LEGISLATIVE BUDGET BOARD
Austin, Texas
 
FISCAL NOTE, 79TH LEGISLATIVE REGULAR SESSION
 
May 16, 2005

TO:
Honorable Dennis Bonnen, Chair, House Committee on Environmental Regulation
 
FROM:
John S. O'Brien, Deputy Director, Legislative Budget Board
 
IN RE:
SB1667 by Duncan (Relating to responsibilities of certain state agencies concerning radioactive substances; imposing fees and surcharges; providing administrative and civil penalties.), As Engrossed



Estimated Two-year Net Impact to General Revenue Related Funds for SB1667, As Engrossed: a positive impact of $5,147,540 through the biennium ending August 31, 2007.

The bill would make no appropriation but could provide the legal basis for an appropriation of funds to implement the provisions of the bill.



Fiscal Year Probable Net Positive/(Negative) Impact to General Revenue Related Funds
2006 ($422,700)
2007 $5,570,240
2008 $5,570,240
2009 $280,050
2010 $280,050




Fiscal Year Probable Revenue Gain/(Loss) from
GENERAL REVENUE FUND
1
Probable (Cost) from
GENERAL REVENUE FUND
1
Change in Number of State Employees from FY 2005
2006 $268,793 ($691,493) 7.5
2007 $6,106,003 ($535,763) 7.5
2008 $6,106,003 ($535,763) 7.5
2009 $815,813 ($535,763) 7.5
2010 $815,813 ($535,763) 7.5

Fiscal Analysis

The bill would transfer responsibilities for regulating certain radioactive substances from the Department of State Health Services (DSHS) to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) and transfer licensing and regulation of naturally-occurring radioactive material (NORM) from the DSHS to the Railroad Commission.

The bill also would provide for the imposition of a fee of 10 percent on the gross receipts of license holders and a surcharge on deliveries of radioactive substances. The bill would provide that the TCEQ set the fees and that the TCEQ establish a threshold level measured in millicuries below which a surcharge would not be required to be paid. Above that threshold, the TCEQ would assess a surcharge of $10 per millicurie. The bill would provide for fees equal to 8 percent of gross receipts to be deposited to the credit of the General Revenue Fund, with the remaining 2 percent transferred to the host county of the disposal site.

The bill would also allow the Railroad Commission to asses a fee to recover costs in administering the oil and gas NORM waste regulatory program.


Methodology

This estimate assumes that appropriations currently made to the DSHS in the amount of $549,979 each fiscal year and 8 FTEs would transfer from the DSHS to the TCEQ. In addition, this estimate assumes that the TCEQ would require an additional 4.5 FTEs to assess and collect fees, conduct analysis and oversight of operational costs of fee payers for the related newly created fee and surcharges. These additional costs are expected to total $422,700 in fiscal year 2006 and $328,950 in subsequent years. This estimate also assumes that revenues from license fees, currently collected by the DSHS would be collected instead by the TCEQ. No significant change to the license fee revenue stream is assumed in this estimate.

Designating the Railroad Commission as the agency responsible for licensing and regulating the possession, storage, processing, handling, and disposal of oil and gas NORM waste would result in the agency being required to process and maintain licenses and conduct additional investigations. This is expected to result in the need for 3.0 additional FTEs at the Railroad Commission and related costs of $268,793 in fiscal year 2006 and $206,813 in future years. This estimate assumes that those costs would be paid out of the General Revenue Fund, but that all costs would be recovered through fee revenues assessed to oil and gas operators and deposited to the General Revenue Fund.

The new fee on gross receipts and surcharges created by the bill is expected to generate at least $14 million in additional revenues to the state over the 2006-10 period. For the purposes of this estimate, the revenue stream is shown to start in fiscal year 2007. No additional revenue is expected in fiscal year 2006 because it is assumed that it would take at least one year before licensing and fee structures would be in place. This estimate assumes that the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) would send waste from the Fernald, Ohio nuclear weapon facility to a Texas facility and that the DOE would pay a gross receipts fee equal to the fee paid at the DOE's Nevada Test Site facility. Gross receipts fee revenues would total $10,580,380, spilt evenly between fiscal year 2007 and fiscal year 2008.

 

This estimate assumes fees from the gradual replacement of the Barnwell, South Carolina facility, which is scheduled to discontinue collecting waste from other states in 2008. The Barnwell facility accepts an average of 2,231 cubic meters of waste annually.  If the facility in Texas were to apply the same rate as the DOE's Nevada Test Site facility, the Texas facility would generate $7.6 million in gross receipts annually.  The state fee of eight percent would lead to additional revenues of $609,000 annually in fiscal years 2007 through 2010.


Local Government Impact

The host county of the radioactive waste disposal site would receive revenues estimated at $1.3 million per year in fiscal years 2007 and 2008, and revenues of $152,000 per year in fiscal years 2009 and 2010.


Source Agencies:
537 Department of State Health Services, 582 Commission on Environmental Quality
LBB Staff:
JOB, HC, WK, ZS, TL