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SAFE DRINKING WATER AND
TOXIC ENFORCEMENT ACT OF 1986
25249.5. Prohibition On Contaminating Drinking Water With Chemicals
Known to Cause Cancer or Reproductive Toxicity. No person in the course of doing business shall
knowingly discharge or release a chemical known to the state to cause
cancer or reproductive toxicity into water or onto or into land where
such chemical passes or probably will pass into any source of drinking
water, notwithstanding any other provision or authorization of law
except as provided in Section 25249.9.>
25249.6. Required Warning Before Exposure To Chemicals Known to Cause
Cancer Or Reproductive Toxicity. No person in the course of doing business shall knowingly
and intentionally expose any individual to a chemical known to the state
to cause cancer or reproductive toxicity without first giving clear and
reasonable warning to such individual, except as provided in Section
25249.10.
25249.7. Enforcement.
(a) Any person that violates or threatens to violate Section 25249.5 or
25249.6 may be enjoined in any court of competent jurisdiction.
(b) (1) Any person who has violated Section 25249.5 or 25249.6 shall be
liable for a civil penalty not to exceed two thousand five hundred
dollars ($2500) per day for each violation in addition to any other
penalty established by law. That civil penalty may be assessed and
recovered in a civil action brought in any court of competent
jurisdiction.
(2) In assessing the amount of a civil penalty for a violation of this
chapter, the court shall consider all of the following:
(A) The
nature and extent of the violation.
(B) The number of, and severity of, the violations.
(C) The economic effect of the penalty on the violator.
(D) Whether the violator took good faith measures to comply with this
chapter and the time these measures were taken.
(E) The willfulness of the violator's misconduct.
(F) The deterrent effect that the imposition of the penalty would have
on both the violator and the regulated community as a whole.
(G) Any other factor that justice may require.
(c)
Actions pursuant to this section may be brought by the Attorney General
in the name of the people of the State of California, by any district
attorney, by any city attorney of a city having a population in excess
of 750,000, or, with the consent of the district attorney, by a city
prosecutor in any city or city and county having a full-time city
prosecutor, or as provided in subdivision (d).
(d) Actions pursuant to this section may be brought by any person in the
public interest if both of the following requirements are met:
(1) The private action is commenced more than 60 days from the date that
the person has given notice of an alleged violation of Section 25249.5
or 25249.6 that is the subject of the private action to the Attorney
General and the district attorney, city attorney, or prosecutor in whose
jurisdiction the violation is alleged to have occurred, and to the
alleged violator. If the notice alleges a violation of Section 25249.6,
the notice of the alleged violation shall include a certificate of merit
executed by the attorney for the noticing party, or by the noticing
party, if the noticing party is not represented by an attorney. The
certificate of merit shall state that the person executing the
certificate has consulted with one or more persons with relevant and
appropriate experience or expertise who has reviewed facts, studies, or
other data regarding the exposure to the listed chemical that is the
subject of the action, and that, based on that information, the person
executing the certificate believes there is a reasonable and meritorious
case for the private action. Factual information sufficient to establish
the basis of the certificate of merit, including the information
identified in paragraph (2) of subdivision (h), shall be attached to the
certificate of merit that is served on the Attorney General.
(2) Neither the Attorney General, any district attorney, any city
attorney nor any prosecutor has commenced and is diligently prosecuting
an action against the violation.
(e) Any person bringing an action in the public interest pursuant to
subdivision (d) and any person filing any action in which a violation of
this chapter is alleged shall notify the Attorney General that the
action has been filed. Neither this subdivision nor the procedures
provided in subdivisions (f) to (j), inclusive, shall affect the
requirements imposed by the statute or a court decision in existence on
January 1, 2002 concerning whether any person filing any action in which
a violation of this chapter is alleged is required to comply with the
requirements of subdivision (d).
(f) (1) Any person bringing an action in the public interest pursuant to
subdivision (d), any person filing any action in which a violation of
this chapter is alleged, or any private person settling any violation of
this chapter alleged in a notice given pursuant to paragraph (1) of
subdivision (d), shall, after the action or violation is either subject
to a settlement or to a judgment, submit to the Attorney General a
reporting form that includes the results of that settlement or judgment
and the final disposition of the case, even if dismissed. At the time of
the filing of any judgment pursuant to an action brought in the public
interest pursuant to subdivision (d), or any action brought by a private
person in which a violation of this chapter is alleged, the plaintiff
shall file an affidavit verifying that the report required by this
subdivision has been accurately completed and submitted to the Attorney
General.
(2) Any person bringing an action in the public interest pursuant to
subdivision (d) or any private person bringing an action in which a
violation of this chapter is alleged, shall, after the action is either
subject to a settlement, with or without court approval, or to a
judgment, submit to the Attorney General a report that includes
information on any corrective action being taken as a part of the
settlement or resolution of the action.
(3) The Attorney General shall develop a reporting form that specifies
the information that shall be reported, including, but not limited to,
for purposes of subdivision (e), the date the action was filed, the
nature of the relief sought, and for purposes of this subdivision, the
amount of the settlement or civil penalty assessed, other financial
terms of the settlement, and any other information the Attorney General
deems appropriate.
(4) If there is a settlement of an action brought by a person in the
public interest under subdivision (d), the plaintiff shall submit the
settlement, other than a voluntary dismissal in which no consideration
is received from the defendant, to the court for approval upon noticed
motion, and the court may approve the settlement only if the court makes
all of the following findings:
(A) Any
warning that is required by the settlement complies with this chapter.
(B) Any award of attorney's fees is reasonable under California law.
(C) Any penalty amount is reasonable based on the criteria set forth in
paragraph (2) of subdivision (b).
(5) The
plaintiff subject to paragraph (4) has the burden of producing evidence
sufficient to sustain each required finding. The plaintiff shall serve
the motion and all supporting papers on the Attorney General, who may
appear and participate in any proceeding without intervening in the
case.
(6) Neither this subdivision nor the procedures provided in subdivision
(e) and subdivisions (g) to (j), inclusive, shall affect the
requirements imposed by statute or a court decision in existence on the
January 1, 2002 concerning whether claims raised by any person or public
prosecutor not a party to the action are precluded by a settlement
approved by the court.
(g) The Attorney General shall maintain a record of the information
submitted pursuant to subdivisions (e) and (f) and shall make this
information available to the public.
(h) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), the basis for the
certificate of merit required by subdivision (d) is not discoverable.
However, nothing in this subdivision shall preclude the discovery of
information related to the certificate of merit if that information is
relevant to the subject matter of the action and is otherwise
discoverable, solely on the ground that it was used in support of the
certificate of merit.
(2) Upon the conclusion of an action brought pursuant to subdivision (d)
with respect to any defendant, if the trial court determines that there
was no actual or threatened exposure to a listed chemical, the court
may, upon the motion of that alleged violator or upon the court's own
motion, review the basis for the belief of the person executing the
certificate of merit, expressed in the certificate of merit, that an
exposure to a listed chemical had occurred or was threatened. The
information in the certificate of merit, including the identity of the
persons consulted with and relied on by the certifier, and the facts,
studies, or other data reviewed by those persons, shall be disclosed to
the court in an in-camera proceeding at which the moving party shall not
be present. If the court finds that there was no credible factual basis
for the certifier's belief that an exposure to a listed chemical has
occurred or was threatened, then the action shall be deemed frivolous
within the meaning of Section 128.6 or 128.7 of the Code of Civil
Procedure, whichever provision is applicable to the action. The court
shall not find a factual basis credible on the basis of a legal theory
of liability that is frivolous within the meaning of Section 128.6 or
128.7 of the Code of Civil Procedure, whichever provision is applicable
to the action.
(i) The Attorney General may provide the factual information submitted
to establish the basis of the certificate of merit on request to any
district attorney, city attorney, or prosecutor within whose
jurisdiction the violation is alleged to have occurred, or to any other
state or federal government agency, but in all other respects the
Attorney General shall maintain, and ensure that all recipients
maintain, the submitted information as confidential official information
to the full extent authorized in Section 1040 of the Evidence Code.
(j) In any action brought by the Attorney General, a district attorney,
a city attorney, or a prosecutor pursuant to this chapter, the Attorney
General, district attorney, city attorney, or prosecutor may seek and
recover costs and attorney's fees on behalf of any party who provides a
notice pursuant to subdivision (d) and who renders assistance in that
action.
25249.8.
List of Chemicals Known to Cause Cancer or Reproductive Toxicity. (a) On
or before March 1, 1987, the Governor shall cause to be published a list
of those chemicals known to the state to cause cancer or reproductive
toxicity within the meaning of this chapter, and he shall cause such
list to be revised and republished in light of additional knowledge at
least once per year thereafter. Such list shall include at a minimum
those substances identified by reference in Labor Code Section
6382(b)(1) and those substances identified additionally by reference in
Labor Code Section 6382(d).
(b) A chemical is known to the state to cause cancer or reproductive
toxicity within the meaning of this chapter if in the opinion of the
state's qualified experts it has been clearly shown through
scientifically valid testing according to generally accepted principles
to cause cancer or reproductive toxicity, or if a body considered to be
authoritative by such experts has formally identified it as causing
cancer or reproductive toxicity, or if an agency of the state or federal
government has formally required it to be labeled or identified as
causing cancer or reproductive toxicity.
(c) On or before January 1, 1989, and at least once per year thereafter,
the Governor shall cause to be published a separate list of those
chemicals that at the time of publication are required by state or
federal law to have been tested for potential to cause cancer or
reproductive toxicity but that the state's qualified experts have not
found to have been adequately tested as required.
(d) The Governor shall identify and consult with the state's qualified
experts as necessary to carry out his duties under this section.
(e) In carrying out the duties of the Governor under this section, the
Governor and his designates shall not be considered to be adopting or
amending a regulation within the meaning of the Administrative Procedure
Act as defined in Government Code Section 11370.
25249.9. Exemptions from Discharge Prohibition.
(a) Section 25249.5 shall not apply to any discharge or release that
takes places less than twenty months subsequent to the listing of the
chemical in question on the list required to be published under
subdivision (a) of Section 25249.8.
(b) Section 25249.5 shall not apply to any discharge or release that
meets both of the following criteria:
(1) The discharge or release will not cause any significant amount of
the discharged or released chemical to enter any source of drinking
water.
(2) The discharge or release is in conformity with all other laws and
with every applicable regulation, permit, requirement, and order. In any
action brought to enforce Section 25249.5, the burden of showing that a
discharge or release meets the criteria of this subdivision shall be on
the defendant.
25249.10. Exemptions from Warning Requirement.
Section 25249.6 shall not apply to any of the following:
(a) An exposure for which federal law governs warning in a manner that
preempts state authority.
(b) An exposure that takes place less than twelve months subsequent to
the listing of the chemical in question on the list required to be
published under subdivision (a) of Section 25249.8.
(c) An exposure for which the person responsible can show that the
exposure poses no significant risk assuming lifetime exposure at the
level in question for substances known to the state to cause cancer, and
that the exposure will have no observable effect assuming exposure at
one thousand (1000) times the level in question for substances known to
the state to cause reproductive toxicity, based on evidence and
standards of comparable scientific validity to the evidence and
standards which form the scientific basis for the listing of such
chemical pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 25249.8. In any action
brought to enforce Section 25249.6, the burden of showing that an
exposure meets the criteria of this subdivision shall be on the
defendant.
25249.11. Definitions. For purposes of this chapter:
(a) "Person" means an individual, trust, firm, joint stock company,
corporation, company, partnership, limited liability company, and
association.
(b) "Person in the course of doing business" does not include any person
employing fewer than 10 employees in his or her business; any city,
county, or district or any department or agency thereof or the state or
any department or agency thereof or the federal government or any
department or agency thereof; or any entity in its operation of a public
water system as defined in Section 4010.1.
(c) "Significant amount" means any detectable amount except an amount
which would meet the exemption test in subdivision (c) of Section
25249.10 if an individual were exposed to such an amount in drinking
water.
(d) "Source of drinking water" means either a present source of drinking
water or water which is identified or designated in a water quality
control plan adopted by a regional board as being suitable for domestic
or municipal uses.
(e) "Threaten to violate" means to create a condition in which there is
a substantial probability that a violation will occur.
(f) "Warning" within the meaning of Section 25249.6 need not be provided
separately to each exposed individual and may be provided by general
methods such as labels on consumer products, inclusion of notices in
mailings to water customers, posting of notices, placing notices in
public news media, and the like, provided that the warning accomplished
is clear and reasonable. In order to minimize the burden on retail
sellers of consumer products including foods, regulations implementing
Section 25249.6 shall to the extent practicable place the obligation to
provide any warning materials such as labels on the producer or packager
rather than on the retail seller, except where the retail seller itself
is responsible for introducing a chemical known to the state to cause
cancer or reproductive toxicity into the consumer product in question.
25249.12.
(a) The Governor shall designate a lead agency and other agencies that
may be required to implement this chapter, including this section. Each
agency so designated may adopt and modify regulations, standards, and
permits as necessary to conform with and implement this chapter and to
further its purposes.
(b) The Safe Drinking Water and Toxic Enforcement Fund is hereby
established in the State Treasury. The director of the lead agency
designated by the Governor to implement this chapter may expend the
funds in the Safe Drinking Water and Toxic Enforcement Fund, upon
appropriation by the Legislature, to implement and administer this
chapter.
(c) In addition to any other money that may be deposited in the Safe
Drinking Water and Toxic Enforcement Fund, all of the following amounts
shall be deposited in the fund:
(1) Seventy-five percent of all civil and criminal penalties collected
pursuant to this chapter.
(2) Any interest earned upon the money deposited into the Safe Drinking
Water and Toxic Enforcement Fund.
(d) Twenty-five percent of all civil and criminal penalties collected
pursuant to this chapter shall be paid to the office of the city
attorney, city prosecutor, district attorney, or Attorney General,
whichever office brought the action, or in the case of an action brought
by a person under subdivision (d) of Section 25249.7, to that person.
25249.13. Preservation Of Existing Rights, Obligations, and Penalties.
Nothing in this chapter shall alter or diminish any legal obligation
otherwise required in common law or by statute or regulation, and
nothing in this chapter shall create or enlarge any defense in any
action to enforce such legal obligation. Penalties and sanctions imposed
under this chapter shall be in addition to any penalties or sanctions
otherwise prescribed by law.
25180.7.
(a) Within the meaning of this section, a "designated government
employee" is any person defined as a "designated employee" by Government
Code Section 82019, as amended. (b) Any designated government employee
who obtains information in the course of his official duties revealing
the illegal discharge or threatened illegal discharge of a hazardous
waste within the geographical area of his jurisdiction and who knows
that such discharge or threatened discharge is likely to cause
substantial injury to the public health or safety must, within
seventy-two hours, disclose such information to the local Board of
Supervisors and to the local health officer. No disclosure of
information is required under this subdivision when otherwise prohibited
by law, or when law enforcement personnel have determined that such
disclosure would adversely affect an ongoing criminal investigation, or
when the information is already general public knowledge within the
locality affected by the discharge or threatened discharge. (c) Any
designated government employee who knowingly and intentionally fails to
disclose information required to be disclosed under subdivision (b)
shall, upon conviction, be punished by imprisonment in the county jail
for not more than one year or by imprisonment in state prison for not
more than three years. The court may also impose upon the person a fine
of not less than five thousand dollars ($5000) or more than twenty-five
thousand dollars ($25,000). The felony conviction for violation of this
section shall require forfeiture of government employment within thirty
days of conviction.
(d) Any local health officer who receives information pursuant to
subdivision (b) shall take appropriate action to notify local news media
and shall make such information available to the public without delay.
25192.
(a) All civil and criminal penalties collected pursuant to this chapter
shall be apportioned in the following manner:
(1) Fifty percent shall be deposited in the Hazardous Substance Account
in the General Fund.
(2) Twenty-five percent shall be paid to the office of the city
attorney, city prosecutor, district attorney, or Attorney General,
whichever office brought the action.
(3) Twenty-five percent shall be paid to the department and used to fund
the activity of the CUPA, the local health officer, or other local
public officer or agency authorized to enforce the provisions of this
chapter pursuant to Section 25180, whichever entity investigated the
matter that led to the bringing of the action. If investigation by the
local police department or sheriff's office or California Highway Patrol
led to the bringing of the action, the CUPA, the local health officer,
or the authorized officer or agency, shall pay a total of 40 percent of
its portion under this subdivision to that investigating agency or
agencies to be used for the same purpose. If more than one agency is
eligible for payment under this paragraph, division of payment among the
eligible agencies shall be in the discretion of the CUPA, the local
health officer, or the authorized officer or agency.
(b) If a reward is paid to a person pursuant to Section 25191.7, the
amount of the reward shall be deducted from the amount of the civil
penalty before the amount is apportioned pursuant to subdivision (a). |
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