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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Ashbill
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2-15-07
HB
SHORT TITLE Above Ground Storage Tank Definition
SB 845
ANALYST Aubel
REVENUE (dollars in thousands)
Estimated Revenue
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
FY09
($1.0)
($1.0)
($1.0) Recurring
Underground
Storage Tank
Fee Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
Relates to Appropriation in the General Appropriation Act
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
New Mexico Environment Department (NMED)
Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources (EMNRD)
New Mexico Department of Agriculture (NMDOA)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 845 amends the Hazardous Waste Act (Section 74-4-3 NMSA 1978) definition of
“above ground storage tank" to exclude tanks containing petroleum products used by crop-
dusting or crop-spraying services. SB 845 also amends the Ground Water Protection Act
(Section 74-6B-3 NMSA 1978) definition of “above ground storage tank" to exclude tanks
containing petroleum products used by crop-dusting or crop-spraying services. This bill also
amends language in both Acts for gender neutrality and readability.
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Senate Bill 845 – Page
2
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
NMED estimates SB 845 would reduce annual tank registration fees by approximately $1.0
thousand.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The purpose of the state Hazardous Waste Act and the Ground Water Protection Act are to
regulate substances acknowledged to be hazardous, which pose a potential threat to human health
and the environment. The Petroleum Storage Tank Regulations (20.5 NMAC) establish
minimum standards to reduce these risks.
Senate Bill 845 would provide a categorical exemption from above-ground petroleum storage
tank regulations for tanks containing petroleum products used by commercial crop-dusting or
crop-spraying services. Tank fees currently run $100.00 per tank.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
The New Mexico Hazardous Waste Act (Act) was amended in 2001 to require NMED to
regulate above ground storage tanks (ASTs) containing petroleum as an integral part of the
underground-storage tank program. The Act required developing and adopting regulations for
aboveground tanks that were substantially similar to regulations previously in place for
underground-storage tanks, including measures for release prevention, release reporting, and
corrective action. These regulations, once adopted by the Environmental Improvement Board
(EIB), provided the same preventative measures for aboveground storage tanks and
underground-storage tanks. The 2001 amendments to the Hazardous Waste Act also gave
owners and operators of ASTs access to the corrective action fund for reimbursing required
environmental remediation activities, provided that the owner was in compliance with the
petroleum storage tank regulations (20.5 NMAC).
Regulation development involved the public participation of tank owners, marketers, corrective
action contractors, tank manufacturers and installers, environmental groups and state and local
government agencies for approximately a two-year period.
NMED maintains that tank systems that contain petroleum products for the purpose of fueling
aircraft involved in commercial activities related to agriculture are no different from tanks used
by any other industrial commercial petroleum storage tank owners, such as gasoline service
stations, municipal vehicle fleets, government agencies, construction companies. Accordingly,
NMED concludes that these tanks should be subject to the same requirements that are designed
to protect New Mexico’s limited ground-water resources.
It is likely that the proposed amendment would provide an unfair economic advantage to this
category of tank owners. One goal of the petroleum storage tank regulations is to provide a
“level playing field" with respect to both underground storage tank owners and aboveground
storage tank owners. Though exempt from state law under SB 845, underground storage tanks
used for crop-dusting or crop-spraying services would still be regulated pursuant to federal law.
NMED suggests that the proposed amendment would weaken this regulatory equivalency.
Both federal and state laws provide an exemption from regulation of petroleum storage tanks for
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Senate Bill 845 – Page
3
“farm tanks". Those exemptions require that farm tanks be located on farm property were crops
are grown or animals are raised. The exemption for “farm tanks" does not extend to commercial,
for-profit operations that are ancillary to the farming operation.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
Aboveground storage tank owners that have tanks used in the crop spraying industry will be
required to upgrade their facilities to meet regulatory requirements. NMED reports that of the
approximately six such facilities in New Mexico that currently have aboveground storage tank
systems used in the crop spraying industry, four are already in compliance with the regulatory
requirements.
POSSIBLE QUESTIONS
1.
If enacted, would other segments of petroleum tank operators request similar
exemptions.
2.
If enacted, what resources would be available to the relevant aboveground storage tank
operator for any remediation that may be required.
MA/nt