Hawaii 2011 bill text
SB 875 (The Repeal bill)
The following text was found at http://www.capitol.hawaii.gov/session2011/bills/SB875_.htm
relating to recycling.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. Section 36-27, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§36-27 Transfers from special funds for central service expenses. (a)Except as provided in this section, and notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, from time to time, the director of finance, for the purpose of defraying the prorated estimate of central service expenses of government in relation to all special funds, except the:
(1) Special out-of-school time instructional program fund under section 302A-1310;
(2) School cafeteria special funds of the department of education;
(3) Special funds of the University of Hawaii;
(4) State educational facilities improvement special fund;
(5) Convention center enterprise special fund under section 201B-8;
(6) Special funds established by section 206E-6;
(7) Housing loan program revenue bond special fund;
(8) Housing project bond special fund;
(9) Aloha Tower fund created by section 206J-17;
(10) Funds of the employees' retirement system created by section 88-109;
(11) Unemployment compensation fund established under section 383-121;
(12) Hawaii hurricane relief fund established under chapter 431P;
(13) Hawaii health systems corporation special funds and the subaccounts of its regional system boards;
(14) Tourism special fund established under section 201B-11;
(15) Universal service fund established under section 269-42;
(16) Emergency and budget reserve fund under section 328L-3;
(17) Public schools special fees and charges fund under section 302A-1130;
(18) Sport fish special fund under section 187A-9.5;
[(19) Glass advance disposal fee established by section 342G-82;
(20)] (19) Center for nursing special fund under section 304A-2163;
[(21)] (20) Passenger facility charge special fund established by section 261-5.5;
[(22)] (21) Court interpreting services revolving fund under section 607-1.5;
[(23)] (22) Hawaii cancer research special fund;
[(24)] (23) Community health centers special fund;
[(25)] (24) Emergency medical services special fund;
[(26)] (25) Rental motor vehicle customer facility charge special fund established under section 261-5.6; and
[(27)] (26) Shared services technology special fund under section 27-43,
shall deduct five per cent of all receipts of all special funds, which deduction shall be transferred to the general fund of the State and become general realizations of the State. All officers of the State and other persons having power to allocate or disburse any special funds shall cooperate with the director in effecting these transfers. To determine the proper revenue base upon which the central service assessment is to be calculated, the director shall adopt rules pursuant to chapter 91 for the purpose of suspending or limiting the application of the central service assessment of any fund. No later than twenty days prior to the convening of each regular session of the legislature, the director shall report all central service assessments made during the preceding fiscal year.
(b) Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the director shall deposit per cent of all moneys collected pursuant to subsection (a) into the shared services technology special fund established pursuant to section 27-43."
SECTION 2. Section 237-24.75, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§237-24.75 Additional exemptions. In addition to the amounts exempt under section 237-24, this chapter shall not apply to:
[(1) Amounts received as a beverage container deposit collected under chapter 342G, part VIII;
(2)] (1) Amounts received by the operator of the Hawaii convention center for reimbursement of costs or advances made pursuant to a contract with the Hawaii tourism authority under section 201B‑7[[]; and[]
[(3)] (2) Amounts received[]] by a professional employment organization from a client company equal to amounts that are disbursed by the professional employment organization for employee wages, salaries, payroll taxes, insurance premiums, and benefits, including retirement, vacation, sick leave, health benefits, and similar employment benefits with respect to assigned employees at a client company; provided that this exemption shall not apply to a professional employment organization upon failure of the professional employment organization to collect, account for, and pay over any income tax withholding for assigned employees or any federal or state taxes for which the professional employment organization is responsible. As used in this paragraph, "professional employment organization", "client company", and "assigned employee" shall have the meanings provided in section 373K-1."
SECTION 3. Section 342G-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by deleting the definition of "deposit beverage".
[""Deposit beverage" means beer, ale, or other drink produced by fermenting malt, mixed spirits, mixed wine, tea and coffee drinks regardless of dairy-derived product content, soda, or noncarbonated water, and all nonalcoholic drinks in liquid form and intended for internal human consumption that is contained in a deposit beverage container.
The term "deposit beverage" excludes the following:
(1) A liquid which is:
(A) A syrup;
(B) In a concentrated form; or
(C) Typically added as a minor flavoring ingredient in food or drink, such as extracts, cooking additives, sauces, or condiments;
(2) A liquid which is ingested in very small quantities and which is consumed for medicinal purposes only;
(3) A liquid which is designed and consumed only as a nutritional supplement as defined in the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994 (P.L. 103-417) and not as a beverage;
(4) Products frozen at the time of sale to the consumer, or, in the case of institutional users such as hospitals and nursing homes, at the time of sale to the users;
(5) Products designed to be consumed in a frozen state;
(6) Instant drink powders;
(7) Seafood, meat, or vegetable broths, or soups, but not juices; and
(8) Milk and all other dairy-derived products, except tea and coffee drinks with trace amounts of these products."]
SECTION 4. Section 342G-81, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by deleting the definition of "deposit glass beverage container".
[""Deposit glass beverage container" means:
(1) The individual, separate, sealed, glass container used for containing, at the time of import, sixty-four ounces or less of a beverage; or
(2) The empty, individual, separate glass container that will be filled with sixty-four ounces or less of a beverage and sealed in this State, so that these glass beverage containers will be subject to [part VIII]."]
SECTION 5. Section 342G-82, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
"(a) Every glass container importer shall pay to the department an advance disposal fee. The fee shall be imposed only once on the same glass container and shall not be assessed on drinking glasses, cups, bowls, plates, ashtrays, and similar tempered glass containers. For the period beginning September 1, 1994, the fee shall be one and one-half cents per glass container. [Beginning October 1, 2004, the glass advance disposal fee shall only apply to glass containers that are not glass deposit beverage containers.]"
SECTION 6. Section 342G-83, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (b) to read as follows:
"(b) All glass container importers shall maintain records reflecting the manufacture of their glass containers as well as the importation and exportation of products packaged in glass. [The records shall identify the type (glass deposit beverage container or non-deposit beverage glass container) and quantity of each type of glass container.] The records shall be made available, upon request, for inspection by the department; provided that any proprietary information obtained by the department shall be kept confidential, and shall not be disclosed to any other person except:
(1) As may be reasonably required in an administrative or judicial proceeding to enforce any provision of this chapter or any rule adopted pursuant to this chapter; or
(2) Under an order issued by a court or administrative agency hearing officer."
SECTION 7. Section 342G-84, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§342G-84 Deposit into environmental management special fund; distribution to counties. (a) Revenues generated from the advance disposal fee shall be deposited into a special account in the environmental management fund. Moneys from the special account shall be used to fund county glass recovery programs established in accordance with the requirements under section 342G-86; provided that no moneys shall be made available to a county unless the county has first submitted its formally adopted integrated solid waste management plan to the department for review. In the event of any surplus in the special account, the department shall recommend a reduction in the fee as deemed necessary.
(b) The department shall distribute the moneys contained in the special account to the counties in proportion to the amount of glass imported into each county based on the county's de facto population. The distribution shall be in the form of direct contracts with the department as permitted under chapters 103 and 103D or transfer of funds from the department.
(c) No more than ten per cent, in the aggregate, of the revenue collected in any one year may be used by the department for administrative and educational purposes and to promote glass recovery, recycling, and reuse in Hawaii through research and demonstration projects.
[(d) All moneys distributed to the counties under subsection (b), and not used by the counties as specified in section 342G-86, shall be returned to the State for deposit into the environmental management special fund at the end of each annual contract period.]"
SECTION 8. Section 342G-85, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§342G-85 Container inventory report and payment. (a) Payment of the advance glass disposal fee shall be made quarterly based on inventory reports of the glass container importers, except for those importers subject to subsection (c) or (d). All glass container importers shall submit to the department documentation in sufficient detail that identifies the number of glass [deposit beverage and glass non-deposit beverage] containers manufactured or imported to the State and sold or distributed, by manufacturer or distributor, during the calendar year.
(b) [Until September 30, 2004, the] The amount due from glass container importers less glass containers exported for the calendar year shall be the sum equal to the number of glass containers provided in subsection (a) multiplied by the advance disposal fee specified in section 342G-82. [Beginning October 1, 2004, the amount due from glass container importers shall be the sum equal to the number of non-deposit beverage glass containers provided in subsection (a), less non-deposit beverage glass containers exported, and multiplied by the advance disposal fee.] Payment shall be made by check or money order payable to the "Department of Health, State of Hawaii". All subsequent inventory reports and payments shall be made not later than the fifteenth day of the month following the end of the previous calendar quarter, except for those importers subject to subsection (d).
(c) [Until September 30, 2004, a] A glass container importer who imports fewer than five thousand glass containers within a one-year period shall be exempt from payment of the fee. Any empty, imported glass container designed to hold not more than two and one-half fluid ounces of a product meant for human consumption shall be exempt from the fee. [Beginning October 1, 2004, a glass container importer who imports or manufactures in the State fewer [than] five thousand non-deposit beverage glass containers within a one-year period shall be exempt from payment of the fee.]
(d) [Until September 30, 2004, a] A glass container importer who imports five thousand or more glass containers, but less than or equal to one hundred thousand glass containers, shall be permitted to provide a report and payment of the fee annually, rather than quarterly. [Beginning October 1, 2004, a glass container importer who imports or manufactures in the State five thousand or more non-deposit beverage glass containers, but less than or equal to one hundred thousand non-deposit beverage glass containers, shall be permitted to provide a report and payment of the fee annually, rather than quarterly.]"
SECTION 9. Section 445-231, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending the definition of "beer keg" to read as follows:
""Beer keg" means a metal container used to hold five gallons or more of liquid that is stamped, engraved, stenciled, or otherwise marked with the name of a brewery manufacturer[; provided that a deposit beverage container, as defined under section 342G-101, shall not be considered a beer keg]."
SECTION 10. Section 708-835.8, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (2) to read as follows:
"(2) For the purposes of this section, "beer keg" means a metal container used to hold five gallons or more of liquid that is stamped, engraved, stenciled, or otherwise marked with the name of a brewery manufacturer[; provided that a deposit beverage container, as defined under section 342G-101, shall not be considered a beer keg]."
SECTION 11. Section 235-18, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.
["[§235-18] Deposit beverage container deposit exemption. This chapter shall not apply to amounts received as a deposit beverage container deposit collected under part VIII of chapter 342G."]
SECTION 12. Part VIII of chapter 342G, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.
SECTION 13. All moneys collected pursuant to part VIII of chapter 342G, Hawaii Revised Statutes, deposited into the deposit beverage container deposit special fund established under section 342G-104, Hawaii Revised Statutes, and remaining unencumbered on balance in that special fund shall lapse to the credit of the general fund on July 1, 2011.
SECTION 14. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 15. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2011.
INTRODUCED BY: |
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Report Title:
Deposit Beverage Container Program; Repeal; Environmental Management Special Fund; Counties
Description:
Repeals the deposit beverage container program and requires that all moneys collected under the program lapse into the general fund. Repeals the requirement that counties return unused monies distributed by the State for glass recovery programs if not used by the end of each annual contract period.
SB 577 (The Wine, Spirits, Supplements, and Dairy Bill)
The following text was found at http://www.capitol.hawaii.gov/session2011/bills/SB577_.htm
relating to solid waste management.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. Section 342G-81, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§342G-81 Definitions. As used in this part, unless the context requires otherwise:
["Deposit glass beverage container" means:
(1) The individual, separate, sealed, glass container used for containing, at the time of import, sixty-eight fluid ounces or less of a beverage; or
(2) The empty, individual, separate glass container that will be filled with sixty-eight fluid ounces or less of a beverage and sealed in this State, so that these glass beverage containers will be subject to part VIII.]
"Glass container importer" means any person who is engaged in the manufacture of glass containers within the State or who imports glass containers from outside the State for sale or use within the State. The term includes federal agencies and military distributors, but does not include airlines and shipping companies that merely transport glass containers.
"Glass deposit beverage container" means:
(1) The individual, separate, sealed, glass container used for containing, at the time of import, one hundred twenty-eight fluid ounces or less of a beverage; or
(2) The empty, individual, separate glass container that will be filled with one hundred twenty-eight fluid ounces or less of a beverage and sealed in this State, so that these glass beverage containers will be subject to part VIII.
"Glass incentive" means an incentive paid to licensed recyclers for recycling glass containers. Such incentives may be structured to include the costs of collection and processing, and a "buy back" incentive to increase participation by the public and private haulers.
"Glassphalt" means an asphaltic concrete mixture utilizing crushed glass, under controlled gradation conditions, as a substitute for a percentage of the aggregate in the mix.
"Glass recovery program" means a program for glass recovery and reuse for purposes including but not limited to:
(1) Glass container reuse or recycling whereby containers are refilled, processed for shipment out of the State, or crushed into aggregate substitute; and
(2) Use in roadway materials or concrete as provided in this part.
"Import" means to buy, bring, or accept delivery of glass containers from an address, supplier, or any entity outside of the State of Hawaii."
SECTION 2. Section 342G-82, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
"(a) Every glass container importer shall pay to the department an advance disposal fee. The fee shall be imposed only once on the same glass container and shall not be assessed on drinking glasses, cups, bowls, plates, ashtrays, and similar tempered glass containers. For the period beginning September 1, 1994, the fee shall be one and one-half cents per glass container. [Beginning] From October 1, 2004, to November 30, 2011, the glass advance disposal fee shall [only] apply only to glass containers that are not glass deposit beverage containers[.] used for containing sixty-eight fluid ounces or less of a beverage. Beginning December 1, 2011, the glass advance disposal fee shall apply only to glass containers that are not glass deposit beverage containers used for containing one hundred twenty-eight fluid ounces or less of a beverage."
SECTION 3. Section 342G-101, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended as follows:
1. By amending the definition of "deposit beverage" to read:
""Deposit beverage" means beer, [ale,] as defined by section 244D‑1; distilled spirits, as defined by section 244D‑1; wine, as defined by section 244D‑1; or other drink produced by fermenting malt, mixed spirits, mixed wine, tea and coffee drinks regardless of dairy-derived product content, soda, or noncarbonated water[,]; and all nonalcoholic drinks in liquid form and intended for internal human consumption that is contained in a deposit beverage container.
The term "deposit beverage" excludes the following:
(1) A liquid which is:
(A) A syrup;
(B) In a concentrated form; or
(C) Typically added as a minor flavoring ingredient in food or drink, such as extracts, cooking additives, sauces, or condiments;
(2) A liquid which is a drug, medical food or infant formula as defined by the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. §301 et seq.);
[(3) A liquid which is designed and consumed only as a dietary supplement and not as a beverage as defined in the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994 (P.L. 103-417);
(4)] (3) Products frozen at the time of sale to the consumer, or, in the case of institutional users such as hospitals and nursing homes, at the time of sale to the users;
[(5)] (4) Products designed to be consumed in a frozen state;
[(6)] (5) Instant drink powders; and
[(7)] (6) Seafood, meat, or vegetable broths, or soups, but not juices[; and
(8) Milk and all other dairy-derived products, except tea and coffee drinks with trace amounts of these products]."
2. By amending the definition of "deposit beverage container" to read:
""Deposit beverage container" means the individual, separate, sealed glass, polyethylene terephthalate, high density polyethylene, or metal container less than or equal to [sixty-eight] one hundred twenty-eight fluid ounces, used for containing, at the time of sale to the consumer, a deposit beverage intended for use or consumption in this State."
SECTION 4. The department of health shall phase-in all requirements affecting the redemption of one hundred twenty-eight fluid ounce deposit beverage containers, beginning December 1, 2011, as follows; provided that the phase-in shall be completed by March 1, 2012:
(1) From December 1, 2011, distributors of deposit beverage containers may begin marking one hundred twenty-eight fluid ounce deposit beverage containers as required under section 342G‑112(a), Hawaii Revised Statutes;
(2) From December 1, 2011, until February 29, 2012, a deposit beverage container holding up to one hundred twenty-eight fluid ounces may be redeemed under the deposit beverage container program, without regard to whether the container bears the refund value of the container and the word "Hawaii" or the letter "HI", as required by section 342G‑112(a), Hawaii Revised Statutes;
(3) Beginning March 1, 2012, every deposit beverage container holding up to one hundred twenty-eight fluid ounces that is sold in the State shall be marked as required under section 342G-112(a), Hawaii Revised Statutes; and
(4) Beginning March 1, 2012, only deposit beverage containers meeting the requirements of section 342G‑112(a), Hawaii Revised Statutes, shall be eligible for redemption.
SECTION 5. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 6. This Act shall take effect upon its approval.
INTRODUCED BY: |
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Report Title:
Deposit Beverage Container Program; Expansion
Description:
Expands the types of beverage containers accepted in the deposit beverage container program and makes conforming amendments to the glass beverage containers subject to the glass advance disposal fee. Sets forth a timetable for implementation of the expansion.
relating to the deposit beverage container program.
HB 1365 (The Wine & Spirits Bill)
This text was found at http://www.capitol.hawaii.gov/session2011/bills/HB1365_.htm
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. Section 342G-101, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending the definition of "deposit beverage" to read as follows:
""Deposit beverage" means beer, ale, or other drink produced by fermenting malt, hard spirits, mixed spirits, wine, mixed wine, tea and coffee drinks regardless of dairy-derived product content, soda, or noncarbonated water, and all nonalcoholic drinks in liquid form and intended for internal human consumption that is contained in a deposit beverage container."
SECTION 2. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 3. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2011.
INTRODUCED BY: |
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Report Title:
Deposit Beverage Container Program; Wine and Hard Spirits
Description:
Amends the definition of "deposit beverage" to include wine and hard spirits
Senate Bill 178 (The Wine, Spirits, and Supplements Bill)
This text was found at http://www.capitol.hawaii.gov/session2011/bills/SB178_.htm
A BILL FOR AN ACT
RELATING TO THE DEPOSIT BEVERAGE CONTAINER PROGRAM.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. The legislature finds that dietary supplements, hard spirits, and wine are excluded from the definition of "deposit beverage" under section 342G-101, Hawaii Revised Statutes, and their containers are excluded from the deposit beverage container program. There has been a significant increase in the number of beverages that are marketed as "energy" or "dietary" supplement drinks. Labeling of these products with the Hawaii recyclable refund label (HI-5¢) is inconsistent, and beverages are often sold in containers that are recyclable plastic, aluminum, or glass. The legislature further finds that the intended uses of these purported "energy" and "dietary" supplements are similar to, if not the same as, the intended use of many other sports drinks, sodas, and juice beverages that are sold in containers subject to the deposit beverage container program. Moreover, hard spirits and wine should be included in the definition of "deposit beverages", as are beer, ale, other drinks produced by fermenting malt, mixed spirits, and mixed wine.
The purpose of this Act is to include energy and dietary supplement beverage, hard spirits, and wine containers in the deposit beverage container program.
SECTION 2. Section 342G-101, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending the definition of "deposit beverage" to read as follows:
""Deposit beverage" means beer, ale, or other drink produced by fermenting malt, hard spirits, mixed spirits, mixed wine, wine, tea and coffee drinks regardless of dairy-derived product content, soda, or noncarbonated water, and all nonalcoholic drinks in liquid form and intended for internal human consumption that is contained in a deposit beverage container.
The term "deposit beverage" excludes the following:
(1) A liquid which is:
(A) A syrup;
(B) In a concentrated form; or
(C) Typically added as a minor flavoring ingredient in food or drink, such as extracts, cooking additives, sauces, or condiments;
(2) A liquid which is a drug, medical food or infant formula as defined by the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. §301 et seq.);
[(3) A liquid which is designed and consumed only as a dietary supplement and not as a beverage as defined in the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994 (P.L. 103-417);
(4)] (3) Products frozen at the time of sale to the consumer, or, in the case of institutional users such as hospitals and nursing homes, at the time of sale to the users;
[(5)] (4) Products designed to be consumed in a frozen state;
[(6)] (5) Instant drink powders;
[(7)] (6) Seafood, meat, or vegetable broths, or soups, but not juices; and
[(8)] (7) Milk and all other dairy-derived products, except tea and coffee drinks with trace amounts of these products."
SECTION 3. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 4. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2011.
INTRODUCED BY: |
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Report Title:
Deposit Beverage Container Program; Dietary Supplements
Description:
Removes the exemption for dietary supplements from the deposit beverage container program; adds hard spirits, and wine containers.
SB 179 (The Supplements Bill)
This text was found at http://www.capitol.hawaii.gov/session2011/bills/SB179_.htm
The identical House Bill 1364 can be found at http://www.capitol.hawaii.gov/session2011/bills/HB1364_.htm
relating to the deposit beverage container program.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. The legislature finds that dietary supplements are excluded from the definition of "deposit beverage" under section 342G-101, Hawaii Revised Statutes, and their containers are excluded from the deposit beverage container program. There has also been a significant increase in the number of beverages that are marketed as "energy" or "dietary" supplement drinks. Although not required by law, some of these products are labeled with the Hawaii recyclable refund label (HI-5¢) and are often sold in containers that are recyclable plastic, aluminum, or glass. The legislature further finds that the intended uses of these purported "energy" and "dietary" supplements are similar to, if not the same as, the intended use of many other sports drinks, sodas, and juice beverages that are sold in containers subject to the deposit beverage container program.
The purpose of this Act is to include energy and dietary supplement beverage containers in the deposit beverage container program.
SECTION 2. Section 342G-101, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending the definition of "deposit beverage" to read as follows:
""Deposit beverage" means beer, ale, or other drink produced by fermenting malt, mixed spirits, mixed wine, tea and coffee drinks regardless of dairy-derived product content, soda, or noncarbonated water, and all nonalcoholic drinks in liquid form and intended for internal human consumption that is contained in a deposit beverage container.
The term "deposit beverage" excludes the following:
(1) A liquid [which] that is:
(A) A syrup;
(B) In a concentrated form; or
(C) Typically added as a minor flavoring ingredient in food or drink, such as extracts, cooking additives, sauces, or condiments;
(2) A liquid [which] that is a drug, medical food, or infant formula as defined by the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. §301 et seq.);
[(3) A liquid which is designed and consumed only as a dietary supplement and not as a beverage as defined in the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994 (P.L. 103-417);]
[(4)] (3) Products frozen at the time of sale to the consumer, or, in the case of institutional users such as hospitals and nursing homes, at the time of sale to the users;
[(5)] (4) Products designed to be consumed in a frozen state;
[(6)] (5) Instant drink powders;
[(7)] (6) Seafood, meat, or vegetable broths, or soups, but not juices; and
[(8)] (7) Milk and all other dairy-derived products, except tea and coffee drinks with trace amounts of these products."
SECTION 3. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 4. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2011.
Report Title:
Deposit Beverage Container Program; Dietary Supplements
Description:
Removes the exemption for dietary supplements from the deposit beverage container program.