Section 44011.6 Of Article 2. Program Requirements From California Health And Safety Code >> Division 26. >> Part 5. >> Chapter 5. >> Article 2.
44011.6
. (a) The use of a heavy-duty motor vehicle that emits
excessive smoke is prohibited.
(b) (1) As expeditiously as possible, the state board shall
develop a test procedure for the detection of excessive smoke
emissions from heavy-duty diesel motor vehicles that is feasible for
use in an intermittent roadside inspection program. During the
development of the test procedure, the state board shall cooperate
with the Department of the California Highway Patrol in conducting
roadside inspections.
(2) The state board may also specify visual or functional
inspection procedures to determine the presence of tampering or
defective emissions control systems in heavy-duty diesel or
heavy-duty gasoline motor vehicles. However, visual or functional
inspection procedures for heavy-duty gasoline motor vehicles shall
not be more stringent than those prescribed for heavy-duty gasoline
motor vehicles subject to biennial inspection pursuant to Section
44013.
(3) The chairperson of the state board shall appoint an ad hoc
advisory committee that shall include, but not be limited to,
representatives of heavy-duty engine manufacturers, carriers of
property for compensation using heavy-duty gasoline or heavy-duty
diesel motor vehicles, and the Department of the California Highway
Patrol. The advisory committee shall cooperate with the state board
to develop a test procedure pursuant to this subdivision and shall
advise the state board in developing regulations to implement test
procedures and inspection of heavy-duty commercial motor vehicles.
(c) Any smoke testing procedures or smoke measuring equipment,
including any meter that measures smoke opacity or density and any
recorder that stores or records smoke opacity or density
measurements, used to test for compliance with this section and
regulations adopted pursuant to this section, shall produce
consistent and repeatable results. The requirements of this
subdivision shall be satisfied by the adoption of Society of
Automotive Engineers recommended practice J 1667, "Snap-Acceleration
Smoke Test Procedures for Heavy-Duty Diesel Powered Vehicles."
(d) (1) The smoke test standards and procedures adopted and
implemented pursuant to this section shall be designed to ensure that
no engine will fail the smoke test standards and procedures when the
engine is in good operating condition and is adjusted to the
manufacturer's specifications.
(2) In implementing this section, the state board shall adopt
regulations that ensure that there will be no false failures or that
ensure that the state board will remedy any false failures without
any penalty to the vehicle owner.
(e) The state board shall enforce the prohibition against the use
of heavy-duty motor vehicles that are determined to have excessive
smoke emissions and shall enforce any regulation prohibiting the use
of a heavy-duty motor vehicle determined to have other
emissions-related defects, using the test procedure established
pursuant to this section.
(f) The state board may issue a citation to the owner or operator
for any vehicle in violation of this section. The regulations may
require the operator of a vehicle to submit to a test procedure
adopted pursuant to subdivision (b) and this subdivision, and may
specify that refusal to so submit is an admission constituting proof
of a violation, and shall require that, when a citation has been
issued, the owner of a vehicle in violation of the regulations shall,
within 45 days, correct every deficiency specified in the citation.
(g) The department may develop criteria for one or more classes of
smog check stations capable of determining compliance with
regulations adopted pursuant to this section and may authorize those
stations to issue certificates of compliance to vehicles in
compliance with the regulations. The department may contract for the
operation of smog check stations for heavy-duty motor vehicles
pursuant to this subdivision, and only heavy-duty motor vehicles may
be inspected at those stations.
(h) In addition to the corrective action required by this section,
the owner of a motor vehicle in violation of this section is subject
to a civil penalty of not more than one thousand five hundred
dollars ($1,500) per day for each day that the vehicle is in
violation. The state board may adopt a schedule of reduced civil
penalties to be applied in cases where violations are corrected in an
expeditious manner. However, the schedule of reduced civil penalties
shall not apply where there have been repeated incidents of
emissions control system tampering. All civil penalties imposed
pursuant to this subdivision shall be collected by the state board
and deposited in the Vehicle Inspection and Repair Fund. Funds in the
Vehicle Inspection and Repair Fund, when appropriated by the
Legislature, shall be available to the state board and the Department
of the California Highway Patrol for the conduct of intermittent
roadside inspections of heavy-duty motor vehicles pursuant to this
section.
(i) Following the adoption of regulations pursuant to this
section, the state board may commence inspecting heavy-duty motor
vehicles. With the concurrence of the Department of the California
Highway Patrol, these inspections may be conducted in conjunction
with the safety and weight enforcement activities of the Department
of the California Highway Patrol, or at other locations selected by
the state board or the Department of the California Highway Patrol.
Inspection locations may include private facilities where fleet
vehicles are serviced or maintained. The state board and the
Department of the California Highway Patrol may conduct these
inspections either cooperatively or independently, and the state
board may contract for assistance in the conduct of these
inspections.
(j) The state board shall inform the Department of the California
Highway Patrol whenever a vehicle owner cited pursuant to this
section fails to take a required corrective action or to pay a civil
penalty levied pursuant to subdivisions (h) and (k) in a timely
manner. Following notice and opportunity for an administrative
hearing pursuant to subdivision (n), the state board may request the
Department of the California Highway Patrol to remove the vehicle
from service and order the vehicle to be stored. Upon notification
from the state board of payment of any civil penalties imposed under
subdivision (h) and storage and related charges, the vehicle shall be
released to the owner or designee. Upon release of the vehicle, the
owner or designee shall correct every deficiency specified in any
citation to that owner with respect to the vehicle.
(k) In addition to the corrective action required by subdivision
(f), and in addition to the civil penalty imposed by subdivision (h),
the owner of a motor vehicle cited by the state board pursuant to
this section shall pay a civil penalty of three hundred dollars
($300) per citation; except that this penalty shall not apply to the
first citation for any schoolbus. All civil penalties imposed
pursuant to this subdivision shall be collected by the state board
and deposited in the Diesel Emission Reduction Fund, which fund is
hereby created. Funds in the Diesel Emission Reduction Fund, when
appropriated by the Legislature, shall be available to the State
Energy Resources Conservation and Development Commission for
research, development, and demonstration programs undertaken pursuant
to Section 25617 of the Public Resources Code.
(l) The state board shall adopt regulations that afford an owner
cited under this section an opportunity for an administrative hearing
consistent with, but not limited to, all of the following: (1) any
owner cited under this section may request an administrative hearing
within 45 days following either personal receipt or certified mail
receipt of the citation; (2) if the owner fails to request an
administrative hearing within 45 days, the citation shall be deemed a
final order and not subject to review by any court or agency; (3) if
the owner requests an administrative hearing and fails to seek
review by administrative mandamus pursuant to Section 1094.5 of the
Code of Civil Procedure within 60 days after the mailing of the
administrative hearing decision, the decision shall be deemed a final
order and not subject to review by any other court or agency; and
(4) the 45-day period may be extended by the administrative hearing
officer for good cause.
(m) Following exhaustion of the review procedures provided for in
subdivision (l), the state board may apply to the Superior Court of
Sacramento County for a judgment in the amount of the civil penalty.
The application, which shall include a certified copy of the final
order of the administrative hearing officer, shall constitute a
sufficient showing to warrant the issuance of the judgment.