Bill Text: HI HB442 | 2024 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Relating To Environmental Protection.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 16-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2023-12-11 - Carried over to 2024 Regular Session. [HB442 Detail]
Download: Hawaii-2024-HB442-Introduced.html
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES |
H.B. NO. |
442 |
THIRTY-SECOND LEGISLATURE, 2023 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
relating to environmental protection.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. The legislature finds that Hawaii's natural resources, including its reefs, oceans, forests, streams, estuaries, shorelines, and beaches, provide irreplaceable and invaluable benefits to visitors, residents, and the global community at large.
The Hawaii State Constitution declares that, for the benefit of present and future generations, the State and its political subdivisions shall conserve and protect Hawaii's natural beauty and all natural resources and shall promote the development and utilization of these resources in a manner consistent with their conservation and in furtherance of the self-sufficiency of the State. The Hawaii State Constitution further confirms that all public natural resources are held in trust by the State for the benefit of the people and requires the State and its agencies to protect Native Hawaiian rights, including traditional and customary practices associated with, and dependent upon, carefully managed and abundant natural resources.
The legislature further finds that Hawaii's natural environment faces significant pressure from the heavy use it receives by visitors. Underinvestment in the State's natural resources poses a significant liability to the visitor industry, the stability of natural systems including food systems and water quality, ecosystem services, fisheries, economic resilience, and the health and safety of residents.
The legislature also finds that Hawaii's residents contribute to the protection and management of the State's natural resources through taxes, environmental stewardship, subsistence and cultural practices, and values and practices embodied in the state constitution. Nonetheless, escalating visitor impacts and increasing global threats to the State's island ecosystem fuel the need for additional funding mechanisms to protect, restore, sustain, manage, and conserve the State's finite natural resources. The Hawaii tourism authority has identified a regenerative tourism fee as a potential solution. The legislature finds that it is both timely and appropriate to ask visitors who enjoy and reap the benefits of Hawaii's natural resources to contribute to their protection, care, and restoration.
The legislature further finds that environmental protection fees, commonly referred to as "green fees", have been successfully implemented at visitor destinations around the world, including the Galapagos Islands, New Zealand, and Palau.
The legislature also finds that a permit requirement for visitors who enjoy Hawaii's state parks, beaches, hiking trails on state-owned land, and ecosystems could generate the necessary funding each year to help offset adverse visitor impacts and conserve Hawaii's green infrastructure in perpetuity.
Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is to:
(1) Establish a visitor green fee program that requires visitors to purchase a license that is valid for one year for the use of a state park, beach, state-owned forest, hiking trail on state-owned land, or other state-owned natural area, to be administered by the department of land and natural resources;
(2) Establish a visitor green fee special fund, into which shall be deposited fees, penalties, appropriations, and gifts and donations for the program;
(3) Establish an environmental legacy commission responsible for allocating disbursements and awarding grants from the visitor green fee special fund for the protection, restoration, enhancement, care, and increased resilience of Hawaii's natural and outdoor recreational resources;
(4) Appropriate funds for the establishment of the environmental legacy commission and a strategic plan; and
(5) Require annual reports to the legislature on the progress of the program.
SECTION 2. Chapter 171, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new part to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
"Part . VISITOR GREEN FEE PROGRAM
§171-A Definitions. As used in this part:
"Commission" means the environmental legacy commission.
"Fund" means the visitor green fee special fund established pursuant to section 171-E.
"License" means the license issued pursuant to this part.
"Licensee" means a person who is issued a license pursuant to this part.
"Nonprofit organization" means a private, nonprofit organization with nonprofit status acknowledged by the United States Internal Revenue Service that qualifies under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, and has among its charitable purposes the preservation, restoration, management, or interpretation of natural or cultural resources for scientific, historic, educational, recreational, scenic, wildlife, or open space purposes, the protection of the natural environment or biological resources, the preservation or enhancement of wildlife, or the protection or interpretation of Native Hawaiian cultural resources and practices related thereto.
"Program" means the visitor green fee program established pursuant to this part.
"Resident" means an individual who has:
(1) Filed or paid state income taxes for the previous tax year; or
(2) Established domicile in the State, as evidenced by documentation showing the individual's address, including any of the following:
(A) A valid Hawaii driver's license;
(B) A valid Hawaii state identification card;
(C) A valid school identification card; or
(D) Any other official document issued to the individual within the last thirty days by a government agency, financial institution, insurance company, or utility company in the State.
"Visitor" means a person in Hawaii who is not a resident.
§171-B Visitor green fee program; license; signs. (a) There is established a visitor green fee program to be administered by the department. Under the program, visitors shall pay a visitor green fee to obtain a license to use a state park, beach, state-owned forest, hiking trail on state-owned land, or other state-owned natural area. Visitor green fees collected shall be deposited in the visitor green fee special fund established pursuant to section 171-E. Revenues collected under the program shall be allocated to protect, restore, and manage natural and cultural resources.
(b) Beginning July 1, 2024, it shall be unlawful for any visitor who is fifteen years of age or older to visit a state park, beach, state-owned forest, hiking trail on state-owned land, or other state-owned natural area without first obtaining a license pursuant to this part.
(c) The department shall establish convenient opportunities for visitors to pay the visitor green fee and be issued a license, including through a mobile application and an internet website. The department may also establish a separate retail license program to enable retail establishments and nonprofit organizations to sell licenses.
(d) The initial visitor green fee shall be $50 per person.
(e) The chairperson may adjust the fee by rule no more than once every five years, by the rate of the consumer price index change from July 1, 2024, compounded annually, and rounded to the nearest dollar.
(f) A license shall be valid for a three hundred sixty-five day period, including the day of issuance.
(g) The department shall place signs at state parks, beaches, state-owned forests, trailheads on state-owned land, and other state-owned natural areas to inform visitors of the requirement to pay a visitor green fee and obtain a license pursuant to this section.
(h) The department may adopt rules pursuant to chapter 91 as necessary to effectuate the purposes of this section.
§171-C Penalties. (a) Any visitor who is fifteen years of age or older who visits a state park, beach, state-owned forest, hiking trail on state-owned land, or other state-owned natural area without first obtaining a license, in violation of section 171-B(b), shall be liable for a civil fine not to exceed $ ; provided that fines shall not be imposed for a violation of the program until the department has had adequate time, as determined by the department, to educate the public about the program and establish procedures to effectively implement and enforce the program; provided further that the imposition of fines shall begin no more than five years after the effective date of this Act.
(b) The civil fine provided by subsection (a) may be imposed by the circuit court or by the department after an opportunity for a hearing under chapter 91. Imposition of a civil fine shall not be a prerequisite to any other penalty or injunctive relief ordered by the circuit court.
§171-D Environmental legacy commission; members; powers; duties. (a) There is established within the department the environmental legacy commission to guide and approve the department's disbursement of revenues collected under the program and deposited into the fund. The commission shall be established within two years before implementation of the program and before any disbursement from the fund, except for disbursements to establish the commission and develop a visitor green fee strategic plan.
(b) The commission shall consist of eleven voting members, as follows:
(1) Three ex officio members:
(A) The chairperson of the board of land and natural resources or the chairperson's designee, who shall serve as the chairperson of the commission;
(B) The director of the office of planning and sustainable development or the director's designee; and
(C) The chief executive officer of the Hawaii Tourism Authority or the chief executive officer's designee; and
(2) Eight members who shall be recommended by the department and appointed by the governor in the manner prescribed by section 26-34:
(A) One representative of a nonprofit environmental organization having expertise in the protection, restoration, and care of terrestrial natural resources;
(B) One representative of a nonprofit environmental organization having expertise in the protection, restoration, and care of marine and coastal natural resources;
(C) One representative of a nonprofit environmental organization having expertise in climate change mitigation, adaptation, and resiliency;
(D) One representative of the department working on climate change mitigation, adaptation, and resiliency in the State;
(E) Two representatives from the Native Hawaiian community who have expertise in the protection, restoration, care, and interpretation of Native Hawaiian cultural resources;
(F) One representative between the ages of eighteen and twenty-five years, inclusive, who works or has worked in the field of environmental sustainability or restoration, or both; and
(G) One representative from the private sector working to advance environmental solutions in the State as a locally owned and operated green business.
(c) Commission members shall annually elect a chairperson and vice-chairperson of the commission from among its members.
(d) A simple majority of the members shall establish a quorum.
(e) The members shall serve without compensation but shall be reimbursed for expenses, including travel expenses, necessary for the performance of their duties.
(f) The commission shall:
(1) Decide how the department will use fund revenues, consistent with the purpose and priorities of the fund set forth in subsection (g);
(2) Make grant determinations pursuant to section 171-F;
(3) Provide guidance to the department based on the expertise of its members and the communities they represent, consistent with the purpose and priorities of the fund set forth in subsection (g); and
(4) Seek to maximize the effectiveness of the program.
(g) The commission shall approve the use of moneys in the fund for one or more of the following purposes:
(1) Use by the department for the completion and implementation of the visitor green fee strategic plan;
(2) Use by state agencies, including the department, for projects that help to offset adverse environmental impacts caused by visitors or ensure that the State's natural resources are maintained for continued use by licensees, or both, including projects that:
(A) Directly restore, enhance, and protect in perpetuity natural resources and the State's unique and fragile ecological status;
(B) Protect, restore, or enhance terrestrial or marine natural resources;
(C) Increase the resilience and adaptation of Hawaii's natural resources with environmentally beneficial strategies to reduce the adverse impacts of climate change, including coastal erosion, sea level rise, damage to reefs, ocean acidification, coral bleaching, damage to land resources, and other impacts; or
(D) Remove and control invasive species and propagate and plant native species; or
(3) Providing grants to nonprofit organizations or local governments or for cost-matching for federal grants; provided that grants to nonprofit organizations shall constitute at least twenty-five per cent, but not exceed fifty per cent, of fee revenue annually. In awarding grants, the commission shall prioritize projects that promote at least one of the following:
(A) Nature-based solutions to environmental and climate issues that impact the State;
(B) Significant protection, restoration, and enhancement of the State's natural resources;
(C) Increased resilience of state-owned natural resources used by licensees; or
(D) The State's ability to protect natural resources through the establishment, stability, and growth of a green work force.
(h) Moneys in the fund shall be allocated and
administered with transparency and accountability and shall complement but not
supplant funds otherwise appropriated for the purposes identified in this section.
§171-E
Visitor green fee special fund.
(a) There is established within
the state treasury the visitor green fee special fund, into which shall be
deposited:
(1) All proceeds from visitor green fees and licenses purchased pursuant to the program established under section 171-B;
(2) All proceeds from fines collected pursuant to section 171-C;
(3) Appropriations made by the legislature; and
(4) Grants and gifts made to the special fund.
(b) Moneys deposited into the special fund shall be used and allocated as directed by the commission pursuant to section 171-D, except for disbursements to establish the commission and develop a visitor green fee strategic plan.
§171-F Grants; qualifications and conditions. (a) Any nonprofit organization or local government requesting a grant under this part shall:
(1) Be licensed and accredited, as applicable, under the laws of the State;
(2) Have at least one year of experience with the project or in the program area for which the grant request or proposal is being made;
(3) Be, employ, or have under contract persons who are qualified to engage in the program or activity to be funded by the State; and
(4) Submit its request together with all the information required by the department on an application form provided by the department.
(b) Grant recipients shall be subject to the following conditions and restrictions:
(1) Grant funds shall not be used for entertainment or perquisites;
(2) Grant recipients shall comply with all applicable federal, state, and county laws and any other requirements the department may prescribe;
(3) Grant recipients shall allow the department, legislature, and state auditor full access to records, reports, files, and other documents related to the grant so that the program and management and fiscal practices of the grant recipient may be monitored and evaluated to ensure the proper and effective expenditure of grant funds;
(4) Every grant shall be monitored pursuant to rules or policies established by the department to ensure compliance with this part; and
(5) Any grant recipient who withholds or omits any material fact or deliberately misrepresents facts to the department or who violates the terms of the recipient's contract shall be in violation of this section and, in addition to any other penalties provided by law, shall be prohibited from applying for a grant under this part for a period of five years from the date of termination.
(c) The department shall provide grant recipients with access to any state-owned lands or natural resources necessary to effectuate the project for which the grant has been awarded.
§171-G Report to legislature. (a)
The department shall submit a report to the legislature no later than
twenty days prior to the convening of the regular session of 2025 and each year thereafter. The report shall contain information on ways
that the fund restored, enhanced, and protected state-owned natural resources,
including its unique and vulnerable ecosystems, during the prior fiscal year,
and the benefits that accrued or will accrue from fund expenditures to the
benefit of the State's natural resources.
(b)
The department shall publish the annual reports on its website to make
the reports easily accessible to the public.
§171-H
Rules. The department may
adopt rules pursuant to chapter 91 as necessary to carry out the purposes of
this part, including any rules to ensure that persons who purchase a license
are aware the license is distinct from entrance fees to visit a state park,
state-owned forest, hiking trail on state-owned land, or other state-owned
natural area that are specific to that place."
SECTION 3.
(a) The department of land and
natural resources shall amend its existing rules, including the fee schedule
for state parks authorized by section 184-3.2, Hawaii Revised Statutes, to
ensure that persons who purchase a license under the visitor green fee program established
by this Act are not assessed a separate entrance fee to visit a state park,
beach, state-owned forest, hiking trail on state-owned land, or other
state-owned natural area to which access is granted by the license.
(b)
No later than twenty days prior to the convening of the regular session
of 2024, the department of land and natural resources shall submit to the
legislature proposed legislation, if any, that may be needed to ensure persons
who purchase a license under the visitor green fee program are not assessed a
separate entrance fee to visit a state park, beach, state-owned forest, hiking
trail on state-owned land, or other state-owned natural area to which access is
granted by the license.
SECTION 4. There
is appropriated out of the general revenues of the State of Hawaii the sum of
$3,000,000 or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year
2023-2024 for deposit into the visitor green fee special fund.
SECTION 5. There
is appropriated out of the visitor green fee special fund the sum of $1,000,000
or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2023-2024 for the
establishment of the environmental legacy commission and a strategic plan with
a timetable indicating how the purposes of the visitor green fee program shall
be implemented pursuant to this Act.
SECTION 6. In codifying the new sections added by section 2 of this Act, the revisor of statutes shall substitute appropriate section numbers for the letters used in designating the new sections in this Act.
SECTION 7. This Act does not affect rights and duties that matured, penalties that were incurred, and proceedings that were begun before its effective date.
SECTION 8. This Act shall take effect upon its approval; provided that sections 4 and 5 shall take effect on July 1, 2023.
INTRODUCED BY: |
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Report Title:
Visitor Green Fee Program; License; Penalties; Environmental Legacy Commission; Visitor Green Fee Special Fund; Grants; DLNR; Report; Appropriation
Description:
Establishes a visitor green fee program that requires that visitors purchase a license which is valid for one year for the use of a state park, beach, state-owned forest, hiking trail on state-owned land, or other state-owned natural area, to be administered by the department of land and natural resources. Establishes a visitor green fee special fund, into which shall be deposited fees, penalties, appropriations, and gifts and donations for the program. Establishes an environmental legacy commission, which shall be responsible for allocating disbursements and awarding grants from the visitor green fee special fund for the protection, restoration, enhancement, care, and increased resilience of Hawaii's natural and outdoor recreational resources. Appropriates fund for the establishment of the environmental legacy commission and a strategic plan. Requires annual reports to the legislature on the progress of the program.
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.