HB-5073, As Passed Senate, June 25, 2008

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SENATE SUBSTITUTE FOR

 

HOUSE BILL NO. 5073

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

     A bill to amend 1994 PA 451, entitled

 

"Natural resources and environmental protection act,"

 

by amending section 32701 (MCL 324.32701), as amended by 2006 PA

 

33.

 

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:

 

     Sec. 32701. (1) As used in this part:

 

     (a) "Adverse resource impact" means either any of the

 

following:

 

     (i) Decreasing Until February 1, 2009, decreasing the flow of a

 

river or stream by part of the index flow such that the river's or

 

stream's ability to support characteristic fish populations is

 

functionally impaired.

 

     (ii) Beginning February 1, 2009, subject to subparagraph (vi),

 


decreasing the flow of a cold river system by part of the index

 

flow as follows:

 

     (A) For a cold stream, the withdrawal will result in a 3% or

 

more reduction in the density of thriving fish populations as

 

determined by the thriving fish curve.

 

     (B) For a cold small river, the withdrawal will result in a 1%

 

or more reduction in the density of thriving fish populations as

 

determined by the thriving fish curve.

 

     (iii) Beginning February 1, 2009, subject to subparagraph (vi),

 

decreasing the flow of a cold-transitional river system by part of

 

the index flow such that the withdrawal will result in a 5% or more

 

reduction in the density of thriving fish populations as determined

 

by the thriving fish curve.

 

     (iv) Beginning February 1, 2009, subject to subparagraph (vi),

 

decreasing the flow of a cool river system by part of the index

 

flow as follows:

 

     (A) For a cool stream, the withdrawal will result in a 10% or

 

more reduction in the abundance of characteristic fish populations

 

as determined by the characteristic fish curve.

 

     (B) For a cool small river, the withdrawal will result in a

 

15% or more reduction in the density of thriving fish populations

 

as determined by the thriving fish curve.

 

     (C) For a cool large river, the withdrawal will result in a

 

12% or more reduction in the density of thriving fish populations

 

as determined by the thriving fish curve.

 

     (v) Beginning February 1, 2009, subject to subparagraph (vi),

 

decreasing the flow of a warm river system by part of the index

 


flow as follows:

 

     (A) For a warm stream, the withdrawal will result in a 5% or

 

more reduction in the abundance of characteristic fish populations

 

as determined by the characteristic fish curve.

 

     (B) For a warm small river, the withdrawal will result in a

 

10% or more reduction in the abundance of characteristic fish

 

populations as determined by the characteristic fish curve.

 

     (C) For a warm large river, the withdrawal will result in a

 

10% or more reduction in the abundance of characteristic fish

 

populations as determined by the characteristic fish curve.

 

     (vi) Beginning February 1, 2009, decreasing the flow of a

 

stream or river by more than 25% of its index flow.

 

     (vii) (ii) Decreasing the level of a body of surface water lake

 

or pond with a surface area of 5 acres or more through a direct

 

withdrawal from the lake or pond in a manner that would impair or

 

destroy the lake or pond or the uses made of the lake or pond,

 

including the ability of the lake or pond to support characteristic

 

fish populations, or such that the body of surface water's ability

 

of the lake or pond to support characteristic fish populations is

 

functionally impaired. As used in this subparagraph, lake or pond

 

does not include a retention pond or other artificially created

 

surface water body.

 

     (b) "Agricultural purpose" means the agricultural production

 

of plants and animals useful to human beings and includes, but is

 

not limited to, forages and sod crops, grains and feed crops, field

 

crops, dairy animals and dairy products, poultry and poultry

 

products, cervidae, livestock, including breeding and grazing,

 


equine, fish and other aquacultural products, bees and bee

 

products, berries, herbs, fruits, vegetables, flowers, seeds,

 

grasses, nursery stock, trees and tree products, mushrooms, and

 

other similar products, or any other product, as determined by the

 

commission of agriculture, that incorporates the use of food, feed,

 

fiber, or fur.

 

     (c) "Assessment tool" means the water withdrawal assessment

 

tool provided for in section 32706a.

 

     (d) (c) "Baseline capacity", subject to subsection (2), means

 

either any of the following, which shall be considered the existing

 

withdrawal approval amount under section 4.12.2 of the compact:

 

     (i) The following applicable withdrawal capacity as reported to

 

the department or the department of agriculture, as appropriate, by

 

the person making the withdrawal in the April 1, 2007 annual report

 

submitted under section 32707 not later than April 1, 2009 or in

 

the April 1, 2007 water use conservation plan submitted under

 

section 32708 not later than April 1, 2009:

 

     (A) For a community supply, the total designed withdrawal

 

capacity for the community supply under the safe drinking water

 

act, 1976 PA 399, MCL 325.1001 to 325.1023, on the effective date

 

of the amendatory act that added this subparagraph.

 

     (A) (B) Unless reported under a different provision of this

 

subparagraph, for a quarry or mine that holds an authorization to

 

discharge under part 31 that includes a discharge volume, the

 

discharge volume stated in that authorization on the effective date

 

of the amendatory act that added this subparagraph February 28,

 

2006.

 


     (B) (C) The system capacity used or developed to make a

 

withdrawal on the effective date of the amendatory act that added

 

this subparagraph February 28, 2006, if the system capacity and a

 

description of the system capacity are included in an annual report

 

that is submitted under this part not later than April 1, 2009.

 

      (ii) If the person making the withdrawal does not report under

 

subparagraph (i), the highest annual amount of water withdrawn as

 

reported under this part for calendar year 2002, 2003, 2004, or

 

2005. However, for a person who is required to report by virtue of

 

the 2008 amendments to section 32705(2)(d), baseline capacity means

 

the person's withdrawal capacity as reported in the April 1, 2009

 

annual report submitted under section 32707.

 

     (iii) For a community supply, the total designed withdrawal

 

capacity for the community supply under the safe drinking water

 

act, 1976 PA 399, MCL 325.1001 to 325.1023, on February 28, 2006 as

 

reported to the department in a report submitted not later than

 

April 1, 2009.

 

     (e) "Characteristic fish curve" means a fish functional

 

response curve that describes the abundance of characteristic fish

 

populations in response to reductions in index flow as published in

 

the document entitled "Report to the Michigan Legislature in

 

response to 2006 Public Act 34" by the former groundwater

 

conservation advisory council dated July 2007, which is

 

incorporated by reference.

 

     (f) "Characteristic fish population" means the fish species,

 

including thriving fish, typically found at relatively high

 

densities in stream reaches having specific drainage area, index

 


flow, and summer temperature characteristics.

 

     (g) "Cold river system" means a stream or small river that has

 

the appropriate summer water temperature that, based on statewide

 

averages, sustains a fish community composed predominantly of cold-

 

water fish species, and where small increases in water temperature

 

will not cause a decline in these populations, as determined by a

 

scientific methodology adopted by order of the commission.

 

     (h) "Cold-transitional river system" means a stream or river

 

that has the appropriate summer water temperature that, based on

 

statewide averages, sustains a fish community composed

 

predominantly of cold-water fish species, and where small increases

 

in water temperature will cause a decline in the proportion of

 

cold-water species, as determined by a scientific methodology

 

adopted by order of the commission.

 

     (i) (d) "Community supply" means that term as it is defined in

 

section 2 of the safe drinking water act, 1976 PA 399, MCL

 

325.1002.

 

     (j) "Compact" means the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence river basin

 

water resources compact provided for in part 342.

 

     (k) (e) "Consumptive use" means that portion of water

 

withdrawn or withheld from the Great Lakes basin and assumed to be

 

lost or otherwise not returned to the Great Lakes basin due to

 

evaporation, incorporation into products or agricultural products,

 

use as part of the packaging of products or agricultural products,

 

or other processes. Consumptive use includes a withdrawal of waters

 

of the Great Lakes basin that is packaged within the Great Lakes

 

basin in a container of 5.7 gallons (20 liters) or less and is

 


bottled drinking water as defined in the food code, 2005

 

recommendations of the food and drug administration of the United

 

States public health service.

 

     (l) "Cool river system" means a stream or river that has the

 

appropriate summer water temperature that, based on statewide

 

averages, sustains a fish community composed mostly of warm-water

 

fish species, but also contains some cool-water species or cold-

 

water species, or both, as determined by a scientific methodology

 

adopted by order of the commission.

 

     (m) "Council" means the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence river basin

 

water resources council created in the compact.

 

     (n) (f) "Department" means the department of environmental

 

quality.

 

     (o) (g) "Designated trout stream" means a trout stream

 

identified on the document entitled "Designated Trout Streams for

 

the State of Michigan", as issued under order of the director of

 

the department of natural resources, FO-210.04, on October 10,

 

2003.

 

     (p) (h) "Diverted" means a transfer of water by pipeline,

 

canal, tunnel, aqueduct, channel, modification of the direction of

 

a watercourse, tanker ship, tanker truck, rail tanker, or similar

 

means from the Great Lakes basin into a watershed outside of the

 

Great Lakes basin. Diverted "Diversion" means a transfer of water

 

from the Great Lakes basin into another watershed, or from the

 

watershed of 1 of the Great Lakes into that of another by any means

 

of transfer, including, but not limited to, a pipeline, canal,

 

tunnel, aqueduct, channel, modification of the direction of a water

 


course, tanker ship, tanker truck, or rail tanker but does not

 

apply to water that is used in the Great Lakes basin or a Great

 

Lake watershed to manufacture or produce a product that is then

 

transferred out of the Great Lakes basin or watershed. Diverted has

 

a corresponding meaning. Diversion includes a transfer of water

 

withdrawn from the waters of the Great Lakes basin that is removed

 

from the Great Lakes basin in a container greater than 5.7 gallons

 

(20 liters). Diverted Diversion does not include any of the

 

following:

 

     (i) A consumptive use.

 

     (ii) The supply of vehicles, including vessels and aircraft,

 

whether for the needs of the persons or animals being transported

 

or for ballast or other needs related to the operation of vehicles.

 

     (iii) Use in a noncommercial project on a short-term basis for

 

firefighting, humanitarian, or emergency response purposes.

 

     (iv) A transfer of water from a Great Lake watershed to the

 

watershed of its connecting waterways.

 

     (q) (i) "Environmentally sound and economically feasible water

 

conservation measures" means those measures, methods, technologies,

 

or practices for efficient water use and for reduction of water

 

loss and waste or for reducing a withdrawal, consumptive use, or

 

diversion that meet all of the following:

 

     (i) Are environmentally sound.

 

     (ii) Reflect best practices applicable to the water use sector.

 

     (iii) Are technically feasible and available.

 

     (iv) Are economically feasible and cost-effective based on an

 

analysis that considers direct and avoided economic and

 


environmental costs.

 

     (v) Consider the particular facilities and processes involved,

 

taking into account the environmental impact, the age of equipment

 

and facilities involved, the process employed, energy impacts, and

 

other appropriate factors.

 

     (r) (j) "Farm" means that term as it is defined in section 2

 

of the Michigan right to farm act, 1981 PA 93, MCL 286.472.

 

     (k) "Generally accepted water management practices" means

 

standards or guidelines for water use that ensure water is used

 

efficiently.

 

     (s) "Flow-based safety factor" means a protective measure of

 

the assessment tool that reduces the portion of index flow

 

available for a withdrawal to 1/2 of the index flow for the purpose

 

of minimizing the risk of adverse resource impacts caused by

 

statistical uncertainty.

 

     (t) "Great Lakes" means Lakes Superior, Michigan and Huron,

 

Erie, and Ontario and their connecting waterways including the St.

 

Marys river, Lake St. Clair, the St. Clair river, and the Detroit

 

river. For purposes of this definition, Lakes Huron and Michigan

 

shall be considered a single Great Lake.

 

     (u) (l) "Great Lakes basin" means the watershed of the Great

 

Lakes and the St. Lawrence river.

 

     (v) (m) "Great Lakes charter" means the document establishing

 

the principles for the cooperative management of the Great Lakes

 

water resources, signed by the governors and premiers of the Great

 

Lakes region on February 11, 1985.

 

     (w) (n) "Great Lakes region" means the geographic region

 


composed of the states of Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota,

 

New York, Ohio, and Wisconsin, the commonwealth of Pennsylvania,

 

and the provinces of Ontario and Quebec, Canada.

 

     (x) (o) "Index flow" means the 50% exceedance flow for the

 

lowest summer flow month of the flow regime, for the applicable

 

stream reach, as determined over the period of record or

 

extrapolated from analyses of the United States geological survey

 

stream flow gauges in Michigan. Beginning On October 1, 2008, index

 

flow shall be calculated as of that date.

 

     (y) "Intrabasin transfer" means a diversion of water from the

 

source watershed of a Great Lake prior to its use to the watershed

 

of another Great Lake.

 

     (z) "Lake augmentation well" means a water well used to

 

withdraw groundwater for the purpose of maintaining or raising

 

water levels of an inland lake or stream as defined in section

 

30101.

 

     (aa) (p) "Large quantity withdrawal" means 1 or more

 

cumulative total withdrawals of over 100,000 gallons of water per

 

day average in any consecutive 30-day period that supply a common

 

distribution system.

 

     (bb) "Large river" means a river with a drainage area of 300

 

or more square miles.

 

     (cc) (q) "New or increased large quantity withdrawal" means a

 

new water withdrawal of over 100,000 gallons of water per day

 

average in any consecutive 30-day period or an increase of over

 

100,000 gallons of water per day average in any consecutive 30-day

 

period beyond the baseline capacity of a withdrawal.

 


     (dd) (r) "New or increased withdrawal capacity" means new or

 

additional water withdrawal capacity to supply a common

 

distribution system that is an increase from the person's baseline

 

capacity. New or increased capacity does not include maintenance or

 

replacement of existing withdrawal capacity.

 

     (s) "Political subdivision" means that term as it is defined

 

in section 2 of the safe drinking water act, 1976 PA 399, MCL

 

325.1002.

 

     (ee) "Online registration process" means the online

 

registration process provided for in section 32706.

 

     (ff) "Preventative measure" means an action affecting a stream

 

or river that prevents an adverse resource impact by diminishing

 

the effect of a withdrawal on stream or river flow or the

 

temperature regime of the stream or river.

 

     (gg) (t) "Registrant" means a person who registers has

 

registered a water withdrawal capacity under this part under

 

section 32705.

 

     (hh) "River" means a flowing body of water with a drainage

 

area of 80 or more square miles.

 

     (ii) "Site-specific review" means the department's independent

 

review under section 32706c to determine whether the withdrawal is

 

a zone A, zone B, zone C, or zone D withdrawal and whether a

 

withdrawal is likely to cause an adverse resource impact.

 

     (jj) "Small river" means a river with a drainage area of less

 

than 300 square miles.

 

     (kk) "Source watershed" means the watershed from which a

 

withdrawal originates. If water is withdrawn directly from a Great

 


Lake, then the source watershed shall be considered to be the

 

watershed of that Great Lake and its connecting waterways. If water

 

is withdrawn from the watershed of a direct tributary to a Great

 

Lake, then the source watershed shall be considered to be the

 

watershed of that Great Lake and its connecting waterways, with a

 

preference for returning water to the watershed of the direct

 

tributary from which it was withdrawn.

 

     (ll) "Stream" means a flowing body of water with a drainage

 

area of less than 80 square miles.

 

     (mm) "Stream reach" means a segment of a stream or river.

 

     (nn) "Thriving fish curve" means a fish functional response

 

curve that describes the initial decline in density of thriving

 

fish populations in response to reductions in index flow as

 

published in the document entitled "Report to the Michigan

 

Legislature in response to 2006 Public Act 34" by the former

 

groundwater conservation advisory council dated July 2007, which is

 

incorporated by reference.

 

     (oo) "Thriving fish population" means the fish species that

 

are expected to flourish at very high densities in stream reaches

 

having specific drainage area, index flow, and summer temperature

 

characteristics.

 

     (pp) "Warm river system" means a stream or river that has the

 

appropriate summer water temperature that, based on statewide

 

averages, sustains a fish community composed predominantly of warm-

 

water fish species, as determined by a scientific methodology

 

adopted by order of the commission.

 

     (qq) (u) "Waters of the Great Lakes basin" means the Great

 


Lakes and all streams, rivers, lakes, connecting channels, and

 

other bodies of water, including groundwater, within the Great

 

Lakes basin.

 

     (rr) (v) "Waters of the state" means groundwater, lakes,

 

rivers, and streams and all other watercourses and waters,

 

including the Great Lakes, within the territorial boundaries of the

 

state. Waters of the state do not include drainage ways and ponds

 

designed and constructed solely for wastewater conveyance,

 

treatment, or control.

 

     (ss) (w) "Withdrawal" means the removal of water from its

 

source for any purpose, other than for hydroelectric generation at

 

sites certified, licensed, or permitted by the federal energy

 

regulatory commission of water from surface water or groundwater.

 

     (tt) "Zone A withdrawal" means the following:

 

     (i) For a cold river system, as follows:

 

     (A) For a cold stream, less than a 1% reduction in the density

 

of thriving fish populations as determined by the thriving fish

 

curve.

 

     (B) For a cold small river, less than 50% of the withdrawal

 

that would result in an adverse resource impact.

 

     (ii) For a cold-transitional river system, there is not a zone

 

A withdrawal.

 

     (iii) For a cool river system, as follows:

 

     (A) For a cool stream, less than a 10% reduction in the

 

density of thriving fish populations as determined by the thriving

 

fish curve.

 

     (B) For a cool small river, less than a 5% reduction in the

 


density of thriving fish populations as determined by the thriving

 

fish curve.

 

     (C) For a cool large river, less than an 8% reduction in the

 

density of thriving fish populations as determined by the thriving

 

fish curve.

 

     (iv) For a warm river system, less than a 10% reduction in the

 

density of thriving fish populations as determined by the thriving

 

fish curve.

 

     (uu) "Zone B withdrawal" means the following:

 

     (i) There is not a zone B withdrawal for a cold stream or small

 

river.

 

     (ii) For a cold-transitional river system, less than a 5%

 

reduction in the density of thriving fish populations as determined

 

by the thriving fish curve.

 

     (iii) For a cool river system, as follows:

 

     (A) For a cool stream, a 10% or more but less than a 20%

 

reduction in the density of thriving fish populations as determined

 

by the thriving fish curve.

 

     (B) For a cool small river, a 5% or more but less than a 10%

 

reduction in the density of thriving fish populations as determined

 

by the thriving fish curve.

 

     (C) For a cool large river, an 8% or more but less than a 10%

 

reduction in the density of thriving fish populations as determined

 

by the thriving fish curve.

 

     (iv) For a warm river system, as follows:

 

     (A) For a warm stream, a 10% or more but less than a 15%

 

reduction in the density of thriving fish populations as determined

 


by the thriving fish curve.

 

     (B) For a warm small river or a warm large river, a 10% or

 

more but less than a 20% reduction in the density of thriving fish

 

populations as determined by the thriving fish curve.

 

     (vv) "Zone C withdrawal" means the following as long as the

 

withdrawal will not decrease the flow of a stream or river by more

 

than 25% of its index flow:

 

     (i) For a cold river system, as follows:

 

     (A) For a cold stream, a 1% or more but less than a 3%

 

reduction in the density of thriving fish populations as determined

 

by the thriving fish curve.

 

     (B) For a cold small river, 50% or more of the withdrawal that

 

would result in an adverse resource impact but less than a 1%

 

reduction in the density of thriving fish populations as determined

 

by the thriving fish curve.

 

     (ii) There is not a zone C withdrawal for a cold-transitional

 

river system.

 

     (iii) For a cool river system, as follows:

 

     (A) For a cool stream, a 20% or more reduction in the density

 

of thriving fish populations as determined by the thriving fish

 

curve but less than a 10% reduction in the abundance of

 

characteristic fish populations as determined by the characteristic

 

fish curve.

 

     (B) For cool small rivers, a 10% or more but less than a 15%

 

reduction in the density of thriving fish populations as determined

 

by the thriving fish curve.

 

     (C) For cool large rivers, a 10% or more but less than a 12%

 


reduction in the density of thriving fish populations as determined

 

by the thriving fish curve.

 

     (iv) For warm river systems, as follows:

 

     (A) For warm streams, a 15% or more reduction in the density

 

of thriving fish populations as determined by the thriving fish

 

curve but less than a 5% reduction in the abundance of

 

characteristic fish populations as determined by the characteristic

 

fish curve.

 

     (B) For warm small rivers and warm large rivers, a 20% or more

 

reduction in the density of thriving fish populations as determined

 

by the thriving fish curve but less than a 10% reduction in the

 

abundance of characteristic fish populations as determined by the

 

characteristic fish curve.

 

     (ww) "Zone D withdrawal" means, beginning February 1, 2009, a

 

withdrawal that is likely to cause an adverse resource impact.

 

     (2) For purposes of determining baseline capacity, a person

 

who replaces his or her surface water withdrawal capacity with the

 

same amount of groundwater withdrawal capacity from the drainage

 

area of the same stream reach may retain the baseline capacity

 

established under this section.

 

     Enacting section 1. This amendatory act does not take effect

 

unless all of the following bills of the 94th Legislature are

 

enacted into law:

 

     (a) Senate Bill No. 212.

 

     (b) Senate Bill No. 723.

 

     (c) Senate Bill No. 727.

 

     (d) Senate Bill No. 858.

 


     (e) Senate Bill No. 859.

 

     (f) Senate Bill No. 860.

 

     (g) House Bill No. 4343.

 

     (h) House Bill No. 5065.

 

     (i) House Bill No. 5066.

 

     (j) House Bill No. 5067.

 

     (k) House Bill No. 5069.