waste management and control.
  (c) Agents or employees may not enter private property with management in residence
without notifying the management, or the person in charge at the time, of their presence
and presenting proper credentials.
  (d) Agents or employees inspecting an establishment shall observe the establishment's
rules on safety, internal security, and fire protection. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Secs. 4(d),
7(a).)
  Sec. 361.033. INSPECTIONS REQUIRED BY ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY. (a) The commission shall inspect regulated hazardous waste management and
disposal facilities periodically as required by the United States Environmental Protection
Agency under the federal Solid Waste Disposal Act, as amended by the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, as amended (42 U.S.C. Section 6901 et seq.).
  (b) In supplementing the inspections under Subsection (a), the commission shall give
priority to inspecting and reinspecting those facilities, including generators, considered
most likely to be in noncompliance or most likely to pose an environmental or public
health threat, regardless of whether the facilities are characterized as major or non-major
facilities.
  (c) The commission may randomly perform Jess comprehensive checks of facilities to
supplement the more comprehensive inspections required by the United States Environ-
mental Protection Agency. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 7(c).)
  Sec. 361.034. REPORTS. (a) The commission shall submit a report to the presiding
officers of the legislature and the governor not later than January 1 of each odd-num-
bered year. The report must include:
     (1) a summary of a performance report of the imposed hazardous waste permit and
  disposal fees, if the fees are approved by the legislature, and related activities to
  determine the appropriateness of the fee structure;
     (2) an evaluation of progress made in accomplishing the state's public policy concern-
  ing the preference of waste management methods under Section 361.023; and
     (3) projections for three years from the due date of the report of the volume of waste
  by type of waste, disposition of waste, and remaining waste disposal capacity.
  (b) To develop the reports required under Subsection (a), the commission shall adopt
rules requiring a person who generates, stores, treats, or disposes of hazardous waste to
submit annually to the commission a report detailing projections of waste volume,
disposition, and remaining capacity, concerning each facility owned or operated by the
person. The report required under this subsection shall be submitted to the commission
by March 1 of each year. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 3(h) (part).)
  Sec. 361.035. RECORDS AND REPORTS; DISPOSAL OF HAZARDOUS WASTE. (a)
The commission by rule shall require operators of solid waste facilities for disposal of
hazardous waste to maintain records and to submit to the commission reports necessary
for the commission to determine the amount of hazardous waste disposal.
   (b) The commission by rule shall establish the date on which a report required by this
section is to be submitted. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 13a.)
   Sec. 36~.036. RECORDS AND MANIFESTS REQUIRED; CLASS I INDUSTRIAL
SOLID WASTE OR HAZARDOUS WASTE. The commission by rule shall require a
person who generates, transports, processes, stores, or disposes of Class I industrial solid
waste or hazardous waste to provide recordkeeping and use a manifest or other appropri-
ate system to assure that the waste is transported to a processing, storage, or disposal
facility permitted or otherwise authorized for that purpose. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec.
4(c) (part).)
                                             2626
HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE                                                     Ch. 678, § 1
                                                                                     1361.062
   Sec. 861.087. ACCESS TO HAZARDOUS WASTE RECORDS. (a) Authorized agents
or employees of the commission have access to and may examine and copy during regular
business hours any records pertaining to hazardous waste management and control.
   (b) Except as provided by this subsection, records copied under Subsection (a) are public
records. If the owner of the records shows to the satisfaction of the executive director
that the records would divulge trade secrets if made public, the commission shall consider
the copied records confidential.
   (c) Subsection (b) does not require the commission to consider the composition or
characteristics of solid waste being processed, stored, disposed of, or otherwise handled to
be held confidential. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Secs. 7(b), (d).)
   Sec. 861.088. ANNUAL INSPECTION REPORT. (a) In January of each year, the
commission shall publish an annual inspection report that:
      (1) summarizes the commission's inspection strategy and the results of inspections
   conducted during the previous fiscal year; and
      (2) lists each hazardous waste treatment, storage, and disposal facility not inspected.
   (b) The report must identify each hazardous waste facility inspected and include a list
of:
      (1) each facility that is in compliance with hazardous waste regulations, including
   each facility with an exemplary record of compliance over the preceding three years;
      (2) each facility that has only minor or clerical violations; and
      (8) each facility that has substantive, nonclerical violations, including each facility
   that has been adjudicated during the preceding three years to have committed substan-
   tive, nonclerical violations resulting in an actual release of hazardous waste that
   presented an imminent and substantial endangerment to the pubJir. health and safety or
   the environment.
   (c) The report must identify the substantive, nonclerical violations and either summa-
rize correcti\'e actions or describe the status of unNsolved violations.
   (d) The report shall be submitted to the governor, lieutenant governor, and speaker of
th~ house. The commission shall provide notice of the report's availability by publishing
notice in the Texas Register. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Secs. 7(e), (f), (g).)
   Sec. 861.089. CONSTRUCTION OF OTHER LAWS. Except as specifically provided
by this chapter, this chapter does not diminish or limit the authority of the department,
the commission, the Texas Air Control Board, or a local government in performing the
powers, functions, and duties vested in those governmental entities by other law.
(V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 14.)

                    [Sections 861.040-861.060 reserved for expansion]

                              SUBCHAPTER C. PERMITS
   Sec. 861.061. PERMITS; SOLID WASTE FACILITY. Except as provided by Section
861.090 with respect to certain industrial solid waste, the department and the commission
may each require and issue permits authorizing and governing the construction, opera-
tion, and maintenance of the solid waste facilities used to store,_l?rocess, or dispose of the
solid waste over which it has jurisdiction under this chapter. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec.
4(e) (part).)
   Sec. 861.062. COMPATIBILITY WITH COUNTY'S PLAN. (a) Before the department
issues a permit to construct, operate, or maintain a solid waste facility to process, store,
or dispose of solid waste in a county that has a local solid waste management plan
approved by the board of health under Chapter 868 (Comprehensive Municipal Solid
Waste Management, Resource Recovery, and Conservation Act), the department must
consider whether the solid waste facility and the proposed site for the facility are
compatible with the county'n approved local solid waste management plan.
   (b) Until a local solid waste management plan is approved by the board of health and
adopted by rule, the department may not consider the plan and its contents in the review
of an application for a solid waste facility permit. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(o).)
                                          ... 2627
Ch. 678, § 1                                 71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION
1381.063
  Sec. 361.063. PREAPPLICATION J,OCAL REVIEW COMMITTEE PROCESS. (a)
The department and the commission shall encourage applicants for solid waste facilities
under the jurisdiction of the department or for hazardous waste management facilities to
enter into agreements with affected persons to resolve issues of concern. During this
process, persons are encouraged to identify issues of concern and work with the applicant
to resolve those issues.
  (b) The l\greement shall be made through participation in a local review committee
process that includes a good faith effort to identify issues of concern, describe them to
the applicant, and attempt to resolve those issues before the hearing on the permit
application begins. A person is not required to be a local review committee member to
participate in a local review committee process.
  (c) If an applicant decides to participate in a local review committee process, the
applicant must file with the department or commission, as appropriate, a notice of intent
to file an application, setting forth the proposed location and type of hazardous waste
management facility. A copy of the notice shall be delivered to the county judge of the
county in which the facility is to be located. In addition, if the proposed facility is to be
located in a municipality or the extraterritorial jurisdiction of a municipality, a copy of the
notice shall be delivered to the mayor of the municipality. The filing of the notice with
the department or commission, as appropriate, initiates the preapplication review process.
  (d) Not later than the 15th day after the date the notice of intent is filed under
Subsection (c), the local review committee shall be appointed. The board of health and
commission shall adopt rules concerning the composition and appointment of a local
review committee.
  (e) The local review committee shall meet not later than the 21st day after the date the
notice of intent is filed under Subsection (c). The preapplication review process must
continue for 90 days unless the process is shortened or lengthened by agreement between
the applicant and the local review committee.
  (f) The commission, as appropriate, may award to a person, other than the applicant,
who has participated in the local review committee process under this section concerning
an application for a hazardous waste management facility all or a part of the person's
reasonable costs for technical studies and reports and expert witnesses associated with
the presentation of evidence at the public hearing concerning issues that are raised by the
person in the local review committee process and that are unresolved at the beginning of
the hearing on the permit application. The total amount of awards granted to all persons
under this subsection concerning an application may not exceed $25,000. In determining
the appropriateness of the award, the commission shall consider whether:
     (1) the evidence or analysis provided by the studies, reports, and witnesses is
  significant to the evaluation of the application;
     (2) the evidence or analysis would otherwise not have been provided in the proceed-
  ing; and
     (3) the local review committee was established in accordance with commission rules.
  (g) Except as provided by Subsection (k), if an applicant has not entered into a local
review committee process, the commission, in determining the appropriateness of an
award of costs under Subsection (f), shall waive any requirement that the person affected
has participated in a local review committee process.
  (h) Except as provided by Subsection (k), costs awarded by the commission under
Subsection (f) are assessed against the applicant. Rules shall be adopted for the award of
those costs. Judicial review of an award of costs is under the substantial evidence rule as
provided by the Administrative Procedure and Texas Register Act (Article 6252-13a,
Vernon's Texas Civil Statutes).
  (i) A local review committee shall:
     (1) interact with the applicant in a structured manner during the preapplication
  review stage of the permitting process and, if necessary, during the technical review
  stage of the permitting process to raise and attempt to resolve both technical and
  nontechnical issues of concern; and
                                            2628
HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE                                                      Ch. 678, § 1
                                                                                      1381.067
      (2) produce a fact-finding report docu~enting resolved and unresolved issues and
   unanswered ques~ions.
   (j) The appli<;ant inust submit the report required under Subsection (i)(2) to the agency
with its permit application.
   (k) If an applicant, after reasonable efforts to determine if local opposition exists to its
proposed facility, including discussing the proposed facility with the county judge and
other elected officials, does not enter into a local review committee process because of no
apparent opposition or, because a local review committee is not established despite the
applicant's good faith efforts, costs may not be assessed against the applicant under
Subsection (f).
   (l ) This section does not apply to:
      (1) a solid waste or hazardous waste management facility for which an application
   was filed, or that was authorized to operate, as of September 1, 1985;
      (2) amendments to applications that were pending on September 1, 1987; or .
  . (8) changes in waste storage or processing operations at existing sites at which waste
   management activities were being conducted on September 1, 1987. (V.A.C.S. Art.
   4477-7, Sec. 4(e)(12).)
   Sec. 861.064. PERMIT APPLICATION FORM AND PROCEDURES. If the depart-
ment or the commission exercises the power to issue permits for solid waste facilities
under this subchapter, the agency exercising the power, to the extent not otherwise
provided by this subchapter, shall prescribe:
      (1) the form of and reasonable requirements for the permit application; and
      (2) the procedures for processing the application. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(e)
   (part).)
   Sec. 861.065. PERMIT APPLICATION FEE. (a) The department shall charge a fee
for the submission to and review by the department of a permit application under this
subchapter.              ·
   (b) The board of health by rule shall adopt fees according to a schedule in which the
amount of the fees is reasonably related to one or more of the following:
      (1) the population to be served by the facility;
      (2) the volume of waste to be handled by the facility;
      (8) the type and size of the facility; or
      (4) the cost of the permit application review.
   (c) The board of health shall set the amount of the fees under this section and Sections
861.018 and 861.014 to collect enough revenue to meet the expenses of performing the
solid waste management, control, and permit duties of the department.
   (d) The fees collected under this section shall be deposited to the credit of the general
revenue fund. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Secs. 4(k)(l), (4).)
   Sec. 861.066. STJBMISSION OF ADMINISTRATIVELY COMPLETE PERMIT AP-
PLICATION. (a) An applicant must submit any portion of an application that the
department or the commission determines is necessary to make the application administra-
tively complete not later than the 270th day after the applicant receives notice from the
department or the commission that the additional information or material is needed.
   (b) If an applicant does not submit an administratively complete application as required
by this section, the application is considered withdrawn, unless there are extenuating
circumstances. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(e)(4)(B) (part), as amended by Ch. 299, Acts
70th Leg., Reg. Bess., 1987.)
   Sec. 861.067. REVIEW OF PERMIT APPLICATION BY OTHER GOVERNMENTAL
ENTITIES. (a) If the department or the commission determines that a permit application
submitted to it is administratively complete, it shall mail a copy of the application or a
summary of its contents to:
      (1) the Texas Air Control Board;
                                            2629
Ch. 678, §. 1                               71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION
1311.087
      (2) the other state agency;
      (3) the mayor and health authority of a municipality in whose territorial limits or
  extraterritorial jurisdiction the solid waste facility is located; and 1    •

      (4) the county judge and the health authority of the county in which the facility is
  located.
  (b) A governmental entity to whom the information is mailed shall have a reasonable
time, as prescribed by the state agency to which the application was originally submitted,
to present comments and recommendations on the permit application before the agency
acts on the application. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(e)(l).)
  Sec. 361.068. WHEN APPLICATION IS ADMINISTRATIVELY COMPLETE. A per-
mit application is administratively complete when:
      (1) a complete permit application form and the report and fees required to be
  submitted with a permit application have been submitted to the department or the
  commission; and
      (2) the permit application is ready for technical review in accordance with the rules of
   the board of health or commission. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 2(1).)
  Sec. 361.069. DETERMINATION OF LAND USE COMPATIBILITY. The department
or the commission in its discretion may, in processing a permit application, make a
separate determination on the question of land use compatibility, and, if the site location
is acceptable, may at another time consider other technical matters concerning the
application. A public hearing may be held for each determination in accordance with
Section 361.088. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(e)(2) (part).)
  Sec. 361.070. SOLE PERMIT HEARING. (a) Except for a permit described under
Section 361.071, all participation in the review of a permit application must be through one
agency hearing, which shall be the sole permit hearing.
  (b) The department or the commission shall conduct the hearing as the lead agency in
accordance with the division of their jurisdiction. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(e)(4)(A)(i)
(part).)
  Sec. 361.071. PERMIT FROM OTHER AGENCIES. The owner or operator of a
hazardous waste or solid waste management facility is not required to obtain a permit
from any agency of the state other than the department or commission to store, process,
treat, dispose of, or destroy solid waste or hazardous waste unless:
      (1) a permit is required under the new source review requirements of Part C or D,
  Title I, of the federal Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. Section 7401 et seq.) for a major source
  or a major modification; or
      (2) a permit is required by the Railroad Commission of Texas under Chapter 27,
   Water Code. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(e)(4)(A)(i) (part).)
   Sec. 361.072. JOINT RULES OR MEMORANDA OF AGREEMENT WITH DEPART-
MENT OR COMMISSION. (a) The Texas Air Control Board and other agencies that might
otherwise have jurisdiction for permitting hazardous or solid waste facilities shall enter
into joint rules or memoranda of agreement with the department 01· the commission.
   (b) The joint rules or memoranda of agreement:
      (1) must include the criteria that the Texas Air Control Board or other agency that
   might otherwise have jurisdiction may prescribe for use by the lead agency in address-
   ing the concerns of the Texas Air Control Board or other agency in the permitting
   process; and
      (2) shall at a minimum be consistent with the applicable requirements of the United
   States Environmental Protection Agency for state ·program authorization under the
   federal Solid Waste Disposal Act, as amended by the Resource Conservation and.
   Recovery Act of 1976, as amended (42 U.S.C. Section 6901 et seq.).
   (c) Consistent with Section 361.070, the joint rules or memoranda of agreement must
provide for .the incorporation of provisions in the permits of the department or the
commission for off-site waste management facilities concerning units t'h,at are:
                                            2630
HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE                                                     Ch. 678, § 1
                                                                                    1381.073
      (1) not otherwise subject to the permitting requirements of the department or
   commission; and
      (2) subject to the permitting requirements of the Texas Air Control Board or other
   relevant agency.                       .
   (d) It is the intent of the legislature that:
      (1) to the extent practicable in conformance:with Sections 361.070-861.078, the lead
   agency shall defer to the policies, rules, and interpretations of the Texas Air Control
   Board on the effect on air quality of the proposed hazardous waste or solid waste
   management activities; and
      (2) the Texas Air Control Board remain the state's principal authority in matters of
   air pollution control. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Se~. 4(e)(4)(A)(i) (part), (ii) (part).)
   Sec. 361.073. AIR CONTROL BOARD REVIEW OF PERMIT APPLICATION. (a)
Except as otherwise provided by Sections 361.070-861.083, the Texas Air Control Board
shall perform a technical review of the air quality aspects of a permit application for a
solid waste or a hazardous waste management facility concerning the criteria established
under Section 361.072.         '               ·
   (b) Except for a permit application for   a    facility that incinerates or burns solid or
hazardous waste, this section does not apply tO an application for:
      (1) a hazardous waste management facility that existed on September 11 1987; or
      (2) the expansion of a hazardous waste land disposal facility that existed on Septem-
   ber 1, 1987.
   (c) The Texas Air Control Board shall complete its review under this section and
forward recommendations or proposed permit provisions to the lead agency within the
time established by the lead agency rules for the.completion of technical review of the
application.                                            •
   (d) The lead agency shall incorporate into its proposed action all recommendations or
proposed permit provisions submitted by' the Texas Air Control Board, unlP.sa the lead
agency determines that the recommendations or proposed permit provisions are less
stringent than applicable requirements of the United States Environmental Protection
Agency for state program authorization under the federal Solid Waste Disposal Act, as
amended by the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, as amended (42 U.S.C.
Section 6901 et seq.). If the Texas Air Control Board's proposed permit· provisions
conflict with provisions proposed by the lead agency technical staff, the staffs of the two
agencies shall attemp~ to resolve the conflict before the technical review of the application
ends.
   (e) If a contested case hearing on a permit application is not held by the lead agency,
the Texas Air Control Board's recommendations or proposed permit provisions shall be
incorporated into the permit issued by the lead agency. If a contested case hearing is
held, the Texas Air Control Board shall develop and present the state's evidence and
testimony concerning the air quality aspects of the application. Any party, including the
lead agency, is entitled to cross-examine any testifying witness of the Texas Air Control
Board.
   (f) At the conclusion of the presentation of testimony, the hearing examiner shall give
the Texas Air Control Board at least 30 days in which to submit:
      (1) proposed· findings of fact and conclusions' of law; and
      (2) if applicable, proposed permit language, concerning the air quality aspects of the
   application that relate to the criteria established under Section 361.072.
   (g) The hearing examiner and the final decision-makiril body of the lead agency must
accept the information submitted by the Texas Air Control Board under Subsection (f)
unless that body finds that the recommendations of the Texas Air Control Board are not
supported by a preponderance of the evidence.
   (h) The Texas Air Control Board may seek judicial review of the air quality aspects of a
final decision of the lea~ agency. Both the lead agency and the Texas Air Control Board
                                           2681
Ch. 678, § 1                                71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION
1381.073
may enforce the terms of a permit issued by the lead agency concerning air quality.
(V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(e)(4)(A)(ii) (part).)
   Sec. 861.074. CERTAIN PERMIT APPLICATIONS NOT AFFECTED. (a) Permit
applications for hazardous waste or solid waste management facilities for which contested
evidentiary hearings have commenced at the Texas Air Control Board before September
1, 1985, or appeals from decisions of the Texas Air Control Board on those applications,
are not affected by Sections 861.072-861.078 and 861.075-861.078.
   (b) An applicant may not withdraw a permit application to circumvent the intent of
Subsection (a). (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(e)(4)(A)(ii) (part).)
   Sec. 861.075. DELEGATION OF AIR CONTROL BOARD AUTHORITY. The Texas
Air Control Board may delegate to its executive director the powers and duties conferred
on the board under Sections 861.072 and 861.078. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(e)(4)(A)(ii)
(part).)
   Sec. 861.076. OTHER STATE AGENCIES' REVIEW OF PERMIT APPLICATION.
(a) An agency other than the Texas Air Control Board may review the lead agency's
proposed action concerning a permit application and determine if its concerns have been
adequately addressed if the agency:
      (1) might otherwise have jurisdiction for permitting the facility; and
      (2) requested an opportunity to review the lead agency's proposed action.
   (b) The other agency may review the lead agency's proposed action:
      (1) after the lead agency completes its technical review of the permit application; and
      (2) for a period of 20 days after the date on which the lead agency's technical review
   period ends.
   (c) If the other agency determines that its concerns have not been adequately ad-
dressed, the other agency's sole remedy concerning the permit is to present its concerns
in the permit proceedings of the lead agency.
   (d) The other agency is entitled to:
      (1) request a hearing;
      (2) intervene as a n,atter of law;
      (8) seek judicial review; and
      (4) enforce each aspect of a lead agency permit concerning the other agency's
   jurisdiction. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(e)(4)(A)(iii).)
   Sec. 861.077. EXEMPTION OF CERTAIN FACILITIES THAT BURN HAZARDOUS
WASTE. Sections 861.070-861.076 do not apply to a facility that burns hazardous waste
unless the facility is required to obtain a permit for the burning from the commission
under rules adopted by the commission under a state hazardous waste regulatory
program. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(e)(4)(A)(iv).)
   Sec. 861.078. MAINTENANCE OF STATE PROGRAM AUTHORIZATION UNDER
FEDERAL LAW. This subchapter does not abridge, modify, or restrict the authority of
the commission to adopt rules under Subchapters B and C, to issue permits and to enforce
the terms and conditions of the permits, concerning hazardous waste management to the
extent necessary for the commission to receive and maintain state program authorization
under Section 8006 of the federal Solid Waste Disposal Act, as amended by the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, as amended (42 U.S.C. Section 6901 et seq.).
(V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(e)(4)(A)(v).)
   Sec. 861.079. NOTICE CONCERNING RECEIPT OF PERMIT APPLICATION;
HEARING PROCEDURES. (a) The board of health and the commission by rule shall
establish procedures for public notice and a public hearing under Section 861.080 or
861.081.
   (b) To improve the timeliness of notice to the public of a public hearing under Section
861.080 or 861.081, public notice of receipt of the permit application shall be provided at
the time a permit application is administratively complete as determined by the depart-
ment or the commission. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(e)(4)(B) (part).)
                                           2632
HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE                                                      Ch. 678, § 1
                                                                                     I 381.083
   Sec. 861.080. HEARING CONCERNING PERMIT APPLICATION FOR HAZARD·
OUS INDUSTRIAL SOLID WASTE FACILITY. A hearing on an application for a permit
concerning a hazarqous industrial solid waste facility must include one session held in the
county in which the facility is located. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(e)(4)(B) (part).)
   Sec. 861.081. NOTICE OF HEARING CONCERNING APPLICATION FOR LAND·
FILL PERMIT. (a) The department shall give public notice of an opportunity for a
hearing on an application for a landfill permit at least once each week for two consecutive
weeks beginning not later than the 14th day from the last day allowed to request the
hearing.
   (b) The notice shall be published in the newspaper of the largest general circulation
that is published in the county in which the ·proposed landfill will be located, unless a
newspaper is not published in the county, in which case the notice shall be published in a
),ewspaper of general circulation in the county.
   (c) The department shall mail notice to each residence, business, and owner of real
property located within one mile of the proposed landfill listed in the real property records
of the county in which the landfill is sought to be permitted as of the date the department
determines the permit application is administratively complete. The notice must be sent
by certified or registered mail, return receipt requested, and be deposited with the United
States postal service not more than 45 days or less than 80 days before the date of the
hearing.
   (d) The department shall presume that the notice requirements under Subsection (c)
have been complied with on the applicant's verification to the department that the
mailings were deposited as required by that subsection unless it is demonstrated by at
least 85 percent of the affected parties that the applicant did not comply with that
subsect;on.
   (e) Hearings under this section shall be conducted in accordance with the hearing rules
adopted by the department and the applicable provisions of the Administrative Procedure
and Texas Register Act (Article 6252-18a, Vernon's Texas Civil Statutes). (V.A.C.S. Art.
4477-7, Sec. 4(e)(4)(B), as amended by Ch. 78J, Acts 70th Leg., Reg. Seas., 1987.)
   Sec. 861.082. APPLICATION FOR HAZARDOUS WASTE PERMIT; NOTICE AND
HEARING. (a) A person may not process, store, or dispose of hazardous waste without
having first obtained a hazardous waste permit issued by the commission.
   (b) On its own motion or the request of a person affected, the commission may hold a
public hearing on an application for a hazardous waste permit in accordance with this
subchapter.
   (c) The commission by rule shall establish procedures for public notice and public
hearing.
   (d) The commission may include any requirement in the permit for remedial action by
the applicant that the commission determines is necessary to protect the public health and
safety and the environment.
   (e) A person who, on or before November 19, 1980, began on-site processing, storing, or
disposing of hazardous waste under this section and who has filed a hazardous waste
permit application in accordance with commission rules may continue to process, store, or
dispose of hazardous waste until the commission apprcves or denies the application,
except as provided by Section 861.110. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(f)(2).)
   Sec. 861.088. EVIDENCE OF NOTICE OF HEARING. (a) Before the department or
the commission may hear testimony in a contested case, evidence must be placed in the
record to show that proper notice of the hearing was given to affected persons.
   (b) If mailed notice to an affected person is required, the departrr.ent, commission, or
other party to the hearing sholl place evidence in the record that notice was mailed to the
affected person's address as i.hown by the appropriate county tax rolls at the time of the
mailing.
   (c) The affidavit of the department or commission employee responsible for the mailing
of the notice, attesting that the notice was mailed to the address shown by the tax rolls at
                                            2633
Ch. 678, § 1                                 71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION
1381.083
the timi of mailing, is prima facie evidence of proper mailing. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec.
4(c)(4)(C) (part).)
   Sec. 361.084. COMPLIANCE SUMMARIES. (a) The board of health and the commis-
sion each by rule shall establish a procedure to prepare compliance summaries relating to
the applicant's solid waste management activities under each agency's jurisdiction.
   (b) TJ..c compliance summaries shall be made available to the applicant and any
interest~d person after the lead agency has completed its technical review ..of the permit
application and before the issuance of the public notice concerning an opportunity for a
hearing on the permit application.
   (c) Evidence of compliance or noncompliance by an applicant for a solid waste facility
permit with agency rules, permits, or other orders concerning solid waste management
may be:
      (1) offered by a party at a hearing concerning the application; and
      (2) admitted into l'Vidence subject to applicable rules of evidence.
   (d) The agency shall consider all evidence admitted, including compliance history, in
determining whether to issue, amend, extend, or renew a permit. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7,
Sec. 4(e)(ll).)
   Sec. 361.085. FINANCIAL ASSURANCE BY PERMIT APPLICANT. (a) Before a
permit may be issued, amended, extended, or renewed for a solid waste facility to store,
process, or dispose of hazardous waste, the commission shall determine the type or types
of financial assurance that may be given by the applicant to comply with rules adopted by
the commission requiring financial assurance.
   (b) Before hazardous waste may be received for storage, processing, or disposal at a
solid waste facility for which a permit is issued, amended, extended, or renewed, the
commission shall require the permit holder to execute the required financial assurance
conditioned on the permit holder's satisfactorily operating and closing the solid waste
facility.
   (c) An agency may condition issuance, amendment, extension, or renewal of a permit
for a solid waste facility, other than a solid waste facility for disposal of hazardous waste,
on the permit holder's executing a bond or giving other financial assurance conditioned on
the permit holder's satisfactorily operating and closing the solid waste facility.
   (d) The agency to which the application is submitted shall require an assurance of
financial responsibility as may be necessary or desirable consistent with the degree and
duration of risks associated with the processing, storage, or disposal of upecified solid
waste.
   (e) Financial requirements established by the agency must at a minimum be consistent
with the federal requirements established under the federal Solid Waste Disposal Act, as
amended by the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, as amended (42 U.S.C.
Section 6901 et seq.).
   (f) The department and the commission may each:
      (1) receive funds as the beneficiary of a financial assurance arrangement established
   under this section for the proper closure of a solid waste management facility; and
      (2) spend the funds from the financial assurance arrangement to close the facility.
   (g) If liability insurance is required of an applicant, the applicant may not use a claims
made policy as security unless the applicant places in escrow, as provided by the
department or commission, an amount sufficient to pay an additional year of premiums
for renewal of the policy by the state on notice of termination of coverage.
   (h) In addition to other forms of financial assurance authorized by rules of the board of
health or commission, the agency may au tho. ize the applicant to use a letter of credit if
the issuing institution or another institution that guarantees payment under the letter is:
      (1) a bank chartered by the state or the federal government; and
      (2) federally insured and its financial practices are regulated by the state or the
   federal government. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(e)(5).)
                                            2634
HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE                                                      Ch. 678, § 1
                                                                                     1381.090
   Sec. 361.086. SEPARATE PERMIT FOR EACH FACILITY. (a) A separate permit is
required for each solid waste facility.
   (b) A permit under this subchapter may be issued only to the person in whose name the
application is made and only for the facility described by the permit.
   (c) A permit may not be transferred without first giving written notice to and receiving
written approval of the agency that issued the permit. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Secs. 4(e)(2)
(part), (7).)
   Sec. 361.087. CONTENTS OF PERMIT. A permit issued under this subchapter must
include:
      (1) the name and address of each person who owns the land on which the solid waste
   facility is located and the person who is or will be the operator or person in charge of
   the facility;
      (2) a legal description of the land on which the facility is located; and
      (3) the terms and conditions on which the permit is issued, including the duration of
   the permit. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(e)(2) (part).)
   Sec. 361.088. PERMIT ISSUANCE, AMENDMENT, EXTENSION, AND RENEWAL:
NOTICE AND HEARING. (a) The department or the commission may amend, extend, or
renew a permit it issues in accordance with reasonable procedures prescribed by the
department or commission, as appropriate.
   (b) The procedures prescribed by Section 361.067 for a permit application apply to an
application to amend, extend, or renew a permit.
   (c) Before a permit is issued, amended, extended, or renewed, the agency to which the
application is submitted shall provide an opportunity for a hearing to the applicant and
persons affected. The agency may also hold a hearing on its own motion. (V.A.C.S. Art.
4477-7, Secs. 4(e)(3), (4).)
   Sec. 361.089. PERMIT AMENDMENT OR REVOCATION; NOTICE AND HEAR·
ING. (a) The department or commission may, for good cause, amend or revoke a permit it
issues for reasons pertaining to public health, air or water pollution, or land use, or for a
violation of this chapter or other applicable laws or rules controlling the management of
solid waste.
   (b) Except as provided by Section 361.110, the department or commission shall notify
each governmental entity listed under Section 361.067 and provide an opportunity for a
hearing to the permit holder and persons affected. The department or commission may
also hold a hearing on its own motion.
   (c) The board of health and the commission by rule shall establish procedures for public
notice and any public hearing under this section.
   (d) Hearings under tltis section shall be conducted in accordance with the hearing rules
adopted by the department or commission and the applicable provisions of t:1e Administra·
tive Procedure and Texas Register Act (Article 6252-lSa, Vernon's Texas .Civil Statutes).
(V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(e)(8).)
   Sec. 361.090. REGULATION AND PERMITI'ING OF CERTAIN INDUSTRIAL SOL-
ID WASTE DISPOSAL. (a) The commission may not require a permit under this chapter
for the collection, handling, storage, processing, and disposal of industrial solid waste that
is disposed of within the boundaries of a tract of land that is:
      (1) owned or otherwise effectively controlled by the owners or operators of the
   particular industrial plant, manufacturing plant, mining operation, or agricultural
   operation from which the waste results or is produced; and
      (2) located within 50 miles from the plant or operation that is the source of the
   industrial solid waste.
   (b) This section does not apply to:
      (1) waste collected, handled, stored, processed, or disposed of with solid waste from
   any other source or sources; or
      (2) hazardous waste.
     2 Tex.Seu.laws Bd.Vol. 'Bll-21         2635
Ch. 678, § 1                                71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSidN
1361.090
   (c) This section does not change or limit any ·authority the 'commission may have
concerning:                                                            '
      (1) the requirement of permits and the coqtrol of water quality, or otherwise, under
   Chapter 26, Water Code; or                                    ·          · ·         · ~
      (2) the authority under Section 361.303.
   (d) The commission may adopt rules under Section 361.024 to control the collection,
handling, storage, processing, and disposal of the industdal solid waste to which this
section applies to protect the property of others, public property and rights-of-way,
groundwater, and other rights requiring protection.                .
   (e) Th9 commission may require a person who disposeo or plans to dispose of industrial
solid waste and claims to be exempt under this section to submit to the commission
information that is reasonably required to enable the commission to determine if this
section applies to the waste disposal activity. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-:-7, Sec. 4(f)(l).)
   Sec. 361.091. ENCLOSED CONTAINERS OR VEHICLES; PE~MITS; INSPEC-
TIONS; CRIMINAL PENALTY. (a) A solid waste site or operation permitted as a Type
IV landfill may not accept solid waste that is in a completely enclosed container or
enclosed vehicle unless:
      (1) the solid waste is transported on a route approved by the department and
   designed to eliminate putrescible, hazardous, or infectious waste;
      (2) the solid waste is delivered to the site or rperation on a date and time designated
   and approved by the department to eliminate putrescible, hazardous, or infectious
   waste;                                                                   ·
      (3) the transporter possesses a special vermit.issued by the department that includes
   the approved route, date, and time; and
      (4) a department inspector is present to verify that the solid waste is free of
   putrescible, hazardous, or infectious waste.
   (b) The department may issue the special permit under this section and charge a
reasonable fee to cover the costs of the permit. The board of health may adopt rules of
procedure necessary to carry out the permit program.
   (c) The department may employ one or more inspectors and other employees necessary
to inspect and determine if Type IV landfills are free of putrescible, hazardous, or
infectious waste. The department shall pay the compensation and expenses of inspectors
and other necessary employees employed under this subsection, but the holders of .Type
IV landfill permits shall reimburse the department for the compensation and expenses as
provided by this section.                                                                   ·
   (d) The department shall notify each holder of a Type IV landfill permit of the
compensation and expenses that are required annually for the inspection of the landfills.
   (e) The department shall hold a public hearing to determine the apportionment of the
administration costs of the inspection program among the holders of Type IV landfill
permits. After the hearing, the department shall equitably apportion the costs of the
inspection program and issue an order 11ssersing the annual costs against each permit
holder. The department may provid1; for payments in installments and shall specify the
date by which each payment must be made to the department.
   (f) A holder of a permit issued under this section may not accept· ~olid waste if the
permit holder is delinquent in the payment of costs assessed under Subsection (e).
                                                            -          I   '

   (g) The department's order assessing costs is effective until the department:
      (1) modifies, revokes, or supersedes an order assessing costs with a subsequent
   order; or                                                             ..
      (2) issues supplementary orders applicable to new Type IV landfill ·permits.
   (h) The board of health may adopt rules· necessary to carry out this section.
   (i) An operator of a solid waste facility or a solid waste hauler commits an offense if
 the operator or hauler disposes of solid waste in a completely encl()~ed container or
 vehicle at a solid waste site or operation permitted as a Type IV landfill:'
                                            2636
HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE                                                    Ch. 678, § 1
                                                                                   1381.095
     (1) without having in possession the special permit required by this section;
     (2) on a date or time not authorized by the department; or
     (S) without a department inspector present to verify that the solid waste is free of
  putrescible, hazardous, and infectious waste.
  (j) An offense under this section is a Class B misdemeanor.
  (k) Penalties under this section are in addition to any other penalty applicable under
this chavter.
  (l ) This section does not apply to:
     (1) a stationary compartor that is at a specific location and that has an annual permit
  under this section issued by the department, on certification to the department by the
  generator that the contents of the compa!!tor are free of putrescible, hazardous, or
  infectious waste; or
     (2) an enclosed vehicle of a rnunicipality if the vehicle has a permit issued by the
  department to transport brush or construction-demolition waste and rubbish on desig-
  nated dates, on certification by the municipality to the department that the contents of
  the vehicle are free of putrescible, hazardous, or infectious waste.
  (m) In this section, "putrescible waste" means organic waste, such as garbage, waste-
water treatment plant sludge, and grease trap waste, that may:
     (1) be decomposed by microorganisms with sufficient rapidity as to cause odors or
  gases; or
     (2) provide food for or attract birds, animals, or disease vectors. (V.A.C.S. Art.
  4477-7, Sec. 4A, as added by Ch. 1119, Acts 70th Leg., Reg. Sess., 1987.)
  Sec. 361.092. PERMIT FOR EXTRACTING MATERIALS FROM CERTAIN SOLID
WASTE FACILITIES. (a) The department and the commission may each require a permit
to extract materials for energy and material recovery and for gas recovery from closed or
inactive portions of a solid waste facility that has been used for disposal of municipal or
industrial solid waste.
  (b) The department or the commission shall issue a permit under this section in the
same manner as provided by this subchapter for issuance of a permit to operate and
maintain a solid waste facility.
  (c) Each agency shall adopt standards necessary to ensure that the integrity of a solid
waste facility is maintained. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(j).)
  Sec. 361.093. REGULATION AND PERMITTING OF RENDERING PLANTS. (a) A
manufacturing or processing establishment, commonly known as a rendering plant, that
processes waste materials originating from animals and from materials of vegetable
origin, including animal parts and scraps, offal, paunch manure, and waste cooking
grease of animal and vegetable origin, is subject to regulation under the industrial solid
waste provisions of this chapter and may be regulated under Chapter 26, Water Code.
  (b) If a rendering plant is owned by a person who operates the plant as an integral part
of an establishment that manufactures or processes for animal or human consumption
food derived wholly or partly from dead, slaughtered, or processed animals, the combined
business may operate under a single permit issued under Chapter 26, Water Code.
  (c) This section does not apply to a rendering plant in operation and production on or
before August 27, 1973.
  (d) In this·section, "animals" includes only animals, poultry, and fish. (V.A.C.S. Art.
4477-7, Sec. 4(e)(9).)
  Sec. 361.094. PERMIT HOLDER EXEMPT FROM LOCAL LICENSE REQUIRE-
MENTS. If a permit is issued, amended, renewed, or extended by the department or the
commission in accordance with this subchapter, the solid waste facility owner or operator
does not need to obtain a license for the same facility from a political subdivision under
Section 361.165 or from a county. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(e)(6) (part).)
  Sec. 361.095. APPLICANT FOR HAZARDOUS WASTE MANAGEMENT FACILITY
PERMIT EXEMPT FROM LOCAL PERMIT. (a) An applicant for a permit under this
                                           2637
Ch. 678, § 1                                 71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION
1381.095
subchapter is not required to obtain a permit for the siting, construction; or operation of a
hazardous waste management facility from a local government or other political subdivi-
sion of the state.
   (b) A local government or other political subdivision of the state may not adopt a rule
or ordinance that conflicts with or is inconsistent. with the requirements for hazardous
waste management facilities as specified by the rules of the commission or by a permit
issued by the commission.
   (c) In an action to enforce a rule or ordinance of a local government or other political
subdivision, the burden is on the facility owner or operator or on the applicant to
demonstrate conflict or inconsistency with state requirements.
   (d) The validity or applicability of a rule or ordinance of a local government or other
political subdivision may be determined in an action for declaratory judgment under
Chapter 87, Civil Practice and Remedies Code, if it is alleged that the rule or ordinance, or
its threatened application, interferes with or impairs, or threatens to interfere with or
impair, the legal rights or privileges of the plaintiff concerning an application for or the
issuance of a permit for the siting, construction, or operation of a hazardous waste
management facility.
   (e) The local government or other political subdivision whose rule or ordinance is being
questioned shall be made a party to the action. The commission shall be given written
notice by certified mail of the pendency of the action, and the commission may become a
party to the action.                                         ·
   (f) A declaratory judgment may be rendered even if the plaintiff has requested the
commission, the local government or political subdivision, or another court to determine
the validity or applicability of the rule or ordinance in question. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7,
Sec. 4(e)(6) (part).)
   Sec. 861.096. EFFECT ON AUTHORITY OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT OR OTHER
POLITICAL SUBDIVISION. (a) Except as specifically provided by this chapter, this
subchapter does not limit the powers and duties of a local government or other political
subdivision of the state as conferred by this or other law.
   (b) Sections 861.094 and 861.095 do not affect the power of a local government or other
political subdivision to adopt or enforce building codes. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4.(e)(6)
(part).)
   Sec. 861.097. CONDITION ON ISSUANCE OF PERMIT FOR HAZARDOUS WASTE
MANAGEMENT FACILITY. The commission by rule shall condition the issuance of a
permit for a new hazardous waste management facility or the areal expansion of an
existing hazardous waste management facility on the selection of a facility site that
reasonably minimizes possible contamination of surface water and groundwater. (V.A.
C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(c) (part).)
   Sec. 861.098. PROHIBITION ON PERMIT FOR HAZARDOUS WASTE LANDFILL
IN 100-YEAR FLOODPLAIN. The commission by rule shall prohibit the issuance of a
permit for a new hazardous waste landfill or an areal expansion of such a landfill if the
landfill is to be located in the 100-year floodplain existing before site development, unless
the landfill is .to be located in an area with a flood depth of less than three feet. (V.A.C.S.
Art. 4477-7, ~ec. 4(c) (part).)
   Sec. 861.099. PROHIBITION ON PERMIT FOR HAZARDOUS WASTE MANAGE-
MENT UNIT IN WETLANDS. (a) The commission by rule shall prohibit the issuance of a
permit for a new hazardous waste management unit or an areal expansion 'of an existing
hazardous waste management .unit if the unit is to be located in wetlands, as defined by
the commission.
   (b) In this section and Section 861.100, "hazardous waste management unit" means a
landfill, surface impoundment, land treatment facility, waste pile, or storage or process-
ing facility used to manage hazardous waste. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(c) (part).)
   Sec. 861.100. PROHIBITION ON PERMIT FOR CERTAIN HAZARDOUS WASTE
MANAGEMENT UNITS. The commission by rule shall prohibit the issuance of a permit
for a new hazardous waste management unit if the landfill:                 '.
                                            2638
HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE                                                      Ch. 678, § 1
                                                                                     1361.106
      (1) is in a floodplain of a perennial stream subject to not less than one percent chance
   of flooding in any year, delineated on a flood map adopted by the Federal Emergency
   Management Agency after September 1, 1985, as zone Al-99, VO, or Vl-30; and
      (2) receives hazardous waste for a fee. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(c) (part).)
   Sec. 361.101. PROHIBITION ON PERMIT FOR FACILITY ON RECHARGE ZONE
OF SOLE SOURCE AQUIFER. The commission by rule shall prohibit the issuance of a
permit for a new hazardous waste landfill, land treatment facility, surface impoundment,
or waste pile, or areal expansion of such a facility, if the facility is to be located on the
recharge zone of a sole source aquifer. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(c) (part).)
   Sec. 361.102. PROHIBITION ON PERMIT FOR FACILITY WITHIN 1,000 FEET OF
RESIDENCE, CHURCH, SCHOOL, OR PARK. The commission by rule shall prohibit the
issuance of a pern1it for a new hazardous waste landfill or land treatment facility or the
areal expansion of such a facility if the boundary of the landfill or land treatment facility
is to be located within 1,000 feet of an established residence, church, school, or dedicated
public park that is in use:
      (1) when the notice of intent to file a permit application is filed with the commission;
   or
      (2) if no notice of intent is filed, when the permit application is filed with the
   commission. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(c) (part).)
   Sec. 361.103. OTHER AREAS UNSUITABLE FOR HAZARDOUS WASTE
MANAGEMENT FACILITY. The commission by rule shall define the characteristics that
make other areas unsuitable for a hazardous waste management facility, including
consideration of:
      (1) flood hazards;
      (2) discharge from or recharge to a groundwater aquifer;
      (3) soil conditions;
      (4) areas of direct drainage within one mile of a lake used to supply public drinking
   water;
      (5) active geological processes;
      (6) coastal high hazard areas, such as areas subject to hurricane storm surge and
   shoreline erosion; or
      (7) critical habitat of endangered species. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec.. 4(c) (part).)
   Sec. 361.104. PROHIBITION ON PERMIT FOR FACILITY IN UNSUITABLE
AREA. The commission by rule shall prohibit the issuance of a permit for a new
hazardous waste management facility or an areal expansion of an existing hazardous
waste management facility if the facility is to be located in an area determined to be
unsuitable under rules adopted by the commission under Section 361.103 unless the
design, construction, and operational features of the facility will prevent adverse effects
from unsuitable site characteristics. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(c) (part).)
   Sec. 361.105. PETITION BY LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR RULE ON HAZARDOUS
WASTE FACILITY IN UNSUITABLE AREA. (a) The commission by rule shall allow a
local government to petition the commission for a rule that restricts or prohibits the siting
of a new hazardous waste disposal facility or other new hazardous waste management
facility in an area including an area meeting one or more of the characteristics described
by Section 361.103.
   (b) A rule adopted under this section may not affect the siting of a new hazardous
waste disposal facility or other new hazardous waste management facility if an applica-
tion or a notice of intent to file an application concerning the facility is filed with the
commission before the filing of a petition under this section. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec.
4(c) (part).)
   Sec. 361.106. PROHIBITION ON PERMIT FOR LANDFILL IF ALTERNATIVE
EXISTS. The commission by rule shall prohibit the issuance of a permit for a new
hazardous waste landfill or the areal expansion of an existing hazardous waste landfill if
there is a practical, economic, and feasible alternat've to the landfill that is reasonably
                                   .        2639
Ch. 678, § 1                                71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION
1381.108
available to manage the types and classes of hazardous waste that might be disposed of
at the landfill. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(c) (part).)
  Sec. 361.107. HYDROGEOLOGIC REPORT FOR CERTAIN HAZARDOUS WASTE
FACILITIES. The commission by rule shall require an applicant for ·a new hazardous
waste landfill, land treatment facility, or surface impoundment that is to be located in the
apparent recharge zone of a regional aquifer to prepare and file a hydrogeologic report
documenting the potential effects, if any, on the regional aquifer in the event of a release
from the waste containment system. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(c) (part).)
  Sec. 361.108. ENGINEERING REPORT FOR HAZARDOUS WASTE LANDFILL.
The commission by rule shall require an applicant for a new hazardous waste landfill filed
after January 1, 1986, to provide an engineering report evaluating:
     (1) the benefits, if any, associated with constructing the landfill above existing grade
  at the proposed site;
     (2) the costs associated with the above grade construction; and
     (3) the potential adverse effects, if any, that would be associated with the above
  grade construction. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(c) (part).)
  Sec. 361.109. GRANT OF PERMIT FOR HAZARDOUS WASTE MANAGEMENT
FACILITY. The commission may grant an application for a permit in whole or in part for
a hazardous waste management facility if it finds that:
    (1) the applicant has provided for the proper operation of the proposed hazardous
  waste management facility;
    (2) the applicant for a proposed hazardous waste management facility not located in
  an area of industrial land use has made a reasonable effort to ensure that the burden, if
  any, imposed by the proposed hazardous waste management facility on local law
  enforcement, emergency medical or fire-fighting personnel, or public roadways, will be
  reasonably minimized or mitigated; and
     (3) the applicant, other than an applicant who is not an owner of the facility, owns or
  has made a good faith claim to, or has an option to acquire, or the authority to acquire
  by eminent domain, the property or portion of the proper:y on which the hazardous
  waste management facility will be constructed. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(e)(13).)
  Sec. 361.110. TERMINATION OF AUTHORIZATION OR PERMIT. Authorization to
store, process, or dispose of hazardous waste under Section 361.082 or under a solid waste
permit issued under this subchapter that has not been reissued in accordance with an
approved state program under Section 3006 of the federal Solid Waste Disposal Act, as
amended by the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, as amended (42 U.S.C.
Section 6901 et seq.), terminates as follows:
    (1) in the case of each land disposal facility, on November 8, 1985, unless the facility
  owner or operator applied for a final determination concerning the issuance of a permit
  before that date and certified that the facility was in compliance with all applicable
  groundwater monitoring and financial responsibility requirements;
     (2) in the case of each incinerator facility, on November 8, 1989, unless the facility
  owner or operator applied for a final determination concerning the issuance of a permit
  by November 8, 1986; or
     (3) in the case of any other solid waste facility, on November 8, 1992, unless the
  facility owner or operator applied fot a final dett!rmination concerning the issuance of a
  permit by November 8, 1988. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(l ).)

                    [Sections 361.111-361.130 reserved for expansion]

     SUBCHAPTER D. HAZARDOUS WASTE GENERATION, FACILITY, AND
                    DISPOSAL; FEES AND FUNDS
  Sec. 361.131. DEFINITIONS. In this subchapter:
    (1) "Dry weight" means the weight of constituents other than water.
                                           2640
HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE                                                    Ch. 678, § 1
                                                                                   1381.133
      (2) "Generator of hazardous waste" or "generator" means a person whose act or
   process produces hazardous waste or whose act first causes a hazardous waste to be
   regulated by the commission.
      (3) "Hazardous waste" means solid waste not otherwise exempt that is identified or
   listed as hazardous waste by the administrator of the United States Environmen~l
   Protectiou Agency under the federal Solid Waste Disposal Act (42 U.S.C. Section 6901
   et ~eq.) W! of.August 26, 1985.
      (4) "Land disposal" does not include:
         (A) the normal application of agricultural chemicals or fertilizers; or
         (B) disposal of hazardous waste retrieved or created due to remediation of an
      inactive hazardous waste disposal facility for which a federal or state permit is not
      issued after August 26, 1985.
      (5) "Land ciiaposal facility" includes:
         (A) a landfill;
         (B) a surface impoundmant, excluding an impoundment treating or storing waste
      that ·:; disposed of under Ciiapter 26 or 27,, Water Code;
         (C) a waste pile:
         (D) a facility at l':hich land farming or a land application process is used; and
         (E) an injection well.
      (6) "Primary metals high volume, low-hazard waste" in hazardous waste from the
   extraction, beneficiation, anfl. processing of ores, minerals, or scrap metal and whose
   constituents are subject to the criteria for the identification or listing as a hazardous
   waste under Section 3001(a) of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 (42
   U.S.C. Section 6901 et seq.) and account for 10 percent or less of its total dry weight
   volume. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 12(a).)
   Sec. 361.132. HAZARDOUS WASTE GENERATION AND FACILITY FEES FUND.
(a) The hazardous waste generation and facility fees fund is in the state treasury.
   (b) The fund consists of money r.ollected by the commissfon from:
      (1) fees imposed on hazardous waste generation and permitted or interim status solid
   waste facilities for processing, storing, or disposing of hazardous waste under Sections
   361.134 and 361.135; and
      (2) interest and penalties imposed under Section 361.137 for late payment of hazard-
   ous waste generation or facility fees.
   (c) The commission may use the money in the fund only for regulation of hazardous
waste, including payment to other state agencies for services provided under contract
concerning enforcement of this chapter.
   (d) The total amount of hazardous waste generation fees and facility fees collected and
deposited to the credit of the hazardous waste generation and facility fees fund in a fiscal
year may not be less than $3.5 million or more than $4.5 million. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7,
Secs. lla(a) (part), (b); 12(b) (part), (c) (part).)
   Sec. 361.133. HAZARDOUS WASTE DISPOSAL FEE FUND. (a) The hazardous
waste disposal fee fund is in the state treasury.
   (b) The fund consists of money collected by the commission from:
      (1) fees imposed on the operator of a solid waste facility for disposal of hazardous
   waste under Section 361.136;
      (2) interest and penalties imposed under Section 361.137 for late payment of a
   disposal fee or late filing of a report; and
      (3) money paid by a person liable for facility cleanup and maintenance under
   Subchapter F.
   (c) The commission may use the money collected and deposited to the credit of the fund
under this section only for:
                                           2641
                                                                                          I

Ch. 678, § 1                                71et LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION
I 381.133
      (1) necessary and appropriate removal and remedial action at sites' at which ·hazard·
   oue waste or hazardous substances have been disposed if funds from a liable ,person,
   independent third person, or the federal government nre not sufficient for the removal
   or remedial action;
      (2) necessary and appropriate maintenance of removal and remedial actions for· the
   expected life of those actions if:
         (A) funds from a liable person have been collected and deposited to the credit of
      the fund for that purpose; or
         (B) funds from a liable person, independent third person, or the federal govern·
      ment are not sufficient for the maintenance; and
      (3) expenses concerning compliance with:
         (A) the federal Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation nnd Liabili·
      ty Act of 1980 (42 U.S.C. Section 9601 et seq.);
         (B) the federal Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of 1986 (10 U.S.C.
      Section 2701 et seq.); and
         (C~ Subchapters F and I. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Secs. lla(a) (part), (c), (d), 12(d)
      (part).)
   Sec. 361.134. HAZARDOUS WASTE GENERATION FEE. (a) The annual hazardous
waste generation fee prescribed by this section is imposed on each generator of hazardous
waste who generates hazardous waste during any part of the year.
   (b) The commission shall:
      (1) require each generator of hazardous waste to register its activities; and
      (2) collect the annual hazardous waste generation fee imposed under this section.
   (c) The commission by rule shall adopt a generation fee schedule for use in determining
the amount of fees to be charged. The annual generation fee may not be less than $50 or
more than $15,000.
   (d) A generator of less than 100 kilograms of hazardous waste each month is exempt
from the payment of a generation fee under this section. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 12(b)
(part).)
   Sec. 361.135. HAZARDOUS WASTE FACILITY FEE. (a) The annual facility fee is
imposed on each facility that holds one or more permits or is operating a hazardous waste
management unit subject to permit authorization to process, store, or dispose of hazard·
ous waste during any part of the year.
   (b) The commission by rule shall adopt a facility fee schedule for determining the
amount of each annual fee to be charged. In adopting the schedule, the commission shall
consider:
      (1) the permitted capacity of facilities; and
      (2) variations in the costs necessary to regulate different types of facilities.
   (c) The annual facility fee may not be less than $250. The maximum fee for a facility
may not exceed $25,000. The annual fee to be charged each hazardous waste facility
must be that set by the fee schedule adopted by the commission.
   (d) The commission shall collect the facility fee imposed under this section.
   (e) During a year in which a facility subject to interim status requirements receives a
final permit, the facility fee under this section may be imposed only 'on one of those
classifications. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 12(c) (part).)
   Sec. 361.136. HAZARDOUS WASTE DISPOSAL FEE. (a) A fee for each dry weight
ton of hazardous waste deposited in a land disposal facility is imposed o,n the pperator of a
hazardous waste land disposal facility.
   (b) The commission by rule shall:
      (1) set the fee for each dry weight ton of hazardous waste, as provided by Subsection
   (e); and                                                             •
      (2) provide for methods of computing the dry weight of hazard~us waste.
                                            2642
HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE                                                      Ch. 678, § 1
                                                                                     I 361.151
   ~c) The amount of the fee for primary metals high volume, low-hazard waste is 25
percent of the amount of the fee set under Subsection (b)(l).
  (d) The generator of hazardous waste shall provide certification:
      (1) of the computation to the operator of the dry weight of the hazardous waste to be
   disposed of; or
      (2) that the composition of the industrial solid waste meets the definition of a primary
   metals high volume, low-hazard waste, in the case of primary metals high volume,
   low-hazard waste.
  (e) The commission by rule may provide for a method to determine or estimate the dry
weight of small volum~s of hazardous waste delivered to commercial hazardous waste
disposal facilities for which costs of analyzing the waste to determine dry weight are
disproportionate.
  (f) The commission by rule shall set the hazardous waste disposal fee and revise it as
necessary so that the amount of money collected each biennium equals between $10
million and $12 million or an amount set by legislative appropriation.
  (g) In setting a different amount hy legislative approprilltion to be raised in fees during
a biennium, the Jegis)p.ture shall con::iider only:
      (1) the amount necesoary to raise the required st!lte matches for remedial actions
  under the federal Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability
  Act of 1980 (42 U.S.C. Section 9601et11eq.) 1 as amended by the Superfund Amendments
  and Reauthorization Act of 1986 (10 U.S.C. Section 2701 et seq.); and
      (2) the cost of state-funded remedial actions under Subchapter F.
  (h) If during the biennium additional funds are necessary to match newly available
federal funds under the federal Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of 1986
(10 U.S.C. Section 2701 et seq.), the commission may increase the fee to collect the
necessary matching funds.
  (i) The commission shall collect the hazardous waste disposal fee quarterly on dates
established by rule. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 12(d) (part).)
  Sec. 361.137. INTEREST AND PENALTIES. (a) Interest at an annual rate of 15
percent of the amount of a fee due under Section 361.134, 361.135, or 361.136 and unpaid
accrues from the date on which the fee is due.
  (b) A person is subject to a civil penalty of $100 for each day the violation continues for
failure to timely submit a repo1t as required by commission rule under Section 361.035.
  (c) Interest collected under this section for late payment of generation or facility fees
shall be deposited in the state treasury to the credit of the hazardous waste generation
and facility fees fund.
  (d) Interest and penalties collected under this section for late payment of disposal fees
and late filing of reports shall be deposited in the state treasury to the credit of the
hazardous waste disposal fee fund. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 14a.)

                    [Sections 361.138-361.150 reserved for expansion]

      SUBCHAPTER E. POWERS AND DUTIES OF LOCAL GOVERNMENTS
  Sec. 361.151. RELATIONSHIP OF COUNTY AUTHORITY TO STATE AUTHORI-
TY. (a) Each county has the solid waste =nanagement powers prescribed under this
subchapter.
  (b) The exercise of the licensing authority and other powers granted to a county by this
chapter does not preclude the department or the commission from exercising the powers
vested in the department or the commission under other provisions of this chapter,
including the provisions authorizing the department and the commission to issue a permit
to construct, operate, and maintain a facility to process, store, or dispose of solid waste.
  (c) The department. and the commission, each acting within its separate scope of
jurisdiction, by specific action or directive, may supersede any authority granted to or
exercised by a county under this chapter. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 5(a) (part).)
                                            2643
Ch. 678, § 1                                71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION
1361.152
   Sec. 361.152. LIMITATION ON COUNTY POWERS CONCERNING INDUSTRIAL
SOLID WASTE. The powers specified by Sections 361.154-361.162 and Sections 364.011
and 364.012 (CrJunty Solid Waste Control Act) may not be exercised by a county with
respect to the industrial solid waste disposal practices and areas to which Section 361.090
applies. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 5(a) (part).)
   Sec. 361.153. COUNTY SOLID WASTE PLANS AND PROGRAM; FEES. A county
may:
      (1) appropriate and spend money from its general revenues to manage solid waste
   and to administer a solid waste program and may charge reasonable fees for those
   services; and
      (2) develop county solid waste plans and coordinate those plans with the plans of
   local governments, regional planning agencies, other governmental entities, the depart-
   m1.mt, and the commission. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Secs. 5(b), (c).)
   Sec. 361.154. COUNTY LICENSING AUTHORITY. (a) Except as provided by Sec-
tions 361.151 and 361.152, a county may require and issue licenses authorizing and
governing the operation and maintenance of facilities used to process, store, or dispose of
solid waste, other than hazardous waste, in an area not in the territorial limits or
extraterritorial jmisdiction of a municipality.
   (b) If a county exerdses licensing authority, it shall adopt and enforce rules for the
management of solid waste. The rules must be:
      (1) compatible with and not less stringent than those of the board of health or the
   commission, as appropriate; and
      (2) approved by the department or the commission, as appropriate.
   (c) Sections 361.155-361.161 apply if a county exercises licensing authority under this
section. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 5(d) (part).)
   Sec. 361.155. COUNTY NOTIFICATION OF LICENSE APPLICATION TO STATE
AGENCIES. The county shall mail a copy of each license application with pertinent
supporting data to the department, the commission, and the Texas Air Control Board.
Each agency has at least 60 days to submit comments and recommendations on the
license alJplication before the county may act on the application unless that privilege is
waived by the affected agency. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 5(d) (part).)
   Sec. 361.156. SEPARATE LICENSE FOR EACH FACILITY. (a) A county shall issue
a separate license for each solid waste facility.
   (b) A license under this subchapter may be issued only to the person in whose name the
application is made and only for the facility described in the license.
   (c) A license may not be transferred without prior notice to and approval by the county
that issued it. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 5(d) (part).)
   Sec. 361.157. CONTENTS OF LICENSE. A license for a solid waste facility issued by
a county must include:
      (1) the name and ad:iress of each person who owns the land on which the solid waste
   facility is located and the person who is or will be the operator or person in charge of
   the facility;
      (2) a legal description of the land on which the facility is located; and
      (3) the terms and conditions on which the license is issued, including the duration of
   the license. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 5(d) (part).)
   Sec. 361.158. LICENSE FEE. (a) A county may charge a license fee not to exceed
$100, as set by the commissioners court of the county.
   (b) The fees shall be deposited to the credit of the county's general fund. (V.A.C.S.
Art. 4477-7, Sec. 5(d) (part).)
   Sec. 361.159. LICENSE ISSUANCE, AMENDMENT, EXTENSION, AND RENEW-
AL. (a) A county may amend, extend, or renew a license it issues in accordance with
county rules.
                                           2644
HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE                                                       Ch. 678, § 1
                                                                                      1381.185
   (b) The procedures prescribed by Section 361.155 apply to an application to amend,
extend, or renew a license.
   (c) A license for the use of a facility to process, store, or dispose of solid waste may not
be issued, amended, renewed, or extended without the prior approval of the department or
the commission, as appropriate. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4471-7, Sec. 5(d) (part).)
  Sec. 361.\60. LICENSE AMENDMENT AND REVOCATION. (a) A county may, for
good cause, after hearing with notice to the license holder and to the state agencies
specified by Section 361.155, revoke or amend a license it issues for reasons concerning:
      (1) publfo health;
      (2) air or water pollution;
      (3) land use; or·
      (4) a violation of this chapter or of other applicable laws or rules controlling the
   processing, storage, or disposal of oolid waste.
  (b) For similar reasons, the department and the commission, each acting within its
separate scope of jurisdiction, may for good cause amend or revoke a license issued by a
county, after hearing with notice to:
      (1) the license holder;
      (2) the county that issued the license; and
      (3) the other state agencies specified by Section 361.155. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec.
  5(d) (part).)
  Sec. 361.161. PERMIT FROM DEPARTMENT OR COMMISSION NC'I' REQUIRED.
If a county issues, amends, renews, or extends a license in accordance with Sections
361.154-301.160, the owner or operator of the facility is not required to obtain a permit
from the department or the commission for the same facility. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec.
5(d) (part).)
  Sec. 361.162. DESIGNATION OF AREAS SUITABLE FOR FACILITIES. (a) Subjact
to the limitation under Sections 361.151 and 361.152, a county may designate land areas
not in the territorial limits or extraterritorial jurisdiction of a municipality as suitable for
use as solid waste facilities.
  (b) The county shall base a designation on the p1inciples of public health, safety, and
welfare, including proper land use, compliance with state statutes, and other pertinent
factors. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 5(e).)
  Sec. 361.163. COOPERATIVE AGREEMENTS WITH LOCAL GOVERNMENTS. A
county may enter into cooperative agreements with local governments and other govern-
mental entities to jointly operate solid waste management activities and to charge
reasonable fees for the services. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 5(h).)
  Sec. 361.164. ENFORCEMENT. A county may enforce this chapter and the rules
adopted by the board of health and the commission concerning the management of solid
waste. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 5(f).)
  Sec. 361.165. POLITICAL SUBDIVISIONS WITH JUkISDICTION IN TWO OR
MORE COUNTIES. (a) This section applies to a political subdivision of the state that:
      (1) has jurisdiction of territory in more than one county; and
      (2) has been granted the power by the legislature to regulate solid waste handling or
  disposal practices or activities in its jurisdiction.
  (b) The gover.ding body of the political subdivision may, by resolution, assume for the
political subdivision the exclusive authority to exercise, in the area subject to its
jurisdiction, the powers granted by this chapter to a county, to the exclusion of the
exercise of the same powers by the counties otherwise having jurisdiction over the area.
  (c) In the exercise of those powers, the political subdivision is subject to the same
duties, limitations, and restrictions applicable to a county under this chapter.
  (d) A political subdivision that assumes the authority granted under this section:
                                             2645
Ch. 678, § 1                                  71et LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION
1381.185
      (1) serves as the coordinator of all solid waste management practices and activities
   for municipalities, counties, and other governmental entities in its jurisdiction that have
   solid waste management regulatory powers or engage in solid waste managem1mt
   practices or activities; and
      (2) shall exercise the authority as long as the resolution of the political subdivision is
   effective. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 6.)
   Sec. 861.166. MUNICIPAL RESTRICTIONS. A municipality may not abolish or re·
strict the use or operation of a solid waste facility in its limits or extraterritorial
j11risdiction if the solid waste facility:
      (1) was in existence when the municipality was incorporated or was in existence when
   th:) municipality annexed the area in which it is located: and
      (2) is operated in substantial compliance with applicable state and county regulations.
  (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 6a(a).)
  Sec. 861.167. OPERATION OF FACILITY BY POLITICAL SUBDIVISION. A munic·
ipality or other political subdivision operating a solid waste facility may not be prevented
from operating the solid waste facility on the ground that the facility is located in the
limits or extratertitorial jurisdiction of another muni~ipality. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec.
6(b).)

                    [Sections 861.168-361.180 reserved for expansion]

            SUBCHAPTER F. REGISTRY AND CLEANUP OF CERTAIN
                     HAZARDOUS WASTE FACILITIES
  Sec. 861.181. REGISTRY. (a) The commission shall publish a registry:
     (1) identifying each facility listed by the survey required under Section 12, Chapter
  566, Acts of the 69th Legislature, Regular Session, 1985;
     (2) assigning the relative priority of the need for action at each facility to remedy
  environmental and health problems resulting from the presence of hazardous waste at
  those facilities; and
     (8) recommending actions to achieve effective, efficient, and timely cleanup or other
  resolution of the problems identified for each facility.
  (b) A recommendation under Subsection (a)(3) is not the remedial investigation and
feasibility study for the relevant facility but must form the basis for the study. (V.A.C.S .•
Art. 4477-7, Sec. 13(a) (part).)
  Sec. 861.182. INVESTIGATION OF FACILITIES LISTED IN REGISTRY. The com-
mission may, in accordance with Section 361.032, investigate:
     (1) facilities listed in the registry; and
     (2) areas or sites that it has reason to believe should he included in the registry.
  (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 13(b)(l).)
  Sec. 861.183. RELATIVE PRIORITY FOR ACTION AT EACH FACILITY LISTED
IN REGISTRY. The commission shall, in cooperation with the department and as part of
the registry, reassess by January 1 of each year the relative priority of the need for
action at each facility listed in the registry to remedy environmental and health problems
re~mlting from .the presence of hazardous waste at those facilities. The reassessments
shall be made according to new information received from public hearings and other
sources. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 13(b)(2).)
  Sec. 361.184. REVISION OF REGISTRY; FILING NOTICE. The commission shall:
     (1) revise the registry periodically to:
        (A) add facilities that may be an imminent and substantial endangerment to public
     health and safety or the environment; and
      . (B) delete facilities that have been cleaned up under this subchapter or removed
     from the registry under Section 361.186; and
                                              2646
HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE                                                        Ch. 678, § 1
                                                                                       1381.111
     (2) file an affidavit or notice in the real property records of the county in which a
  facility is located identifying those facilities included in and deleted from the registry.
   (V.A:c.s. Art. 4477-7, Secs. 13(c), (d).)
  Sec. 361.185. NOTICE OF INCLUSION IN REGISTRY. (a) The commission shall
notify in writing any person identified as responsible for all or any part of a facility or
area that is not listed in the regist..-y of the contemplated addition of the facility or area in
the registry.
  (b) The notice must be sent by certified mail, return receipt requested, to each named
responsible person at the person's last known address not later than two months before
the revised registry is published.
  (c) The notice must include a description of the duties and restrictions imposed by
Section 361.187.
  (d) The failure to receive a notice mailed to a named responsible person under this
section does not affect the responsibilities, duties, or liabilities imposed on the person.
(V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Secs. 13(e)(l) (part), (2), (3).)
  Sec. 361.186. REQUEST FOR CHANGE IN REGISTRY. (a) An owner or operator of
a facility or other named person responsible for a facility listed or to be listed in the
registry of the commission under this subchapter may, by submitting a written statement
setting forth the grounds of the request in the form as the commission may require,
request the commission to:
     (1) delete the fac!!ity from the registry;
     (2) modify the facility's priority in the registry; or
     (3) modify information concerning the facility.
  (b) The commission by rule shall establish procedures, including public hearings, for
review of requests submitted under this section to delete a facility. (V.A.C.S. Art.
4477-7, Secs. 13(e)(4), (5) (part).)
  Sec. 361.187. CHANGE IN USE OF FACILITY LISTED IN REGISTRY. (a) A person
may not substantially change the manner in which a facility listed in the' registry is used
without notifying the commission and receiving the commission's written approval for the
change.
  (b) The commission by rule shall define a substantial change of use and include in the
definition:
     (1) the erection of a building or other structure at the facility and similar actions;
     (2) the use of the facility for agricultural production;
     (3) the paving of the facility for use as a roadway or parking lot; and
     (4) the creation of a park or other public or private recreational facility on the
  facility.
  (c) The notice under Subsection (a) must:
     (1) be in writing and addressed to the executive director;
     (2) include a brief description of the proposed change of use; and
     (3) be submitted at least 60 days before the day physical alt~ration of the Jand or
  construction occurs or, if no alteration or construction is required to initiate the change
• of use, at least 60 days before the date of change of use.
  (d) The executive director may not approve a change of use under this section if the
new use will:                                                                             ·
     (1) interfere significantly with a proposed, ongoing, or completed hazardous waste
  facility remedial action program at the facility; or                                      .
     (2) expose the environment or public health to a significantly increased threat of
  harm. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Secs. 13(f)(l), (2).)
  Sec. 361.188. CLEANUP OF CERTAIN HAZARDOUS WASTE FACILITIES. The
cleanup of a facility identified under Section 361.181 by the commission in the registry
                                             2647
Ch. 678, § 1                                 71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION
1381.188
and that is an imminent and substantial endangerment to the public health and safety or
the environment shall be expedited. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. lB(g)(l) (part).)
  Sec. 361.189. PRIORITY OF USE OF FUNDS FOR CLEANUP. (al Payment for
cleanup of a facility identified in the registry shall be made in the f· Jllowing order:
      (1) by private funding;                                    ·
      (2) by federal funding; and
      (3) by state funding from the hazardous waste permit and disposal fee, if approved
   by the legislature.
  (b) If voluntary assistance from private sources is not available, federal funds must be
used for facility cleanup if those funds are available when needed.
  (c) State funds may be used only if funds from a liable person, an independent third
person, or the federal government are not available when needed. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7,
Secs. lB(a) (part), (g)(l) (part).)
  Sec. 361.190. IMMEDIATE REMOVAL ACTION; RECOVERY OF COSTS. (a) The
commission may, with the funds available to the commission from the hazardous waste
permit and disposal fees if approved by the legislature, undertake immediate removal
action at a facility to alleviate irreversible or irreparable harm, if the commission after an
investigation finds that:
      (1) a release or threatened release of hazardous waste that is causing irreversible or
  irreparable harm to the public health and safety or the environment exists at a facility
  identified by the registry; and
      (2) the immediacy of the situation makes it prejudicial to the public interest to delay
  action until:
         (A) an administrative order can be issued to a person liable under Section 361.191;
      or
         (B) a judgment can be entered in an appeal of an administrative order.
  (b) l<,indings required under Subsection (a) must be made in writing and may be made
ex parte. The findings are subject to judicial review under the substantial evidence rule
as provided by the Administrative Procedure and Texas Register Act (Article 6252-lSa,
Vernon's Texas Civil Statutes).
  (c) The reasonable expenses of immediate removal action taken by the commission
under this section may be recovered from a person identified as liable under Subchapter I.
The state may seek to recover the reasonable expenses in a court of appropriate
jurisdiction. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 1S(g)(3) (part).)
  Sec. 361.191. ADMINISTRATIVE ORDER CONCERNING FACILITY LISTED IN
REGISTRY. (a) If the commission finds that there exists an actual or threatened release
of hazardous waste at a hazardous waste facility listed in the registry that presents an
imminent and substantial endangerment to the public health and safety or the environ·
ment, or after any immediate danger of irreversible or irreparable harm is alleviated
under Section 361.190, the commission may issue an administrative order to:
      (1) the owner or operator of the facility;
      (2) any other person responsible for the release of hazardous waste or a threatened
   release at the facility; or
      (3) each of the persons under Subdivisions (1) and (2).
   (b) The order may require a person liable under Subchapter I to:
      (1) develop a remedial action program at the facility, subject to the commission's
   approval; and
      (2) implement the program within a reasonable time specified by the order.
   (c) The provisions of Subchapters I, K, and L concerning administrative orders apply to
an order issued under this section. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Secs. 1S(g)(2), (3) (part).)
                                            2648
HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE                                                   Ch. 678, § 1
                                                                                  1381.195
   Sec. 361.192. VOLUNTARY CLEANUP OF FACILITY. (a) If possible, persons identi-
fied as persons liable under Subchapter I should be notified by the commission of an
opportunity to participate voluntarily in a cleanup of the facility.
   (b) If all persons liable under Subchapter I do not volunteer to develop and implement a
remedial action program for the facility, private individuals or entities that volunteer to
participate in cleanup activities should be allowed to do so and may recover costs under
Section 361.344 from liable persons who do not participate in the voluntary cleanup.
   (c) If no persons liable under Subchapter I volunteer to develop and implement a
remedial action program for the facility, independent third persons who volunteer to
participate in the cleanup of the facility should be permitted to contract with the
commission to do so. Independent third persons may recover costs under Section 361.344
from liable persons who do not participate in the voluntary cleanup. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7,
Sec. 13(g)(l) (part).)
   Sec. 361.193. REMEDIAL ACTION PROGRAM BY COMMISSION ON FAILURE
OF RESPONSIBLE PERSON. (a) The commission may develop and implement a remedial
action program for a facility if:
      (1) a person ordered to eliminate an imminent and substantial endangerment to the
   public health and safety or the environment fails to do so within the time prescribed by
   the order; and
      (2) no third person agrees to develop and implement a remedial action program for
   the facility under Section 861.192(c).
   (b) Persons to whom the order is issued shall pay the commission's reasonable expenses
of developing and implementing the remedial action program. The state may recover
those reasonable expenses in a court of appropriate jurisdiction.
   (c) An action instituted by the commission under this section is subject to Subchapters
I, K, and L. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 13(g)(4).)
   Sec. 361.194. REMEDIAL ACTION PROGRAM BY COMMISSION IF NO RESPON-
SIBLE PERSON. (a) The commission may develop and implement a remedial action
program for a facility identified by the registry if:                       ·
      (1) the commission finds that at the facility there exists a release or threatened
   release of hazardous waste that presents an imminent and substantial endangerment to
   the public health and safety or the environment;
      (2) after a reasonable attempt to determine who may be liable for the release or
   threatened release in accordance with Section 361.192, the commission cannot:
         (A) determine who may be liable; or
         (B) locate a person who may be liable; and
      (8) no independent third person agrees to develop and implement a remedial action
   program for the facility under Section 361.192(c).
   (b) Federal funds shall be used for a cleanup under this section to the extent available
when needed in accordance with Section 361.189(b).
   (c) The commission shall make every effort to obtain appropriate relief from a person
subsequently identified or located who is liable for the release or threatened release of
hazardous waste at the facility, including recovery of:
      (1) the cost of developing and implementing a remedial action program;
      (2) payment of the cost of the program; and
      (3) reasonable expenses incurred by the state. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 13(g)(5).)
   Sec. 361.195. GOAL OF REMEDIAL ACTION PROGRAM. (a) The goal of a remedial
action program under this subchapter is to eliminate the imminent and substantial
endangerment to the public health and safety or the environment posed by a release or
threatened release of hazardous waste a~ a facility.
   (b) The commission shall determine the appropriate extent of remedy at a particular
facility by selecting the lowest cost remedial alternative that:                       .
      (1) is technologically feasible and reliable; and
                                          2649
Ch. 678, § 1                                      71st LEGISI.ATURE-REGULAR SESSION
f 361.195
      (2) effectively mitigates and minimizes damage to and provides adequate protection
   of the public health and safety or the environment. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 13(g)(6).)
   Sec. 361.196. LIEN FOR CLEANUP ACTION. (a) The state has a lien on the real
property, and any interest in the real property, that' is subject to or affected by a cleanup
action for cleanup costs for which a person is liable to the state.
   (b) The lien imposed by this section is perfected and attaches to the affected real
property when and not before an affidavit is recorded in accordance with Subsection (d) in
the county in which the real property is located.
   (c) The affidavit must be executed by an authorized representative of the commission
and must show:
      (1) the name and address of each person liable for the costs;
      (2) a description of the real property that is affected by the cleanup action; and
      (3) the amount of the costs and the amount due.
   (d) The county clerk shall:
      (1) record the affidavit in records kept for that purpose; and
      (2) index the affidavit under the name of each person liable for the costs.
   (e) The lien is effective until the liability for the costs is satisfied or becomes unenforce-
able by operation of law. The commission shall record a relinquishment or satisfaction of
the lien when the lien is paid or satisfied. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Secs. 13(g)(7)(A), (B), (C),
(D).)
   Sec. 361.197. VALIDITY AND ENFORCEABILITY OF LIEN. The lien imposed by
Section 361.196 is not valid or enforceable if real property or an interest in the real
property or a mortgage, lien, or other encumbrance on or against the property is acquired
before the lien is perfected unless the person acquiring the real property or an interest in
the real property or acquiring the mortgage, lien, or other encumbrance:
      (1) had or reasonably should have had actual notice or knowledge that the real
   property is affected by a cleanup action; or
      (2) knows that the state has incurred cleanup costs. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec.
   13(g)(7)(F).)
   Sec. 361.198. LIEN FORECLOSURE. The lien may be foreclosed only on judgment of
a court of competent jurisdiction foreclosing the lien and ordering the sale of the property
subject to the lien. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 13(g)(7)(E).)
   Sec. 361.199. FILING OF .ilOND. (a) If a lien is perfected or attempted to be
perfected as provided by Section 361.196, the owner of the real property affected by the
lien may file a bond to indemnify against the lien.
   (b) The bond must be filed with the county clerk of the county in which the real
property subject to the lien is located.
   (c) An action to establish, enforce, or foreclose a lien or claim of lien covered by the
bond must be brought not later than the 30th day after the date of service of notice of the
bond.
   (d) The bond must:
      (1) describe the real property on which the lieh is claimed;
      (2) refer to the lien claimed in a manner sufficient to identify it;
      (3) be in an amount double the amount of the costs due stated in the lien;
      (4) be payable to the commission;
      (5) be executed by the party filing the bond as principal and a corporate surety
   authorized under the law of this state to execute the bond as surety; and
      (6) be conditioned substantially that the principal and sureties will pay to the
   commission the amount of the lien claimed, plus costs, if the claim is proved to be a lien
   on the real property. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Secs. 13(g)(7)(G), (H).)
                                             2650
• HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE                                                     Ch. 678, § 1
                                                                                       1381.221
    Sec. 361.200. NOTICE OF BOND TO NAMED OBLIGEE. (a) After the bond is filed,
 the county clerk shall issue notice of the bond to the named obligee. A copy of the bond
 must be attnched to the notice.
    (b) The notice may be ser\red on each obligee by having a copy delivered to the obligee
 by a person competent to make oath of the delivery.
    (c) The original notice shall be returned to the county clerk, and the person making
 service of copy shall make an oath on the back of each copy showing on whom and on
 what date the copy is Sl'rved. The county clerk shall record the bond notice and return in
 records kept for that purpose.
    (d) In acquiring an interest in real property, a purchaser or lender may rely on and is
 absolutely protected by the record of the bond, notir.e, and return. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7,
 Sec. 13(g)(7)(1).)
    Sec. 361.201. SUIT ON BOND BY COMMISSION. (a) The commission may sue on the
 bond after the 30th day following the date on which the notice is served under Section
 361.200 but may not sue on the bond later than one year after the date on which the
 notice is served.
    (b) If the commission recovers in a suit on the lien or the bond, it is entitled to recover
 reasonable attorney's fees. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 13(g)(7)(J).)
    Sec. 361.202. COSTS OF CLEANUP PAYAPLE TO COMMISSION FROM PERMIT
 FEES. (a) Money for actions taken or to be taken by the commission to eliminate an
 imminent and substantial endangerment to the public health and safety or the environ·
 ment under this subchapter is payable directly to the commission from the hazardous
 waste permit and disposal fees, if approved by the legislature.
    (b) Costs payable to the commission under this section include costs of inspecting or
 sampling and laboratory analysis of waste, soil, air, surface water, and groundwater done
 for the commission. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 13(g)(8).)
    Sec. 361.203. PRIVATE PARTY CLEANUP; IMMUNITY. (a) The commission shall
 seek cleanup of a facility by private individuals or entities before spending federal or
 state funds for the cleanup.
    (b) Private individuals or entities shall coordinate with ongoing federal and state
 hazardous waste programs and obtain necessary approvals for any cleanup.
    (c) An action taken by the private individual or entity to contain or remove a release or
 threatened release in accordance with an approved remedial action plan is not an
 admission of liability for the release or threatened release.
    (d) If a private individual's or entity's actions to contain or remove a release or
 threatened release comply with an approved remedial action plan, the individual or entity
 is not liable for additional cleanup costs at the facility resulting solely from an act or
 omission of that individual or entity, unless the cleanup costs are caused by that
 individual's or entity's gross negligence or wilful misconduct.
    (e) Except as specifically provided, this section does not expand or diminish the common
 law tort liability, if any, of a private individual or entity participating in a cleanup action
 for civil damages to a third person. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 13(g)(9).)

                      [Sections 361.204-361.220 reserved for expansion]

      SUBCHAPTER G. ENFORCEMENT; CRIMINAL AND CIVIL PENALTIES
   Sec. 361.221. 'CRIMINAL PENALTIES. (a) A person commits an offense if the person
 knowingly:
     (1) transports, or causes to be transported, for storage, processing, or disposal, any
   hazardous waste to any location that does not have a permit as required by the
   commission exercising jurisdiction under this chapter;
     (2) stores, processes, or disposes of, or causes to be stored, processed, or disposed of,
   any hazardous waste without a permit as required by the commission exercising
                                              2651
Ch. 678, § 1                                 71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION
1381.221
   jurisdiction under this chapter or in knowing viola~ion of any material condition or
   requirement of a permit or of an applicable interim 3tatus rule or standard;
      (3) omits or causes to be omitted material information or makes or causes to be made
   any false material statement or representation in any application, label, manifest,
   record, report, permit, or other document filed, maintained, or used to comply with any
   requirement of this chapter applicable to hazardous waste;
      (4) generates, transports, stores, processes, or disposes of, or otherwise handles, or
   causes to be generated, transported, stored, processed, disposed of, or otherwise
   handled, hazardous waste, whether the activity took place before or after September 1,
   1981, and who knowingly destroys, alters, conceals, or does not file, or causes to be
   destroyed, altered, concealed, or not filed, any record, application, manifest, report, or
   other document required to be maintained or filed to comply with the rules adopted by
   the commission under this chapter; or
      (5) transports without a manifest, or causes to be transported without a manifest,
   any hazardous waste required by rules adopted by the commission under this chapter to
   be accompanied by a manifest.
   (b) Except as provided by Subsection (c), a person who commits an offense under this
section shall be subject on conviction to:
      (1) a fine of not less than $100 or more than $50,000 for each act of violation and
   each day of violation;
      (2) imprisonment not to exceed five years for a violation under Subsection (a)(l) or (2)
   or imprisonment not to exceed two years for any other violation under Subsection (a);
   or
      (3) both fine and imprisonment.
   (c) If it is shown on the trial of the defendant that the defendant has previously been
convicted of an offense under this section, the offense is punishable by:
      (1) a fine of not less than $200 or more than $100,000 for each day of violation;
      (2) imprisonment not to exceed 10 years for a violation under Subsection (a)(l) or (2)
   or imprisonment not to exceed four years for any other violation under Subsection (a);
   or
      (3) both fine and imprisonment.
   (d) Venue for prosecution for an alleged violation under this section is in the county in
which the violation is alleged to have occurred or in Travis County.
   (e) Unless otherwise provided by this chapter, a fine recovered under this section shall
be equally divided between the state and the local government or governments that first
brought the cause.
   (f) In this section, "person" means an individual, corporation, company, association,
firm, partnership, joint stock company, foundation, institution, trust, society, union, or
any other association of individuals. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Secs. S(b), (d), (e) (part), (f)
(part).)
   Sec. 361.222. KNOWING ENDANGERMENT; CRIMINAL PENALTY. (a) A person
commits an offense if the person knowingly transports, processes, stores, exports, or
disposes of, or causes to be transported, processed, stored, exported, or disposed of,
hazardous waste in violation of this chapter and the person knows at the time that the
person by the person's conduct places another person in imminent danger of death or
serious bodily injury.
   (b) An individual who commits an offense under this section shall ·be subject on
conviction to:
      (1) a fine of not more than $250,000;
      (2) imprisonment for not more than 15 years; or
      (3) both fine and imprisonment.
   (c) A person, other than an individual, that commits an offense under this section shall
be subject on conviction to a fine of not more than $1 million.
                                            2652
HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE                                                       Ch. 678, § 1
                                                                                      1381.225
   (d) It is an affirmative defense to a prosecution under this section that the person
endangered consented to the conduct charged and that the danger and conduct charged
were reasonably foreseeable hazards of:
      (1) an occupation, business, or profession; or
      (2) medical treatment or medical or scientific experimentation conducted by profes-
   sionally approved methods if the endangered person had been made aware of the risks
   involved before giving consent.
   (e) Venue for prosecution for an alleged violation under this section is in the county in
which the violation is alleged to have occurred or in Travis County.
   (f) Unless otherwise provided by this chapter, a fine recovered under this section shall
be equally divided between the state and the local government or governments that first
brought the cause.
   (g) In this section, "person" means an individual, corporation, company, association,
firm, partnership, joint stock company, foundation, institution, trust, society, union, or
any other association of individuals. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Secs. S{c), (d), (e) (part), (f)
(part).)
   Sec. 361.223. CIVIL PENALTIE~. (a) A person may not cause, suffer, allow, or
permit the collection, storage, handling, transportation, processing, or disposal of solid
waste or the use or operation of a solid waste facility to store, process, or dispose of solid
waste or to extract materials under Section 361.092 in violation of this chapter or a rule,
permit, license, or other order of the department or commission, or a county or a political
subdivision exercising the authority granted by Section 361.165 in whose jurisdiction the
violation occurs.
   (b) Any person who violates any provision of this chapter or any rule, permit, license, or
order of the department or commission, or a county or a political subdivision exercising
the authority granted by Section 361.165 in whose jurisdiction the violation occurs is
subject to a civil penalty of not less than $100 or more than $25,000 for each act of
violation and for each day of violation, as the court may deem proper, to be recovered in
the manner provided by this section.
   (c) A civil penalty recovered in a suit first brought by a local government or govern·
ments under this chapter shall be equally divided between the state and the local
government or governments that first brought the suit, and the state shall deposit its
recovery to the credit of the genl.'ral revenue fund.
   (d) The penalties imposed under this section do not apply to failure to pay a fee under
Sections 361.134-361.136 or failure to file a report under Section 361.035. Subsection (c)
does not apply to interest and penalties imposed under Section 361.137. (V.A.C.S. Art.
4477-7, Secs. 8(a)(l), (2), (9); (i) as amended by Ch. 279, Acts 70th Leg., Reg. Sess., 1987.)
   Sec. 361.224. SUIT BY STATE. (a) If it appears that a person has violated, is
violating, or is threatening to violate any provision of this chapter or of any rule, permit,
or other order of the department or commission, the department or the commission may
request a civil suit to be brought in a district court for:
      (1) injunctive relief to restrain th~ person from continuing the violation or threat of
   violation;
      (2) the assessment and recovery of a civil penalty as pr~vided by this subchapter, as
   the court may consider proper; or
      (3) both the injunctive relief and civil penalty.
   (b) At the request of the commissioner or the executive director, the attorney general
shall bring and conduct the suit in the name of the state. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec.
8(a)(3) (part).)
   Sec. 361.225. SUIT BY COUNTY OR POLITICAL SUBDIVISION. If it appears that a
violation or threat of violation of any provision of this chapter or any rule, permit, license,
or other order of the department, the commission, a county, or a political subdivision
exercising the authority granted by Section 361.165 has occurred or is occurring in the
jurisdiction of that county or political subdivision, the county or political subdivision, in
                                            2663
Ch. 678, § 1                                 71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION
1361.225
the same manner as the commission and the department, may institute a civil suit in a
district court by its own attorney for the injunctive relief or civil penalty, or both, as
authorized by Section 361.224, against the person who committed, is committing, or is
threatening to commit the violation. (V.A.C.S. Art, 4477-7, Sec. 8(a)(4).)
  Sec. 361.226. SUIT BY MUNICIPALITY. If it appears that a violation or threat of
violation of any provision of this chapter or any rule, permit, license, or other order of the
department, the commission, a county, or a political subdivision exercising the authority
granted by Section 361.165 has occurred or is occurring in a municipality or its extraterri-
torial jurisdiction, or is causing or will cause injury to or an adverse effect on the health,
welfare, or physical property of the municipality or its inhabitants, the municipality, in the
same manner as the department and the commission, may institute a civil suit in a district
court by its own attorney for the injunctive relief or civil penalty, or both, as authorized
by Section 361.224, against the person who committed, is committing, or is threatening to
commit the violation. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 8(a)(5).)
  Sec. 361.227. VENUE. A suit for injunctive relief or for recovery of a civil penalty, or
for both, may be brought in the county in which the defendant resides or in the county in
which the violation or threat of violation occurs. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 8(a)(6) (part).)
  Sec. 361.228. INJUNCTION. (a) On application for injunctive relief and a finding that
a person is violating or threatening to violate any provision of this chapter or of any rule,
permit, or other order of the department or the commission, the district court shall grant
appropriate injunctive relief.
   (b) In a suit brought to enjoin a violation or threat of violation of this chapter or of any
rule, permit, license, or order of the department, the commission, a county, or a political
subdivision exercising the authority granted by Section 361.165, the court may grant any
prohibitory or mandatory injunction warranted by the facts, including a temporary
restraining order after notice and hearing, a temporary injunction, and a permanent
injunction. The court shall grant injunctive relief without bond or other undertaking by
the governmental entity. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Secs. 8(a)(3) (part), (6) (part).)
  Sec. 361.229. PARTIES IN SUIT BY LOCAL GOVERNMENT. In a suit brought by a
local government under Section 361.225 or 361.226, the department and the commission
are necessary and indispensable parties. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 8(a)(7).)

                    [Sections 361.230-361.250 reserved for expansion]

       SUBCHAPTER H. ENFORCEMENT; ADMINISTRATIVE PENALTIES
  Sec. 361.251. ADMINISTRATIVE PENALTY BY DEPARTMENT. (a) The depart·
ment may assess a civil penalty against a person as provided by this section if the person
violates:
     (1) a provision of this chapter that is under the department's jurisdiction; or
     (2) a rule adopted by the board of health or order, license, or permit issued by the
  department under this chapter.
  (b) The amount of the penalty may not exceed $10,000 a day for a person who violates
this chapter or a rule, order, license, or permit issued under this chapter. Each day a
violation continues may be considered a separate violation.
  (c) In determining the amount of the penalty, the department shall consider:
     (1) the seriousness of the violation, including the nature, circumstances, extent, and
  gravity of the prohibited act and the hazard or potential hazard created to the health or
  safety of the public;
     (2) the history of previous violations;
     (3) the amount necessary to deter future violations;
     (4) efforts to correct the violation; and
     (5) any other matters that justice may require.
                                             2654
HE:ALTH AND SAFETY CODE                                                     Ch. 678, § 1
                                                                                      1381.251
   (d) If, after examination of a possible violation and the facts surrounding that possible
violation, the department concludes that a violation has occurred, the department may
issue a preliminary report:
       (1) stating the facts that support the conclusion;
       (2) recommending 'that a civil penalty under this section be imposed; and
       (3) recommending the amount of the penalty, which shall be based on the seriousness
   of the violation as determined from: the facts surrounding the violation.
   (e) Not later than the 10th day after the date on which the report is issued, the
department shall give written notice of the report to the person charged with the
violation. The notice must include:
       (1) a brief summary of the charges;
       (2) a statement of the amount of the penalty recommended; and             ,
       (3) a statement of the right of the person charged to a hearing on the occurrence of
   the violation, the amount of the penalty, or both.
   (f) Not later than the 20th day after the date on which notice is sent, the person
charged may give to the commissioner written consent to the department's report,
including the recommended penalty, 01· make a written request for a hearing.                  ·
   (g) If the pers9n charged with the violation consents to the penalty recommended by
the commissioner or does not timely respond to the notice, the commissioner or the
commissioner's designee by order shall assess the penalty or order a hearing to be held on
the findings and recommendations in the department's report. If the commissioner or the
commissioner's designee assesses the penalty, the department shall give written notiee to
the person charged of the decision and the person shall pay the penalty.
   (li) If the person charged requests or the commissi(mer o~ders a hearing, the commie~
sioner shall order and shall give notice of the hearing. ,
   (i) The hearing shall be held by a hearing examiner designated by the commissioner.
   (j) 'rhe hearing examiner shall make findings of fact and promptly issue to the
commissioner a written decision as to the occurrence of the violation and a recommenda·
tion of the amount of the proposed penalty if a penalty is warranted.
   (k) Based on the findings of fact and the recommendations of the hearing examiner, the
commissioner by order may find that a violation has occurred and assess a civil penalty or
may find that no violation occurred.
   (l ) All proceedings under Subsections (h)-(k) are subject. to the Administrative Proce-
dure and Texas Register Act (Article 6252-13a, Vernon's Texas Ci"'.il Statutes).
   (m) The commissioner shall give notice of the commissioner's decision to the person
charged, and if the commissioner finds that a violation has occurred and assesses a civil
penalty, the commissioner shall give written notice to the person charged of:
       (1) the commissioner's findings;
       (2) the amount of the penalty; and
       (3) the person's right to judicial review of the commissioner's order.
   (n) Not later than the 30th day after the date on which the commissioner's order is
final, the person charged with the penalty shall pay the penalty in full or file a petition for
judicial review.
   (o) If the person seeks judicial review of the fact of the violation, the amount of the
penalty, or both, the person, within the time provided by Subsection (n), shall:        ,
       (1) send the amount of the penalty to the commissioner for placement in an e.scrow
   account; or
       (2) post with the commissioner a supersedeas bond in a form approved by the
   commissioner for the amount of the penalty, the bond to be effective until judicial
   review of the order or decision is final.
   (p) A person who fails to comply with Subsection (o) waives the right to judicial review,
and the commissioner may refer the matter to the attorney general for enforcement.
                                             2655
Ch. 678, § 1                                7lst LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION
1361.251
   (q) Judicial review of the order or decision of the commissioner assessing the penalty
shall be under Section 19, Administrative Procedure and Texas Register Act (Article
6252-13a, Vernon's Texas Civil Statutes).
  (r) If the penalty is reduced or not assessed, the commissioner shall:
     (1) remit to the person charged the appropriate amount of any penalty payment plus
  accrued interest; or
     (2) execute a release of the bond if a supersedeas bond has been posted.
  (s) The accrued interest on amounts remitted by the commissioner shall be paid:
     (1) at a rate equal to the rate charged on loans to depository institutions by the New
  York Federal Reserve Bank; and
     (2) for the period beginning on the date the penalty is paid to the commissioner under
  Subsection (o) and ending on the date the penalty is remitted.
  (t) A penalty collected under this section shall be deposited to the credit of the general
revenue fund. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Secs. 8a(a)-(i), (j) (part), (k)-(n).)
  Se~. 361.252. ADMINISTRATIVE PENALTY BY COMMISSION. (a) The commission
may assess a civil penalty against a person as provided by this section if the person
violates:
     (1) a provision of this chapter concerning solid waste that is under the commission's
  jurisdiction;
     (2) a rule or order adopted by the commission concerning solid waste that is under
  the commission's jurisdiction; or
     (3) a solid waste permit or registration issued by the commission under this chapter.
  (b) The amount of the penalty may not exceed $10,000 a day for a person who violates
this chapter or a rule, order, or permit issued under this chapter. Each day a violation
continues may be considered a separate violation.
  (c) In determining the amount of the penalty, the commission shall consider:
     (1) the nature, circumstances, extent, duration, and gravity of the prohibited act with
  special emphasis on the ha~ard or potential hazard crented to the health or safety of the
  public;
     (2) the impact of the violation on a receiving stream or underground water reservoir,
  on the property owners along a receiving stream or underground water reservoir, and
  on water users of a receiving stream or underground water reservoir;
     (3) with respect to the alleged violator:
        (A) the history and extent of previous violations;
        (B) the degreE. of culpability, including whether the violation was attributable to
      mechanical or electrical failures and whether the violation could have been reasonably
     anticipated and avoided;
        (C) the demonstrated good faith, including actions taken by the alleged violator to
     rectify the cause of the violation;
        (D)·economic benefit gained by the violation; and
        (E) the amount necessary to deter future violations; and
     (4) any other matters that justice may require.
  (d) If, after examination of a possible violation and the facts surrounding that possible
violation, the executive director concludes that a violation has occurred, the executive
director may issue a preliminary report:
     (1) stating the facts that support the conclusion;
     (2) recommending that a civil penalty under this section be imposed; and
     (3) rer.ommending the amount of the penalty, which shall be based on the factors
  prescribed by Subsection (c), including an analysis of each factor for the commission.
                                           2656
HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE                                                      Ch. 678, § 1
                                                                                     1381.252
    (e) Not later than the 10th day after the date on which the report is issued, the
executive director shall give written notice of the report to the person charged with the
violation. The notice must include: ·
       (1) a brief summary of the charges;
       (2) a statement of the amount of the penalty recommended; and
       (8) a statement of the right of the person charged to a hearing on the occurrence of
    the violation, the amount of the penalty, or both.
    (f) Not later than the 20th day after the date on which notice is received, the person
charged may give to the commission written consent to the executive director's report,
including the recommended penalty, or make a written request for a hearing.
    (g) If the person charged with the violation consents to the penalty recommended by
the executive director or does not timely respond to the notice, the commission by order
shall assess the penalty or order a hearing to be held on the findings and recommenda-
tions in the executive director's report. If the commission assesses the penalty, the
commission shall give written notice to the person charged c1f its decision.
    (h) If the person charged requests or the commission orders a hearing, the commission
shall order and shall give notice of the hearing. The commission by order may find that a
violation has occurred and may assess a civil penalty, may find that a violation has
occurred but that no penalty should be assessed, or may find that no violation has
occurred. In making a penalty decision, the commission shall analyze each factor
prescribed by Subsection (c). All proceedings under this subsection are subject to the
Administrative Procedure and Texas Register Act (Article 6252-13a, Vernon's Texas Civil
Statutes).
    (i) The commission shall give notice of its decision to the person charged, and if the
commission finds that a violation has occurred and assesses a civil penalty, the commis-
sion shall give written notice to the person charged of:
       (1) the commission's findings;
       (2) the .amount of the penalty; and
       (3) the person's right to judicial review of the commission's order.
    (J1 If the commission is required to give notice of a civil penalty under Subsection (g) or
(i), the commission shall file notice of its decision in the Texas Register not later than the
10th day after the date on which the decision is adopted.
    (k) Not later than the 30th day after the date on which the commission's order is final,
the person charged With the penalty shall pay the penalty in full or file a petition for
judicial review.                    ·
    (l) If the person seeks judicial review of the fact of the violation, the amount of the
penalty, or both, the person, within the time provided by Subsection (k), shall:
       (1) send the amount of the penalty to the commission for placement in an escrow
    account; or
       (2) post with the commission a supersedeas bond in a form approved by the commis-
    sion for the amount of the penalty, the bond to be effective until judicial review of the
    order or decision is final.
    (m) A person who fails to comply with Subsection (l) waives the right to judicial
review, and the commission or the executive director may refer the matter to the attorney
general for enforcement.
    (n) Judicial review of the order or decision of the commission assessing the penalty
shall be under Section 19, Administrative Procedure and Texas Register Act (Article
6252-!3a, Vernon's Texas Civil Statutes).
    (o) The commission may compromise, modify, or remit, with or without conditions, a
civil penalty imposed under this section.
    (p) Payment of a penalty under this section is full and complete satisfaction of the
violation for which the administrative penalty ill assessed and precludes any other civil or
criminal penalty for th.e same violation.
                                            2657
Ch. 678, § 1                                71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION
1361.252
  (q) A penalty collected under this section shall be deposited to the credit of the general
revenue fund. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Secs. 8b(a)-(i), (j) (part), (k)-(o).)
                    [Sections 361.253-361.270 reserved for expansion]

 SUBCHAPTER I. ENFORCEMENT; ADMINISTRATIVE ORDERS CONCERNING
           IMMINENT AND SUBSTANTIAL ENDANGERMENT
  Sec. 361.271. PERSONS RESPONSIBLE FOR SOLID WASTE. For the purpose of
this subchapter, a person is responsible for solid waste if the person:
     (1) is any owner or operator of a solid waste facility;
     (2) owned or operated a solid waste facility at the time of processing, storage, or
  disposal of any solid waste;
     (3) by contract, agreement, or otherwise, arranged to process, store, or dispose of, or
  arranged with a transportet for transport to process, store, or dispose of, solid waste
  owned or possessed by the person, by any other person or entity at:
        (A) the solid waste facility owned or operated by another person or entity that
     contains the solid waste; or
        (B) the site to which the solid waste was transported that contains the solid waste;
     or
     (4) accepts or accepted any solid waste for transport to a solid waste facility or site
  selected by the person. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 8(g)(2) (part).)
  Sec. 361.272. ADMINISTRATIVE ORDERS CONCERNING IMMINENT AND SUB·
STANTlAL ENDANGERMENT. (a) The department or the commission, as appropriate,
may issue an administrative order to a person responsible for solid waste if it appears
that there is an actual or threatened release of solid waste that presents an imminent and
substantial endangerment to the public health and safety or the environment:
     (1) from a solid waste facility at which solid waste is stored, processed, or disposed
  of; or
     (2) at any site at which one or more of those activities concerning solid waste have
  been conducted in the past, regardless of whether the activity was lawful at the time.
  (b) An administrative order may be issued under this section to:
     (1) resirain the person from allowing or continuing the release or threattned release;
  and
     (2) require the person to take any action necessary to provide and implement a cost
  effective and environmentally sound remedial action plan designed to eliminate the
  release or threatened release.
  (c) An administrative order issued under this section shall:
     (1) be delivered to the persons identified by 'he order by certified mail, return receipt
  requested;
     (2) be delivered by hand delivery to the person identified by the order; or
     (3) on failure of delivery of the order by certified mail or hand delivery, be served on
  the persons by publication:
        (A) once in the Texas Register; and
        (B) once in a newspaper of general circulation in each county in which a person
     identified by the order had the person's last known address. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7,
     Secs. 8(g)(l) (part), (2) (part).)
   Sec. 361.273. INJUNCTION AS ALTERNATIVE TO ADMINISTRATIVE ORDER.
The department or commission, as appropriate, may cause a civil suit for injunctive relief
to be brought in a district court in the county in which the actual release is occurring or
threatened release may occur to:
     (1) restrain a person responsible for solid waste under Section 361.271 from allowing
   or continuing the release or threatened release; and
                                             2658
HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE                                                      Ch. 678, § 1
                                                                                     I   381.275
      (2) require the person to take actions necessary to provide and implement a cost
   effective and environmentally sound remedial action plan designed to eliminate the
   release or threatened release. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. S(g)(l) (part).)
   Sec. 361.274. NO PRIOR NOTICE CONCERNING ADMINISTRATIVE ORDER. An
administrative order under Section 361.272 does not require prior notice or an adjudicative
hearing before the department or commission. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. S(g)(l) (part).)
   Sec. 361.275. DEFENSES. (a) A person responsible for solid waste under Section
361.271 is liable under Section 361.272 or 361.273 unless the person can establish by a
preponderance of the evidence that the release or threatened release was caused solely
by:
      (1) an act of God;
      (2) an act of war;
      (3) an act or omission of a third person; or
      (4) any combination of Subdivisions (1), (2), and (3).
   (b) In a defense under Subsection (a)(3), the defendant must establish by a preponder-
ance of the evidence that the defendant:
      (1) exercised due care concerning the solid waste, considering the characteristics of
   the solid waste, in light of all relevant facts and circumstances; and
      (2) took precautions against foreseeable acts or omissiuns of the third person and the
   consequences that could foreseeably result from those acts or omissions.
   (c) The defense under Subsection (a)(3) does not apply if the third person:
      (1) is an employee or agent of the defendant; or
      (2) has a direct or indirect contractual relationship with the defendant and the act or
   omission of the third person occurred in connection with the contractual relationship.
   (d) In Subsection (c)(2), "contractual relationship" includes land contracts, deeds, or
other instruments transferring title or possession of real property.
   (e) A defendant who enters into a contractual relationship as provided by Subsection
(c)(2) is not liable under this subchapter if:
      (1) the sole contractual relationship is acceptance for rail carriage by a common
   carrier under a published tariff; or
      (2) the defendant acquired the real property on which the facility requiring the
   remedial action is located, after the disposal or placement of the hazardous substance
   on, in, or at the facility and the defendant establishes by a preponderance of the
   evidence that:
         (A) the defendant has satisfied Subsection (b);
         (B) at the time the defendant acquired the facility the defendant did not know and
      had no reason to know that a hazaJ'dous substance that is the subject of the release
      or threatened release was disposed of on, in, or at the facility;
         (C) the defendant is a governme1.tal entity that acquired the facility by escheat, by
      othE:r involuntary transfer or acquisition, or by the exercise of the power of eminent
      domain; or
         (D) the defendant acquired the facili~ by inheritance or bequest.
   (f) To demonstrate the condition under Subsection (e)(2)(B), the defendant must have
made, at the time of acquisition, appropriate inquiry into the previous ownership and uses
of the property consistent with good commercial or customary practice in an effort to
minimize liability. In deciding whether the defendant meets this condition, the court shall
consider:
      (1) any specialized knowledge or experience of the defendant;
      (2) the relationship of the purchase price to the valu~ ~ the property if the propert;1
   were uncontaminated;
      (3) commonly known or reasonably ascertainable information about the property;
                                            2659
Ch. 678, § 1                                7lst LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION
t 381.275
      (4) the obvious presence or likely presence of contamination of the property; and
      (5) the defendant's ability to detect the contamination by appropriate inspection.
   (g) This section does not decrease the liability of a previous owner or operator of a
facility who is liable under this chapter. If the defendant obtained actual knowledge of the
release or threatened release of a hazardous substance at a facility at the time the
defendant owned the real property on which the facility is loca4!d and subsequently
transferred ownership of the property to another person without disclosing that knowl-
edge, the defendant is liable and a defense under this section is not available to the
defendant.
   (h) Subsections (e)-(g) do not affect the liability under this chapter of a defendant who,
by an act or omission, caused or contributed to the release or threatened release of a
hazardous substance that is the subject of the action concerning the facility. (V.A.C.S.
Art. 4477-7, Secs. 8(g)(3), (6).)
   Sec. 361.276. APPORTIONMENT OF LIABILiTY. (a) If the release or threatened
release caused by a person's acts or omissions is proved by a preponderance of the
evidence to be divisible, that person is liable only for the elimination of, that release or
threatened release attributable to the person. If the release or threatened release is not
proved to be divisible, persons liable under Section 361.272 or 361.273 are jointly and
severally liable for eliminating the release or threatened release.
   (b) In this section, "divisible" means that the waste released or threatened to be
released has been and is capable of being managed separately under the remedial action
plan~ (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 8(g)(4).)
   Sec. 361.277. JUDGMENT BY STATE AGAINST NONSETTLING PARTY; ACTION
FOR CONTRIBUTION BY NONSETTLING PARTY. (a) If fewer than all of the persons
identified as liable under this subchapter agree with the state to take remedial action to
abate an actual or threatened release of solid waste that is an imminent and substantial
endangerment to the public health and safety or the environment under an administrative
order issued under Section 361.272 or an action filed by the state under this subchapter,
the state may seek a jud~ment against a nonsettling person for the total amount of the
cost of the remedial action minus that amount the settling persons agree to pay or spend.
   (b) In an action for contribution brought by a nonsettling person against a settling
person, the nonsettling person has the burden to prove that the amount of cleanup costs
that a settling person agreed to pay under an agreement with the state is unreasonable
considering the factors under Section 361.343 and the need to undertake timely cleanup
action concerning the release or threatened release. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 8(g)(5).)
   Sec. 361.278. LIABILITY OF ENGINEER OR CONTRACTOR. (a) An engineer or
contractor performing a program of remedial action or cleanup of hazardous waste or
aolid waste under a contract with a state agency or political subdivision of the state is
liable under this subchapter for any negligent act' or omission or for wilful misconduct
that results in an actual or threatened release of hazardous waste or solid waste after the
abandonment or conclusion of the program only to the extent that the endangerment to
public health and safety or the environment is aggravated as a result of the act, omission,
or misconduct.
   (b) In this section, "engineer or contractor" means a person, including the employee or
subcontractor of the person, who performs a contract for evaluation, planning, designing,
engineering, construction, equipment, or auxiliary services in connection w.ith:·
      (1) identifying a hazardous or solid waste site;
      (2) developing a plan to clean up the site; or                          .
                                                                              l  '
      (3) supervising or implementing the plan to clean up the site. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7,
   Sec. 8(i) as added by Ch. 302, Acts 70th Legis., Reg. Sess., 1987.) ... , 1
   Sec. 361.279. CONTRACTS WITH STATE. A state agency contracting for services or
products shall consider whether the person proposing to contract with the state has been
adjudicated during the preceding three-year period to have committed substantive, non-
clerical violations resulting in an actual release of hazardous waste .that ,Presented an
                                            2660                             ' ''
HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE                                                    Ch. 678, § 1
                                                                                   1381.303
imminent and substantial danger to the public health and safety or the environment.
(V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 8(h).) ·
  Sec. 361.280. REMEDIES CUMULATIVE. (a) The remedies under this subchapter are
cumulative of all other remedies.
  (b) This subchapter does not exempt a person from complying with or being subject to
other law. (V.A.C.S. ~rt. 4477-7, Sec. 8(g)(l) (part).)
                    [Sections 361.281-361.300 reserved for expansion]

             SUBCHAPTER J. ENFORCEMENT; EMERGENCY ORDER;
                           CORRECTIVE ACTION
   Sec. 361.301. EMERGENCY ORDER. (a) The department and the commission may
each issue an emergency mandatory or prohibitory order concerning an activity of solid
waste management under its jurisdiction, even if the activity is not covered by a permit, if
the agency determines that an emergency requiring immediate action to protect the public
health and safety or the environment exists.
   (b) The order may be issued without notice and hearing or with notice and hearing the
agency considers practicable under the circumstances.
   (c) If an emergency order is issued under this section without a hearing, the issuing
agency shall set a time and place for a hearing to be held in accordance with the rules of
the board of health or commission to affirm, modify, or set aside the emergency order.
   (d) The requirements of Section 361.088 concerning public notice do not apply to the
hearing, but general notice of the hearing shall be given in accordance with the rules of
the board of health or commission. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 4(e)(10).)
   Sec. 361.302. ISSUANCE OF ORDER BY COMMISSION. (a) The commission may
issue an order to a person requiring compliance with this chapter and prescribing the
corrective action that the person must take to achieve compliance if the person violates:
      (1) the provisions of this chapter concerning solid waste under the commission's
   jurisdiction;
      (2) a rule or order adopted by the commission concerning solid waste under the
   commission's jurisdiction; or
      (3) a solid waste permit or registration issued by the commission under this chapter.
   (b) The order may be issued instead of or in addition to an order under Section 361.252
assessing an administrative civil penalty.
   (c) Judicial review of an order issued under this section is in the district court of the
county in which the alleged violation occurred. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. Sc.)
   Sec. 361.303. CORRECTIVE ACTION. (a) The commission shall require corrective
action for a release of hazardous waste or hazardous waste constituents from a solid
waste management unit at a solid waste processing, storage, or disposal facility that is
required to obtain a permit for the management of hazardous waste and whose permit is
issued after November 8, 1984, regardless of when the waste is placed in the unit.
   (b) The commission shall establish schedules for compliance for the corrective action, if
the corrective action cannot be completed before permit issuance, and shall require
assurances of financial responsibility for completing the corrective action.
   (c) If, before the issuance of a permit, the commission determines that there is or has
been a release of hazardous waste into the environment from a facility required to obtain
a permit in accordance with an approved state program under Section 3006 of the federal
Solid Waste Disposal Act, as amended by the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of
1976, as amended (42 U.S.C. Section 6901 et seq.), the commission may:
      (1) issue an order requiring corrective action or other response measure considered
   necessary to protect human health or the environment; or
      (2) institute a civil action under Section 361.224.
                                           2661
Ch. 678, § 1.                                 71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION
1381.303
  (d) An order issued under this section:
     (1) may include a suspension or revocation of authorization to operate;
     (2) must state with reasonable specificity the nature of the required corrective action
  or other response measure; and                     · '         ·           ·
     (3) must specify a time for compliance.
  (e) If ~ny person named in the order does not comply with the order, the agency issuing
the order may assess a civil penalty in accordance· with this chapter. (V.A.C.S. Art. '
4477-7, Sec. 4(m).)

                    [Sections 361.304-361.320 reserved for expansion]

                SUBCHAPTER K. APPEALS; JOINDER OF PARTIES
                                                  '       '
   Sec. 361.321. APPEALS. (a) A person affected by· a ruling, order, decision, or other
act of the department or the commission may appeal the action by filing a petition in the
district court of Travis County.                                               ·
   (b) A person affected by a ruling, order, decision, ·or other ·act of a county, or of a
political subdivision exercising the authority gran~d by Section 361.165, may appeal by
filing a petition in a district court with jurisdiction in the 'county or political subdivision.
   (c) Except as provided by Section 361.322(b), the petition must be filed not later than
the 30th day after' the date ofthe ruling, order, decision, or other act of the governmental
entity whose action is appealed. Service of citation must be accomplished not later than
the 30th day af.ter the date on which the petition is filed.
   (d) The plaintiff shall pursue the action with reasonable . diligence. The court shall
presume ths.t the action has been abandoned if the plaintiff does riot prosecute the action
within one year after it is filed and shall dismiss the 1mit on a motion for dismissal made
by the governmental entity whose action is appealed unless the plaintiff, after receiving
notice, can show good and sufficient cause for the delay.
   (e) Except as provided by Section 361.322(e), in· ~n appeal from an action of the
department, the commission, a county, or a political subdivision exercising the authority
granted by Section 361.165, the issue is whether the action is invalid, arbitrary, or
unreasonable. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 9(a) (part).)                           ·
   Sec. 361.322. APPEAL OF ADMINISTRATIVE ORDER ISSUED UNDER SECTION
36i.272; JOINDER OF PARTIES. (a) A person filing a petition appealing an administra·
tive order issued under Section 361.272 must join as a party the state agency issuing the
administrative order and may join as a party:         ·              · · ·        ·
      (1) any other person named in the administratiye order; ·and        .
      (2) any other person who is or may be liable for the elimination of t~e actual or
   threatened release of solid waste governed by the administrative order. ·
   (b) The plaintiff shall pursue the action with reasonable diligence. The court shall
presume that the action has been abandoned if the plaintiff does not prosecute the action
within one year after it is filed and shall dismiss the suit on a motion for·dismissal made
by the governmental entity whose action is appealed unless the plaintiff, after receiving
notice, can show good and sufficient cause for the delay.                 ,i •
   (c) The filing of the petition before the 46th day after the date of receipt; hand delivery,
or publication service of the order stays the order as to the appealing) party pending
action by the district court. The filing of the petition does not affect other. enforcement
powers of the department or commission.                                     ·· ·
   (d) The administrative order is final as to a nonappealing party on the· 46th day after
the date of receipt, hand delivery, or publication service of the order by, to, or on the
nonappealing party..
   (e) The district court shall uphold the order if the department or the commission, b·.· a
preponderance of the evidence, proves that:                                                  •
                                             2662
HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE                                                      Ch. 678, § 1
                                                                                     1381.342
      (1) there is an actual or threatened release of solid waste that is an imminent and
   substantial endangerment to the public health and safety or the environment; and
      (2) the person made subject to the administrative order is liable for the elimination of
   the release or threatened release, in whole or in part.
   (f) A person made a party to the appeal may join as a party any other person who is or
may be liable for the elimination of the release or threatened release, but the failure by a
party to file an action for contribution or indemnity does not waive any right under this
chapter or other law.
   (g) In an appeal under this section, the district court on establishing the validity of the
order shall issue an injunction requiring any person named or joined against whom
liability has been established by the department or the commission or other party to
comply with the order.
   (h) As between parties determined to be liable under Subchapter I, the court may, as
equity requires, apportion cleanup costs in accordance with Section 861.348 and grant any
other appropriate relief. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Secs. 9(a) (part), (b)-(g).)
   Sec. 861.823. JOINDER OF PARTIES IN ACTION FILED BY STATE. {a) In an
action brought by the attorney general under Section 861.273 seeking an injunction to
eliminate a release or threatened release, the attorney general shall, and a party may, join
as a party a person reasonably believed to be liable for the release or threatened release
in accordance with Section 861.272.
   (b) Failure of the attorney general or a party to name or join a person as a party is not
a defense to an action against that person for contribution or indemnity.
   (c) In an action brought by the attorney general under Section 361.273, the district
court shall grant relief on the grounds provided by Section 861.322(d), and Sections
861.822(f) and (g) apply to the action. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 10.)

                    [Sections 861.324-861.340 reserved for expansion]

                         SUBCHAPTER L. COST RECOVERY
  Sec. 861.841. COST RECOVERY BY STATE. (a) The state is entitled to recover
reasonable attorney's fees, reasonable costs to prepare and provide witnesses, and
reasonable costs of investigating and assessing the facility or site if it prevails in:
     {l) an appeal of an administrative order issued under Section 361.272 or Section
  361.191;
     (2) an action to enforce such an administrative order;
     (8) a civil suit seeking injunctive relief under Section 861.273; or
     (4) a cost recovery suit under Section 361.190.
  (b) The court shall apportion the costs among liable parties as it determines is equitable
and just.
  (c) Costs recovered by the state under this section shall be:
     (1) remitted to the commission; and
     (2) placed in a separate account in the hazardous waste generation and facility fees
  fund for use by the commission to administer the hazardous waste management
  program. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Secs. 9(h)(l), (2).)
  Sec. 861.342. COST RECOVERY BY APPEALING OR CONTESTING PARTY. If the
court finds that an administrative order referred to by Section 861.841 is frivolous,
unreasonable, or without foundation with respect to a party named by the order, the party
appealing or contesting the order is entitled to recover from the state its reasonable:
     (1) attorney's fees;                             '
     (2) costs to prepare and provide witnesses; and
     {3) costs of studies, analyses, engineering reports, tests, or other projects the court
  finds were necessary to prepare the party's case. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. 9(h)(8).)
                              .             2663
Ch. 678, § 1                                7Ist LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION
1361.343
   Sec. 361.343. APPORTIONMENT OF COSTS. (a) Apportionment of costs for the
elimination of the release or threatened release of solid waste among the persons
responsible 'for solid waste under Section 361.271 shall be made according to:
     (1) the relationship between the parties' actions in storing, processing, and disposing
   of solid waste and the remedy required to eliminate the release or threatened release;
    (2) the volume of solid waste each party is responsible for at the solid waste facility
  or site to the extent that the costs of the remedy are based on the volume of solid waste
  present;
    (3) consideration of toxicity or other waste characteristics if those characteristics
  affect the cost to eliminate the release or threatened release; and
      (4) a party's cooperation with state agencies, its cooperation or noncooperation with
   the pending efforts to eliminate the release or threatened release, or a party's actions
   concerning storing, processing, or disposing of solid waste, as well as the d!3gree of
   care that the party exercised.                                            ·    .
   (b) The apportionment of costs only adjusts the rights of parties identified by Section
361.271 and does not affect a person's liability to the state. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec.
ll(a).)
  Sec. 361.344. COST RECOVERY BY LIABLE PARTY OR THIRD PARTY. (a) A
person subject to a court injunction or an administrative order issued under this chapter,
or a third person identified by Section 361.192(c) who acts to eliminate a release or
threatened release, in addition to having the right to file an action for contribution or
indemnity, or both, in an appeal proceeding or in an action brought by the attorney
general, may bring suit in a district court to recover costs incurred to eliminate the
release or threatened release and other costs as the court, in its discretion, considers
reasonable.
  (b) Venue for the suit is:
     (I) in the county in which the release or threatened release is or was located; or
     (2) in any other county in which venue is proper under Chapter 15, Civil Practice and
  Remedies Code.
  (c) To recover costs under this section in a proceeding that is not an appeal proceeding
or an action brought by the attorney general under this subchapter, the person seeking
cost recovery must have made reasonable attempts to notify the person against whom
cost recovery is sought:
    (1) of the existence of the release or threatened release; and
    (2) that the person seeking cost recovery intended to take steps to eliminate the
  release or threatened release.
  (d) The court shall determine the amount of cost recovery according to the criteria
prescribed by Section 361.343.
  (e) A fact determination or ruling by a district court ir{ an appeal of an administrative
order under Section 361.322 is not res judicata or coH~teral estoppal as to an issue
brought in a proceeding under this section concerning a p~rty not joined in the appeal.
(V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Secs. ll(b), (c).)                      ·
  Sec. 361.345. CREATION OF RIGHTS. Subchapter I and Section 361.344 and the
enforcement by the department or the commission of that subchapter and section do not:
    (1) create rights or causes of action on behalf of a person other than those expressly
  stated by this chapter; or
    (2) change common law or a rule of decision except as limited by this chapter to
  actions by the department or the commission to eliminate an actual release or threat-
  ened release of solid waste that is an imminent and substantial endangerment to the
  public health and safety or the environment. (V.A.C.S. Art. 4477-7, Sec. llb.)
                                           2664                .
HEALTH AND SAFETY CODE                                                  Ch. 678, § 16
The changes made by this Act to Section 3(d) are intended to be nonsubstantive and do
not affect the requirements for executing a written directive or the information that
should be included in a written directive.
   SECTION 13. REPEALER. The following Jaws are repealed:
     (1) the following articles and Acts, as compiled in Vernon's Texas Civil Statutes:
   165-2; 165-3; 180; 181; 182; 182a; 186; 190; 190a; 190a-1; 190a-2; 190b; 190c;
   190d; 190d-l; 190e; 190f; 190g; 190g-l; 190g-2; 190g-3; 190g-4; 190h; 190i; 190j;
   191; 192b; 192-2; 192-3; 192-4; 912a-l; 912a-2; 912a-3; 912a-4; 912a-5; 912a-6;
   912a-7; 912a-8; 912a-9; 912a-10; 912a-11; 912a-12; 912a-13; 912a-14; 912a-15;
   912a-16; 912a-17; 912a-18; 912a-19; 912a-20; 912a-21; 912a-22; 912a-23; 912a-24;
   912a-25; 912a-26; 912a-26a; 912a-27; 912a-28; 912a-29; 912a-30; 912a-31; 912a-32;
   912a-33; 912a-34; 930a-l; 931b-l; 93lc; 969c; 969c-1; 969c-2; 1015q; 1070a; 1071;
   1072; 1073; 1074; 1075; 1146A; 1269j-10; 1432c; 1432d; 1432e; 1432f; 1432g; 1436c;
   1528j; 2338-la; 235la-6; 2351a-8; 2351a-9; 2351f-l; 2351f-2; 235lf-3; 235lg-1;
   2368a.6; 2372i; 2372t; 2372ee; 3196a-1; 3196c; 3196c-1; 320la; ::>201a-l; 3201a-2;
   3201a-2.1; 320la-3; 3201a-4; 3955; 3956; 3957; 3958; 3959; 3959a; 3960; 3961; 3962;
   3963; 3964; 3965; 3966; 3967; 3968; 3969; 3970; 3971; 3972; 3972.l; 3972.2; 3972.3;
   3972b; 3972c; 4414b; 4414c; 4418f-l; 4418g-2; 4418g-3; 4418h; 4419b-l; 4419b-1.5;
   4419b-2; 4419c; 4419g; 4419h; 4420a; 4420b; 4421; 4436; 4436a-2; 4436a-3; 4436a-4;
   4436b; 4437; 4437a; 4437b; 4437c; 4437c-1; 4437c-2; 4437d; 4437e; 4437e-1;
   4437e-2; 4437e-3; 4437f; 4437f-1; 4437f-2; 4437f-3; 4437g; 4437h; 4438a; 4438b;
   4438c; 4438d; 4438e; 4438f; 4442a; 4442c; 4443a; 4446; 4447d; 4447d-1; 4447d-2;
   4447e; 4447e-1; 4447e-2; 4447f; 4447i; 4447j; 4447k; 44471; 4447n; 44470; 44470-l;
   4447p; 4447q; 4447r; 4447s; 4447t; 4447u; 4447v; 4447w; 4447x; 4447y; 4474; 4475;
   4476; 4476-la; 4476-5; 4476-5a; 4476-5b; 4476-5d; 4476-5e; 4476-5f; 4476-5g;
   4476-6b; 4476-7; 4476-8; 4476-9; 4476-10; 4476-lOb; 4476-lOc; 4476-11; 4476-18;
   4476-13a; 4476-14; 4476-15; 4476-15a; 4476-15b; 4476-15d; 4476-16; 4476a; 4477;
   4477c; 4477e; 4477f; 4477-1; 4477-lc; 4477-2; 4477-5; 4477-5a; 4477-5b; 4477-6;
   4477-6a; 4477-6b; 4477-7; 4477-7a; 4477-7c; 4477-7d; 4477-7e, as added by Chapters
   162, 406, and 810, Ar.ts of the 70th Leg., R.S., 1987; 4477-7f; 4477-8; 4477-Sa;
   4477-9a, Articles II and III and Section l .01; 4477-9b; 4477-10; 4477-11; 4477-12;
   4477-20; 4477-30; 4477-40; 4477-41; 4477-50; 4477-60; 4477-70; 4477-80; 4478;
   4478a; 4479; 4480; 4481; 4482; 4483; 4484; 4485; 4486; 4487; 4488; 4489; 4490;
   4491; 4492; 4493; 4493a; 4494; 4494a; 4494b; 4494c; 4494c-l; 4494d; 4494e; 4494f;
   4494g; 4494h; 4494i; 4494i-1; 4494j; 4494k; 44941; 4494m; 4494m-1; 4494n; 4494n-1;
   4494n-2; 4494n-3; 44940; 4494p; 4494r; 4494r-1; 4494r-2; 4494r-2.1; 4494r-3;
   4494r-4; 4494r-5; 4494s; 4494~ 4512.8; 4583; 4583a; 4584; 4585; 4585A; 4586; 4587; 4589;
   4590; 4590.1; 4590-2; 4590-4; 4590-5; 4590-6; 4590f; 4590f-1; 4590h; 4596d; 5182b;
   5182c; 5221c; 556lcc; 556lc-1; 556lc-2; 5561c-2a; 5561c-3; 6145a; 6145b; 6145c; 8876;
   9002; 9013; 9201; 9202; and 9203.
     (2) Subchapter D, Chapter 76, Parks and Wildlife Code.
     (3) Chapter 301, Acts of the 70th Legislature, Re~lar Session, 1987 (designated by
   Vernon's Texas Session Law Service as Article 1528,J-1, but printed in Vernon's Texas
   Civil Statutes as Article 1527j-1); and Section 9, Chapter 236, Acts of the 70th
   Legislature, Regular Session, 1987.
   SECTION 14. LEGISLATIVE INTENT OF NO SUBSTANTIVE CHANGE. This Act
is enacted under Article III, Section 43, of the Texas Constitution. This is intended as a
recodification only, and no substantive change in the Jaw is intended by this Act.
   SECTION 15. EFFECTIVE DATE. This Act takes effect September 1, 1989.
   SECTION 16. EMERGENCY. The importance of this legislation and the crowded
condition of the calendars in both houses create an emergency and an imperative public
necessity that the constitutional rule requiring bills to be read on three several days in
each house be suspended, and this rule 1s hereby suspended.
   Passed by the House on April 27, 1989, by a non-record vote; and that the House
        concurred In Senate amendments to H.B. No. 2136 on May 18, 1989, by a
        non-record vote; passed by the Senate, with amendments, on May 16, 1989, by a
        viva-voce vote.
   Approved June 14, 1989.
   Effective Sept. 1, 1989.
                                          3165
TAB 2
Ch. 702, § 1                                    71et LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION

    (5)   the   Texas Juvenile Probation Commission;
    (6)   the   Texas Department of Human Services;
    (7)   the   Texas Department of Corrections;
    (8)   the   Texas Employment Commission;
    (9)   the   Texas Commission on Alcohol and Drug Abuse,·
    (10) the Texas Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation,· and
    (11) the Texas Department of Health.
   SECTION 2. The importance of this legislation and the crowded condition of the
calendars in both houses create an emergency and an imperative public neressity that the
constitutional rule requiting bills to be read on three several days in each house be
suspended, and this rule is hereby suspended, and that this Act take effect and be in force
from and after its passage, and it is so enacted.
   Passed the Senate on May 9, 1989, by the following vote: Yeas 31, Nays O; passed the
       House on May 22, 1989, by the following vote: Yeas 141, Nays 1, one present not
       voting.
  Approved June 14, 1989.
   Effective June 14, 1989.

                                         CHAPTER 703
                                         S.B. No. 1502
                                              AN ACT
relating to regulation of hazardous substances and solid waste.
  Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Texas:
  SECTION 1. Section 2, Solid Waste Disposal Act (Article 4477-'/, Vernon's Texas Civil
Statutes), is amended to read as follows:
  Sec. 2. DEFINITIONS. Aa used in this Act, unless the context requires a different
definition:
     (1) "Administratively complete" means that a complete permit application form, as
  well as the report and fees required to be submitted with a permit application, have
  been submitted to the department or the commission and the permit application is ready
  for technical review in accordance with the rules of the department or commission.
     (2) "Apparent recharge zone" means that recharge zone designated on maps pre-
  pared or compiled by, and located in the offices of, the commission.
     (8) "Board of health" means the Texas Board of Health.
     (4) "Class I industrial solid waste" means any industrial solid waste or mixture of
  industrial solid wastes which because of its concentration or physical or chemical
  characteristics is toxic, corrocsive, flammable, a strong sensitizer or irritant, a generator
  of sudden pressure l>y decomposition, heat, or other means and may pose a substantial
  present or potential danger to human health or the environment when improperly
  processed, stored, transported, or otherwise managed, including hazardous industrial
  waste.
     (5) "Commission" means the Texas Water Commission.
     (6) "Commissioner" means the Commissioner of Health.
     (7) "Composting" means the controlled biological decomposition of organic solid
  waste under aerobic conditions.
     (8) "Department" means the Texas Department of Health.
     (9) "Disposal" means the discharge, deposit, injection, dumping, spilling, leaking, or
  placing of any solid waste or hazardous waste (whether containerized or uncontainer-
                                               8212
Ch. 703, § 1                                71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION

    community and institutional activities, but does not include: (i) solid or dissolved
    material in domestic sewage, or solid or dis1:1olved material :n irrigation return flows,
    or industrial discharges subject to regulation by permit issued pursuant to Chapter
    26, Water Code; (ii) soil, dirt, rock, sand and other natural or man-made inert solid
    materials used to fill land if the object of the fill is to make the land suitable for the
    construction of surface improvements; or (iii) waste materials which result from
    activities associated with the exploration, development, or production of oil or gas or
    geothermal resources, and any other substance or material regulated by the Railroad
    Commission of Texas pursuant to Section 91.101, Natural Resources Code. For the
    purposes of Sections B(g), 11, and llb, the term "solid waste" shall also include
    hazardous substances, as they are defined by this Act.
    (31) [~] "Solid waste facility" means all contiguous land, and structures, other
  appurtenances, and improvements on the land, used for processing, storing, or dispos-
  ing of solid waste. A facility may be publicly or privately owned and consist of several
  processing, storage, or disposal operational units; e.g., one or more landfills, surface
  impoundments, or combinations of them.
     (32) ((31.)] "Solid waste technician" means an individual who is trained in the
  practical aspect.s of the design, operation, and maintenance of a solid waste facility in
  accordance with standards, rules, or orders established by the commission or board of
  health.
     (33) [~] "Storage" means the holding of solid waste for a temporary period, at
  the end of which the solid waste is processed, disposed of, or stored elsewhere.
  SECTION 2. Subsection (h), Section 3, Solid Waste Disposal Act (Article 4477-7,
Vernon's Texas Civil Statutes), is amended to read as follows:
  (h) The department and department of water resources shall submit a report to the
presiding officers of the legislature and the governor on January 1, 1987, and each two
years thereafter, providing the following information:
     (1) a summary of a performance report of the imposed hazardous waste permit and
  disposal fees, if the fees are approved by the legislature, and related activities to
  determine the appropriateness of the fee structure;
     (2) an evaluation of progress made in accomplishing the public policy of the state in
  regard to the preference of waste management methods as set forth in Section (3)(e)(l)
  of this Act;
     (3) projections, [~r a peried ef three years frem the due date ef the repert,] of waste
  volumes by type of waste, disposition of wastes, and remaining capacity or capacity
  utilized for the treatment and disposal of the wastes. The commission [department
  and the department ef water reeeuroee] shall adopt rules requiring persons who
  generate, store, treat, or dispose of hazardous waste to respond to a periodic survey
  [1nd1mit te the state agenoy ef apprepriate juriediotien en an annual baeie reperts]
  detailing projections of waste volumes generated and handled, assumptions t!Bed as
  the bases for these projections, disposition, and remaining capacity, as it relates to a
  surveyed [eaeh] facility owned or operated by such persons, in order that the commis·
  sion [~] may develop its [their] report. [The first report shall be sub
  mitted by Maroh 11 1996, and subsequent reperte shall be submitted annually by Mar-eh
  1 thereafter,]
  SECTION 8. Subsections (a), (b), (c), (f), and (h), Section 9, Solid Waste Disposal Act
(Article 4477-7, Vernon's Texas Civil Statutes), are amended to read as follows:
  (a) A person affected by any ruling, order, decision, or other act of the department or
the commission may appeal by filing a petition in a district court of Travis County. A
person affected by any ruling, order, decision, or other act of a county, or of a political
subdivision exercising the authority granted in Section 6 of this Act, may appeal by filing
a petition in a district court having jurisdiction in the county or political subdivision.
Except as provided in Section 9(b), the petition must be filed within 30 days after the date
of the action, ruling, order, or decision of the governmental entity complained of. Service
of citation must be accomplished within 30 days after the date the petition is filed. (~
peraen filing a petitien appealing an administrative erder issued pursuant te Seotien S(g)
                                           3216
71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION                                              Ch. 703, § 3
mYst join as parties the state agenoy isst1ing the administrative order and may join as
parties any ether person named in the administrative order and any other person whe is
er may be liable f.er the elimination of the a11tt1al or threatened release gf solid waste
governed by the administrative order,] The plaintiff shall pursue his action with reason-
able diligence. If the plaintiff does not prosecute his action within one year after the
action is filed, the court shall presume that the action has been abandoned. The court shall
dismiss the suit on a motion for dismissal made by the governmental entity whose action
is appealed, unless the plaintiff, after receiving due notice, can show good and sufficient
cause for the delay. Except as provided in Section 9(c), in an appeal from an action of the
department, the commission, a county, or a political subdivision exercising the authority
granted in Section 6 of this Act, the issue is whether the action is invalid, arbitrary or
unreasonable.
  (b) Any person subject to an administrative order under Section 8(g) may appeal
the order by filing a petition [The filing of a petition appealing an order isrmed pt1ret1ant
to Seotion S(g)] within 45 days after the date of receipt, hand delivery, or publication
service of the order [shall stay the administrative order as te the appealing party pending
aotion by the distriot 11ot1rt]. The filing of a motion for rehearing under the Adminis-
trative Procedure and Texas Register Act (Article 6252-13a, Vernon~ Texas Civil
Statutes) shall not be a prerequisite/or an appeal of the order. The person appealing
the order must join the state agency issuing the administrative order as a party and
may join as parties any other person named as a responsible party in the administra-
tive order and any other person who is or may be liable for the elimination of the
actual or threatened release of solid waste or hazardous substances governed by the
administrative order. The filing of the petition shall not prevent the state agency
issuing the administrative order from proceeding with the remedial action program
under Section 13 of this Act unless the court enjoins the remedial action under its
general equity jurisdiction. [However, the filing of the petition shall not affeot any other
enforGement powers gf the department or departm~nt gf water resot1r11e1h] An adminis-
trative order [isst1ed pt1rst1ant to Seotion S(g)] shall become final as to non-appealing
parties 45 days after the date of receipt, hand delivery, or publication service of the order
by, to, or upon such non-appealing parties.
  (c)(J) The district court shall uphold an administrative order issued pursuant to
Section S(g) if the commission [department or department of water resot1r11es, by a
preponderange ef the evidenoe1] proves by a preponderance of the evidence that:
        (A) [(1) that] there is an actual or threatened release of solid waste or hazardous
     substances that is an imminent and substantial endangerment to the public health
     and safety or the environment; and
        (B) [(2) that] the person made subject to the administrative order is liable for the
     elimination of the release or threatened release, in whole or in part.
    (2) If the appropriateness of the selected remedial action is contested in the
  appeal of the administrative order, the remedial action shall be upheld unless the
  court determines that the remedy is arbitrary or unreasonable.
  (f) In appeals of an administrative order issued pursuant to Section 8(g), the district
court upon establishing the validity of the order, shall issue an injunctior. requiring all
persons named or joined against whom liability has been established by the department or
the commission [department of water resot1r11es] or any other party to comply with the
terms of the administrative order.
  (h)(l) In appeals of an administrative order issued pursuant to Section S(g) or Section
13(g)(2) of this Act, in any action to enforce such an administrative order, in civil suits
seeking injunctive relief under Section 8(g)(l) of this Act, and in cost recovery suits under
Section 13(g)(3) or Section 13(g)(4) of this Act, the state, if it prevails, shall be entitled to
recover from parties against whom liability has b.aen established its reasonable attorney's
fees, its reasonable costs of preparing and providing witnesses, and its reasonable costs
of having investigated and assessed the facility or site. The court shall apportion such
costs among liable parties as it determines is equitable and just. All such costs recovered
by the state pursuant to Section 13 shall be remitted to the commission and placed in
a separate account of the hazardous waste disposalfee/und. All other costs recovered
                                             3217
Ch. 703, § 3                                71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION

by the state under Section 8(g) shall be remitted to the commission and placed in a
separate account of the hazardous waste generation and facility fees fund.
      (2) In the event an appeal or third party claim is found by the court to be
  frivolous, unreasonable, or without foundation, the court may assess damages
   against the party bringing such appeal or third party claim in an amount not to
   exceed twice the costs incurred by the state or the third party defendant, including
   reasonable attorney's fees, reasonable costs of preparing and providing witnesses,
   and reasonable costs of studies, analyses, engineering reports, tests, or other
   projects the court finds were necessary/or the preparation of the party's case. [CG&t&
   Jel!9\'ered by the state YRder SubdivisiGR (1) 9f this subse0tiGn shall be n1mitted tG the
   G9mmissi9n a11d plaoed iR the hazardGYS waste generatiGn and faoility fees fund tG be
   used by the 119mmissiGR f9r the administratiGn 9f the hazardGus waste managemeRt
   pl!Ggram. All amGYRts re1191Je1?ed under this subseotiGR shall be pla0ed by the oGmmis
   siGR in a separate a11119unt within the ha;i;ard911s waste generatiGn and faoility fees
   fwld.]
      (3) In the event the state's orders enumerated under Subdivision (1) of this subsection
   are found by the court to be frivolous, unreasonable, or without foundation as
   regarding any party named in the order, such party appealing or contesting the order
   shall be entitled to recover from the state its reasonable attorney's fees, its reasonable
   costs of preparing and providing witnesses, and its reasonable costs of studies,
   analyses, engineering report.a, tests, or other projects the court finds were necessary
   for the preparation of the party's case.
   SECTION 4. Subsections (c) and (d), Section lla, Solid Waste Disposal Act (Article
4477-7, Vernon's Texas Civil StatuU>'l), are amended to read as follows:
   (c) The hazardous waste disposal fee fund shall consist of money collected by the
commission from fees imposed on the operator of a solid waste facility for disposal of
hazardous waste under Section 12 of this Act, from interest and penalties imposed under
Section 14a of this Act for late payment of a disposal fee or late filing of a report, and
from money paid by a liable party for facility cleanup and maintenance under Subsection
(m) [(g)] of Section 13 of this Act. In addition, the interest received from the
investment of this fund, in accounts under the charge of the treasurer, shall be
credited to the hazardous waste disposal fee fund on a pro rata basis. The com mis·
sion may use the money credited to the account from interest received from the
investment of the fund for only those purposes specified in Subsection (d) of this
section.
   (d) The commission may use the money collected and deposited in the fund under
Subsection (c) of this section only for:
      (1) necessary and appropriate removal and remedial action at sites at which solid
   [hazardGus] waste or hazardous substances have been disposed if funds from a liable
   party, independent third party, or the federal government are not sufficient for the
   removal or remedial action;
      (2) necessary and appropriate maintenance of removal and remedial actions for the
   expected life of those actions if funds from a liable party have been collected and
   deposited in the fund for that purpose or if funds from a liable party, Independent third
   party, or the federal government are not sufficient for the maintenance; and
      (3) expenses related to complying with the federal Comprehensive Environmental
   Response, Compensation, and Liabilit.y Act of 1980 (42 U.S.C. Section 9601 et seq.), the
   federal Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of 1986, and Sections 8(g) and
   13 of this Act.                                                                     ·
   SECTION 5. Section 13, Solid Waste Disposal Act (Article 4477-7, Vernon's Texas
Civil Statutes), is revised to read as follows:
   Sec. 13. IDENTIFICATION, ASSESSMENT, AND CLEANUP OF HAZARDOUS
WASTE FACILITIES. (a) The commission shall annually publish an updated state
registry identifying, to the extent feasible, every facility that may constitute an
imminent and substantial endangerment to public health and safety or the environ·
ment due to a release or threatened release of hazardous substances into the environ·
                                           3218
71et LEGISLATURE-REGULAU SESSION                                           Ch. 703, § 5
 ment. The registry shall identify the relative priority for action at each listed
facility. The relative priority for action at facilities listtd on the registry shall be
 periodically reviewed and revised by the commission, as necessary to accurately
 reflect the need/or action at the facilities. For thtJ purposes of this section, "facility"
 means (1) any building, structure, installation, equipment, pipe, or pipeline (includ-
ing any pipe into a sewer or publicly owned treatment works, well, pit, pond, lagoon,
impoundment, ditch, landfill, storage container, motor vehicle, rolling stock, or
aircraft), or (2) any site or area where a hazardous substance has been deposited,
stored, disposed of, or placed or otherwise come to be located,· but does not include
 any consumer product in con.'lumer use or any vessel.
   (b) The executive director may conduct investigations of facilities which are listed
 on the state registry, or which it has reason to believe should be included on the state
registry, in accordance with Section 7 of this Act. If there is a reasonable basis to
 believe there may be a release or threatened release of a hazardous substance at a
facility, the executive director may submit requests for information and requests for
 the production of documents to any person who has or may have information' or
documents relevant to:
      (1) the identification, nature, or quantity of materials that have been generated,
   treated, stored, or disposed of at a facility or transported to a facility;
      (2) the identification of soils, ground water, or surface water at a facility that
   have been or may be affected by an actual or threatened release of a hazardous
   substance;
      (3) the nature or extent of a release or threatened release of a hazardous
   substance at or from a facility; or
      (4) the ability of a person to pay for or to perform a remedial action.
   If the requested information or documents are not produced in a timely manner,
 the commission may issue an order directing compliance with the requests for
information or production of documents. Information or documents requested
under this subsection shall be public records, except that, if a showing satisfactory to
 the commission is made by the owner of the records that the records would divulge
 trade secrets if made public, then the commission shall consider the copied records as
confidential. Nothing in this subsection .'/hall require the commission to consider the
composition or characteristics of hazardous substances being processed, stored, dis·
posed of, or otherwise handled to be held confidential. The commission shall promul-
gate rules regarding the provision of notice and an opportunity for a hearing before
 the commission on whether the requested injormaf.ion or documents should be
produced.
   (c) Prior to the listing of a facility on the state registry, the executive director shall
first determine whether the potential endangerment to public health and safety or the
environment at the facility can be resolved by the present owner or operator under
 the federal Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1978 (42 U.S.C. 8901) or by
some or all of the potentially responsible parties identified in Section B(g), pursuant
 to an agreed administrati?Je order issued by the commission. If the potential endan-
germent to public health and safety or the environment can be resolved in such a
manner, the facility shall not be listed on the state registry. Notice of the approach
selected to resolve the apparent endangerment to health and public safety or the
environment and the fact that this action is being taken in lieu of listing the facility
on the state registry shall be published in the Texas Register. If after reasonable
efforts the executive director determines that the potential endangerment to public
health and safety or the environment cannot be resolved by either of these approaches,
 the executive director shall evaluate the facility to determine whether the site exceeds
 the commission~ minimum criteria for listing on the state regisi ry. These minimum
criteria shall be promulgated by rule. The executive director sltall also evaluate the
facility to determine whether it is eligible for listing on the federal National Priorities
List. The commission shall proceed under this section only if, based on information
available to the executive director, the facility is eligible for listing on the state
registry but not eligible for the federal National Priorities List.
                                           3219
Ch. 703, § 5                              7lst LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION

     (1) Once the executive director has determined that the facility is eligible for
 listing on the state registriJ, the commission shall publish in the Texas Register and
 in a newspaper of general circulation in the county in which the facility is located a
 notice of intent to list the facility on the state registry. The notice shall at least
 specify the name and location of tlte facility, the general nature of the potential
 endangerment to public health and safety or the environment as determined by
 information available to the executive director at that time, and the duties and
 restrictions imposed by Subsection (c)(3) . of this section. The notice also shall
 provide that interested parties may do either or both of the following: (A) submit
 written comments to the commission relative to the proposed listing of the facility,·
 or (B) request a public meeting to discuss the proposed listing by submitting a
  request within 30 days of issi;ance of the notice.
    (2) Once the facility is determined tCJ be eligible for listing on the state registry,
  the executive director shall make all reasonable efforts to identify all potentially
 responsible parties/or remediation of the facility. Concurrent with the publication
 of general notice in accordance with Subdivision (1) of this subsection, the executive
 director shall provide to e3.ch identified potentially responsible party direct, written
 notification of the proposed listing of the facility on the state registry and of the
 procedures for requesting a public meeting to discuss the listit.:i and the inform.a·
  tion included in the general notice as required by Subdivision (1) of thi'l subsection.
  Written notifications under this subsection shall be by certified mail, return receipt
 requested, by mailing notice to each named responsible party at the party 8 last
 known address.
    (3) If a public meeting is requested regarding the proposed listing of a facility on
  the state registry, the commission shall publish general notice of the date, time, and
 location of the public meeting in the Texas Register and in the same newspaper in
 which the notice of the opportunity to request the public meetin,Q was published.
  The public meeting notice shall be provided at least 30 days in advance of the
 meeting. Notice of the meeting also shall be provided by certified mail, return
 receipt requested, to all identified potentially responsible parties at the parties' last
 known addresses. Nonreceipt of any notice mailed to a potentially responsible
 party pursuant to this subdivision or Subdivision (2) of this subsection shall in no
 way affect the responsibilities, duties, or liabilities imposed on the party. Contem·
 poraneously with the issuance of notice of the public meeting, the executive director
 shall make available to all interested parties the public records he has regarding the
 facility. For the purposes of providing this information, the executive director
 shall provide a brief summary of the public records he has and make these public
 records available for inspection and copying during regular business hours.
    (4) The public meetings will be legislative in nature and not contested case
 hearings under the Administrative Procedure and Texas Register Act (Article
 6252-13a, Vernons Texas Civil Statutes). The meeting shall be held/or the purpose
 of obtaining additional information regarding the facility relative to the eligibility
 of the facility for listing on the state registry and the identification of potentially
 respon:Jible partfos.
    (5) Subsequent to the public meeting or after opportunity to request a public
 meeting has passed, the commission shall file or cause to be filed an affidavit or
 notice in the real property records of the county in which a facility is located
 identifying the facility as one proposed for listing on the state registry, unless the
 executive director determines, based on information presented at the public meet·
 ing, that efforts to list the facility on the state registry should not be pursued.
    (6)(A) Subsequent to the public meeting or after opportunity to request a pubtic
 meeting has passed, but prior to any listing of the facility on the state registry, the
 commission shall allow all identified potentially responsible parties the opportuni·
 ty to fund or conduct, if appropriate, a remedial investigation/feasibility study, or
 similar study as approved by the executive director, for the facility. The potentially
 responsible parties shall have 90 days from the date of the issuance of notice of the
 opportunity to request a public meeting to make a good faith offer to conduct the
                                         3220
71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION                                         Ch. 703, § 5
 study. If a good faith offer from all or some of the potentially responsible parties is
 received by the commission within 90 days, those making the offer sl:all have an
 additional 60 days within which to negotiate an agreed administrative order from
  the commission, which shall include a scope of work. The commission shall not
 require the participating potentially responsible parties to agree to perform the
 remedial action or admit liability for the facility remediation in this agreed
 administrative order.
       (B) If no potentially responsible party makes a good faith offer to conduct the
    remedial investigation/feasibility study or similar study as approved by the
    executive director or .if the participating potentially responsible parties fail to
    conduct or complete an· approved study, the commission is authorized to conduct
    or complete the study using funds from the hc;,zardous waste disposal fee fund.
       (C) To encourage potentially responsible parties to perform the remedial inves-
    tigation/feasibility Etudy or other similar study as approved by the executive
    director, no costs for commission oversight of the study may be assessed against
    those parties who fund or perform the study. Nonparticipating pote.ttially
    responsible parties who are ultimately determined to be liable for remediation of
    the facility under this Act or who subsequentll' enter into an agreed ordu relative
    to the remediation of the facility may be assessed up to the full costs fot
    commission oversight of the study process. If all potentially responsible parties
    participate or agree to fund the remedial investigation/feasibility study or other
    similar study, all commission oversight costs shall be borne by the hazardous
    waste disposal fee fund.
       (D) Once the executive director has determin 1u;! that a facility is eligible for
    listing on the state registry, no person shall perform at the facility any partial or
    total removal activities except as authorized by the executive director in appropri-
    ate circumstances after notice and opportunity for comment to all other poten-
    tially responsible parties. The commission may develop rules determining what
    constitutes an appropriate circumstance to take removal action under this
    paragraph. Authorization by the executive director to conduct a partial or total
    removal action shall not constitute a final determination of the party$ ultimate
    liability for remediation of the facility, nor a determination of divisibility.
    (7)(A) Once the facility is determined to be eligibl1?for listing on the state registry,
 the owner or operator of the facility must provide the executive director with
 written notice of any substantial change in use of the facility at least 60 days before
 the change in use is made. Notice of a prnposed substantial change in use shall be
 in writing, addressed to the executive director, provided by certified mail, return
 receipt requested, and shall include a brief description of the proposed change in
 use. A substantia! change in use shall be defined by rule and shall include but not
 be limited to actions such as the erection of a building or other structure at the
 facility, the use of the facility for agricultural production, the paving of the facility
 for use as a roadway or parking lot, and the creation of a park or other public or
 private recreational use on the facility.
       (B) If, within 30 days of the notice, the executive director determines that the
    proposed substantial change in use will interfere significantly with a proposed or
    ongoing remedial investigation/feasibility study, or similar study approved by
    the executive director, or expose the public health and safety or the environment
    to a significantly increased threat of harm, then he shall notify the owner or
    operator of his determination. Once the determination is made and notification
    given, the owner or operator shall not proceed with the proposed substantial
    change in use. The owner or operator may request a hearing before the commis-
    sion on whether the determination should be modified or set aside by submitting
    a request within 30 days of receipt of the executive director$ determination. If a
    hearing is requested, the commission shall initiate the hearing within 45 days of
    the receipt of the request. The hearing shall be conducted in accordance with the
    Administrative Procedure and Texas Register Act (Article 6252-13a, Vernon$
                                          3221
Ch. 703, § 5                              71et LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION

     Texas Civil Statutes). The executive director's determination shall become unap-
     pealable 30 days after issuance if a hearing is not requested.
    (8) Within a reasonable time following the completion of the remedial investiga·
  tionlfeasibility study or other similar study, if required, the executive director shall
 select a proposed remedial action. Subsequent to its selection of a proposed
 remedial action, the commission shall hold a public meeting to discuss the proposed
 action. The commission shall publish notice of the meeting in the Texas Register
 and in a newspaper ofgeneral circulation in the county where the facility is located
 at least 45 days prior to the public meeting. The notice shall provide information
 regarding the proposed remedial action and the date, time, and place of the
 meeting. The commission shall also mail the same information to each potentially
 responsible party by certified mail, return receipt requested, at each party's last
 known address at least 45 days prior to the publii: meeting Contemporaneously
 with the issuance of notice of the public meeti1~g, the executive director shall make
 available to all interested parties the public records he has regarding the facility.
 For purposes of providing this information, the executive director shall provide a
 brief summary of the public records he has and make these public records available
 for inspection and copying during regular business hours. Nonreceipt of any notice
 mailed to a potentially responsible party pursuant to this subdivision shall in no
 1;ay affect the responsibilities, duties, 01· liabilities imposed on any such party.
    (9) The public meeting shall bt legislative in nature and not conducted as a
 contested case hearing under the Administrative Procedure and Texas Register Act
 (Article 6252-13a, Vernon's Texas Civil Statutes). The meeting shall be held for the
 purpose :if obtaining additional information regarding the facility and the identifi·
 cation of additional potentially responsible parties. Those in attendance may
 present their comments on the proposed remedial action, and the executive director
 may revise its proposed remedial action in light of the presentations.
    (JO)(A) Subsequent to the public meeting on the proposed remedial action, the
 commission shall provide all identified potentially responsible parties an opportu-
 nity to fund or perform the proposed remedial action. The potentially responsible
 parties shall have 60 days from the date of the public meeting in which to make a
 good faith offer to perform or fund the proposed remedial action. If a good faith
 offer is made by all or some of the potentially responsible parties within the 6{1-day
 period, then these parties will have an additional 60 days to negotiate an aoreed
 administrative order from the commission, which shall include a scope of u ork.
 The commission shall not require an admission of liability in the agreed adr.1 inis·
 trative order.
       (B) To encourage potentially responsible parties to perform the remedial ac·
    tion, no costs for commission oversight of the remedial action may be assessed
    against those parties who fund or perform the remedial action. Nonpartic·
    ipating potentially responsible parties who are ultimately determined to be liable
    for remediation of the facility may be assessed up to the full costs/or commission
    oversight of the remedial action. If all potentially responsible parties conduct or
    fund the remedial action, all commission oversight costs shall be borne by the
    hazardous waste disposal fee fund. Participation in the remedial action does not
    relieve those who did not conduct or fund the remedial investigation/feasibility
    study or other similar study approved by the executive director from paying their
    portion of the oversight costs of that phase of the remediation.
       (C) The executive director may authorize a potentially responsible party to
    conduct a partial remedial action at a portion of the facility if the executive
    director determines that the release or threatened release is divisible after notice
    and opportunity for comment to all other potentially responsible parties. For
    purposes of this section, "divisible" means that the hazardous substance released
    or threatened to be released is capable of being managed separately under the
    remedial action plan. A determination of divisibility by the executive director
    shall have no res judicata or collateral estoppel effect on a potentially responsible
    party's ultimate liability for remediation of the facility under Section 8.
                                         3222
71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION                                           Ch. 703, § 5
      (11) After consideration of all good faith offers to perform a remedial action, the
   commission shall issue a final administrative order that shall:
        (A) list the facility on the state registry, thus determining that the facility poses
      an imminent and substantial endangerment to public health and safety or the
      environment;
        (B) specify the selected remedial action,·
         (C) list the parties determined to be responsible for remediating the facility,·
         (D) make findings offact describing actions voluntarily undertaken by respon-
      sible parties,·
        (E) order the responsible parties to remediate the facility and, if appropriate,
      reimburse the hazardous waste disposal fee fund for remedial investigation/fea-
      sibility study and remediation costs;
        (F) establish a schedule for completion of the remedial action,·
        (G) state any determination of divisibility of responsible party liability; and
        (H) give notice of the duties and restrictions imposed by Subsection (/) of this
      section.      ·
   The provisions in Sections B(g), 9, 10, and 11 of this Act relating to administrative
orders shall apply to orders issued pursuant to this paragraph.
      (12) If a potentially responsible party is newly identified after a final administra-
   tive order has been issued by the commission pursuant to Subdivision (11) of this
   sub~ection, that party shall have 60 days to negotiate an amendment to the existing
   order. The commission shall not be prohibited from issuing a separate order for
   the newly identified potentially responsible party if it determines that the circum-
   stances warrant a separate order. The responsible parties identified in the order
   issued pursuant to Subdivision (11) of this subsection shall be allowed to comment
   on the issuance of a separate order for the newly identified potentially responsible
   party.
   (d) The commission shall file or cause to be filed an affidavit or notice in the real
property records of the county in which the facility is located stating that the facility
has been listed on or deleted from the state registry or is no longer proposed for
listing on the state registry, within a reasonable period after a determination has
been made.
   (e) Any owner or operator or other named responsible party of a facility listed or to
be listed in the state registry may request the commission to delete the facility from
 the state registry, modify the facility~ priority within the state registry, or modify
any information regarding the facility by submitting a written statement setting
forth the grounds of the request in the form as the commission may require pursuant
 to its promulgated rules. The commission shall promulgate rules establishing proce-
dures, including public hearings, for review of requests submitted pursuant to this
subsection.
   (/) Subsequent to the listing of a facility on the state registry, no person may
substantially change the manner in which the facility is used without notifying the
executive director and receiving written approval of the executive director for the
change. A substantial change in use shall be rll!fined by rule and shall include but
not be limited to actions such as the erection of u building or other structure at the
facility, the use of the facility for agriculturq,l production, the paving of the facility
for use as a roadway or parking lot, and the creation of a park or other public or
private recreational use on the facility. The notice shall be in writing, addressed to
 the executive director, provided by certified mail, return receipt requested, and shall
include a brief description of the proposed change of use. The executive director shall
approve or disapprove the proposed action within 60 days of receipt of the notice of
proposed change in use. The executive director shall not approve the proposed change
of use if such new use will significantly interfere with a proposed, ongoing, or
completed remedial action program at a facility or expose the public health and
safety or the environment to a significantly increased threat of harm.
                                           3223
Ch. 703, § 5                                71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION

   (g)(J) Whenever the commission, after investigation, finds that there exists a release
or threatened release of a hazardous substance at n facility that: (A) is causing
irreversible or irreparable harm to the public health and safety or the environment,·
and (B) the immediacy of the situation makes it prejudic.ial to the public interest to
delay action until an administrative order can be issue1t to potentially responsible
parties or until a judgment can be entered in an appeal of an administrative order,·
 the commission may, with the funds available to the corn.mission from the hazardous
waste disposal fee fund, undertake immediate removal action at the facility to
alleviate the harm. After the immediate danger of irreversible or irreparable harm
has been alleviated, the commission shall proceed pursuant to the provisions of this
section. Fi.ndings required pursuant to this subsection shall be in writing and may
be made by the commission on an ex parte basis subject to judicial review pursuant to
 the substantial evidence rule as provided by the Administrative Procedure and Texas
Register Act (Article 6252-13a, Vernon~ Texas Civil Statutes).
      (2) The reasonable expenses of any immediate removal action taken by the
   commission may be recoverable from the persons described in Section 8, and the
   state may seek to recover the reasonable expenses in any court of appropriate
   jurisdiction.
   (h) Whenever a person ordered to eliminate an imminent and substantial endan·
germent to the public health and safety or the environment has failed to do so within
 the time limits specified in the order or any extension of time approved by the
commission, the commission may implement the remedial action program for the
facility. The reasonable expenses of implementing the remedial action program by
 the commission shall be paid by the persons to whom the order was issued and shall be
recoverable under the provisions of Subsection (m) of this section.
   (i)(J) The goal of any remedial action shall be the elimination of the imminent and
substantial endangerment to the public health and safety or the environment posed
 by a release or threatened release of a hazardous substance at a facility. The
appropriate extent of the remedial action at any particular facility shall be deter-
 mined by the commission~ selection of the remedial alternative which the state
agency determines is cost effective (i.e., the lowest cost alternative that is technologi-
cally feasible and reliable and which effectively mitigates and minimizes damage to
and provides adequate protection of the public health and safety or the environment).
      (2) In considering the appropriate remedial action program at a particular
   facility, the commission may approve a program that does not attain a level or
   standard of control at least equivalent to a legally applicable or relevant and
   appropriate standard, requirement, criterion, or limitation, as required by state or
   local law, if the commission finds that:
         (A) the remedial action selected is only part of a total remedial action that will
      attain such level or standard of control when completed,·
         (B) compliance with the requirement at that facility will result in greater risk
      to public health and safety or the environment than alternative options,·
         (C) compliance with the requirement is technically impracticable from an
      engineering perspective,·
         (D) the remedial action selected will attain a standard of performance that is
      equivalent to that required under the otherwise applicable standard, requirement,
      criterion, or limitation through use of another method or approach,·
         (E) with respect to a local standard, requirement, criterion, or limitation, the
      locality has not consistently applied (or demonstrated the intention to consistent-
      ly apply) the standard, requirement, criterion, or limitation in similar circum-
      stances of other remedial actions within the locality,· or
         (F) with respect to an action using solely state funds, selection of a remedial
      action that attains such levels or standards of control will not provide a balance
      between the need/or protection of public health and safety or the environment at
      the facility and the availabilty of state funds to respond to other sites that present
                                           3224
71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION                                        Ch. 703, § 5
      a threat to public health and safety or the environment, taking into consideration
      the relative immediacy of the threats.
  (jJ In adflition to all other remedies available to the state under this Act or any
other law or statute, all remediation costs for which a person is liable to the state
shall constitute a lien in favor of the state on the real property and the rights to the
real property that are subject to or affected by a remedial action. This provision is
cumulative of other remedies available to the state under this Act.
      (JJ The lien imposed by this subsection shall arise and attach to th,e real property
  subject to or affected by a remedial action at the time an affidavit is recorded and
  indexed in accordance with this subsection in the county in which the real property
  is located. For the purpose of determining rights of all affected parties, the lien
  shall not relate back to a time prior to the date on which the affidavit is recorded,
  which date shall be the lien inception date. The lien shall continue until the
  liability for the costs is satisfied or becomes unenforceable through operation of law.
      (2J The affidavit shall be executed by an authorized representative of the commis-
  sion and must show:
         (AJ the names and addresses of the persons liable for the costs,·
         (BJ a description of the real property that is subject to or affected by the
      remediation action for the costs or claims,· and
          (CJ the amount of the costs and the balance due.
      (9J The county clerk shall record the affidavit in records kept for that purpose
  and shall index the affidavit under the names of the persons liable for the costs.
      (4J The commission shall record a relinquishment or satisfaction of the lien when
  the lien is paid or satisfied.
     (SJ The lien may be foreclosed only on judgment of a court of competent jurisdic-
   tion foreclosing the lien and ordering the sale of the property subject to the lien.
      (6J The lien imposed by this subsection shall not be valid or enforceable if real
  property or an interest therein or a mortgage, lien, or other encumbrance upon or
  against real property is acquired before the affidavit is recorded, unless the person
  acquiring the real property or an interest therein or acquiring the mortgage, lien,
  or other encumbrance thereon had or reasonably should have had actual notice or
  knowledge that the real property is subject to or affected by a clean-up action or has
  knowledge that the state has incurred clean-up costs.
      ('1J If a lien is fixed or attempted to be fixed as provided in this subsection, the
  owner of the real property affected by the lien may file a bond to indemnify against
  the lien. The bond shall be filed with the county clerk of the county in which the
  real property subject to the lien is located. An action to establish, enforce, or
  foreclose any lien or claim of lien covered by the bond must be brought not later
   than the 90th day after the date of service of notice of the bond.
      (BJ The bond must:
         (AJ describe the real property upon which the lien is claimed,·
         (BJ refer to the lien claimed in a manner sufficient to identify it,·
          (CJ be in an amount double the amount of the lien referred to,·
          (DJ be payable to the commission;
         (EJ be executed by the party filing the bond as principal and a corporate surety
      authorized under the law of this state to execute the bond as surety,· and
          (FJ be conditioned substantially that the principal and sureties will pay to the
      commission the amount of the lien claimed, plus costs, if the claim is proved to be
      a lien on the real property.
      (9J .After the bond is filed, the county clerk shall issue notice of the bond to the
  named obligee. A copy of the bond must be attached to the notice. The notice may
  be served on each obligee by having a copy delivered to the obligee by any person
  competent to make oath of the delivery. The original notice shall be returned to the
                                          3225
Ch. 703, § 5                               71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION

    office of the county clerk, and the person making service of copy shall make an oath
    on the back of the copies showing on whom and on what date the copies were served.
    The county clerk shall record the bond notice and return in records kept for that
    purpose. In acquiring an interest in real property, a purchaser or lender may rely
    on and is absolutely protected by the record of the bond, notice, and return.
       (10) The commission may sue on the bond after the 30th day following the date on
    which the notice is served but may not sue on the bond later than one year after the
    date on which the notice is served. If the commission recovers in a suit on the lien
    or on the bond, it is entitled to also recover reasonable attorney's fees.
   (k) Money for actions taken or to be taken by the commission in connection with the
 elimination of an imminent and substantial endangerment to the public health and
 safety or the environment pursuant to this section shall be payable directly to the
 commission from the hazardous waste disposal fee fund. This includes any costs of
 inspection or sampling and laboratory analysis of wastes, soils, air, surface water,
 and ground water done on behalf of a state agency and the costs of investigations to
 identify and locate potentially responsible parties.
    (l) The commission shall seek remediation of facilities by potentially responsible
 parties prior to expenditure offederal or state funds for the remediations. Potential·
 ly responsible parties shall coordinate with ongoing federal and state hazardous waste
 programs, although no state or local permit shall be required for any removal or
 remedial action conducted on site. Subject to the provisions nf Subsection (i) of this
 section, the state may enforce any federal or state standard, requirement, criterion,
 or limitation to which the remedial action would otherwise be required to conform if a
 permit were required. No action taken by the person to contain or remove a release
 or threatened release in accordance with an approved remedial action plan shall be
 construed as an admission of liability for said release or threatened release. No
 person who renders assistance in containing or removing a release or threatened
 release in accordance with an approved remedial action plan shall be liable for any
 additional remediation costs at the facility resulting solely from acts or omissions of
 the person in rendering the assistance in compliance with the approvals required by
 this subsection, unless the remediation costs were caused by the person's gross
 negligence or wilful misconduct. Except as specifically provided in this subsection,
 these provisions shall not be construed to expand or diminish the common law tort
 liability, if any, of private parties participa~ing in a remediation action for civil
 damages to third parties.
    (m) The commission sh1ill file a cost recovery action against all respomnble parties
 who have not complied with the terms of an administrative order issued pursuant to
 Subdivision (11} or (12) of Subsection (c) of this section. The commission shall file
 the cost recovery action no later than one year after all remedial action has been
 completed. The state may seek a judgment against the noncompliant parties for the
 total amount of the cost of the remedial action, including costs of any necessary
 studies and oversight costs, minus the amount agreed to be paid or expended by any
 other responsible parties pursuant to an order issued pursuant to Subdivision (11) or
 (12) of Subsection (c) of this section. The action may also include a plea seeking civil
 penalties for noncompliance with the commission's administrative order and a claim
 for up to double the state's costs if the responsible party's defenses are determined by
 the court to be unreasonable, frivolous, or without foundation.
· (n)(l) A responsible party named in an administrative order who does not comply
 with the order shall become subject to the imposition of administrative or civil
 penalties under Section Bb of this Act. The penalties may be assessed only from the
 date after which the administrative order becomes nonappealable.
       (2) The commission is authorized to include provisions within an agreed adminis·
    trative order that stipulate administrative penalty amounts for failure to comply
    with the order. The penalty provisions may be applicable to either or both of the
    remedial investigation/feasibility study and remedial action orders.
    (o)(l) The commiss-ion shall promulgate rules necessary to develop a mixed funding
 program in which available money from potentially responsible parties is combined
                                          8226
71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION                                            Ch. 703, § 5
with state or federal funds to clean up a facility in a timely manner. Use of the state
or federal funds in a mixed funding approach shall not preclude the state or federal
government from seeking recovery of its costs from nonparticipating potentially
responsible parties.
      (2) The commission shall assess and may, through rulemaking, develop and
  implement a de minimis settlement program. Under the program, the commission
  shall be required to consider the advantages of developing a final settlement with
   potentially responsible parties that are responsible for only a minor portion of the
  response costs at a facility because the hazardous substances the party is respon•
  sible for are minimal in amount or in hazardous effect by comparison with the
  hazardous substances attributable to other parties.
      (3) The commission shall investigate additional alternative programs to encour·
  age potentially responsible parties to investigate or remediate facilities and report
   its findings to the 72nd Legislature with recommendations for legislative action.
  (p) The commission is authorized to determine whether a potentially responsible
party is. financially capable of conducting any necessary remediation studies or
remedial action. The commission shall promulgate rules to develop the criteria for
determination of financial capability. If no financially capable potentially r~pon·
sible parties exist for a facility, the commission shall issue an administrative order
stating its determination that the facility constitutes an imminent and substantial
endangerment and that there are no financially capable potentially responsible
parties. The commission shall then conduct its own remediation study and remedial
action, using federal funds if available. Iffederal funds are not available, state funds
from the hazardous waste disposal fee fund shall be used. Generally, the remediation
of listed facilities shall be achieved first by private party funding, second with the aid
of federal funds, and third, if necessary, with state funds from the hazardous waste
disposal fee fund.
  (q) The executive director or the commission shall have the authority to extend any
time period specified in this section if deemed appropriate.
   [Seo. 13, IDENTIFICATION AND J..SSESSMENT OF HAZJ..RDO:US WASTE FA
CIUTIES, (a) The department ef water reseurees, in eeeperatien with the department,
shall oenduot and oemplete a survey ef the state by July 1, 11~8G 1 the pUFf19Se ef whioh is
t9 identify te the extent feasible every hazardeus waste faoility whieh may oenstitute an
imminent and substantial endangerment te publio health and safety er the envirenment,
The werk already perfermed te identify eandidate sites fur inolusien in the federal
Natienal Pri9rities list shall serve as the basis fer suoh a sun•ey, As seen as pessible
after e9mpletien ef a draft survey, the department ef water reseurees shall eenduot a
publio hearing te selieit oemments en the draft survey and inf9rmatien en additienal
eandidate sites. Net later than January 11 1Q871 the department ef water reseurees shall
publish a registry identifying eaeh faoility listed by the survey, the relative priority of the
need fer aetion at eaoh faoili~• to remedy eni.tirenmental and health problems resulting
frem the presenoe ef hazardous wastes at suoh faeilities, and setting ferth ree9mmenda
tiens fer aotiens whieh may be pursued to aehie•,re effeoti~•e, effioient, and timely eleanup
or ether reselutien of the preblems identified fer eaoh faoility, Sueh reeemmendatiens
shall net oonstitute the remedial innstigatien/feasibility study fur the relevant faeility,
but shall ferm the preliminary basis fur suoh a study. The eleanup of sueh faeilities shall
be aohieved first by private party funding, seoend with the aid of federal funds, and third,
if neeessary, w4th state funds frem the hazardous waste permit and disposal fee, if the
fee is approved by the legislature. J.. draft eepy of the registry shall be eireulated te the
department for eemment prier te publioatien, Three oepies ef the registry, as published,
shall be deli'Jered to the Offioe of the Geverner,
   [{b)(l) The department ef water reseurees may eonduet in~•estigatiens of the faeilities
listed in the registry and may in'Jestigate areas er sites whioh it has reason te belie'le
should be ineluded in the registry, in aeeerdanee with Seetie~ 7 ef this Aet.
     [(2) The department ef •nater reseurees shall, as part of the registry, aBBeBB by
   January 11 1Q871 and eaeh year thereafter, and, based upon new infermatien reeeiJJed
   from seuroes ineluding but net limited to publie hearings, reasseBB 1 in eeeperatien with
                                            3227
Ch. 703, § 5                                 71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION

  the department, the relative priority of the need for aetion at eaeh faeility listed in the
  registry t9 remedy en¥ironmental and health problems resulting frem the presenee of
  hazardous wastes at sueh faeilities,
  [(e) The department of water resourees shall update the registry perfodieally to add
faeilities whieh may eonstitute an imminent and substantial endangerm9nt te publie
health and safety or the environment and to delete faeilities whieh have been elean&d up
pursuant to Subseetion (g) of this seetion qr delisted pursuant te Subseetion (e) of this
seGtioo.
  [(d) The department of water resourees shall file an affidavit or notiee in the real
pr-eperty reeords of the eounty in whieh a faeility is loeated identifying those faeilities
ineluded in the registry, as well as thgse faeilities deleted from the registry.
  [(e)(l) Within thirty (30) days after the survey pursuant tg Subseetign (a) gf this seetign
is ggmpleted, the department gf water resgurees shall ngtify ia ~!friting the parties
identified as respgnsible for all gr any part gf eaeh faeility gr area ineluded in the registry
prepared pursuant tg sueh l!iubseetion (a) gf the inelusign gf the faeility gr area gn sueh
sur\tey. Thereafter, twg mgnths bef9re any unineluded faeili~ gr area is added; tg the
registry, the department gf water resgurees shall ngtify in writing the parties identified
as respgnsible for all gr any part gf sueh faeility gr area gf the ggntemplated inelusign gf
sueh faeility gr area go sueh registry, Written ngtifieatigns under this subseetign shall be
by eertified mail, return reeeipt requested, by mailing ngtiee tg eaeh sueh named
respgnsible party at the party's last kngwn address.
     ((2) Ngtiee pursuant t9 Paraffraph (1) gf this subseetign shall inelude but ngt he
   limited tg a deseriptign gf the dr:;ties and restrietigns impgsed by Subseetign (f) gf this
  seGtioo.
     ((3) Ngo reeeipt gf any ngtiee mailed tg a named respgnsible party pursuant tg thi&
  subseetion shall in ng way affoet the responsibilities, duties or liabilities impelled on any
  sueh party.
     ((4) .A.ny owner or operatgr or gther named responsible party gf a faeility listed gr t9
  be listed in the registry of the department of water resoyrees pYrsuant t9 this seetion
  may request the department gf water resgyr.ees t9 delete sueh faeility fr9m the
  registry, modify the faeility's priority within the registry gr mgdify any informatien
  regarding sueh faeility by sybmitting a \!fritten statement setting forth the gNUnds gf
  the request in sueh form as the department of water resgurees may reqyire.
     ((9) Within one hundred and eighty (180) 'days after the eff9eti¥e date gf this
  provision, the department gf water resourees shall propgse rules establishing pl'99&-
  d1ues, ineluding publie hearings, for review of delisting requests submitted pursuant tg
  this sybseetion.
  [(f)(l) SYbseqyent to the listing of a faeility go the registry prepared and maintained by
the department of watel' resourees, R9 person may sYbstantially ehange the manner in
whieh the faeility is used withoYt notifying the department gf water resgurees and
reeeii.ting •1mtten approval of the department gf water resgurees for sueh ehange, A
substantial ehange gf yse shall be defined in rules adopted by the bgard and shall inelude,
but ngt be limited to, aetions sueh as the ereetign gf a building gr other strueture at sueh
faeility, the use of SYGh faeility for agrieYltural prgduetion, the paving gf sueh faeility for
yse as a roadway or parking lot, and the cireation gf a park gr gther publie or private
reereatignal faciility gn sueh faeility, Sueh Mtiee shall be in writing, addressed tg the
eMeutPJe diregt9r and sh!MI inelu~ a brief deseriptign gf the prgpgsed ehange gf use.
Sueh notiee shall be submitted in writing at least sixty days bef9re any physieal alteratign
gf the land gr eonstruetign will geeur or, in the event any alteration gr ggnstruetign is net
required tg initiate .sueh ehange gf use, at least sixty days before any cihange of use.
     ((2) The exeeutive direetgr shall not apprgve sueh ehange gf use if sucih ne'I.' use will
  interfere sigDifieantly with a prgpgeed, gnggil\g gr eompleted hazardgus waste faeility
  remedial aetion prggram at sucih faeility or expose the en'!ir-enment er publie health t9 a
  sigDifieantly inereased threat of harm.
  [(g)(l) The eleanup gf a faeility identified by the department of water resourcies in the
registry whieh ggnetitutes an imminent and substantial endangerment te the publie health
                                            3228
71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION                                                Ch. 703, § 5
and saf.ety 9r the eR'lir9RmeRt shall pr9eeed 9R an expedited basis p1m1uaRt te the
f9119WiRg guideliReSi
        [(A) whel·e'ler p9ssible, parties ident:.Red as lial· 'q par.ties pursuant te Seeti9R
     ll(g)(l) sh9uld be R9tif.ied by the depar:..meRt 9f water res9urees 9f an 9p119rtunity te
     partieipate in a '191uRtary eleaRup P~ the faeility;
        [{:0) if all pel!t'~Rs liable uRdet Seeti9R ll(g)(l) d9 R9t V9luRteer t9 devel9p and
     implement a remedial aeti9R pregram fer the faeility, then private partie11 wh9 are
     willing to partieipate iR eleaRup aetivities '19luntarily sh9uld be all9•Ned t9 d9 119 and
     they may seek g9st ree9very pursuaRt t9 Seeti9n ll(b) "9m th9se liable partie11 n9t
     partieipatiRg iR the '19luRtary eleaRup;
      . [(C) if n9 parties ideRtif.ied aa liable uRder Seeti9R ll(g)(l) '19IURteer t9 •de'lel9p and
     implemeRt a remedial aeti9n pr9gram f9r the faeility, theR iRdependeRt third partie11
     wh9 are w411iRg t9 partieipate '191untarily iR the eleanup 9f the faeility sh9uld be
     permitted t9 e9ntraet with the department 9f water res9urees t9 d9 s9 and they may
     seek e9st ree9very pursuaRt t9 Seeti9R ll(b) frem th9se liable parties R9t partieipat
     iRg iR the 'J9IURtary g)eaRup;
        [(D) where '19luntary assistaRee R9m the private seet9r is R9t f9rthe9miRg 1 federal
     fuRds sh9uld be used f9r faeility eleaRup if sueh fuRds are timely a'lailable; aRd
        [(E) state fuRds sh9uld be used 9Rly wheR a liable party 9r iRdepeRdeRt third party
     eleanup 9r f.ederal funds are n9t timely available,
     [(2) Whene'ler the department 9f water res9urees f.inds that there eKist& aR aetual 9r
   threatened release 9f hazard9us wastes at a har&ard9u11 waste faeility listed 9R the
   registry that present& aR imminent aRd BYbstantial endangerment te the publie health
   and saf.ety 9r the en'lir9nmeRt, it may 9rder the 9wner and/9r 9perater 9f sueh faeility
   and/9r any 9ther pers9R resp9nsible f9r the release 9r threateRed release at sueh
   faeility (A) t9 de'Jel9p a -remedial aeti9n pr9gram, subjeet t9 the appreval 9f the
   department 9f water res9urees, at sueh faeility, and (:D) te implement BYeh pregram
   withiR reas9nable time limit& speeified in the 9rder. The pre'lisi9RS iR Seeti9ns !l{g), g,
   10 aRd 11 9f this Aet relating t9 administrati'Jo 9rders shall apply t9 erders issued
   pursuant t9 this paragraph.
     [(3) Whene'ler the eemmissi9n, after iR'lestigati9n 1 f.inds that there exist& a release or
   threatened release ef har&ard9us wastes at a faeility identified in the registry that;
        [(A) is eausing irreYersible er irreparable harm t9 the publfo health aRd safety er
     the en'!cireRmeRt; and
        [(:0) the immediagy ef the situati9R makes it prejudieial te the publie iRterest te
     delay aetien until an administrati'le erder Gan be issued te liable parties pursuant te
     Paragraph (2) 9f this subseetien er until a judgment GaR be entered in an appeal ef an
     administrative erder; the g9mmissien may, with the funds a'Jailable te the eemmis
     sien h9m the har&ardeus waste permit aRd dispesal fees, if lijlpre'!ed by the I..egiala
     ture, undertake immediate reme•Jal aetien at the faeility te alleviate the harm, After
     the immediate danger ef irte'lersible er irreparable harm has been alleviated, the
     eemmissieR shall preeeed pursuaRt te Paragraph (2) ef this subseetien, Findings
     required pursuaRt te this paragraph shall be in writing aRd may be made by the
     eemmissieR en aR ex parte basis subjeet te judieial review pursuant t9 the substantial
     evidenee rule as pre'lided by the Administrati'le Preeedure and T-exaa Register J~et
     (Artiele 6252 13a, VerneR's Texas CMI Statutes),
        [(C) The reaseRable expenses 9f any immediate reme'lal aetien taken by the T-exas
     Water Cemmissien may be reeeverable hem the persens deseribed in Seetien ll(g)(2)
     and the state may seek te reee'!er sueh reasenable expeRses in any eeurt ef
     appropriate jurisdietieR.                                                 .
     [(4) Whene'!er a persen erdered te eliminate an immiRent and sub11&aRtial endanger
   ment t9 the publie health and saf.ety er the en'lirenmeRt has failed te de se within the
   time limits speeified in the erder, and ne third party has a~ed te de'Jel9p and
   implemeRt a remedial aetien pregram f9r the faeility pursuant te Paragraph (l)(C) ef
   this subseetien, the departmeRt 9f water reseurees may de'lelep and implement a
   remedial aetien pregram f9r sueh faeility, The reasenable expenses gf de'Jeleping and
                                              3229
Ch. 703, § 5                                   7lst LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION

 implementing euoh r-emedial aotion pregram by the department ef water reeeuroee shall
 be paid by the pereene te whem the erder was issued and the state may seek t9 reoe•.42 U.S. C. 2011 et seq.), if the release is subject to requirements with respect to
   financial protection established by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission under
    Section 170 of that Act, or, for the purposes of Section 104 of the environmental
    response law or any other response action, any release of source, by-product, or
    special nuclear mate1ial from any processing site designated under Section
    102(a)(1) or 302(a) of the Uranium Mill Tailings Radiation Control Act of 1978 (42
    U.S.C. 7912 and 7942),· and
       (D) the normal application of fertilizer.
    (5) "Removal" means the cleanup or removal of released hazardous substances,
 pollutants, or contaminants from the environment,· the actions necessary to be
 taken in the event of the threat of release of hazardous substances, pollutants, or
 contaminants into the environment,· the actions necessary to monitor, assess, and
 evaluate the release or threat of release of hazardous substances, pollutants, or
 contaminants,· the disposal of removed material,· or the taking of other actions as
 may be necessary to prevent, minimize, or mitigate damage to the public health and
 safety or to the environment that may otherwise result from a release or threat of
 release. The term also includes security fencing or other measures to limit access,
 provision of alternate water supplies, temporary evacuation and housing of threat-
 ened individuals not otherwise provided for, action taken under Section 104(b) of
 the environmental response law, and any emergency assistance that may be provid-
 ed under the Disaster Relief Act of 1974 (42 U.S.C. 5121 et seq.).
                                               3232
Ch. 703, § 8                                  71st LEGISLATURE-REGULAR SESSION

    proved as of September 1, 1989, the executive clirector shall notify all potentially
    responsible parties that they have 90 days from roceipt of the notice within which to
    make a good faith offer under Subdivision (7) of Subsection (c) of Section 13 of the
    Solid Waste Disposal Act (Article 4477-7, Vernon's Texns Civil Statutes), as amended
    by this Act. All other activities regarding the facility shall take place in accordance
    with that Act as amended by this legislation.
  SECTION 9. This Act takes effect September 1, 1989.
  SECTION 10. The importance of this legislation and the crowded condition of the
calendars in both houses create an emergency and an imperative public necessity that the
constitutional rule requiring bills to be read on three several days in each house be
suspended, and this rule is hereby suspended.
  Passed the Senate on April 27, 1989, by a viva-voce vote; and that the Senate concurred
       in House amendment on May 24, 1989, by a viva-voce vote; passed the House, with
       amendment, on May 22, 1989, by a non-record vote.
  Approved June 14, 1989.
  Effective Sept. 1, 1989.

                                      CHAPTER 704
                                       S.B. No. 1521
                                              AN ACT
relating to the creation of the waste reduction advisory committee and to waste minimization and
reduction activities of the Texas Water Commission.
  Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Texas:
  SECTION 1. Subsection (g), Section 3, Solid Waste Disposal Act (Article 4477-7,
Vernon's Texas Civil Statutes), is amended by adding Paragraphs (3) and (4) to read as
follows:
    (3) The waste reduction advisory committee, which shall advise the commission
  and interagency coordination council on matters the council is required to consider
  under Subdivision (2) of this suhsection, is created. The committee also shall advise
  the commission and council on:
       (A) the appropriate organization of state agencies and the financial and
    technical resources required to aid the state in its efforts to promote waste
    reduction and minimization;
       (B) the development of public awareness programs to educate citizens about
    hazardous waste and the appropriate disposal of hazardous waste and hazardous
    materials that are used and collected by households,·
       (C) the provision of technical assistance to local governments for the develop-
    ment of waste management strategies designed to assist small quantity genera-
    tors of hazardous waste; and
       (D) other possible programs to more effectively implement the state's hierarchy
    of preferred waste management technologies as set forth in Section 3(e)(l) of this
    Act. The committee shall be composed of nine members with a balanced represen-
    tation of environmental and public interest groups and the regula~ed communi-
    ty.
    (4) The commission shall establish a waste minimization and reduction group to
  assist in developing waste minimization and reduction programs and to provide
  incentives for their use so as to make such programs economically and technologi-
  cally feasible.
  SECTION 2. The importance of this legislation and the crowded condition of the
calendars in both houses create an emergency and an imperative public necessity that the
constitutional rule requiring bills to be read on three several days in each house be
                                             3236
TAB 3
71et LEGISLATURE-SIXTH CALLED SESSION                                    Ch. 10, Art. I, § I
  Approved June 14, 1990.
  Effective Sept. 6, 1990, 90 days after date of adjournment.

                                           CHAPTER 9

                                            H.B. No. 48
                                                 AN ACT
relating to an exemption for full-service gasoline stations during certain times from the requirement to
provide refueling service to disabled persons.
  Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Texas:
  SECTION 1. Section 3, Chapter 948, Acts of the 71st Legislature, Regular Session,
1989 (Article 8613, Vernon's Texas Civil Statutes), is amended to read as follows:
  Sec. 3. EXEMPTIONS. This Act does not apply to:
    (1) a gasoline service station or other facility that offers gasoline or other motor
  vehicle fuel for sale to the public from the facility:
       (A) if the station or other facility has only remotely controlled pumps and never
    provides pump island service; or
       (B) during regularly scheduled hours in which, for security reasons, a station
    or facility that ordinarily provides pump island service does not provide that
    service,· or
    (2) refueling service to provide liquefied gas, as that term is defined by Section
  153.001, Tax Code.
  SECTION 2. The importance of this legislation and the crowded condition of the
calendars in both houses create an emergency and an imperative public necessity that the
constitutional rule requiring bills to be read on three several days in each house be
suspended, and this rule is hereby suspended.
  Passed the House on June 6, 1990, by a non-record vote; passed by the Senate on June
      6, 1990, by a viva-voce vote.
  Approved June 13, 1990.
  Effective Sept. 6, 1990, 90 days after date of adjournment.

                                          CHAPTER 10

                                            S.B. No. 43
                                             AN ACT
relating to conforming Chapters 361 and 363, Health and Safety Code (the Solid Waste Disposal Act
and the Comprehensive Municipal Solid Waste Management, Resource Recovery, and Conservation
Act), to certain enactments of the 71st Legislature, Regular Session, 1989, and to making certain
corrective and other conforming amendments to the Health and Safety Code.
  Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Texas:

                                    Article 1. General Provisions
  SECTION 1. (a) This Act is enacted as part of the state's continuing statutory
revision program under Chapter 323, Government Code. This Act is a revision of
statutes, without substantive change, for purposes of Article III, Section 43, of the Texas
Constitution and has the purposes of:
   Tex.Seas. Laws Bd. Vol. '90-17                 47
Ch. 10, Art. 2, § 24                 71st LEGISLATURE-SIXTH CALLED SESSION

       (2) the funding needed to support the adequate regulation of industrial solid
   waste and hazardous waste generation, storage, processing, and disposal activities,
   which considers authorized facility capacity and the variation in the cost of
   regulating different types of facilities,·
       (3) promoting the efficient and effective use of existing hazardous waste storage,
   processing, and disposal facilities within the state,·
       (4) whether a volume of waste received by a commercial facility has been or will
   be assessed a commercial hazardous waste fee at other commP-rcial facilities under
   Section 361.138,· and
       (5) the prevailing rates of similar fees for hazardous waste activities charged in
   other states to which wastes from this state may be exported or from which wastes
   may be imported for storage, processing, or disposal.
   SECTION 25. Section 361.153, Health and Safety Code, is amended to conform to
Section 2, Chapter 1143 (S.B. 1519), Acts of the 71st Legislature, Regular Session, 1989,
and to read as follows:
   Se..:. 361.153. COUNTY SOLID WASTE PLANS AND PROGRAM; FEES. (a) A
county may[;
       [(.!.)] appropriate and spend money from its general revenues to manage solid waste
   and to administer a solid waste program and may charge reasonable fees for those
   services.
   (b) As sufficient funds are made available by the department, a county shall [r-arui
(-2)] develop county solid waste plans and coordinatt those plans with the plans of:
       (1) local governments, regional planning agenci~s, other governmental entities, and
   the department, as prescribed by Subchapter D, Chapter 363,· and
       (2) the commission.
   SECTION 26. Section 361.227, Health and Safety Code, is amended to conform to
Section 1, Chapter 639 (S.B. 1511), Acts of the 71st Legislature, Regular Session, 1989,
and tc. read as follows:
   Sec. 361.227. VENUE. A suit for injunctive relief or for recovery of a civil penalty, or
for both, may be brought in:
       (1) the county in which the defendant resides,·
       (2) [91'--ffi] the county in which the violation or threat of violation occurs; or
       (3) Travis County if the suit involves an unpermitted municipal solid waste
   facility.
    SECTION 27. Chapter ~61, Health and Safety Code, is amended to conform to Section
2, Chapter 639 (S.B. 1511), Acts of the 71st Legislature, Regular Session, 1989, by adding
Section 361.230 to read as follows:
   Sec. 361.230. FEES AND COSTS RECOVERABLE. If the attorney general or a
local government institutes a suit under this subchapter or Subchapter I for injunc·
tive relief, recovery of a civil penalty, or both injunctive relief and a civil penalty, the
prevailing party may recover its reasonable attorney's fees, court costs, and reason·
o ble investigative costs incurred in relation to the proceeding. However, the amount
awarded by the court may not exceed $250,000.
    SECTION 28. Subsection (c), Section 361.321, and Sections 361.322 and 361.341,
Health and Safety Code, are amended to conform to Section 3, Chapter 703 (S.B. 1502),
Acts of the 71st Legislature, Regular Session, 1989, and to read as follows:
    (c) Except as provided by Section 361.322(a) [Segtign 361.322(b)], the petition must be
filed not later than the 30th day after the date of the ruling, order, decision, or other act
of the governmental entity whose action is appealed. Service of citation must be
accomplished not later than the 30th day after the date on which the petition is filed.
    Sec. 361.322. APPEAL OF ADMINISTRATIVE ORDER ISSUED UNDER SECTION
361.272; JOINDER OF PARTIES. (a) Any person subject to an administrative order
under Section ,'161.272 may appeal the order by filing a petition before the 46th day
                                              64
71st LEGISLATURE-SIXTH CALLED SESSION                               Ch. 10, Art. 2, § 28

after the date of receipt, hand delivery, or pullication service of the order. [A-fl61'SOO
Hlmg a f!etitioR af!f!ealiRg aR admiRistrath1e order issued 1mder lileGtioR 361.272 must joiR
as a f!arty the state ageRGY issuiRg the admiRistrath1e order aRd may joiR as a f!arty;
     ((1) aRy other f!ersoR Ramed iR the admiRistrative orderj aRd
     [(2) aRy other f!ersEJR whEl is or may be liaQle for the elimiRatioR of the agtual ElF
  threateRed release Elf sEJlid waste goverRed by the admiRistrative order,]
  (b) The plaintiff shall pursue the action with reasonable diligence. The court shall
presume that the action has been abandoned if the plaintiff does not prosecute the action
within one year after it is filed and shall dismiss the suit on a motion for dismissal made
by the governmental entity whose action is appealed unless the plaintiff, after receiving
notice, can show good and sufficient cause for the delay.
  (c) The filing of a motion for rehearing under the Administrative Procedure and
Texas Register Act (Article 6252-13a, Vernon's Texas Civil Statutes) is not a prerequi·
site for an appeal of the order.
   (d) The person appealing the order must join the state agency issuing the adminis-
tratii:e order as a party and may join as parties any other person named as a
responsible party in the administrative order and any other person who is or may be
liable for the elimination of the actual or threatened release of solid waste or
hazardous substances governed by the administrative order.
   (e) The filing of the petition does not prevent the state agency issuing the adminis·
trative order from proceeding with the remedial action program under Subchapter F
unless the court enjoins the remedial action under Us general equity jurisdiction [the
f!etitiEJR before the 46th day after the date of reGeif!t, haRd delivery, or f!UbliGatiEJR serviGe
gf the order stays the EJrder as to the af!f!ealiRg f!arty f!eRdiRg aGtitiR by the distriGt g911rt,
The filiRg gf the f!etitilm does 1ot affegt other eRforgemeRt powers of the departmeRt or
GommissiEJR].
   (/) [(d)] The administr~tive order is final as to a nonappealing party on the 46th day
after the date of receipt, hand delivery, or publication service of the order by, to, or on the
nonappealing party.
   (g) [(&)] The district court shall uphold the administrative order if the [def!artmeRt or
tM] commission[, by a f!ref!ORderaRGe Elf the evideRGe 1] proves by a preponderance of the
evidence that:
       (1) there is an actual or threatened release of solid waste or hazardous substances
   that is an imminent and substantial endangerment to the public health and safety or the
   environment; and
       (2) the person made subject to the administrative order is liable for the elimination of
   the release or threatened release, in whole or in part.
  (h) If the appropriateness of the selected remedial action is contested in the appeal
of the admin;strative order, the remedial action shall be upheld unless the court
determines that the remedy is arbitranJ or unreasonable.
  (i) [(f)] A person made a party to the appeal may join as a party any other person who
is or may be liable for the elimination of the release or threatened release, but the failure
by a party to file an action for contribution or indemnity does not waive any right under
this chapter or other law.
   (j) [(g)] In an i.ppeal under this section, the district court on establishing the validity
of the order shall issue an injunction requiring any person named or joined against whom
liability has been established by the department or the commission or other party to
comply with the order.
   (k) [(h)] As between parties determined to be liable under Subchapter I, the court
may, a: equity requires, apportion cleanup costs in accordance with Section 361.343 and
grant any other appropriate relief.
   Sec. 361.341. COST RECOVERY BY STATE. (a) The state is entitled to recover
reasonable attorney's fees, reasonable costs to prepare and provide witnesses, and
reasonable costs of investigating and assessing the facility or site if it prevails in:
                                                65
Ch. 10, Art. 2, § 28                  71et LEGISLATURE-SIXTH CALLED SESSION

     (1) an appeal of an administrative order issued under Section 361.272 or Section
  361.188 [3fil..l.9.l.];
     (2) an action to enforce such an administrative order;
     (3) a civil suit seeking injunctive relief under Section 361.273; or
     (4) a cost recovery suit under Section 361.197 [3GUOO].
  (b) The court shall apportion the costs among liable parties as it determines is equitable
and just.
   (c) All such costs recovered by the state under Subchapter F shall be remitted to the
commission and deposited to the credit of a separate account of the hazardous waste
disposal fee fund. All other costs recovered by the state unrler Sections 361.271
 through 361.277 shall be remitted to the commission and deposited to the credit of a
separate account of the hazardous waste generation and facility fees fund [Gosts
 re11evered by the state under this se11tien shall bei
      ((1) remitted te the (lGmmissien; and
      [(2) pla11ed in a separate a1111eunt in the hazardeus waste generatien and fa(lility fees
   fund fer use by the 11emmissien te administer the hazardeus waste management
   pregram].
   (d) If an appeal or third party claim is found by the court to be frivolous,
 unreasonable, or witho"J,t foundation, the court may assess damages against the party
 bringing the appeal or third party claim in an amount not to exceed twice the costs
 incurred by the state or the third party defendant, including reasonable attorney's
fees, reasonable costs of preparing and providing witne.q,qes, and reasonable costs of
studies, analyses, engineering reports, tests, or other projects the court finds were
necessary for the preparation of the party's case.
   SECTION 29. Subchapter F, Chapter 361, Health and Safety Code, is amended to
conform to Section 5, Chapter 703 (S.B. 1502), Acts of the 71st Legislature, Regular
Session, 1989, and to read as follows:

            SUBCHAPTER F.         REGISTRY AND CLEANUP OF CERTAIN
                           HAZARDOUS WASTE FACILITIES
  Sec. 361.181. STATE REGISTRY: ANNUAL PUBI.ICATION. (a) The commission
shall annually publish an updated state registry identifying, to the extent feasible,
each facility that may constitute an imminent and substantial endangerment to
public health and safety or the environment due to a release or threatened release of
hazardous substances into the environment.
  (b) The registry shall identify the relative priority for action at each listed facility.
The relative priority for action at facilities listed on the registriJ shall be periodically
reviewed and revised by the commission as necessary to accurately reflect the need/or
action at the facilities.
  (c) In this subchapter, '1acility" means any building, structure, installation, equip-
ment, pipe, or pipeline (including any pipe into a sewer or publicly owned treatment
works, well, pit, pond, lagoon, impoundment, ditch, landfill, storage container, motor
vehicle, rolling stock, or aircraft), or any site or area where a hazardous sub:~tance
has been deposited, stored, disposed of, or placed or otherwise come to be located. The
term does not include any consumer product ir. consumer use or any vessel.
  Sec. 361.182. INVESTIGATIONS. (a) The executive director may conduct investi-
gations of facilities that are listed on the state registry, or that the executive director
has reason to believe 11hould be included on the state registry, in accordance with
Sections 361.032, 361.033, and 361.037.
  (b) If there is a reasonable basis to believe there may be a release or threatent•d
release of a hazardous substance at a facility, the executive director may submit
requests for information and requests for the production of documents to any person
who has or may have information or documents relevant to:
                                             66
7lst LEGISLATURE-SIXTH CALLED SESSION                           Ch. 10, Art. 2, § 29
       (1) the identification, nature, or quantity of materials that have been generated,
    treated, stored, or disposed of at a facility or transported to a fac'ility,·
       (2) the identification of soils, groundwater, or surface water at a facility that
    have been or may be affected by an actual or threatened release of a hazardous
   substance,·
       (3) the nature or extent of a release or threatened release of a hazardous
   substance at or from a facility; or
       (4) the ability of a person to pay for or to perform a remedial action.
    (c) If the requested information 01· documents are not produced in a timely
manner, the commission muy issut: an order directing compliance with the requests
for information or production of documents. Information or documents requested
under Subsection (b) or this subse.:tion are public records, except that the commission
shall consider the copied records as confidential if a showing satisfactory to the
commission is made by the owner of the records that the records would divulge trade
secrets if made public. This subsection does not require the commission to consider
the composition or characteristics of hazardous substances being processed, stored,
disposed of, or otherwise handled to be held confidential.
    (d) The commission shall adopt rules regarding the provision of notice and an
opportunity for a hearing before the commission on whether the requested informa-
tion or documents should be produced.
    Sec. 361.183. REGISTRY LISTING PROCEDURE: DETERMINATION OF ELIGI-
BILITY. (a) Before the listing of a facility on the state registry, the executive dfrector
shall determine whether the potential endangerment to public hFalth and safety or
 the environment at the facility can be resolved by the present owner or operator
under the federal Resource Conservation and Recoi·ery Act of 1976 (42 U.S.C. Section
6901) or by some or all of the potentially responsible parties identified in Subchapter
I, under an agreed administrative order issued by the commission.
    (b) If the potential endangerment to public health and safety or the environment
can be resolved in such a manner, the facility may not be listed on the state registry.
Notice of the approach selected to resolve the apparent endangerment to public health
and safety or the emrironment and the fact that this action is being taken in lieu of
 listing the facility on the state registry shall be published in the Texas Register.
    (c) If after reasonable efforts the executive director determines that the potential
endangerment to public health and safety or the environment cannot be resolved by
either of the approaches under Subsection (a), the executive director shall evaluate the
facility to determine whether the site exceeds the commission 8 minimum criteria for
 listing on the state registry. The commission by rule shall adopt the minimum
 criteria. The extcutive director shall also evaluate the facility to determine whether it
 is eligible for listing on the federal National Priorities List.
    (d) The commission shall proceed under th!,s subchapter only if, based on informa-
 tion available to the executive di ..ector, the facility is eligible for listing on the state
 registry but not eligible for the federal National Priorities List.
    Sec. 361.184. REGISTRY LISTING PROCEDURE: NOTICES AND HEARING. (a)
 If the executive director determines that a facility is eligible for listing on the state
 registry, the commission shall publish in the Texas Register and in a newspaper of
general circulation in the county in which the facility is located a notice of intent to
 list the facility on the state registry. The 11otice shall at least specify tne name and
 location of the facility, the general natun of the potential endangerment to public
 health and safety or the environment as determined by information available to the
 executive director at that time, and the duties and restrictions imposed by Subsection
(c). The notice aiE'I shall provide that interested parties may do either or both of the
following:
       (1) submit written comments to the commission relative to the Froposed listing of
    the facility,· or
                                             67
Ch. 10, Art. 2, § 29                71st LEGISLATURE-SIXTH CALLED SESSION

      (2) request a public meeting to discuss the proposed listing by submitting a
   request not later than the 30th day after the date on which the notice is issued.
  (b) If the facility is determined to be eligible for listing on the state registry, the
executive director shall make all reasonable efforts to identify all potentially respon-
sible parties for remediation of the facility. Concurrent with the publication of
general notice under Subsection (a), the executive director shall provide to each
identified potentially responsible party direct, written notification of the proposed
listing of the facility on the state registry and of the procedures for requesting a
public meeting to discuss the listing and the information included in the general
notice as required by Subsection (a). Written notifications under this subsection
shall be by certified mail, return receipt requested, to each named responsible party at
the party's last known address.
   (c) If a public meeting is requested regarding the proposed listing of a facility on
the state registry, the commission shall publish general notice of the date, time, and
location of the public meeting in the Texas Register arirl in the same newspaper in
which the notice of the opportunity to request the public meeting was published. The
public meeting notice shall be provided not later than the 31st day before the date of
the meeting. Notice of the meeting also shall be provided by certified mail, return
receipt requested, to each ident~tied potentially responsible party at the party's last
known address.
   (d) Nonreceipt of any notice mailed to a potentially responsible party under
Subsection (b) or this subsection does not affect the responsibilities, duties, or liabili-
ties imposed on the party. Contemporaneously with issuing the notice of the public
meeting, the executive director shall make available to all interested parties the public
records the executive director has regarding the facility. For the purposes of provid-
ing this information, the executive director shall provide a brief summary of those
public records and make those public records available for inspection and copying
during regular business hours.
   (e) A public meeting is legislative in nature and not a contested case hearing under
the Administrative Procedure and Texas Register Act (Article 6252-13a, Vernon's
Texas Civil Statutes). The meeting shall be held for the purpose of obtaining
additional information regarding the facility relative to the eligibility of the facility
for listing on the state registry and the identification of potentially responsible
parties.
   (/) After the public --neeting or after opportunity to request a public meeting has
passed, the commissivr. shall file or cause to be filed an affidavit or notice in the real
property records of the county in which the facility is located identifying the facility
as one proposed for listing on the state registry unless the executive director deter-
mines, based on information presented at the public meeting, that efforts to list the
facility on the state registry should not be pursued.
   Sec. 361.185. INVESTIGATION/FEASIBILITY STUDY. (a) After the public meet-
ing or after opportunity to request a public meeting has passed, but before any listing
of the facility on the state registry, the commission shall allow all identified potential-
ly responsible parties the opportunity to fund or conduct, if appropriate, a remedial
investigation/feasibility study, or a similar study as approved by the executive
director, for the facility. Not later than the 90th day after notice under Section
361.184(a) is issued, the potentially responsible parties may make a good faith offer to
conduct the study. If a good faith offer from all or some of the potentially responsible
parties is received by the commission within that period, those making the offer have
an additional 60 days within which to negotiate an agreed administrative order from
the commission, which must include a scope of work. In the agreed administrative
order the commission may not require the participating potentially r11sponsible
parties to agree to perform the remedial action or admit liability for the facility
remediation.
   (b) If no pot mtinlly responsible party makes a good faith offer to conduct the
remedial investigation/feasibility study or similar study as approved by the executive
director or if the participating potentially responsible parties fail to conduct or
                                            68
71st LEGISLATURE-SIXTH CALLED SESSION                         Ch. 10, Art. 2, § 29
complete an approved study, the commission may conduct or complete the study
using funds from the hazardous waste disposal fee fund.
   (c) To encourage potentially responsible parties to perform the remedial investiga-
tionlfec;,sibility study or other similar study as approved by the executive director,
costs for commission oversight of the study may not be assessed against those parties
who fund or perform the study. Nonparticipating potentially re..:tent of the remedial action at any
particular facility shall be determined by the commissions selection of the remedial
alternative that the commission determines is the lowest cost alternative that is
technologically feasible and reliable and that effectively mitigates and minimizes
damage to and provides adequate protection of the public health and safety or the
em>ironment.
   (b) In considering the appropriate remedial action program at a particular facility,
the commission may approve a program that does not attain a level or standard of
control at least equivalent to a legally applicable or relevant and appropriate
standard, requirement, criterion, or limitation, as required by state or local law, if
the commission finds that:
      (1) the remedial action selected is only part of a total remedial action that will
   attain that level or standard of control when completed,·
      (2) compliance with the requirement at that facility will result in greater risk to
   public health and safety or the environment than alternative options,·
      (3) compliance with the requirement is technically impracticable from an engi-
   neering perspective,·
      (4) the remedial action selected will attain a standard of performa.nce that is
   equivalent to that required under the otherwise applicable standard, requirement,
   criterion, or limitation through use of another method or approach,·
      (5) uJi.th respect to a local standard, requirement, criterion, or limitation, the
   locality has not consistently applied or demonstrated the intention to consistently
   apply the standard, requirement, criterion, or limitation in similar circumstances
   of other remedial actions within the locality,· or
      (6) with respect to an action using solely state funds, selection of a remedial
   action that attain.'l those levels or standards of control will not provide a balance
   between the need for protection of public health and safety or the environment at
   the facility and the availability of state funds to respond to other sites that present
                                           72
7lst LEGISLATURE-SIXTH CALLED SESSION                          Ch. 10, Art. 2, § 29

    a threat to public health and safety or the environment, taking into consideration
    the relative immediacy of the threats.
   Sec. 361.194. LIEN. (a) In addition to all other remedies available to the state
 under this chapter or other law, all remediation costs for which a person is liable to
 the state constitute a lien in favor of the state on the real property and the rights to
 the real property that are subject to or affected by a remedial action. This provision
 is cumulative of other remedies available to the state under this chapter.
    (b) The lien imposed by this section arises and attaches to the real property subject
 to or affected by a remedial action at the time an affidavit is recorded and indexed in
accordance with this section in the county in which the real property is located. For
 the purpose of determining rights of all affected parties, the lien does not relate back
 to a time before the date on which the affidavit is recorded, which date is the lien
 inception date. The lien continues until the liability for tile costs is satisfied or
 becomes unenforceable through operation of law.
    (c) An authorized representative of the commission shall execute the affidavit. The
affidavit must show:
       (1) the names and addresses of the persons liable for the costs;
       (2) a description of the real property that is subject to or affected by the
    remediation action for the costs or claims,· and
       (3) the amount of the costs and the balance due.
    (d) The county clerk shall record the affidavit in records kept for that purpose and
shall index the affidavit under the names of the persons liable for the costs.
    (e) The commission shall record a relinquishment or satisfaction of the lien when
 the lien is paid or satisfied.
    (j) The lien may be foreclosed only on judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction
foreclosing the lien and ordering the sale of the property subject to the lien.
    (g) The lien imposed by this section is not valid or enforreable if real property, an
 interest in real property, or a mortgage, lien, or other encumbrance on or against
 real property is acquired before the affidavit is recorded, unless the person acquiring
 the real property, an interest in the property, or the mortgage, lien, or other
encumbrance on the property had or reasonably should have had actual notice or
knowledge that the real property is subject to or affected by a clean-up action or has
knowledge that the state has incurred clean-up costs.
   (h) If a lien is fixed or attempted to be fixed as provided by this section, the owner of
 the real property affected by the lien may file a bond to indemnify against the lien.
The bond must be filed with the county clerk of the county in which the real property
subject to the lien is located. An action to establish, enforce, or foreclose any lien or
claim of lien covered by the bond must be brought not later than the 30th day after the
date of service of notice of the bond. The bond must:
       (1) describe the real property on which the lien is claimed,·
       (2) refer to the lien claimed in a manner sufficient to identify it,·
       (3) be in an amount double the amount of the lien referred to,·
       (4) be payable to the cr>mmission,·
       (5) be executed by the party filing the bond as principal and a corporate surety
   authorized under the law of this state to execute the bond as surety; and
       (6) be conditioned substantially that the principal and sureties will pay to the
   commission the amount of the lien claimed, plus costs, if the claim is proved to be a
    lien on the real property.
   (i) After the bond is filed, the county clerk shall issue notice of the bond to the
named obligee. A copy of the bond must be attached to the notice. The notice may be
served on each obligee by having a copy delivered to the obligee by any person
competent to make oath of the deli-very. The original notice shall be returned to the
office of the county clerk, and the person making service of copy shall make an oath
on the back of the copies showing on whom and on what date the copies were served.
                                               73
Ch. 10, Art. 2, § 29                71st LEGISLATURE-SIXTH CALLED SESSION

 The county clerk shall record the bond notice and return in records kept for that
purpose. In acquiring an interest in real property, a purchaser or lender may rely
on and is absolutely protected by the record of the bond, notice, and return.
   (j) The commission may sue on the bond after the 30th day after the date on which
the notice is served but may not sue on the bond later than one year after the date on
which the notice is served. The commission is entitled to recover reasonable attor-
ney's fees if the commission recovers in a suit on the lien or on the bond.
   Sec. 361.195. PAYMENTS FROM HAZARDOUS WASTE DISPOSAL FEE FUND.
(a) Money for actions taken or to be taken by the commission in connection with the
elimination of an imminent and substantial endangerment to the public health and
safety or the environment under this subchapter is payable directly to the commission
from the hazardous waste disposal fee fund. These payments include any costs of
inspection or sampling and laboratory analysis of wastes, soils, air, surface water,
and groundwater done on behalf of a state agency and the costs of investigations to
identify and locate potentially respoMible parties.
   (b) The commission shall seek remediation of facilities by potentially responsible
parties before expenditure of federal or state funds for the remediations.
   Sec. 361.196. REMEDIATION: PERMITS NOT REQUIRED; LIABILITY. (a) Po-
tentially responsible parties shall coordinate with ongoing federal and state hazard-
ous waste programs although a state or local permit may not be required for any
removal or remedial action conducted on site.
   (b) Subject to Section 361.193, the state may enforce any federal or state standard,
requirement, criterion, or limitation to which the remedial action would otherwise be
required to conform if a permit were required.
   (c) An action taken by the person to contain or remove a release or tiireatened
release in accordance with an approved remedial action plan may not be construed as
an admission of liability for the release or threatened release.
   (d) A person who renders assistance in containing or removing a release or
threatened release in accordance with an approved remedial action plan is not liable
for any additional remediation costs at the facility resulting solely from acts or
omissions of the person in rendering the assistance in compliance with the approvals
required by this section, unless the remediation costs were caused by the persons gross
negligence or wilful misconduct.
   (e) Except as specifically provided by this section, these provisions do not expand or
diminish the common law tort liability, if any, of private parties participating in a
remediation action for civil damages to third parties.
   Sec. 361.197. COST RECOVERY. (a) The commission shall file a cost recovery
action against all responsible parties who have not complied with the terms of an
administrative order issued under Section 361.188. The commission shall file the cost
recovery action no later than one year after all remedial action has been completed.
   (b) The state may seek a judgment against the noncompliant parties for the total
amount of the cost of the remedial action, including costs of any necessary studies
and oversight costs, minus the amount agreed to be paid or expended by any other
responsible parties under an order issued under Section 361.188.
   (c) The action may also include a plea seeking civil penalties for noncompliance
with the commission's administrative order and a claim for up to double the states
costs if the responsible party$ defenses are determined by the court to be unreason-
able, frivolous, or without foundation.
   Sec. 361.198. ADMINISTRATIVE OR CIVIL PENALTY. (a) A responsible party
named in an administrative order who does not comply with the order is subject to
the imposition of administrative or civil penalties under Section 361.252. The
penalties may be assessed only from the date after which the administrative order
becomes nonappealable.
   (b) Tlte commission may include provisions within an agreed administrative order
that stipulate administrative penalty amount..<1 for failure to comply with the order.
                                           74
7lst LEGISLATURE-SIXTH CALLED SESSION                          Ch. 10, Art. 2, § 29

 The penalty provisions may be applicable to either or both the remedial investiga-
tion/feasibility study and remedial action orders.
   Sec. 3Sl.199. MIXED FUNDING PROGRAM. The commission by rule shall adopt
a mixed funding program in which available money from potentially responsible
parties is combined with state or federal funds to dean up a facility in a timely
manner. Use of the state or federal funds in a miced funding approach does not
preclude the state or federal government from seeking recovery of its costs from
nonparticipating pot.mtially responsible parties.
   Sec. 361.200. DE MIN/MIS SE'ITLEMENT. The commission shall assess and by
 rule may develop and implement a de minimis settlement program. Under the
program, the commission shall consider the advantages of developing a final settle-
ment with potentially responsible parties that are responsible for only a minor
portion of the response costs at a facility because tlte hazardous substances the party
is responsible for are minimal in amount or in hazardous effect by comparison with
the hazardous substances attributable to other parties.
   Sec. 361.201. FINANCIAL CAPABILITY AND FUNDING PRIORITY. (a) The
commission may determine whether a potentially responsible party is financially
capable of conducting any necessary remediation studies or remedial action. The
commission by rule shall adopt the criteria for determination offinancial capability.
   (b) If no financially capable, potentially responsible parties exist for a facility, the
commission shall issue an administrative order stating its determination that the
facility constitutes an imminent and substantial endangerment and that there are no
financially capable, potentially responsible parties. The commission shall then
conduct its own remediation study and '!"emedial action, using federal funds if
available, or, iffederal funds are not available, using state funds from the hazardous
 waste disposal fee fund.
   (c) Generally, the remediation of listed facilities shall be achieved first by private
party funding, second with the aid offederal funds, and third, if necessary, with state
funds from the hazardous waste disposal fee fund.
   Sec. 361.202. DEADLINE EXTENSIONS. The executive director or the commis-
sion may extend any period specified in this section if considered appropriate.
   [Seg, 361.Ull, REGU!TRY. (a) The cgmmissign shall 1niblish a Fegistry:
      [(1) identifying eaGh fagility listed by the survey required under SeGtign 12, Chapter
   566, AGts gf the 69th I.egislP.ture, Regular Sessign, 1985;
      [(2) assigning the relative prigrity gf the need f9r aGtign at eagh fagility tg remedy
   envirnnmental and health prgblems resulting frgm the presenge gf hazardgus waste at
   thgse fagilities; and
      [(3) reggmmeading aGtigas tg aGhi1we effeotive, effioieat, imd timely oleanup gr gther
   resglutign gf the prnblems identified f9r eagh fagility.
   [(b) A reggmmendatien under Subseotien (a)(3) is RGt the remedial investigatign and
feasibility study fer the rele 1ant faoility but must f9rm the basis f9r the study.
                                1

   [Seo. 361.182, INVESTIGATION OF FACILITIES LISTED IN REGISTRY. The ggm
~aoogrdaage with Seotien 361.032, investigate:
      [(l) faoilities listed in the registry; and
      [(2) areas gr sites that it has reason to believe shguld be ingluded in the registry,
   [Seg, 361.183, RELATIVE PRIORITY FOR AG!I'ION AT EACH FACILITY LISTED
IN-REGISTRY. The Gemmissien shall, in geeperatien with the department and as part of
the registry, reassess by January 1 of eagh year the relative prigrity of the need f9r
agtign at eaoh faoility listed in the registry to remedy e1wirgnmental and health problems
resulting from the pre11enoe of hazardous waste at these faoilities. The reassessments
shall be made ago9rding to new inf9rmatien regeived from publio hearings and ethel'
seurges.
   [Seo. 361.184, REVISION OF REGISTRY; Fil.ING NOTICE. The ogmmissign shall:
      [(1) revise the Fegistry peFiodioally to:
                                            75
Ch. 10, Art. 2, § 29                  7lst LEGISLATURE-SIXTH CALLED SESSION

         [(A) add faGilities that may be an imminent and substantial endangerment tG publiG
      health and safety er the envirenment; and
         [(B) delete faGilities that have been Gleaned up under this subGhapter er remeved
      frem the registry under SeGtien 361.186j-and
      [(2) file an affidavit er netiGe in the real preperty reGerds gf the Geunty in whiGh a
   faGility is leGated identifying these faGilities inGluded in and deleted frgm the registry.
   [SeG. 361.185. NOTICE OF INCLUSION IN REGISTRY. (a) The Gemmissien shall
netify in writing any persen-identified as respensible fur all or any part of a faGility or
area that is net listed in the registry of the Gentemplated additien of the faGility er area in
the registry.
   [(b) The notiGe must be sent by Gertified mail, return reGeipt requested, to eaGh named
respensible person at the person's last known address net later than twe months befGre
th&-ravised registry is published.
   [(G) The netiGe must inGlude a desGription of the duties and restriGtiens imposed by
SeGtion 361.U!7.
   [(d) The failure te reGeive a netiGe mailed te a named respensible persen under this
seGtien dees net affeGt the respensibilities, duties, or liabilities impesed on the person.
   [Seg, 361.186, REQUEST FOR CHANGE JN REGISTRY. (a) An owner er operator
of a faGility or other named persen respensible fur a faGility listed or to be listed in the
registry gf the Gommission under this subGhapter may, by submitting a written statement
setting forth the grounds of the request in the furm as the Gommission may require,
request the Gommissien to:
      [(1) delete the faGility from the registry;
      [(2) modify the faGility's priority in the registry; or
      [(3) modify infurmatien GQnGerning the faGility.
   [(b) The GRmmission by rule shall establish proGedures, inGluding publiG hearings, fur
review of requests submitted under this seGtion to delete a faGility,
   [SeG. 361.187, CHANGE IN USE OF FACILITY LISTED IN REGISTRY. (a) A
person may not substantially Ghange the manner in whiGh a faGility listed in the registry
is used without notifying the Gommission and reGeiving the Gommission's written approval
fur the Ghange.
   [~b~ '.fhe Gommission by rule shall define a substantial Ghang~ of use and inGlude in the
defm1t1on:
      [(1) the ereGtion of a building or other struGture at the faGility and similar aGtions;
      [(2) the use of the faGility fur agriGultural produGtion;
      [(3) the paving of the faGility fur use as a roadway or parking lot; and
      [(4) the Greation of a park or other publiG or private reGreational faGility on the
  faGility.
  [(G) The notiGe under SubseGtion (a) must:
     [(l) be in writing and addressed to the exeGutive direGtor;
     [(2) inGlude a brief desGription of the proposed Ghange of use; and
     [(3) be submitted at least 60 days befure the day physiGal alt11ration of the land or
  GonstruGtion OGGUrs or, if no alteration or GonstruGtion is required to initiate the Ghange
  of use, at least 60 days befure the date of Ghange of use.
  [(d) The exeGutive direGtor may not approve a Ghange ef use under this seGtion if the
new use will:
     [(1) interfere signifiGantly with a proposed, ongoing, er Gompleted hagardous waste
  faGility remedial aGtion program at the faGility; or
     [(2) expose the environment or publiG health to a signifiGantly inGreased threat of
  harm.
                                             76
71st LEGISLATURE-SIXTH CALLED SESSION                              Ch. I 0, Art. 2, § 29

   [See, 361.188, CLEANUP OF CERTAIN' HAZARDOUS WASTE FACILITIES. The
eleanufl of a faeility identified under Seetion 361.Un by the eommission in the registry
and that is an imminent and substantial endangerment to the flUblie health and safety or
the en'lironment shall be exfledited.
   [~l.181>. PRIORITY OF USE OF FUN'DS FOR CLEANUP. (a) Payment for
eleanufl of a faeility identified in the registry shall be made in the following orde1·:
      [(1) by pri'late funding;
      [(2) by federal funding; and
      [(3) by state funding from the hazardous waste f>ermit and disflosal fee, if 3flflrO'!ed
   by the legislature..
   [(b) If 'loluntary assistanee from r>rivate sourees is Mt a'lailable, federal funds must be
used for faeility eleanufl if those funds are a'lailable when needed,
   [(e) State funds may be used only if funds from a liable f>erson, an indeflendent third
f>erson, or the federal government are not a'lailable when needed.
   [See. 361.lQO, IMMEDIATE REMOVAL ACTION; RECOVERY OF COSTS. (a) The
eommission may, with the funds a'lailable to the eo'llmission from the hazardous waste
f>ermit and disflosal fees if af>flrO'!ed by the le["islat•.ue, undertake immediate remo1Jal
aetion at a faeility to alle'liate irre'!ersible or irrelJarable harm, if the eommission after an
investigation finds that:
      [(I) a release or threatened release of hazardous waste that is eausing irreversible or
   irref>arable harm to the flUblie health and safety or the en1Jironment exists at a faeility
   identified by the registry; and
      [(2) the immediaey of the situation makes it f>rejudieial to the flUblie interest to delay
   aetion until;
         [(A) an administrati'le order ean be issued to a f>erson liable under Seetion 361.191;
      or
         [(B) a judgment ean be entered in an apf>eal of an administrative order.
   [(b)-Findings required under Subseetion (a) must be made in writing and may be made
ex flarte, The findings are subjeet to judieial re1Jiew under the substantial evidemie rule
a11 pro1Jided by the Administrative Proeedure and Texas Register Aet (Artiele 6252 13a,
Vernon's Texas Ci'lil Statutes),
   [(e) The reasonable exf>enses of immediate removal aetion taken by the eommission
under this seetion may be reeovered from a f>erson identified as liable under Subehapter I.
The state may seek to reeo'!er the reasonable exf>enses in a eourt of apf>ropriate
jurisdietion,
   [See. 361.191. ADMIN'ISTRATIV'E ORDER CONCERNING FACILITY LISTED IN
REGISTRY. (a) If the eommission finds that there exists an aetual or threatened release
of ha;iardous waste at a hazardous waste faeility listed in the registry that presents an
imminent and substantial endangerment to the flUblie health and safety or the environ
meat, or after any immediate danger of irreversible or irref>arable harm is alleviated
under Seetion 361.1!)0, the eommission may issue an administrative order to;
      [(1) the owner or operator of the faeility;
      [(2) any other f>erson resf>onsible for the release of hazardous waste or a threatened
   release at the faeility; or
      [(3) eaeh of the f>ersons under Subdivisions (1) and (2),
   [(b) The order may require a flerson liable under Subehapter I to:
      [(1) develop a remedial aetion program at the faeility, subjeet to the eommission's
   af>proval; and
      [(2) imr>lement the program within a reasonable time speeified by the order,
   [(e) The provisions of Subehapters I, K, and L eoneerning administrati'le orders apply to
an order issued under this seetio11.
                                              77
Ch. 10, Art. 2, § 29                  71st LEGISLATURE-SIXTH CALLED SESSION

   [Seo. 361.192. VOI.UNTARY CLEANUP OF FACILITY. (a) If possible, persons
identified as pel11ons Hable \mder Subehapter I should be notified by the eommission of an
opJX>rtYnity to partieipate voluntarily in a eleanup gf the faeility,
   [(b) If all persons liable under Subehapter I dg ngt volunteer to develop and implement
a remedial aetion program for the faeilit.y, private individuals or entities that vgJunteer to
partieipate in eleanup aetivities should be allowed to do so and may reeover eosts under
Seeti1m 361,344 from liable persons who-de not partieipate in the voluntary < 1 ~
   [(o) If no persons liable under Subeha1'ter I •1olunteer to develop and imple1.ient-a.
remlddial aotion program for the faeility, independent third persP!IS who volunteer to
~ipate in the eleam1p of the faeility should be permittr·1 to 6ontraet with the
eommission to do so. Independent third persons may reeover eosts under Seotion 361.344
from liable persons who do not partieipate in the volunt.Ary eleanup.
   [See. 361.193. REMEPIAL ACTION PROGRAM "DY COMMISSION ON FAILURE
OF RESPONSIBLE PE™N,..(a) The eommission may develop and implement a remedi
al aetion program for a faoili'~
       [(1) a person ordered to eliminate an imminent and substantial endangerment to the
   publie health and safet]-Q". the environment fails to de so within the time preseribed by
   the order; and
       [(2) R9 third person agrees to develop and implement a remedial aotion program ror
   the fa6ility under Se'ltion 361.192(e),
   [(.b) Persons to whom the order is issued shall pay the eommission's reasonable
expenses of developing and implementing the remedial aetion program. The state may
re6over those reasgnable expenses in a 69Urt gf appropriate jurisdi6tion.
   [(6) An aetion instituted by the 6Qmmission under this se6tion is subje6t tg Sub6hapters
I, K, and L.
   [Se6. 361.1Sl4, REMEDIAL ACTION PROGRAM "DY COMMISSION IF NO RESPON
SIBLE PERSON. (a) The 6ommission may develop and implement a remedial a6tign
program for a fa6ility identified by the registry if:
       [(1) the eommission finds that at the f&oility there exists a release or threatened
   release of hazardo\ls waste that presents an imminent and substantial endangerment to
   th&-publi6 health and safety or the environment;
       [(2) after a reasonable attempt to determine who may be liable ror the release or
   threatened release in aG6ordanoe with Se6tion -S61.192, the 69mmission 6anngt:
           [(A) determine who may be liable; gr
           [(10 lo6ate a persgn who may be liable; and
       [(3) no independent third persgn agrees te develgp and implement a remedial aetion
   prggram for the fa6ility under Se6tign 361.192(6),
   [(b) Federal funds shall be used ror a oleanup under this seetion to the extent available
when needed iri aeeordanee with Seotion 361.1S9(.b),
   [(o) The oommissign shall make every effort tg obtain apprgpriate relief frgm a persgn
~UentJy identified or )g6ated whg is liable fur the release gr threatened release gf
hazardous waste at the fa6ility, inolllding re6gvery gf:
       ((1) the eost of developing and implementing a remedial aotion prggram;
       [(2) payment gf the ggst gf the prggram; and
       [(:J) reasgnable expenses in6urred by the state,
   [Seo. 361.195, GOAL OF REMEDIAL ACTION PROGRAM. (a) The goal gf a reme
dial aetign program under this subohapter is tg eliminate the imminent and substantial
endangerment te the publio health and safety or the envirgnment }X>sed by a release gr
threatened release gf hazardous waste at a faoility.
   [(.b) The oommissign shall determine the apprgpriate extent of remedy at a partioular
fa6ility by seleoting the lowest oost remedial alternative that:
       [(l) is teohnolggieally feasible and reliable; and
                                             78
71st LEGISLATURE-SIXTH CALLED SESSION                           Ch. 10, Art. 2, § 29
      [(2) effeGtively mitigates and minimizes damage t9 and fW9Vide. -adequate pr9teciti9n
   9f the publiG health and safety 9r the enviF9nment.
   [SeG, 361.11)6, LIEN FOR CLEANUP ACTION. (a) The state has a lien 9n the real
pr9perty, and any interest in the real pr9perty, that is subjeGt t9 9r affegted by a cileanup
aGti9n f9r Gleanup G9sts fur whiGh a peri;9n is liable t9 the state,
   [(b) The lien imp9sed by this se~ti9n is perfegte~ .and attaGhes t9 the affecited real
pr9perty when and n9t befure an affidavit is reG9rded in aGG9rdanGe with SubseGti9n (d) in
the G9unty in whiGh the real prPperty is )9gated,
   [(G) The affidavit must be exeu1ted by an auth9rized representative 9f the G9R.~
and must sh9w:
      [(l) the name and address 9f eaGh pers9n liable fur the g9sts;
      [(2) a desgriptfon 9f the rea1 property that is affegted by the eleanup aGti9nj and
      f(3) th& am9unt 9f the ggsts and the am9unt-Que..
   [(d) The g9unty Glerk shall:
      [(1) r£iG9rd the affidavit in reg9rds kept fur that purp9se; and
      [(2) index the affidavit under the name 9f eagh pers9n liable fur the G9sts.
   [W The lien is effegtive until the liability fur the G9sts is satisfied 9r beG9mes
unenfurg0able by 9perati9n 9f law·, The G9mmissi9n shall reC!9rd a relinquishment or
satisfaC!ti9n 9f the lien when the lien is paid 9r satir :ded,.
   [Seg, 361.1Q7, VALIDITY AND ENFORCEAIUI.ITY OF LIEN. The lien imposed by
SeC!tion 361.lll6 is n9t valid or enfurgeable if real pr9perty 9r an interest in the real
property 9r a mortgage, lien, or other enciumbrange 9n or against the propr.rt.u is agquired
befure the lien is perfegted unless the person aG{fuiring th~ real property 9r an interest in
the real property or agquiring the m9rtgage, lien, 9r other enciumbrange:
      [(l) had 9r reas9nably sh9uld have had aGtual n9tiGe 9r knowledge that the real
   property is affegted by a cileanup aGti9n; 9r
      [(2) kn9ws that the state has inGurred Gleanup g9sts.
   [Seg, 361.lll!l, LIEN FORECLOSURE. The lien may be fureg)osed only 9n judgment
9f a G9Urt 9f G9mpetent j11risdiGtion fureG19sing the lien and orderiilg the sale of the
property subjegt te the lien,
   [Seg, 361,lllQ, FILING OF BOND. (a) If a lien is perfeGted or attempted t9 be
perfegted as provided by SeGti9n 361.11)6, the owner of the real property affegted by the
lien may file a bond to indemnify against the lien,
   [(b) The bond must be filed with the g9unty g)erk of the G9Unty in whiGh the real
property subjeGt t9 the lien is )ogated,
   [(G) An aGti9n te establish, enfurge, 9r fureGlose a lien or Glaim 9f lien G9vered by the
bimd must be brought not later than the 30th da~· after the date 9f serviGe of n9tiGe of the
bond.                                                                         .
   [(d) The b9nd must:
      [W-JesGribe the real pr9perty 9n whiGh the lien is Glaimed;
      [(2) refer t9 the lien Glaimed in a manner s11ffigien~
      [(3) be in an amount double the amount 9f the Gosts due stated in the lien;
      [(4) be payable t9 the g9mmissionj
      [(a) be exeGuted by the party filing the bond as pri11Gipal and a g9rp9rate surety
   authorized under the law of this state te exeGute t>-.e bond as surety; and
      [(6) be G9nditi9ned substantially that the pri 1Qipal and sureties will pay t9 tlie
   G9mmission the amount of the lien g)aimed, plus G9sta, if the Glaim is preved to be a lien
   on the real pr9perty,
   [Seg, 361.200, NOTICE OF IJOND TO NAMED OIJLIGEE. (a) After the b9nd is
filed, the G9unty Glerk shall issue R9tiGe of the bend te the namod ebligee. A gopy ef the
bend must be attaghed t9 the n9tige,
    Tex.Sass.Laws Bd.Vol. '00-18              79
Ch. 10, Art. 2, § 29                   71st LEGISLATURE-SIXTH CALLED SESSION

  [(b) The notiGe may be served on eaGh obligee by having a Gopy delivered to the obligee
by a person Gompetent to make oath of the delivery.
  [(G) The original notiGe shall be returned to the Gounty Glerk, and the person making
serviGe of Gopy shall make an oath on the baGk of eaGh Gopy showing on whom and on
what date the Gopy is served. The Gounty Glerk shall r(l.Gord the bond notiGe and return in
reGords kept for that purpose.
  [(d) In aGquir.ing-a.'1 interest in real property, a purehaser or lender may rely on and is
absolutely proteGted by the reGord of the bond, notiGe, and t'eturn.
  [SeG. 361,201. SUIT ON EOND EY COMMISSION. (a) The Gommission may sue on
the bond after the 30th day fgllowing the date on whiGh the notiGe is served under SeGtion
361;20~ but may not sue on the bond later than one year after the date on whiGh the
notrne 1s served.
   [(b) If the Gommission reGovers in a suit OR the lien or the bond, it is entitled to reGover
reasonable attorney's fees.
   [SeG. 361.202. -GQSq :ii OF CLEANUP PAYAELE ~·o COMMISSION FROM PERMIT
FEES. (a) Money for aGtions taken or to be taken by the Gommission to eliminate an
imminent and substantial eadangerment to the publiG health and safety or the environ
ment under this subGhapter is payable direGtly to the Gommission from the hazardous
waste permit and disposal fees, if approvell by the legislature.
   [(b) CostB payable to the Gommission under this seGtion inGlude GostB of inspeGting or
sampling and laboratory analysis of waste, soil, air, surfaGe water, and groundwater done
for the Gommission.
   [SeG. 361,203, PRIVATE PARTY CLEANUP; IMMUNITY. (a) The Gommission shall
seek Gleanup of a faGility by private individuals or entities before spending federal or
state funds for the Gleanup.
   [(b) Private individual or entities shall Goordinate with ongoing federal and state
hazardous waste prograri·,s and obtain neGessary approvals for any Gleanup.
   [(G) An aGtion taken by the private individual or entity to Gontain or remove a release or
threatened release in aGGordanGe with an approved remedial aGtion plan is not an
admission of liability for the release or threatened release,
   [(d) If a private individual's or entity's aGtions to Gontain or remove a release or
threatened release Gomply with an approved remedial aGtion plan, the individual or entity
is not liable for additional Gleanup GostB at the faGility resulting solely from an aGt or
omission of that individual or entity, unless the Gleanup Gosts are Gaused by that
individual's or entity's gross negligenge or wilful misGonduGt,
   [(e) ExGept as speGifiGally provided, this seGtion does not expand or diminish the
Gommon law tort liability, if any, of a pri•;ate individual or entity partiGipating in a Gleanup
aGtion for Givil damages to a third person.]
   SECTION 30. Chapter 361, Health and Safety Code, is amended to conform to Section
6, Chapter 703 (S.B. 1502), Acts of the 71st Legislature, Regular Session, 1989, by adding
Subchapter M to read as follows:

     SUBCHAPTER M. REMOVAL AND REMEDIAL ACTION AGREEMEN1'S
  5ec. 361.401. DEFINITIONS. In this subchapter:
     (1) "Disposal facility" means a site or area at which a hazardous substance,
  pollutant, or contaminant has been deposited, stored, disposed of, or placed or
  otherwise come to be located that no longer receives hazardous substances, pollu-
  tants, and contaminants.
     (2) "Fund" means the hazardous waste disposal fee fund.
     (3) "Petroleum" means crude oil or any fraction of crude oil that is not otherwise
  listed or designated as a hazardous substance under Section 361.003(13)(A).
     (4) "Pollutant" or "contaminant" means any element, substance, compound, or
  mixture, including disease-causing agents, that after release into the environment
                                              80
71et LEGISLATURE-SIXTH CALLED SESSION                                      Ch. 11, § 3
  Sec. 14a(c); and
  Sec. 15.

                                    Article 4. Emergency
   SECTION 1. The importance of this legislation and the crowded condition of the
calendars in both houses create an emergency and an imperative public necessity that the
constitutional rule requiring bills to be read on three several days in each house be
suspended, and this rule is hereby suspended, and that this Act take effect and be in force
from and after its passage, and it is so enacted.
   Passed the Senate on June 5, 1990, by the following vote: Yeas 30, Nays O; passed the
       House on June 6, 1990, by a non-record vote.
   Approved June 14, 1990.
   Effective Sept. 6, 1990, 90 days after date of adjournment.

                                       CHAPTER 11

                                         S.B. No. 49
                                             AN ACT
relating to the County Court at Law of Nacogdoches County.
  Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Texas:
  SECTION 1. Subsection (a), Section 25.1762, Government Code, is amended to read as
follows:
  (a) In addition to the jurisdiction provided by Section 25.0003 and other law, a county
court at law in Nacogdoches County has:
     (1) the probate jurisdiction provided by general law for county courts,· and
    (2) concurrent jurisdiction with the district court in:
       (A) civil cases in which the matter in controversy exceeds $500 and does not
    exceed $50,000, excluding interest and attorney's fees,·
       (B) appeals of final rulings and decisions of the Industrial Accident Board,
    regardless of the amount in controversy; and
       (C) family law cases and proceedings.
  SECTION 2. Effective January 1; 1991, Subsection (a), Section 25.1762, Government
Code, is amended to read as follows:
  (a) In addition to the jurisdiction provided by Section 25.0003 and other law, a county
court at law in Nacogdoches County has:
     (1) the probate jurisdiction provided by general law for county courts; and
    (2) concurrent jurisdiction with the district court in:
       (A) civil cases in which the matter in controversy exceeds $500 and does not
    exceed $50,000, excluding interest and attorney's fees;
       (B) appeals of final rulings and decisions of the Texas Workers' Compensation
    Commission, regardless of the amount in controversy,· and
       (CJ family law cases and proceedings.
  SECTION 3. Subsection (d), Section 25.1762, Government Code, is amended to read as
follows:
  (d) A judge of a county court at law shall be paid an annual salary that is at least
$15,000 but not more than 90 [SO] percent of the total annual salary paid to the judge of
the 145th Judicial District. The salary shall be paid out of the county treasury on orders
from the commissioners court. A county court at law judge is entitled to reasonable
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