HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES |
H.B. NO. |
1305 |
THIRTIETH LEGISLATURE, 2019 |
H.D. 1 |
|
STATE OF HAWAII |
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|
A BILL FOR AN ACT
RELATING TO MUTUAL ASSISTANCE AGREEMENT.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION
1. In
2006, the Hawaii legislature approved the Emergency Management Assistance
Compact allowing the State of Hawaii to become a member with forty-nine other
states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. As a member of the Emergency Management Assistance
Compact, the State would be able to receive interstate aid in the event of a
disaster. In doing so, the legislature
recognized that while Hawaii may be capable of managing most emergencies, there
are times when disasters exceed state and local resources and therefore require
outside assistance. The legislature
recognized that such outside assistance is especially crucial for a
geographically isolated state such as Hawaii.
For any critical infrastructure providers,
particularly public utility providers, in time of a major natural disaster or
emergency, one priority is restoration of utilities to ensure the public has
available resources to recover from any disaster. For the electrical utilities, one major
concern is being able to safely and timely respond to all customers' needs,
including residents, businesses, and the federal, state, and county governments
following any disasters. While Hawaii's
utility providers are reliable and in much better condition than those of
Puerto Rico, if a disaster like Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico hit Hawaii, the public
utility providers in the State may need to seek assistance from outside of the
State.
All Hawaii based public utility providers
are members of the Western Region Mutual Assistance Agreement (WRMAA), an
agreement between public electric and gas utilities throughout the continental
United States and certain Canadian utilities, to make their resources available
in the event of emergencies or disasters, similar to the Emergency Management
Assistance Compact entered into by the State with other states. The Hawaiian Electric Companies, consisting of
Hawaiian Electric Company, Maui Electric Company, Ltd., and Hawaiian Electric
Light Company, Inc., have been signatory to the WRMAA since 2006. The Kauai Island Utility Cooperative is also a
signatory to the WRMAA as of August 6, 2013. Most recently, in November, 2018, the Hawaiian
Electric Companies provided support to Pacific Gas and Electric by sending a
team of thirty-five linemen and support staff to assist its recovery after the
Camp Fire that devastated the town of Paradise, California. The support was provided under the terms of
the WRMAA. In the event that the State
suffers devastating effects from a disaster, out-of-state public utilities are
willing and able to provide the State with similar support. This Act will ensure that in times of an
emergency, qualified utility workers from out-of-state would be able to provide
their services in the State to help restore public electrical utilities to
operating condition.
The purpose of this Act is to ensure that in times of emergencies
or a natural disaster where assistance may be necessary to restore critical
electrical infrastructure, that the State along with electrical utilities would
be lawfully allowed to enter into a mutual assistance agreement with an
out-of-state utility to assist in the restoration of electrical power.
SECTION 2. Section 127A-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
"(a) Because of the existing and increasing
possibility of the occurrence of disasters or emergencies of unprecedented size
and destructiveness resulting from natural or man-made hazards, and in order to
ensure that the preparations of this State will be adequate to deal with such
disasters or emergencies; to ensure the administration of state and federal
programs providing disaster relief to individuals; and generally to protect the
public health, safety, and welfare, and to preserve the lives and property of
the people of the State, it is hereby found and declared to be necessary:
(1) To
provide for emergency management by the State, and to authorize the creation of
local organizations for emergency management in the counties of the State;
(2) To
confer upon the governor and upon the mayors of the counties of the State the
emergency powers necessary to prepare for and respond to emergencies or
disasters;
(3) To
provide for the rendering of mutual aid among the counties of the State and
with other states and in cooperation with the federal government with respect
to the carrying out of emergency management functions; [and]
(4) To permit out-of-state utilities to provide
services in the State pursuant to a mutual assistance agreement with a state utility
to repair, renovate, or install electrical facilities that have been damaged,
impaired, or destroyed due to or in connection with such disasters or
emergencies; and
[(4)] (5) To provide programs, in cooperation with other
governmental agencies, the private sector, and nonprofit organizations, to
educate and train the public to be prepared for emergencies and disasters."
SECTION 3. Section 127A-2, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding four new definitions to be appropriately inserted and to read as follows:
""Electrical
facilities" means any equipment and infrastructure owned and operated by a
state utility for the purpose of generating, transmitting, distributing, or
furnishing electrical energy service.
"Mutual assistance agreement"
means an agreement to which two or more business entities are parties and under
which a public utility, municipally owned utility, or electric cooperative
owning, operating, or owning and operating infrastructure used for electric
generation, electric transmission, or electric distribution in this State may
request that an out-of-state business perform work in this State in
anticipation of a disaster or an emergency.
"Out-of-state utility"
means a public utility, municipally owned utility, or electric cooperative,
that owns, operates, or owns and operates infrastructure used for electric
generation, electric transmission, or electric distribution outside of the
State, and is regulated by the public utilities commission of the state where
they operate.
"State utility" means and
refers to any public utility within the State under a franchise or charter
granted by the State."
SECTION 4. Section 127A-13, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
"(a) In the event of a state of emergency declared
by the governor pursuant to [[]section[]] 127A-14, the governor
may exercise the following additional powers pertaining to emergency management
during the emergency period:
(1) Provide
for and require the quarantine or segregation of persons who are affected with
or believed to have been exposed to any infectious, communicable, or other
disease that is, in the governor's opinion, dangerous to the public health and
safety, or persons who are the source of other contamination, in any case
where, in the governor's opinion, the existing laws are not adequate to assure
the public health and safety; provide for the care and treatment of the
persons; supplement the provisions of sections 325-32 to 325-38 concerning
compulsory immunization programs; provide for the isolation or closing of
property which is a source of contamination or is in a dangerous condition in
any case where, in the governor's opinion, the existing laws are not adequate
to assure the public health and safety, and designate as public nuisances acts,
practices, conduct, or conditions that are dangerous to the public health or
safety or to property; authorize that public nuisances be summarily abated and,
if need be, that the property be destroyed, by any police officer or authorized
person, or provide for the cleansing or repair of property, and if the
cleansing or repair is to be at the expense of the owner, the procedure
therefor shall follow as nearly as may be the provisions of section 322-2,
which shall be applicable; and further, authorize without the permission of the
owners or occupants, entry on private premises for any such purposes;
(2) Relieve
hardships and inequities, or obstructions to the public health, safety, or
welfare, found by the governor to exist in the laws and to result from the operation
of federal programs or measures taken under this chapter, by suspending the
laws, in whole or in part, or by alleviating the provisions of laws on such
terms and conditions as the governor may impose, including licensing laws,
quarantine laws, and laws relating to labels, grades, and standards;
(3) Suspend
any law that impedes or tends to impede or be detrimental to the expeditious
and efficient execution of, or to conflict with, emergency functions, including
laws which by this chapter specifically are made applicable to emergency
personnel;
(4) Suspend
the provisions of any regulatory statute prescribing the procedures for out-of-state
utilities to conduct business in the State including any licensing laws
applicable to out-of-state utilities or their respective employees, as well as
any orders, rules, or regulation of any state agency, if strict compliance with
the provisions of any such statute, order, rule, or regulation would in any way
prevent, hinder, or delay necessary action of a state utility in coping with
the emergency or disasters with assistance that may be provided under the mutual
assistance agreement;
[(4)] (5) In the event of disaster or emergency beyond
local control, or an event which, in the opinion of the governor, is such as to
make state operational control necessary, or upon request of the local entity,
assume direct operational control over all or any part of the emergency
management functions within the affected area;
[(5)] (6) Shut off water mains, gas mains, electric power
connections, or suspend other services, and, to the extent permitted by or
under federal law, suspend electronic media transmission;
[(6)] (7) Direct and control the mandatory evacuation of
the civilian population;
[(7)] (8) Exercise additional emergency functions to the
extent necessary to prevent hoarding, waste, or destruction of materials,
supplies, commodities, accommodations, facilities, and services, to effectuate
equitable distribution thereof, or to establish priorities therein as the public
welfare may require; to investigate; and notwithstanding any other law to the
contrary, to regulate or prohibit, by means of licensing, rationing, or
otherwise, the storage, transportation, use, possession, maintenance,
furnishing, sale, or distribution thereof, and any business or any transaction
related thereto;
[(8)] (9) Suspend section 8-1, relating to state
holidays, except the last paragraph relating to holidays declared by the
president, which shall remain unaffected, and in the event of the suspension,
the governor may establish state holidays by proclamation;
[(9)] (10) Adjust the hours for voting to take into
consideration the working hours of the voters during the emergency period, and
suspend those provisions of section 11-131 that fix the hours for voting, and
fix other hours by stating the same in the election proclamation or notice, as
the case may be;
[(10)] (11) Assure the continuity of service by critical
infrastructure facilities, both publicly and privately owned, by regulating or,
if necessary to the continuation of the service thereof, by taking over and
operating the same; and
[(11)] (12) Except as provided in section 134-7.2, whenever
in the governor's opinion, the laws of the State do not adequately provide for
the common defense, public health, safety, and welfare, investigate, regulate,
or prohibit the storage, transportation, use, possession, maintenance,
furnishing, sale, or distribution of, as well as any transaction related to,
explosives, firearms, and ammunition, inflammable materials and other objects,
implements, substances, businesses, or services of a hazardous or dangerous
character, or particularly capable of misuse, or obstructive of or tending to
obstruct law enforcement, emergency management, or military operations,
including intoxicating liquor and the liquor business; and authorize the
seizure and forfeiture of any such objects, implements, or substances
unlawfully possessed, as provided in this chapter."
SECTION 5. Section 127A-14, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (c) to read as follows:
"(c) The governor or mayor shall be the sole judge
of the existence of the danger, threat, or circumstances giving rise to a
declaration of a state of emergency in the State or a local state of emergency
in the county, as applicable. This
section shall not limit the power and authority of the governor under section [127A-13(a)(4)]
127A-13(a)(5)."
SECTION 6. If any provision of this Act, or the application thereof to any person or circumstance, is held invalid, the invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of the Act that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of this Act are severable.
SECTION 7. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 8. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2100.
Report Title:
Mutual Assistance Agreement; Natural Disaster; Emergency
Description:
Authorizes the State and electrical utilities to enter into a mutual assistance agreement with an out-of-state utility to assist in the restoration of electrical power following a natural disaster or emergency. (HB1305 HD1)
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.