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S02026 Summary:

BILL NOS02026A
 
SAME ASSAME AS A02127-A
 
SPONSORHINCHEY
 
COSPNSR
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Add Art 5 Title 1-C §§1022 - 1022-z, amd §§51 & 1005, Pub Auth L; add §1413, N-PC L
 
Establishes the Hudson Valley power authority to own and operate electricity service and to create or acquire one or more wholly owned subsidiaries or membership interests in subsidiaries; establishes energy observatory corporations for studying and enabling effective community governance of power authorities; makes related provisions.
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S02026 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                         2026--A
 
                               2025-2026 Regular Sessions
 
                    IN SENATE
 
                                    January 15, 2025
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by  Sen. HINCHEY -- read twice and ordered printed, and when
          printed to be committed to the Committee on Corporations,  Authorities
          and   Commissions  --  committee  discharged,  bill  amended,  ordered
          reprinted as amended and recommitted to said committee
 
        AN ACT to amend the public authorities law, in relation to  establishing
          the  Hudson  Valley  power authority, and providing for its powers and
          duties; to amend the public authorities law, in relation  to  the  New
          York power authority; and to amend the not-for-profit corporation law,
          in relation to establishing energy observatory corporations
 
          The  People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
 
     1    Section 1. Article 5 of the  public  authorities  law  is  amended  by
     2  adding a new title 1-C to read as follows:
     3                                  TITLE 1-C
     4                        HUDSON VALLEY POWER AUTHORITY
     5  Section 1022.   Short title.
     6          1022-a. Definitions.
     7          1022-b. Hudson Valley power authority.
     8          1022-b-1.  Trustees.
     9          1022-c. Hudson Valley power authority service area; extension of
    10                    service area.
    11          1022-d. Powers and duties of the authority.
    12          1022-e. Powers  to provide and maintain generating, transmission
    13                    and related facilities.
    14          1022-f. Rate-setting procedures.
    15          1022-g. Climate leadership and community protection act  commit-
    16                    ment.
    17          1022-h. Acquisition  of  property, including the exercise of the
    18                    power of eminent domain.
    19          1022-i. Subsidiaries.
    20          1022-j. Deposit and investment of moneys of the authority.
 
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD02011-04-5

        S. 2026--A                          2
 
     1          1022-k. Conflicts of interest.
     2          1022-l. Sale of surplus power.
     3          1022-m. Audit and annual reports.
     4          1022-n. Bonds, notes and other obligations of the authority.
     5          1022-o. State and municipalities not liable on bonds or notes or
     6                    other obligations.
     7          1022-p. Agreement of the state.
     8          1022-q. Exemption of the authority from taxation.
     9          1022-r. Actions against the authority.
    10          1022-s. Equal employment opportunity.
    11          1022-t. Limitation of liability; indemnification.
    12          1022-u. Public  service  law  generally  not  applicable  to the
    13                    authority; inconsistent provisions  in  certain  other
    14                    acts superseded.
    15          1022-v. Authority subject to certain provisions contained in the
    16                    state  finance law, the public service law, the social
    17                    services law and the general municipal law.
    18          1022-w. Website.
    19          1022-x. Periodic review by the legislature.
    20          1022-y. Hudson Valley power authority observatory.
    21          1022-z. Severability.
    22    § 1022. Short title. This title shall be known and may be cited as the
    23  "Hudson Valley power authority act" or the HVPA act.
    24    § 1022-a. Definitions. As used or referred to in this title, unless  a
    25  different meaning clearly appears from the context:
    26    1. "Acquire" means, with respect to any right, title or interest in or
    27  to  any  property, either the act of taking by the exercise of the power
    28  of eminent domain, or the acquisition by purchase or otherwise.
    29    2. "Act" means the Hudson  Valley  power  authority  act,  being  this
    30  title.
    31    3.  "Authority" means the Hudson Valley power authority established by
    32  section one thousand twenty-two-b of this title.
    33    4. "Commission" means the public service commission.
    34    5. "Comptroller" means the state comptroller.
    35    6. "Utility corporation" means any private gas  corporation,  electric
    36  corporation, or combined gas and electric corporation, as such terms are
    37  defined  in section two of the public service law, that has a portion of
    38  its service territory within the service area. This  shall  not  include
    39  any municipality that provides gas or electric service.
    40    7.  "Federal  government"  means  the United States of America and any
    41  agency or instrumentality, corporate or otherwise, of the United  States
    42  of America.
    43    8.  "Final  determination"  or  "finally  determined" means a judicial
    44  decision (a) by the highest court of competent jurisdiction, or (b) by a
    45  court of competent jurisdiction from which no appeal has been taken  and
    46  the time within which to appeal has expired.
    47    9.  "Municipality"  means  any  county, city, town, village, municipal
    48  corporation, school district  or  other  political  subdivision  of  the
    49  state,  including  any  agency,  authority  or public corporation of the
    50  state or any of the foregoing, or any combination  thereof,  other  than
    51  the authority.
    52    10.  "Property"  means the power distribution system or systems of the
    53  authority, whether completed facilities  or  projects  in  construction,
    54  whether situated within or without the territorial limits of the service
    55  area,  including  the plants, works, structures, poles, lines, conduits,
    56  mains, systems, instrumentalities or  parts  thereof  and  appurtenances

        S. 2026--A                          3
 
     1  thereto,  lands,  franchises and interest in land, including lands under
     2  water and riparian rights, space rights and air rights, contract rights,
     3  substations, and distribution facilities, or any  other  property  inci-
     4  dental  to and included in such system or part thereof, and any improve-
     5  ments, extensions or betterments. The term "property" shall also include
     6  any and all interests in real property less than  full  title,  such  as
     7  easements,  rights of way, uses, leases, licenses and all other incorpo-
     8  real hereditaments and every estate, interest or right, legal or equita-
     9  ble, including terms for years and liens thereon by  way  of  judgments,
    10  mortgages  or otherwise, and also all claims for damages related to such
    11  real estate.
    12    11. "Revenues" means all rates, rents,  fees,  charges,  payments  and
    13  other income and receipts derived by the authority from the operation of
    14  the  properties of the authority other than the proceeds of the sales of
    15  its securities, including, but not limited to, investment  proceeds  and
    16  proceeds  of  insurance, condemnation, and sales or other disposition of
    17  assets, together with all federal, state or municipal aid.
    18    12. "Security" means any bond, note or other obligation issued by  the
    19  authority.
    20    13. "State" means the state of New York.
    21    14.  "State  agency"  means  any board, authority, agency, department,
    22  commission, public corporation, body politic or instrumentality  of  the
    23  state.
    24    15. "Trustees" means the board of trustees of the authority.
    25    16.  "Relevant  sectors" refers to the sectors that the HVPA will need
    26  expertise from in order to succeed. They include environmental  justice,
    27  consumer protection, indigenous nation rights, community renewable ener-
    28  gy,  electrification,  energy  efficiency,  workplace  issues  and local
    29  government.
    30    § 1022-b. Hudson Valley power authority. 1. A corporation known as the
    31  Hudson Valley power authority is hereby established and charged with the
    32  duties and having the powers provided in this title. The authority shall
    33  be a state authority, a body corporate and politic constituting a public
    34  benefit corporation, a political subdivision of  the  state,  exercising
    35  governmental  and public powers, perpetual in duration, capable of suing
    36  and being sued and having a seal, and which shall have  the  powers  and
    37  duties  enumerated  in  this  title, together with such others as may be
    38  conferred upon it by law. The authority is not created or organized, and
    39  its operations shall not be conducted,  for  the  purpose  of  making  a
    40  profit.  No  part of the revenues or assets of the authority shall inure
    41  to the benefit of or be distributable to its trustees or officers or any
    42  other private persons, except as herein  provided  for  actual  services
    43  rendered.
    44    2.  (a)  The  trustees from time to time shall hire, without regard to
    45  any personnel or civil service law, rule or  regulation  of  the  state,
    46  such  officers  and  employees,  including a chief executive officer and
    47  such engineering, management and legal officers, and other  professional
    48  employees,   including   but   not   limited  to  accounting,  planning,
    49  construction,  marketing,  finance,  appraisal,  banking   and   trustee
    50  services,  transmission and distribution, energy management, information
    51  technology, cyber security, power supply, human resources,  procurement,
    52  treasury,  energy  efficiency,  customer  service  and any other area of
    53  utility operations as the trustees may require for  the  performance  of
    54  their  duties  and  shall  prescribe the duties and compensation of each
    55  such officer and employee. Such compensation  shall  be  reasonable  and
    56  commensurate to the duties of the position of such officer or employee.

        S. 2026--A                          4
 
     1    (b)  Any  such  employees  hired, leased, or otherwise retained by the
     2  authority or any of its subsidiaries as a consequence of an  acquisition
     3  of all the membership interests in, or assets of, the Central Hudson Gas
     4  and Electric Corporation (hereinafter, "Central Hudson"), or any author-
     5  ity subsidiary shall be hired subject to, and be entitled to, all appli-
     6  cable  provisions  of  (i) any existing contract or contracts with labor
     7  unions representing Central Hudson  employees,  and  (ii)  all  existing
     8  pension,  retirement,  or  other  benefits  provided  to  Central Hudson
     9  employees under any existing  collective  bargaining  agreement.    Such
    10  employees shall not be public employees or eligible to become members of
    11  the  New York state employees' retirement system on the basis of compen-
    12  sation payable to them by the authority.
    13    3. The authority shall not hire  third-party  service  contractors  to
    14  conduct utility operations unless it has obtained written consent by the
    15  labor unions representing Central Hudson workers.
    16    4.  In addition to all of the powers of the public service commission,
    17  prior to acquiring any property and commencing operations, the authority
    18  shall secure an order from the commission authorizing  such  acquisition
    19  and  commencement.  The  commission  shall  have  the  power to deny the
    20  authority's application to acquire property and commence operations. The
    21  authority shall comply with any and all requests for documents,  materi-
    22  als,  and  testimony  that the commission may seek. The commission shall
    23  consider, including but not limited to,  the  following  factors  before
    24  issuing  an  order:  ratepayer  impacts;  and  system reliability.   The
    25  authority granted  pursuant  to  this  paragraph  shall  terminate  upon
    26  commencement of distribution of power.
    27    5.  The  authority  and  its  corporate existence shall continue until
    28  terminated by law, provided, however, that no such law shall take effect
    29  so long as the  authority  shall  have  securities  outstanding,  unless
    30  adequate provision has been made for the payment thereof.
    31    6.  In the event that the authority does not commence delivering elec-
    32  tric power within ten years of the effective date  of  this  title,  the
    33  authority shall cease to exist and the provisions of this title shall be
    34  of no further force and effect, subject to the terms of any bonds, notes
    35  or other debt obligations then outstanding.
    36    §  1022-b-1.  Trustees. 1. The board of the authority shall consist of
    37  nine trustees all of whom shall be residents of the service area, two of
    38  whom shall be appointed by the governor (trustees one and two),  one  of
    39  whom  the  governor  shall  designate  as  chair,  two  of whom shall be
    40  appointed by the temporary president of the  senate  after  consultation
    41  with  the  state  senator or senators representing the HVPA service area
    42  (trustees three and four), two of whom shall be appointed by the speaker
    43  of the assembly after consultation with the  state  assembly  member  or
    44  members  representing the HVPA service area (trustees five and six), one
    45  of whom shall be the HVPA observatory  governing  board  chair  (trustee
    46  seven), one of whom shall be appointed by the HVPA observatory governing
    47  board  (trustee eight), and one of whom shall be the business manager of
    48  the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers 320 representing the
    49  frontline workers of the HVPA (trustee nine). Appointed  trustees  shall
    50  have  expertise  in one of the relevant sectors mentioned in section one
    51  thousand twenty-two-a of this article.  Trustees shall  serve  staggered
    52  five-year  terms,  except during the first term of appointments upon the
    53  effective date of  this  title.    Trustees  three  and  five  shall  be
    54  appointed  for two years, trustees seven and nine shall be appointed for
    55  three years, trustees one and eight shall be appointed for  four  years,
    56  trustees two, four, and six shall be appointed for five years. This will

        S. 2026--A                          5
 
     1  allow for staggered appointments of at least two members each year after
     2  the  first  year,  thus  ensuring  a  degree  of continuity of committee
     3  membership.
     4    2. The trustees shall serve without compensation but shall be entitled
     5  to  reimbursement of their actual and necessary expenses incurred in the
     6  performance of their official duties, as may be authorized by the  trus-
     7  tees,  in  each  case  upon  appropriate documentation by the submitting
     8  trustee. No trustee or any entity, the majority of  which  is  owned  or
     9  controlled  by  any  trustee,  shall receive any additional compensation
    10  from the authority or be employed by the authority in any other capacity
    11  by whatever means.
    12    3. A majority of the appointed  voting  trustees  shall  constitute  a
    13  quorum  for  the  transaction of business, and the affirmative vote of a
    14  majority of trustees at a meeting shall be necessary to the validity  of
    15  any  resolution,  order or determination. The trustees, in by-laws or by
    16  resolution, may allow for attendance at a meeting  of  the  trustees  by
    17  speaker phone or any other electronic means by which all meeting partic-
    18  ipants can hear one another.
    19    4.  The trustees shall appoint an executive committee of not less than
    20  three trustees and shall delegate such duties  and  responsibilities  of
    21  the trustees to the executive committee as it may determine from time to
    22  time,  except  that  the  trustees  shall  not delegate to the executive
    23  committee the power to authorize the issuance of securities.  The  trus-
    24  tees may appoint such additional committees with such duties and respon-
    25  sibilities as they may determine from time to time.
    26    §  1022-c.  Hudson  Valley  power authority service area; extension of
    27  service area. 1. The service area of the Hudson Valley  power  authority
    28  shall  embrace  the service territory of Central Hudson Gas and Electric
    29  as of the effective date of this title.
    30    2. The service area of  the  Hudson  Valley  power  authority  may  be
    31  extended  at any time to include additional territory by the trustees in
    32  accordance with the following procedure, provided however, the procedure
    33  does not conflict with any rule or  regulation  of  the  public  service
    34  commission  or  any  other law. Whenever the trustees determine that the
    35  territory included within the service area should be extended,  consist-
    36  ent with the provisions of this title, the trustees shall adopt a resol-
    37  ution  proposing  the  additional  territory. The trustees shall fix the
    38  dates, hours and places for three public hearings before  such  trustees
    39  upon  the question of such extension and cause notice thereof and of the
    40  additional territory to be  included  within  the  service  area  to  be
    41  published  in  two  newspapers  of general circulation in the county not
    42  less than twenty nor more than thirty days before such  date.  At  least
    43  one  of  such  hearings  shall be held within the bounds of the proposed
    44  additional territory.  At such time the trustees shall hear all persons,
    45  taxpayers or officials who may wish to be heard and shall finally deter-
    46  mine the additional territory, if any, to be included in such extension.
    47  Such determination shall be made by resolution of the  trustees  adopted
    48  by  a  two-thirds  vote  of  all  trustees  then in office. A map of the
    49  service area, as extended, shall thereupon be filed in the office of the
    50  county clerk of the affected counties.
    51    § 1022-d. Powers and duties of the authority. The powers conferred  by
    52  this  title  shall be exercised by the trustees, subject to the terms of
    53  this title. In the exercise of those powers, either directly or  through
    54  its  officers  and  employees, the trustees may do the following things,
    55  among others, and the following list  of  powers  shall  not  be  deemed
    56  complete or exclusive, or to deny the existence of other powers, whether

        S. 2026--A                          6
 
     1  similar  or  different,  so  long  as  they are reasonably necessary for
     2  accomplishing the purposes declared and indicated in this title:
     3    1.  To  make  and  alter by-laws for the regulation of its affairs and
     4  conduct of its activities, to schedule annual, regular and special meet-
     5  ings of the trustees, as the conduct of the business  of  the  authority
     6  may warrant, and to adopt and amend an official seal;
     7    2.  To  develop,  acquire,  construct,  reconstruct,  rehabilitate and
     8  improve facilities for the distribution of electric and gas power or any
     9  connected service;
    10    3.  To  determine  the  location,  type,  size,  construction,  lease,
    11  purchase, ownership, acquisition, use and operation of any facilities or
    12  other structure or property, within or without the service area;
    13    4.  To  investigate,  implement  and  integrate, to the fullest extent
    14  practicable and economically feasible, such  resource  conservation  and
    15  energy efficiency measures and equipment intended to reduce power demand
    16  and  usage, utilize green technologies, alternative and renewable fuels,
    17  net metering, crediting mechanisms for distributed energy resources  and
    18  demand response programs, all as integral elements in its investments in
    19  new  equipment  for distribution of power, and in its marketing and sale
    20  of electricity and gas to consumers;
    21    5. To acquire on behalf of and in the name of the  authority,  whether
    22  by  agreement  with  and  purchase from the owner or owners, or by arbi-
    23  tration, or within the service area by eminent domain, pursuant  to  the
    24  procedures  set  forth in the eminent domain procedure law, or by lease,
    25  the whole or any part of any existing facilities or of any other proper-
    26  ty to be used in connection with power distribution by the authority  as
    27  set  out  in this title; provided, however, that the authority shall not
    28  acquire real property of a municipality or a  political  subdivision  of
    29  the  state  unless  such  municipality  or  political  subdivision shall
    30  consent thereto; and provided  further  that  the  authority  shall  not
    31  acquire  by  the  exercise of eminent domain any facilities for distrib-
    32  ution operating at a voltage in excess of twenty-two thousand volts from
    33  any person, corporation or association, public or  private,  engaged  in
    34  the business of distribution and sale of electricity and gas to ultimate
    35  customers unless the authority is unable to acquire by contract with the
    36  owners  or  operators thereof, the right to use such facilities on just,
    37  reasonable and non-discriminatory terms. In the exercise of the power of
    38  eminent domain, as provided in  this  subdivision,  the  property  being
    39  acquired shall be deemed, when so determined by the authority, to be for
    40  a public use;
    41    6.  To  create  or  acquire  one  or more wholly owned subsidiaries or
    42  membership interests in subsidiaries  in  accordance  with  section  one
    43  thousand  twenty-two-i of this title to carry out all or any part of the
    44  purposes of this title;
    45    7. To distribute electric and gas power  and  any  connected  services
    46  within  the  service  area, to fix progressive rates and charges for the
    47  furnishing or rendition of electric and gas power or  of  any  connected
    48  service,  and  to  collect revenues. Provided however, that prior to the
    49  first sale of electric and gas  power  or  any  connected  service,  the
    50  authority   shall  promulgate  regulations  granting  to  customers  the
    51  protections afforded by article  two  of  the  public  service  law  and
    52  section one hundred thirty-one-s of the social services law;
    53    8.  To maintain, operate and manage, and contract for the maintenance,
    54  operation and management of properties of the authority;
    55    9. To apply to the appropriate agencies and officials of the  federal,
    56  state  and local governments for such licenses, permits or approvals for

        S. 2026--A                          7
 
     1  its plans and projects as it may deem necessary or advisable,  and  upon
     2  such  terms  and conditions as it may deem appropriate to accept, in its
     3  discretion, such licenses, permits or approvals as may be tendered to it
     4  by such agencies and officials;
     5    10. To enter upon such lands, waters or premises as in the judgment of
     6  the  authority  shall  be  necessary  for the purpose of making surveys,
     7  soundings, borings and examinations to accomplish any purpose authorized
     8  by this title, the authority being liable only for actual damages done;
     9    11. To enter into cooperative agreements with other authorities, muni-
    10  cipalities, utility companies, individuals, firms or  corporations,  and
    11  the dominion of Canada and its political subdivisions, for the intercon-
    12  nection  of  facilities  and the exchange or interchange of electric and
    13  gas power or connected services, upon such terms and conditions as shall
    14  be determined to be reasonable;
    15    12. To execute contracts, borrow money, issue bonds, notes  and  other
    16  obligations  as  provided  in  section one thousand twenty-two-j of this
    17  title, and sell the same in such amounts and at  such  prices,  interest
    18  rates and other financial terms as may be determined by the trustees;
    19    13. To enter into agreements to purchase power from the power authori-
    20  ty  of  the  state of New York, the state, any state agency, any munici-
    21  pality, any private entity or any other available source at  such  price
    22  or  prices  as  may be negotiated, including the power to enter into any
    23  agreement or any negotiation for the purchase of power from the dominion
    24  of Canada, or any political subdivision,  public  authority  or  private
    25  corporation therein;
    26    14.  To  make  any  plans, studies or investigations which it may deem
    27  necessary, convenient or desirable to enable it effectually to carry out
    28  the provisions of this title;
    29    15. To do whatever may be necessary to give effect to the purposes  of
    30  this  title, and in general to have and exercise all other powers neces-
    31  sary or incidental to the purposes of this title;
    32    16. The trustees shall hold a monthly public meeting  to  discuss  the
    33  authority's  business,  including  but not limited to proposed rates and
    34  resource plans. Special meetings may be called by  the  chief  executive
    35  officer, by a majority of trustees, observatory, or by a petition signed
    36  by  not  less  than  one-tenth  of  all  of the primary account holders.
    37  Monthly and special meetings shall be held at the authority's  headquar-
    38  ters.  At  monthly  and  special  meetings,  members shall be allowed to
    39  attend in person or virtually and be given the  opportunity  to  present
    40  their views through oral or written statements;
    41    17. To develop and manage a public distributed renewable energy (PDRE)
    42  program  that  will  plan,  fund, and build distributed renewable energy
    43  owned by the HVPA. The PDRE program will include community energy  stor-
    44  age (CES). Similarly, the HVPA will ensure ratepayers that own their own
    45  distributed renewable energy are fairly rewarded for sending energy back
    46  to the grid;
    47    18.  In  regards  to hiring workers to operate the HVPA's distribution
    48  assets, the authority shall enter into  a  memorandum  of  understanding
    49  with  bona  fide  labor  organizations  of jurisdiction that is actively
    50  engaged  in  representing  transitioning  employees  from  non-renewable
    51  generation  facilities. Such memorandum shall contain but not be limited
    52  to safety and training standards, disaster response measures, guaranteed
    53  hours, staffing levels, pay rate protection,  and  retraining  programs.
    54  The  employees eligible for these positions shall first be selected from
    55  a pool of transitioning workers who have lost their employment  or  will
    56  be  losing  their  employment in the non-renewable energy sector. Such a

        S. 2026--A                          8
 
     1  list of potential employees will be provided by affected labor organiza-
     2  tions and provided to the department of labor. If  positions  cannot  be
     3  filled  by  transitioning  employees,  workers who live in disadvantaged
     4  communities  within  the  service  territory should then be prioritized,
     5  followed by any worker who lives in the service territory;
     6    19. In order to ensure a prevailing wage is paid, whenever the author-
     7  ity enters into any contract, subcontract, lease, grant, bond,  covenant
     8  or  other  agreement for or in connection with any construction, demoli-
     9  tion, reconstruction, excavation,  rehabilitation,  repair,  renovation,
    10  alteration, or improvement project, such project shall be deemed to be a
    11  public works project for the purposes of article eight of the labor law,
    12  and  all  of  the  provisions of article eight of the labor law shall be
    13  applicable to all the work involved  in  the  construction,  demolition,
    14  reconstruction,  excavation,  rehabilitation, repair, renovation, alter-
    15  ation, or improvement of such project. Funds, financial  assistance,  or
    16  any other benefits provided pursuant to this title shall not be utilized
    17  for  or in connection with the construction, demolition, reconstruction,
    18  excavation, rehabilitation, repair, renovation, alteration, or  improve-
    19  ment  of  any  project  to  which the provisions of article eight of the
    20  labor law are not applicable; and
    21    20. (a) For the protection of consumer health, safety  and/or  privacy
    22  needs,  it  shall  be  the  right of every consumer of the Hudson Valley
    23  power authority, at no penalty, fee or service charge, to require  their
    24  electric  corporation  or gas corporation to replace an existing digital
    25  utility meter at such consumer's  premises  that  is  assigned  to  such
    26  consumer's account with an analog utility meter.
    27    (b) The Hudson Valley power authority may not install a digital utili-
    28  ty  meter  on  a consumer's premises that is assigned to such consumer's
    29  account unless it first shall provide written notice to the consumer  no
    30  less than ninety days prior to the scheduled installation of such meter,
    31  so that such consumer may decline permission for such installation. Such
    32  notice shall provide that:
    33    (i)  the  consumer  shall have the right to decline permission for the
    34  Hudson Valley power authority from installing a  digital  utility  meter
    35  with no fee, penalty or service charge;
    36    (ii) the consumer may, at any point in time following the installation
    37  of  a  digital utility meter, request the removal of such device and its
    38  replacement with an analog utility meter; and
    39    (iii) the Hudson Valley power authority shall respond to such  consum-
    40  er's instructions within thirty days of receipt. The Hudson Valley power
    41  authority may charge such consumer the at-cost price for this service.
    42    (c)  The  Hudson Valley power authority may offer a one-time credit to
    43  customers who have a digital utility meter installed on their premises.
    44    § 1022-e. Powers to provide and maintain generating, transmission  and
    45  related  facilities.  Without  limiting  the  generality  of  the powers
    46  conferred upon the authority by section  one  thousand  twenty-two-d  of
    47  this title, the authority shall have the specific power:
    48    1.  Subject  to the provisions of subdivision one of section one thou-
    49  sand twenty-two-u of this title, to acquire, construct,  improve,  reha-
    50  bilitate, maintain and operate such generating, transmission and related
    51  facilities  as the authority deems necessary or desirable to maintain an
    52  adequate and dependable supply of electric  and  gas  power  within  the
    53  service area;
    54    2.  Subject  to the provisions of subdivision one of section one thou-
    55  sand twenty-two-u of this title, to acquire, construct,  improve,  reha-
    56  bilitate,  maintain  and  operate  such  hydroelectric or energy storage

        S. 2026--A                          9
 
     1  projects within the state as it deems necessary or desirable to contrib-
     2  ute to the adequacy, economy and reliability of the supply  of  electric
     3  power and energy or to conserve fuel;
     4    3.  Subject  to the provisions of subdivision one of section one thou-
     5  sand twenty-two-u of this title, to determine the location, type,  size,
     6  construction, lease, purchase, ownership, acquisition, use and operation
     7  of  any  generating,  transmission  or other related facility, provided,
     8  however, that in making such determinations relating to  electric  power
     9  facilities  the  authority  shall  give  primary  consideration  to  the
    10  construction of energy efficient facilities, energy  conservation,  load
    11  management programs, and cogeneration in the service area;
    12    4.  To  proceed  with  the  physical construction or completion of any
    13  generating, transmission or related facility;
    14    5. To apply to the appropriate agencies and officials of  the  federal
    15  and  state  governments,  for  such licenses, permits or approval of its
    16  plans or projects as it may deem necessary or advisable, and  to  accept
    17  such  licenses,  permits  or  approvals as may be tendered to it by such
    18  agencies or officials, upon such terms and conditions  as  it  may  deem
    19  appropriate;
    20    6.  To  institute suit, or to apply to any legislative body for legis-
    21  lation, or to take such other action as it may deem necessary or  advis-
    22  able  in  the  furtherance  of  the  purposes  of this title and for the
    23  protection of its rights, if for any reason the authority shall fail  to
    24  secure  any such license, permit or approval as it may deem necessary or
    25  advisable;
    26    7. To implement programs and policies  designed  to  provide  for  the
    27  interconnection of: (i) (A) solar electric generating equipment owned or
    28  operated  by  residential  customers, (B) farm waste electric generating
    29  equipment owned or operated by customer-generators, (C)  solar  electric
    30  generating equipment owned or operated by non-residential customers, (D)
    31  micro-combined  heat  and  power  generating  equipment owned, leased or
    32  operated by residential customers, (E)  fuel  cell  electric  generating
    33  equipment  owned,  leased  or operated by residential customers, and (F)
    34  micro-hydroelectric generating equipment owned, leased  or  operated  by
    35  customer-generators  and for net energy metering consistent with section
    36  sixty-six-j of the public service law, to  increase  the  efficiency  of
    37  energy  end  use, to shift demand from periods of high demand to periods
    38  of low demand and to facilitate the development of cogeneration; and
    39    (ii) wind electric generating equipment owned or operated  by  custom-
    40  er-generators  and  for  net  energy  metering  consistent  with section
    41  sixty-six-l of the public service law;
    42    8. To develop, with public participation, a  comprehensive  least-cost
    43  plan  which shall consider practical and economical use of conservation,
    44  renewable resources, and  cogeneration  for  providing  service  to  its
    45  customers;
    46    9.  To  cooperate with and to enter into contractual arrangements with
    47  private utility companies or public entities:
    48    (i) with respect to the construction and operation  of  facilities  by
    49  the authority and the sale of all or part of the output therefrom;
    50    (ii) with respect to the construction, completion, acquisition, owner-
    51  ship  and/or  operation  of generating facilities, fuel, docks, sidings,
    52  loading or unloading equipment, storage facilities and other  subsidiary
    53  facilities  and the disposition of the output of such generating facili-
    54  ties; and
    55    (iii) with respect to the construction, acquisition, ownership, opera-
    56  tion and/or use of transmission facilities;

        S. 2026--A                         10

     1    10. To cooperate with and to enter into contractual arrangements  with
     2  municipalities  with respect to the construction, improvement, rehabili-
     3  tation, ownership and/or operation of generating facilities;
     4    11.  To cooperate with and to enter into contractual arrangements with
     5  the  New  York  state  energy  research  and  development  authority  in
     6  connection  with the planning, siting, development, construction, opera-
     7  tion and maintenance of generating facilities of the authority utilizing
     8  new energy technologies;
     9    12. All renewable energy generating projects subject to this  subdivi-
    10  sion shall be deemed public work and subject to and performed in accord-
    11  ance  with  articles  eight and nine of the labor law. Each contract for
    12  such renewable energy generating project shall contain a provision  that
    13  such  projects may only be undertaken pursuant to a project labor agree-
    14  ment.  For purposes of this section,  "project  labor  agreement"  shall
    15  mean  a  pre-hire collective bargaining agreement between the authority,
    16  or a third party on behalf of the authority, and a  bona  fide  building
    17  and  construction trade labor organization establishing the labor organ-
    18  ization as the collective bargaining representative for all persons  who
    19  will perform work on a public work project, and which provides that only
    20  contractors  and subcontractors who sign a pre-negotiated agreement with
    21  the labor organization can perform project  work.  All  contractors  and
    22  subcontractors  associated  with  this work shall be required to utilize
    23  apprenticeship agreements as defined  by  article  twenty-three  of  the
    24  labor law;
    25    13.  The  authority  shall  include requirements in any procurement or
    26  development of a renewable energy generating project, as defined in this
    27  subdivision, that the components and parts shall be produced or made  in
    28  whole  or  substantial  part  in  the  United States, its territories or
    29  possessions. The authority's president and chief executive  officer,  or
    30  such  chief  executive  officer's designee may waive the procurement and
    31  development requirements set forth in this paragraph  if  such  official
    32  determines  that:  the requirements would not be in the public interest;
    33  the requirements would result  in  unreasonable  costs;  obtaining  such
    34  infrastructure  components and parts in the United States would increase
    35  the cost of a renewable energy generating  project  by  an  unreasonable
    36  amount;  or such components or parts cannot be produced, made, or assem-
    37  bled in the United States in sufficient and reasonably available quanti-
    38  ties or of satisfactory quality. Such determination must be made  on  an
    39  annual basis no later than December thirty-first, after providing notice
    40  and  an  opportunity for public comment, and such determination shall be
    41  made publicly available, in writing, on the authority's website  with  a
    42  detailed  explanation  of the findings leading to such determination. If
    43  the authority's president and chief executive officer, or designee,  has
    44  issued  determinations  for three consecutive years finding that no such
    45  waiver is warranted pursuant to this paragraph, then the authority shall
    46  no longer be required to provide the annual  determination  required  by
    47  this paragraph;
    48    14.  To enter into a memorandum of understanding for the operation and
    49  maintenance of a renewable energy generating project developed  pursuant
    50  to  this subdivision with a bona fide labor organization of jurisdiction
    51  that is actively engaged in representing  transitioning  employees  from
    52  non-renewable  generation  facilities.  Such memorandum shall be entered
    53  into prior to the completion  date  of  a  renewable  energy  generating
    54  project  and  shall be an ongoing material condition of authorization to
    55  operate and maintain a renewable  energy  generating  project  developed
    56  pursuant  to  this  subdivision.  The memorandum shall only apply to the

        S. 2026--A                         11
 
     1  employees necessary for the maintenance and operation of such  renewable
     2  energy  generating  projects.  Such  memorandum shall contain but not be
     3  limited to safety and training standards,  disaster  response  measures,
     4  guaranteed  hours,  staffing levels, pay rate protection, and retraining
     5  programs. The employees eligible for  these  positions  shall  first  be
     6  selected  from  a  pool  of  transitioning  workers  who have lost their
     7  employment or will be losing their employment in the non-renewable ener-
     8  gy generation sector. Such list of potential employees will be  provided
     9  by affected labor organizations and provided to the department of labor.
    10  The  department  of  labor  shall  update  and  provide such list to the
    11  authority  ninety  days   prior   to   purchase,   acquisition,   and/or
    12  construction of any project under this subdivision.
    13    15.  For  the  purposes of article fifteen-A of the executive law, any
    14  person entering into a contract for a  project  authorized  pursuant  to
    15  this  section  shall be deemed a state agency as that term is defined in
    16  such article and such contracts shall be deemed state  contracts  within
    17  the meaning of that term as set forth in such article.
    18    16.  Nothing  in this subdivision, shall be construed as exempting the
    19  authority, its subsidiaries, or any renewable energy generating projects
    20  undertaken pursuant to this section from  the  requirements  of  article
    21  eight  of  the public service law respecting any renewable energy system
    22  developed by the authority or an authority subsidiary after  the  effec-
    23  tive date of this subdivision that meets the definition of "major renew-
    24  able  energy facility" as defined in section one hundred thirty-seven of
    25  the public service law,  and  section  11-0535-c  of  the  environmental
    26  conservation  law  as it relates to an endangered and threatened species
    27  mitigation bank fund.
    28    § 1022-f. Rate-setting procedures. In  periodically  establishing  and
    29  revising rates, the trustees shall use the following procedures:
    30    1. Notice of the proposed rates shall be published in the state regis-
    31  ter  with  a  statement of the justification and reasons supporting such
    32  rates.  Such notice shall include a date for  a  hearing  in  accordance
    33  with subdivision two of this section.
    34    2. One or more hearings shall be conducted as expeditiously as practi-
    35  cable  by a hearing officer to develop a full and complete record and to
    36  receive public comment in the form of written and oral  presentation  of
    37  views,  data, questions, and argument related to such proposed rates. In
    38  any such hearing:
    39    (a) any person shall be provided an adequate opportunity by the  hear-
    40  ing officer to offer refutation or rebuttal of any material submitted by
    41  any other person or the trustees, and
    42    (b)  the  hearing officer, in such hearing officer's discretion, shall
    43  allow a reasonable opportunity for cross examination, which,  as  deter-
    44  mined  by  the  hearing  officer,  is  not dilatory, in order to develop
    45  information and material relevant to any such proposed rate.
    46    3. In addition to the opportunity to submit oral and written  material
    47  at  the  hearings,  any  written  views,  data, questions, and arguments
    48  submitted by persons prior to, or before the close of, hearings shall be
    49  made a part of the administrative record.
    50    4. The HVPA shall use progressive green rates. The rates shall  follow
    51  set parameters for energy rates and charges based on energy usage.
    52    (a)  The  HVPA's  rates  shall have increasing block rates, so that as
    53  electric  energy  and  gas  consumption  increases,  the  marginal  cost
    54  increases as well.
    55    (b) The first block of residential electric energy and gas use will be
    56  priced at below market rate, as determined by the HVPA.

        S. 2026--A                         12
 
     1    (c) Additional blocks shall be determined in the rate-making process.
     2    5. After such a hearing, the trustees in coordination with the observ-
     3  atory  may  propose  revised  rates,  publish such proposed rates in the
     4  state register, and conduct additional hearings in accordance with  this
     5  section.
     6    6.  The  trustees  shall, in coordination with the observatory, make a
     7  final decision establishing a rate or rates based on  the  record  which
     8  shall  include  the hearing transcript, together with exhibits, and such
     9  other materials and information as may have been submitted to, or devel-
    10  oped by, the trustees. The decision shall include a  full  and  complete
    11  justification of the final rates pursuant to this section.
    12    7. The final decision of the trustees shall become effective on publi-
    13  cation.
    14    §  1022-g. Climate leadership and community protection act commitment.
    15  1. At the outset, it is critical to  enshrine  climate  goals  into  the
    16  enabling  legislation  to  ensure  achieving  the climate leadership and
    17  community protection act's goals (CLCPA). In line with the CLCPA  goals,
    18  the HVPA shall:
    19    (a)  Procure  seventy  percent  renewable  electricity by two thousand
    20  thirty, and one hundred percent renewable electricity  by  two  thousand
    21  forty, provided the supply is available at reasonable rates;
    22    (b) Ensure at least thirty-five percent of the benefits of clean ener-
    23  gy and energy efficiency programs go to disadvantaged communities in its
    24  service territory; and
    25    (c) Conduct a study within two years of its creation to create a time-
    26  line for the potential phaseout of its gas infrastructure.
    27    2.  The authority shall, to the extent it is eligible, apply for elec-
    28  tive pay  credit  programs  authorized  or  extended  by  the  Inflation
    29  Reduction  Act of 2022, as established by Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
    30  Rule 89 FR 17546. Prior to filing, the authority shall  ensure  that  it
    31  has:
    32    (a) properly registered with the IRS;
    33    (b)  met  the  prevailing  wage  and  apprenticeships set forth by the
    34  Inflation Reduction Act; and
    35    (c) qualified for the domestic  content  bonus  credit  amounts  under
    36  sections forty-five, forty-five-y, forty-eight, and forty-eight-e of the
    37  Internal Revenue Code.
    38    § 1022-h. Acquisition of property, including the exercise of the power
    39  of  eminent domain. 1. The legislature hereby expressly finds and deter-
    40  mines:
    41    (a) The acquisition by the authority, through purchase or the exercise
    42  of the power of eminent domain, of either the securities or assets of  a
    43  utility  corporation  whichever is less expensive for the ratepayers, as
    44  the authority may determine will  be  just  to  the  ratepayers  in  the
    45  service area, is the most appropriate means of dealing with the emergen-
    46  cy  involving  the  economy,  health and safety of the residents and the
    47  industry and commerce in the service area, notwithstanding the fact that
    48  such utility corporation presently may be devoted to a public use, since
    49  the public use of such property by the authority is hereby deemed to  be
    50  superior to the public use of such property by any other person, associ-
    51  ation, or corporation.
    52    (b)  The authority, prior to exercising its power of eminent domain to
    53  acquire the stock or assets of a utility corporation, shall  enter  into
    54  negotiations  with such utility corporation for the purpose of acquiring
    55  such stock or assets upon such terms  as  the  authority,  in  its  sole
    56  discretion, determines will result in average electric rates equal to or

        S. 2026--A                         13
 
     1  less than the projected electric rates which would result if such utili-
     2  ty corporation were to continue in operation.
     3    (c)  The  compensation  paid by the authority to a utility corporation
     4  shall be just to the ratepayers in the service area who  must  pay  such
     5  compensation.
     6    (d)  If  the  authority  determines  that it is the stock of a utility
     7  corporation that should be taken, the proper measure of damages shall be
     8  the fair market value thereof as evidenced by the price of such stock on
     9  the exchange on which it is traded on the valuation date since there  is
    10  an established market for such stock that is reflective of its value. In
    11  no  event,  however, shall consequential or severance damages be awarded
    12  if control of such utility corporation shall  have  been  taken  by  the
    13  authority.
    14    (e)  If  the  authority  determines that it is the assets of a utility
    15  corporation that should be taken, fair market value would not constitute
    16  just compensation to such utility corporation since there is an insuffi-
    17  cient market in the usual sense for its assets to  ascertain  the  value
    18  thereof  from  the  market.  In determining the compensation payable for
    19  such assets, there shall be taken into consideration the  capitalization
    20  of such utility corporation's expected future earnings.
    21    (f)  Neither  consequential  nor  severance  damages are proper if the
    22  authority condemns all the assets of a utility corporation.
    23    (g) Such an acquisition by the authority of the securities  or  assets
    24  of  a  utility  corporation  serves  the public purposes of assuring the
    25  provision of an adequate supply of electricity in a reliable,  efficient
    26  and  economic manner and retaining existing commerce and industry in and
    27  attracting new commerce and industry to the service area, all  of  which
    28  are matters of state-wide concern.
    29    2.  In  furtherance of the legislative findings and determinations set
    30  forth in subdivision one  of  this  section,  the  authority  is  hereby
    31  authorized and empowered to acquire, through purchase or the exercise of
    32  the power of eminent domain, all or any part of the securities or assets
    33  of  a  utility  corporation, as the authority in its sole discretion may
    34  determine; provided, however, that prior to  proceeding  with  any  such
    35  acquisition  under this title, the board of trustees shall determine, in
    36  its sole discretion based upon such  engineering,  financial  and  legal
    37  data,  studies and opinions as it may deem appropriate, that the average
    38  electric rates projected to be charged after such  acquisition  and  for
    39  such  reasonable  period  of time as the board of trustees may determine
    40  will not be higher than the electric rates projected to  be  charged  by
    41  such  utility corporation during such period if such acquisition had not
    42  occurred.
    43    3. The authority also is authorized and empowered, in its  discretion,
    44  to  make  a  tender offer or tender offers for all or any portion of the
    45  securities of a utility corporation at  such  price  or  prices  as  the
    46  authority  may  determine to be appropriate; provided, however that such
    47  tender offer or tender offers, in the sole judgment  of  the  authority,
    48  will  result  in average electric rates less than the projected electric
    49  rates which would result from continued operation by such utility corpo-
    50  ration.
    51    (a) The authority shall make such offer or offers  or  any  adjustment
    52  thereof prior to acquiring any such securities or any assets of a utili-
    53  ty  corporation through the exercise of the power of eminent domain. The
    54  authority may pay for such securities in cash or by exchanging  therefor
    55  the authority's bonds or a combination thereof.

        S. 2026--A                         14
 
     1    (b) In the case of a tender offer in which a subsidiary of the author-
     2  ity  acquires  at  least  sixty-six  and two-thirds percent of a utility
     3  corporation's common stock, such subsidiary may merge with such  utility
     4  corporation  and  either  continue  in  existence or dissolve, as it may
     5  determine.
     6    (c)  The  provisions  of  section  five  hundred  thirteen and article
     7  sixteen of the business corporation law and any other provisions of  law
     8  relating  to procedures in a corporate takeover, including without limi-
     9  tation chapter nine hundred fifteen of  the  laws  of  nineteen  hundred
    10  eighty-five,  shall  not  be  applicable to the actions of the authority
    11  pursuant to this title.
    12    (d) In determining whether acceptance of such a tender  offer  by  the
    13  authority  is in the best interests of a utility corporation, the direc-
    14  tors of such utility corporation shall  consider  not  only  the  dollar
    15  amount of such offer but the interests of employees, suppliers, ratepay-
    16  ers,  creditors  (including  holders  of such utility corporation's debt
    17  securities), and the economy of the service area and the state.
    18    4. The authority, should it determine,  in  its  sole  discretion,  to
    19  acquire  the stock or assets of a utility corporation by the exercise of
    20  the power of eminent domain, shall not take title to nor  possession  of
    21  such  stock  or  assets  prior to a final determination of the amount of
    22  compensation to be paid for such stock or assets nor prior to a determi-
    23  nation by the authority, in its sole discretion that the taking of  such
    24  stock  or  assets  will  result  in average electric rates less than the
    25  projected electric rates which would result from continued operation  by
    26  such utility corporation.  Notwithstanding the provisions of the eminent
    27  domain  procedure  law,  the  provisions of subdivisions five and six of
    28  this section shall apply to the acquisition of the stock or property  of
    29  such utility corporation by the power of eminent domain, provided howev-
    30  er,  to  the  extent  the provisions herein do not supersede or conflict
    31  with the provisions of such law the provisions of such law shall apply.
    32    5. Procedure for acquisition of a utility corporation  stock.  (a)  In
    33  the  event  the  authority  determines to acquire the stock of a utility
    34  corporation by the exercise of the power of eminent domain, having first
    35  entered into negotiations with such utility corporation for the purchase
    36  of such stock, the authority need not hold any  public  hearing  on  its
    37  intention  to condemn such stock or on the question of the public use of
    38  such action, such finding having been made by  the  legislature  herein.
    39  The authority shall commence such acquisition by serving upon such util-
    40  ity  corporation and filing with the county clerk of the county in which
    41  the principal office of such utility corporation  is  located  a  notice
    42  describing  the  stock being acquired, the valuation date, as determined
    43  by the authority, and such additional information as the  authority  may
    44  reasonably  deem necessary to facilitate the process of condemnation and
    45  payment. The notice shall state that it is a notice of  pendency  of  an
    46  acquisition  proceeding and that the authority will elect whether or not
    47  to pay the amount of such award when it has been finally determined. The
    48  authority also shall cause a copy of such notice: (i) to be served  upon
    49  the  stock  transfer  agent  or agents designated by such utility corpo-
    50  ration for the transfer and registration of its stock; and  (ii)  to  be
    51  published  in  at  least  five successive issues of a daily newspaper of
    52  national circulation.
    53    (b) Upon receipt of such notice, the stock transfer agent  or  agents,
    54  at  the expense of the authority, shall forthwith serve upon each of the
    55  registered owners of such stock a copy of such notice. Service shall  be
    56  deemed  sufficient  if  mailed  by  certified  or registered mail to the

        S. 2026--A                         15
 
     1  address of each such owner as shown on  a  utility  corporation's  stock
     2  transfer  books.  Service of the notice upon the stock transfer agent or
     3  agents and its publication shall not be jurisdictional prerequisites  to
     4  the  validity  of the taking. Failure to notify any owner of stock to be
     5  taken shall not invalidate any  proceedings  brought  hereunder  or  any
     6  title acquired by the authority.
     7    (c)  Upon  filing  of  the  notice  described in paragraph (a) of this
     8  subdivision, the authority shall petition a special term of the  supreme
     9  court in the judicial district in which such utility corporation has its
    10  principal  office  for the acquisition of the stock. Such petition shall
    11  be generally in the form prescribed by the eminent domain procedure  law
    12  so far as consistent herewith.
    13    (d)  The  supreme  court  in the district in which such utility corpo-
    14  ration has its principal office shall  have  exclusive  jurisdiction  to
    15  hear  and  determine all claims arising from the acquisition of stock by
    16  the exercise of the power of eminent domain and shall hear  such  claims
    17  without  a  jury  and  without  referral  to a referee or commissioners.
    18  Notwithstanding the provisions of section nine hundred one of the  civil
    19  practice  law  and rules, upon motion to the court by the authority, the
    20  condemnation proceeding for the acquisition of stock shall be maintained
    21  as a class action, pursuant to remaining provisions of article  nine  of
    22  the  civil  practice law and rules, and the owners of the stock shall be
    23  deemed a defendant class on the basis of the following express  legisla-
    24  tive findings:
    25    (i)  the class of such utility corporation stock owners is so numerous
    26  that joinder of all members is impracticable;
    27    (ii) the issue of valuation  of  such  utility  corporation  stock  is
    28  common  to all such utility corporation stock owners and there are ques-
    29  tions of law or fact common to the members of such class which  predomi-
    30  nate over any questions affecting only individual members;
    31    (iii)  the  claims or defenses, if any, of any representative owner of
    32  such utility corporation stock to acquisition thereof by  the  authority
    33  are typical of the claims or defenses of the class;
    34    (iv)  there  are representative parties who will fairly and adequately
    35  protect the interests of the class; and
    36    (v) the prosecution of  separate  actions  by  or  against  individual
    37  members  of  the  class  would  create a risk of inconsistent or varying
    38  adjudications with respect to the issue of valuation  and  other  issues
    39  common to the class.
    40    (e)  The  procedure  for determining just compensation shall be in the
    41  manner prescribed by the eminent domain procedure  law,  except  to  the
    42  extent such procedure is inconsistent with the provisions of this title,
    43  in which case the provisions of this title shall control.
    44    (f)  Upon  the entry of an award finally determining just compensation
    45  for the stock, the authority shall have  sixty  days  after  receipt  of
    46  notice  of entry of such award within which to elect to proceed with the
    47  taking or to abandon such acquisition as provided in subdivision nine of
    48  this section.  Notice of such election shall be served by the  authority
    49  and by the stock transfer agent in the manner described in paragraph (a)
    50  of  this subdivision. If the authority elects to proceed with the acqui-
    51  sition, it shall deposit with the supreme court in which  the  condemna-
    52  tion proceeding was held an amount equal to the award within one hundred
    53  eighty  days  after  receipt by the authority of notice of entry of such
    54  award. Upon the making of such deposit, the authority shall notify  such
    55  utility  corporation's  stock transfer agent in writing of such deposit.
    56  The sum so deposited shall be applied as provided in the eminent  domain

        S. 2026--A                         16
 
     1  procedure  law.  Upon  making such deposit and giving such notice to the
     2  stock transfer agent, title to all stock  described  in  the  notice  of
     3  taking  shall  immediately vest in the authority and the authority shall
     4  have  the  immediate right thereto. In the event the authority elects to
     5  abandon the acquisition, the provisions  of  subdivision  nine  of  this
     6  section shall apply.
     7    (g)  It  shall be a condition precedent to the payment of compensation
     8  for any such securities that  such  securities  be  surrendered  to  the
     9  supreme  court  or  to  such  other entity, including the issuer's stock
    10  transfer agent, as the supreme court may direct.
    11    6. Procedure for acquisition of a utility corporation's assets. (a) If
    12  the authority shall find it necessary or convenient to acquire any  real
    13  or personal property of such utility corporation, other than securities,
    14  whether  for immediate or future use, then the authority need not deter-
    15  mine that such property is required for public use, since  the  legisla-
    16  ture  already  has  made such determination in this title which determi-
    17  nation shall be binding for all purposes. The authority need not publish
    18  any notice of its intention to acquire such property or hold any  public
    19  hearing with respect thereto or to the public use of such action.
    20    (b)  When  any  real  property of such utility corporation within this
    21  state is sought to be acquired by the exercise of the power  of  eminent
    22  domain,  and  after  the  authority shall have entered into negotiations
    23  with such utility corporation for the purchase  of  such  property,  the
    24  authority  shall  cause  a  survey  and map to be made thereof and shall
    25  cause such survey and map to be filed in its office and in the office of
    26  the county clerk in which such  property  is  located.  There  shall  be
    27  annexed to such survey and map a certificate executed by the chief engi-
    28  neer  of  the  authority, or by such other officer or employee as may be
    29  designated by the board of trustees, stating that the property or inter-
    30  est therein described in such  survey  and  map  is  necessary  for  its
    31  purposes.
    32    (c)  Upon  filing  such survey and map, the authority shall petition a
    33  special term of the supreme court in the judicial district in which  the
    34  property  is  located  for  the acquisition of such property or interest
    35  therein. Such petition shall describe the property being  acquired,  the
    36  valuation  date,  as  determined  by  the authority, and such additional
    37  information as the authority may reasonably deem necessary to facilitate
    38  the process of condemnation and payment. The petition shall  state  that
    39  the  authority will elect whether or not to pay the amount of such award
    40  when it has been finally determined. In all other respects,  such  peti-
    41  tion  shall  be  generally  in the form prescribed by the eminent domain
    42  procedure law, so far as consistent herewith.  Such  petition,  together
    43  with  a  notice  of  pendency  of  the proceeding, shall be filed in the
    44  office of the county clerk of  the  county  in  which  the  property  is
    45  located  and shall be indexed and recorded as provided by law. A copy of
    46  such petition, together with a notice of  the  presentation  thereof  to
    47  such  special term of the supreme court, shall be served upon the owners
    48  of such property as provided in the eminent domain  procedure  law.  The
    49  authority may cause a duplicate original affidavit of the service there-
    50  of to be recorded in the books used for recording deeds in the office of
    51  the  county  clerk of the county in which the property described in such
    52  notice is located, and the recording of such affidavit  shall  be  prima
    53  facie evidence of due service thereof.
    54    (d)  Subsequent proceedings shall be conducted generally in the manner
    55  prescribed by the eminent domain procedure law except to the extent  the

        S. 2026--A                         17
 
     1  provisions  thereof  are inconsistent with the provisions of this title,
     2  in which case the provisions of this title shall control.
     3    (e)  Notwithstanding any provision of the eminent domain procedure law
     4  to the contrary, in any proceeding brought by the authority  to  condemn
     5  real  property  pursuant  to such law, title shall vest in the authority
     6  and compensation shall be paid only upon: (i) a decision by the  supreme
     7  court  that compensation for the real property condemned shall be deter-
     8  mined solely by the income capitalization method of valuation  based  on
     9  the  actual  net income as allowed by the public service commission; and
    10  (ii) such supreme court's determination that the amount of such  compen-
    11  sation  shall  be  based on the income capitalization method, entry of a
    12  final judgment, the filing of the final decree and the conclusion of any
    13  appeal or the expiration of the time to file an appeal  related  to  the
    14  condemnation  proceeding.  If  any  court  shall  utilize  any method of
    15  compensation other than the income  capitalization  method,  or  if  the
    16  proposed  compensation is more than the rate base of the assets taken in
    17  condemnation, as utilized by the public service  commission  in  setting
    18  rates  and as certified by such commission, then the authority may with-
    19  draw the condemnation proceeding  without  prejudice  or  costs  to  any
    20  party.
    21    (f)  Should  a utility corporation's property be taken by the exercise
    22  of the power of eminent domain and if  such  utility  corporation  shall
    23  have  agreed  upon the compensation to be paid therefor in settlement of
    24  the proceeding, if,  such  utility  corporation  shall  be  entitled  to
    25  payment  of the agreed or awarded compensation within one hundred eighty
    26  days after the date of the agreement upon the amount of the compensation
    27  or of the entry of the award, together with interest upon the amount  of
    28  such  compensation from the time of acquisition thereof by the authority
    29  to the date of payment of such compensation;  but  such  interest  shall
    30  cease  upon the service by the authority, upon the person or corporation
    31  entitled thereto, of a fifteen days' notice that the authority is  ready
    32  and willing to pay the amount of such compensation upon the presentation
    33  of proper proofs and vouchers. Such notice shall be served personally or
    34  by registered mail and publication thereof shall be made at least once a
    35  week  for  three successive weeks in a daily newspaper of general circu-
    36  lation in the county in which such  property  or  any  part  thereof  is
    37  located.
    38    (g)  Upon  the entry of an award finally determining just compensation
    39  for the property of such utility corporation, the authority  shall  have
    40  sixty  days  after receipt of notice of entry of such award within which
    41  to elect to proceed with the taking or to abandon  such  acquisition  as
    42  provided  in  subdivision  nine of this section. Notice of such election
    43  shall be served by the authority on the owners of such property  in  the
    44  manner described in paragraph (c) of this subdivision.  If the authority
    45  elects  to  proceed  with  the  acquisition,  it  shall deposit with the
    46  supreme court in which the condemnation proceeding was  held  an  amount
    47  equal  to  the award within one hundred eighty days after receipt by the
    48  authority of notice of entry of such award.  Upon  the  making  of  such
    49  deposit,  the authority shall notify such utility corporation in writing
    50  of such deposit.  The sum so deposited shall be applied as  provided  in
    51  the  eminent  domain  procedure law. Upon making such deposit and giving
    52  such notice to such utility corporation, title to all property described
    53  in the notice of taking shall immediately vest in the authority and  the
    54  authority  shall  have  the  immediate  right thereto. The order setting
    55  forth the award, together with evidence from the clerk of the  court  of
    56  receipt  of the amount of the award, shall be filed in the office of the

        S. 2026--A                         18
 
     1  county clerk of the county in which the property is located and shall be
     2  indexed and recorded in the same manner as a notice  of  pendency  under
     3  the  eminent  domain procedure law. The owner or person in possession of
     4  such  property  shall  deliver  possession thereof to the authority upon
     5  demand, and in case possession is not delivered when demanded or  demand
     6  is not convenient because of absence of the owner or inability to locate
     7  or  determine  the  owner,  the authority may apply to the court without
     8  notice for an order requiring the sheriff to put it into  possession  of
     9  such  real  property.  Such  an order shall be executed as if it were an
    10  execution for the delivery of the possession of  the  property.  In  the
    11  event the authority elects to abandon the acquisition, the provisions of
    12  subdivision nine of this section shall apply.
    13    7.  At  any  time  the  authority  and  its duly authorized agents and
    14  employees may, on reasonable notice and during business hours, (a) enter
    15  upon any real property proposed to be acquired for the purpose of making
    16  the surveys or maps mentioned in this section, or of making  such  other
    17  surveys,  inspections  or examinations of real and personal property and
    18  (b) inspect and make copies of the books and records of  the  issuer  of
    19  such  securities,  all as the authority may deem necessary or convenient
    20  for the purposes of this title.
    21    8. Upon the acquisition of all the outstanding shares of  stock  of  a
    22  corporate  issuer representing all the voting rights and equity thereof,
    23  the authority shall as soon as reasonably  practicable  take  all  steps
    24  necessary to ensure that the rights and claims of all the holders of any
    25  other  stock  and debt securities and all other creditors thereof are as
    26  secure as they were immediately prior to the acquisition by the authori-
    27  ty. Nothing herein shall prohibit the authority from taking  any  appro-
    28  priate  and  prudent  action to renegotiate and restructure such debt or
    29  from purchasing the preferred stock and debt securities issued  by  such
    30  corporation at such prices as the authority may determine. The authority
    31  may  also exchange its bonds for any outstanding preferred stock or debt
    32  securities with the consent of the holders of such  preferred  stock  or
    33  debt securities.
    34    9. If the authority determines, in its sole discretion, that the total
    35  cost  of  acquisition will result in average electric rates in excess of
    36  the projected electric rates which would result from continued operation
    37  by such utility corporation, the authority shall  abandon  the  acquisi-
    38  tion.  In  such event, the authority shall serve notice of such abandon-
    39  ment (a) in the case of a stock acquisition, by causing to be mailed  by
    40  certified  or registered mail a copy of such notice to each former owner
    41  of stock as shown on such utility  corporation's  stock  transfer  books
    42  immediately prior to such acquisition at the address shown on such stock
    43  transfer  books  and by causing to be published a copy of such notice in
    44  at least five successive issues of a daily newspaper of national  circu-
    45  lation or (b) in the case of an asset acquisition, in the same manner as
    46  provided  for the service of a petition for acquisition in paragraph (c)
    47  of subdivision six of this section.   In addition, in  the  case  of  an
    48  asset acquisition the authority shall file a copy of the notice of aban-
    49  donment with the county clerk of the county in which is located any real
    50  property that was taken and with the clerk of the supreme court in which
    51  the proceeding was instituted.
    52    § 1022-i. Subsidiaries. 1. The authority shall have the right to exer-
    53  cise  and perform all or part of its powers and functions through one or
    54  more wholly owned subsidiaries by operating as the sole member  thereof,
    55  acquiring  the  voting  shares  or  membership  interests thereof, or by
    56  resolution of the board directing  any  of  its  trustees,  officers  or

        S. 2026--A                         19
 
     1  employees  to organize a subsidiary pursuant to the business corporation
     2  law, the not-for-profit corporation law, the limited  liability  company
     3  law,  or  the  transportation  corporations  law.  Such resolution shall
     4  prescribe the purpose for which such subsidiary is to be formed.
     5    2.  The  authority may transfer to any subsidiary any moneys, property
     6  (real, personal or mixed) or  facilities  in  order  to  carry  out  the
     7  purposes  of  this title. Each such subsidiary shall have all the privi-
     8  leges, immunities, tax exemptions and other exemptions of the  authority
     9  to the extent the same are not inconsistent with the statute or statutes
    10  pursuant  to  which  such  subsidiary was established provided, however,
    11  that in any event any such subsidiary shall be  entitled  to  exemptions
    12  from  the  public service law and any regulation by, or the jurisdiction
    13  of, the public service commission, and the state  environmental  quality
    14  review  act  to  the  extent  provided in subdivision two of section one
    15  thousand twenty-two-u of this title.
    16    3. When the authority acquires either directly or through a subsidiary
    17  the private entity known as Central Hudson, the authority shall maintain
    18  the employment of the Central Hudson employees who are  subject  to  the
    19  terms  of  any  existing contract or contracts with any labor union, and
    20  shall assume such labor contracts. Upon acquisition of Central Hudson by
    21  the authority, such employees shall:
    22    (a) continue to be treated as private sector employees subject to  the
    23  national  labor  relations act and exempt from the New York state public
    24  employees fair employment act;
    25    (b) not acquire civil service status;
    26    (c) be entitled to continue to receive such  salary  and  benefits  as
    27  said employees receive as provided in the existing labor union contracts
    28  as of the date of the authority's acquisition of any membership interest
    29  in Central Hudson;
    30    (d)  be  entitled  to  all  provisions  of  any  existing  contract or
    31  contracts with labor unions; and
    32    (e) have pension and other benefits,  including  retirement  benefits,
    33  continued in plans that are operated and administered in compliance with
    34  the employee retirement income security act of 1974, as amended (herein-
    35  after  "ERISA"),  and  the  internal revenue code, to the fullest extent
    36  allowed by law.  After acquisition of Central Hudson by  the  authority,
    37  the authority shall have an obligation to bargain in good faith with the
    38  collective  bargaining  representative of such employees pursuant to the
    39  national labor relations act. The  authority  may,  in  its  discretion,
    40  utilize  the  services  of a professional employer organization (PEO) as
    41  defined in section nine hundred sixteen of the labor law to maintain the
    42  employment and  working  conditions  of  the  Central  Hudson  employees
    43  consistent  with  the requirements of this subdivision.  Notwithstanding
    44  any provision of law which may or could be deemed to the contrary,  such
    45  acquisition  of  Central Hudson by or for the authority and/or authority
    46  subsidiary, and the rights, obligations and undertakings of the authori-
    47  ty in connection therewith as hereinabove set forth, are hereby declared
    48  to be in furtherance of the authority's proprietary,  marketplace  func-
    49  tion  of  providing  a  safer,  more efficient, reliable, and economical
    50  supply of electrical and gas energy within the service area, which  will
    51  realize savings for the ratepayers and taxpayers in the service area and
    52  further  protect  the  interests  of  ratepayers  and the economy in the
    53  service area.
    54    § 1022-j. Deposit and investment of moneys of the  authority.  1.  All
    55  moneys  of the authority, from whatever source derived, except as other-
    56  wise authorized or provided in this title, shall upon receipt be  depos-

        S. 2026--A                         20
 
     1  ited  forthwith  in  a  bank  or banks designated by the trustees, to be
     2  selected in accordance with such standards as  the  trustees  shall  set
     3  forth  in  the  by-laws or investment guidelines of the authority, which
     4  standards shall take into account the creditworthiness and capital posi-
     5  tion of the depositary bank or banks. The moneys in such accounts may be
     6  invested in obligations of the state or the United States, or guaranteed
     7  by either in accordance with practices that the trustees shall set forth
     8  in  the by-laws or investment guidelines of the authority. The moneys in
     9  such accounts shall be withdrawn on the order of such person or  persons
    10  as  the  directors  shall  authorize in the by-laws of the authority and
    11  shall be applied to the use of  the  authority  as  the  trustees  shall
    12  authorize  in  the by-laws of the authority. All deposits of such moneys
    13  shall be secured in accordance with section twenty-nine hundred  twenty-
    14  five  of  this  chapter.  The  state  comptroller and such comptroller's
    15  legally authorized representatives are  authorized  and  empowered  from
    16  time to time to examine the accounts and books of the authority, includ-
    17  ing  its  receipts,  disbursements,  contracts,  leases,  sinking funds,
    18  investments and any other records and papers relating to  its  financial
    19  standing;  the authority shall not be required to pay a fee for any such
    20  examination.
    21    2. The authority shall have power to contract with holders of  any  of
    22  its  bonds or notes or other obligations, or any trustee therefor, as to
    23  the custody, collection, securing, investment and payment of any  moneys
    24  of  the  authority  and of any moneys held in trust or otherwise for the
    25  payment of bonds or notes or other obligations, and  to  carry  out  any
    26  such  contract.  Moneys  held  in  trust or otherwise for the payment of
    27  bonds or notes or other obligations or in any way  to  secure  bonds  or
    28  notes  or  obligations  and  deposits of such moneys shall be secured in
    29  full in direct obligations of the  federal  government  the  payment  of
    30  which  is  guaranteed  by the United States of America. Such investments
    31  shall be held on deposit only in banks having a  minimum  credit  rating
    32  and  a minimum accumulated capital, as the trustees shall specify in the
    33  by-laws or investment guidelines of the authority.
    34    3. Subject to agreements with noteholders and bondholders or any trus-
    35  tee therefor, the authority shall prescribe a uniform system of accounts
    36  in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles.
    37    4. The trustees shall adopt investment  guidelines  and  standards  to
    38  implement the foregoing provisions of this section, which guidelines and
    39  standards  shall  be reviewed annually by the trustees and shall be made
    40  available to state and municipal officials and to the public.
    41    5. The Hudson Valley power  authority  is  a  public  entity  and  the
    42  management  of its financial resources shall be conducted by a bank that
    43  is accountable to the public in ways that are not possible with  private
    44  financial  institutions.  Subsequent  to  the  passage  of the "New York
    45  public banking act" or similar legislation to allow for the creation  of
    46  local  public  banks  and the chartering of a public bank in the service
    47  territory, the Hudson Valley power authority shall transfer  all  finan-
    48  cial  assets  into  accounts  held  by such an institution as soon as is
    49  practicable.
    50    § 1022-k. Conflicts of interest.  Eligibility  for  appointment  as  a
    51  trustee,  officer  or  employee of the authority shall be subject to the
    52  provisions of section twenty-eight hundred twenty-five of this  chapter.
    53  In addition to the requirements of such section:
    54    1.  If any trustee, officer or employee of the authority shall have an
    55  interest, either direct or  indirect,  in  any  contract  to  which  the
    56  authority  is  or  is to be a party, such interest shall be disclosed to

        S. 2026--A                         21
 
     1  the authority in writing and shall be set forth in the  minutes  of  the
     2  authority.  The  trustee, officer or employee having such interest shall
     3  not participate in any action by the  authority  with  respect  to  such
     4  contract.
     5    2. No trustee, officer or employee of the authority shall be deemed to
     6  have  such  an interest solely by reason of the ownership of two percent
     7  or less of the securities of a corporation which is or is to be a  party
     8  to a contract with the authority, including without limitation the hold-
     9  ing company of any banking institution in which the funds of the author-
    10  ity are, or are to be deposited, or which is or is to be acting as trus-
    11  tee  or  paying agent under any bond or note resolution, trust indenture
    12  or similar instrument to which the authority is a party.
    13    3. Nothing in this section shall be deemed or construed to  limit  the
    14  right of any trustee, officer or employee of the authority to acquire an
    15  interest in the securities of the authority.
    16    § 1022-l. Sale of surplus power. Whenever any electric power which the
    17  authority  may  acquire  creates  a  surplus over the amount of electric
    18  power required by the residents of the service area, the  authority  may
    19  sell  such  surplus in territory outside the service area to persons, or
    20  public or private corporations. In acquiring any  facility  or  property
    21  which  also  serves  any  municipality  or territory outside the service
    22  area, the authority, if it deems it advantageous and  economical  so  to
    23  do,  may,  with the consent of the trustees, serve any such municipality
    24  or territory or sell electric power to persons,  or  public  or  private
    25  corporations in such territory or to such municipality.
    26    §  1022-m.  Audit and annual reports. 1. The accounts of the authority
    27  shall be subject to the supervision of the  comptroller  and  an  annual
    28  audit  shall  be performed by an independent certified public accountant
    29  selected by the trustees and shall be  made  available  to  the  munici-
    30  palities served by the authority and to the public.
    31    2. The authority shall submit a detailed annual report pursuant to and
    32  as specified in section twenty-eight hundred of this chapter, and a copy
    33  of such report shall be filed with the county executives of the counties
    34  within  the  service  area,  and  with the mayors and supervisors of the
    35  municipalities within the service area and shall be  made  available  to
    36  the municipalities served by the authority and to the public. Nothing in
    37  this  section  shall  be deemed to exempt the authority from any rule or
    38  regulation, including this chapter.
    39    § 1022-n. Bonds, notes and other obligations of the authority. 1.  The
    40  authority shall have power and is hereby authorized from time to time to
    41  issue its bonds, notes or other obligations for the purpose of financing
    42  any  capital project authorized by this title, including but not limited
    43  to, the acquisition of any  real  or  personal  property  or  facilities
    44  deemed   necessary   by  the  authority,  development  and  professional
    45  expenses, and funding any capital or other reserve funds established  in
    46  connection with the authority's operations or issuances, in such princi-
    47  pal  amount  as  the  trustees  shall determine necessary to perform its
    48  corporate duties and further its purposes as authorized in  this  title.
    49  The maximum maturity of any such bond shall not exceed thirty years from
    50  its  date  of  issuance.  The maximum maturity of any such note or other
    51  obligation shall not exceed five years from its date of issuance.
    52    2. Except as may be otherwise expressly provided by the authority, the
    53  issuance of bonds, notes or other obligations, shall  be  general  obli-
    54  gations  of  the  authority payable out of any moneys or revenues of the
    55  authority, subject only to any agreements with the holders of particular

        S. 2026--A                         22
 
     1  bonds, notes or other obligations  pledging  any  particular  moneys  or
     2  revenues.
     3    3. The authority shall have power from time to time, whenever it deems
     4  refunding  expedient, to refund any bonds, notes or other obligations by
     5  the issuance of new bonds,  notes  or  other  obligations,  whether  the
     6  bonds,  notes  or  other  obligations  to  be  refunded have or have not
     7  matured, and may issue bonds,  notes  or  other  obligations  partly  to
     8  refund bonds, notes or other obligations then outstanding and partly for
     9  any  other  purpose described in this section. Refunding bonds, notes or
    10  other obligations may be exchanged for the bonds, notes or  other  obli-
    11  gations  to be refunded, with such cash adjustments as may be agreed, or
    12  may be sold with the proceeds applied to the purchase or payment of  the
    13  bonds to be refunded.
    14    4. Bonds may be issued either in a series with multiple discrete matu-
    15  rity  dates  or  as  term  bonds with a single maturity date. The bonds,
    16  notes or other obligations shall be  authorized  by  resolution  of  the
    17  trustees  and  shall  bear  such  date  or dates, mature at such time or
    18  times, bear interest at such rate or rates, payable annually or semi-an-
    19  nually, be in such denominations, be in such form, carry such  registra-
    20  tion  privileges, be executed in such manner, be payable in lawful money
    21  of the United States of America at such place or places, and be  subject
    22  to  such  terms  of  redemption,  as  such resolution or resolutions may
    23  provide. In the event that term bonds, notes or  other  obligations  are
    24  issued, the resolution authorizing the same may make such provisions for
    25  the  establishment  and  management  of  adequate  sinking funds for the
    26  payment thereof, as the authority may deem necessary.
    27    5. The bonds, notes or other obligations of the authority may be  sold
    28  at  public  or  private  sale  for such price or prices as the authority
    29  shall determine. For a private sale of  its  securities,  the  authority
    30  shall  obtain  the  written  approval of the terms of such sale from the
    31  comptroller if such sale is to a party other than  the  comptroller,  or
    32  from  the  director of the budget where such sale is to the comptroller,
    33  in either case prior to closing the issuance transaction.
    34    6. Any resolution authorizing any issuance of bonds,  notes  or  other
    35  obligations  may  contain  provisions,  which  shall  be  a  part of the
    36  contract between the authority and the holders of the issued securities,
    37  as to:
    38    (a) pledging all or any part of the revenues of the authority  or  its
    39  projects  or  any  revenue  producing  contract or contracts made by the
    40  authority with any individual, partnership, limited  liability  company,
    41  corporation  or association to secure the payment of the bonds, notes or
    42  other obligations, subject to such agreements with holders of securities
    43  of the authority;
    44    (b) pledging, assigning or creating a lien  on  all  or  any  part  of
    45  assets  of  the  authority, including mortgages and obligations security
    46  mortgages, to secure the payment of the bonds, subject  to  such  agree-
    47  ments with holders of securities of the authority;
    48    (c) the setting aside of reserves or sinking funds, and the regulation
    49  and disposition thereof;
    50    (d) establishment of special funds for deposit of moneys received from
    51  the  proceeds of the issuance of securities as the trustees shall deter-
    52  mine, consistent with the authorizing resolution and the  provisions  of
    53  this title;
    54    (e)  limitations  on  the purpose to which the proceeds of sale of any
    55  issuance of bonds, notes or other obligations then or thereafter  to  be

        S. 2026--A                         23
 
     1  issued  may  be applied and pledging such proceeds to secure the payment
     2  of the bonds, notes or other obligations;
     3    (f)  limitations  of  the issuance of additional bonds, notes or other
     4  obligations; the terms upon which additional bonds, notes or other obli-
     5  gations may be issued and secured;  and  the  refunding  of  outstanding
     6  bonds, notes or other obligations;
     7    (g)  the  procedure,  if  any, by which the terms of any contract with
     8  bondholders may be amended or abrogated, the amount of bonds the holders
     9  of which must consent thereto, and the manner in which such consent  may
    10  be given;
    11    (h)  providing for the appointment and powers of a trustee for holders
    12  of securities, and the rights, powers and duties of such trustee as  the
    13  directors may determine;
    14    (i)  limitations  on the amount of moneys derived from a project to be
    15  expended for operating, administrative or other expenses of the authori-
    16  ty;
    17    (j) defining the acts or omissions to act  which  shall  constitute  a
    18  default in the duties of the authority to holders of its obligations and
    19  providing  the  rights  and  remedies  of such holders in the event of a
    20  default, provided, however, that such rights and remedies shall  not  be
    21  inconsistent with the laws of the state and any other provisions of this
    22  title;  and  provided,  further, however, that nothing contained in this
    23  title shall be deemed to restrict the right of the state or of any muni-
    24  cipality to amend, modify or otherwise alter statutes, local laws, ordi-
    25  nances, resolutions or agreements imposing or relating to taxes or  fees
    26  or  appropriations  relating thereto; and there shall not be included in
    27  any resolution or contract or agreement with the holders of  the  bonds,
    28  notes  or other obligations authorized by this title any provision which
    29  provides that a default shall occur as a result of the  state  or  of  a
    30  municipality  exercising  its  right to amend, modify or otherwise alter
    31  laws, ordinances, resolutions or  agreements  imposing  or  relating  to
    32  taxes or fees or appropriations relating thereto; and
    33    (k)  any  other  provisions  not inconsistent with those enumerated in
    34  this subdivision and necessary to effect its issuances of  bonds,  notes
    35  or other obligations and the rights of the holders of its securities, or
    36  otherwise in furtherance of its corporate purposes.
    37    7.  Notwithstanding any other provision of this title, any such resol-
    38  ution or resolutions shall contain a covenant by the authority  that  it
    39  will at all times maintain rates, fees or charges sufficient to pay, and
    40  that  any  contracts  entered  into  by  the  authority  for the sale or
    41  distribution of power shall contain rates, fees or charges sufficient to
    42  pay the costs of operation and maintenance of the project, the principal
    43  of and interest on any obligations issued pursuant to such resolution as
    44  the same severally become due and payable,  and  to  maintain  any  debt
    45  service  coverage  ratios and any reserves required by the terms of such
    46  resolution or resolutions.
    47    8. It is the intent of this title that any pledge of revenues or other
    48  moneys or of a revenue producing  contract  or  contracts  made  by  the
    49  authority  shall  be  valid and binding from the time when the pledge is
    50  made; that the revenues or other moneys or proceeds of any  contract  or
    51  contracts  so  pledged  and  thereafter  received by the authority shall
    52  immediately be subject to the lien of such pledge without  any  physical
    53  delivery  thereof  or  further act; and that the lien of any such pledge
    54  shall be valid and binding as against all parties having claims  of  any
    55  kind  in  tort, contract or otherwise against the authority irrespective

        S. 2026--A                         24
 
     1  of whether such parties have notice thereof. Neither the resolution  nor
     2  any other instrument by which a pledge is created need be recorded.
     3    9.  Neither the trustees of the authority nor any person executing the
     4  bonds, notes or other obligations shall  be  liable  personally  on  the
     5  bonds,  notes or other obligations or be subject to any personal liabil-
     6  ity or accountability by reason of the issuance thereof.
     7    10. The authority shall have the power  out  of  any  funds  available
     8  therefor  to  purchase  bonds, notes or other obligations. The authority
     9  may hold, pledge, cancel or resell such  bonds,  notes  or  other  obli-
    10  gations, subject to and in accordance with agreements with bondholders.
    11    11.  Any bonds, notes or other obligations issued by the authority are
    12  hereby made securities in which all public officers and bodies  of  this
    13  state  and  all municipalities and municipal subdivisions, all insurance
    14  companies and associations and other persons carrying  on  an  insurance
    15  business, all banks, bankers, trust companies, savings banks and savings
    16  associations, including savings and loan associations, building and loan
    17  associations, investment companies and other persons carrying on a bank-
    18  ing  business,  and  all  other persons whatsoever who are authorized to
    19  invest in bonds, notes or other obligations of the state,  may  properly
    20  and legally invest funds including capital in their control or belonging
    21  to  them;  subject to the provisions of any other general or special law
    22  to the contrary.
    23    12. The authority is authorized to obtain from any department or agen-
    24  cy of the United States of America or the state or  any  nongovernmental
    25  insurer or financial institution any insurance, guaranty or other credit
    26  support  device,  to  the extent available, as to, or for the payment or
    27  repayment of interest or principal, or both, or any part thereof, on any
    28  bonds, notes or other obligations issued by the authority and  to  enter
    29  into  any  agreement  or  contract with respect to any such insurance or
    30  guaranty, except to the extent that the same would in any way impair  or
    31  interfere  with  the ability of the authority to perform and fulfill the
    32  terms of any agreement made with the holders of outstanding bonds, notes
    33  or other obligations of the authority.
    34    13. In addition to the powers  conferred  in  this  section  upon  the
    35  authority to secure its bonds, notes or other obligations, the authority
    36  shall  have the power in connection with the issuance of bonds, notes or
    37  other obligations to enter into such agreements  as  the  authority  may
    38  deem  necessary,  convenient or desirable concerning the use or disposi-
    39  tion of its revenues or other moneys or property, and for  the  acquisi-
    40  tion,  alteration  or  disposition  of  its property, real and personal,
    41  including the mortgaging of any of its properties  and  the  entrusting,
    42  pledging  or  creation of any other security interest in any such reven-
    43  ues, moneys or properties and the doing of any act, including refraining
    44  from doing any act, which the authority would have the right  to  do  in
    45  the  absence  of  such agreements. The authority shall have the power to
    46  enter into amendments of any such agreements within the  powers  granted
    47  to  the  authority  by  this  title  and to perform such agreements. The
    48  provisions of any such agreements may be made a  part  of  the  contract
    49  with the holders of bonds, notes or other obligations of the authority.
    50    14.  All  bonds,  notes  and other obligations issued by the authority
    51  under the provisions of this title are hereby declared to have  all  the
    52  qualities  and  incidents of negotiable instruments under the applicable
    53  laws of the state.
    54    § 1022-o. State and municipalities not liable on  bonds  or  notes  or
    55  other  obligations.  The securities of the authority shall not be a debt
    56  of the state or of any municipality, and neither the state nor any muni-

        S. 2026--A                         25
 
     1  cipality shall be liable thereon. The authority shall not have the power
     2  to pledge or restrict the credit, the revenues or the  taxing  power  of
     3  the  state  or of any municipality, and neither the credit, the revenues
     4  nor  the  taxing  power  of the state or of any municipality shall be or
     5  shall be deemed to be pledged to the payment of any  securities  of  the
     6  authority. Each evidence of indebtedness of the authority, including the
     7  securities  of  the authority, shall contain a clear and explicit state-
     8  ment of the provisions of this section. Nothing in this title  shall  be
     9  deemed to obligate the state or any municipality to make any payments or
    10  impose any taxes to satisfy the debt service obligations of the authori-
    11  ty.
    12    §  1022-p. Agreement of the state. The state does hereby pledge to and
    13  agree with the holders of any bonds, notes or other  obligations  issued
    14  by  the  authority  under  this  title, that the state will not limit or
    15  alter the rights hereby vested in the authority to establish and collect
    16  the revenues and other charges referred to in this title and to  fulfill
    17  the  terms of any agreements made with or for the benefit of the holders
    18  of the securities, or in any way impair the rights and remedies  of  the
    19  bondholders  until  such  securities  are  fully met and discharged. The
    20  authority is authorized to include this  pledge  of  the  state  in  all
    21  agreements  by the authority with the holders of its securities. Nothing
    22  contained in this title shall be deemed to restrict  any  right  of  the
    23  state  or municipality to amend, modify, repeal or otherwise alter stat-
    24  utes imposing or relating to taxes or fees, or  appropriations  relating
    25  thereto. The authority shall not include within any resolution, contract
    26  or  agreement  with  holders  of  the  bonds, notes or other obligations
    27  issued under this article any provision which provides  that  a  default
    28  occurs  as  a  result  of  the state or of a municipality exercising its
    29  right to amend, modify, repeal or otherwise alter any  statute  imposing
    30  or relating to taxes, fees, or appropriations relating thereto.
    31    §  1022-q.  Exemption  of the authority from taxation. 1. It is hereby
    32  found and declared that the operation of the authority is primarily  for
    33  the  benefit of the people of the participating municipalities, counties
    34  and the state, for the improvement of their health, welfare and prosper-
    35  ity, and is a public purpose, and the authority  shall  be  regarded  as
    36  performing  an  essential  governmental  function  in  carrying  out the
    37  provisions of this title.
    38    2. The authority shall be required to pay  no  taxes  nor  assessments
    39  upon any of the property acquired or controlled by it or upon its activ-
    40  ities  in  the  operation and maintenance thereof or upon income derived
    41  therefrom, provided that nothing herein shall prevent the authority from
    42  entering into agreements to make payments in lieu of taxes.
    43    3. The authority shall make payments  in  lieu  of  taxes  to  munici-
    44  palities  and  school districts equal to the taxes and assessments which
    45  would have been received from year to year by such jurisdiction.
    46    4. The authority shall also make payments in lieu of taxes  for  those
    47  taxes which would otherwise be imposed upon a utility corporation pursu-
    48  ant  to:  (a)  section  one  hundred eighty-six-a and former section one
    49  hundred eighty-six of the tax law as such sections  were  in  effect  on
    50  December  thirty-first,  nineteen  hundred  ninety-nine;  (b)  any taxes
    51  imposed by a city within the authority's service area  pursuant  to  the
    52  authorization  granted  by section twenty-b of the general city law; and
    53  (c) any taxes imposed by a village within the authority's  service  area
    54  pursuant to authorization granted by section 5-530 of the village law.

        S. 2026--A                         26
 
     1    5.  Notwithstanding  the exemption in subdivision two of this section,
     2  the authority shall also be subject to the assessments imposed  pursuant
     3  to section eighteen-a of the public service law.
     4    6.  The  securities  issued by the authority, and the income therefrom
     5  shall, at all times, be free from taxation, except for estate  and  gift
     6  taxes.
     7    7.  Nothing  in  this title shall relieve the authority from its obli-
     8  gations to register for sales tax purposes, collect state or local sales
     9  and compensating use taxes imposed by or pursuant to  the  authority  of
    10  articles  twenty-eight  and  twenty-nine  of  the tax law, and otherwise
    11  comply with those articles on its sale of property or services.
    12    § 1022-r. Actions against  the  authority.  1.  Any  action,  suit  or
    13  proceeding  to  which the authority may be a party in which any question
    14  arises as to the validity of this title or the  valuation  of  stock  or
    15  assets acquired by the authority by the exercise of the power of eminent
    16  domain  shall  be preferred over all other civil causes in all courts of
    17  the state, except election matters, and shall be heard and determined in
    18  preference to all other civil business pending therein, except  election
    19  matters,  irrespective  of position on the calendar. The same preference
    20  shall be granted upon application of counsel to  the  authority  in  any
    21  action or proceeding questioning the validity of this title or the valu-
    22  ation  of  stock  or assets acquired by the authority by the exercise of
    23  the power of eminent domain in which such  counsel  may  be  allowed  to
    24  intervene.  The  venue of any such action or proceeding shall be laid in
    25  the supreme court pursuant to article five of the civil practice law and
    26  rules.
    27    2. In the event any party shall appeal an award  of  compensation  for
    28  the  taking by the authority of stock or assets, such party shall post a
    29  bond in such amount, if any, as the supreme court shall deem appropriate
    30  to adequately protect the interests of the other party under all circum-
    31  stances.
    32    3. An action against the authority founded on tort shall be  commenced
    33  in compliance with all the requirements of section fifty-e of the gener-
    34  al municipal law, except that an action against the authority for wrong-
    35  ful  death shall be commenced in accordance with the provisions of title
    36  eleven of article nine of this chapter.
    37    § 1022-s. Equal employment opportunity. All contracts entered into  by
    38  the  authority  pursuant  to this title of whatever nature and all docu-
    39  ments soliciting bids or proposals therefor shall contain or make refer-
    40  ence to the following provision:
    41    The contractor shall not discriminate against employees or  applicants
    42  for employment because of race, creed, color, national origin, sex, age,
    43  disability  or  marital  status, and will undertake or continue existing
    44  programs of affirmative action to ensure that minority group persons and
    45  women  are  afforded  equal  opportunity  without  discrimination.  Such
    46  programs  shall include, but not be limited to, recruitment, employment,
    47  job assignment, promotion, upgrading, demotion, transfer, layoff, termi-
    48  nation, rates of pay or other forms of compensation, and  selection  for
    49  training  and retraining, including apprenticeship and on-the-job train-
    50  ing.
    51    The HVPA shall diligently follow article fifteen-A  of  the  executive
    52  law  to  promote  contracting  with  minority-  and women-owned business
    53  enterprises (MWBE).
    54    § 1022-t. Limitation of liability; indemnification. 1.  The  trustees,
    55  officers  and  employees of the authority, while acting within the scope
    56  of their authority as trustees, officers  or  employees,  shall  not  be

        S. 2026--A                         27

     1  subject  to any personal or civil liability resulting from the exercise,
     2  carrying out or advocacy of any of the  authority's  purposes  or  power
     3  unless  the  conduct  of  the trustees, officers or employees is finally
     4  determined  by  a  court  of competent jurisdiction to constitute inten-
     5  tional wrongdoing or recklessness.
     6    2. The provisions of section eighteen of the public officers law shall
     7  apply to trustees, officers and employees of the authority in connection
     8  with any and all claims, demands, suits, actions  or  proceedings  which
     9  may  be  made or brought against any of them arising out of any determi-
    10  nations made or actions taken or omitted to be taken in compliance  with
    11  any actions taken pursuant to the powers of this title.
    12    3.  As  used  in  this  section,  the  terms  "trustee", "officer" and
    13  "employee" shall include a former trustee, officer or employee and  such
    14  trustee's,  officer's  or  employee's  estate  or  judicially  appointed
    15  personal representative.
    16    4. Nothing in this section shall limit the obligations of a "trustee",
    17  "officer", or "employee" of the authority or  of  a  subsidiary  of  the
    18  authority as a "person required to collect tax", as such term is defined
    19  in  article  twenty-eight  of  the  tax law, if such trustee, officer or
    20  employee is, or was, under a duty to act for the  authority  or  subsid-
    21  iary,  or both, as the case may be, in complying with any requirement of
    22  article twenty-eight or related provision of article twenty-nine of  the
    23  tax law.
    24    §  1022-u. Public service law generally not applicable to the authori-
    25  ty; inconsistent provisions in certain other acts superseded.    1.  The
    26  rates,  services  and practices relating to the electricity generated by
    27  facilities owned or operated by the authority shall not  be  subject  to
    28  the  provisions  of  the  public service law or to regulation by, or the
    29  jurisdiction of, the public service commission or the office of  renewa-
    30  ble energy siting, except to the extent that:
    31    (a)  the  commission  has  promulgated  regulations  to  contribute to
    32  achieving the statewide greenhouse gas emissions limits  established  in
    33  article seventy-five of the environmental conservation law;
    34    (b)  article seven of the public service law applies to the siting and
    35  operation of a major utility transmission facility as  defined  therein;
    36  and
    37    (c)  section eighteen-a of the public service law provides for assess-
    38  ment for certain costs, property or operations.
    39    2. The issuance by the authority of its obligations to acquire securi-
    40  ties or assets of a utility shall be deemed not  to  be  "state  action"
    41  within the meaning of the state environmental quality  review  act,  and
    42  such  act  shall not be applicable in any respect to such acquisition or
    43  any action of the authority to effect such acquisition.
    44    3. In the event that an audit indicates a finding of fraud, abuse,  or
    45  mismanagement  by a former service provider of the authority, and upon a
    46  finding by the public service commission that  reasonable  cause  exists
    47  for  the  basis  of  such  indication, the commission may order that any
    48  recommendations contained  in  the  audit  be  implemented.  The  public
    49  service  commission  may  also provide in their order, the date in which
    50  any recommendation must be fully implemented. Failure to comply with any
    51  such order can result in the imposition of a civil penalty by the public
    52  service commission against the former service provider or revocation  of
    53  the former service provider's authority to operate within the state.
    54    §  1022-v.  Authority  subject  to certain provisions contained in the
    55  state finance law, the public service law, the social services  law  and
    56  the  general  municipal  law.  All  contracts  of the authority shall be

        S. 2026--A                         28
 
     1  subject to the provisions of the state finance law relating to contracts
     2  made by the state. The authority shall also establish  rules  and  regu-
     3  lations  with  respect  to providing to its residential gas and electric
     4  utility  customers those rights  and protections provided in article two
     5  and sections one hundred seventeen  and  one  hundred  eighteen  of  the
     6  public  service  law  and section one hundred thirty-one-s of the social
     7  services law. The  authority  shall  conform  to  any  safety  standards
     8  regarding  manual lockable disconnect switches for solar electric gener-
     9  ating equipment established by the public service commission pursuant to
    10  subparagraph  (ii) of paragraph (a) of subdivision five and subparagraph
    11  (ii) of paragraph (a) of subdivision five-a of  section  sixty-six-j  of
    12  the   public   service  law.  The  authority  shall  let  contracts  for
    13  construction or purchase of supplies, materials, or  equipment  pursuant
    14  to  section  one  hundred three and paragraph (e) of subdivision four of
    15  section one hundred twenty-w of the general municipal law.
    16    § 1022-w. Website. The authority shall make accessible to the  public,
    17  via its official or shared internet website, documentation pertaining to
    18  its  mission,  current activities, most recent annual financial reports,
    19  current year budget and its most recent independent audit report  unless
    20  such  information  is covered by subdivision two of section eighty-seven
    21  of the public officers law.
    22    § 1022-x. Periodic review by the legislature.    Beginning  two  years
    23  after  the  effective  date of this section, and not more than every ten
    24  years thereafter, the legislature of the state of New York shall conduct
    25  a comprehensive review, of the structure, activities and  operations  of
    26  the authority, and the authority shall provide such records, reports and
    27  testimony  as  the  legislature  may request to assist in the conduct of
    28  this review.
    29    § 1022-y. Hudson Valley power authority observatory. 1. A not-for-pro-
    30  fit corporation known as the Hudson Valley power  authority  observatory
    31  shall be established under section one thousand four hundred thirteen of
    32  the  not-for-profit  corporation  law by the inaugural statutory members
    33  and charged with the duties and  having  the  powers  provided  in  this
    34  title. The observatory shall be a special not-for-profit corporation as,
    35  a political subdivision of the state, exercising governmental and public
    36  powers,  perpetual  in  duration,  capable  of  suing and being sued and
    37  having a seal, and which shall have the powers and duties enumerated  in
    38  this  title,  together  with  such others as may be conferred upon it by
    39  law.
    40    2. The purpose of the observatory is to operate as a  quasi-governmen-
    41  tal  civil  society organization to help the authority achieve its goals
    42  by engaging in community participation, transparency, and local  benefit
    43  sharing. The observatory's primary functions are to monitor the utility,
    44  conduct research, and support local projects.
    45    3.  The  governing  board  of the observatory shall consist of fifteen
    46  members all of whom shall be residents of the service  area.    Jointly,
    47  the  temporary  president of the senate and the speaker of the assembly,
    48  after consultation with state legislators representing the HVPA  service
    49  area  and  elected  county  and  municipal  leaders shall appoint eleven
    50  members (members one through eleven). Five of these eleven members shall
    51  have one of the following areas of  focus  or  expertise:  environmental
    52  justice,  consumer  protection,  electrification, energy efficiency, and
    53  local governments. The remaining six members shall have  expertise  from
    54  one  of  the relevant sectors as defined in section one thousand twenty-
    55  two-a of this title. In selecting between similarly qualified  potential
    56  members,  preference  shall  be given to potential members from counties

        S. 2026--A                         29
 
     1  that are not yet represented on the board. Jointly, the temporary presi-
     2  dent of the senate and the speaker of the assembly shall consult academ-
     3  ic institutions that are partners to the observatory as  well  as  state
     4  legislators  representing the HVPA service area and appoint two academic
     5  members (members twelve and thirteen). If the temporary president of the
     6  senate and the speaker of the assembly are  unable  to  fill  a  vacancy
     7  after  ninety  days, the existing governing board of the observatory may
     8  appoint a member. IBEW Local 320 will select two labor member  represen-
     9  tatives  (members  fourteen and fifteen).  Members shall serve staggered
    10  four-year terms, except during the first term of appointments  upon  the
    11  effective  date  of  this  title.   Members one, five, and nine shall be
    12  appointed for one year; members two, six, ten,  and  thirteen  shall  be
    13  appointed  for  two  years;  members  three, seven, eleven, and fourteen
    14  shall be   appointed   for   three   years;   and members  four,  eight,
    15  twelve,  and  fifteen shall be appointed for four years. This will allow
    16  for staggered appointments to ensure a degree of continuity of committee
    17  membership.  The chair of the observatory's  governing  board  shall  be
    18  selected by a vote of the members of the governing board.
    19    4.  The members shall serve with compensation and shall be entitled to
    20  reimbursement of their actual and necessary  expenses  incurred  in  the
    21  performance  of  their  official  duties,  as  may  be authorized by the
    22  members, in each case upon appropriate documentation by  the  submitting
    23  member.  The  level  of  compensation  will  be  the value of two course
    24  releases as determined  by  the  academic  institution  of  any  members
    25  employed  by  a college or university, and the members will set the cash
    26  equivalent of a course release for non-academic  members  on  an  annual
    27  basis.  No  member  or  any  entity,  the  majority of which is owned or
    28  controlled by any member, shall receive any additional compensation from
    29  the authority or be employed by the authority in any other  capacity  by
    30  whatever means.
    31    5.  A  majority  of the appointed voting membership shall constitute a
    32  quorum for the transaction of business, and the affirmative  vote  of  a
    33  majority  of  members at a meeting shall be necessary to the validity of
    34  any resolution, order or determination. The members, in  by-laws  or  by
    35  resolution, may allow for attendance at a meeting of the governing board
    36  by  speaker  phone  or  any  other electronic means by which all meeting
    37  participants can hear one another.
    38    6. The members shall appoint an executive committee of not  less  than
    39  five  members and shall delegate such duties and responsibilities of the
    40  members to the executive committee as it  may  determine  from  time  to
    41  time.   In addition to the executive committee, there will be a monitor-
    42  ing council, research council, and local projects council. The  monitor-
    43  ing  council shall study the utility as a traditional independent watch-
    44  dog and deliver comments or make recommendations to  the  Hudson  Valley
    45  power  authority's  board of trustees. The research council shall review
    46  the authority's  operations  in  terms  of  reliability,  affordability,
    47  climate  resilience, and environmental justice. The local projects coun-
    48  cil shall support communities in their own efforts to create  or  imple-
    49  ment energy projects and partnerships independent of the authority. Each
    50  year, the authority will transfer a portion of its revenue into communi-
    51  ty-controlled  trust funds. The local projects council will run a parti-
    52  cipatory budgeting process to democratically decide on community benefit
    53  projects the fund can be spent towards.  Local  elected  officials  will
    54  play  a  critical  role  in  helping  shape the process. The members may
    55  appoint such additional committees with such duties and responsibilities
    56  as they may determine from time to time.

        S. 2026--A                         30
 
     1    7. The members from time to time shall hire,  without  regard  to  any
     2  personnel  or  civil  service law, rule or regulation of the state, such
     3  officers and employees, including an executive director and  such  engi-
     4  neering,  management  and legal officers, and other professional employ-
     5  ees,  including  but  not limited to accounting, planning, construction,
     6  marketing, finance, appraisal,  banking  and  trustee  services,  trans-
     7  mission  and  distribution,  energy  management, information technology,
     8  cyber security, power supply, human  resources,  procurement,  treasury,
     9  energy  efficiency, customer service and any other area of utility oper-
    10  ations, as the members may require for the performance of  their  duties
    11  and shall prescribe the duties and compensation of each such officer and
    12  employee.  Such compensation shall be reasonable and commensurate to the
    13  duties of the position of such officer or employee.
    14    8. The observatory and its non-profit existence shall  continue  until
    15  terminated by law once incorporated.
    16    9.  In  the  event  that  the  Hudson  Valley power authority does not
    17  commence delivering electric power within ten  years  of  the  effective
    18  date  of  this  title,  the  observatory  shall  cease  to exist and the
    19  provisions of this title shall be of no further force and effect.
    20    § 1022-z. Severability. The provisions of this  title  are  severable,
    21  and  if  any clause, sentence, paragraph, section or part of this title,
    22  or the application thereof to  any  person  or  circumstance,  shall  be
    23  adjudged  by  any court of competent jurisdiction to be invalid or unen-
    24  forceable, such judgment shall not  affect,  impair  or  invalidate  the
    25  remainder  of  this  title  or  the application of such provision to any
    26  other person or circumstance, but shall be confined in its operation  to
    27  the  clause,  sentence,  paragraph, section or part thereof or person or
    28  circumstance directly involved in the controversy in which such judgment
    29  shall have been rendered.
    30    § 2. Subdivision 1 of section 51 of  the  public  authorities  law  is
    31  amended by adding a new paragraph o to read as follows:
    32    o. Hudson Valley Power Authority
    33    §  3.  Subdivision 6 of section 1005 of the public authorities law, as
    34  amended by chapter 294 of the laws of 1968,  the  opening  paragraph  as
    35  amended  by  section  18  of  part CC of chapter 60 of the laws of 2011,
    36  paragraph d as amended, paragraph e as added and paragraph f  as  relet-
    37  tered by chapter 369 of the laws of 1974, is amended to read as follows:
    38    6.  To  develop,  maintain, manage and operate its projects other than
    39  the Niagara and Saint Lawrence  hydroelectric  projects  so  as  (i)  to
    40  provide  an  adequate  supply  of  energy for optimum utilization of its
    41  hydroelectric projects, (ii) to attract  and  expand  high  load  factor
    42  industry,  (iii)  to  [provide for the additional needs of its municipal
    43  electric and rural electric cooperative customers] operate for the bene-
    44  fit of the general public and, in disposing of electric energy generated
    45  at these facilities, to give preference at all times to  municipalities,
    46  other  political  subdivisions  of  the state, and cooperatives, (iv) to
    47  provide a supply of power and energy for use in the  recharge  New  York
    48  power  program  as  recharge New York market power, and (v) to assist in
    49  maintaining an adequate, dependable electric power supply for the state.
    50    An application by any municipality, other political subdivision of the
    51  state, or cooperative for an allocation of electric energy shall not  be
    52  denied,  or  another  application  competing or in conflict therewith be
    53  granted, to any private corporation, company, agency, or person, on  the
    54  ground that any proposed bond or other security issue of any such public
    55  body  or  cooperative,  the  sale  of  which is necessary to enable such
    56  prospective purchaser to enter into the public business of  selling  and

        S. 2026--A                         31
 
     1  distributing  the electric energy proposed to be purchased, has not been
     2  authorized or marketed, until after a reasonable time, to be  determined
     3  by  the administrator, has been afforded such public body or cooperative
     4  to have such bond or other security issue authorized or marketed.
     5    It  is  declared  to be the policy of the legislature, as expressed in
     6  this chapter, to  preserve  the  said  preferential  status  of  munici-
     7  palities,  other  political  subdivisions of the state, and cooperatives
     8  herein referred to, and to give  to  the  people  of  the  state  within
     9  economic  transmission distance of the authority's facilities reasonable
    10  opportunity and time to hold any  election  or  elections  or  take  any
    11  action  necessary to create such political subdivisions of the state and
    12  cooperatives as the laws of the  state  authorize  and  permit,  and  to
    13  afford  such political subdivisions of the state or cooperatives reason-
    14  able time and opportunity to take any action necessary to authorize  the
    15  issuance  of  bonds or to arrange other financing necessary to construct
    16  or acquire necessary and desirable electric distribution facilities, and
    17  in all  other  respects  legally  to  become  qualified  purchasers  and
    18  distributors of electric energy available under this chapter.
    19    Contracts  for  the  sale,  transmission and distribution of power and
    20  energy generated by such projects shall provide for the effectuation  of
    21  the  policy  set forth in this title relating to such projects and shall
    22  provide:
    23    a. Payment of all operating and maintenance expenses of the projects.
    24    b. Interest on and amortization and reserve charges sufficient  within
    25  fifty years of the date of issuance to retire the bonds of the authority
    26  issued for the projects.
    27    c.  For  the  cancellation  and  termination of any such contract upon
    28  violation of the  terms  thereof  by  the  purchasing,  transmitting  or
    29  distributing public agency or company, or any subsidiary thereof.
    30    d. That the rates, services and practices of the purchasing, transmit-
    31  ting and/or distributing public agencies and rural electric cooperatives
    32  in  respect to the power and energy from such projects shall be governed
    33  by the provisions and principles established in the contract, and not by
    34  regulations of the public service commission or by general principles of
    35  public service law regulating rates, services and practices and that  in
    36  the  event any such public agencies or cooperatives which purchase power
    37  from the authority shall sell any such power for resale, such  sale  for
    38  resale  shall  be  made at rates no higher than those at which the power
    39  was purchased from the authority.
    40    e. In the case of a contract with an electric corporation entered into
    41  on or after May first, nineteen hundred seventy-four (i) for  assurances
    42  by  the  electric  corporation of prompt and timely payment of all bills
    43  rendered by the authority and that failure to make such prompt and time-
    44  ly payment shall be grounds for immediate termination of  the  contract,
    45  and  (ii)  that in the event the contract is so terminated, the electric
    46  company will wheel to such purchasers as the authority  may  direct  the
    47  power  and  energy that would have been sold to the electric company had
    48  the contract not been terminated.
    49    f.  Grant reasonable rate discounts to municipalities, other political
    50  subdivisions of the state, and cooperatives in a manner not inconsistent
    51  with the provisions and policy of this title.
    52    g. In order to foster a close relationship between public power  enti-
    53  ties, specifically between the Hudson Valley power authority and the New
    54  York  power  authority,  the latter is tasked with building, owning, and
    55  operating new transmission for the former under  certain  circumstances.
    56  Specifically,  if  the  Hudson  Valley power authority requests that new

        S. 2026--A                         32
 
     1  transmission be built by the New York power authority because  it  would
     2  be cheaper or more efficient than building it itself, the New York power
     3  authority shall not deny any reasonable request.
     4    h. Such other terms not inconsistent with the provisions and policy of
     5  this title as the authority may deem advisable.
     6    §  4.  The  not-for-profit  corporation law is amended by adding a new
     7  section 1413 to read as follows:
     8  § 1413. Energy observatory corporations.
     9    (a) Definitions. An energy observatory corporation  is  a  corporation
    10  formed  under  or  by a general or special law for studying and enabling
    11  effective community governance of power authorities.
    12    (b) Type of corporation. An energy observation corporation is  a  non-
    13  charitable corporation under this chapter.
    14    (c)  Corporate name. An energy observatory corporation shall be called
    15  the name of the authority it monitors  and  studies  with  "observatory"
    16  appended  to  it  at  the  end. No other corporation shall have the same
    17  name.
    18    (d) Governing  board.  An  energy  observatory  corporation  shall  be
    19  managed  by its governing board. The number of members shall not be less
    20  than five and shall not be greater than twenty. The members should  have
    21  a  diversity of experience from the following relevant sectors: environ-
    22  mental justice, consumer protection, indigenous nation rights, community
    23  renewable energy, electrification, energy efficiency, workplace  issues,
    24  and local government.
    25    (e) Funding of the observatory corporation:
    26    (1)  An  observatory corporation shall be funded through a monthly fee
    27  of each ratepayer served by the authority. The observatory shall be  set
    28  up  with  a  one-time  donation  of  not less than five hundred thousand
    29  dollars from the authority.
    30    (2) An observatory corporation shall not issue bonds, stocks, or other
    31  security interests or incur a debt to a bank or other financial institu-
    32  tion of any duration.
    33    (3) An observatory corporation  shall  only  place  cash  reserves  or
    34  surplus in a checking or savings account at a depository institution.
    35    (f)  Restrictions on the formation of corporations. There shall be but
    36  one energy observation corporation per authority.
    37    (g) Staff. An energy observatory corporation shall employ an executive
    38  director, staff, and such  other  agents  and  employees,  permanent  or
    39  temporary,  as  it may require, and may determine the qualifications and
    40  fix the compensation and benefits of such persons.
    41    (h) Public assemblies. The board and  executive  director  shall  hold
    42  semi-annual  assemblies to ensure public participation, transparency and
    43  accountability.
    44    § 5. This act shall take effect on the one hundred eightieth day after
    45  it shall have become a law. Effective immediately, the addition,  amend-
    46  ment and/or repeal of any rule or regulation necessary for the implemen-
    47  tation  of  this act on its effective date are authorized to be made and
    48  completed on or before such effective date.
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