West Virginia Code § 22-25-6

Application review and authority to enter into environmental performance
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
agreement.
(a) The secretary shall review all completed applications within a reasonable period of time.
If the secretary determines that the application meets the requirements for the program, the
secretary shall notify the applicant in writing, and the application shall be incorporated into
a written agreement. If the secretary determines the application does not meeet the
requirements of the program, the secretary shall notify the applicant in writing and shall
provide an adequate opportunity for the applicant to address the outstarnding items.
(b) The secretary may enter into one or more agreements with au participant as necessary to
implement the provisions of this article. The agreement shall describe the requirements for
continued participation and incentives to be provided to the tparticipant.
(c) The secretary shall not enter into any environmental performance agreement that would:
(1) Violate or waive any specific statutory provisionl;
(2) Waive any federal regulation, unless specifically authorized by the federal government;
(3) Result in an increase in emissions, discharges, or other releases above those allowable
under the otherwise applicable regulatory requirements; or
(4) Address past or ongoing violations or noncompliance by a qualified applicant.
(d) The following documLents shall be made available for public review:
(1) The application, including documentation of compliance with environmental laws and
permits applicable to the facility over the last three years, information regarding an
appropriate environmental management system, a description of the current status of
proposed performance indicators, and an outline of the measures by which the program will
be eWvaluated;
(2) The executive's determination regarding their application; and
(3) The agreement described in subsections (a) and (b) of this section.

‹ Prev All West Virginia sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.