Section
4434
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Revises certain provisions to:
(1) require the Secretary of Homeland Security to provide a curriculum to train public public sector emergency response and preparedness teams in matters relating to the transportation of hazardous material;
(2) establish an Emergency Preparedness Fund for planning and training grants to States and Indian tribes to train public sector employees to respond to accidents and incidents involving hazardous material;
(3) authorize the Secretary of Homeland Security to issue, modify, or terminate a special permit authorizing variances with respect to the transportation of hazardous materials, or regulations regarding the safe transportation of such materials, to a person performing a function related to the safe transportation (including security) of hazardous materials in intrastate, interstate, and foreign commerce;
(4) authorize the Secretary of Homeland Security to prescribe regulations to establish uniform forms and regulations for States to register and issue permits to persons that transport or cause to be transported hazardous material by motor vehicles and to permit the transportation of hazardous material in a State;
(5) set forth the general authority of the Secretary of Homeland Security with respect to the transportation of hazardous material, including to issue emergency orders with respect to violations of safe transportation of hazardous material regulations, enter into grants, cooperative agreements, and other transactions with a person, agency, State or local government, Indian tribe, foreign government, educational institution, or other entity to expand risk assessment and emergency response capabilities with respect to the security of transportation of hazardous material, or to conduct research, development, demonstration, risk assessment and emergency response planning and training activities;
(6) authorize the Secretary of Homeland Security to disclose security sensitive information if it is determined such information may reveal a vulnerability of a hazardous material to attack during transportation in commerce, or may facilitate the diversion of hazardous material during transportation in commerce for use in an attack on people or property;
(7) increase the maximum civil penalty for persons who knowingly violate safe transportation of hazardous material regulations, or special permit or approval issued pursuant to such regulations, to $100,000 per violation;
(8) set forth both civil and criminal penalties for persons who knowingly and willfully violate such regulations, or special permit or approval, and thereby cause the release of hazardous material;
(9) direct the Secretary of Homeland Security to achieve uniform regulation of the transportation of hazardous material and otherwise promote the safe and efficient movement of hazardous material in commerce;
(10) provide that laws, regulations, orders, or other requirements of a State or Indian tribe concerning the manufacturing, designing, inspecting, testing, reconditioning, or repairing of a packaging or packaging component that is represented as qualified for use in transporting hazardous material in commerce that are not substantively the same as Federal laws or regulations concerning such matter are preempted by such Federal laws and regulations; and
(11) authorize a person who has been adversely affected by a final action of the Secretary of Homeland Security with respect to safe transportation of hazardous material regulations to petition the U.S. court of appeals for the judicial review of such actions.