A06192 Summary:
| BILL NO | A06192D |
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| SAME AS | SAME AS S05759-C |
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| SPONSOR | Kelles |
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| COSPNSR | Romero, Gallagher, Rosenthal, Simon, Forrest, Griffin, Otis, Epstein, Schiavoni, Shrestha, Simone, Slater, Seawright, Clark, Levenberg, Tapia, Lunsford, Taylor, Lavine, Benedetto, Reyes, Paulin, Bendett, McDonald, Tague, Stirpe, Colton, Lupardo, Glick, Jacobson, Brown K, Barrett, Lucas, Gonzalez-Rojas, Dinowitz, Stern, Steck |
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| MLTSPNSR | |
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| Add Art 27 Title 8 §§27-0801 & 27-0803, §71-2704, En Con L | |
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| Establishes a moratorium on the sale and use of biosolids; defines terms. | |
A06192 Memo:
Go to topNEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLY
MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF LEGISLATION
submitted in accordance with Assembly Rule III, Sec 1(f)   BILL NUMBER: A6192D SPONSOR: Kelles
  TITLE OF BILL: An act to amend the environmental conservation law, in relation to establishing a moratorium on the sale and use of biosolids   PURPOSE OR GENERAL IDEA OF BILL:: to address the threat of PFAS contamination through sewage sludge, or biosolids, on New York state farmland and water supplies   SUMMARY OF PROVISIONS:: Sec. 1- amends article 27 of the environmental conservation law by adding a new title 8.establishing a 5-year moratorium on the land spreading of biosolids, renewal and approval of related permits, and a 5-year moratorium on the sale, offer for sale, distribution of biosolids and biosolid containing products. Sec. 2 - establishes penalties for non-compliance of up to $2,500 per violation Sec. 3 - Severability clause Sec. 4 - Effective date A-print clarifies the what falls under/does not fall under the moratori- um on the spreading of biosolids; clarifies that the agricultural response fund portion of the bill is pursuant to an appropriation; makes other technical and clarifying changes; B-print removes provision authorizing the department to promulgate rules and regulations to establish regulatory threshold levels for all indi- vidual PFAS chemicals for which methods are available which call for remediating PFAS contamination in both water and soils. C-print adds to the list of materials excluded from the moratorium: manure, litter, food processing waste, process wastewater from any animal feeding operation and digestate from such materials. D-print removes the task force and other provisions and adds a prohibition on the sale and distribution of biosolids or products containing biosolids.   JUSTIFICATION:: NYS has already recognized the risk of PFAS and banned their use in outdoor apparel, food packaging, firefighting equipment, and firefight- ing foam. NYS' allowable limit for PFAS in drinking water is also 10 parts per trillion, yet there is currently no regulatory or statutory limit for PFAS in biosolids spread on farmland (6 CRR-NY 361-3.0). In fact, in 2023, New York's Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) released a draft Solid Waste Management Plan, which states that the DEC would "continue to support local efforts to increase biosolids recycling as a means to provide nutrients and organic matter to soils..." in order to reduce landfilling of biosolids. While it is an honorable goal to reduce waste going to landfills, bioso- lids are far too toxic to continue spreading directly on farmland that produces our food. A 2019 The Guardian Article titled "Biosolids: mix human waste with toxic chemicals, then spread on crops," details the risk of biosolids, stating: "By the time the mix lands in treatment plants, it can teem with pharmaceuticals, hormones, pathogens, bacteria, viruses, protozoa and parasitic worms, as well as heavy metals like lead, cadmium, arsenic or mercury. It often includes PCBs, PFAS, diox- ins, BPAs and dozens of other harmful substances ranging from flame retardants to hospital waste." There are nearly 80,000 man-made chemi- cals from industrial discharge and sewage systems, with the EPA identi- fying 350 pollutants, of which 61 are acknowledged as "1. acutely hazardous, 2. hazardous, or 3. priority pollutants." Furthermore, the Federal Government bars dumping of biosolids in oceans because it causes marine dead zones, while Whole Foods, Dole, Heinz, and Del Monte won't buy crops grown in biosolids. The impacts of land spreading of biosolids on human health are clear. A 2013 study from the University of North Carolina which found that 75 of people living near farms that spread biosolids experienced health issues like burning eyes, nausea, vomiting, boils, and rashes, while others contracted penicillin-resistant MRSA. While PFAS are only one of the many contaminants in biosolids, an EPA web page titled "Our Current Understanding of the Human Health and Environmental Risks of PFAS" recognizes health effects of this chemical includes: "decreased fertili- ty or increased high blood pressure in pregnant women; developmental effects or delays in children, including low birth weight, accelerated puberty, bone variations, or behavioral changes; increased risk of cancers including prostate, kidney, and testicular; reduced ability of the body's immune system to fight infections, including reduced vaccine response; interference with the body's natural hormones; increased cholesterol levels and/or risk of obesity." There is no reason why New York's food should not be as protected as our drinking water. Continuing the spreading of biosolids that are not treated to neutralize the known effects of contaminants like PFAS, other known toxic chemicals including PCBs, dioxins, and BPAs, and heavy metals will only contaminate New York's land, food, and people, costing millions to mitigate and taking prime farmland offline for many decades. A more comprehensive approach to reducing and appropriately treating toxic sewage sludge needs to be taken before we further contaminate our fields with nutrient rich toxic waste.   PRIOR LEGISLATIVE HISTORY:: This is a new bill   FISCAL IMPLICATIONS FOR STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS:: To be determined   EFFECTIVE DATE:: This act shall take effect on the sixtieth day after it shall have become a law.
A06192 Text:
Go to topSTATE OF NEW YORK ________________________________________________________________________ 6192--D 2025-2026 Regular Sessions IN ASSEMBLY February 26, 2025 ___________ Introduced by M. of A. KELLES, ROMERO, GALLAGHER, ROSENTHAL, SIMON, FORREST, GRIFFIN, OTIS, EPSTEIN, SCHIAVONI, SHRESTHA, SIMONE, SLATER, SEAWRIGHT, CLARK, LEVENBERG, TAPIA, LUNSFORD, TAYLOR, LAVINE, BENEDET- TO, REYES, PAULIN, BENDETT, McDONALD, TAGUE, SIMPSON, STIRPE, COLTON, LUPARDO -- read once and referred to the Committee on Environmental Conservation -- committee discharged, bill amended, ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted to said committee -- again reported from said committee with amendments, ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted to said committee -- again reported from said committee with amendments, ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted to said committee -- committee discharged, bill amended, ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted to said committee AN ACT to amend the environmental conservation law, in relation to establishing a moratorium on the sale and use of biosolids The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem- bly, do enact as follows: 1 Section 1. Article 27 of the environmental conservation law is amended 2 by adding a new title 8 to read as follows: 3 TITLE 8 4 MORATORIUM ON THE SALE AND USE OF BIOSOLIDS 5 Section 27-0801. Definitions. 6 27-0803. Moratorium on the sale and use of biosolids. 7 § 27-0801. Definitions. 8 As used in this title: 9 1. "Biosolids" means the accumulated semi-solids, solids or liquids 10 resulting from treatment of wastewaters from publicly or privately owned 11 or operated sewage treatment plants. 12 2. "Perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances" or "PFAS" means a 13 class of fluorinated organic chemicals containing at least one fully 14 fluorinated carbon atom. EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets [] is old law to be omitted. LBD10313-15-5A. 6192--D 2 1 3. "Wastewater treatment facility" means any facility that treats 2 wastewater, including but not limited to municipal sewage treatment 3 plants, industrial wastewater treatment plants, and septage treatment 4 facilities. 5 § 27-0803. Moratorium on the sale and use of biosolids. 6 1. For the period commencing on the effective date of this title and 7 ending five years after such date, a moratorium shall be established on 8 the land application, and issuance, renewal, or approval of any permits 9 related thereto, of: 10 (a) biosolids generated from a publicly or privately owned or operated 11 wastewater treatment facility; 12 (b) compost material that included in its production biosolids gener- 13 ated from a publicly or privately owned or operated wastewater treatment 14 facility; and 15 (c) any other product or material that is intended for use as a ferti- 16 lizer, soil amendment, topsoil replacement or mulch, or for other simi- 17 lar agricultural purposes including parks, golf courses, or other non- 18 crop land applications, that is derived from or contains biosolids 19 generated from a publicly or privately owned or operated wastewater 20 treatment facility. 21 2. For the period commencing on the effective date of this title and 22 ending five years after such date, a moratorium shall be established on 23 selling, offering for sale, distributing, or otherwise providing bioso- 24 lids, including products containing biosolids, in the state for use as 25 fertilizer, soil amendment, topsoil replacement, mulch, or for other 26 similar purposes. 27 3. The moratoria in subdivisions one and two of this section shall not 28 apply to: 29 (a) the disposal or placement at a solid waste landfill of any of the 30 materials that are prohibited from application, spreading, sale or 31 distribution by this section; or 32 (b) the land application of or the sale or distribution of compost 33 materials or other agricultural products or materials derived from or 34 containing residuals generated as a result of the processing or culti- 35 vation of food, food waste, crops or vegetative material, manure, 36 litter, food processing waste, process wastewater from any animal feed- 37 ing operation, digestate from such materials, or any other product or 38 material that is not derived from or does not contain biosolids. 39 § 2. The environmental conservation law is amended by adding a new 40 section 71-2704 to read as follows: 41 § 71-2704. Violations of title 8 of article 27 of this chapter. 42 A person who violates any of the provisions of, or who fails to 43 perform any duty imposed by title 8 of article 27 of this chapter, or 44 the rules, regulations, orders or determinations of the commissioner 45 promulgated thereto, shall be liable for a penalty of not to exceed 46 twenty-five hundred dollars for each such violation and an additional 47 penalty of not more than five hundred dollars for each day during which 48 such violation continues, and, in addition thereto, such person may be 49 enjoined from continuing such violation. Penalties and injunctive relief 50 provided herein shall be recoverable in an action brought by the attor- 51 ney general at the request and in the name of the commissioner. 52 § 3. Severability clause. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivi- 53 sion, section or part of this act shall be adjudged by any court of 54 competent jurisdiction to be invalid, such judgment shall not affect, 55 impair, or invalidate the remainder thereof, but shall be confined in 56 its operation to the clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, sectionA. 6192--D 3 1 or part thereof directly involved in the controversy in which such judg- 2 ment shall have been rendered. It is hereby declared to be the intent of 3 the legislature that this act would have been enacted even if such 4 invalid provisions had not been included herein. 5 § 4. This act shall take effect on the sixtieth day after it shall 6 have become a law.