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S01833 Summary:

BILL NOS01833A
 
SAME ASNo Same As
 
SPONSORMAY
 
COSPNSRFAHY, HARCKHAM, HELMING, ROLISON
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Add §15-0519, En Con L; add §99-tt, St Fin L
 
Enacts the "harmful algal bloom monitoring and prevention act"; establishes the harmful algal bloom monitoring and prevention fund.
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S01833 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                         1833--A
 
                               2025-2026 Regular Sessions
 
                    IN SENATE
 
                                    January 14, 2025
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by Sens. MAY, FAHY, HARCKHAM, HELMING, ROLISON -- read twice
          and ordered printed, and when printed to be committed to the Committee
          on Environmental Conservation -- reported favorably from said  commit-
          tee and committed to the Committee on Finance -- committee discharged,
          bill  amended,  ordered  reprinted  as amended and recommitted to said
          committee
 
        AN ACT to amend the environmental conservation law and the state finance
          law, in relation to enacting the "harmful algal bloom  monitoring  and
          prevention act"
 
          The  People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
 
     1    Section 1. Short title. This act shall be known and may  be  cited  as
     2  the "harmful algal bloom monitoring and prevention act".
     3    § 2. Legislative findings and declarations. The legislature finds that
     4  the  state  of  New York has a responsibility to maintain the health and
     5  safety of its abundant clean water resources, upon which  the  residents
     6  of  New  York state, as well as its many visitors, rely on for drinking,
     7  agriculture, tourism, recreation, and  their  livelihoods.  Because  the
     8  waters  of  the  state  are under threat by harmful algal blooms (HABS),
     9  which are known to be toxic and even fatal to humans,  pets,  and  wild-
    10  life,  the  state has a responsibility to provide coordinated, statewide
    11  monitoring, evaluation, prevention and mitigation,  going  beyond  water
    12  body-specific data collection and isolated mitigation efforts. While the
    13  causes  of HABS are complex and varied, with a coordinated and standard-
    14  ized approach to monitoring and evaluation, patterns can more readily be
    15  identified to isolate the combination of  relevant  causes  specific  to
    16  different bodies of water across the state and determine the most effec-
    17  tive  targeted  interventions.  To  address  this threat, the state must
    18  develop and  maintain  a  comprehensive  state  clearinghouse  to  bring
    19  together existing and new available statewide cross-sectional and longi-
    20  tudinal  data  and  information  on  harmful algal blooms, potential and

         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD05332-04-5

        S. 1833--A                          2
 
     1  known  causes,  best  practice  interventions,  expertise,  and  funding
     2  resources.  This  data  and  subsequent  report will enable the state to
     3  effectively and efficiently administer a central grant program  support-
     4  ing  data-driven  best practices in prevention and mitigation of harmful
     5  algal blooms.
     6    § 3. The environmental conservation law is amended  by  adding  a  new
     7  section 15-0519 to read as follows:
     8  § 15-0519. Harmful algal bloom monitoring and prevention program.
     9    1.  Definitions. For the purposes of this section, the following terms
    10  shall have the following meanings:
    11    a. "Harmful algal blooms"  shall  mean  growths  of  blooms  of  algal
    12  species  present in fresh or salt water that can produce toxins that are
    13  harmful to public health, the economy,  or  recreational  enjoyment,  or
    14  that can impair water quality and the natural ecology therein.
    15    b. "Municipality" shall mean a county, city, town, or village.
    16    c.  "Waters  of  the  state"  means  all waterways, or bodies of water
    17  located within New York state or that part of any body of water which is
    18  adjacent to New York state over which the state has  territorial  juris-
    19  diction.
    20    2. Comprehensive statewide data collection consolidation and analysis;
    21  report.  a.  The  commissioner  shall  develop  a program to further the
    22  comprehensive and consistent  collection,  consolidation,  analysis  and
    23  meta-analysis  of statewide data relating to the monitoring, evaluation,
    24  prevention, and mitigation of harmful algal bloom outbreaks. The commis-
    25  sioner shall provide guidelines  for  the  submission  of  existing  and
    26  historical  harmful  algal bloom monitoring, evaluation, mitigation, and
    27  prevention data and strategies  from  relevant  institutions,  organiza-
    28  tions, and individuals with experience in peer-reviewed research, grant-
    29  making,  or  other like activities in the area of water quality relating
    30  to the monitoring, evaluation, prevention,  and  mitigation  of  harmful
    31  algal  bloom  outbreaks, including but not limited to research programs,
    32  clinics, labs, and project management.
    33    b. The data collected, consolidated, and  analyzed  shall  consist  of
    34  elements including but not limited to longitudinal data on the incidence
    35  of  harmful  algal  blooms,  contextual factors thought to be associated
    36  with the incidence of harmful algal blooms such  as  water  temperature,
    37  turbidity,  flow  rate,  salinity,  nutrient  levels  for phosphorus and
    38  nitrogen, acidity (pH), dissolved oxygen levels, monitoring  and  evalu-
    39  ation  of  waters of the state that do not contain harmful algal blooms,
    40  and results of harmful algal bloom interventions in New York state.
    41    c. The data collected, consolidated, and analyzed shall meet a  stand-
    42  ard that is consistent with the practices and expertise of institutions,
    43  organizations, or individuals with experience in peer-reviewed research,
    44  grantmaking,  or  other  like  activities  in  the area of water quality
    45  relating to the monitoring, evaluation, prevention,  and  mitigation  of
    46  harmful  algal  bloom  outbreaks,  including but not limited to research
    47  programs, clinics, labs, and project management.
    48    d. The department shall annually publish and update a list  of  vetted
    49  best practice strategies for harmful algal bloom monitoring, evaluation,
    50  prevention,  and  mitigation, which shall be differentiated by region or
    51  water body with unique confirmed causal pathways for the related harmful
    52  algal bloom outbreak trends. Such strategies shall be supported by find-
    53  ings of the harmful algal bloom database created pursuant to subdivision
    54  three of this section, as well as external evaluation, including but not
    55  limited to strategies approved by the federal  environmental  protection
    56  agency,  certification  that such strategies meet or exceed the American

        S. 1833--A                          3
 
     1  National Standards for health effects of drinking water treatment chemi-
     2  cals (NSF/ANSI/CAN-60), or testing for efficacy by center of  excellence
     3  in  healthy  water solutions. The department shall publish such list and
     4  findings  supporting  the  strategies  on  such list on the department's
     5  website.
     6    e. No later than five years after the effective date of this  section,
     7  the  commissioner,  in consultation with the commissioner of agriculture
     8  and markets, shall prepare a report providing comprehensive analysis and
     9  meta-analysis of the data collected pursuant to this section,  including
    10  findings  and recommendations for establishing, maintaining, and improv-
    11  ing upon a coordinated system of monitoring, evaluation, prevention, and
    12  mitigation of harmful algal bloom outbreaks across New York  state.  The
    13  department shall:
    14    i.  update the report at least once every five years after the initial
    15  completion of the report;
    16    ii. make the report publicly available on the department's website;
    17    iii. hold at least six regional public comment hearings on  the  draft
    18  report and subsequent updates to the report, including three meetings in
    19  the upstate region and three meetings in the downstate region, and shall
    20  allow  at  least  one  hundred  twenty days for the submission of public
    21  comment;
    22    iv. provide meaningful  opportunities  for  public  comment  from  all
    23  segments  of  the  populations  that  live near, or are reliant upon for
    24  drinking, recreation, or economic activity,  the  waters  of  the  state
    25  included in the report;
    26    v.  seek  out  input  from institutions or organizations with relevant
    27  expertise,  citizen  scientists,  and  labs  testing  water  quality  in
    28  relation to harmful algal blooms;
    29    vi.  identify  the  magnitude of harmful algal blooms across the state
    30  and make recommendations on regulatory measures and other state or local
    31  actions to monitor, evaluate, prevent, or mitigate harmful algal blooms,
    32  including existing opportunities for  coordination  of  federal,  state,
    33  municipal, and non-governmental organizations;
    34    vii.  identify  best  practices,  technology,  and  available federal,
    35  state, municipal, or private funding for and existing efforts  in  moni-
    36  toring, evaluating, preventing, and mitigating harmful algal blooms; and
    37    viii.  identify  the  current need in specific bodies of water for the
    38  establishment of programs or organizations to  further  the  monitoring,
    39  evaluation,  prevention, and mitigation of harmful algal blooms, and the
    40  costs therefor.
    41    3. Harmful algal bloom database. a. The commissioner  shall  establish
    42  and  maintain a website providing public access to a harmful algal bloom
    43  database which shall contain all relevant data, research, and  reporting
    44  required pursuant to subdivision two of this section.
    45    b.  Such  database,  and  analysis of the comprehensive statewide data
    46  therein, shall support the coordination of efforts across the  state  to
    47  monitor, evaluate, prevent, and mitigate harmful algal blooms, and shall
    48  include, but not be limited to:
    49    i.  the  geolocation  of harmful algal bloom outbreaks, and efforts to
    50  monitor, evaluate, prevent, and mitigate such outbreaks;
    51    ii. existing research, analysis, or reports relating to  outbreaks  of
    52  harmful  algal  blooms in the waters of the state and the causes of such
    53  outbreaks;
    54    iii. known or developing  strategies  and  best  practices  of  state,
    55  municipal,  and  non-governmental  organizations that monitor, evaluate,
    56  prevent, or mitigate  harmful  algal  bloom  outbreaks,  the  respective

        S. 1833--A                          4
 
     1  waters  of  the  state  in which such strategies and best practices have
     2  been conducted, and the geolocations of such waters;
     3    iv.  available sources of financing for algal bloom monitoring, evalu-
     4  ation, prevention, and mitigation, including federal, state,  municipal,
     5  and/or private funding, grants, or other monies; and
     6    v.  information on institutions with expertise in peer-reviewed grant-
     7  making and research in the area of water quality  and/or  harmful  algal
     8  blooms,  including  but  not  limited to the New York sea grant at Stony
     9  Brook University, the New  York  water  resource  institute  at  Cornell
    10  University,  the  center  of  excellence in healthy water solutions, the
    11  bureau of water supply protection, the New York city department of envi-
    12  ronmental protection, the department of agriculture and markets,  commu-
    13  nity-based  nonprofit  organizations  with  missions  that  specifically
    14  involve monitoring, evaluating, mitigating, or preventing harmful  algal
    15  blooms,  and  any  other  institution  or  organization  providing  data
    16  compiled pursuant to this section, and the contact information, relevant
    17  research programs, clinics, labs, and published research of such  insti-
    18  tutions.
    19    4. Rules and regulations. The commissioner shall, in a manner which is
    20  coordinated  with and supports efforts by federal, state, municipal, and
    21  non-governmental organizations, promulgate rules and regulations to:
    22    a.  limit and take action to mitigate  the  causes  of  harmful  algal
    23  bloom outbreaks; and
    24    b. monitor and mitigate harmful algal bloom outbreaks.
    25    5.  Program  development. The commissioner shall establish and support
    26  new and existing programs and organizations relevant to  the  health  of
    27  waters  of  the  state  that have not implemented strategies to monitor,
    28  evaluate, prevent, or mitigate harmful algal bloom outbreaks.
    29    6. Harmful algal bloom grant program.  In addition to the financing to
    30  be identified pursuant to subparagraph iv of paragraph b of  subdivision
    31  three of this section:
    32    a. The commissioner, in consultation with the commissioner of agricul-
    33  ture  and  markets, the commissioner of health, and the president of the
    34  empire state development corporation, shall establish  a  harmful  algal
    35  bloom  grant  program  which  shall  provide  funding to municipalities,
    36  intermunicipal organizations, community-based  nonprofits,  or  academic
    37  institutions for the deployment of harmful algal bloom monitoring, eval-
    38  uation, prevention, and mitigation strategies and best practices.
    39    b.  The  program  shall  require that applicants for the harmful algal
    40  bloom grant program conduct and submit a study, as part of their  appli-
    41  cation, assessing the most appropriate mitigation and prevention strate-
    42  gies  for  relevant  waters of the state and best practices therefor, as
    43  informed by the harmful algal bloom database created pursuant to  subdi-
    44  vision three of this section.
    45    c. In determining which applicants shall be awarded grants pursuant to
    46  this  subdivision,  first  preference  shall  be given to applicants who
    47  propose strategies that incorporate principles of least harm and  great-
    48  est  safety to applicators, the public, and the environment, and utilize
    49  passive or non-chemical physical controls, including but not limited to:
    50    i. aeration;
    51    ii. hydrological manipulations;
    52    iii. mechanical mixing;
    53    iv. reservoir drawdown or desiccation;
    54    v. surface skimming;
    55    vi. ultrasound; or
    56    vii. other emerging technologies, as approved by the department.

        S. 1833--A                          5
 
     1    d. In determining which applicants shall be awarded grants pursuant to
     2  this subdivision, second preference shall be  given  to  applicants  who
     3  demonstrate  expertise with previous experience treating water bodies in
     4  the United States larger than one thousand acres,  with  proven  success
     5  using accepted strategies, including but not limited to strategies that:
     6    i. are aimed at reducing cyanotoxins in the water to less than harmful
     7  levels;
     8    ii. employ ready-to-use technology that is means tested, reproducible,
     9  and  generalizable,  without  limitation  of  size or shape of the water
    10  body;
    11    iii. employ technology which allows for  application  under  emergency
    12  situations and within less than ninety-six hours from approval;
    13    iv.  utilize  products that are modular and can be used as a preventa-
    14  tive measure;
    15    v. utilize products that are quick and easy to apply and are generally
    16  recognized as safe to the applicator, public, and environment;
    17    vi. utilize products that float on the surface of the water and do not
    18  sink immediately to the bottom of the water column;
    19    vii. utilize products that are  distributed  autonomously  across  the
    20  water body after a localized application;
    21    viii.  utilize  products  with  a  time-release mechanism that applies
    22  constant and prolonged oxidative stress of the  cyanobacteria  triggered
    23  by  the  programmed  cell  death  signaling  cascade, resulting in their
    24  collapse; and
    25    ix. utilize products manufactured in the United States.
    26    e. The commissioner shall make monies available from the harmful algal
    27  bloom monitoring and prevention fund, as established pursuant to section
    28  ninety-nine-tt of the state finance  law,  within  amounts  appropriated
    29  therefor, pursuant to this section.
    30    § 4. The state finance law is amended by adding a new section 99-tt to
    31  read as follows:
    32    §  99-tt. Harmful algal bloom monitoring and prevention fund. 1. There
    33  is hereby established in the joint custody of the state comptroller  and
    34  commissioner  of  taxation and finance a special fund to be known as the
    35  "harmful algal bloom monitoring and prevention fund".
    36    2. Such fund shall consist of all revenues received by the comptroller
    37  and all other moneys appropriated, credited, or transferred thereto from
    38  the general fund or any other fund or source pursuant  to  law.  Nothing
    39  contained in this section shall prevent the state from receiving grants,
    40  gifts,  or  bequests  for  the purposes of such fund and depositing them
    41  into such fund according to law.
    42    3. Moneys shall be paid out of the fund on the audit  and  warrant  of
    43  the comptroller on vouchers certified or approved by the commissioner of
    44  environmental  conservation or the commissioner of environmental conser-
    45  vation's designee.
    46    4. Moneys of the fund shall be available to the commissioner of  envi-
    47  ronmental  conservation  for  the  harmful  algal  bloom  monitoring and
    48  prevention program established pursuant to section 15-0519 of the  envi-
    49  ronmental conservation law.
    50    §  5. This act shall take effect one year after it shall have become a
    51  law. Effective immediately, the addition, amendment and/or repeal of any
    52  rule or regulation necessary for the implementation of this act  on  its
    53  effective date are authorized to be made and completed on or before such
    54  effective date.
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