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§ 21-0701. Delaware river basin compact.    The  Delaware  river  basin  compact as first entered into pursuant to  chapter 148 of the laws of 1961, as renumbered by  chapter  801  of  the  laws  of  1962,  and  as  amended by chapter 262 of the laws of 1970, is  hereby continued as follows:    The Delaware river basin compact is hereby entered  into  and  enacted  into  law,  subject to the execution by the Governor as provided in said  compact and in accordance with its terms. The compact is as follows:    WHEREAS  the  signatory  parties  recognize  the  water  and   related  resources  of  the  Delaware basin as regional assets vested with local,  state  and  national  interests,   for   which   they   have   a   joint  responsibility; and    WHEREAS  the  conservation,  utilization,  development, management and  control of the water and related resources of the Delaware  River  Basin  under  a  comprehensive  multi-purpose  plan  will  bring  the  greatest  benefits and produce the most efficient service in the  public  welfare;  and    WHEREAS  such a comprehensive plan administered by a basin-wide agency  will  provide  effective  flood  damage  reduction;   conservation   and  development of ground and surface water supply for municipal, industrial  and   agricultural  uses;  development  of  recreational  facilities  in  relation to reservoirs, lakes and streams; propagation of fish and game;  promotion of related forestry, soil conservation and watershed projects;  protection  and  aid  to  fisheries  dependent  upon  water   resources;  development of hydro-electric power potentialities; improved navigation;  control  of  the movement of salt water; abatement and control of stream  pollution; and regulation of stream flows toward the attainment of these  goals; and    WHEREAS decisions of the United States Supreme Court relating  to  the  waters  of the basin have confirmed the interstate regional character of  the water resources of the Delaware River Basin, and the  United  States  Corps  of  Engineers  has  in a prior report on the Delaware River Basin  (House Document 179, 73d Cong., 2nd  Sess.)  officially  recognized  the  need  for  an  interstate  agency and the economies that can result from  unified development and control of the water resources of the basin; and    WHEREAS the water resources of the basin are presently subject to  the  duplicating,  overlapping  and  uncoordinated  administration of some 43  state agencies, 14 interstate agencies and  19  federal  agencies  which  exercise  a multiplicity of powers and duties resulting in a splintering  of authority and responsibilities; and    WHEREAS the joint advisory body known as the Interstate Commission  on  the   Delaware   River   Basin  (INCODEL),  created  by  the  respective  commissions or committee on Interstate  Cooperation  of  the  States  of  Delaware, New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania, has on the basis of its  extensive  investigations,  surveys  and studies concluded that regional  development of the Delaware  River  Basin  is  feasible,  advisable  and  urgently  needed;  and  has  recommended that an interstate compact with  federal participation be consummated to this end; and    WHEREAS the Congress of the United States and the executive branch  of  the  government  have  recognized  the national interest in the Delaware  River Basin by authorizing and directing the Corps  of  Engineers,  U.S.  Department of the Army, to make a comprehensive survey and report on the  water  and  related resources of the Delaware River Basin, enlisting the  technical aid and planning participation  of  many  federal,  state  and  municipal  agencies  dealing  with  the  waters  of  the  basin,  and in  particular the federal departments  of  Agriculture,  Commerce,  Health,  Education and Welfare, Interior, and Federal Power Commission; andWHEREAS  some  22,000,000  people of the United States at present live  and work in the region of the Delaware River Basin and its environs, and  the government, employment, industry and  economic  development  of  the  entire  region  and  the  health,  safety  and  general  welfare  of its  population  are  and  will  continue  to be vitally affected by the use,  conservation, management and control of the water and related  resources  of the Delaware River Basin; and    WHEREAS demands upon the waters and related resources of the basin are  expected  to  mount  rapidly  because of the anticipated increase in the  population of the region projected  to  reach  30,000,000  by  1980  and  40,000,000   by  2010,  and  because  of  the  anticipated  increase  in  industrial growth projected to double by 1980; and    WHEREAS water resources planning and development is technical, complex  and expensive, and has often required fifteen to twenty years  from  the  conception to the completion of a large dam and reservoir; and    WHEREAS the public interest requires that facilities must be ready and  operative  when needed, to avoid the catastrophe of unexpected floods or  prolonged drought, and for other purposes; and    WHEREAS the Delaware River Basin Advisory Committee, a temporary  body  constituted  by the governors of the four basin states and the mayors of  the cities of New York and Philadelphia, has  prepared  a  draft  of  an  interstate-federal  compact  for the creation of a basin agency, and the  signatory parties desire to effectuate the purposes thereof;    Now therefore the states of Delaware, New Jersey and New York and  the  Commonwealth  of  Pennsylvania,  and the United States of America hereby  solemnly covenant and agree with  each  other,  upon  the  enactment  of  concurrent  legislation  by the Congress of the United States and by the  respective state legislatures, having the same effect as  this  Part  as  follows:         ARTICLE 1--SHORT TITLE, DEFINITIONS, PURPOSE AND LIMITATIONS   Section 1.1 Short title.    This  act  shall be known and may be cited as the Delaware River Basin  Compact.   1.2. Definitions.    For  the  purposes  of  this  compact,  and  of  any  supplemental  or  concurring  legislation  enacted  pursuant  thereto,  except  as  may be  otherwise required by the context:    (a) "Basin" shall mean the area of drainage into  the  Delaware  River  and its tributaries, including Delaware Bay;    (b)  "Commission"  shall  mean  the  Delaware  River  Basin Commission  created and constituted by this compact;    (c) "Compact" shall mean the compact as contained title 7  of  article  21 of the Environmental Conservation Law.    (d)  "Cost"  shall  mean direct and indirect expenditures, commitment,  and net induced adverse effects, whether or not compensated for, used or  incurred   in   connection   with   the   establishment,    acquisition,  construction, maintenance and operation of a project;    (e)  "Facility"  shall  mean  any real or personal property, within or  without the basin, and improvements thereof or thereon, and any and  all  rights  of  way,  water, water rights, plants, structures, machinery and  equipment,  acquired,  constructed,  operated  or  maintained  for   the  beneficial  use  of  water  resources  or  related  land uses including,  without limiting the generality of the foregoing, any and all things and  appurtenances  necessary,  useful  or  convenient   for   the   control,  collection,   storage,   withdrawal,   diversion,   release,  treatment,transmission, sale or exchange of water; or for navigation  thereon,  or  the  development  and  use of hydroelectric energy and power, and public  recreational facilities; or the propagation of fish and wildlife; or  to  conserve and protect the water resources of the basin or any existing or  future  water  supply  source, or to facilitate any other uses of any of  them;    (f) "Federal government" shall  mean  the  government  of  the  United  States  of  America,  and  any appropriate branch, department, bureau or  division thereof, as the case may be;    (g) "Project" shall mean  any  work,  service  or  activity  which  is  separately  planned,  financed,  or identified by the commission, or any  separate facility undertaken or to  be  undertaken  within  a  specified  area,   for  the  conservation,  utilization,  control,  development  or  management of water resources which  can  be  established  and  utilized  independently  or  as  an  addition  to an existing facility, and can be  considered as a separate entity for purposes of evaluation;    (h) "Signatory party" shall mean a state or commonwealth party to this  compact, and the federal government;    (i)  "Water  resources"  shall  include  water  and  related   natural  resources  in, on, under, or above the ground, including related uses of  land, which are subject to beneficial use, ownership or control.   1.3 Purpose and findings.    The legislative bodies of the respective signatory parties hereby find  and declare:    (a) The water resources of the basin are affected with a local, state,  regional  and  national  interest  and  their  planning,   conservation,  utilization,  development,  management  and  control,  under appropriate  arrangements for intergovernmental cooperation, are public  purposes  of  the respective signatory parties.    (b) The water resources of the basin are subject to the soverign right  and  responsibility  of  the signatory parties, and it is the purpose of  this compact  to  provide  for  a  joint  exercise  of  such  powers  of  sovereignty in the common interests of the people of the region.    (c)  The  water  resources of the basin are functionally interrelated,  and  the  uses  of  these  resources  are   interdependent.   A   single  administrative   agency   is   therefore  essential  for  effective  and  economical  direction,  supervision  and  coordination  of  efforts  and  programs  of  federal,  state  and  local  governments  and  of  private  enterprise.    (d) The water resources of  the  Delaware  River  Basin,  if  properly  planned and utilized, are ample to meet all presently projected demands,  including  existing  and  added  diversions  in  future  years; and ever  increasing economies and efficiencies in the  use  and  reuse  of  water  resources  can  be  brought about by comprehensive planning, programming  and management.    (e) In general, the purposes of this compact are to promote interstate  comity; to remove causes of present  and  future  controversy;  to  make  secure  and protect present developments within the states; to encourage  and provide for the planning,  conservation,  utilization,  development,  management  and  control of the water resources of the basin; to provide  for cooperative planning  and  action  by  the  signatory  parties  with  respect to such water resources; and to apply the principle of equal and  uniform  treatment  to all water users who are similarly situated and to  all users of related facilities, without regard to established political  boundaries.   1.4 Powers of Congress; withdrawal.Nothing  in  this  compact  shall  be  construed  to  relinquish   the  functions,  powers  or  duties of the Congress of the United States with  respect to the control of any navigable waters  within  the  basin,  nor  shall  any  provision  hereof  be  construed in derogation of any of the  constitutional  powers  of  the  Congress to regulate commerce among the  states and with foreign nations. The power and right of the Congress  to  withdraw  the federal government as a party to this compact or to revise  or modify the terms, conditions and provisions under which it may remain  a party by amendment, repeal or  modification  of  any  federal  statute  applicable thereto is recognized by the signatory parties.   1.5 Existing agencies; construction.    It is the purpose of the signatory parties to preserve and utilize the  functions,  powers  and  duties  of  existing  offices  and  agencies of  government to the extent not inconsistent with  this  compact,  and  the  commission is authorized and directed to utilize and employ such offices  and  agencies  for  the purpose of this compact to the fullest extent it  finds feasible and advantageous.   1.6 Duration of compact.    (a) The duration of this compact shall be for an initial period of 100  years from its effective date, and it shall be continued for  additional  periods of 100 years if not later than 20 years nor sooner than 25 years  prior  to the termination of the initial period or any succeeding period  none of the signatory states, by authority of an act of its legislature,  notifies the commission of intention to terminate the compact at the end  of the then current 100 year period.    (b) In the event that this compact should be terminated  by  operation  of  paragraph  (a)  above, the commission shall be dissolved, its assets  and liabilities transferred, and its corporate affairs wound up, in such  manner as may be provided by act of the Congress.                       ARTICLE 2--ORGANIZATION AND AREA   Section 2.1 Commission created.    The Delaware River Basin  Commission  is  hereby  created  as  a  body  politic and corporate, with succession for the duration of this compact,  as  an  agency  and instrumentality of the governments of the respective  signatory parties.   2.2 Commission membership.    The commission shall consist of the Governors of the signatory states,  ex officio, and one commissioner to be appointed by the President of the  United States to serve during the term of office of the President.   2.3 Alternates.    Each member of the commission shall appoint an alternate to act in his  place  and  stead,  with  authority  to  attend  all  meetings  of   the  commission,  and with power to vote in the absence of the member. Unless  otherwise provided by law  of  the  signatory  party  for  which  he  is  appointed,  each  alternate  shall  serve  during the term of the member  appointing him, subject to removal at the pleasure of the member. In the  event of a vacancy in the office of alternate, it shall be filled in the  same manner as an original appointment for the unexpired term only.   2.4 Compensation.Members  of  the  commission  and  alternates  shall   serve   without  compensation  but  may  be reimbursed for necessary expenses incurred in  and incident to the performance of their duties.   2.5 Voting power.    Each  member  shall  be  entitled to one vote on all matters which may  come before the commission. No action of the commission shall  be  taken  at  any  meeting unless a majority of the membership shall vote in favor  thereof.   2.6 Organization and procedure.    The commission shall provide for its own organization  and  procedure,  and  shall  adopt  rules  and  regulations  governing  its  meetings and  transactions. It shall organize annually by the election of  a  chairman  and  vice-chairman from among its members. It shall provide by its rules  for the appointment by each member in his discretion of  an  advisor  to  serve   without  compensation,  who  may  attend  all  meetings  of  the  commission and its committees.   2.7 Jurisdiction of the commission.    The commission shall  have,  exercise  and  discharge  its  functions,  powers  and duties within the limits of the basin, except that it may in  its discretion act  outside  the  basin  whenever  such  action  may  be  necessary  or  convenient  to effectuate its powers or duties within the  basin, or to sell or dispose of  water,  hydroelectric  power  or  other  water  resources  within  or  without  the  basin.  The commission shall  exercise such power outside the basin only upon the consent of the state  in which it proposes to act.                ARTICLE 3--POWERS AND DUTIES OF THE COMMISSION   Section 3.1 Purpose and policy.    The commission  shall  develop  and  effectuate  plans,  policies  and  projects  relating  to  the water resources of the basin. It shall adopt  and promote uniform and coordinated  policies  for  water  conservation,  control,  use  and  management  in  the  basin.  It  shall encourage the  planning,  development  and  financing  of  water   resources   projects  according to such plans and policies.   3.2 Comprehensive plan, program and budgets.    The  commission  shall, in accordance with Article 13 of this compact,  formulate and adopt:    (a) A comprehensive plan, after  consultation  with  water  users  and  interested  public  bodies, for the immediate and long range development  and uses of the water resources of the basin;    (b) A water resources program,  based  upon  the  comprehensive  plan,  which  shall  include  a  systematic  presentation  of  the quantity and  quality of water resources needs of the  area  to  be  served  for  such  reasonably  foreseeable period as the commission may determine, balanced  by existing and  proposed  projects  required  to  satisfy  such  needs,  including  all public and private projects affecting the basin, together  with a separate statement of the projects proposed to be  undertaken  by  the commission during such period; and    (c)  An  annual  current  expense budget, and an annual capital budget  consistent with the water resources program  covering  the  commission's  projects and facilities for the budget period.   3.3 Allocations, diversions and releases.The commission shall have the power from time to time as need appears,  in  accordance with the doctrine of equitable apportionment, to allocate  the waters of the basin to  and  among  the  states  signatory  to  this  compact and to and among their respective political subdivisions, and to  impose conditions, obligations and release requirements related thereto,  subject to the following limitations:    (a)  The  commission,  without the unanimous consent of the parties to  the United States Supreme Court decree in New Jersey v.  New  York,  347  U.S.    995  (1954),  shall  not impair, diminish or otherwise adversely  affect  the  diversions,  compensating  releases,  rights,   conditions,  obligations,  and  provisions for the administration thereof as provided  in said decree; provided, however,  that  after  consultation  with  the  river  master  under  said  decree the commission may find and declare a  state of emergency resulting from a drought or catastrophe  and  it  may  thereupon  by  unanimous  consent of its members authorize and direct an  increase or  decrease  in  any  allocation  or  diversion  permitted  or  releases  required  by  the  decree, in such manner and for such limited  time as may be necessary to meet such an emergency condition.    (b) No allocation of waters hereafter made pursuant  to  this  section  shall  constitute  a  prior  appropriation of the waters of the basin or  confer any superiority of right in respect to the use of  those  waters,  nor  shall  any  such action be deemed to constitute an apportionment of  the waters of the basin among the parties  hereto;  provided  that  this  paragraph  shall  not  be  deemed  to limit or restrict the power of the  commission to enter into covenants with respect to water supply, with  a  duration  not  exceeding  the  life  of  this  compact,  as  it may deem  necessary for the benefit or development of the water resources  of  the  basin.    (c)  Any  proper  party  deeming  itself  aggrieved  by  action of the  commission with respect to an  out-of-basin  diversion  or  compensating  releases  in  connection therewith, notwithstanding the powers delegated  to the commission by this compact may invoke the  original  jurisdiction  of the United States Supreme Court within one year after such action for  an  adjudication  and determination thereof de novo. Any other action of  the commission pursuant to this section shall  be  subject  to  judicial  review in any court of competent jurisdiction.   3.4 Supreme court decree; waivers.    Each   of   the   signatory  states  and  their  respective  political  subdivisions, in consideration of like action  by  the  others,  and  in  recognition  of  reciprocal benefits, hereby waives and relinquishes for  the duration of this compact any right, privilege or power it  may  have  to  apply  for any modification of the terms of the decree of the United  States Supreme Court in New Jersey v. New  York,  347  U.S.  995  (1954)  which  would  increase or decrease the diversions authorized or increase  or decrease the releases required thereunder, except that  a  proceeding  to modify such decree to increase diversions or compensating releases in  connection  with such increased diversions may be prosecuted by a proper  party to effectuate rights, powers, duties and obligations under Section  3.3 of this compact, and except as may be  required  to  effectuate  the  provisions of paragraphs III B 3 and V B of said decree.   3.5 Supreme court decree; specific limitations on commission.    Except  as  specifically  provided  in  Sections  3.3  and 3.4 of this  article, nothing in this compact  shall  be  construed  in  any  way  to  impair,  diminish  or  otherwise  adversely  affect  the rights, powers,  privileges, conditions and obligations contained in the  decree  of  the  United  States  Supreme  Court  in  New Jersey v. New York, 347 U.S. 995(1954). To this end, and  without  limitation  thereto,  the  commission  shall not:    (a)  Acquire, construct or operate any project or facility or make any  order or take any action  which  would  impede  or  interfere  with  the  rights,  powers, privileges, conditions or obligations contained in said  decree;    (b) Impose or collect any fee, charge or assessment  with  respect  to  diversions of waters of the basin permitted by said decree;    (c)  Exercise any jurisdiction, except upon consent of all the parties  to said decree, over the planning, design,  construction,  operation  or  control of any projects, structures or facilities constructed or used in  connection  with  withdrawals,  diversions and releases of waters of the  basin authorized by said decree or of  the  withdrawals,  diversions  or  releases to be made thereunder; or    (d)  Serve  as  river master under said decree, except upon consent of  all the parties thereto.   3.6 General powers.    The commission may:    (a) Plan, design,  acquire,  construct,  reconstruct,  complete,  own,  improve,  extend,  develop,  operate  and maintain any and all projects,  facilities, properties,  activities  and  services,  determined  by  the  commission  to  be  necessary,  convenient or useful for the purposes of  this compact;    (b) Establish standards of  planning,  design  and  operation  of  all  projects  and  facilities in the basin which affect its water resources,  including without limitation thereto water and waste  treatment  plants,  stream   and   lake  recreational  facilities,  trunk  mains  for  water  distribution, local flood protection works, small  watershed  management  programs, and ground water recharging operations;    (c)  Conduct  and sponsor research on water resources, their planning,  use, conservation, management, development, control and protection,  and  the  capacity,  adaptability  and best utility of each facility thereof,  and collect, compile, correlate, analyze, report and interpret  data  on  water  resources  and  uses  in  the basin, including without limitation  thereto the relation of  water  to  other  resources,  industrial  water  technology,  ground  water  movement,  relation  between water price and  water demand, and general hydrological conditions;    (d) Compile and coordinate systematic stream stage  and  ground  water  level  forecasting  data,  and  publicize  such  information when and as  needed for water uses,  flood  warning,  quality  maintenance  or  other  purposes;    (e)  Conduct  such  special  ground  water  investigations, tests, and  operations and compile such data relating thereto as may be required  to  formulate and administer the comprehensive plan;    (f)  Prepare,  publish  and  disseminate  information and reports with  respect to the water problems of the basin and for the  presentation  of  the  needs,  resources  and  policies  of  the  basin  to  executive and  legislative branches of the signatory parties;    (g) Negotiate for such loans, grants, services or other aids as may be  lawfully available from public or private sources to finance  or  assist  in  effectuating any of the purposes of this compact; and to receive and  accept such aid upon such terms and  conditions,  and  subject  to  such  provisions  for  repayment as may be required by federal or state law or  as the commission may deem necessary or desirable;    (h) Exercise such other and different powers as may be delegated to it  by this compact or otherwise pursuant to law, and have and exercise  allpowers  necessary or convenient to carry out its express powers or which  may be reasonably implied therefrom.   3.7 Rates and charges.    The  commission  may from time to time after public notice and hearing  fix,  alter  and  revise  rates,  rentals,   charges   and   tolls   and  classifications  thereof,  for the use of facilities which it may own or  operate  and  for  products  and  services  rendered  thereby,   without  regulation  or  control  by  any  department,  office  or  agency of any  signatory party.   3.8 Referral and review.    No project having a substantial effect on the water resources  of  the  basin  shall  hereafter  be  undertaken  by  any  person, corporation or  governmental authority unless it shall have been first submitted to  and  approved  by  the  commission, subject to the provisions of Sections 3.3  and 3.5. The commission shall approve a project whenever  it  finds  and  determines  that such project would not substantially impair or conflict  with the comprehensive plan and may modify and approve as  modified,  or  may  disapprove  any  such project whenever it finds and determines that  the project would substantially impair or conflict with such  plan.  The  commission  shall provide by regulation for the procedure of submission,  review  and  consideration  of  projects,  and  for  its  determinations  pursuant  to this section. Any determination of the commission hereunder  shall  be  subject  to  judicial  review  in  any  court  of   competent  jurisdiction.   3.9 Coordination and cooperation.    The   commission  shall  promote  and  aid  the  coordination  of  the  activities  and  programs  of  federal,  state,  municipal  and  private  agencies  concerned with water resources administration in the basin. To  this end, but without limitation thereto, the commission may:    (a)  Advise,  consult,  contract,  financially  assist,  or  otherwise  cooperate with any and all such agencies;    (b) Employ any other agency or instrumentality of any of the signatory  parties  or  of  any  political  subdivision  thereof,  in  the  design,  construction,  operation  and  maintenance  of   structures,   and   the  installation  and  management of river control systems, or for any other  purpose;    (c) Develop and adopt plans and specifications  for  particular  water  resources  projects  and  facilities which so far as consistent with the  comprehensive plan incorporate any separate plans of  other  public  and  private   organizations   operating   in   the  basin,  and  permit  the  decentralized administration thereof;    (d) Qualify as a  sponsoring  agency  under  any  federal  legislation  heretofore or hereafter enacted to provide financial or other assistance  for  the planning, conservation, utilization, development, management or  control of water resources.   3.10 Advisory committees.    The commission may constitute and empower advisory  committees,  which  may be comprised of representatives of the public and of federal, state,  county  and municipal governments, water resources agencies, water-using  industries, water-interest groups, labor and agriculture.                            ARTICLE 4--WATER SUPPLY   Section 4.1 Generally.The commission shall have power to develop, implement  and  effectuate  plans  and projects for the use of the waters of the basin for domestic,  municipal, agricultural  and  industrial  water  supply.  To  this  end,  without  limitation  thereto,  it  may  provide for, construct, acquire,  operate   and   maintain  dams,  reservoirs  and  other  facilities  for  utilization of surface and  ground  water  resources,  and  all  related  structures, appurtenances and equipment on the river and its tributaries  and at such off-river sites as it may find appropriate, and may regulate  and control the use thereof.   4.2 Storage and release of waters.    (a)  The  commission  shall have power to acquire, operate and control  projects and facilities for the storage and release of waters,  for  the  regulation  of  flows  and  supplies of surface and ground waters of the  basin, for the protection of  public  health,  stream  quality  control,  economic development, improvement of fisheries, recreation, dilution and  abatement  of  pollution,  the  prevention  of  undue salinity and other  purposes.    (b) No signatory party shall permit any augmentation  of  flow  to  be  diminished  by the diversion of any water of the basin during any period  in which waters are being released from storage under the  direction  of  the  commission for the purpose of augmenting such flow, except in cases  where such diversion is duly authorized  by  this  compact,  or  by  the  commission  pursuant  thereto,  or by the judgment, order or decree of a  court of competent jurisdiction.   4.3 Assessable improvements.    The commission may undertake to provide stream regulation in the  main  stream  or  any tributary in the basin and may assess on an annual basis  or otherwise the cost thereof upon water users or any classification  of  them  specially  benefited thereby to a measurable extent, provided that  no such assessment shall exceed the actual benefit to  any  water  user.  Any  such  assessment  shall  follow the procedure prescribed by law for  local improvement assessments and shall be subject to judicial review in  any court of competent jurisdiction.   4.4 Coordination.    Prior to entering upon the execution of any project authorized by this  article, the commission shall review and consider all  existing  rights,  plans   and   programs   of   the  signatory  parties,  their  political  subdivisions, private parties, and water users which  are  pertinent  to  such project, and shall hold a public hearing on each proposed project.   4.5 Additional powers.    In  connection  with  any  project  authorized  by  this  article, the  commission shall have power to provide storage, treatment,  pumping  and  transmission  facilities,  but  nothing  herein  shall  be  construed to  authorize the commission to  engage  in  the  business  of  distributing  water.                         ARTICLE 5--POLLUTION CONTROL   Section 5.1 General powers.    The  commission may undertake investigations and surveys, and acquire,  construct, operate and  maintain  projects  and  facilities  to  control  potential  pollution and abate or dilute existing pollution of the water  resources of the basin. It may  invoke  as  complainant  the  power  andjurisdiction  of  water  pollution  abatement  agencies of the signatory  parties.   5.2 Policy and standards.    The commission may assume jurisdiction to control future pollution and  abate  existing  pollution  in  the  waters  of  the  basin, whenever it  determines after investigation and public hearing upon due  notice  that  the  effectuation of the comprehensive plan so requires. The standard of  such control shall be that pollution by sewage or  industrial  or  other  waste  originating within a signatory state shall not injuriously affect  waters of the basin as  contemplated  by  the  comprehensive  plan.  The  commission,  after  such  public  hearing may classify the waters of the  basin and establish standards of  treatment  of  sewage,  industrial  or  other  waste,  according  to  such  classes  including allowance for the  variable factors of surface and ground  waters,  such  as  size  of  the  stream,  flow,  movement,  location,  character,  self-purification, and  usage of the waters  affected.  After  such  investigation,  notice  and  hearing  the commission may adopt and from time to time amend and repeal  rules, regulations and standards to control such  future  pollution  and  abate  existing  pollution,  and  to  require  such treatment of sewage,  industrial or other waste within a time reasonable for the  construction  of  the  necessary works as may be required to protect the public health  or to preserve the waters of the basin for uses in accordance  with  the  comprehensive plan.   5.3 Cooperative legislation and administration.    Each  of  the  signatory  parties covenants and agrees to prohibit and  control  pollution  of  the  waters  of  the  basin  according  to   the  requirements  of this compact and to cooperate faithfully in the control  of future pollution in and abatement  of  existing  pollution  from  the  rivers, streams, and waters in the basin which flow through, under, into  or border upon any of such signatory states, and in order to effect such  object,  agrees  to  enact any necessary legislation to enable each such  party to place and maintain the waters of said basin in  a  satisfactory  condition,  available  for  safe  and  satisfactory  use  as  public and  industrial water  supplies  after  reasonable  treatment,  suitable  for  recreational  usage, capable of maintaining fish and other aquatic life,  free from unsightly or malodorous nuisances due to  floating  solids  or  sludge  deposits  and adaptable to such other uses as may be provided by  the comprehensive plan.   5.4 Enforcement.    The commission may, after investigation and hearing, issue an order or  orders upon any person  or  public  or  private  corporation,  or  other  entity, to cease the discharge of sewage, industrial or other waste into  waters of the basin which it determines to be in violation of such rules  and  regulations  as  it  shall  have  adopted  for  the  prevention and  abatement of pollution. Any such order or orders may prescribe the date,  including a reasonable time for the construction of any necessary works,  on  or  before  which  such  discharge  shall  be  wholly  or  partially  discontinued,  modified  or  treated,  or  otherwise  conformed  to  the  requirements  of  such  rules  and  regulations.  Such  order  shall  be  reviewable  in  any  court  of competent jurisdiction. The courts of the  signatory parties shall have jurisdiction to enforce against any person,  public or private corporation, or other entity, any and  all  provisions  of this Article or of any such order. The commission may bring an action  in  its  own  name in any such court of competent jurisdiction to compel  compliance with any provision of this Article, or any rule or regulationissued pursuant thereto or of any such order, according to the  practice  and procedure of the court.   5.5 Further jurisdiction.    Nothing  in  this  compact  shall  be  construed  to repeal, modify or  qualify the authority of any signatory party to enact any legislation or  enforce any additional conditions and restrictions to lessen or  prevent  the pollution of waters within its jurisdiction.                          ARTICLE 6--FLOOD PROTECTION   Section 6.1 General powers.    The  commission  may  plan, design, construct and operate and maintain  projects and facilities, as it may deem necessary or desirable for flood  damage reduction. It shall have power to operate such facilities and  to  store  and  release waters on the Delaware River and its tributaries and  elsewhere within the basin, in such manner, at  such  times,  and  under  such  regulations  as  the commission may deem appropriate to meet flood  conditions as they may arise.   6.2 Flood plain zoning.    (a) The commission  shall  have  power  to  adopt,  amend  and  repeal  recommended  standards, in the manner provided by this section, relating  to the nature and extent of  the  uses  of  land  in  areas  subject  to  flooding  by  waters  of  the  Delaware  River and its tributaries. Such  standards shall not be deemed to impair or restrict  the  power  of  the  signatory  parties  or  their political subdivisions to adopt zoning and  other land use regulations not inconsistent therewith.    (b) The commission may study and determine the nature  and  extent  of  the  flood  plains  of  the Delaware River and its tributaries. Upon the  basis of such studies, it may establish encroachment lines and delineate  the areas subject to flood, including a  classification  of  lands  with  reference  to  relative risk of flood and the establishment of standards  for flood plain use which will safeguard the public health,  safety  and  property.  Prior  to the adoption of any standards delineating such area  or defining such use, the commission shall hold public hearings, in  the  manner  provided  by  Article  14, with respect to the substance of such  standards. At or before such  public  hearings  the  proposed  standards  shall  be  available,  and  all  interested  persons  shall  be given an  opportunity to be heard thereon at the hearing. Upon  the  adoption  and  promulgation of such standards, the commission may enter into agreements  to  provide technical and financial aid to any municipal corporation for  the administration and enforcement of any local land use  ordinances  or  regulations giving effect to such standards.   6.3 Flood lands acquisition.    The  commission  shall  have  power  to  acquire the fee or any lesser  interest in lands and improvements thereon within the area  of  a  flood  plain  for  the purpose of restricting the use of such property so as to  minimize the flood hazard, converting property to  uses  appropriate  to  flood  plain  conditions,  or  preventing unwarranted constrictions that  reduce the ability of the river channel to carry flood water.  Any  such  action  shall  be  in  accord with the standards adopted and promulgated  pursuant to Section 6.2.   6.4 Flood and stream stage warnings and posting.    The commission may cause lands particularly subject  to  flood  to  be  posted with flood hazard warnings, and may from time to time cause floodadvisory  notices  to  be  published  and  circulated  as conditions may  warrant.                        ARTICLE 7--WATERSHED MANAGEMENT   Section 7.1 Watersheds generally.    The  commission  shall promote sound practices of watershed management  in the basin, including projects and facilities  to  retard  runoff  and  waterflow and prevent soil erosion.   7.2 Soil conservation and forestry.    The commission may acquire, sponsor or operate facilities and projects  to  encourage  soil  conservation,  prevent  and control erosion, and to  promote land reclamation and sound forestry practices.   7.3 Fish and wildlife.    The commission may acquire, sponsor or operate projects and facilities  for the maintenance  and  improvement  of  fish  and  wildlife  habitats  related to the water resources of the basin.   7.4 Cooperative planning and operation.    (a)  The  commission  shall cooperate with the appropriate agencies of  the signatory parties and with other public and private agencies in  the  planning  and  effectuation  of  a coordinated program of facilities and  projects authorized by this Article.    (b) The commission shall not operate  any  such  project  or  facility  unless  it has first found and determined that no other suitable unit or  agency of government is available to operate the  same  upon  reasonable  conditions,  in  accordance  with  the  intent  and purpose expressed in  Section 1.5 of this compact.                             ARTICLE 8--RECREATION   Section 8.1 Development.    The commission shall provide for  the  development  of  water  related  public  sports  and  recreational  facilities. The commission on its own  account or in cooperation with a signatory party, political  subdivision  or any agency thereof, may provide for the construction, maintenance and  administration  of such facilities, subject to the provisions of Section  8.2 hereof.   8.2 Cooperative planning and operation.    (a) The commission shall cooperate with the  appropriate  agencies  of  the  signatory parties and with other public and private agencies in the  planning and effectuation of a coordinated  program  of  facilities  and  projects authorized by this article.    (b)  The  commission  shall  not  operate any such project or facility  unless it has first found and determined that no other suitable unit  or  agency  of  government  is available to operate the same upon reasonable  conditions, in accordance with  the  intent  and  purpose  expressed  in  Section 1.5 of this compact.   8.3 Operation and maintenance.    The commission, within limits prescribed by this article, shall:    (a) Encourage activities of other public agencies having water related  recreational interests and assist in the coordination thereof;    (b)  Recommend  standards  for  the  development and administration of  water related recreational facilities;(c) Provide for  the  administration,  operation  and  maintenance  of  recreational  facilities  owned  or controlled by the commission and for  the letting and supervision of private concessions  in  accordance  with  this article.   8.4 Concessions.    The  commission  shall  after  notice  and  public  hearing provide by  regulation for  the  award  of  contracts  for  private  concessions  in  connection  with  recreational  facilities,  including  any  renewal  or  extension  thereof,  upon   sealed   competitive   bids   after   public  advertisement therefor.                        ARTICLE 9--HYDROELECTRIC POWER   Section 9.1 Development.    The  waters of the Delaware River and its tributaries may be impounded  and used by or under authority of the commission for the  generation  of  hydroelectric  power  and  hydroelectric  energy, in accordance with the  comprehensive plan.   9.2 Power generation.    The commission may develop and operate, or authorize to  be  developed  and  operated,  dams  and  related  facilities and appurtenances for the  purpose of generating hydroelectric power and hydroelectric energy.   9.3 Transmission.    The  commission  may  provide  facilities  for  the  transmission   of  hydroelectric  power  and hydroelectric energy produced by it where such  facilities are not otherwise available upon reasonable  terms,  for  the  purpose  of  wholesale  marketing  of  power and nothing herein shall be  construed to authorize the commission  to  engage  in  the  business  of  direct sale to consumers.   9.4 Development contracts.    The  commission  may  after  public  notice  and  hearing  enter  into  contracts on reasonable terms, consideration and  duration  under  which  public  utilities or public agencies may develop hydroelectric power and  hydroelectric energy through the use of  dams,  related  facilities  and  appurtenances.   9.5 Rates and charges.    Rates  and charges fixed by the commission for power which is produced  by its facilities shall be reasonable, nondiscriminatory, and just.             ARTICLE 10--REGULATION OF WITHDRAWALS AND DIVERSIONS   Section 10.1 Power of regulation.    The commission may regulate and  control  withdrawals  and  diversions  from  surface waters and ground waters of the basin, as provided by this  article. The commission may enter into  agreements  with  the  signatory  parties  relating to the exercise of such power of regulation or control  and may delegate to any of them such powers of the commission as it  may  deem necessary or desirable.   10.2 Determination of protected areas.    The  commission  may  from  time to time after public hearing upon due  notice determine and delineate such areas within the basin  wherein  the  demands  upon supply made by water users have developed or threatened todevelop to such a degree as to create a water shortage or to  impair  or  conflict  with  the  requirements  or  effectuation of the comprehensive  plan, and any such areas may be designated  as  "protected  areas."  The  commission,  whenever it determines that such shortage no longer exists,  shall terminate the protected status of such area and shall give  public  notice of such termination.   10.3 Withdrawal permits.    In  any protected areas so determined and delineated, no person, firm,  corporation or other entity shall divert or withdraw water for domestic,  municipal, agricultural or industrial uses in excess of such  quantities  as  the  commission  may  prescribe  by  general  regulation, except (i)  pursuant to a permit granted under this article, or (ii) pursuant  to  a  permit  or  approval  heretofore  granted  under  the laws of any of the  signatory states.   10.4 Emergency.    In the event of a drought or other condition which may cause an actual  and immediate shortage of available water supply within  the  basin,  or  within  any  part  thereof,  the  commission  may, after public hearing,  determine and delineate the area of such shortage and  declare  a  water  supply  emergency  therein.  For  the  duration  of  such  emergency  as  determined by the commisssion no  person,  firm,  corporation  or  other  public or private entity shall divert or withdraw water for any purpose,  in  excess of such quantities as the commission may prescribe by general  regulation or authorize by special permit granted hereunder.   10.5 Standards.    Permits shall be granted, modified or denied as the case may be so  as  to avoid such depletion of the natural stream flows and ground waters in  the  protected area or in an emergency area as will adversely affect the  comprehensive plan or the just and equitable  interests  and  rights  of  other  lawful users of the same source, giving due regard to the need to  balance and reconcile alternative and conflicting uses in the  event  of  an actual or threatened shortage of water of the quality required.   10.6 Judicial review.    The  determinations  and  delineations  of  the commission pursuant to  Section 10.2  and  the  granting,  modification  or  denial  of  permits  pursuant  to  Section  10.3  through  10.5  shall be subject to judicial  review in any court of competent jurisdiction.   10.7 Maintenance of records.    Each state shall provide for the maintenance and preservation of  such  records  of  authorized diversions and withdrawals and the annual volume  thereof  as  the  commission   shall   prescribe.   Such   records   and  supplementary  reports  shall  be  furnished  to  the  commission at its  request.   10.8 Existing state systems.    Whenever the commission finds its necessary or desirable  to  exercise  the powers conferred by this article any diversion or withdrawal permits  authorized or issued under the laws of any of the signatory states shall  be  superseded  to  the  extent  of  any  conflict  with the control and  regulation exercised by the commission.                    ARTICLE 11--INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONSSection 11.1 Federal agencies and projects.    For  the  purposes of avoiding conflicts of jurisdiction and of giving  full effect to the commission as a  regional  agency  of  the  signatory  parties, the following rules shall govern federal projects affecting the  water  resources of the basin, subject in each case to the provisions of  Section 1.4 of this compact:    (a) The planning of all projects related to powers  delegated  to  the  commission  by this compact shall be undertaken in consultation with the  commission;    (b) No expenditure or commitment shall be made for or  on  account  of  the  construction,  acquisition  or operation of any project or facility  nor shall it be deemed authorized,  unless  it  shall  have  first  been  included by the commission in the comprehensive plan;    (c)  Each  federal agency otherwise authorized by law to plan, design,  construct, operate or maintain any project or facility  in  or  for  the  basin  shall  continue  to  have,  exercise and discharge such authority  except as specifically provided by this section.   11.2 State and local agencies and projects.    For the purpose of avoiding conflicts of jurisdiction  and  of  giving  full  effect  to  the  commission  as a regional agency of the signatory  parties, the following rules shall  govern  projects  of  the  signatory  states,  their  political subdivisions and public corporations affecting  water resources of the basin:    (a) The planning of all projects related to powers  delegated  to  the  commission  by this compact shall be undertaken in consultation with the  commission;    (b) No expenditure or commitment shall be made for or  on  account  of  the  construction,  acquisition  or operation of any project or facility  unless it shall have first  been  included  by  the  commission  in  the  comprehensive plan;    (c)  Each  state and local agency otherwise authorized by law to plan,  design, construct, operate or maintain any project or facility in or for  the basin shall continue to have, exercise and discharge such authority,  except as specifically provided by this section.   11.3 Reserved taxing powers of states.    Each of the signatory parties reserves the right to levy,  assess  and  collect  fees,  charges  and  taxes  on or measured by the withdrawal or  diversion of waters of the basin for use within the jurisdictions of the  respective signatory parties.   11.4 Project costs and evaluation standards.    The commission shall establish uniform standards  and  procedures  for  the  evaluation,  determination  of  benefits,  and  cost allocations of  projects affecting the basin,  and  for  the  determination  of  project  priorities,  pursuant  to the requirements of the comprehensive plan and  its water resources program. The commission shall develop equitable cost  sharing and reimbursement formulas for the signatory parties including:    (a) Uniform and consistent procedures for the  allocation  of  project  costs among purposes included in multiple-purpose programs;    (b)  Contracts  and  arrangements for sharing financial responsibility  among and with signatory parties,  public  bodies,  groups  and  private  enterprise, and for the supervision of their performance;    (c)  Establishment  and  supervision  of  a  system  of  accounts  for  reimbursable purposes and directing the payments and charges to be  made  from such accounts;(d) Determining the basis and apportioning amounts (i) of reimbursable  revenues  to  be paid signatory parties or their political subdivisions,  and (ii) of payments in lieu of taxes to any of them.   11.5 Cooperative services.    The   commission   shall   furnish   technical  services,  advice  and  consultation to authorize agencies of the signatory parties with respect  to the water resources of the basin, and each of the  signatory  parties  pledges  itself  to provide technical and administrative services to the  commission upon request, within the limits of  available  appropriations  and  to cooperate generally with the commission for the purposes of this  compact, and the cost of such services may be reimbursable whenever  the  parties deem appropriate.                         ARTICLE 12--CAPITAL FINANCING   Section 12.1 Borrowing power.    The  commission  may  borrow  money  for  any  of the purposes of this  compact, and may issue its  negotiable  bonds  and  other  evidences  of  indebtedness  in  respect  thereto.  All  such  bonds  and  evidences of  indebtedness shall be payable solely out of the properties and  revenues  of  the  commission  without  recourse  to taxation. The bonds and other  obligations of the commission, except as may be  otherwise  provided  in  the  indenture under which they were issued, shall be direct and general  obligations of the commission and the  full  faith  and  credit  of  the  commission are hereby pledged for the prompt payment of the debt service  thereon  and  for  the  fulfillment  of  all  other  undertakings of the  commission assumed by it to or for the benefit of the holders thereof.   12.2 Funds and expenses.    The purposes of this compact shall include without limitation  thereto  all  costs  of  any  project  or facility or any part thereof, including  interest  during  a  period  of  construction  and  a  reasonable   time  thereafter  and  any  incidental  expenses  (legal, engineering, fiscal,  financial consultant and other  expenses)  connected  with  issuing  and  disposing  of  the  bonds;  all  amounts required for the creation of an  operating fund, construction fund, reserve fund, sinking fund, or  other  special  fund;  all  other expenses connected with the planning, design,  acquisition, construction, completion, improvement or reconstruction  of  any  facility  or any part thereof; and reimbursement of advances by the  commission or by others for such purposes and for working capital.   12.3 Credit excluded; officers, state and municipal.    The commission shall have  no  power  to  pledge  the  credit  of  any  signatory  party,  or  of  any  county or municipality, or to impose any  obligation for payment of the bonds upon  any  signatory  party  or  any  county  or  municipality.  Neither  the  commissioners  nor  any  person  executing the bonds shall be liable  personally  on  the  bonds  of  the  commission  or be subject to any personal liability or accountability by  reason of the issuance thereof.   12.4 Funding and refunding.    Whenever the commission deems it expedient, it may fund and refund its  bonds and other obligations whether or not such  bonds  and  obligations  have  matured.  It  may  provide  for  the issuance, sale or exchange of  refunding bonds for the purpose  of  redeeming  or  retiring  any  bonds  (including  the  payment  of  any  premium,  duplicate  interest or cash  adjustment required in connection therewith) issued by the commission orissued by any other issuing body, the proceeds of the sale of which have  been applied to any facility acquired by the  commission  or  which  are  payable  out of the revenues of any facility acquired by the commission.  Bonds  may  be  issued partly to refund bonds and other obligations then  outstanding, and partly for any other purpose  of  the  commission.  All  provisions  of  this  compact  applicable  to  the issuance of bonds are  applicable to refunding bonds and to  the  issuance,  sale  or  exchange  thereof.   12.5 Bonds; authorization generally.    Bonds  and other indebtedness of the commission shall be authorized by  resolution of the commission. The  validity  of  the  authorization  and  issuance  of any bonds by the commission shall not be dependent upon nor  affected in any way by: (i) the disposition  of  bond  proceeds  by  the  commission  or  by  contract, commitment or action taken with respect to  such proceeds; or (ii) the failure to complete any part of  the  project  for  which  bonds  are authorized to be issued. The commission may issue  bonds in one or more series and may provide for one or more consolidated  bond  issues,  in  such  principal  amounts  and  with  such  terms  and  provisions  as  the  commission  may  deem  necessary.  The bonds may be  secured by a pledge of all or any part of  the  property,  revenues  and  franchises  under  its control. Bonds may be issued by the commission in  such amount, with such maturities and in such denominations and form  or  forms,  whether coupon or registered, as to both principal and interest,  as may be determined by the commission. The commission may  provide  for  redemption of bonds prior to maturity on such notice and at such time or  times  and  with  such redemption provisions, including premiums, as the  commission may determine.   12.6 Bonds; resolutions and indentures generally.    The commission may determine and enter into indentures  providing  for  the   principal  amount,  date  or  dates,  maturities,  interest  rate,  denominations,  form,  registration,  transfer,  interchange  and  other  provisions  of  the  bonds and coupons and the terms and conditions upon  which the same shall be executed, issued, secured, sold, paid, redeemed,  funded and refunded. The resolution of the  commission  authorizing  any  bond or any indenture so authorized under which the bonds are issued may  include   all  such  covenants  and  other  provisions  other  than  any  restriction on the regulatory powers vested in the  commission  by  this  compact as the commission may deem necessary or desirable for the issue,  payment,  security,  protection  or  marketing  of  the bonds, including  without limitation covenants and other provisions as  to  the  rates  or  amounts  of  fees, rents and other charges to be charged or made for use  of the facilities; the use, pledge, custody, securing,  application  and  disposition  of  such revenues, of the proceeds of the bonds, and of any  other moneys of the commission; the operation, maintenance,  repair  and  reconstruction  of  the facilities and the amounts which may be expended  therefor; the sale, lease or other disposition of  the  facilities;  the  insuring  of  the  facilities and of the revenues derived therefrom; the  construction or other acquisition of other facilities; the  issuance  of  additional  bonds  or  other indebtedness; the rights of the bondholders  and of any trustee for the bondholders upon default by the commission or  otherwise; and the modification of the provisions of the  indenture  and  of  the  bonds. Reference on the face of the bonds to such resolution or  indenture by its date of adoption or  the  apparent  date  on  the  face  thereof  is  sufficient to incorporate all of the provisions thereof and  of this compact into  the  body  of  the  bonds  and  their  appurtenant  coupons.  Each  taker  and  subsequent  holder  of the bonds or coupons,whether the coupons are attached to or  detached  from  the  bonds,  has  recourse  to  all of the provisions of the indenture and of this compact  and is bound thereby.   12.7 Maximum maturity.    No  bond  by  its terms shall mature in more than fifty years from its  own date and in the event any authorized issue is divided  into  two  or  more  series  or  divisions, the maximum maturity date hereby authorized  shall be calculated from the date on the face of each  bond  separately,  irrespective  of the fact that different dates may be prescribed for the  bonds of each separate series or division of any authorized issue.   12.8 Tax exemption.    All bonds issued by  the  commission  under  the  provisions  of  this  compact  and  the interest thereof shall at all times be free and exempt  from all taxation by or under authority of any of the signatory parties,  except for transfer, inheritance and estate taxes.   12.9 Interest.    Bonds shall bear interest at a  rate  determined  by  the  commission,  payable annually or semi-annually.   12.10 Place of payment.    The  commission  may  provide  for  the  payment  of the principal and  interest of bonds at any place or places within or without the signatory  states, and in any specified lawful  coin  or  currency  of  the  United  States of America.   12.11 Execution.    The  commission  may  provide  for the execution and authentication of  bonds by the manual, lithographed  or  printed  facsimile  signature  of  officers  of  the  commission,  and  by  additional  authentication by a  trustee or fiscal agent appointed by  the  commission.  If  any  of  the  officers whose signatures or counter signatures appear upon the bonds or  coupons  cease  to  be  officers  before  the  delivery  of the bonds or  coupons, their signatures or counter signatures are  nevertheless  valid  and  of  the  same  force  and effect as if the officers had remained in  office until the delivery of the bonds and coupons.   12.12 Holding own bonds.    The commission shall have power out of any funds available therefor to  purchase its bonds and may hold, cancel or resell such bonds.   12.13 Sale.    The commission may fix terms and conditions  for  the  sale  or  other  disposition  of  any  authorized issue of bonds. The commission may sell  bonds at less than their par or face value but no issue of bonds may  be  sold  at  an aggregate price below the par or face value thereof if such  sale would result in a net interest cost to  the  commission  calculated  upon the entire issue so sold of more than six percent per annum payable  semi-annually,  according  to  standard tables of bond values. All bonds  issued and sold for cash pursuant to this act shall be  sold  on  sealed  proposals  to  the  highest  bidder.  Prior to such sale, the commission  shall advertise for bids by publication of a notice  of  sale  not  less  than ten days prior to the date of sale, at least once in a newspaper of  general  circulation  printed  and  published  in New York City carrying  municipal bond notices and devoted  primarily  to  financial  news.  The  commission may reject any and all bids submitted and may thereafter sellthe  bonds  so  advertised  for  sale at private sale to any financially  responsible bidder under such terms and  conditions  as  it  deems  most  advantageous  to the public interest, but the bonds shall not be sold at  a  net  interest  cost  calculated  upon the entire issue so advertised,  greater than the lowest  bid  which  was  rejected.  In  the  event  the  commission  desires  to  issue  its  bonds  in  exchange for an existing  facility or portion thereof, or in exchange for  bonds  secured  by  the  revenues  of  an  existing  facility, it may exchange such bonds for the  existing facility or portion thereof or for the bonds so  secured,  plus  an additional amount of cash, without advertising such bonds for sale.   12.14 Negotiability.    All  bonds  issued under the provisions of this compact are negotiable  instruments, except when registered in the name of a registered owner.   12.15 Legal investments.    Bonds of the commission shall be legal investments for savings  banks,  fiduciaries and public funds in each of the signatory states.   12.16 Validation proceedings.    Prior  to  the  issuance  of any bonds, the commission may institute a  special proceeding to determine the legality of proceedings to issue the  bonds and their validity under the laws of any of the signatory parties.  Such proceedings shall be instituted  and  prosecuted  in  rem  and  the  judgment  rendered  therein  shall  be  conclusive  against  all persons  whomsoever and against each of the signatory parties.   12.17 Recording.    No indenture need be recorded or filed in  any  public  office,  other  than  the  office  of the commission. The pledge of revenues provided in  any indenture shall  take  effect  forthwith  as  provided  therein  and  irrespective  of  the date of receipt of such revenues by the commission  or the indenture trustee. Such pledge shall be effective as provided  in  the   indenture  without  physical  delivery  of  the  revenues  to  the  commission or to the indenture trustee.   12.18 Pledged revenues.    Bond redemption and interest payments shall, to the extent provided in  the resolution or indenture, constitute a first,  direct  and  exclusive  charge  and  lien  on all such rates, rents, tolls, fees and charges and  other revenues and interest thereon received from the use and  operation  of  the  facility,  and on any sinking or other funds created therefrom.  All such rates, rents, tolls, fees, charges and other revenues, together  with interest thereon, shall constitute a trust fund  for  the  security  and  payment  of  such bonds and except as and to the extent provided in  the indenture with respect to the  payment  therefrom  of  expenses  for  other   purposes   including   administration,  operation,  maintenance,  improvements or extensions of the facilities or other purposes shall not  be used or pledged for any other purpose so long as such bonds,  or  any  of them, are outstanding and unpaid.   12.19 Remedies.    The holder of any bond may for the equal benefit and protection of all  holders   of   bonds  similarly  situated:  (a)  by  mandamus  or  other  appropriate proceedings require and compel the performance of any of the  duties imposed upon the commission  or  assumed  by  it,  its  officers,  agents or employees under the provisions of any indenture, in connection  with  the  acquisition,  construction,  operation,  maintenance, repair,reconstruction or insurance of the facilities, or in connection with the  collection, deposit, investment, application  and  disbursement  of  the  rates,  rents,  tolls, fees, charges and other revenues derived from the  operation  and use of the facilities, or in connection with the deposit,  investment and disbursement of the proceeds received from  the  sale  of  bonds;  or (b) by action or suit in a court of competent jurisdiction of  any signatory party require 	
	
	
	
	

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > New-york > Env > Article-21 > Title-7 > 21-0701

§ 21-0701. Delaware river basin compact.    The  Delaware  river  basin  compact as first entered into pursuant to  chapter 148 of the laws of 1961, as renumbered by  chapter  801  of  the  laws  of  1962,  and  as  amended by chapter 262 of the laws of 1970, is  hereby continued as follows:    The Delaware river basin compact is hereby entered  into  and  enacted  into  law,  subject to the execution by the Governor as provided in said  compact and in accordance with its terms. The compact is as follows:    WHEREAS  the  signatory  parties  recognize  the  water  and   related  resources  of  the  Delaware basin as regional assets vested with local,  state  and  national  interests,   for   which   they   have   a   joint  responsibility; and    WHEREAS  the  conservation,  utilization,  development, management and  control of the water and related resources of the Delaware  River  Basin  under  a  comprehensive  multi-purpose  plan  will  bring  the  greatest  benefits and produce the most efficient service in the  public  welfare;  and    WHEREAS  such a comprehensive plan administered by a basin-wide agency  will  provide  effective  flood  damage  reduction;   conservation   and  development of ground and surface water supply for municipal, industrial  and   agricultural  uses;  development  of  recreational  facilities  in  relation to reservoirs, lakes and streams; propagation of fish and game;  promotion of related forestry, soil conservation and watershed projects;  protection  and  aid  to  fisheries  dependent  upon  water   resources;  development of hydro-electric power potentialities; improved navigation;  control  of  the movement of salt water; abatement and control of stream  pollution; and regulation of stream flows toward the attainment of these  goals; and    WHEREAS decisions of the United States Supreme Court relating  to  the  waters  of the basin have confirmed the interstate regional character of  the water resources of the Delaware River Basin, and the  United  States  Corps  of  Engineers  has  in a prior report on the Delaware River Basin  (House Document 179, 73d Cong., 2nd  Sess.)  officially  recognized  the  need  for  an  interstate  agency and the economies that can result from  unified development and control of the water resources of the basin; and    WHEREAS the water resources of the basin are presently subject to  the  duplicating,  overlapping  and  uncoordinated  administration of some 43  state agencies, 14 interstate agencies and  19  federal  agencies  which  exercise  a multiplicity of powers and duties resulting in a splintering  of authority and responsibilities; and    WHEREAS the joint advisory body known as the Interstate Commission  on  the   Delaware   River   Basin  (INCODEL),  created  by  the  respective  commissions or committee on Interstate  Cooperation  of  the  States  of  Delaware, New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania, has on the basis of its  extensive  investigations,  surveys  and studies concluded that regional  development of the Delaware  River  Basin  is  feasible,  advisable  and  urgently  needed;  and  has  recommended that an interstate compact with  federal participation be consummated to this end; and    WHEREAS the Congress of the United States and the executive branch  of  the  government  have  recognized  the national interest in the Delaware  River Basin by authorizing and directing the Corps  of  Engineers,  U.S.  Department of the Army, to make a comprehensive survey and report on the  water  and  related resources of the Delaware River Basin, enlisting the  technical aid and planning participation  of  many  federal,  state  and  municipal  agencies  dealing  with  the  waters  of  the  basin,  and in  particular the federal departments  of  Agriculture,  Commerce,  Health,  Education and Welfare, Interior, and Federal Power Commission; andWHEREAS  some  22,000,000  people of the United States at present live  and work in the region of the Delaware River Basin and its environs, and  the government, employment, industry and  economic  development  of  the  entire  region  and  the  health,  safety  and  general  welfare  of its  population  are  and  will  continue  to be vitally affected by the use,  conservation, management and control of the water and related  resources  of the Delaware River Basin; and    WHEREAS demands upon the waters and related resources of the basin are  expected  to  mount  rapidly  because of the anticipated increase in the  population of the region projected  to  reach  30,000,000  by  1980  and  40,000,000   by  2010,  and  because  of  the  anticipated  increase  in  industrial growth projected to double by 1980; and    WHEREAS water resources planning and development is technical, complex  and expensive, and has often required fifteen to twenty years  from  the  conception to the completion of a large dam and reservoir; and    WHEREAS the public interest requires that facilities must be ready and  operative  when needed, to avoid the catastrophe of unexpected floods or  prolonged drought, and for other purposes; and    WHEREAS the Delaware River Basin Advisory Committee, a temporary  body  constituted  by the governors of the four basin states and the mayors of  the cities of New York and Philadelphia, has  prepared  a  draft  of  an  interstate-federal  compact  for the creation of a basin agency, and the  signatory parties desire to effectuate the purposes thereof;    Now therefore the states of Delaware, New Jersey and New York and  the  Commonwealth  of  Pennsylvania,  and the United States of America hereby  solemnly covenant and agree with  each  other,  upon  the  enactment  of  concurrent  legislation  by the Congress of the United States and by the  respective state legislatures, having the same effect as  this  Part  as  follows:         ARTICLE 1--SHORT TITLE, DEFINITIONS, PURPOSE AND LIMITATIONS   Section 1.1 Short title.    This  act  shall be known and may be cited as the Delaware River Basin  Compact.   1.2. Definitions.    For  the  purposes  of  this  compact,  and  of  any  supplemental  or  concurring  legislation  enacted  pursuant  thereto,  except  as  may be  otherwise required by the context:    (a) "Basin" shall mean the area of drainage into  the  Delaware  River  and its tributaries, including Delaware Bay;    (b)  "Commission"  shall  mean  the  Delaware  River  Basin Commission  created and constituted by this compact;    (c) "Compact" shall mean the compact as contained title 7  of  article  21 of the Environmental Conservation Law.    (d)  "Cost"  shall  mean direct and indirect expenditures, commitment,  and net induced adverse effects, whether or not compensated for, used or  incurred   in   connection   with   the   establishment,    acquisition,  construction, maintenance and operation of a project;    (e)  "Facility"  shall  mean  any real or personal property, within or  without the basin, and improvements thereof or thereon, and any and  all  rights  of  way,  water, water rights, plants, structures, machinery and  equipment,  acquired,  constructed,  operated  or  maintained  for   the  beneficial  use  of  water  resources  or  related  land uses including,  without limiting the generality of the foregoing, any and all things and  appurtenances  necessary,  useful  or  convenient   for   the   control,  collection,   storage,   withdrawal,   diversion,   release,  treatment,transmission, sale or exchange of water; or for navigation  thereon,  or  the  development  and  use of hydroelectric energy and power, and public  recreational facilities; or the propagation of fish and wildlife; or  to  conserve and protect the water resources of the basin or any existing or  future  water  supply  source, or to facilitate any other uses of any of  them;    (f) "Federal government" shall  mean  the  government  of  the  United  States  of  America,  and  any appropriate branch, department, bureau or  division thereof, as the case may be;    (g) "Project" shall mean  any  work,  service  or  activity  which  is  separately  planned,  financed,  or identified by the commission, or any  separate facility undertaken or to  be  undertaken  within  a  specified  area,   for  the  conservation,  utilization,  control,  development  or  management of water resources which  can  be  established  and  utilized  independently  or  as  an  addition  to an existing facility, and can be  considered as a separate entity for purposes of evaluation;    (h) "Signatory party" shall mean a state or commonwealth party to this  compact, and the federal government;    (i)  "Water  resources"  shall  include  water  and  related   natural  resources  in, on, under, or above the ground, including related uses of  land, which are subject to beneficial use, ownership or control.   1.3 Purpose and findings.    The legislative bodies of the respective signatory parties hereby find  and declare:    (a) The water resources of the basin are affected with a local, state,  regional  and  national  interest  and  their  planning,   conservation,  utilization,  development,  management  and  control,  under appropriate  arrangements for intergovernmental cooperation, are public  purposes  of  the respective signatory parties.    (b) The water resources of the basin are subject to the soverign right  and  responsibility  of  the signatory parties, and it is the purpose of  this compact  to  provide  for  a  joint  exercise  of  such  powers  of  sovereignty in the common interests of the people of the region.    (c)  The  water  resources of the basin are functionally interrelated,  and  the  uses  of  these  resources  are   interdependent.   A   single  administrative   agency   is   therefore  essential  for  effective  and  economical  direction,  supervision  and  coordination  of  efforts  and  programs  of  federal,  state  and  local  governments  and  of  private  enterprise.    (d) The water resources of  the  Delaware  River  Basin,  if  properly  planned and utilized, are ample to meet all presently projected demands,  including  existing  and  added  diversions  in  future  years; and ever  increasing economies and efficiencies in the  use  and  reuse  of  water  resources  can  be  brought about by comprehensive planning, programming  and management.    (e) In general, the purposes of this compact are to promote interstate  comity; to remove causes of present  and  future  controversy;  to  make  secure  and protect present developments within the states; to encourage  and provide for the planning,  conservation,  utilization,  development,  management  and  control of the water resources of the basin; to provide  for cooperative planning  and  action  by  the  signatory  parties  with  respect to such water resources; and to apply the principle of equal and  uniform  treatment  to all water users who are similarly situated and to  all users of related facilities, without regard to established political  boundaries.   1.4 Powers of Congress; withdrawal.Nothing  in  this  compact  shall  be  construed  to  relinquish   the  functions,  powers  or  duties of the Congress of the United States with  respect to the control of any navigable waters  within  the  basin,  nor  shall  any  provision  hereof  be  construed in derogation of any of the  constitutional  powers  of  the  Congress to regulate commerce among the  states and with foreign nations. The power and right of the Congress  to  withdraw  the federal government as a party to this compact or to revise  or modify the terms, conditions and provisions under which it may remain  a party by amendment, repeal or  modification  of  any  federal  statute  applicable thereto is recognized by the signatory parties.   1.5 Existing agencies; construction.    It is the purpose of the signatory parties to preserve and utilize the  functions,  powers  and  duties  of  existing  offices  and  agencies of  government to the extent not inconsistent with  this  compact,  and  the  commission is authorized and directed to utilize and employ such offices  and  agencies  for  the purpose of this compact to the fullest extent it  finds feasible and advantageous.   1.6 Duration of compact.    (a) The duration of this compact shall be for an initial period of 100  years from its effective date, and it shall be continued for  additional  periods of 100 years if not later than 20 years nor sooner than 25 years  prior  to the termination of the initial period or any succeeding period  none of the signatory states, by authority of an act of its legislature,  notifies the commission of intention to terminate the compact at the end  of the then current 100 year period.    (b) In the event that this compact should be terminated  by  operation  of  paragraph  (a)  above, the commission shall be dissolved, its assets  and liabilities transferred, and its corporate affairs wound up, in such  manner as may be provided by act of the Congress.                       ARTICLE 2--ORGANIZATION AND AREA   Section 2.1 Commission created.    The Delaware River Basin  Commission  is  hereby  created  as  a  body  politic and corporate, with succession for the duration of this compact,  as  an  agency  and instrumentality of the governments of the respective  signatory parties.   2.2 Commission membership.    The commission shall consist of the Governors of the signatory states,  ex officio, and one commissioner to be appointed by the President of the  United States to serve during the term of office of the President.   2.3 Alternates.    Each member of the commission shall appoint an alternate to act in his  place  and  stead,  with  authority  to  attend  all  meetings  of   the  commission,  and with power to vote in the absence of the member. Unless  otherwise provided by law  of  the  signatory  party  for  which  he  is  appointed,  each  alternate  shall  serve  during the term of the member  appointing him, subject to removal at the pleasure of the member. In the  event of a vacancy in the office of alternate, it shall be filled in the  same manner as an original appointment for the unexpired term only.   2.4 Compensation.Members  of  the  commission  and  alternates  shall   serve   without  compensation  but  may  be reimbursed for necessary expenses incurred in  and incident to the performance of their duties.   2.5 Voting power.    Each  member  shall  be  entitled to one vote on all matters which may  come before the commission. No action of the commission shall  be  taken  at  any  meeting unless a majority of the membership shall vote in favor  thereof.   2.6 Organization and procedure.    The commission shall provide for its own organization  and  procedure,  and  shall  adopt  rules  and  regulations  governing  its  meetings and  transactions. It shall organize annually by the election of  a  chairman  and  vice-chairman from among its members. It shall provide by its rules  for the appointment by each member in his discretion of  an  advisor  to  serve   without  compensation,  who  may  attend  all  meetings  of  the  commission and its committees.   2.7 Jurisdiction of the commission.    The commission shall  have,  exercise  and  discharge  its  functions,  powers  and duties within the limits of the basin, except that it may in  its discretion act  outside  the  basin  whenever  such  action  may  be  necessary  or  convenient  to effectuate its powers or duties within the  basin, or to sell or dispose of  water,  hydroelectric  power  or  other  water  resources  within  or  without  the  basin.  The commission shall  exercise such power outside the basin only upon the consent of the state  in which it proposes to act.                ARTICLE 3--POWERS AND DUTIES OF THE COMMISSION   Section 3.1 Purpose and policy.    The commission  shall  develop  and  effectuate  plans,  policies  and  projects  relating  to  the water resources of the basin. It shall adopt  and promote uniform and coordinated  policies  for  water  conservation,  control,  use  and  management  in  the  basin.  It  shall encourage the  planning,  development  and  financing  of  water   resources   projects  according to such plans and policies.   3.2 Comprehensive plan, program and budgets.    The  commission  shall, in accordance with Article 13 of this compact,  formulate and adopt:    (a) A comprehensive plan, after  consultation  with  water  users  and  interested  public  bodies, for the immediate and long range development  and uses of the water resources of the basin;    (b) A water resources program,  based  upon  the  comprehensive  plan,  which  shall  include  a  systematic  presentation  of  the quantity and  quality of water resources needs of the  area  to  be  served  for  such  reasonably  foreseeable period as the commission may determine, balanced  by existing and  proposed  projects  required  to  satisfy  such  needs,  including  all public and private projects affecting the basin, together  with a separate statement of the projects proposed to be  undertaken  by  the commission during such period; and    (c)  An  annual  current  expense budget, and an annual capital budget  consistent with the water resources program  covering  the  commission's  projects and facilities for the budget period.   3.3 Allocations, diversions and releases.The commission shall have the power from time to time as need appears,  in  accordance with the doctrine of equitable apportionment, to allocate  the waters of the basin to  and  among  the  states  signatory  to  this  compact and to and among their respective political subdivisions, and to  impose conditions, obligations and release requirements related thereto,  subject to the following limitations:    (a)  The  commission,  without the unanimous consent of the parties to  the United States Supreme Court decree in New Jersey v.  New  York,  347  U.S.    995  (1954),  shall  not impair, diminish or otherwise adversely  affect  the  diversions,  compensating  releases,  rights,   conditions,  obligations,  and  provisions for the administration thereof as provided  in said decree; provided, however,  that  after  consultation  with  the  river  master  under  said  decree the commission may find and declare a  state of emergency resulting from a drought or catastrophe  and  it  may  thereupon  by  unanimous  consent of its members authorize and direct an  increase or  decrease  in  any  allocation  or  diversion  permitted  or  releases  required  by  the  decree, in such manner and for such limited  time as may be necessary to meet such an emergency condition.    (b) No allocation of waters hereafter made pursuant  to  this  section  shall  constitute  a  prior  appropriation of the waters of the basin or  confer any superiority of right in respect to the use of  those  waters,  nor  shall  any  such action be deemed to constitute an apportionment of  the waters of the basin among the parties  hereto;  provided  that  this  paragraph  shall  not  be  deemed  to limit or restrict the power of the  commission to enter into covenants with respect to water supply, with  a  duration  not  exceeding  the  life  of  this  compact,  as  it may deem  necessary for the benefit or development of the water resources  of  the  basin.    (c)  Any  proper  party  deeming  itself  aggrieved  by  action of the  commission with respect to an  out-of-basin  diversion  or  compensating  releases  in  connection therewith, notwithstanding the powers delegated  to the commission by this compact may invoke the  original  jurisdiction  of the United States Supreme Court within one year after such action for  an  adjudication  and determination thereof de novo. Any other action of  the commission pursuant to this section shall  be  subject  to  judicial  review in any court of competent jurisdiction.   3.4 Supreme court decree; waivers.    Each   of   the   signatory  states  and  their  respective  political  subdivisions, in consideration of like action  by  the  others,  and  in  recognition  of  reciprocal benefits, hereby waives and relinquishes for  the duration of this compact any right, privilege or power it  may  have  to  apply  for any modification of the terms of the decree of the United  States Supreme Court in New Jersey v. New  York,  347  U.S.  995  (1954)  which  would  increase or decrease the diversions authorized or increase  or decrease the releases required thereunder, except that  a  proceeding  to modify such decree to increase diversions or compensating releases in  connection  with such increased diversions may be prosecuted by a proper  party to effectuate rights, powers, duties and obligations under Section  3.3 of this compact, and except as may be  required  to  effectuate  the  provisions of paragraphs III B 3 and V B of said decree.   3.5 Supreme court decree; specific limitations on commission.    Except  as  specifically  provided  in  Sections  3.3  and 3.4 of this  article, nothing in this compact  shall  be  construed  in  any  way  to  impair,  diminish  or  otherwise  adversely  affect  the rights, powers,  privileges, conditions and obligations contained in the  decree  of  the  United  States  Supreme  Court  in  New Jersey v. New York, 347 U.S. 995(1954). To this end, and  without  limitation  thereto,  the  commission  shall not:    (a)  Acquire, construct or operate any project or facility or make any  order or take any action  which  would  impede  or  interfere  with  the  rights,  powers, privileges, conditions or obligations contained in said  decree;    (b) Impose or collect any fee, charge or assessment  with  respect  to  diversions of waters of the basin permitted by said decree;    (c)  Exercise any jurisdiction, except upon consent of all the parties  to said decree, over the planning, design,  construction,  operation  or  control of any projects, structures or facilities constructed or used in  connection  with  withdrawals,  diversions and releases of waters of the  basin authorized by said decree or of  the  withdrawals,  diversions  or  releases to be made thereunder; or    (d)  Serve  as  river master under said decree, except upon consent of  all the parties thereto.   3.6 General powers.    The commission may:    (a) Plan, design,  acquire,  construct,  reconstruct,  complete,  own,  improve,  extend,  develop,  operate  and maintain any and all projects,  facilities, properties,  activities  and  services,  determined  by  the  commission  to  be  necessary,  convenient or useful for the purposes of  this compact;    (b) Establish standards of  planning,  design  and  operation  of  all  projects  and  facilities in the basin which affect its water resources,  including without limitation thereto water and waste  treatment  plants,  stream   and   lake  recreational  facilities,  trunk  mains  for  water  distribution, local flood protection works, small  watershed  management  programs, and ground water recharging operations;    (c)  Conduct  and sponsor research on water resources, their planning,  use, conservation, management, development, control and protection,  and  the  capacity,  adaptability  and best utility of each facility thereof,  and collect, compile, correlate, analyze, report and interpret  data  on  water  resources  and  uses  in  the basin, including without limitation  thereto the relation of  water  to  other  resources,  industrial  water  technology,  ground  water  movement,  relation  between water price and  water demand, and general hydrological conditions;    (d) Compile and coordinate systematic stream stage  and  ground  water  level  forecasting  data,  and  publicize  such  information when and as  needed for water uses,  flood  warning,  quality  maintenance  or  other  purposes;    (e)  Conduct  such  special  ground  water  investigations, tests, and  operations and compile such data relating thereto as may be required  to  formulate and administer the comprehensive plan;    (f)  Prepare,  publish  and  disseminate  information and reports with  respect to the water problems of the basin and for the  presentation  of  the  needs,  resources  and  policies  of  the  basin  to  executive and  legislative branches of the signatory parties;    (g) Negotiate for such loans, grants, services or other aids as may be  lawfully available from public or private sources to finance  or  assist  in  effectuating any of the purposes of this compact; and to receive and  accept such aid upon such terms and  conditions,  and  subject  to  such  provisions  for  repayment as may be required by federal or state law or  as the commission may deem necessary or desirable;    (h) Exercise such other and different powers as may be delegated to it  by this compact or otherwise pursuant to law, and have and exercise  allpowers  necessary or convenient to carry out its express powers or which  may be reasonably implied therefrom.   3.7 Rates and charges.    The  commission  may from time to time after public notice and hearing  fix,  alter  and  revise  rates,  rentals,   charges   and   tolls   and  classifications  thereof,  for the use of facilities which it may own or  operate  and  for  products  and  services  rendered  thereby,   without  regulation  or  control  by  any  department,  office  or  agency of any  signatory party.   3.8 Referral and review.    No project having a substantial effect on the water resources  of  the  basin  shall  hereafter  be  undertaken  by  any  person, corporation or  governmental authority unless it shall have been first submitted to  and  approved  by  the  commission, subject to the provisions of Sections 3.3  and 3.5. The commission shall approve a project whenever  it  finds  and  determines  that such project would not substantially impair or conflict  with the comprehensive plan and may modify and approve as  modified,  or  may  disapprove  any  such project whenever it finds and determines that  the project would substantially impair or conflict with such  plan.  The  commission  shall provide by regulation for the procedure of submission,  review  and  consideration  of  projects,  and  for  its  determinations  pursuant  to this section. Any determination of the commission hereunder  shall  be  subject  to  judicial  review  in  any  court  of   competent  jurisdiction.   3.9 Coordination and cooperation.    The   commission  shall  promote  and  aid  the  coordination  of  the  activities  and  programs  of  federal,  state,  municipal  and  private  agencies  concerned with water resources administration in the basin. To  this end, but without limitation thereto, the commission may:    (a)  Advise,  consult,  contract,  financially  assist,  or  otherwise  cooperate with any and all such agencies;    (b) Employ any other agency or instrumentality of any of the signatory  parties  or  of  any  political  subdivision  thereof,  in  the  design,  construction,  operation  and  maintenance  of   structures,   and   the  installation  and  management of river control systems, or for any other  purpose;    (c) Develop and adopt plans and specifications  for  particular  water  resources  projects  and  facilities which so far as consistent with the  comprehensive plan incorporate any separate plans of  other  public  and  private   organizations   operating   in   the  basin,  and  permit  the  decentralized administration thereof;    (d) Qualify as a  sponsoring  agency  under  any  federal  legislation  heretofore or hereafter enacted to provide financial or other assistance  for  the planning, conservation, utilization, development, management or  control of water resources.   3.10 Advisory committees.    The commission may constitute and empower advisory  committees,  which  may be comprised of representatives of the public and of federal, state,  county  and municipal governments, water resources agencies, water-using  industries, water-interest groups, labor and agriculture.                            ARTICLE 4--WATER SUPPLY   Section 4.1 Generally.The commission shall have power to develop, implement  and  effectuate  plans  and projects for the use of the waters of the basin for domestic,  municipal, agricultural  and  industrial  water  supply.  To  this  end,  without  limitation  thereto,  it  may  provide for, construct, acquire,  operate   and   maintain  dams,  reservoirs  and  other  facilities  for  utilization of surface and  ground  water  resources,  and  all  related  structures, appurtenances and equipment on the river and its tributaries  and at such off-river sites as it may find appropriate, and may regulate  and control the use thereof.   4.2 Storage and release of waters.    (a)  The  commission  shall have power to acquire, operate and control  projects and facilities for the storage and release of waters,  for  the  regulation  of  flows  and  supplies of surface and ground waters of the  basin, for the protection of  public  health,  stream  quality  control,  economic development, improvement of fisheries, recreation, dilution and  abatement  of  pollution,  the  prevention  of  undue salinity and other  purposes.    (b) No signatory party shall permit any augmentation  of  flow  to  be  diminished  by the diversion of any water of the basin during any period  in which waters are being released from storage under the  direction  of  the  commission for the purpose of augmenting such flow, except in cases  where such diversion is duly authorized  by  this  compact,  or  by  the  commission  pursuant  thereto,  or by the judgment, order or decree of a  court of competent jurisdiction.   4.3 Assessable improvements.    The commission may undertake to provide stream regulation in the  main  stream  or  any tributary in the basin and may assess on an annual basis  or otherwise the cost thereof upon water users or any classification  of  them  specially  benefited thereby to a measurable extent, provided that  no such assessment shall exceed the actual benefit to  any  water  user.  Any  such  assessment  shall  follow the procedure prescribed by law for  local improvement assessments and shall be subject to judicial review in  any court of competent jurisdiction.   4.4 Coordination.    Prior to entering upon the execution of any project authorized by this  article, the commission shall review and consider all  existing  rights,  plans   and   programs   of   the  signatory  parties,  their  political  subdivisions, private parties, and water users which  are  pertinent  to  such project, and shall hold a public hearing on each proposed project.   4.5 Additional powers.    In  connection  with  any  project  authorized  by  this  article, the  commission shall have power to provide storage, treatment,  pumping  and  transmission  facilities,  but  nothing  herein  shall  be  construed to  authorize the commission to  engage  in  the  business  of  distributing  water.                         ARTICLE 5--POLLUTION CONTROL   Section 5.1 General powers.    The  commission may undertake investigations and surveys, and acquire,  construct, operate and  maintain  projects  and  facilities  to  control  potential  pollution and abate or dilute existing pollution of the water  resources of the basin. It may  invoke  as  complainant  the  power  andjurisdiction  of  water  pollution  abatement  agencies of the signatory  parties.   5.2 Policy and standards.    The commission may assume jurisdiction to control future pollution and  abate  existing  pollution  in  the  waters  of  the  basin, whenever it  determines after investigation and public hearing upon due  notice  that  the  effectuation of the comprehensive plan so requires. The standard of  such control shall be that pollution by sewage or  industrial  or  other  waste  originating within a signatory state shall not injuriously affect  waters of the basin as  contemplated  by  the  comprehensive  plan.  The  commission,  after  such  public  hearing may classify the waters of the  basin and establish standards of  treatment  of  sewage,  industrial  or  other  waste,  according  to  such  classes  including allowance for the  variable factors of surface and ground  waters,  such  as  size  of  the  stream,  flow,  movement,  location,  character,  self-purification, and  usage of the waters  affected.  After  such  investigation,  notice  and  hearing  the commission may adopt and from time to time amend and repeal  rules, regulations and standards to control such  future  pollution  and  abate  existing  pollution,  and  to  require  such treatment of sewage,  industrial or other waste within a time reasonable for the  construction  of  the  necessary works as may be required to protect the public health  or to preserve the waters of the basin for uses in accordance  with  the  comprehensive plan.   5.3 Cooperative legislation and administration.    Each  of  the  signatory  parties covenants and agrees to prohibit and  control  pollution  of  the  waters  of  the  basin  according  to   the  requirements  of this compact and to cooperate faithfully in the control  of future pollution in and abatement  of  existing  pollution  from  the  rivers, streams, and waters in the basin which flow through, under, into  or border upon any of such signatory states, and in order to effect such  object,  agrees  to  enact any necessary legislation to enable each such  party to place and maintain the waters of said basin in  a  satisfactory  condition,  available  for  safe  and  satisfactory  use  as  public and  industrial water  supplies  after  reasonable  treatment,  suitable  for  recreational  usage, capable of maintaining fish and other aquatic life,  free from unsightly or malodorous nuisances due to  floating  solids  or  sludge  deposits  and adaptable to such other uses as may be provided by  the comprehensive plan.   5.4 Enforcement.    The commission may, after investigation and hearing, issue an order or  orders upon any person  or  public  or  private  corporation,  or  other  entity, to cease the discharge of sewage, industrial or other waste into  waters of the basin which it determines to be in violation of such rules  and  regulations  as  it  shall  have  adopted  for  the  prevention and  abatement of pollution. Any such order or orders may prescribe the date,  including a reasonable time for the construction of any necessary works,  on  or  before  which  such  discharge  shall  be  wholly  or  partially  discontinued,  modified  or  treated,  or  otherwise  conformed  to  the  requirements  of  such  rules  and  regulations.  Such  order  shall  be  reviewable  in  any  court  of competent jurisdiction. The courts of the  signatory parties shall have jurisdiction to enforce against any person,  public or private corporation, or other entity, any and  all  provisions  of this Article or of any such order. The commission may bring an action  in  its  own  name in any such court of competent jurisdiction to compel  compliance with any provision of this Article, or any rule or regulationissued pursuant thereto or of any such order, according to the  practice  and procedure of the court.   5.5 Further jurisdiction.    Nothing  in  this  compact  shall  be  construed  to repeal, modify or  qualify the authority of any signatory party to enact any legislation or  enforce any additional conditions and restrictions to lessen or  prevent  the pollution of waters within its jurisdiction.                          ARTICLE 6--FLOOD PROTECTION   Section 6.1 General powers.    The  commission  may  plan, design, construct and operate and maintain  projects and facilities, as it may deem necessary or desirable for flood  damage reduction. It shall have power to operate such facilities and  to  store  and  release waters on the Delaware River and its tributaries and  elsewhere within the basin, in such manner, at  such  times,  and  under  such  regulations  as  the commission may deem appropriate to meet flood  conditions as they may arise.   6.2 Flood plain zoning.    (a) The commission  shall  have  power  to  adopt,  amend  and  repeal  recommended  standards, in the manner provided by this section, relating  to the nature and extent of  the  uses  of  land  in  areas  subject  to  flooding  by  waters  of  the  Delaware  River and its tributaries. Such  standards shall not be deemed to impair or restrict  the  power  of  the  signatory  parties  or  their political subdivisions to adopt zoning and  other land use regulations not inconsistent therewith.    (b) The commission may study and determine the nature  and  extent  of  the  flood  plains  of  the Delaware River and its tributaries. Upon the  basis of such studies, it may establish encroachment lines and delineate  the areas subject to flood, including a  classification  of  lands  with  reference  to  relative risk of flood and the establishment of standards  for flood plain use which will safeguard the public health,  safety  and  property.  Prior  to the adoption of any standards delineating such area  or defining such use, the commission shall hold public hearings, in  the  manner  provided  by  Article  14, with respect to the substance of such  standards. At or before such  public  hearings  the  proposed  standards  shall  be  available,  and  all  interested  persons  shall  be given an  opportunity to be heard thereon at the hearing. Upon  the  adoption  and  promulgation of such standards, the commission may enter into agreements  to  provide technical and financial aid to any municipal corporation for  the administration and enforcement of any local land use  ordinances  or  regulations giving effect to such standards.   6.3 Flood lands acquisition.    The  commission  shall  have  power  to  acquire the fee or any lesser  interest in lands and improvements thereon within the area  of  a  flood  plain  for  the purpose of restricting the use of such property so as to  minimize the flood hazard, converting property to  uses  appropriate  to  flood  plain  conditions,  or  preventing unwarranted constrictions that  reduce the ability of the river channel to carry flood water.  Any  such  action  shall  be  in  accord with the standards adopted and promulgated  pursuant to Section 6.2.   6.4 Flood and stream stage warnings and posting.    The commission may cause lands particularly subject  to  flood  to  be  posted with flood hazard warnings, and may from time to time cause floodadvisory  notices  to  be  published  and  circulated  as conditions may  warrant.                        ARTICLE 7--WATERSHED MANAGEMENT   Section 7.1 Watersheds generally.    The  commission  shall promote sound practices of watershed management  in the basin, including projects and facilities  to  retard  runoff  and  waterflow and prevent soil erosion.   7.2 Soil conservation and forestry.    The commission may acquire, sponsor or operate facilities and projects  to  encourage  soil  conservation,  prevent  and control erosion, and to  promote land reclamation and sound forestry practices.   7.3 Fish and wildlife.    The commission may acquire, sponsor or operate projects and facilities  for the maintenance  and  improvement  of  fish  and  wildlife  habitats  related to the water resources of the basin.   7.4 Cooperative planning and operation.    (a)  The  commission  shall cooperate with the appropriate agencies of  the signatory parties and with other public and private agencies in  the  planning  and  effectuation  of  a coordinated program of facilities and  projects authorized by this Article.    (b) The commission shall not operate  any  such  project  or  facility  unless  it has first found and determined that no other suitable unit or  agency of government is available to operate the  same  upon  reasonable  conditions,  in  accordance  with  the  intent  and purpose expressed in  Section 1.5 of this compact.                             ARTICLE 8--RECREATION   Section 8.1 Development.    The commission shall provide for  the  development  of  water  related  public  sports  and  recreational  facilities. The commission on its own  account or in cooperation with a signatory party, political  subdivision  or any agency thereof, may provide for the construction, maintenance and  administration  of such facilities, subject to the provisions of Section  8.2 hereof.   8.2 Cooperative planning and operation.    (a) The commission shall cooperate with the  appropriate  agencies  of  the  signatory parties and with other public and private agencies in the  planning and effectuation of a coordinated  program  of  facilities  and  projects authorized by this article.    (b)  The  commission  shall  not  operate any such project or facility  unless it has first found and determined that no other suitable unit  or  agency  of  government  is available to operate the same upon reasonable  conditions, in accordance with  the  intent  and  purpose  expressed  in  Section 1.5 of this compact.   8.3 Operation and maintenance.    The commission, within limits prescribed by this article, shall:    (a) Encourage activities of other public agencies having water related  recreational interests and assist in the coordination thereof;    (b)  Recommend  standards  for  the  development and administration of  water related recreational facilities;(c) Provide for  the  administration,  operation  and  maintenance  of  recreational  facilities  owned  or controlled by the commission and for  the letting and supervision of private concessions  in  accordance  with  this article.   8.4 Concessions.    The  commission  shall  after  notice  and  public  hearing provide by  regulation for  the  award  of  contracts  for  private  concessions  in  connection  with  recreational  facilities,  including  any  renewal  or  extension  thereof,  upon   sealed   competitive   bids   after   public  advertisement therefor.                        ARTICLE 9--HYDROELECTRIC POWER   Section 9.1 Development.    The  waters of the Delaware River and its tributaries may be impounded  and used by or under authority of the commission for the  generation  of  hydroelectric  power  and  hydroelectric  energy, in accordance with the  comprehensive plan.   9.2 Power generation.    The commission may develop and operate, or authorize to  be  developed  and  operated,  dams  and  related  facilities and appurtenances for the  purpose of generating hydroelectric power and hydroelectric energy.   9.3 Transmission.    The  commission  may  provide  facilities  for  the  transmission   of  hydroelectric  power  and hydroelectric energy produced by it where such  facilities are not otherwise available upon reasonable  terms,  for  the  purpose  of  wholesale  marketing  of  power and nothing herein shall be  construed to authorize the commission  to  engage  in  the  business  of  direct sale to consumers.   9.4 Development contracts.    The  commission  may  after  public  notice  and  hearing  enter  into  contracts on reasonable terms, consideration and  duration  under  which  public  utilities or public agencies may develop hydroelectric power and  hydroelectric energy through the use of  dams,  related  facilities  and  appurtenances.   9.5 Rates and charges.    Rates  and charges fixed by the commission for power which is produced  by its facilities shall be reasonable, nondiscriminatory, and just.             ARTICLE 10--REGULATION OF WITHDRAWALS AND DIVERSIONS   Section 10.1 Power of regulation.    The commission may regulate and  control  withdrawals  and  diversions  from  surface waters and ground waters of the basin, as provided by this  article. The commission may enter into  agreements  with  the  signatory  parties  relating to the exercise of such power of regulation or control  and may delegate to any of them such powers of the commission as it  may  deem necessary or desirable.   10.2 Determination of protected areas.    The  commission  may  from  time to time after public hearing upon due  notice determine and delineate such areas within the basin  wherein  the  demands  upon supply made by water users have developed or threatened todevelop to such a degree as to create a water shortage or to  impair  or  conflict  with  the  requirements  or  effectuation of the comprehensive  plan, and any such areas may be designated  as  "protected  areas."  The  commission,  whenever it determines that such shortage no longer exists,  shall terminate the protected status of such area and shall give  public  notice of such termination.   10.3 Withdrawal permits.    In  any protected areas so determined and delineated, no person, firm,  corporation or other entity shall divert or withdraw water for domestic,  municipal, agricultural or industrial uses in excess of such  quantities  as  the  commission  may  prescribe  by  general  regulation, except (i)  pursuant to a permit granted under this article, or (ii) pursuant  to  a  permit  or  approval  heretofore  granted  under  the laws of any of the  signatory states.   10.4 Emergency.    In the event of a drought or other condition which may cause an actual  and immediate shortage of available water supply within  the  basin,  or  within  any  part  thereof,  the  commission  may, after public hearing,  determine and delineate the area of such shortage and  declare  a  water  supply  emergency  therein.  For  the  duration  of  such  emergency  as  determined by the commisssion no  person,  firm,  corporation  or  other  public or private entity shall divert or withdraw water for any purpose,  in  excess of such quantities as the commission may prescribe by general  regulation or authorize by special permit granted hereunder.   10.5 Standards.    Permits shall be granted, modified or denied as the case may be so  as  to avoid such depletion of the natural stream flows and ground waters in  the  protected area or in an emergency area as will adversely affect the  comprehensive plan or the just and equitable  interests  and  rights  of  other  lawful users of the same source, giving due regard to the need to  balance and reconcile alternative and conflicting uses in the  event  of  an actual or threatened shortage of water of the quality required.   10.6 Judicial review.    The  determinations  and  delineations  of  the commission pursuant to  Section 10.2  and  the  granting,  modification  or  denial  of  permits  pursuant  to  Section  10.3  through  10.5  shall be subject to judicial  review in any court of competent jurisdiction.   10.7 Maintenance of records.    Each state shall provide for the maintenance and preservation of  such  records  of  authorized diversions and withdrawals and the annual volume  thereof  as  the  commission   shall   prescribe.   Such   records   and  supplementary  reports  shall  be  furnished  to  the  commission at its  request.   10.8 Existing state systems.    Whenever the commission finds its necessary or desirable  to  exercise  the powers conferred by this article any diversion or withdrawal permits  authorized or issued under the laws of any of the signatory states shall  be  superseded  to  the  extent  of  any  conflict  with the control and  regulation exercised by the commission.                    ARTICLE 11--INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONSSection 11.1 Federal agencies and projects.    For  the  purposes of avoiding conflicts of jurisdiction and of giving  full effect to the commission as a  regional  agency  of  the  signatory  parties, the following rules shall govern federal projects affecting the  water  resources of the basin, subject in each case to the provisions of  Section 1.4 of this compact:    (a) The planning of all projects related to powers  delegated  to  the  commission  by this compact shall be undertaken in consultation with the  commission;    (b) No expenditure or commitment shall be made for or  on  account  of  the  construction,  acquisition  or operation of any project or facility  nor shall it be deemed authorized,  unless  it  shall  have  first  been  included by the commission in the comprehensive plan;    (c)  Each  federal agency otherwise authorized by law to plan, design,  construct, operate or maintain any project or facility  in  or  for  the  basin  shall  continue  to  have,  exercise and discharge such authority  except as specifically provided by this section.   11.2 State and local agencies and projects.    For the purpose of avoiding conflicts of jurisdiction  and  of  giving  full  effect  to  the  commission  as a regional agency of the signatory  parties, the following rules shall  govern  projects  of  the  signatory  states,  their  political subdivisions and public corporations affecting  water resources of the basin:    (a) The planning of all projects related to powers  delegated  to  the  commission  by this compact shall be undertaken in consultation with the  commission;    (b) No expenditure or commitment shall be made for or  on  account  of  the  construction,  acquisition  or operation of any project or facility  unless it shall have first  been  included  by  the  commission  in  the  comprehensive plan;    (c)  Each  state and local agency otherwise authorized by law to plan,  design, construct, operate or maintain any project or facility in or for  the basin shall continue to have, exercise and discharge such authority,  except as specifically provided by this section.   11.3 Reserved taxing powers of states.    Each of the signatory parties reserves the right to levy,  assess  and  collect  fees,  charges  and  taxes  on or measured by the withdrawal or  diversion of waters of the basin for use within the jurisdictions of the  respective signatory parties.   11.4 Project costs and evaluation standards.    The commission shall establish uniform standards  and  procedures  for  the  evaluation,  determination  of  benefits,  and  cost allocations of  projects affecting the basin,  and  for  the  determination  of  project  priorities,  pursuant  to the requirements of the comprehensive plan and  its water resources program. The commission shall develop equitable cost  sharing and reimbursement formulas for the signatory parties including:    (a) Uniform and consistent procedures for the  allocation  of  project  costs among purposes included in multiple-purpose programs;    (b)  Contracts  and  arrangements for sharing financial responsibility  among and with signatory parties,  public  bodies,  groups  and  private  enterprise, and for the supervision of their performance;    (c)  Establishment  and  supervision  of  a  system  of  accounts  for  reimbursable purposes and directing the payments and charges to be  made  from such accounts;(d) Determining the basis and apportioning amounts (i) of reimbursable  revenues  to  be paid signatory parties or their political subdivisions,  and (ii) of payments in lieu of taxes to any of them.   11.5 Cooperative services.    The   commission   shall   furnish   technical  services,  advice  and  consultation to authorize agencies of the signatory parties with respect  to the water resources of the basin, and each of the  signatory  parties  pledges  itself  to provide technical and administrative services to the  commission upon request, within the limits of  available  appropriations  and  to cooperate generally with the commission for the purposes of this  compact, and the cost of such services may be reimbursable whenever  the  parties deem appropriate.                         ARTICLE 12--CAPITAL FINANCING   Section 12.1 Borrowing power.    The  commission  may  borrow  money  for  any  of the purposes of this  compact, and may issue its  negotiable  bonds  and  other  evidences  of  indebtedness  in  respect  thereto.  All  such  bonds  and  evidences of  indebtedness shall be payable solely out of the properties and  revenues  of  the  commission  without  recourse  to taxation. The bonds and other  obligations of the commission, except as may be  otherwise  provided  in  the  indenture under which they were issued, shall be direct and general  obligations of the commission and the  full  faith  and  credit  of  the  commission are hereby pledged for the prompt payment of the debt service  thereon  and  for  the  fulfillment  of  all  other  undertakings of the  commission assumed by it to or for the benefit of the holders thereof.   12.2 Funds and expenses.    The purposes of this compact shall include without limitation  thereto  all  costs  of  any  project  or facility or any part thereof, including  interest  during  a  period  of  construction  and  a  reasonable   time  thereafter  and  any  incidental  expenses  (legal, engineering, fiscal,  financial consultant and other  expenses)  connected  with  issuing  and  disposing  of  the  bonds;  all  amounts required for the creation of an  operating fund, construction fund, reserve fund, sinking fund, or  other  special  fund;  all  other expenses connected with the planning, design,  acquisition, construction, completion, improvement or reconstruction  of  any  facility  or any part thereof; and reimbursement of advances by the  commission or by others for such purposes and for working capital.   12.3 Credit excluded; officers, state and municipal.    The commission shall have  no  power  to  pledge  the  credit  of  any  signatory  party,  or  of  any  county or municipality, or to impose any  obligation for payment of the bonds upon  any  signatory  party  or  any  county  or  municipality.  Neither  the  commissioners  nor  any  person  executing the bonds shall be liable  personally  on  the  bonds  of  the  commission  or be subject to any personal liability or accountability by  reason of the issuance thereof.   12.4 Funding and refunding.    Whenever the commission deems it expedient, it may fund and refund its  bonds and other obligations whether or not such  bonds  and  obligations  have  matured.  It  may  provide  for  the issuance, sale or exchange of  refunding bonds for the purpose  of  redeeming  or  retiring  any  bonds  (including  the  payment  of  any  premium,  duplicate  interest or cash  adjustment required in connection therewith) issued by the commission orissued by any other issuing body, the proceeds of the sale of which have  been applied to any facility acquired by the  commission  or  which  are  payable  out of the revenues of any facility acquired by the commission.  Bonds  may  be  issued partly to refund bonds and other obligations then  outstanding, and partly for any other purpose  of  the  commission.  All  provisions  of  this  compact  applicable  to  the issuance of bonds are  applicable to refunding bonds and to  the  issuance,  sale  or  exchange  thereof.   12.5 Bonds; authorization generally.    Bonds  and other indebtedness of the commission shall be authorized by  resolution of the commission. The  validity  of  the  authorization  and  issuance  of any bonds by the commission shall not be dependent upon nor  affected in any way by: (i) the disposition  of  bond  proceeds  by  the  commission  or  by  contract, commitment or action taken with respect to  such proceeds; or (ii) the failure to complete any part of  the  project  for  which  bonds  are authorized to be issued. The commission may issue  bonds in one or more series and may provide for one or more consolidated  bond  issues,  in  such  principal  amounts  and  with  such  terms  and  provisions  as  the  commission  may  deem  necessary.  The bonds may be  secured by a pledge of all or any part of  the  property,  revenues  and  franchises  under  its control. Bonds may be issued by the commission in  such amount, with such maturities and in such denominations and form  or  forms,  whether coupon or registered, as to both principal and interest,  as may be determined by the commission. The commission may  provide  for  redemption of bonds prior to maturity on such notice and at such time or  times  and  with  such redemption provisions, including premiums, as the  commission may determine.   12.6 Bonds; resolutions and indentures generally.    The commission may determine and enter into indentures  providing  for  the   principal  amount,  date  or  dates,  maturities,  interest  rate,  denominations,  form,  registration,  transfer,  interchange  and  other  provisions  of  the  bonds and coupons and the terms and conditions upon  which the same shall be executed, issued, secured, sold, paid, redeemed,  funded and refunded. The resolution of the  commission  authorizing  any  bond or any indenture so authorized under which the bonds are issued may  include   all  such  covenants  and  other  provisions  other  than  any  restriction on the regulatory powers vested in the  commission  by  this  compact as the commission may deem necessary or desirable for the issue,  payment,  security,  protection  or  marketing  of  the bonds, including  without limitation covenants and other provisions as  to  the  rates  or  amounts  of  fees, rents and other charges to be charged or made for use  of the facilities; the use, pledge, custody, securing,  application  and  disposition  of  such revenues, of the proceeds of the bonds, and of any  other moneys of the commission; the operation, maintenance,  repair  and  reconstruction  of  the facilities and the amounts which may be expended  therefor; the sale, lease or other disposition of  the  facilities;  the  insuring  of  the  facilities and of the revenues derived therefrom; the  construction or other acquisition of other facilities; the  issuance  of  additional  bonds  or  other indebtedness; the rights of the bondholders  and of any trustee for the bondholders upon default by the commission or  otherwise; and the modification of the provisions of the  indenture  and  of  the  bonds. Reference on the face of the bonds to such resolution or  indenture by its date of adoption or  the  apparent  date  on  the  face  thereof  is  sufficient to incorporate all of the provisions thereof and  of this compact into  the  body  of  the  bonds  and  their  appurtenant  coupons.  Each  taker  and  subsequent  holder  of the bonds or coupons,whether the coupons are attached to or  detached  from  the  bonds,  has  recourse  to  all of the provisions of the indenture and of this compact  and is bound thereby.   12.7 Maximum maturity.    No  bond  by  its terms shall mature in more than fifty years from its  own date and in the event any authorized issue is divided  into  two  or  more  series  or  divisions, the maximum maturity date hereby authorized  shall be calculated from the date on the face of each  bond  separately,  irrespective  of the fact that different dates may be prescribed for the  bonds of each separate series or division of any authorized issue.   12.8 Tax exemption.    All bonds issued by  the  commission  under  the  provisions  of  this  compact  and  the interest thereof shall at all times be free and exempt  from all taxation by or under authority of any of the signatory parties,  except for transfer, inheritance and estate taxes.   12.9 Interest.    Bonds shall bear interest at a  rate  determined  by  the  commission,  payable annually or semi-annually.   12.10 Place of payment.    The  commission  may  provide  for  the  payment  of the principal and  interest of bonds at any place or places within or without the signatory  states, and in any specified lawful  coin  or  currency  of  the  United  States of America.   12.11 Execution.    The  commission  may  provide  for the execution and authentication of  bonds by the manual, lithographed  or  printed  facsimile  signature  of  officers  of  the  commission,  and  by  additional  authentication by a  trustee or fiscal agent appointed by  the  commission.  If  any  of  the  officers whose signatures or counter signatures appear upon the bonds or  coupons  cease  to  be  officers  before  the  delivery  of the bonds or  coupons, their signatures or counter signatures are  nevertheless  valid  and  of  the  same  force  and effect as if the officers had remained in  office until the delivery of the bonds and coupons.   12.12 Holding own bonds.    The commission shall have power out of any funds available therefor to  purchase its bonds and may hold, cancel or resell such bonds.   12.13 Sale.    The commission may fix terms and conditions  for  the  sale  or  other  disposition  of  any  authorized issue of bonds. The commission may sell  bonds at less than their par or face value but no issue of bonds may  be  sold  at  an aggregate price below the par or face value thereof if such  sale would result in a net interest cost to  the  commission  calculated  upon the entire issue so sold of more than six percent per annum payable  semi-annually,  according  to  standard tables of bond values. All bonds  issued and sold for cash pursuant to this act shall be  sold  on  sealed  proposals  to  the  highest  bidder.  Prior to such sale, the commission  shall advertise for bids by publication of a notice  of  sale  not  less  than ten days prior to the date of sale, at least once in a newspaper of  general  circulation  printed  and  published  in New York City carrying  municipal bond notices and devoted  primarily  to  financial  news.  The  commission may reject any and all bids submitted and may thereafter sellthe  bonds  so  advertised  for  sale at private sale to any financially  responsible bidder under such terms and  conditions  as  it  deems  most  advantageous  to the public interest, but the bonds shall not be sold at  a  net  interest  cost  calculated  upon the entire issue so advertised,  greater than the lowest  bid  which  was  rejected.  In  the  event  the  commission  desires  to  issue  its  bonds  in  exchange for an existing  facility or portion thereof, or in exchange for  bonds  secured  by  the  revenues  of  an  existing  facility, it may exchange such bonds for the  existing facility or portion thereof or for the bonds so  secured,  plus  an additional amount of cash, without advertising such bonds for sale.   12.14 Negotiability.    All  bonds  issued under the provisions of this compact are negotiable  instruments, except when registered in the name of a registered owner.   12.15 Legal investments.    Bonds of the commission shall be legal investments for savings  banks,  fiduciaries and public funds in each of the signatory states.   12.16 Validation proceedings.    Prior  to  the  issuance  of any bonds, the commission may institute a  special proceeding to determine the legality of proceedings to issue the  bonds and their validity under the laws of any of the signatory parties.  Such proceedings shall be instituted  and  prosecuted  in  rem  and  the  judgment  rendered  therein  shall  be  conclusive  against  all persons  whomsoever and against each of the signatory parties.   12.17 Recording.    No indenture need be recorded or filed in  any  public  office,  other  than  the  office  of the commission. The pledge of revenues provided in  any indenture shall  take  effect  forthwith  as  provided  therein  and  irrespective  of  the date of receipt of such revenues by the commission  or the indenture trustee. Such pledge shall be effective as provided  in  the   indenture  without  physical  delivery  of  the  revenues  to  the  commission or to the indenture trustee.   12.18 Pledged revenues.    Bond redemption and interest payments shall, to the extent provided in  the resolution or indenture, constitute a first,  direct  and  exclusive  charge  and  lien  on all such rates, rents, tolls, fees and charges and  other revenues and interest thereon received from the use and  operation  of  the  facility,  and on any sinking or other funds created therefrom.  All such rates, rents, tolls, fees, charges and other revenues, together  with interest thereon, shall constitute a trust fund  for  the  security  and  payment  of  such bonds and except as and to the extent provided in  the indenture with respect to the  payment  therefrom  of  expenses  for  other   purposes   including   administration,  operation,  maintenance,  improvements or extensions of the facilities or other purposes shall not  be used or pledged for any other purpose so long as such bonds,  or  any  of them, are outstanding and unpaid.   12.19 Remedies.    The holder of any bond may for the equal benefit and protection of all  holders   of   bonds  similarly  situated:  (a)  by  mandamus  or  other  appropriate proceedings require and compel the performance of any of the  duties imposed upon the commission  or  assumed  by  it,  its  officers,  agents or employees under the provisions of any indenture, in connection  with  the  acquisition,  construction,  operation,  maintenance, repair,reconstruction or insurance of the facilities, or in connection with the  collection, deposit, investment, application  and  disbursement  of  the  rates,  rents,  tolls, fees, charges and other revenues derived from the  operation  and use of the facilities, or in connection with the deposit,  investment and disbursement of the proceeds received from  the  sale  of  bonds;  or (b) by action or suit in a court of competent jurisdiction of  any signatory party require 	
	











































		
		
	

	
	
	

			

			
		

		

State Codes and Statutes

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > New-york > Env > Article-21 > Title-7 > 21-0701

§ 21-0701. Delaware river basin compact.    The  Delaware  river  basin  compact as first entered into pursuant to  chapter 148 of the laws of 1961, as renumbered by  chapter  801  of  the  laws  of  1962,  and  as  amended by chapter 262 of the laws of 1970, is  hereby continued as follows:    The Delaware river basin compact is hereby entered  into  and  enacted  into  law,  subject to the execution by the Governor as provided in said  compact and in accordance with its terms. The compact is as follows:    WHEREAS  the  signatory  parties  recognize  the  water  and   related  resources  of  the  Delaware basin as regional assets vested with local,  state  and  national  interests,   for   which   they   have   a   joint  responsibility; and    WHEREAS  the  conservation,  utilization,  development, management and  control of the water and related resources of the Delaware  River  Basin  under  a  comprehensive  multi-purpose  plan  will  bring  the  greatest  benefits and produce the most efficient service in the  public  welfare;  and    WHEREAS  such a comprehensive plan administered by a basin-wide agency  will  provide  effective  flood  damage  reduction;   conservation   and  development of ground and surface water supply for municipal, industrial  and   agricultural  uses;  development  of  recreational  facilities  in  relation to reservoirs, lakes and streams; propagation of fish and game;  promotion of related forestry, soil conservation and watershed projects;  protection  and  aid  to  fisheries  dependent  upon  water   resources;  development of hydro-electric power potentialities; improved navigation;  control  of  the movement of salt water; abatement and control of stream  pollution; and regulation of stream flows toward the attainment of these  goals; and    WHEREAS decisions of the United States Supreme Court relating  to  the  waters  of the basin have confirmed the interstate regional character of  the water resources of the Delaware River Basin, and the  United  States  Corps  of  Engineers  has  in a prior report on the Delaware River Basin  (House Document 179, 73d Cong., 2nd  Sess.)  officially  recognized  the  need  for  an  interstate  agency and the economies that can result from  unified development and control of the water resources of the basin; and    WHEREAS the water resources of the basin are presently subject to  the  duplicating,  overlapping  and  uncoordinated  administration of some 43  state agencies, 14 interstate agencies and  19  federal  agencies  which  exercise  a multiplicity of powers and duties resulting in a splintering  of authority and responsibilities; and    WHEREAS the joint advisory body known as the Interstate Commission  on  the   Delaware   River   Basin  (INCODEL),  created  by  the  respective  commissions or committee on Interstate  Cooperation  of  the  States  of  Delaware, New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania, has on the basis of its  extensive  investigations,  surveys  and studies concluded that regional  development of the Delaware  River  Basin  is  feasible,  advisable  and  urgently  needed;  and  has  recommended that an interstate compact with  federal participation be consummated to this end; and    WHEREAS the Congress of the United States and the executive branch  of  the  government  have  recognized  the national interest in the Delaware  River Basin by authorizing and directing the Corps  of  Engineers,  U.S.  Department of the Army, to make a comprehensive survey and report on the  water  and  related resources of the Delaware River Basin, enlisting the  technical aid and planning participation  of  many  federal,  state  and  municipal  agencies  dealing  with  the  waters  of  the  basin,  and in  particular the federal departments  of  Agriculture,  Commerce,  Health,  Education and Welfare, Interior, and Federal Power Commission; andWHEREAS  some  22,000,000  people of the United States at present live  and work in the region of the Delaware River Basin and its environs, and  the government, employment, industry and  economic  development  of  the  entire  region  and  the  health,  safety  and  general  welfare  of its  population  are  and  will  continue  to be vitally affected by the use,  conservation, management and control of the water and related  resources  of the Delaware River Basin; and    WHEREAS demands upon the waters and related resources of the basin are  expected  to  mount  rapidly  because of the anticipated increase in the  population of the region projected  to  reach  30,000,000  by  1980  and  40,000,000   by  2010,  and  because  of  the  anticipated  increase  in  industrial growth projected to double by 1980; and    WHEREAS water resources planning and development is technical, complex  and expensive, and has often required fifteen to twenty years  from  the  conception to the completion of a large dam and reservoir; and    WHEREAS the public interest requires that facilities must be ready and  operative  when needed, to avoid the catastrophe of unexpected floods or  prolonged drought, and for other purposes; and    WHEREAS the Delaware River Basin Advisory Committee, a temporary  body  constituted  by the governors of the four basin states and the mayors of  the cities of New York and Philadelphia, has  prepared  a  draft  of  an  interstate-federal  compact  for the creation of a basin agency, and the  signatory parties desire to effectuate the purposes thereof;    Now therefore the states of Delaware, New Jersey and New York and  the  Commonwealth  of  Pennsylvania,  and the United States of America hereby  solemnly covenant and agree with  each  other,  upon  the  enactment  of  concurrent  legislation  by the Congress of the United States and by the  respective state legislatures, having the same effect as  this  Part  as  follows:         ARTICLE 1--SHORT TITLE, DEFINITIONS, PURPOSE AND LIMITATIONS   Section 1.1 Short title.    This  act  shall be known and may be cited as the Delaware River Basin  Compact.   1.2. Definitions.    For  the  purposes  of  this  compact,  and  of  any  supplemental  or  concurring  legislation  enacted  pursuant  thereto,  except  as  may be  otherwise required by the context:    (a) "Basin" shall mean the area of drainage into  the  Delaware  River  and its tributaries, including Delaware Bay;    (b)  "Commission"  shall  mean  the  Delaware  River  Basin Commission  created and constituted by this compact;    (c) "Compact" shall mean the compact as contained title 7  of  article  21 of the Environmental Conservation Law.    (d)  "Cost"  shall  mean direct and indirect expenditures, commitment,  and net induced adverse effects, whether or not compensated for, used or  incurred   in   connection   with   the   establishment,    acquisition,  construction, maintenance and operation of a project;    (e)  "Facility"  shall  mean  any real or personal property, within or  without the basin, and improvements thereof or thereon, and any and  all  rights  of  way,  water, water rights, plants, structures, machinery and  equipment,  acquired,  constructed,  operated  or  maintained  for   the  beneficial  use  of  water  resources  or  related  land uses including,  without limiting the generality of the foregoing, any and all things and  appurtenances  necessary,  useful  or  convenient   for   the   control,  collection,   storage,   withdrawal,   diversion,   release,  treatment,transmission, sale or exchange of water; or for navigation  thereon,  or  the  development  and  use of hydroelectric energy and power, and public  recreational facilities; or the propagation of fish and wildlife; or  to  conserve and protect the water resources of the basin or any existing or  future  water  supply  source, or to facilitate any other uses of any of  them;    (f) "Federal government" shall  mean  the  government  of  the  United  States  of  America,  and  any appropriate branch, department, bureau or  division thereof, as the case may be;    (g) "Project" shall mean  any  work,  service  or  activity  which  is  separately  planned,  financed,  or identified by the commission, or any  separate facility undertaken or to  be  undertaken  within  a  specified  area,   for  the  conservation,  utilization,  control,  development  or  management of water resources which  can  be  established  and  utilized  independently  or  as  an  addition  to an existing facility, and can be  considered as a separate entity for purposes of evaluation;    (h) "Signatory party" shall mean a state or commonwealth party to this  compact, and the federal government;    (i)  "Water  resources"  shall  include  water  and  related   natural  resources  in, on, under, or above the ground, including related uses of  land, which are subject to beneficial use, ownership or control.   1.3 Purpose and findings.    The legislative bodies of the respective signatory parties hereby find  and declare:    (a) The water resources of the basin are affected with a local, state,  regional  and  national  interest  and  their  planning,   conservation,  utilization,  development,  management  and  control,  under appropriate  arrangements for intergovernmental cooperation, are public  purposes  of  the respective signatory parties.    (b) The water resources of the basin are subject to the soverign right  and  responsibility  of  the signatory parties, and it is the purpose of  this compact  to  provide  for  a  joint  exercise  of  such  powers  of  sovereignty in the common interests of the people of the region.    (c)  The  water  resources of the basin are functionally interrelated,  and  the  uses  of  these  resources  are   interdependent.   A   single  administrative   agency   is   therefore  essential  for  effective  and  economical  direction,  supervision  and  coordination  of  efforts  and  programs  of  federal,  state  and  local  governments  and  of  private  enterprise.    (d) The water resources of  the  Delaware  River  Basin,  if  properly  planned and utilized, are ample to meet all presently projected demands,  including  existing  and  added  diversions  in  future  years; and ever  increasing economies and efficiencies in the  use  and  reuse  of  water  resources  can  be  brought about by comprehensive planning, programming  and management.    (e) In general, the purposes of this compact are to promote interstate  comity; to remove causes of present  and  future  controversy;  to  make  secure  and protect present developments within the states; to encourage  and provide for the planning,  conservation,  utilization,  development,  management  and  control of the water resources of the basin; to provide  for cooperative planning  and  action  by  the  signatory  parties  with  respect to such water resources; and to apply the principle of equal and  uniform  treatment  to all water users who are similarly situated and to  all users of related facilities, without regard to established political  boundaries.   1.4 Powers of Congress; withdrawal.Nothing  in  this  compact  shall  be  construed  to  relinquish   the  functions,  powers  or  duties of the Congress of the United States with  respect to the control of any navigable waters  within  the  basin,  nor  shall  any  provision  hereof  be  construed in derogation of any of the  constitutional  powers  of  the  Congress to regulate commerce among the  states and with foreign nations. The power and right of the Congress  to  withdraw  the federal government as a party to this compact or to revise  or modify the terms, conditions and provisions under which it may remain  a party by amendment, repeal or  modification  of  any  federal  statute  applicable thereto is recognized by the signatory parties.   1.5 Existing agencies; construction.    It is the purpose of the signatory parties to preserve and utilize the  functions,  powers  and  duties  of  existing  offices  and  agencies of  government to the extent not inconsistent with  this  compact,  and  the  commission is authorized and directed to utilize and employ such offices  and  agencies  for  the purpose of this compact to the fullest extent it  finds feasible and advantageous.   1.6 Duration of compact.    (a) The duration of this compact shall be for an initial period of 100  years from its effective date, and it shall be continued for  additional  periods of 100 years if not later than 20 years nor sooner than 25 years  prior  to the termination of the initial period or any succeeding period  none of the signatory states, by authority of an act of its legislature,  notifies the commission of intention to terminate the compact at the end  of the then current 100 year period.    (b) In the event that this compact should be terminated  by  operation  of  paragraph  (a)  above, the commission shall be dissolved, its assets  and liabilities transferred, and its corporate affairs wound up, in such  manner as may be provided by act of the Congress.                       ARTICLE 2--ORGANIZATION AND AREA   Section 2.1 Commission created.    The Delaware River Basin  Commission  is  hereby  created  as  a  body  politic and corporate, with succession for the duration of this compact,  as  an  agency  and instrumentality of the governments of the respective  signatory parties.   2.2 Commission membership.    The commission shall consist of the Governors of the signatory states,  ex officio, and one commissioner to be appointed by the President of the  United States to serve during the term of office of the President.   2.3 Alternates.    Each member of the commission shall appoint an alternate to act in his  place  and  stead,  with  authority  to  attend  all  meetings  of   the  commission,  and with power to vote in the absence of the member. Unless  otherwise provided by law  of  the  signatory  party  for  which  he  is  appointed,  each  alternate  shall  serve  during the term of the member  appointing him, subject to removal at the pleasure of the member. In the  event of a vacancy in the office of alternate, it shall be filled in the  same manner as an original appointment for the unexpired term only.   2.4 Compensation.Members  of  the  commission  and  alternates  shall   serve   without  compensation  but  may  be reimbursed for necessary expenses incurred in  and incident to the performance of their duties.   2.5 Voting power.    Each  member  shall  be  entitled to one vote on all matters which may  come before the commission. No action of the commission shall  be  taken  at  any  meeting unless a majority of the membership shall vote in favor  thereof.   2.6 Organization and procedure.    The commission shall provide for its own organization  and  procedure,  and  shall  adopt  rules  and  regulations  governing  its  meetings and  transactions. It shall organize annually by the election of  a  chairman  and  vice-chairman from among its members. It shall provide by its rules  for the appointment by each member in his discretion of  an  advisor  to  serve   without  compensation,  who  may  attend  all  meetings  of  the  commission and its committees.   2.7 Jurisdiction of the commission.    The commission shall  have,  exercise  and  discharge  its  functions,  powers  and duties within the limits of the basin, except that it may in  its discretion act  outside  the  basin  whenever  such  action  may  be  necessary  or  convenient  to effectuate its powers or duties within the  basin, or to sell or dispose of  water,  hydroelectric  power  or  other  water  resources  within  or  without  the  basin.  The commission shall  exercise such power outside the basin only upon the consent of the state  in which it proposes to act.                ARTICLE 3--POWERS AND DUTIES OF THE COMMISSION   Section 3.1 Purpose and policy.    The commission  shall  develop  and  effectuate  plans,  policies  and  projects  relating  to  the water resources of the basin. It shall adopt  and promote uniform and coordinated  policies  for  water  conservation,  control,  use  and  management  in  the  basin.  It  shall encourage the  planning,  development  and  financing  of  water   resources   projects  according to such plans and policies.   3.2 Comprehensive plan, program and budgets.    The  commission  shall, in accordance with Article 13 of this compact,  formulate and adopt:    (a) A comprehensive plan, after  consultation  with  water  users  and  interested  public  bodies, for the immediate and long range development  and uses of the water resources of the basin;    (b) A water resources program,  based  upon  the  comprehensive  plan,  which  shall  include  a  systematic  presentation  of  the quantity and  quality of water resources needs of the  area  to  be  served  for  such  reasonably  foreseeable period as the commission may determine, balanced  by existing and  proposed  projects  required  to  satisfy  such  needs,  including  all public and private projects affecting the basin, together  with a separate statement of the projects proposed to be  undertaken  by  the commission during such period; and    (c)  An  annual  current  expense budget, and an annual capital budget  consistent with the water resources program  covering  the  commission's  projects and facilities for the budget period.   3.3 Allocations, diversions and releases.The commission shall have the power from time to time as need appears,  in  accordance with the doctrine of equitable apportionment, to allocate  the waters of the basin to  and  among  the  states  signatory  to  this  compact and to and among their respective political subdivisions, and to  impose conditions, obligations and release requirements related thereto,  subject to the following limitations:    (a)  The  commission,  without the unanimous consent of the parties to  the United States Supreme Court decree in New Jersey v.  New  York,  347  U.S.    995  (1954),  shall  not impair, diminish or otherwise adversely  affect  the  diversions,  compensating  releases,  rights,   conditions,  obligations,  and  provisions for the administration thereof as provided  in said decree; provided, however,  that  after  consultation  with  the  river  master  under  said  decree the commission may find and declare a  state of emergency resulting from a drought or catastrophe  and  it  may  thereupon  by  unanimous  consent of its members authorize and direct an  increase or  decrease  in  any  allocation  or  diversion  permitted  or  releases  required  by  the  decree, in such manner and for such limited  time as may be necessary to meet such an emergency condition.    (b) No allocation of waters hereafter made pursuant  to  this  section  shall  constitute  a  prior  appropriation of the waters of the basin or  confer any superiority of right in respect to the use of  those  waters,  nor  shall  any  such action be deemed to constitute an apportionment of  the waters of the basin among the parties  hereto;  provided  that  this  paragraph  shall  not  be  deemed  to limit or restrict the power of the  commission to enter into covenants with respect to water supply, with  a  duration  not  exceeding  the  life  of  this  compact,  as  it may deem  necessary for the benefit or development of the water resources  of  the  basin.    (c)  Any  proper  party  deeming  itself  aggrieved  by  action of the  commission with respect to an  out-of-basin  diversion  or  compensating  releases  in  connection therewith, notwithstanding the powers delegated  to the commission by this compact may invoke the  original  jurisdiction  of the United States Supreme Court within one year after such action for  an  adjudication  and determination thereof de novo. Any other action of  the commission pursuant to this section shall  be  subject  to  judicial  review in any court of competent jurisdiction.   3.4 Supreme court decree; waivers.    Each   of   the   signatory  states  and  their  respective  political  subdivisions, in consideration of like action  by  the  others,  and  in  recognition  of  reciprocal benefits, hereby waives and relinquishes for  the duration of this compact any right, privilege or power it  may  have  to  apply  for any modification of the terms of the decree of the United  States Supreme Court in New Jersey v. New  York,  347  U.S.  995  (1954)  which  would  increase or decrease the diversions authorized or increase  or decrease the releases required thereunder, except that  a  proceeding  to modify such decree to increase diversions or compensating releases in  connection  with such increased diversions may be prosecuted by a proper  party to effectuate rights, powers, duties and obligations under Section  3.3 of this compact, and except as may be  required  to  effectuate  the  provisions of paragraphs III B 3 and V B of said decree.   3.5 Supreme court decree; specific limitations on commission.    Except  as  specifically  provided  in  Sections  3.3  and 3.4 of this  article, nothing in this compact  shall  be  construed  in  any  way  to  impair,  diminish  or  otherwise  adversely  affect  the rights, powers,  privileges, conditions and obligations contained in the  decree  of  the  United  States  Supreme  Court  in  New Jersey v. New York, 347 U.S. 995(1954). To this end, and  without  limitation  thereto,  the  commission  shall not:    (a)  Acquire, construct or operate any project or facility or make any  order or take any action  which  would  impede  or  interfere  with  the  rights,  powers, privileges, conditions or obligations contained in said  decree;    (b) Impose or collect any fee, charge or assessment  with  respect  to  diversions of waters of the basin permitted by said decree;    (c)  Exercise any jurisdiction, except upon consent of all the parties  to said decree, over the planning, design,  construction,  operation  or  control of any projects, structures or facilities constructed or used in  connection  with  withdrawals,  diversions and releases of waters of the  basin authorized by said decree or of  the  withdrawals,  diversions  or  releases to be made thereunder; or    (d)  Serve  as  river master under said decree, except upon consent of  all the parties thereto.   3.6 General powers.    The commission may:    (a) Plan, design,  acquire,  construct,  reconstruct,  complete,  own,  improve,  extend,  develop,  operate  and maintain any and all projects,  facilities, properties,  activities  and  services,  determined  by  the  commission  to  be  necessary,  convenient or useful for the purposes of  this compact;    (b) Establish standards of  planning,  design  and  operation  of  all  projects  and  facilities in the basin which affect its water resources,  including without limitation thereto water and waste  treatment  plants,  stream   and   lake  recreational  facilities,  trunk  mains  for  water  distribution, local flood protection works, small  watershed  management  programs, and ground water recharging operations;    (c)  Conduct  and sponsor research on water resources, their planning,  use, conservation, management, development, control and protection,  and  the  capacity,  adaptability  and best utility of each facility thereof,  and collect, compile, correlate, analyze, report and interpret  data  on  water  resources  and  uses  in  the basin, including without limitation  thereto the relation of  water  to  other  resources,  industrial  water  technology,  ground  water  movement,  relation  between water price and  water demand, and general hydrological conditions;    (d) Compile and coordinate systematic stream stage  and  ground  water  level  forecasting  data,  and  publicize  such  information when and as  needed for water uses,  flood  warning,  quality  maintenance  or  other  purposes;    (e)  Conduct  such  special  ground  water  investigations, tests, and  operations and compile such data relating thereto as may be required  to  formulate and administer the comprehensive plan;    (f)  Prepare,  publish  and  disseminate  information and reports with  respect to the water problems of the basin and for the  presentation  of  the  needs,  resources  and  policies  of  the  basin  to  executive and  legislative branches of the signatory parties;    (g) Negotiate for such loans, grants, services or other aids as may be  lawfully available from public or private sources to finance  or  assist  in  effectuating any of the purposes of this compact; and to receive and  accept such aid upon such terms and  conditions,  and  subject  to  such  provisions  for  repayment as may be required by federal or state law or  as the commission may deem necessary or desirable;    (h) Exercise such other and different powers as may be delegated to it  by this compact or otherwise pursuant to law, and have and exercise  allpowers  necessary or convenient to carry out its express powers or which  may be reasonably implied therefrom.   3.7 Rates and charges.    The  commission  may from time to time after public notice and hearing  fix,  alter  and  revise  rates,  rentals,   charges   and   tolls   and  classifications  thereof,  for the use of facilities which it may own or  operate  and  for  products  and  services  rendered  thereby,   without  regulation  or  control  by  any  department,  office  or  agency of any  signatory party.   3.8 Referral and review.    No project having a substantial effect on the water resources  of  the  basin  shall  hereafter  be  undertaken  by  any  person, corporation or  governmental authority unless it shall have been first submitted to  and  approved  by  the  commission, subject to the provisions of Sections 3.3  and 3.5. The commission shall approve a project whenever  it  finds  and  determines  that such project would not substantially impair or conflict  with the comprehensive plan and may modify and approve as  modified,  or  may  disapprove  any  such project whenever it finds and determines that  the project would substantially impair or conflict with such  plan.  The  commission  shall provide by regulation for the procedure of submission,  review  and  consideration  of  projects,  and  for  its  determinations  pursuant  to this section. Any determination of the commission hereunder  shall  be  subject  to  judicial  review  in  any  court  of   competent  jurisdiction.   3.9 Coordination and cooperation.    The   commission  shall  promote  and  aid  the  coordination  of  the  activities  and  programs  of  federal,  state,  municipal  and  private  agencies  concerned with water resources administration in the basin. To  this end, but without limitation thereto, the commission may:    (a)  Advise,  consult,  contract,  financially  assist,  or  otherwise  cooperate with any and all such agencies;    (b) Employ any other agency or instrumentality of any of the signatory  parties  or  of  any  political  subdivision  thereof,  in  the  design,  construction,  operation  and  maintenance  of   structures,   and   the  installation  and  management of river control systems, or for any other  purpose;    (c) Develop and adopt plans and specifications  for  particular  water  resources  projects  and  facilities which so far as consistent with the  comprehensive plan incorporate any separate plans of  other  public  and  private   organizations   operating   in   the  basin,  and  permit  the  decentralized administration thereof;    (d) Qualify as a  sponsoring  agency  under  any  federal  legislation  heretofore or hereafter enacted to provide financial or other assistance  for  the planning, conservation, utilization, development, management or  control of water resources.   3.10 Advisory committees.    The commission may constitute and empower advisory  committees,  which  may be comprised of representatives of the public and of federal, state,  county  and municipal governments, water resources agencies, water-using  industries, water-interest groups, labor and agriculture.                            ARTICLE 4--WATER SUPPLY   Section 4.1 Generally.The commission shall have power to develop, implement  and  effectuate  plans  and projects for the use of the waters of the basin for domestic,  municipal, agricultural  and  industrial  water  supply.  To  this  end,  without  limitation  thereto,  it  may  provide for, construct, acquire,  operate   and   maintain  dams,  reservoirs  and  other  facilities  for  utilization of surface and  ground  water  resources,  and  all  related  structures, appurtenances and equipment on the river and its tributaries  and at such off-river sites as it may find appropriate, and may regulate  and control the use thereof.   4.2 Storage and release of waters.    (a)  The  commission  shall have power to acquire, operate and control  projects and facilities for the storage and release of waters,  for  the  regulation  of  flows  and  supplies of surface and ground waters of the  basin, for the protection of  public  health,  stream  quality  control,  economic development, improvement of fisheries, recreation, dilution and  abatement  of  pollution,  the  prevention  of  undue salinity and other  purposes.    (b) No signatory party shall permit any augmentation  of  flow  to  be  diminished  by the diversion of any water of the basin during any period  in which waters are being released from storage under the  direction  of  the  commission for the purpose of augmenting such flow, except in cases  where such diversion is duly authorized  by  this  compact,  or  by  the  commission  pursuant  thereto,  or by the judgment, order or decree of a  court of competent jurisdiction.   4.3 Assessable improvements.    The commission may undertake to provide stream regulation in the  main  stream  or  any tributary in the basin and may assess on an annual basis  or otherwise the cost thereof upon water users or any classification  of  them  specially  benefited thereby to a measurable extent, provided that  no such assessment shall exceed the actual benefit to  any  water  user.  Any  such  assessment  shall  follow the procedure prescribed by law for  local improvement assessments and shall be subject to judicial review in  any court of competent jurisdiction.   4.4 Coordination.    Prior to entering upon the execution of any project authorized by this  article, the commission shall review and consider all  existing  rights,  plans   and   programs   of   the  signatory  parties,  their  political  subdivisions, private parties, and water users which  are  pertinent  to  such project, and shall hold a public hearing on each proposed project.   4.5 Additional powers.    In  connection  with  any  project  authorized  by  this  article, the  commission shall have power to provide storage, treatment,  pumping  and  transmission  facilities,  but  nothing  herein  shall  be  construed to  authorize the commission to  engage  in  the  business  of  distributing  water.                         ARTICLE 5--POLLUTION CONTROL   Section 5.1 General powers.    The  commission may undertake investigations and surveys, and acquire,  construct, operate and  maintain  projects  and  facilities  to  control  potential  pollution and abate or dilute existing pollution of the water  resources of the basin. It may  invoke  as  complainant  the  power  andjurisdiction  of  water  pollution  abatement  agencies of the signatory  parties.   5.2 Policy and standards.    The commission may assume jurisdiction to control future pollution and  abate  existing  pollution  in  the  waters  of  the  basin, whenever it  determines after investigation and public hearing upon due  notice  that  the  effectuation of the comprehensive plan so requires. The standard of  such control shall be that pollution by sewage or  industrial  or  other  waste  originating within a signatory state shall not injuriously affect  waters of the basin as  contemplated  by  the  comprehensive  plan.  The  commission,  after  such  public  hearing may classify the waters of the  basin and establish standards of  treatment  of  sewage,  industrial  or  other  waste,  according  to  such  classes  including allowance for the  variable factors of surface and ground  waters,  such  as  size  of  the  stream,  flow,  movement,  location,  character,  self-purification, and  usage of the waters  affected.  After  such  investigation,  notice  and  hearing  the commission may adopt and from time to time amend and repeal  rules, regulations and standards to control such  future  pollution  and  abate  existing  pollution,  and  to  require  such treatment of sewage,  industrial or other waste within a time reasonable for the  construction  of  the  necessary works as may be required to protect the public health  or to preserve the waters of the basin for uses in accordance  with  the  comprehensive plan.   5.3 Cooperative legislation and administration.    Each  of  the  signatory  parties covenants and agrees to prohibit and  control  pollution  of  the  waters  of  the  basin  according  to   the  requirements  of this compact and to cooperate faithfully in the control  of future pollution in and abatement  of  existing  pollution  from  the  rivers, streams, and waters in the basin which flow through, under, into  or border upon any of such signatory states, and in order to effect such  object,  agrees  to  enact any necessary legislation to enable each such  party to place and maintain the waters of said basin in  a  satisfactory  condition,  available  for  safe  and  satisfactory  use  as  public and  industrial water  supplies  after  reasonable  treatment,  suitable  for  recreational  usage, capable of maintaining fish and other aquatic life,  free from unsightly or malodorous nuisances due to  floating  solids  or  sludge  deposits  and adaptable to such other uses as may be provided by  the comprehensive plan.   5.4 Enforcement.    The commission may, after investigation and hearing, issue an order or  orders upon any person  or  public  or  private  corporation,  or  other  entity, to cease the discharge of sewage, industrial or other waste into  waters of the basin which it determines to be in violation of such rules  and  regulations  as  it  shall  have  adopted  for  the  prevention and  abatement of pollution. Any such order or orders may prescribe the date,  including a reasonable time for the construction of any necessary works,  on  or  before  which  such  discharge  shall  be  wholly  or  partially  discontinued,  modified  or  treated,  or  otherwise  conformed  to  the  requirements  of  such  rules  and  regulations.  Such  order  shall  be  reviewable  in  any  court  of competent jurisdiction. The courts of the  signatory parties shall have jurisdiction to enforce against any person,  public or private corporation, or other entity, any and  all  provisions  of this Article or of any such order. The commission may bring an action  in  its  own  name in any such court of competent jurisdiction to compel  compliance with any provision of this Article, or any rule or regulationissued pursuant thereto or of any such order, according to the  practice  and procedure of the court.   5.5 Further jurisdiction.    Nothing  in  this  compact  shall  be  construed  to repeal, modify or  qualify the authority of any signatory party to enact any legislation or  enforce any additional conditions and restrictions to lessen or  prevent  the pollution of waters within its jurisdiction.                          ARTICLE 6--FLOOD PROTECTION   Section 6.1 General powers.    The  commission  may  plan, design, construct and operate and maintain  projects and facilities, as it may deem necessary or desirable for flood  damage reduction. It shall have power to operate such facilities and  to  store  and  release waters on the Delaware River and its tributaries and  elsewhere within the basin, in such manner, at  such  times,  and  under  such  regulations  as  the commission may deem appropriate to meet flood  conditions as they may arise.   6.2 Flood plain zoning.    (a) The commission  shall  have  power  to  adopt,  amend  and  repeal  recommended  standards, in the manner provided by this section, relating  to the nature and extent of  the  uses  of  land  in  areas  subject  to  flooding  by  waters  of  the  Delaware  River and its tributaries. Such  standards shall not be deemed to impair or restrict  the  power  of  the  signatory  parties  or  their political subdivisions to adopt zoning and  other land use regulations not inconsistent therewith.    (b) The commission may study and determine the nature  and  extent  of  the  flood  plains  of  the Delaware River and its tributaries. Upon the  basis of such studies, it may establish encroachment lines and delineate  the areas subject to flood, including a  classification  of  lands  with  reference  to  relative risk of flood and the establishment of standards  for flood plain use which will safeguard the public health,  safety  and  property.  Prior  to the adoption of any standards delineating such area  or defining such use, the commission shall hold public hearings, in  the  manner  provided  by  Article  14, with respect to the substance of such  standards. At or before such  public  hearings  the  proposed  standards  shall  be  available,  and  all  interested  persons  shall  be given an  opportunity to be heard thereon at the hearing. Upon  the  adoption  and  promulgation of such standards, the commission may enter into agreements  to  provide technical and financial aid to any municipal corporation for  the administration and enforcement of any local land use  ordinances  or  regulations giving effect to such standards.   6.3 Flood lands acquisition.    The  commission  shall  have  power  to  acquire the fee or any lesser  interest in lands and improvements thereon within the area  of  a  flood  plain  for  the purpose of restricting the use of such property so as to  minimize the flood hazard, converting property to  uses  appropriate  to  flood  plain  conditions,  or  preventing unwarranted constrictions that  reduce the ability of the river channel to carry flood water.  Any  such  action  shall  be  in  accord with the standards adopted and promulgated  pursuant to Section 6.2.   6.4 Flood and stream stage warnings and posting.    The commission may cause lands particularly subject  to  flood  to  be  posted with flood hazard warnings, and may from time to time cause floodadvisory  notices  to  be  published  and  circulated  as conditions may  warrant.                        ARTICLE 7--WATERSHED MANAGEMENT   Section 7.1 Watersheds generally.    The  commission  shall promote sound practices of watershed management  in the basin, including projects and facilities  to  retard  runoff  and  waterflow and prevent soil erosion.   7.2 Soil conservation and forestry.    The commission may acquire, sponsor or operate facilities and projects  to  encourage  soil  conservation,  prevent  and control erosion, and to  promote land reclamation and sound forestry practices.   7.3 Fish and wildlife.    The commission may acquire, sponsor or operate projects and facilities  for the maintenance  and  improvement  of  fish  and  wildlife  habitats  related to the water resources of the basin.   7.4 Cooperative planning and operation.    (a)  The  commission  shall cooperate with the appropriate agencies of  the signatory parties and with other public and private agencies in  the  planning  and  effectuation  of  a coordinated program of facilities and  projects authorized by this Article.    (b) The commission shall not operate  any  such  project  or  facility  unless  it has first found and determined that no other suitable unit or  agency of government is available to operate the  same  upon  reasonable  conditions,  in  accordance  with  the  intent  and purpose expressed in  Section 1.5 of this compact.                             ARTICLE 8--RECREATION   Section 8.1 Development.    The commission shall provide for  the  development  of  water  related  public  sports  and  recreational  facilities. The commission on its own  account or in cooperation with a signatory party, political  subdivision  or any agency thereof, may provide for the construction, maintenance and  administration  of such facilities, subject to the provisions of Section  8.2 hereof.   8.2 Cooperative planning and operation.    (a) The commission shall cooperate with the  appropriate  agencies  of  the  signatory parties and with other public and private agencies in the  planning and effectuation of a coordinated  program  of  facilities  and  projects authorized by this article.    (b)  The  commission  shall  not  operate any such project or facility  unless it has first found and determined that no other suitable unit  or  agency  of  government  is available to operate the same upon reasonable  conditions, in accordance with  the  intent  and  purpose  expressed  in  Section 1.5 of this compact.   8.3 Operation and maintenance.    The commission, within limits prescribed by this article, shall:    (a) Encourage activities of other public agencies having water related  recreational interests and assist in the coordination thereof;    (b)  Recommend  standards  for  the  development and administration of  water related recreational facilities;(c) Provide for  the  administration,  operation  and  maintenance  of  recreational  facilities  owned  or controlled by the commission and for  the letting and supervision of private concessions  in  accordance  with  this article.   8.4 Concessions.    The  commission  shall  after  notice  and  public  hearing provide by  regulation for  the  award  of  contracts  for  private  concessions  in  connection  with  recreational  facilities,  including  any  renewal  or  extension  thereof,  upon   sealed   competitive   bids   after   public  advertisement therefor.                        ARTICLE 9--HYDROELECTRIC POWER   Section 9.1 Development.    The  waters of the Delaware River and its tributaries may be impounded  and used by or under authority of the commission for the  generation  of  hydroelectric  power  and  hydroelectric  energy, in accordance with the  comprehensive plan.   9.2 Power generation.    The commission may develop and operate, or authorize to  be  developed  and  operated,  dams  and  related  facilities and appurtenances for the  purpose of generating hydroelectric power and hydroelectric energy.   9.3 Transmission.    The  commission  may  provide  facilities  for  the  transmission   of  hydroelectric  power  and hydroelectric energy produced by it where such  facilities are not otherwise available upon reasonable  terms,  for  the  purpose  of  wholesale  marketing  of  power and nothing herein shall be  construed to authorize the commission  to  engage  in  the  business  of  direct sale to consumers.   9.4 Development contracts.    The  commission  may  after  public  notice  and  hearing  enter  into  contracts on reasonable terms, consideration and  duration  under  which  public  utilities or public agencies may develop hydroelectric power and  hydroelectric energy through the use of  dams,  related  facilities  and  appurtenances.   9.5 Rates and charges.    Rates  and charges fixed by the commission for power which is produced  by its facilities shall be reasonable, nondiscriminatory, and just.             ARTICLE 10--REGULATION OF WITHDRAWALS AND DIVERSIONS   Section 10.1 Power of regulation.    The commission may regulate and  control  withdrawals  and  diversions  from  surface waters and ground waters of the basin, as provided by this  article. The commission may enter into  agreements  with  the  signatory  parties  relating to the exercise of such power of regulation or control  and may delegate to any of them such powers of the commission as it  may  deem necessary or desirable.   10.2 Determination of protected areas.    The  commission  may  from  time to time after public hearing upon due  notice determine and delineate such areas within the basin  wherein  the  demands  upon supply made by water users have developed or threatened todevelop to such a degree as to create a water shortage or to  impair  or  conflict  with  the  requirements  or  effectuation of the comprehensive  plan, and any such areas may be designated  as  "protected  areas."  The  commission,  whenever it determines that such shortage no longer exists,  shall terminate the protected status of such area and shall give  public  notice of such termination.   10.3 Withdrawal permits.    In  any protected areas so determined and delineated, no person, firm,  corporation or other entity shall divert or withdraw water for domestic,  municipal, agricultural or industrial uses in excess of such  quantities  as  the  commission  may  prescribe  by  general  regulation, except (i)  pursuant to a permit granted under this article, or (ii) pursuant  to  a  permit  or  approval  heretofore  granted  under  the laws of any of the  signatory states.   10.4 Emergency.    In the event of a drought or other condition which may cause an actual  and immediate shortage of available water supply within  the  basin,  or  within  any  part  thereof,  the  commission  may, after public hearing,  determine and delineate the area of such shortage and  declare  a  water  supply  emergency  therein.  For  the  duration  of  such  emergency  as  determined by the commisssion no  person,  firm,  corporation  or  other  public or private entity shall divert or withdraw water for any purpose,  in  excess of such quantities as the commission may prescribe by general  regulation or authorize by special permit granted hereunder.   10.5 Standards.    Permits shall be granted, modified or denied as the case may be so  as  to avoid such depletion of the natural stream flows and ground waters in  the  protected area or in an emergency area as will adversely affect the  comprehensive plan or the just and equitable  interests  and  rights  of  other  lawful users of the same source, giving due regard to the need to  balance and reconcile alternative and conflicting uses in the  event  of  an actual or threatened shortage of water of the quality required.   10.6 Judicial review.    The  determinations  and  delineations  of  the commission pursuant to  Section 10.2  and  the  granting,  modification  or  denial  of  permits  pursuant  to  Section  10.3  through  10.5  shall be subject to judicial  review in any court of competent jurisdiction.   10.7 Maintenance of records.    Each state shall provide for the maintenance and preservation of  such  records  of  authorized diversions and withdrawals and the annual volume  thereof  as  the  commission   shall   prescribe.   Such   records   and  supplementary  reports  shall  be  furnished  to  the  commission at its  request.   10.8 Existing state systems.    Whenever the commission finds its necessary or desirable  to  exercise  the powers conferred by this article any diversion or withdrawal permits  authorized or issued under the laws of any of the signatory states shall  be  superseded  to  the  extent  of  any  conflict  with the control and  regulation exercised by the commission.                    ARTICLE 11--INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONSSection 11.1 Federal agencies and projects.    For  the  purposes of avoiding conflicts of jurisdiction and of giving  full effect to the commission as a  regional  agency  of  the  signatory  parties, the following rules shall govern federal projects affecting the  water  resources of the basin, subject in each case to the provisions of  Section 1.4 of this compact:    (a) The planning of all projects related to powers  delegated  to  the  commission  by this compact shall be undertaken in consultation with the  commission;    (b) No expenditure or commitment shall be made for or  on  account  of  the  construction,  acquisition  or operation of any project or facility  nor shall it be deemed authorized,  unless  it  shall  have  first  been  included by the commission in the comprehensive plan;    (c)  Each  federal agency otherwise authorized by law to plan, design,  construct, operate or maintain any project or facility  in  or  for  the  basin  shall  continue  to  have,  exercise and discharge such authority  except as specifically provided by this section.   11.2 State and local agencies and projects.    For the purpose of avoiding conflicts of jurisdiction  and  of  giving  full  effect  to  the  commission  as a regional agency of the signatory  parties, the following rules shall  govern  projects  of  the  signatory  states,  their  political subdivisions and public corporations affecting  water resources of the basin:    (a) The planning of all projects related to powers  delegated  to  the  commission  by this compact shall be undertaken in consultation with the  commission;    (b) No expenditure or commitment shall be made for or  on  account  of  the  construction,  acquisition  or operation of any project or facility  unless it shall have first  been  included  by  the  commission  in  the  comprehensive plan;    (c)  Each  state and local agency otherwise authorized by law to plan,  design, construct, operate or maintain any project or facility in or for  the basin shall continue to have, exercise and discharge such authority,  except as specifically provided by this section.   11.3 Reserved taxing powers of states.    Each of the signatory parties reserves the right to levy,  assess  and  collect  fees,  charges  and  taxes  on or measured by the withdrawal or  diversion of waters of the basin for use within the jurisdictions of the  respective signatory parties.   11.4 Project costs and evaluation standards.    The commission shall establish uniform standards  and  procedures  for  the  evaluation,  determination  of  benefits,  and  cost allocations of  projects affecting the basin,  and  for  the  determination  of  project  priorities,  pursuant  to the requirements of the comprehensive plan and  its water resources program. The commission shall develop equitable cost  sharing and reimbursement formulas for the signatory parties including:    (a) Uniform and consistent procedures for the  allocation  of  project  costs among purposes included in multiple-purpose programs;    (b)  Contracts  and  arrangements for sharing financial responsibility  among and with signatory parties,  public  bodies,  groups  and  private  enterprise, and for the supervision of their performance;    (c)  Establishment  and  supervision  of  a  system  of  accounts  for  reimbursable purposes and directing the payments and charges to be  made  from such accounts;(d) Determining the basis and apportioning amounts (i) of reimbursable  revenues  to  be paid signatory parties or their political subdivisions,  and (ii) of payments in lieu of taxes to any of them.   11.5 Cooperative services.    The   commission   shall   furnish   technical  services,  advice  and  consultation to authorize agencies of the signatory parties with respect  to the water resources of the basin, and each of the  signatory  parties  pledges  itself  to provide technical and administrative services to the  commission upon request, within the limits of  available  appropriations  and  to cooperate generally with the commission for the purposes of this  compact, and the cost of such services may be reimbursable whenever  the  parties deem appropriate.                         ARTICLE 12--CAPITAL FINANCING   Section 12.1 Borrowing power.    The  commission  may  borrow  money  for  any  of the purposes of this  compact, and may issue its  negotiable  bonds  and  other  evidences  of  indebtedness  in  respect  thereto.  All  such  bonds  and  evidences of  indebtedness shall be payable solely out of the properties and  revenues  of  the  commission  without  recourse  to taxation. The bonds and other  obligations of the commission, except as may be  otherwise  provided  in  the  indenture under which they were issued, shall be direct and general  obligations of the commission and the  full  faith  and  credit  of  the  commission are hereby pledged for the prompt payment of the debt service  thereon  and  for  the  fulfillment  of  all  other  undertakings of the  commission assumed by it to or for the benefit of the holders thereof.   12.2 Funds and expenses.    The purposes of this compact shall include without limitation  thereto  all  costs  of  any  project  or facility or any part thereof, including  interest  during  a  period  of  construction  and  a  reasonable   time  thereafter  and  any  incidental  expenses  (legal, engineering, fiscal,  financial consultant and other  expenses)  connected  with  issuing  and  disposing  of  the  bonds;  all  amounts required for the creation of an  operating fund, construction fund, reserve fund, sinking fund, or  other  special  fund;  all  other expenses connected with the planning, design,  acquisition, construction, completion, improvement or reconstruction  of  any  facility  or any part thereof; and reimbursement of advances by the  commission or by others for such purposes and for working capital.   12.3 Credit excluded; officers, state and municipal.    The commission shall have  no  power  to  pledge  the  credit  of  any  signatory  party,  or  of  any  county or municipality, or to impose any  obligation for payment of the bonds upon  any  signatory  party  or  any  county  or  municipality.  Neither  the  commissioners  nor  any  person  executing the bonds shall be liable  personally  on  the  bonds  of  the  commission  or be subject to any personal liability or accountability by  reason of the issuance thereof.   12.4 Funding and refunding.    Whenever the commission deems it expedient, it may fund and refund its  bonds and other obligations whether or not such  bonds  and  obligations  have  matured.  It  may  provide  for  the issuance, sale or exchange of  refunding bonds for the purpose  of  redeeming  or  retiring  any  bonds  (including  the  payment  of  any  premium,  duplicate  interest or cash  adjustment required in connection therewith) issued by the commission orissued by any other issuing body, the proceeds of the sale of which have  been applied to any facility acquired by the  commission  or  which  are  payable  out of the revenues of any facility acquired by the commission.  Bonds  may  be  issued partly to refund bonds and other obligations then  outstanding, and partly for any other purpose  of  the  commission.  All  provisions  of  this  compact  applicable  to  the issuance of bonds are  applicable to refunding bonds and to  the  issuance,  sale  or  exchange  thereof.   12.5 Bonds; authorization generally.    Bonds  and other indebtedness of the commission shall be authorized by  resolution of the commission. The  validity  of  the  authorization  and  issuance  of any bonds by the commission shall not be dependent upon nor  affected in any way by: (i) the disposition  of  bond  proceeds  by  the  commission  or  by  contract, commitment or action taken with respect to  such proceeds; or (ii) the failure to complete any part of  the  project  for  which  bonds  are authorized to be issued. The commission may issue  bonds in one or more series and may provide for one or more consolidated  bond  issues,  in  such  principal  amounts  and  with  such  terms  and  provisions  as  the  commission  may  deem  necessary.  The bonds may be  secured by a pledge of all or any part of  the  property,  revenues  and  franchises  under  its control. Bonds may be issued by the commission in  such amount, with such maturities and in such denominations and form  or  forms,  whether coupon or registered, as to both principal and interest,  as may be determined by the commission. The commission may  provide  for  redemption of bonds prior to maturity on such notice and at such time or  times  and  with  such redemption provisions, including premiums, as the  commission may determine.   12.6 Bonds; resolutions and indentures generally.    The commission may determine and enter into indentures  providing  for  the   principal  amount,  date  or  dates,  maturities,  interest  rate,  denominations,  form,  registration,  transfer,  interchange  and  other  provisions  of  the  bonds and coupons and the terms and conditions upon  which the same shall be executed, issued, secured, sold, paid, redeemed,  funded and refunded. The resolution of the  commission  authorizing  any  bond or any indenture so authorized under which the bonds are issued may  include   all  such  covenants  and  other  provisions  other  than  any  restriction on the regulatory powers vested in the  commission  by  this  compact as the commission may deem necessary or desirable for the issue,  payment,  security,  protection  or  marketing  of  the bonds, including  without limitation covenants and other provisions as  to  the  rates  or  amounts  of  fees, rents and other charges to be charged or made for use  of the facilities; the use, pledge, custody, securing,  application  and  disposition  of  such revenues, of the proceeds of the bonds, and of any  other moneys of the commission; the operation, maintenance,  repair  and  reconstruction  of  the facilities and the amounts which may be expended  therefor; the sale, lease or other disposition of  the  facilities;  the  insuring  of  the  facilities and of the revenues derived therefrom; the  construction or other acquisition of other facilities; the  issuance  of  additional  bonds  or  other indebtedness; the rights of the bondholders  and of any trustee for the bondholders upon default by the commission or  otherwise; and the modification of the provisions of the  indenture  and  of  the  bonds. Reference on the face of the bonds to such resolution or  indenture by its date of adoption or  the  apparent  date  on  the  face  thereof  is  sufficient to incorporate all of the provisions thereof and  of this compact into  the  body  of  the  bonds  and  their  appurtenant  coupons.  Each  taker  and  subsequent  holder  of the bonds or coupons,whether the coupons are attached to or  detached  from  the  bonds,  has  recourse  to  all of the provisions of the indenture and of this compact  and is bound thereby.   12.7 Maximum maturity.    No  bond  by  its terms shall mature in more than fifty years from its  own date and in the event any authorized issue is divided  into  two  or  more  series  or  divisions, the maximum maturity date hereby authorized  shall be calculated from the date on the face of each  bond  separately,  irrespective  of the fact that different dates may be prescribed for the  bonds of each separate series or division of any authorized issue.   12.8 Tax exemption.    All bonds issued by  the  commission  under  the  provisions  of  this  compact  and  the interest thereof shall at all times be free and exempt  from all taxation by or under authority of any of the signatory parties,  except for transfer, inheritance and estate taxes.   12.9 Interest.    Bonds shall bear interest at a  rate  determined  by  the  commission,  payable annually or semi-annually.   12.10 Place of payment.    The  commission  may  provide  for  the  payment  of the principal and  interest of bonds at any place or places within or without the signatory  states, and in any specified lawful  coin  or  currency  of  the  United  States of America.   12.11 Execution.    The  commission  may  provide  for the execution and authentication of  bonds by the manual, lithographed  or  printed  facsimile  signature  of  officers  of  the  commission,  and  by  additional  authentication by a  trustee or fiscal agent appointed by  the  commission.  If  any  of  the  officers whose signatures or counter signatures appear upon the bonds or  coupons  cease  to  be  officers  before  the  delivery  of the bonds or  coupons, their signatures or counter signatures are  nevertheless  valid  and  of  the  same  force  and effect as if the officers had remained in  office until the delivery of the bonds and coupons.   12.12 Holding own bonds.    The commission shall have power out of any funds available therefor to  purchase its bonds and may hold, cancel or resell such bonds.   12.13 Sale.    The commission may fix terms and conditions  for  the  sale  or  other  disposition  of  any  authorized issue of bonds. The commission may sell  bonds at less than their par or face value but no issue of bonds may  be  sold  at  an aggregate price below the par or face value thereof if such  sale would result in a net interest cost to  the  commission  calculated  upon the entire issue so sold of more than six percent per annum payable  semi-annually,  according  to  standard tables of bond values. All bonds  issued and sold for cash pursuant to this act shall be  sold  on  sealed  proposals  to  the  highest  bidder.  Prior to such sale, the commission  shall advertise for bids by publication of a notice  of  sale  not  less  than ten days prior to the date of sale, at least once in a newspaper of  general  circulation  printed  and  published  in New York City carrying  municipal bond notices and devoted  primarily  to  financial  news.  The  commission may reject any and all bids submitted and may thereafter sellthe  bonds  so  advertised  for  sale at private sale to any financially  responsible bidder under such terms and  conditions  as  it  deems  most  advantageous  to the public interest, but the bonds shall not be sold at  a  net  interest  cost  calculated  upon the entire issue so advertised,  greater than the lowest  bid  which  was  rejected.  In  the  event  the  commission  desires  to  issue  its  bonds  in  exchange for an existing  facility or portion thereof, or in exchange for  bonds  secured  by  the  revenues  of  an  existing  facility, it may exchange such bonds for the  existing facility or portion thereof or for the bonds so  secured,  plus  an additional amount of cash, without advertising such bonds for sale.   12.14 Negotiability.    All  bonds  issued under the provisions of this compact are negotiable  instruments, except when registered in the name of a registered owner.   12.15 Legal investments.    Bonds of the commission shall be legal investments for savings  banks,  fiduciaries and public funds in each of the signatory states.   12.16 Validation proceedings.    Prior  to  the  issuance  of any bonds, the commission may institute a  special proceeding to determine the legality of proceedings to issue the  bonds and their validity under the laws of any of the signatory parties.  Such proceedings shall be instituted  and  prosecuted  in  rem  and  the  judgment  rendered  therein  shall  be  conclusive  against  all persons  whomsoever and against each of the signatory parties.   12.17 Recording.    No indenture need be recorded or filed in  any  public  office,  other  than  the  office  of the commission. The pledge of revenues provided in  any indenture shall  take  effect  forthwith  as  provided  therein  and  irrespective  of  the date of receipt of such revenues by the commission  or the indenture trustee. Such pledge shall be effective as provided  in  the   indenture  without  physical  delivery  of  the  revenues  to  the  commission or to the indenture trustee.   12.18 Pledged revenues.    Bond redemption and interest payments shall, to the extent provided in  the resolution or indenture, constitute a first,  direct  and  exclusive  charge  and  lien  on all such rates, rents, tolls, fees and charges and  other revenues and interest thereon received from the use and  operation  of  the  facility,  and on any sinking or other funds created therefrom.  All such rates, rents, tolls, fees, charges and other revenues, together  with interest thereon, shall constitute a trust fund  for  the  security  and  payment  of  such bonds and except as and to the extent provided in  the indenture with respect to the  payment  therefrom  of  expenses  for  other   purposes   including   administration,  operation,  maintenance,  improvements or extensions of the facilities or other purposes shall not  be used or pledged for any other purpose so long as such bonds,  or  any  of them, are outstanding and unpaid.   12.19 Remedies.    The holder of any bond may for the equal benefit and protection of all  holders   of   bonds  similarly  situated:  (a)  by  mandamus  or  other  appropriate proceedings require and compel the performance of any of the  duties imposed upon the commission  or  assumed  by  it,  its  officers,  agents or employees under the provisions of any indenture, in connection  with  the  acquisition,  construction,  operation,  maintenance, repair,reconstruction or insurance of the facilities, or in connection with the  collection, deposit, investment, application  and  disbursement  of  the  rates,  rents,  tolls, fees, charges and other revenues derived from the  operation  and use of the facilities, or in connection with the deposit,  investment and disbursement of the proceeds received from  the  sale  of  bonds;  or (b) by action or suit in a court of competent jurisdiction of  any signatory party require