31 Tex. Admin. Code § 20.10 - Definitions
The following words, terms and phrases, when used in this chapter, shall have the following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise.
(1) Acquisition
of equivalent--The acquisition of a natural resource that provides services
substantially equivalent to those injured as the result of an unauthorized
discharge of oil.
(2) Area
Contingency Plan--The contingency plan required by the Federal Water Pollution
Control Act (33 United States Code Annotated §1321(j)(4)).
(3) Assessment or natural resource damage
assessment--The process of collecting, compiling and analyzing information
through prescribed procedures and protocols to determine damages for injuries
to natural resources and any loss in the services provided by the natural
resources resulting from an unauthorized discharge of oil.
(4) Assessment area--The area or areas within
which natural resources and the services they provide have been affected
directly or indirectly by the unauthorized discharge of oil.
(5) Center--The Center for Public Policy
Dispute Resolution and any successor entity established by the University of
Texas providing statewide assistance and expertise to government agencies and
courts for the design and implementation of alternative dispute resolution
processes.
(6) Coastal Protection
Fund (CPF)--The fund established by the OSPRA, §40.151.
(7) Coastal waters--The waters and bed of the
Gulf of Mexico within the jurisdiction of the State of Texas, including the
arms of the Gulf of Mexico subject to tidal influence, and any other waters
contiguous thereto that are navigable by vessels with a capacity to carry
10,000 gallons or more of oil as fuel or cargo and as further defined in §
19.2(a)(1) of
this title (relating to Definitions).
(8) Commissioner--The commissioner of the
Texas General Land Office.
(9)
Comprehensive damage assessment--A method including sampling, modeling, and
other appropriate scientific procedures to make a reasonable and rational
determination of injury to natural resources resulting from an unauthorized
discharge of oil.
(10)
Cost-effective--When two or more activities provide the same or a similar level
of benefits, the one which costs the least is cost-effective.
(11) Damages--With respect to natural
resources, includes the cost to assess, restore, rehabilitate, replace and/or
acquire the equivalent of injured natural resources, or to mitigate further
injury, and their diminution in value after such restoration, rehabilitation,
replacement, or mitigation.
(12)
Discharge of oil--An intentional or unintentional act or omission by which
harmful quantities of oil are spilled, leaked, pumped, poured, emitted, or
dumped into or on coastal waters or at a place adjacent to coastal waters
where, unless controlled or removed, an imminent threat of pollution to coastal
waters exists.
(13) Ecological
services--The services provided by natural resources to each other and
includes, but is not limited to, water purification, flood control, erosion
control, shelter, food supply, and reproductive habitats.
(14) Expedited damage assessment--A method
selected by the state trustees that allows for prompt initiation of
restoration, replacement, rehabilitation, and/or acquisition of an equivalent
natural resource without lengthy analysis of the impact on affected natural
resources and which may utilize limited, focused field and/or laboratory
studies related to injured natural resources.
(15) Exposure--When all or part of a natural
resource is or may be in physical contact with oil or with media containing oil
or its degradation products.
(16)
Federal fund--The Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund established by the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986,
26 United States Code
§9509.
(17) Federal trustee--Officials of the
federal government designated, according to OPA, §2706(b)(2), as trustees and
also includes, for the purposes of the rules, Indian tribes and foreign
governments which may present a claim for and recover damages for injury to
natural resources.
(18) Field
investigation--An evaluation of the area impacted by an unauthorized discharge
of oil to determine the actual and potential exposure of natural resources and
the impact on natural resources and the services they provide for the purpose
of evaluating which damage assessment methods, if any, should be utilized by
state trustees.
(19) Harmful
quantity--A quantity of oil that has created a sheen or film on coastal waters
or that has been deposited as a sludge or emulsion in, on or under coastal
waters.
(20) Incident--Any
unauthorized discharge of oil or series of unauthorized discharges of oil
having the same origin, involving one or more vessels, facilities, or any
combination thereof.
(21)
Injury--Any measurable adverse change, either long or short term, in the
chemical or physical quality or the viability of a natural resource or any loss
of a service provided by that resource resulting either directly or indirectly
from exposure to an unauthorized discharge of oil.
(22) Lead administrative trustee--The state
trustee responsible for compiling the assessment record and for coordinating
activities of the state in the natural resource damage assessment
process.
(23) Limited observable
mortality--A determination that, in the best professional judgment of the state
trustees, the mortality of natural resources from exposure to oil is not
extensive or severe.
(24) Loss--A
measurable adverse reduction in the chemical or physical quality or the
viability of a natural resource or a reduction in a service provided by a
natural resource resulting either directly or indirectly from exposure to an
unauthorized discharge of oil.
(25)
Mediation--The process defined in the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code, §
154.023.
(26) National Contingency Plan--The federal
regulations for response to oil spills and releases of hazardous substances,
published at the Code of Federal Regulations, Title 40, Part 300.
(27) Natural recovery--The process through
which injured resources and their services recover, without additional human
intervention.
(28) Natural
resources--All land, fish, shellfish, fowl, wildlife, biota, vegetation, air,
water, groundwater, and other similar resources owned, managed, held in trust,
regulated, or otherwise controlled by the State of Texas.
(29) Negotiated assessment--Any assessment
method agreed to by the state trustees and the responsible person.
(30) Oil--Oil of any kind or in any form,
including but not limited to crude oil, petroleum, fuel oil, sludge, oil
refuse, and oil mixed with wastes other than dredged spoil, but does not
include petroleum, including crude oil or any fraction thereof, which is
specifically listed or designated as a hazardous substance under the
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA),
42 United States Code Annotated §9601(14)(A) - (F), and which is subject to the
provisions of that Act.
(31)
OSPRA--The Oil Spill Prevention and Response Act, Texas Natural Resources Code,
Chapter 40.
(32) OPA--The Oil
Pollution Act of 1990, 33 United States Code Annotated §2701 et seq.
(33) Passive use values--The values a person
places on natural resources which are not derived from direct use of those
resources. These values include the value derived from: the knowledge of the
existence of the resource and its protection; the availability of the resource
for the use of a person, a person's family and other members of the public; and
the knowledge that the resources will be available for future
generations.
(34) Pathway--Any
physical, biological or chemical link that connects a natural resource to an
unauthorized discharge of oil.
(35)
Pre-discharge condition--The condition or conditions of the natural resources
and the level of services provided by those resources before the unauthorized
discharge of oil. Pre-discharge condition may be measured by use of a reference
area or a reference resource or by analysis of historical data.
(36) Properties of oil--The persistence,
degradability, dispersability, toxicity, bioaccumulative effects, and any other
characteristics relevant to a particular unauthorized discharge of
oil.
(37) Public use--The services
provided by natural resources for human activities; this includes, but is not
limited to, cultural, archaeological, transportation, public water supply,
industrial water supply, swimming, fishing, harvesting of natural resources,
nature viewing, hunting, diving, sailing, boating, hiking, camping, climbing,
photographing, drawing, painting, and other human activities.
(38) Recovery--The return of the injured
natural resource and service to its pre-discharge or comparable condition
within the constraints of natural or other variability.
(39) Reference area or reference resource--An
area or natural resource, unaffected by the relevant unauthorized discharge of
oil, and comparable in physical, chemical and biological characteristics or in
the level of services provided by the assessment area or natural
resource.
(40)
Rehabilitation--Those actions which enhance the recovery of injured natural
resources but do not return them to pre-discharge conditions.
(41) Replacement--Substituting natural
resources at or near the impacted area to compensate for the loss of natural
resources due to an unauthorized discharge of oil.
(42) Responsible person--
(A) the owner or operator of a vessel or
facility from which an unauthorized discharge of oil emanates or threatens to
emanate; and
(B) in the case of an
abandoned vessel or facility, the person who would have been responsible
immediately prior to the abandonment; and
(C) any other person who causes, allows or
permits an unauthorized discharge of oil or threatened unauthorized discharge
of oil.
(43)
Restoration--Those actions that return injured natural resources and the
services they provide to their pre-discharge or comparable condition.
(44) Restoration plan--A plan selected after
public review and comment which describes the required restoration,
replacement, rehabilitation, and/or acquisition of equivalent natural
resources.
(45) Services or natural
resource services--The physical, ecological, biological, chemical, aesthetic,
cultural, and public uses provided by natural resources.
(46) State On-Scene Coordinator (SOSC)--The
person appointed by the commissioner of the Texas General Land Office to
coordinate all state response actions for the abatement, containment, and
removal of pollution resulting from an unauthorized discharge of oil.
(47) State trustee or trustee--The Texas
General Land Office, Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, and the Texas
Commission on Environmental Quality.
(48) Technically feasible--The technology and
management skills necessary to implement an assessment plan or restoration plan
are known such that each element of the plan has a reasonable chance of
successful completion in the applicable time period as defined in §
20.34(b) of this
title (relating to Comprehensive Damage Assessment) and §
20.33(a) of this
title (relating to Expedited Damage Assessment).
(49) Unauthorized discharge of oil--Any
discharge of oil, or any discharge of oil emanating from a vessel into waters
adjoining and accessible from coastal waters, that is not authorized by a
federal or state permit.
Notes
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