The bill creates the stream and wetlands protection commission
(commission) in the department of natural resources (department) and requires the commission to develop, adopt, and maintain a dredge-and-fill permit program (permit program) for:
Regulating the discharge of dredged or fill material into certain state waters; and
Providing protections for state waters, which protections are no more restrictive than the protections provided under the federal Clean Water Act as it existed on May 24, 2023.
The bill creates the stream and wetlands protection division
(division) in the department to administer and enforce the permit program.
The commission is required to promulgate rules as expeditiously
as is prudent and feasible concerning the issuance of permits under the permit program. Until the division implements such rules, the bill prohibits the water quality control division in the department of public health and environment from taking any enforcement action against an activity that includes the discharge of dredged or fill material into state waters if the activity causing the discharge is conducted in a manner that provides for protection of state waters consistent with the protections that would have occurred through compliance with federal law prior to May 25, 2023.
The bill establishes enforcement mechanisms for the permit
program. A person who violates the terms of a permit, a rule, or a cease-and-desist order or clean-up order is subject to a civil penalty of not more than $10,000 per day per violation.
The bill directs the state treasurer to transfer $600,000 from the
severance tax operational fund to the capital construction fund on July 1, 2024, for the implementation of the bill.