Number 485 CHAIRMAN PORTER asked Ms. Adair if the amendment would assist the DEC, in the event that HB 238, Oil and Hazardous Substances Release Response Fund, passed. Number 491 MS. ADAIR replied that it would not. She expressed concerns about the amendment's impact on small businesses. Number 501 REPRESENTATIVE GREEN asked if the amendment would not be of assistance to small operators, as fees were on a sliding scale. Number 505 MS. ADAIR reiterated her concern that Representative Green's amendment would not cover her agency's costs. Number 512 REPRESENTATIVE GREEN wondered if it would be possible for the DEC to review like oil spill contingency plans together. Number 520 MS. ADAIR noted that there were some similarities in some plans. However, she said that the DEC was very sensitive to criticisms that it did not adequately review contingency plans. In that light, she said, the DEC would still need to review each plan separately. Number 534 REPRESENTATIVE GREEN said that he was not suggesting that the DEC short-circuit the review process. Number 548 MS. ADAIR commented that regulations developed to implement former HB 567 had set out a format for contingency plans. A contingency plan, she said, was a total document, and needed to be thoroughly reviewed by the DEC. CHAIRMAN PORTER commented that the issue before the committee was whether to set these fees in statute, as the House State Affairs Committee had done, or to allow the DEC to set them by regulation, as the House Labor and Commerce Committee had done. REPRESENTATIVE NORDLUND noted that he had made a motion to reinstate the House Labor and Commerce Committee's section 54. OBJECTION was heard. Number 600 REPRESENTATIVE NORDLUND AMENDED his MOTION to REINSTATE the House Labor and Commerce Committee's section 54 to also INCLUDE the DELETION of the House State Affairs Committee's section 44. MS. ADAIR said that even if section 44 was deleted, the DEC already had the authority in current law to establish fees for contingency plan review. That, she said, would not change. It was her understanding that Representative Green's amendment would reestablish the DEC's authority to set contingency plan review fees in regulation. Number 638 REPRESENTATIVE GREEN WITHDREW his AMENDMENT. A roll call vote on Representative Nordlund's motion was taken. Representatives Green, Nordlund, and Porter voted "YEA." Representative Kott voted "NAY." And so, the MOTION PASSED. Number 680 MS. FRASCA asked the committee to reinstate the House Labor and Commerce Committee's section 55, which would authorize the DEC to set fees to recover its indirect costs of administering the air quality permit program. She noted that this change was required by the federal government. Currently, she said, the DEC could recover direct costs, but not indirect costs.