130A-295.2. Financial responsibility requirements for applicants and permit holders for solid waste management facilities.
(a) As used in this section:
(1) "Financial assurance" refers to the ability of an applicant or permit holder to pay the costs of assessment and remediation in the event of a release of pollutants from a facility, closure of the facility in accordance with all applicable requirements, and post-closure monitoring and maintenance of the facility.
(2) "Financial qualification" refers to the ability of an applicant or permit holder to pay the costs of proper design, construction, operation, and maintenance of the facility.
(3) "Financial responsibility" encompasses both financial assurance and financial qualification.
(b) The Commission may adopt rules governing financial responsibility requirements for applicants for permits and for permit holders to ensure the availability of sufficient funds for the proper design, construction, operation, maintenance, closure, and post-closure monitoring and maintenance of solid waste management facilities and for any corrective action the Department may require during the active life of a facility or during the closure and post-closure periods.
(c) The Department may provide a copy of any filing that an applicant for a permit or a permit holder submits to the Department to meet the financial responsibility requirements under this section to the State Treasurer. The State Treasurer shall review the filing and provide the Department with a written opinion as to the adequacy of the filing to meet the purposes of this section, including any recommended changes.
(d) The Department may, in its sole discretion, require an applicant for a permit to construct a facility to demonstrate its financial qualification for the design, construction, operation, and maintenance of a facility. The Department may require an applicant for a permit for a solid waste management facility to provide cost estimates for site investigation; land acquisition, including financing terms and land ownership; design; construction of each five-year phase, if applicable; operation; maintenance; closure; and post-closure monitoring and maintenance of the facility to the Department. The Department may allow an applicant to demonstrate its financial qualifications for only the first five-year phase of the facility. If the Department allows an applicant for a permit to demonstrate its financial qualification for only the first five-year phase of the facility, the Department shall require the applicant or permit holder to demonstrate its financial qualification for each successive five-year phase of the facility when applying for a permit to construct each successive phase of the facility.
(e) If the Department requires an applicant for a permit or a permit holder for a solid waste management facility to demonstrate its financial qualification, the applicant or permit holder shall provide an audited, certified financial statement. An applicant who is required to demonstrate its financial qualification may do so through a combination of cash deposits, insurance, and binding loan commitments from a financial institution licensed to do business in the State and rated AAA by Standard & Poor's, Moody's Investor Service, or Fitch, Inc. If assets of a parent, subsidiary, or other affiliate of the applicant or a permit holder, or a joint venturer with a direct or indirect interest in the applicant or permit holder, are proposed to be used to demonstrate financial qualification, then the party whose assets are to be used must be designated as a joint permittee with the applicant on the permit for the facility.
(f) The applicant and permit holder for a solid waste management facility shall establish financial assurance by a method or combination of methods that will ensure that sufficient funds for closure, post-closure maintenance and monitoring, and any corrective action that the Department may require will be available during the active life of the facility, at closure, and for any post-closure period of time that the Department may require even if the applicant or permit holder becomes insolvent or ceases to reside, be incorporated, do business, or maintain assets in the State. Rules adopted by the Commission shall allow a business entity that is an applicant for a permit or a permit holder to establish financial assurance through insurance, irrevocable letters of credit, trusts, surety bonds, corporate financial tests, or any other financial device as allowed pursuant to 40 Code of Federal Regulations 258.74 (July 1, 2010 Edition), or any combination of the foregoing shown to provide protection equivalent to the financial protection that would be provided by insurance if insurance were the only mechanism used. Assets used to meet the financial assurance requirements of this section shall be in a form that will allow the Department to readily access funds for the purposes set out in this section. Assets used to meet financial assurance requirements of this section shall not be accessible to the permit holder except as approved by the Department. Where a corporate financial test is used that is substantially similar to that allowed under 40 Code of Federal Regulations 258.74 (July 1, 2010 Edition), the assets shall be presumed both to be readily accessible by the Department and not otherwise accessible to the permit holder.
(g) In order to continue to hold a permit under this Article, a permit holder must maintain financial responsibility and must provide any information requested by the Department to establish that the permit holder continues to maintain financial responsibility. A permit holder shall notify the Department of any significant change in the: (i) identity of any person or structure of the business entity that holds the permit for the facility; (ii) identity of any person or structure of the business entity that owns or operates the facility; or (iii) assets of the permit holder, owner, or operator of the facility. The permit holder shall notify the Department within 30 days of a significant change. A change shall be considered significant if it has the potential to affect the financial responsibility of the permit holder, owner, or operator, or if it would result in a change in the identity of the permit holder, owner, or operator for purposes of either financial responsibility or environmental compliance review. Based on its review of the changes, the Department may require the permit holder to reestablish financial responsibility and may modify or revoke a permit, or require issuance of a new permit.
(h) To meet the financial assurance requirements of this section, the owner or operator of a sanitary landfill, other than a sanitary landfill for the disposal of construction and demolition debris waste, shall establish financial assurance sufficient to cover a minimum of two million dollars ($2,000,000) in costs for potential assessment and corrective action at the facility. The Department may require financial assurance in a higher amount and may increase the amount of financial assurance required of a permit holder at any time based upon the types of waste disposed in the landfill, the projected amount of waste to be disposed in the landfill, the location of the landfill, potential receptors of releases from the landfill, and inflation. The financial assurance requirements of this subsection are in addition to the other financial responsibility requirements set out in this section.
(h1) To meet the financial assurance requirements of this section, the owner or operator of a sanitary landfill for the disposal of construction and demolition debris waste shall establish financial assurance sufficient to cover a minimum of one million dollars ($1,000,000) in costs for potential assessment and corrective action at the facility. The financial assurance requirements of this subsection are in addition to the other financial responsibility requirements set out in this section.
(i) The Commission may adopt rules under which a unit of local government and a solid waste management authority created pursuant to Article 22 of Chapter 153A of the General Statutes may meet the financial responsibility requirements of this section by either a local government financial test or a capital reserve fund requirement.
(j) In addition to the other methods by which financial assurance may be established as set forth in subsection (f) of this section, the Department may allow the owner or operator of a sanitary landfill permitted on or before August 1, 2009, to meet the financial assurance requirement set forth in subsection (h) of this section by establishing a trust fund which conforms to the following minimum requirements:
(1) The trustee shall be an entity which has the authority to act as a trustee and whose trust operations are regulated and examined by a State or federal agency.
(2) A copy of the trust agreement shall be placed in the facility's operating record.
(3) Payments into the trust fund shall be made annually by the owner or operator over a period not to exceed five years. This period is referred to as the pay-in period.
(4) Payments into the fund shall be made in equal annual installments in amounts calculated by dividing the current cost estimate for potential assessment and corrective action at the facility, which, for a sanitary landfill, other than a sanitary landfill for the disposal of construction and demolition debris waste, shall not be less than two million dollars ($2,000,000) in accordance with subsection (h) of this section, by the number of years in the pay-in period.
(5) The trust fund may be terminated by the owner or operator only if the owner or operator establishes financial assurance by another method or combination of methods allowed under subsection (f) of this section.
(6) The trust agreement shall be accompanied by a formal certification of acknowledgement. (2007-550, s. 5(a); 2011-262, s. 1; 2014-120, s. 27.)
Structure North Carolina General Statutes
North Carolina General Statutes
Article 9 - Solid Waste Management.
§ 130A-291 - Division of Waste Management.
§ 130A-291.1 - Septage management program; permit fees.
§ 130A-291.2 - Temporary domestic wastewater holding tanks.
§ 130A-291.3 - Septage operator training required.
§ 130A-292 - Conveyance of land used for commercial hazardous waste disposal facility to the State.
§ 130A-294 - Solid waste management program.
§ 130A-295 - Additional requirements for hazardous waste facilities.
§ 130A-295.01 - Additional requirement for commercial hazardous waste facilities.
§ 130A-295.05 - Hazardous waste transfer facilities.
§ 130A-295.1 - (See Editor's note) Limitations on permits for sanitary landfills.
§ 130A-295.3 - Environmental compliance review requirements for applicants and permit holders.
§ 130A-295.4 - Combustion products landfills.
§ 130A-295.5 - Traffic study required for certain solid waste management facilities.
§ 130A-295.6 - Additional requirements for sanitary landfills.
§ 130A-295.8 - Fees applicable to permits for solid waste management facilities.
§ 130A-295.9 - Solid waste disposal tax; use of proceeds.
§ 130A-297 - Receipt and distribution of funds.
§ 130A-298 - Hazardous waste fund.
§ 130A-299 - Single agency designation.
§ 130A-300 - Effect on laws applicable to water pollution control.
§ 130A-301 - Recordation of permits for disposal of waste on land and Notice of Open Dump.
§ 130A-302 - Sludge deposits at sanitary landfills.
§ 130A-303 - Imminent hazard; emergency.
§ 130A-304 - Confidential information protected.
§ 130A-306 - Emergency Response Fund.
§ 130A-309 - Corrective actions beyond facility boundary.
§ 130A-309.02 - Applicability.
§ 130A-309.03 - Findings, purposes.
§ 130A-309.04 - State solid waste management policy and goals.
§ 130A-309.05 - Regulated wastes; certain exclusions.
§ 130A-309.06 - Additional powers and duties of the Department.
§ 130A-309.07 - State solid waste management plan.
§ 130A-309.08 - Determination of cost for solid waste management; local solid waste management fees.
§ 130A-309.09 - Recodified as §§ A to C by Session Laws 1991, c621, ss7 to 10.
§ 130A-309.09A - Local government solid waste responsibilities.
§ 130A-309.09B - Local government waste reduction programs.
§ 130A-309.11 - Compost standards and applications.
§ 130A-309.13 - Solid Waste Management Outreach Program.
§ 130A-309.14 - Duties of State agencies.
§ 130A-309.14A - Reports by certain State-assisted entities.
§ 130A-309.15 - Prohibited acts regarding used oil.
§ 130A-309.16 - Public education program regarding used oil collection and recycling.
§ 130A-309.18 - Regulation of used oil as hazardous waste.
§ 130A-309.19 - Coordination with other State agencies.
§ 130A-309.20 - Public used oil collection centers.
§ 130A-309.21 - Incentives program.
§ 130A-309.22 - Grants to local governments.
§ 130A-309.23 - Certification of used oil transporters.
§ 130A-309.24 - Permits for used oil recycling facilities.
§ 130A-309.25 - Training of operators of solid waste management facilities.
§ 130A-309.26 - Regulation of medical waste.
§ 130A-309.27 - Joint and several liability.
§ 130A-309.28 - University research.
§ 130A-309.29 - Adoption of rules.
§ 130A-309.52 - Findings; purpose.
§ 130A-309.54 - Use of scrap tire tax proceeds.
§ 130A-309.57 - Scrap tire disposal program.
§ 130A-309.58 - Disposal of scrap tires.
§ 130A-309.59 - Registration of tire haulers.
§ 130A-309.60 - Nuisance tire collection sites.
§ 130A-309.61 - Effect on local ordinances.
§ 130A-309.62 - Fines and penalties.
§ 130A-309.64 - Scrap Tire Disposal Program; other Department activities related to scrap tires.
§ 130A-309.72 - Wholesalers required to accept lead-acid batteries.
§ 130A-309.73 - Inspections of battery retailers authorized; construction of this Part.
§ 130A-309.80 - Findings and purpose.
§ 130A-309.81 - Management of discarded white goods; disposal fee prohibited.
§ 130A-309.82 - Use of disposal tax proceeds by counties.
§ 130A-309.84 - Civil penalties for improper disposal.
§ 130A-309.85 - Reporting on the management of white goods.
§ 130A-309.86 - Effect on local ordinances.
§ 130A-309.87 - Eligibility for disposal tax proceeds.
§ 130A-309.111 - (Expires October 1, 2023) Purpose.
§ 130A-309.112 - (Expires October 1, 2023) Definitions.
§ 130A-309.113 - (Expires October 1, 2023) Management of abandoned manufactured homes.
§ 130A-309.114 - (Expires October 1, 2023) Process for the disposal of abandoned manufactured homes.
§ 130A-309.115 - (Expires October 1, 2023) Grants to local governments.
§ 130A-309.116 - (Expires October 1, 2023) Authority to adopt ordinances.
§ 130A-309.118 - (Expires October 1, 2023) Effect on local ordinances.
§ 130A-309.132 - Responsibility for recycling discarded computer equipment and televisions.
§ 130A-309.133 - Data security.
§ 130A-309.134 - Requirements for computer equipment manufacturers.
§ 130A-309.135 - Requirements for television manufacturers.
§ 130A-309.136 - Requirements applicable to retailers.
§ 130A-309.137 - Electronics Management Fund.
§ 130A-309.138 - Responsibilities of the Department.
§ 130A-309.141 - Local government authority not preempted.
§ 130A-309.142 - Registration of facilities recovering or recycling electronics required.
§ 130A-309.203 - Expedited permit review.
§ 130A-309.206 - Federal preemption; severability.
§ 130A-309.207 - General rule making for Part.
§ 130A-309.210 - Generation, disposal, and use of coal combustion residuals.
§ 130A-309.212 - Identification and assessment of discharges; correction of unpermitted discharges.
§ 130A-309.213 - Prioritization of coal combustion residuals surface impoundments.
§ 130A-309.214 - Closure of coal combustion residuals surface impoundments.
§ 130A-309.215 - Variance authority.
§ 130A-309.216 - Ash beneficiation projects.
§ 130A-309.218 - Applicability.
§ 130A-309.222 - Closure of projects using coal combustion products for structural fill.
§ 130A-309.223 - Recordation of projects using coal combustion products for structural fill.
§ 130A-309.224 - Department of Transportation projects.
§ 130A-309.225 - Inventory and inspection of certain structural fill projects.
§ 130A-309.226 - Amendments required to rules.
§ 130A-309.230 - General enforcement.
§ 130A-309.231 - Penalties for making false statements.
§ 130A-310.2 - Inactive Hazardous Waste Sites Priority List.
§ 130A-310.3 - Remedial action programs for inactive hazardous substance or waste disposal sites.
§ 130A-310.4 - Public participation in the development of the remedial action plan.
§ 130A-310.5 - Authority of the Secretary with respect to sites which pose an imminent hazard.
§ 130A-310.8 - Recordation of notices of environmental contamination and notices of restricted use.
§ 130A-310.10 - Annual reports.
§ 130A-310.11 - Inactive Hazardous Sites Cleanup Fund created.
§ 130A-310.12 - Administrative procedure; adoption of rules.
§ 130A-310.21 - Administration of the Superfund program.
§ 130A-310.22 - Contracts authorized.
§ 130A-310.23 - Filing notices of CERCLA/SARA (Superfund) liens.
§ 130A-310.32 - Brownfields agreement.
§ 130A-310.33 - Liability protection.
§ 130A-310.34 - Public notice and community involvement.
§ 130A-310.35 - Notice of Brownfields Property; land-use restrictions in deed.
§ 130A-310.37 - Construction of Part.
§ 130A-310.38 - Brownfields Property Reuse Act Implementation Account.
§ 130A-310.40 - Legislative reports.
§ 130A-310.60 - Recycling required by public agencies.
§ 130A-310.67 - Applicability.
§ 130A-310.68 - Remediation standards.
§ 130A-310.69 - Remedial investigation report; remedial action plans.
§ 130A-310.70 - Notice of intent to remediate.
§ 130A-310.71 - Review and approval of proposed remedial action plans.
§ 130A-310.72 - Financial assurance requirement.
§ 130A-310.73 - Attainment of the remediation standards.
§ 130A-310.73A - Remediation of sites with off-site migration of contaminants.
§ 130A-310.74 - Compliance with other laws.
§ 130A-310.75 - Use of registered environmental consultants.
§ 130A-310.76 - Fees; permissible uses of fees.