A. 1. Owners or operators of landfill disposal sites which are not generator-owned and -operated nonhazardous industrial waste monofills and owners or operators of commercial incinerators shall install scales. Such scales shall be installed on or within five (5) miles of the landfill disposal site or incinerator and shall be tested and certified as required by Section 14-35 of Title 2 of the Oklahoma Statutes relating to the authority of the State Board of Agriculture to test the standards of weights and measures within the state and to approve if found to be correct. For purposes of this section, any reference to "incinerator" or "incineration" shall encompass waste-to-energy facilities that produce recoverable energy by high-temperature combustion.
2. The owner or operator shall upon receipt weigh all waste received and record the weight in writing. If scales at a disposal site or incinerator are not operative, tonnage shall be estimated on a volume basis whereby the volume reported shall be no less than the volume capacity of the containers or, if none, of the vehicles delivering the waste, and one cubic yard of solid waste shall be calculated to weigh one-third (1/3) ton. The owner or operator shall place notice in the operating record of the disposal site or incinerator of the time and date at which the scales became inoperable, describe the steps taken to repair them, and note the date use was resumed. If daily use has not resumed within thirty (30) days after the scales became inoperable, the owner or operator shall give written notice to the Department of Environmental Quality.
3. The owner or operator shall also maintain a written record of the weight or volume of any solid waste received which is productively reused or recovered in materially the same form as when received and sold in accordance with the permit for the landfill disposal site or incinerator.
4. The scale location restriction of this subsection shall not apply to federal or state military installations so long as:
B. 1. Except as otherwise provided by this subsection:
2.a.Owners and operators of landfill disposal sites or commercial incinerators which receive an average of more than one hundred (100) tons of solid waste per operating day shall assess a fee of One Dollar and fifty cents ($1.50) per ton of solid waste received for disposal or incineration, retaining twenty-five cents ($0.25) per ton for a period of time necessary to recoup a capital investment, plus the interest costs expended in purchasing the scales, of Forty Thousand Dollars ($40,000.00). At the end of such period the fee shall revert to One Dollar and twenty-five cents ($1.25) per ton. For a return with remittance filed on or before the due date, the owner or operator may deduct and retain ten percent (10%) of the fees collected.
3. Owners and operators of commercial composting facilities shall assess a fee of One Dollar and twenty-five cents ($1.25) per ton of all composting material received.
4.a.Owners and operators of landfill disposal sites or commercial incinerators may be reimbursed for capital investment costs that have been or will be expended for the purchase and installation of a wheel wash system for use at the landfill disposal site or commercial incinerator facility. To be eligible to claim this reimbursement, the owner or operator must notify the Department no later than January 1, 2011, of the intent to claim the reimbursement, and the wheel wash system must be in place and operational no later than January 1, 2012. Reimbursement shall be paid only after the wheel wash system is installed and operational and each landfill disposal site or commercial incinerator shall be eligible for reimbursement for only one wheel wash system.
5. The fee assessed by paragraph 1 or 2 of this subsection shall not be imposed on:
6. Large industrial waste generators who generate over ten thousand (10,000) tons of nonhazardous industrial solid waste in the state in a calendar year may annually apply to the Department for a certificate exempting the disposal or incineration of such generated waste in excess of ten thousand (10,000) tons from the disposal and incineration fee authorized by this section. An applicant must have implemented a pollution prevention plan for such waste and filed it with the Department, provided operational documentation regarding such plan and paid the disposal and incineration fee on ten thousand (10,000) tons of the waste during the calendar year of application. The Department-issued exemption certificates shall be valid for the remainder of the calendar year of application, may contain conditions, and, upon presentation by authorized persons, shall be recognized by owners or operators of landfill disposal sites and incinerators subject to this section. If a generator operates a landfill or incinerator solely for waste from that generator, and if that generator chooses to seek the exemption authorized by this paragraph, the generator shall not be required to install scales or keep records relative to quantity of waste received for the landfill or incinerator.
7. The fee assessed by paragraph 1 or 2 of this subsection shall be imposed for all nonhazardous solid wastes accepted for disposal at a site or facility to which a solid waste or hazardous waste permit has been issued by the Department of Environmental Quality, and is to be a charge to waste producers in addition to any charges specified in any contract or elsewhere. The fee shall be imposed upon and passed through to disposers of waste using the facility.
8. The owner or operator of a solid waste disposal site or incinerator and the owner or operator of a commercial composting facility shall collect the fee levied pursuant to this subsection as trustee for the state and shall prepare and file with the Department quarterly returns indicating:
9. Not later than thirty (30) days after the end of the quarter to which such a return applies, the owner or operator shall mail to the Department the return for that quarter together with the fees collected during that quarter as indicated on the return.
10. The owner or operator may receive an extension of not more than thirty (30) days for filing the return and remitting the fees, provided that:
11. For any quarterly return filed more than thirty (30) days after the last day of the quarter or extension date, the owner or operator shall remit an additional five percent (5%) of the fees collected during the month to which the return applies. If the fees are not remitted within sixty (60) days of the last day of the quarter during which they were collected, the owner or operator shall pay an additional fifteen percent (15%) of the amount of the fees for each month that they are late.
12. If the owner or operator misrepresents, or fails to properly measure or record, the amount of waste received or fails to remit fees within sixty (60) days after the last day of the quarter during which they were collected, the permit for the landfill disposal site, incinerator or commercial composting facility shall be summarily suspended by order and the Department shall initiate the process of revoking the permit and may require closure of the landfill, incinerator or commercial composting facility.
C. 1. The Department shall expend funds collected pursuant to the provisions of this section solely for the administration and enforcement of the provisions of the Oklahoma Solid Waste Management Act and for the development of solid waste technical assistance programs, solid waste public environmental education programs and educational curricula, solid waste studies, development of a statewide solid waste plan, solid waste recycling and litter prevention programs, and other environmental improvements.
2. In order to assist the Department of Environmental Quality regarding its responsibilities relating to the promotion of recycling of solid waste, each fiscal year the Department shall contract with units of local government, political subdivisions of this state, components of The Oklahoma State System of Higher Education, local and statewide organizations representing municipalities or counties, or substate planning districts recognized by the Oklahoma Department of Commerce, for up to a total of One Hundred Thousand Dollars ($100,000.00) and to the extent such monies are available for projects promoting the recycling of solid waste. Local governments, political subdivisions of this state, components of The Oklahoma State System of Higher Education, local and statewide organizations representing municipalities and counties and substate planning districts recognized by the Oklahoma Department of Commerce desiring to contract with the Department for such projects shall meet the application requirements of rules promulgated by the Environmental Quality Board and the criteria established by a recycling priorities plan prepared annually by the Department after review and comment by the Solid Waste Management Advisory Council. Except as otherwise provided by this section, contracts for such projects shall not be granted to state agencies.
3. Any litter prevention program shall be developed by the Department in conjunction with the Department of Transportation.
4.a.To the extent that funds are available, the Department may also reimburse any governmental entity for equipment other than motor vehicles or buildings to separate, process, modify, convert or treat solid waste or recovered materials so that the resulting product is being used in a productive manner.
5.a.The Department, in conjunction with the Corporation Commission, the Oklahoma Energy Resources Board and the Oklahoma Conservation Commission, may develop a plan to use suitable portions of the solid waste stream to reclaim Oklahoma lands damaged by oil and gas exploration and production or by mining activities.
6.a.To the extent that funds are available, after having reasonably met other specified uses of the solid waste fund, the Department is authorized to expend up to five percent (5%) of the total annual solid waste fee income for the purpose of making incentive payments to any person, firm or corporation located in this state generating energy by utilizing solid waste landfill methane or steam produced by a commercial incinerator.
D. The provisions of this section shall not apply to landfill disposal sites that receive only ash generated by the burning of coal.
E. On or before September 1 of each year, the Department of Environmental Quality shall prepare a report of income and expenditures for the period of each fiscal year in which solid waste fee monies authorized by this section were received and such report shall be distributed to members of the Solid Waste Management Advisory Council for review. By November 1 of each year, the Council shall submit to the Executive Director, Governor, Speaker of the House of Representatives and President Pro Tempore of the Senate its written comments on the comparison of income with program expenditures.
Added by Laws 1990, c. 225, § 10, eff. Sept. 1, 1990. Amended by Laws 1990, c. 217, § 9, eff. Sept. 1, 1990; Laws 1991, c. 131, § 1, emerg. eff. April 29, 1991; Laws 1992, c. 50, § 3, emerg. eff. April 8, 1992; Laws 1992, c. 270, § 1, emerg. eff. May 25, 1992; Laws 1993, c. 145, § 162, eff. July 1, 1993. Renumbered from § 1-2305 of Title 63 by Laws 1993, c. 145, § 359, eff. July 1, 1993. Amended by Laws 1995, c. 341, § 5, eff. Jan. 1, 1996; Laws 1996, c. 59, § 3, emerg. eff. April 9, 1996; Laws 1997, c. 371, § 5, eff. July 1, 1997; Laws 1998, c. 401, § 7, emerg. eff. June 10, 1998; Laws 1999, c. 15, § 1, eff. July 1, 1999; Laws 2000, c. 184, § 2, emerg. eff. May 3, 2000; Laws 2005, c. 400, § 1, eff. Nov. 1, 2005; Laws 2006, c. 115, § 1, eff. July 1, 2006; Laws 2007, c. 71, § 1, eff. July 1, 2007; Laws 2010, c. 301, § 2, eff. July 1, 2010; Laws 2011, c. 164, § 10, eff. July 1, 2011; Laws 2011, c. 219, § 2; Laws 2013, c. 151, § 1, emerg. eff. April 24, 2013.