Bill Text: MA H4170 | 2009-2010 | 186th General Court | Introduced


Bill Title: RELATIVE TO THE CONSUMER PROTECTION AND SAFETY OF PERSONS TOWED IN THE COMMONWEALTH

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2009-07-23 - Bill reported favorably by committee and referred to the House Committee On Ways and Means [H4170 Detail]

Download: Massachusetts-2009-H4170-Introduced.html

The Commonwealth of Massachusetts

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     By Mr. Speliotis of Danvers, for the committee on Consumer Protection and Professional Licensure, on House, No. 234, a Bill relative to the consumer protection and safety of persons towed in the Commonwealth (House, No. 4170).  July 23, 2009.

 

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An Act RELATIVE TO THE CONSUMER PROTECTION AND SAFETY OF PERSONS TOWED IN THE COMMONWEALTH.

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FOR THE COMMITTEE:

 

Name:

District/Address:

Theodore C. Speliotis

13th Essex


 

The Commonwealth of Massachusetts

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In the Year Two Thousand and Nine

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An Act RELATIVE TO THE CONSUMER PROTECTION AND SAFETY OF PERSONS TOWED IN THE COMMONWEALTH.



                Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows:

            SECTION 1. Section 6B of chapter 159B of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2006

Official Edition, is hereby amended by inserting after the third paragraph the following

paragraph;

Notwithstanding any General or special law, or rule or regulation to the contrary, an owner and any lien holder of a motor vehicle which has been involuntarily towed under the provisions of this section, by any carrier with a certificate of authority to transport property for hire, may pay for any and all towing charges, storage fees and any other fees associated with any bill for the towing or storage of any such vehicle either by cash, by debit card or by a major credit card backed by any federal or state charted bank, provided, however, it shall not include a credit card issued by a retail establishment the use of which is exclusively limited for purchases at said establishment. Failure of any tow truck operator or motor vehicle storage facility to comply with the provisions of this paragraph shall result in a one hundred dollar ($100.00) fine, payable to the department, for each such non-compliance and complete reimbursement of all towing and storage charges and fees to the owner and any lien holder or any authorized individual who attempted to pay said fees pursuant to this paragraph.

SECTION 2.   Section 6B of chapter 159B of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2006

Official Edition, is hereby further amended by inserting after the fourth paragraph the following

paragraphs;

Notwithstanding any General or special law, or any rule or regulation to the contrary, no person may own or operate a business which engages in the involuntary towing of a motor vehicle in the Commonwealth without holding a certificate to transport property for hire issued by the Department of Public Utilities. Prior to the granting of any such certificate, whether a first time application or any renewal thereof, the Department of Public Utilities shall have submitted and received the results of a request with the state criminal history systems board to conduct a Criminal Offender Records Information background check on said person pursuant to the provision of sections 168 to section 178B of Chapter of the General Laws. Said person shall not own or operate any tow truck used to tow motor vehicles in the Commonwealth, and the department shall not issue such certificate,  if such person as a result of said background check is a sex offender, as defined in section 178C of chapter 6, or who has been convicted of the use, sale, manufacture or distribution of or possession with intent to distribute any of the controlled substances which are unlawful under the provisions of section 31 of chapter 94C, or to any person who has been convicted of operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor or of marijuana, narcotic drugs, depressants or stimulant substances, all as defined in section 1 of said chapter 94C, or of the vapors of glue, within the preceding five year period under the provisions of section 24 of said chapter. Any person who has consented to have any such case disposed of under the provisions of section 24D of Chapter 94C shall, for the purposes of this section, be deemed to have been convicted. If a person, owning or operating a business certified by this paragraph, is found by the department to have knowingly operated such a business in the towing of a motor vehicle in the Commonwealth and who has been convicted of any of the aforementioned offenses, the department may, after a hearing before said department, suspend or revoke said certificate for such period of time as said department may determine. Said person shall submit to the department, when applying for such certificate or for the renewal thereof, the fee required by the provisions of section 172A of chapter 6 of the General laws and by the criminal history systems board for such criminal offender record information.

           

Notwithstanding any General or special law, or any rule or regulation to the contrary, prior to permitting any person, whether as an employee or a volunteer of said owner, to operate a motor vehicle used in the towing of motor vehicles in the Commonwealth, said owner shall submit to the chief of police in the city or town, wherein such tow truck has been registered with the Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles a request with the state criminal history systems board to conduct a Criminal Offender Records Information background check on said employee or volunteer pursuant to the provision of sections 168 to section 178B of Chapter of the General Laws . Said owner shall not hire as an employee, nor permit a person to volunteer, to operator any tow truck used to tow motor vehicles in the Commonwealth owned or under supervision said owner if such employee or volunteer as a result of said background check is a sex offender, as defined in section 178C of chapter 6, or who has been convicted of the use, sale, manufacture or distribution of or possession with intent to distribute any of the controlled substances which are unlawful under the provisions of section 31 of chapter 94C, or to any person who has been convicted of operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor or of marijuana, narcotic drugs, depressants or stimulant substances, all as defined in section 1 of said chapter 94C, or of the vapors of glue, within the preceding five year period under the provisions of section 24 of said chapter. Any person who has consented to have any such case disposed of under the provisions of section 24D of Chapter 94C shall, for the purposes of this section, be deemed to have been convicted. If a person,

owning or operating a business certified by this section, is found by the department to have knowingly hired an employee, or used as a volunteer, to work for said person in the towing of a motor vehicle in the Commonwealth and who has been convicted of any of the aforementioned offenses, the department may, after a hearing before said department, suspend or revoke said certificate for such period of time as said department may determine. Said person shall submit said chief, at the time of each such request, the fee required by the provisions of section 172A of chapter 6 of the General laws and by the criminal history systems board for such criminal offender record information for each person they seek to hire as an employee, or use as a volunteer, to engage in the towing of motor vehicles in the Commonwealth,.

In likewise manner, notwithstanding any General or special law, or any rule or regulation to the contrary, no person may be licensed to own  or operate, or hired to work or volunteer at a motor vehicle storage facility in the Commonwealth to which motor vehicles are involuntarily towed, under the provisions of this section , until said owner shall have submitted to the chief of police in the city or town, wherein such facility is located, a request with the state criminal history systems board to conduct a Criminal Offender Records Information background check on said owner or operator, and for all persons hired as a employee or used as a volunteer, pursuant to the provision of sections 168 to section 178B of Chapter of the General Laws . Said person shall not own, operate, employ or use as a volunteer any person who if as a result of said background check any such person is a sex offender, as defined in section 178C of chapter 6, or who has been convicted of the use, sale, manufacture or distribution of or possession with intent to distribute any of the controlled substances which are unlawful under the provisions of section 31 of chapter 94C, or to any person who has been convicted of operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor or of marijuana, narcotic drugs, depressants or stimulant substances, all as defined in section 1 of said chapter 94C, or of the vapors of glue, within the preceding five year period under the provisions of section 24 of said chapter. Any person who has consented to have any such case disposed of under the provisions of section 24D of Chapter 94C shall, for the purposes of this section, be deemed to have been convicted. If a person owning or operating a business, licensed by a municipality to operate in said municipality as a motor vehicle storage facility, is found by the local licensing authority of said municipality to have knowingly hired an employee, or used as a volunteer, to work for said person in such a facility and who has been convicted of any of the aforementioned offenses, said authority may, after a hearing before said authority, suspend or revoke said license for such period of time as said authority determine. Said person shall submit to said chief of police, at the time of each such request, the fee required by the provisions of section 172A of chapter 6 of the General laws and by the criminal history systems board for such criminal offender record information for each person who seeks own, operate, work or volunteer at said motor vehicle storage facility.

SECTION 3.  Section 25 of chapter 255 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2008

Official Edition, is hereby amended by inserting, after the first paragraph, the following

paragraph:-

 

Whenever a motor vehicle has been towed to motor vehicle storage facility, under the provisions of section 6B of chapter 159B of the General laws, the owner of said facility shall, after consultation with the police department in the city or town wherein said facility is located, request the name of the owner and any lien holder and the address of the owner and lien holder(s) of the vehicle towed to said facility. Said owner shall notify both the owner and lien holder(s) of record, as listed in the Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicle records that he is in possession of said motor vehicle. Such notification shall be sent via certified mail no later than 15 days from the date of the receipt of said vehicle and shall state the name of the vehicle owner, the date possession was obtained, the make and model of the vehicle and an itemization of the storage charges and any other duly authorized work performed on the vehicle. If notification is not provided as indicated in this paragraph then any charges shall not exceed the total sum of 10 days of storage charges and any other work performed as listed in the notification.

 

SECTION 4. Section 26 of chapter 255 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2008 Official

Edition, is hereby amended by deleting in line 6 the word “twenty-five”, and inserting in line 7,

after “within ten days”, the following text:-

 

or in the case of a lien described in section twenty-five within 15 days of the date of the letter notifying both the owner and the lien holder as referenced in section twenty-five,

SECTION 4. Section 26 of chapter 255 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2008 Official

Edition, is hereby amended by adding, at the end of the first sentence in line 13, the following

sentence:-

 

As part of said civil action if notification is not provided to owner and the lien holder as provided for in section twenty-five and this section then any lien described in section twenty-five shall not exceed the total sum of 10 days of storage charges, and any other work performed as listed in the notifications required by those sections.

 

SECTION 5. Section 39A of chapter 255 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2008 Official

Edition, is hereby amended by inserting, at the end of the second paragraph, the following

sentence:-

 

The owner of the garage shall also notify the both the owner and any lien holder of its possession of the vehicle in the manner referenced in section 25 of chapter 255 of the General laws.

 

SECTION 6. Section 39A of chapter 255 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2008 Official

Edition, is hereby amended by inserting in line 20 after “If the registered owner” the following

text:-    and lien holder of record

 

SECTION 7. Section 39A of chapter 255 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2008 Official

Edition, is hereby amended by inserting in line 20 after “assents” the following text: in writing

 

SECTION 8. Section 39A of chapter 255 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2008 Official

Edition, is hereby amended by inserting in line 24 after “motor vehicle” the following text: and

lien holder of record

 

SECTION 9. Section 39A of chapter 255 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2008 Official

 

Edition, is hereby amended by inserting in line 29 after “owner” the following text:- and lien

holder of record.

 

SECTION 10. Section 39A of chapter 255 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2008

Official Edition, is hereby amended by deleting in line 29 the word “has” and replacing it with

the word: “have”

 

SECTION 11. Section 39A of chapter 255 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2008

Official Edition, is hereby amended by deleting in line 30 the word “may” and replacing it with

the word “shall”

 

SECTION 12. Section 39A of chapter 255 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2008

Official Edition, is hereby amended by inserting in line 30 after “owner” the following text:-

 and lien holder of record.

 

 

SECTION 13. Section 39A of chapter 255 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2008

Official Edition, is hereby amended by deleting in line 31 the word “his” and replacing it with

the word “their”

 

SECTION 14. Section 39A of chapter 255 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2008

Official Edition, is hereby amended by inserting in line 33 after “owner” the following text:-

and lien holder of record.

 

SECTION 15. Section 39A of chapter 255 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2008

Official Edition, is hereby amended by inserting in line 42 after “owner” the following text:-

and lien holder of record.

 

SECTION 2.  Said subsection (c) of section 35FF of chapter 10 of the General Laws, as so appearing, is hereby further amended by inserting after clause (7) the following clause:-

(8) to make any other expenditure provided by this section.

SECTION 3. Section 2 of chapter 23J of the General Laws, as so appearing, is hereby amended by striking out subsection (b), and inserting in place thereof the following subsection:-

(b) The center shall be governed and its corporate powers exercised by a board of directors consisting of 11 directors: 1 of whom shall be the secretary of energy and environmental affairs or his designee, who shall serve as a chair; 1 of whom shall be the secretary of housing and economic development or his designee; 1 of whom shall be the president of  the University of Massachusetts; 1 of whom shall be the executive director of the Massachusetts Workforce Alliance; 1 of whom shall be the secretary of administration and finance or her designee; 1 of whom shall be the secretary of labor and workforce development or her designee; and 5 of whom shall be appointed by the governor, 1 of whom shall be a venture capitalist or a chief executive officer of a Massachusetts-based clean energy corporation with expertise in clean energy technologies in the commonwealth, 1 of whom shall be the president of a Massachusetts community college or his designee, 1 of whom shall have knowledge of electricity distribution, generation, supply or power marketing, 1 of whom shall be the president of a private college or university, and 1 of whom shall be a union representative. Each of the 5 directors appointed by the governor shall serve for a term of 5 years, except that in making his initial appointments, the governor shall appoint 1 director to serve for a term of 1 year, 1 director for a term of 2 years, 1 director for a term of 3 years, 1 director for a term of 4 years, and 1 director for a term of 5 years.  A director shall be eligible for reappointment. A director may be removed from his appointment by the governor for cause.  A person appointed to fill a vacancy in the office of an appointed director of the board shall be appointed in a like matter and shall serve for only the unexpired term of the director.

SECTION 4.  Said section 2 of chapter 23J, as so appearing, is hereby further amended by inserting after subsection (k) the following subsection:--

(l) At the election of the board of directors of the center or its designee, with notice to the group insurance commission, employees of the center shall be eligible to participate in any and all group insurance programs and benefits administered by the group insurance commission under chapter 32A, and each participating employee shall be considered to be an “employee” for the purposes of section 2 of chapter 32A, but no such employee of the center shall, as a result of such participation, be determined to be an “employee” for the purposes of section 10 of chapter 32A.  The center shall reimburse the commonwealth for the commonwealth's share of the premium and applicable administrative expenses of such participation, which share may be allocated between the center and the participating employees as considered appropriate by the center, and any employee payments in reimbursement of the premium and applicable administrative expenses may be structured by the center through a plan that is consistent with 26 U.S.C. Section 125.

SECTION 5.  Paragraph (8) of subsection (a) of section 3 of said chapter 23J of the General Laws, as so appearing, is hereby amended in line 57 by inserting after  the word “purposes” the following words:-

including but not limited to making, or delegating to a lessee or a licensee to make, improvements, construction, alterations or renovations to the real property of the center, or any interest thereon, provided, that where such activity involves the expenditure of funds from the Massachusetts Renewable Energy Trust Fund, or where such activity is funded entirely by other funds but is estimated to cost less than $500,000, it shall not be a capital facility project and the provisions of sections 38A˝ to38O, inclusive, of chapter 7, sections 44A to 44J, inclusive, of chapter 149, and section 39M of chapter 30 of the General Laws and related statutes, shall not apply thereto;

SECTION 6. Said subsection (a) of section 3 of chapter 23J of the General Laws, as so appearing, is hereby further amended by inserting after paragraph (30) the following paragraph:-

(31) to administer the Massachusetts Renewable Energy Trust Fund in accordance with section 9.

SECTION 7.  Chapter 23J of the General Laws is hereby further amended by inserting after section 8 the following sections:-

Section 9. (a) There is hereby established and placed within the center a separate trust fund to be known as the Massachusetts Renewable Energy Trust Fund, hereinafter referred to as the fund, formerly placed within the Massachusetts Technology Park Corporation, established in section 4E of chapter 40J of the General Laws.  The fund shall be administered by a director appointed by the board. The director shall report to the center executive director. The center shall hold the fund in an account or accounts separate from other funds. There shall be credited to the fund all amounts collected under section 20 of chapter 25 and any income derived from the investment of amounts credited to the fund. All amounts credited to the fund shall be held in trust and used solely for activities and expenditures consistent with the public purpose of the fund as set forth in subsection (b), including the ordinary and necessary expenses of administration and operation associated with the fund. Unless otherwise specified, all monies of the center, from whatever source derived, shall be paid to the treasurer of the center. The monies shall be deposited in the first instance by the treasurer in national banks, in trust companies, savings banks and cooperative banks chartered under the laws of the commonwealth, or in other banking companies in compliance with section 34 of chapter 29. Funds in these accounts shall be paid out on the warrant or other order of the treasurer of the center or other person that the board may authorize to execute warrants.

 (b) The center shall draw upon monies in the fund for the public purpose of generating the maximum economic and environmental benefits over time from renewable energy to the ratepayers of the commonwealth through a series of initiatives which exploit the advantages of renewable energy in a more competitive energy marketplace by promoting the increased availability, use and affordability of renewable energy, by making operational improvements to existing renewable energy projects and facilities which, in the determination of the center, would yield more significant results in the development of renewable energy if said funds were made available for the creation of new renewable energy facilities, and by fostering the formation, growth, expansion and retention within the commonwealth of preeminent clusters of renewable energy and related enterprises, institutions and projects, which serve the citizens of the commonwealth consistent with a strategic plan or annual operational plan.

 (c) Public interests to be advanced through the center’s actions shall include, but not be limited to, the following: (i) the development and increased use and affordability of renewable energy resources in the commonwealth and the new england region; (ii) the protection of the environment and the health of the citizens of the commonwealth through the prevention, mitigation and alleviation of the adverse pollution effects associated with certain electricity generation facilities; (iii) the maximization of benefits to consumers of the commonwealth resulting from increased fuel and supply diversity; (iv) the creation of additional employment opportunities in the commonwealth through the development of renewable technologies, including, but not limited to, promoting programs and investments that lead to pathways towards economic self sufficiency for low and moderate income individuals and communities in the clean energy industry; (v) the stimulation of increased public and private sector investment in, and competitive advantage for, renewable energy and related enterprises, institutions and projects in the commonwealth and the new england region; and (vi) the stimulation of entrepreneurial activities in these and related enterprises, institutions and projects.

 (d) In furtherance of any strategic and operational plans, and other public purposes and interests, the center may expend monies from the fund to make grants, contracts, loans, equity investments, energy production credits, bill credits, or rebates to customers; to provide financial or debt service obligation assistance; or to take any other actions, in such forms, under such terms and conditions and under such selection procedures as the center deems appropriate and otherwise in a manner consistent with good business practices; provided, however, that the center shall generally employ a preference for competitive procurements; provided further, that the center shall endeavor to leverage the full range of the resources, expertise and participation of other state and federal agencies and instrumentalities in the design and implementation of programs under this section; and provided further, that the board has determined and incorporated into the minutes of its proceedings a finding that such actions are calculated to advance the public purpose and public interests set forth in this section, including, but not limited to, the following: (i) the growth of the renewable energy-provider industry; (ii) the use of renewable energy by electricity customers in the commonwealth; (iii) public education and training regarding renewable energy, including, but not limited to, promoting programs and investments that lead to pathways towards economic self sufficiency for low and moderate income individuals and communities in the clean energy industry; (iv) product and market development; (v) pilot and demonstration projects and other activities designed to increase the use and affordability of renewable energy resources by and for consumers in the commonwealth; (vi) the provision of financing in support of the development and application of related technologies at all levels, including, but not limited to, basic and applied research and commercialization activities; (vii) the design and making of improvements to existing renewable energy projects and facilities as defined herein which were in operation as of December 31, 1997; and (viii) matters related to the conservation of scarce energy resources.

 (e) Subject to the approval of the board, and not inconsistent with any strategic or annual operational plans, investment activity of monies from the fund may consist of the following: (i) an equity fund, to provide risk capital to renewable energy enterprises, institutions and projects; (ii) a debt fund, to provide loans to energy enterprises, institutions, projects, intermediaries and end-users; and (iii) a market growth assistance fund, to be used to attract private capital to the equity and debt funds. To implement these investment activities, the center may retain, through a bid process, public or private sector investment fund managers, who shall have prior knowledge and experience in fund management and possess related skills in renewable energy and related technologies development, to direct the investment activity described in this section and to seek other fund co-sponsors to contribute public and private capital from the commonwealth and other states; provided, however, that such capital shall be appropriately segregated. The managers, subject to the approval of the board, may retain necessary services and consultants to carry out the purposes of the fund. The managers shall develop a business plan to guide investment decisions, which shall be approved by the board before any expenditures from the trust fund, and which shall be consistent with the plan for the fund as adopted by the board.

 (f) For the purposes of expenditures from the fund, renewable energy technologies eligible for assistance shall mean technologies eligible as class I or class II renewable energy generating sources under section 11F of chapter 25A, micro-combined heat and power units less than 60 kilowatts, solar hot water, geothermal heating and cooling projects, biomass thermal and storage and conversion technologies connected to qualifying generation projects; provided, however, that the board may make grants from the fund, not to exceed a total of $4 million annually, in support of Massachusetts-based public and private enterprises developing new technologies to significantly increase the efficiency of the internal combustion engine. The center shall make grants, loans or other support from the fund, not to exceed $3 million annually for hydroelectric facilities, other than pumped storage facilities in the commonwealth, constructed before December 31, 1997 for upgrades to increase efficiency or capacity and to reduce environmental impacts. Such funds may also be used for appropriate joint energy efficiency and renewable projects, as well as for investment by distribution companies in renewable energy and distributed generation opportunities, if consistent with this section. The following technologies or fuels shall not be considered renewable energy supplies: coal, oil, natural gas except when used in fuel cells or micro-combined heat and power, and nuclear power.

 (g) The use by the center of monies to implement this section shall be deemed to be an essential governmental function. Notwithstanding any general or special law to the contrary, no expenditure from the fund shall be deemed to involve a capital facility project, and the center shall take no action which contravenes the commonwealth's reversionary interest in any of its real property. The center, any purchasing cooperative established thereby and all members of any such purchasing cooperative may participate in any energy-related purchasing, aggregating or similar program established and operated by the health and educational facilities authority and such participation shall be deemed to be in furtherance of an essential governmental function.

(h)  Notwithstanding any general or special law to the contrary, including without limitation any laws related to the procurement of electricity and as a condition subsequent to the prior transfer of $17 million from the fund to the commonwealth for deposit in the General Fund that was authorized pursuant to section 183 of chapter 26 of the acts of 2003 , the commonwealth, acting by and through the department of energy resources or a successor agency, shall enter into an agreement with the center under which the commonwealth, at the direction of the center, shall enter into contracts, for terms not to exceed 20 years, with owners of facilities that generate electricity using renewable energy technologies, wholesale power marketers or other market intermediaries selling such electricity, for the purchase by the commonwealth, for its own use or for the use of any municipal electric department, public instrumentality or other governmental or nongovernmental entity in the commonwealth, of electricity produced by renewable energy technologies.

The center shall determine the particular types of technologies which shall be the subject of any such contract based on such criteria as it shall deem advisable, including without limitation retail consumer choices of such renewable energy technologies. The aggregate dollar amount of the green power premium associated with electricity purchases to be made by the commonwealth for its own use under such contracts shall have a present value, determined according to such discount rate as shall be mutually agreeable to the center and the commonwealth, of such amount as shall be transferred under the first sentence of this paragraph. The green power premium shall be determined by subtracting from the total amount of the purchase price the undifferentiated commodity price for electricity under then-current commonwealth contracts. The maximum payment in any 1 fiscal year under all such contracts shall not exceed $5 million. The commonwealth shall be indemnified under such contracts by the owners or power marketers on such terms as the center shall deem commercially reasonable. The amounts collected under section 20 of chapter 25 shall be impressed with a trust for the benefit of the fund. To facilitate the purchase by the center of electricity produced by renewable energy technologies or of certificates produced under the renewable energy portfolio standard regulations of the department of energy resources representing the generation attributes of electrical energy produced by renewable energy technologies, and in consideration of the sale of such electricity or certificates, the commonwealth shall covenant with the sellers of such electricity or certificates that the amounts collected under said section 20 shall not be diverted from the fund and that the rates of the mandatory charges under said section 20 shall not be reduced during the term, which shall not exceed 20 years, of any contract entered into by the center for the purchase of such electricity or certificates below a level which shall enable the center to fulfill the terms of such contracts. In furtherance of the public purposes of the fund, income derived from the investment of amounts collected under said section 20 shall be expended by the center as provided in subsection (a) and, in the discretion of the center, in furtherance of the public purposes of the center and for such costs of departments and agencies that support or are otherwise consistent with the purposes of the fund.

Section 10. There is hereby established and placed within the center a program to be known as the pathways out of poverty initiative.  Said initiative shall award grants to clean energy companies, regional employment boards, community-based nonprofit organizations, educational institutions or labor organizations to enable said entities to carry out training programs associated with the clean energy industry that lead to economic self-sufficiency.  The center shall give funding priority to entities that: (i) serve individuals in families with incomes that do not exceed 200 percent of the poverty level, as determined by the United States Census Bureau, or a self-sufficiency standard for the local areas where the training is conducted that specifies the income needs of families, family size, the number and ages of children in the family and geographical considerations; (ii) engage in partnerships with public and private employers and community-based non-profit agencies; and (iii) establish career pathways for hard and soft skill development and salary advancement.  Said grants shall be awarded so as to ensure geographic diversity within the commonwealth.

 

Section 11.  The center shall conduct an annual study detailing the commonwealth’s clean energy sector.  The study shall include, but not be limited to, an examination of the growth rate of the commonwealth’s clean energy sector, including the number of in-state jobs and businesses.  A copy of said study shall be submitted on or before December 1st of each year to the clerks of the house of representatives and the senate.  

SECTION 8. Section 20 of Chapter 25 of the General Laws, as so appearing, is hereby amended by striking out, in line 8, the words “4E of chapter 40J” and inserting in place thereof the following words:-  9 of chapter 23J.

SECTION 9. Said section 20 of chapter 25, as so appearing, is hereby further amended by striking out, in lines 21-23, the words “Massachusetts Technology Park Corporation, doing business as the Massachusetts Technology Collaborative, or the governing board, as applicable”, and inserting in place thereof the following words:- Clean Energy Technology Center.

SECTION 10.  Said section 20 of chapter 25, as so appearing, is hereby further amended by striking out, in lines 28 and 29,  the words “ the collaborative”, and inserting in place thereof, in each instance, the following words:- the center.

SECTION 11.  Section 3 of chapter 40J of the General Laws, as so appearing, is hereby amended by striking out the second and third paragraphs and inserting in place thereof the following paragraphs :-

            The corporation shall be governed and its corporate powers exercised by a board of directors, which shall consist of the secretary of housing and economic development or his designee, the secretary of administration and finance or her designee, and the commissioner of higher education or his designee, 2 members to be appointed from a list of persons nominated by the president of the senate, 2 persons to be appointed from a list of persons nominated by the speaker of the house of representatives, and 16 persons to be appointed by the governor, 6 of whom shall be chief executive officers of post-secondary educational institutions or distinguished members of the engineering or scientific faculties of those institutions, or members of other appropriate faculties, and among said 6, at least 2 of whom shall be representatives of public post-secondary educational institutions, and 6 of whom shall be chief executive officers, chairpersons or chief engineers of businesses concerned with any technology which may come within the purview of this chapter, and 2 of whom shall be recommended by the Massachusetts AFL-CIO. Each director appointed from the list of nominations recommended by the president of the senate and the speaker of the house of representatives shall serve a term of 2 years to be coterminous with the legislative session of the general court. Each director appointed by the governor shall serve for a term of 5 years and thereafter until his successor is appointed. Any person appointed to fill a vacancy on the board shall be appointed in a like manner and shall serve for the unexpired term of the predecessor director. Any director shall be eligible for reappointment. Any director may be removed by the governor for cause. Twelve directors shall constitute a quorum and the affirmative vote of a majority of the directors present and eligible to vote at a meeting shall be necessary for any action to be taken by the board. The directors shall serve without compensation, but each director shall be entitled to reimbursement for actual and necessary expenses incurred in the performance of official duties. The board shall meet at least 4 times in each year and shall have final authority over the activities of the corporation.

            The board shall annually elect from among its members a chairperson and a vice-chairperson, and may designate a treasurer and a secretary, who need not be members of the board. The secretary shall keep a record of the proceedings of the corporation and shall be the custodian of all books, documents, and papers filed with the corporation, and its official seal. The secretary shall cause copies to be made of all minutes and other records and documents of the corporation and shall certify that such copies are true copies and all persons dealing with the corporation may rely upon such certification. The treasurer shall be the chief financial and accounting officer of the corporation and shall be in charge of its funds, books of account, and accounting records. The chairperson and the vice-chairperson, together with the secretary of housing and economic development, and not less than 2 individuals elected annually by the board from among its members, one of whom shall be a board member from a post-secondary educational institution and one of whom shall be a board member from a business, shall constitute the executive committee of the board. The executive committee shall have all the powers of the board between the meetings of the board, to be exercised in accordance with by-laws established by the board. The executive committee shall meet as often as considered necessary by the committee.  Notwithstanding any general or special law to the contrary, and at the election of the board of directors of the corporation or its designee, with notice to the group insurance commission, employees of the corporation shall be eligible to participate in any and all group insurance programs and benefits administered by the group insurance commission under chapter 32A, and each participating employee shall be considered to be an “employee” for the purposes of section 2 of chapter 32A, but no such employee of the corporation shall, as a result of such participation, be determined to be an “employee” for the purposes of section 10 of said chapter 32A.  The corporation shall reimburse the commonwealth for the commonwealth's share of the premium and applicable administrative expenses of such participation, which share may be allocated between the corporation and the participating employees as considered appropriate by the corporation, and any employee payments in reimbursement of such premium and applicable administrative expenses may be structured by the corporation through a plan that is consistent with 26 U.S.C. Section 125.

SECTION 12.  Section 4 of chapter 40J of the General Laws, as so appearing,  is hereby amended by inserting after the word “boards”, in line 20, the following words:- in furtherance of the purposes of this chapter, which may include, but are not limited to, the following objectives:.

SECTION 13.  Section 4A of said chapter 40J, as so appearing, is hereby amended by striking out, in line 7, the word “five” and inserting in place thereof the following figure:- 30. 

SECTION 14. Section 4E of chapter 40J of the General Laws is hereby repealed.

SECTION 15.  Sections 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8 of chapter 307 of the Acts of 2008 are hereby repealed.

SECTION 16.   On the effective date of the establishment of the Massachusetts Renewable Energy Trust Fund within the Massachusetts Clean Energy Technology Center as shall be specified in a memorandum of understanding executed between the Massachusetts Technology Park Corporation and the center, the corporation shall transfer to said center all moneys credited to said trust fund and held by said corporation, except for amounts previously allocated by said corporation pursuant to the last sentence of subsection (l) of section 4E of chapter 40J of the General Laws, and all associated equipment, employees, records,  investments, contracts,  agreements and all other assets funded by the trust fund, as further indentified in said memorandum of understanding.  In furtherance of said transfer of the trust fund, the corporation shall transfer or otherwise assign, and said center shall assume, all rights, responsibilities, obligations and liabilities of said corporation arising out of the trust fund and said corporation shall be discharged from any administrative, legal and financial responsibility arising from its administration of said trust fund,  except as expressly provided otherwise in said memorandum of understanding between said corporation and said center, provided that the memorandum of understanding entered into between said corporation and said center shall provide for the orderly transfer of the trust fund to the center and shall include a plan and schedule to implement the transfer of the trust fund to said center; provided that, to the extent practicable, the transfer of the trust fund shall be completed by September 30, 2009, or sixty days after enactment of legislation authorizing said transfer, whichever is later.

 

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