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A06824 Summary:

BILL NOA06824B
 
SAME ASSAME AS S08296
 
SPONSORWoerner
 
COSPNSRWalsh, Levenberg, Steck, Buttenschon, Shimsky, Zaccaro, Palmesano, Hyndman
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Amd §§671 & 674-a, County L
 
Provides for eye and tissue donation; requires coroners to develop a protocol for making referrals of deaths that fall under their jurisdiction and occur outside of a hospital including calling the federally designated organ procurement organization for donor registry verification and a donor suitability determination.
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A06824 Actions:

BILL NOA06824B
 
03/14/2025referred to local governments
05/23/2025amend and recommit to local governments
05/23/2025print number 6824a
05/28/2025amend and recommit to local governments
05/28/2025print number 6824b
06/05/2025reported referred to rules
06/06/2025reported
06/06/2025rules report cal.447
06/06/2025ordered to third reading rules cal.447
06/06/2025passed assembly
06/06/2025delivered to senate
06/06/2025REFERRED TO RULES
01/07/2026DIED IN SENATE
01/07/2026RETURNED TO ASSEMBLY
01/07/2026ordered to third reading cal.177
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A06824 Memo:

NEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLY
MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF LEGISLATION
submitted in accordance with Assembly Rule III, Sec 1(f)
 
BILL NUMBER: A6824B
 
SPONSOR: Woerner
  TITLE OF BILL: An act to amend the county law, in relation to eye and tissue donation   PURPOSE: To ensure coroners and medical examiners throughout the state adopt referral protocols with appropriate eye and tissue banks to increase donations by enabling such procurement organizations to promptly identi- fy donors and verify their suitability.   SUMMARY OF PROVISIONS: Section 1 amends section 671 of the county law and adds paragraph (c) to direct coroners and medical examiners, in conjunction with appropriate eye and tissue banks, to develop referral protocols to promptly identify donors of anatomical gifts for deaths that fall under the coroner's or medical examiner's jurisdiction and occur outside of a hospital. These protocols must include requiring the coroner or medical examiner to contact the appropriate procurement organizations for donor registry verification and donor suitability determination. Section 2 amends subdivision 1 of section 674-a of the county law to include reference to the referral protocol mandated by section 671 of the county law. Section 3 provides the effective date.   JUSTIFICATION: Unlike donations of major organs, eye and tissue donations can be initi- ated up to 24 hours after death and can be processed and stored for an extended period of time. Various tissue may be donated, including corneas/whole eyes, skin, bone, heart valves, tendons/ligaments and blood vessels. In fact, one tissue donor can potentially restore the health and heal the lives of more than 75 people. Cornea donations help restore sight to people suffering from corneal blindness caused by disease, injury or infection. Donated skin helps burn victims; bone can be used in certain dental procedures, spinal. disc surgeries and bone grafting; heart valves are used to replace damaged valves; ,tendons/ligaments can be used to repair damaged ACLs; and blood vessels are used for cardiac bypass surgeries. Despite a federal mandate in 1998 which directed hospitals to diligently refer all deaths occurring in a hospital to the federally designated Organ Procurement Organization (as well as a regulatory change making compliance with the law a requirement under the Conditions of Partic- ipation for Medicare and Medicaid), there is no federal or NYS mandate directing coroners and medical examiners to refer deaths to procurement organizations. This omission creates a loophole in the referral law that hampers referrals when deaths fall under the jurisdiction of a coroner or medical examiner. The National Association of Medical Examiners (NAME) has long held the position that "Medical Examiners/Coroners (ME/Cs) and Organ/Tissue Procurement Organizations (0/TP0s) should work cooperatively together and establish prospective agreements, protocols, or memoranda of under- standing to ensure that both parties get what is needed and that procurement of organs and/or tissues from cases falling under MC/C jurisdiction can be maximized." Specifically, NAME calls on ME/Cs to "permit the recovery of organs and/or tissues from decedents falling under their jurisdiction in virtually all cases, to include cases of suspected child abuse, other homicides, and sudden unexpected deaths in infants." Despite significant advancements since 1998 to expand donor enrollment opportunities, New York state remains far behind other states in its rate of registry participation. As of 2023, 46% of New York's eligible population has enrolled as organ donors, but the need for donations calls for enrollment levels closer to 65%. Approximately 105,000 people are currently on the national organ transplant waitlist, and 8,200 of those people are New Yorkers. One thousand one hundred and fifty (1,150) such New Yorkers have been on the waitlist for more than five years. Current New York state law fails to require agreements and/or protocols between coroners/medical examiners and procurement organizations. Although some counties in New York state have adopted protocols with their procurement organizations, many have not. Since a significant proportion of potential eye and tissue donors fall within a coroner's or medical examiner's jurisdiction, this bill will significantly increase essential interactions between coroners/medical examiners and procure- ment organizations, leading to an increase in the number of determi- nations made concerning suitability for donation after death, and ulti- mately, to an increase in the number of donations made,   LEGISLATIVE HISTORY: 2024: A.10620 - Referred to Local Governments 2021-2022: A.6010/S.2661 - Referred to Local Governments 2019-2020: A.6582/S.1437 - Referred to Local Governments   FISCAL IMPLICATIONS: None.   EFFECTIVE DATE: This act shall take effect immediately.
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A06824 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                         6824--B
 
                               2025-2026 Regular Sessions
 
                   IN ASSEMBLY
 
                                     March 14, 2025
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by  M.  of  A.  WOERNER,  WALSH,  LEVENBERG -- read once and
          referred  to  the  Committee  on  Local   Governments   --   committee
          discharged, bill amended, ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted
          to  said  committee  -- again reported from said committee with amend-
          ments, ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted to said committee

        AN ACT to amend the county law, in relation to eye and tissue donation
 
          The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and  Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
 
     1    Section 1. Paragraph (b) of subdivision 1 of section 671 of the county
     2  law, as amended by chapter 322 of the laws of 2021, is amended and a new
     3  paragraph (c) is added to read as follows:
     4    (b) shall make inquiry into all deaths whether natural or unnatural in
     5  [his  or  her] their county occurring to an incarcerated individual of a
     6  correctional facility as defined by subdivision three of  section  forty
     7  of  the  correction  law,  whether or not the death occurred inside such
     8  facility[.];
     9    (c) shall develop a referral protocol to promptly identify  donors  of
    10  anatomical gifts for deaths that fall under their jurisdiction and occur
    11  outside  of  a  hospital.  This protocol shall include, but shall not be
    12  limited to, requiring a call and/or text be promptly placed to a  desig-
    13  nated  representative  of  the appropriate eye and tissue bank, as those
    14  terms are defined in section forty-three hundred of  the  public  health
    15  law,  to  enable such procurement organizations to verify donor registry
    16  and make a donor suitability determination.
    17    § 2. Subdivision 1 of section 674-a of the county  law,  as  added  by
    18  chapter 899 of the laws of 1977, is amended to read as follows:
    19    1.  Notwithstanding  any provision of law to the contrary, upon notice
    20  to the appropriate procurement  organizations  in  accordance  with  the
    21  referral  protocol established pursuant to this article, if it is deter-
    22  mined that the decedent who is under the jurisdiction of the coroner  or
    23  medical examiner as defined in this chapter is a donor of all or part of
 
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD10273-04-5

        A. 6824--B                          2
 
     1  [his]  their body as defined in the public health law including properly
     2  executed consent, such body or part thereof [being] is  medically  suit-
     3  able  for transplant, and the donation [having] has been executed pursu-
     4  ant  to  the  provisions  of  the  public  health  law, the coroner, the
     5  coroner's physician or the medical  examiner  who  has  notice  of  such
     6  donation  shall only perform an autopsy and/or analysis of eyes, tissues
     7  or organs in a manner and within a time period compatible with the pres-
     8  ervation for the purposes of transplantation of said donation.
     9    § 3. This act shall take effect immediately.
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