Protects residential customers from utility service shutoffs due to non-payment during summer and winter periods of extreme heat or cold; allows such utility services to be discontinued for non-payment outside such periods; requires an annual report to be submitted to the governor and legislature and posted publicly online.
STATE OF NEW YORK
________________________________________________________________________
10648
IN ASSEMBLY
March 19, 2026
___________
Introduced by M. of A. SIMON -- read once and referred to the Committee
on Corporations, Authorities and Commissions
AN ACT to amend the public service law, in relation to enacting the
"utility shutoff protection act"
The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-bly, do enact as follows:
1 Section 1. This act shall be known and may be cited as the "utility
2 shutoff protection act".
3 § 2. Legislative findings. The legislature finds and declares that:
4 1. It is the duty of the legislature to ensure that New York residents
5 are protected from utility disconnections for nonpayment during periods
6 of extreme heat or cold, when they would be relying on air conditioning
7 or heating the most.
8 2. New York's utility shutoff moratorium during the COVID-19 pandemic
9 provided crucial relief for millions of households, enabling zero utili-
10 ty shutoffs in 2021, but the expiration of this COVID-19 moratorium -
11 absent any accompanying legislation to curb utility companies' record
12 high gas and electricity rates - has left New York residents at risk of
13 having their power cut off for nonpayment. According to NY Department of
14 Public Service (DPS) data, more than 180,000 New York households experi-
15 enced gas or electricity shutoffs for nonpayment in 2023.
16 3. This act serves as an expansion of existing residential utility
17 protections in New York state. Residential service cannot be terminated
18 for nonpayment Friday through Sunday, on public holidays, the day before
19 a holiday, or on a day before the utility business office is closed. New
20 York also bans utility shutoffs during the two-week period that includes
21 Christmas and New Year's Day. Altogether, state law protects residents
22 from utility shutoffs between 170 and 180 calendar days, or about 50
23 percent of the year.
24 4. This legislation provides much-needed coherence and predictability
25 to the presently scattered landscape of private residential shutoff
26 policies. Every utility regulated by the Public Service Commission
27 (hereinafter, "the commission") already follows certain seasonal and
28 temperature-based restrictions on disconnecting residents, but these
EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
[] is old law to be omitted.
LBD00373-02-5
A. 10648 2
1 policies vary dramatically across companies. Con Edison, which serves
2 most of New York city and Westchester county, already suspends residen-
3 tial shutoffs on 204 calendar days per year, on average, based on
4 National Weather Service data. But National Grid-the primary utility
5 provider in upstate New York that serves 2.2 million customers in
6 Buffalo, Syracuse, Albany, and most of the Mohawk valley and the north
7 country-lacks any shutoff protection during colder weather. New York
8 residents' safety during the hottest and coldest months of the year
9 should never depend on where they live or who their energy provider is.
10 5. Finally, this act aligns with the surge in utility shutoff morato-
11 ria nationwide, as the climate crisis continues to accelerate the
12 frequency and severity of extreme weather. According to a 2023 Congres-
13 sional Research Service report, 32 U.S. states have already enacted some
14 level of seasonal utility shutoff protections. Wisconsin's "annual
15 winter moratorium" bans residential gas or electric utility discon-
16 nections from November 1 to April 15, while Illinois similarly prohibits
17 utilities from shutting off residential power or heat from December 1 to
18 March 31.
19 § 3. Section 2 of the public service law is amended by adding two new
20 subdivisions 30 and 31 to read as follows:
21 30. The term "summer protection season", when used in this chapter,
22 shall mean the period beginning upon the first of May and ending upon
23 the thirty-first of August in each year.
24 31. The term "winter protection season", when used in this chapter,
25 shall mean the period beginning upon the first of December of each year
26 and ending upon the twenty-eighth of February of the following year.
27 § 4. Subdivision 6 of section 32 of the public service law is renum-
28 bered subdivision 7 and a new subdivision 6 is added to read as follows:
29 6. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, rule or regulation,
30 no residential utility service shall be terminated by a utility corpo-
31 ration or municipality for nonpayment during any summer protection
32 season or winter protection season.
33 (b) By the first day of every summer protection season and winter
34 protection season, and continuing through the last day of each such
35 protection season, utility corporations and municipalities shall restore
36 all residential utility services that were otherwise discontinued for
37 nonpayment. Such utility corporations and municipalities shall not
38 charge residential customers any fee for such restoration of residential
39 utility services. Further, such utility corporations and municipalities
40 shall be prohibited from assessing any penalties or late fees that would
41 accrue during every summer protection season and winter protection
42 season where a residential customer fails to make timely payment for
43 residential utility services.
44 (c) (i) The commission shall submit an annual report to the governor,
45 the temporary president of the senate and the speaker of the assembly,
46 containing the following information related to residential utility
47 shutoffs: (1) a distribution of residential utility terminations based
48 on household income, age, and geographic location; (2) a distribution of
49 the length of time for reconnecting disconnected households, as well as
50 the cost of deferred payment plans in furtherance of such reconnection;
51 (3) data on the health, safety, and financial consequences that utility
52 terminations have on residents; and (4) any other information that the
53 commission deems appropriate.
54 (ii) To obtain accurate data, the commission shall establish proce-
55 dures expanding the reporting requirements of utility corporations and
A. 10648 3
1 municipalities to include the information required under subparagraph
2 (i) of this paragraph.
3 (iii) The commission shall make the report created under subparagraph
4 (i) of this paragraph publicly available on its website.
5 (d) The commission shall promulgate any rules and regulations neces-
6 sary to:
7 (i) Implement the provisions of paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of this
8 subdivision;
9 (ii) Prohibit utility corporations and municipalities from increasing
10 the costs of any residential utility service as a result of compliance
11 with this section; and
12 (iii) Establish procedures for utility corporations and municipalities
13 discontinuing any residential utility services for nonpayment upon the
14 conclusion of summer protection seasons and winter protection seasons.
15 (e) Nothing in this subdivision shall be construed to waive a residen-
16 tial customer's obligation to make timely payment for residential utili-
17 ty services, or any payment for arrears.
18 (f) The provisions of this subdivision shall not apply to any non-re-
19 sidential utility services.
20 § 5. Section 33 of the public service law is amended by adding a new
21 subdivision 6 to read as follows:
22 6. The provisions of subdivision six of section thirty-two of this
23 article shall apply to any multiple dwelling otherwise subject to the
24 provisions of this section.
25 § 6. Section 34 of the public service law is amended by adding a new
26 subdivision 5 to read as follows:
27 5. The provisions of subdivision six of section thirty-two of this
28 article shall apply to any two family dwelling otherwise subject to the
29 provisions of this section.
30 § 7. This act shall take effect on the ninetieth day after it shall
31 have become a law. Effective immediately, the addition, amendment and/or
32 repeal of any rule or regulation necessary for the implementation of
33 this act on its effective date are authorized to be made and completed
34 on or before such effective date.