Co-Sponsorship Memo Details

2023-2024 Regular Session
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Directing the EQB to Establish Spill Reporting Requirements under the Clean Streams Law
December 2, 2022 02:30 PM to All Senate Members
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Photo of Senator Senator Gene Yaw
Senator Gene Yaw
R Senate District 23
Memo
In the near future, I plan to reintroduce legislation, previously SB 545 of the 2021-22 session, that will amend the act of June 22, 1937 (P.L. 1987, No. 394), also known as The Clean Streams Law, to address accidental discharges or spills of substances that enter or may enter the waters of the Commonwealth.

This legislation would direct the Environmental Quality Board (EQB) to establish a clear, practical reporting obligation similar to the laws of other states.  It would further clarify that accidental discharges that do not cause a violation of numeric water quality criteria - established by the EQB -  do not constitute pollution or subject the discharger to penalties.

PA DEP enforces its own spill reporting regulation, 25 Pa. Code § 91.33(a). PA DEP currently interprets this regulation to require a discharger to notify PA DEP of all unauthorized spills of any substance, even when the quantity spilled is very small and poses no risk of harm to persons or the environment. As confirmed by decisions of Pennsylvania courts, the purpose of The Clean Streams Law is to regulate and control potentially harmful discharges, not to impose an impractical and unnecessary requirement on every business and individual in the Commonwealth to report every drop spilled at their facilities or homes.

I hope you join me in co-sponsoring this legislation that would establish a workable and protective spill reporting requirement under The Clean Streams Law.
Legislation
Document - Introduced as SB 286
Last updated on December 2, 2022 02:31 PM
Directing the EQB to Establish Spill Reporting Requirements under the Clean Streams Law
December 2, 2022 02:30 PM to All Senate Members

Circulated By
YAW

Memo
In the near future, I plan to reintroduce legislation, previously SB 545 of the 2021-22 session, that will amend the act of June 22, 1937 (P.L. 1987, No. 394), also known as The Clean Streams Law, to address accidental discharges or spills of substances that enter or may enter the waters of the Commonwealth.

This legislation would direct the Environmental Quality Board (EQB) to establish a clear, practical reporting obligation similar to the laws of other states.  It would further clarify that accidental discharges that do not cause a violation of numeric water quality criteria - established by the EQB -  do not constitute pollution or subject the discharger to penalties.

PA DEP enforces its own spill reporting regulation, 25 Pa. Code § 91.33(a). PA DEP currently interprets this regulation to require a discharger to notify PA DEP of all unauthorized spills of any substance, even when the quantity spilled is very small and poses no risk of harm to persons or the environment. As confirmed by decisions of Pennsylvania courts, the purpose of The Clean Streams Law is to regulate and control potentially harmful discharges, not to impose an impractical and unnecessary requirement on every business and individual in the Commonwealth to report every drop spilled at their facilities or homes.

I hope you join me in co-sponsoring this legislation that would establish a workable and protective spill reporting requirement under The Clean Streams Law.

Document
Introduced as SB 286

Last Updated
December 2, 2022 02:31 PM
Generated 04/22/2025 08:35 AM