Amend CSSB 1954 as follows:
      (1)  Strike all below the enacting clause and substitute the
following:
      SECTION 1.  Chapter 361, Health and Safety Code, is amended
by adding Subchapter T. to read as follows:
           SUBCHAPTER T.  HANDLING OF USED OIL FILTERS.
      Sec. 361.701.  USED OIL FILTER MANAGEMENT.  A used oil filter
may not be intentionally or knowingly placed in or accepted for
disposal in a landfill permitted by the commission.
      Sec. 361.702.  APPLICABILITY.  This subchapter applies to
persons involved in generating, storing, transporting, handling,
and processing used oil filters and their components.  Except for
Sec. 361.701 and Sec. 361.703(a), this subchapter does not apply to
industrial generators that are registered with the commission as
Industrial or Hazardous waste facilities or that are under the
waste management jurisdiction of a state agency other than the
commission.
      Sec. 361.703.  USED OIL FILTER GENERATORS AND COLLECTORS.
(a)  A person may not generate, collect, transport, process, or
recycle a used oil filter in a manner that endangers or damages the
public health or welfare, or the environment or intentionally or
knowingly place a used oil filter containing oil on land.
      (b)  A used oil filter generator may store used oil filters
on-site in containers that do not in the aggregate have a volume of
more than 330 gallons without commission approval and without
registering as a storage facility.
      (c)  A used oil filter collector may store used oil filters
on site in containers that do not in the aggregate have a volume of
more than 330 gallons without commission approval and without
registering as a storage facility.
      (d)  The containers to be used in accordance with subsections
(b) and (c) of this section must be securely closed, waterproof,
nonleaking, in good condition and labeled "Used Oil Filters".
      (e)  A person must remove from service, or repair, any
container used for storage of used oil filters that is found to be
leaking or in poor condition.
      SECTION 2.  Chapter 361.432, Health and Safety Code, is
repealed.
      SECTION 3.  This Act takes effect September 1, 1997.
      SECTION 4.  The importance of this legislation and the
crowded condition of the calendars in both houses create an
emergency and an imperative public necessity that the
constitutional rule requiring bills to be read on three several
days in each house be suspended, and this rule is hereby
suspended.