SECTION 1.
(a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(1) California’s public health and environmental protection programs, policies, and activities should be conducted in a manner that promotes equity and affords fair treatment, accessibility, and protection for all residents, regardless of race, age, culture, income, or geographic location.
(2) California needs to provide the greatest level of attention and protection to those communities that are at the greatest risk from those impacts.
(3) It is the mission of the California
Department of Toxic Substances Control to protect Californians and the environment of California from harmful effects of toxic substances.
(4) The department ensures that hazardous waste facilities comply with public health and safety requirements through regulations and permitting and inspection programs.
(5) Central to the regulation of hazardous waste facilities is ensuring that entities that operate these facilities comply with applicable laws and regulations, that facilities are operating under proper permits, and that entities that frequently fail to comply with applicable laws and regulations and pose a risk to public health and safety are not given new or renewed hazardous waste facilities permits.
(6) For a full permit, a facility should submit an application, which is subject to a detailed technical review
by the department, a 45-day public comment period, and a public hearing, and should comply with the California Environmental Quality Act (Division 13 (commencing with Section 21000) of the Public Resources Code). Full permits should be renewed every 10 years, and permitted facilities are subject to regular inspection by the department.
(7) One facility has been operating under an interim status permit since 1985 and has repeatedly been found to have polluted the surrounding environment and community with dangerously high levels of lead and arsenic.
(8) Lead and arsenic are known carcinogens that increase the risk of skin, lung, and lymphatic cancer, and can cause developmental harm, damage to the nervous system, and damage reproductive health.
(b) It is the intent of the Legislature to
identify, protect, and defend overburdened communities that suffer from asthma, cancers, and other illnesses born from heavy industrial pollution and to ensure increased public participation from affected communities in the governmental decisionmaking process.