A product stewardship program established for a product or product category designated by the Legislature for inclusion in a product stewardship program must be established and implemented in accordance with the provisions of this section. [PL 2013, c. 315, §7 (NEW).]
1. Program. A producer selling a product in the State that is a designated product or that is in a designated product category is responsible individually, collectively or through a stewardship organization for the implementation and financing of a product stewardship program to manage the product at the end of the product’s life in accordance with the priorities in section 2101.
A. The program must include a collection system that is convenient and adequate to serve the needs of covered entities in both rural and urban areas. No later than one year following commencement of product collections by the program’s collection system, the collection system must include permanent collection locations located within 15 miles of 90% of the residents of the State unless the commissioner determines that the requirements of this paragraph are not practicable due to geographical constraints or that an alternative collection system that does not meet the requirements of this paragraph will result in equivalent and more efficient collection. [PL 2019, c. 227, §3 (AMD).]
B. The program must provide for effective education and outreach to promote the use of the program and to ensure that collection options are understood by covered entities. [PL 2013, c. 315, §7 (NEW).]
C. A producer or stewardship organization, including a producer’s or stewardship organization’s officers, members, employees and agents that organize a product stewardship program under this chapter, is immune from liability for the producer’s or stewardship organization’s conduct under state laws relating to antitrust, restraint of trade, unfair trade practices and other regulation of trade or commerce only to the extent necessary to plan and implement the producer’s or stewardship organization’s chosen organized collection or recycling system. [PL 2013, c. 315, §7 (NEW).]
D. The program must include at a minimum a half-time employee or contracted agent whose job duties are dedicated to implementing the program in the State unless the commissioner determines that a lesser staffing requirement is adequate to provide the administrative oversight, training and ongoing technical support to collection locations, education and outreach efforts, program performance assessment and reporting necessary for program implementation. [PL 2019, c. 227, §4 (NEW).]

[PL 2019, c. 227, §§3, 4 (AMD).]

Terms Used In Maine Revised Statutes Title 38 Sec. 1776

  • Amendment: A proposal to alter the text of a pending bill or other measure by striking out some of it, by inserting new language, or both. Before an amendment becomes part of the measure, thelegislature must agree to it.
  • Evidence: Information presented in testimony or in documents that is used to persuade the fact finder (judge or jury) to decide the case for one side or the other.
  • in writing: include printing and other modes of making legible words. See Maine Revised Statutes Title 1 Sec. 72
  • Oversight: Committee review of the activities of a Federal agency or program.
  • Producer: means a person that:
A. See Maine Revised Statutes Title 38 Sec. 1771
  • Product: means an item intended for sale within the State that is identified pursuant to section 1772 as appropriate for a product stewardship program. See Maine Revised Statutes Title 38 Sec. 1771
  • Product category: means a group of similar products designated pursuant to section 1772 for the purpose of establishing product stewardship programs. See Maine Revised Statutes Title 38 Sec. 1771
  • Product stewardship: means a producer's taking responsibility for managing and reducing the life-cycle impacts of the producer's product, from product design to end-of-life management. See Maine Revised Statutes Title 38 Sec. 1771
  • Product stewardship program: includes a program financed through an assessment paid by the producers to a stewardship organization. See Maine Revised Statutes Title 38 Sec. 1771
  • Proprietary information: means information that is a trade secret or production, commercial or financial information the disclosure of which would impair the competitive position of the submittor and would make available information not otherwise publicly available. See Maine Revised Statutes Title 38 Sec. 1771
  • Recycling: means the transforming or remanufacturing of an unwanted product or the unwanted product's components and by-products into usable or marketable materials. See Maine Revised Statutes Title 38 Sec. 1771
  • Reuse: means a change in ownership of a product or component in a product for use in the same manner and purpose for which it was originally produced. See Maine Revised Statutes Title 38 Sec. 1771
  • Stewardship organization: means a corporation, nonprofit organization or other legal entity created by a producer or group of producers to implement a product stewardship program. See Maine Revised Statutes Title 38 Sec. 1771
  • Unwanted product: means a product that is no longer wanted by its owner or that has been abandoned or discarded or is intended to be discarded by its owner. See Maine Revised Statutes Title 38 Sec. 1771
  • Year: means a calendar year, unless otherwise expressed. See Maine Revised Statutes Title 1 Sec. 72
  • 2. Requirement for sale. One hundred eighty days after a product stewardship plan under subsection 5 is approved in accordance with subsection 8, a producer may not sell or offer for sale in the State the relevant product, unless the producer of the product participates individually, collectively or through a product stewardship program in accordance with an approved product stewardship plan.

    [PL 2013, c. 315, §7 (NEW).]

    3. No fee. A product stewardship program may not charge a fee at the time an unwanted product is delivered or collected for recycling or disposal.

    [PL 2013, c. 315, §7 (NEW).]

    4. Costs. Producers in a product stewardship program shall finance the collection, transportation and reuse, recycling or disposition of the relevant product; effective education and outreach related to the program; program assessment; program reporting; any incentives necessary to achieve program goals; payment of reasonable fees to the department for review of the program plan and any proposed amendments; and payment of annual fees to the department to cover the department’s actual costs for the program for annual report review, oversight, administration and enforcement, which may not exceed $100,000 per year per program and which must be properly documented and provided by the department to the program prior to or at the time that such payment is required.

    [PL 2019, c. 227, §5 (AMD).]

    5. Requirement to submit a plan. Within one year of a product’s or product category’s being designated for inclusion in a product stewardship program, the relevant producer or stewardship organization shall submit a product stewardship plan to the department for approval. The plan must include:
    A. Identification and contact information for:

    (1) The individual or entity submitting the plan;
    (2) All producers participating in the product stewardship program;
    (3) The owners of the brands covered by the program; and
    (4) If using a stewardship organization, the stewardship organization, including a description of the organization and the tasks to be performed by the organization. The description must include information on how the organization is organized, including administration of the organization and management of the organization; [PL 2013, c. 315, §7 (NEW).]
    B. A description of the collection system, including:

    (1) The types of locations or other collection services to be used;
    (2) How all products covered under the product stewardship program will be collected in all counties of the State; and
    (3) How the collection system will be convenient and adequate to serve the needs of all entities; [PL 2019, c. 227, §6 (AMD).]
    C. The names and locations of recyclers, processors and disposal facilities that may be used by the product stewardship program; [PL 2013, c. 315, §7 (NEW).]
    D. Information on how the product and product components will be safely and securely transported, tracked and handled from collection through final disposition; [PL 2013, c. 315, §7 (NEW).]
    E. A description of the methods to be used to reuse, deconstruct and recycle the unwanted product to ensure that the product components are transformed or remanufactured to the extent feasible; [PL 2019, c. 227, §6 (AMD).]
    F. A description of how the convenience and adequacy of the collection system will be monitored and maintained; [PL 2013, c. 315, §7 (NEW).]
    G. A description of how the amount of product and product components collected, recycled, processed, reused and disposed of will be measured; [PL 2013, c. 315, §7 (NEW).]
    H. A description of the education and outreach methods that will be used to recruit, train and monitor collection locations and to encourage participation in the program on an ongoing basis by collection locations and by consumers throughout the State; [PL 2019, c. 227, §6 (AMD).]
    I. A description of how education and outreach methods will be evaluated, including, at a minimum, completion of an annual consumer awareness survey to assess consumer knowledge regarding product management options and collection locations. The survey questions and methodology must be approved by the department, and the survey must be administered by a 3rd party; [PL 2019, c. 227, §6 (AMD).]
    J. A description of how program performance will be assessed, including performance goals to show success of the program. When a performance goal is expressed as a recycling rate or a diversion from disposal rate, the plan must include a description of the methodology and the relevant historic sales data used to develop the rate. Sales information submitted to the department pursuant to this paragraph that is identified by the producer or stewardship organization as proprietary information is confidential and must be handled by the department in accordance with subsection 10. The performance goals under this paragraph must include, at a minimum, one of the following goals:

    (1) That at least 50% of the residents of the State will be aware of the program by no later than the end of the 3rd year of program implementation and at least 70% of the residents of the State will be aware of the program by no later than the end of the 6th year of program implementation;
    (2) That a diversion from disposal rate of at least 50% will be achieved by the program by no later than the end of the 4th year of program implementation; or
    (3) An alternative performance goal that does not meet the criteria in subparagraph (1) or (2) as long as sufficient evidence is provided to the department to justify that alternative performance goal; [PL 2019, c. 227, §6 (AMD).]
    K. A description of how the program will be financed. If the program is financed by a per unit assessment paid by the consumer at the point of sale, a plan for an annual 3rd-party audit to ensure revenue from the assessment does not exceed the cost of implementing the product stewardship program must be included; and [PL 2019, c. 227, §6 (AMD).]
    L. An anticipated annual budget for the program that includes identification of specific anticipated administrative, collection, transportation, disposition and communication costs for the program. The anticipated annual budget must be sufficient to fund the program staffing required under subsection 1, paragraph D and the reimbursement by the producer or stewardship organization of the department’s actual costs incurred in annual report review and in overseeing, administering and enforcing the program. The anticipated annual budget may not include costs for legal fees or costs related to legislative efforts that have been or will be incurred by the producer or stewardship organization. [PL 2019, c. 227, §7 (NEW).]

    [PL 2019, c. 227, §§6, 7 (AMD).]

    6. Plan amendments.

    [PL 2019, c. 227, §8 (RP).]

    6-A. Plan amendments. In accordance with the provisions of this subsection, a producer or stewardship organization or the department may initiate changes to an approved product stewardship plan.
    A. A change to an approved product stewardship plan by a producer or stewardship organization operating the program implemented under the plan must be submitted to the department for review and approval prior to the implementation of that change, except that if the producer or stewardship organization determines that the change is not substantive, such as the addition of or a change to collection locations, or if an additional producer joins the program, the producer or stewardship organization must inform the department of the change within 14 days of implementing the change but need not receive department approval unless the department determines that the change is substantive. The department shall review and approve plan amendments in accordance with subsection 8. [PL 2019, c. 227, §9 (NEW).]
    B. If the department determines that a program has failed to make adequate progress toward achieving the program’s performance goals described in the approved product stewardship plan pursuant to subsection 5, paragraph J, the department shall notify the producer or stewardship organization operating the program in writing regarding its determination and may direct the producer or stewardship organization to implement specific changes to the plan within 6 months of the written notification, which may include, but are not limited to, improvements to the convenience of the collection system or to the education and outreach efforts under the program to improve program performance. The department may also recommend in its annual report under section 1772, subsection 1 that the program be amended to require financial incentives or, if appropriate for the product, implementation of a deposit and refund system. [PL 2019, c. 227, §9 (NEW).]

    [PL 2019, c. 227, §9 (NEW).]

    7. Annual reporting. By March 1st of the calendar year after the calendar year in which an approved product stewardship program is implemented, and annually thereafter, the producer or stewardship organization operating the program shall submit to the department a report on the program for the previous calendar year. The report must include, at a minimum:
    A. The amount of product collected at each collection location; [PL 2019, c. 227, §10 (AMD).]
    B. A description of the methods used to collect, transport and process the product; [PL 2013, c. 315, §7 (NEW).]
    C. An evaluation of program performance, including, if possible, diversion and recycling rates together with certificates of recycling or similar confirmations and an evaluation of the convenience of the collection system implemented under the program; [PL 2019, c. 227, §10 (AMD).]
    D. A description of the methods used for education and outreach efforts and an evaluation the effectiveness of those efforts. The report must include the results of an assessment of the methods used for and effectiveness of education and outreach efforts. The assessment must be completed by a 3rd party; [PL 2019, c. 227, §10 (AMD).]
    E. If applicable, the report of the 3rd-party audit conducted to ensure that revenue collected from the assessment does not exceed implementation costs pursuant to subsection 5, paragraph K; [PL 2019, c. 227, §10 (AMD).]
    F. Any recommendations for changes to the product stewardship program and to the approved goals for the program to improve convenience of collection, consumer education and program evaluation; and [PL 2019, c. 227, §10 (AMD).]
    G. A financial report on the program, including the total cost of implementing the program as determined by an independent financial audit that includes identification of specific administrative, collection, transportation, disposition and communication costs for the program, and an anticipated budget for the program for the next program year. [PL 2019, c. 227, §10 (NEW).]

    [PL 2019, c. 227, §10 (AMD).]

    8. Department review and approval. Within 120 days after receipt of a proposed product stewardship plan, the department shall determine whether the plan complies with this section. If the plan is approved, the department shall notify the submitter in writing. If the department rejects the plan, the department shall notify the submitter in writing stating the reason for rejecting the plan.

    [PL 2019, c. 227, §10 (AMD).]

    9. Plan availability. Within 30 days of approval by the department of a product stewardship plan under subsection 8, the department shall place the approved product stewardship plan on the department’s publicly accessible website.

    [PL 2013, c. 315, §7 (NEW).]

    10. Proprietary information. Proprietary information submitted to the department in a product stewardship plan, in an amendment to a product stewardship plan or pursuant to reporting requirements of this section that is identified by the submittor as proprietary information is confidential and must be handled by the department in the same manner as confidential information is handled under section 1310?B.

    [PL 2019, c. 227, §10 (AMD).]

    11. Exceptions. This section does not apply to products subject to section 1610, 1612, 1665?A, 1665?B, 1672, 2146, 2165 or 2166.

    [PL 2021, c. 94, §3 (AMD); PL 2021, c. 455, §1 (AMD).]

    SECTION HISTORY

    PL 2013, c. 315, §7 (NEW). PL 2019, c. 227, §§3-10 (AMD). PL 2021, c. 94, §3 (AMD). PL 2021, c. 455, §1 (AMD).