•  Summary 
  •  
  •  Actions 
  •  
  •  Committee Votes 
  •  
  •  Floor Votes 
  •  
  •  Memo 
  •  
  •  Text 
  •  
  •  LFIN 
  •  
  •  Chamber Video/Transcript 

S03006 Summary:

BILL NOS03006C
 
SAME ASSAME AS UNI. A03006-C
 
SPONSORBUDGET
 
COSPNSR
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Amd Various Laws, generally
 
Enacts into law major components of legislation necessary to implement the state education, labor, housing and family assistance budget for the 2025-2026 state fiscal year; relates to contracts for excellence; relates to calculation of state aid to school districts; relates to a statewide dual enrollment policy; extends workforce education; relates to maximum class sizes for special education; extends chapter 82 of the laws of 1995; relates to foundation aid; provides for special apportionment for salary expenses; provides for special apportionment for public pension accruals; establishes a dual enrollment program; relates to universal pre-kindergarten and the Statewide universal full-day pre-kindergarten; extends provisions relating to paperwork reduction; relates to funding a program for work force education; extends provisions for monitors in the Hempstead union free school district, the Wyandanch union free school district and the Rochester city school district; relates to supplementary funding for the East Ramapo central school district; extends provisions authorizing the Roosevelt union free school district to finance deficits by the issuance of serial bonds; relates to requirements for zero emissions school buses; relates to certain instructional requirements for nonpublic schools (Part A); establishes a universal free school meals program; repeals provisions relating to the community eligibility provision state subsidy (Part B); relates to school policies regarding the use of internet-enabled devices during the school day (Part C); relates to scholarships awarded to part-time students by the New York state higher education services corporation; makes conforming changes; repeals provisions relating to tuition awards for part-time undergraduate students; relates to the New York state part-time scholarship award program (Part D); relates to authorizing the excelsior scholarship cover the cost of tuition in the state university of New York system (Part E); creates a New York opportunity promise scholarship for certain students who matriculated at a SUNY or CUNY community college, are over 25 years of age, have applied for certain tuition assistance programs, are eligible for resident tuition rates, and have not already obtained a postsecondary degree (Part F); provides for reduction of taxes pursuant to shelter rent (Part L); utilizes reserves in the mortgage insurance fund for the neighborhood preservation program, the rural preservation program, the rural rental assistance program, and the New York state supportive housing program (Part N); extends certain provisions relating to restructuring financing for residential school placements (Part O); authorizes child care support centers which are certified by the office of children and family services to place individuals as substitute caregivers at licensed and registered child care programs (Part P); relates to the provision of public assistance allowances to public assistance recipients upon the birth of a new child (Part Q); relates to increasing the standards of monthly need for aged, blind and disabled persons living in the community (Part R); relates to the effectiveness of provisions of law relating to the powers and duties of the commissioner of social services relating to the appointment of a temporary operator (Part S); relates to the healthy terminals act; amends certain definitions relating to covered airport location and covered airport workers; provides for the applicable standard rate as meaning the wage and benefit rates designated by the commissioner of labor (Part T); limits the amount of liquidated damages for certain frequency of pay violations (Part U); relates to civil penalties for violations of certain wage payment provisions (Part V); increases the civil penalties for violations of child labor laws (Part W); establishes a database for the employment of minors; allows for registration of minors and employers in such database; digitizes the process for minors to apply for employment (Part X); expands certain payments previously made to parents of deceased service members to spouses and minor children of such service members; authorizes the commissioner of veterans' affairs to conduct an outreach program for the purpose of informing the public and persons who may be eligible to receive an annuity (Part Y); requires submission of an annual report on the New York state museum (Part AA); decreases the length of the suspension period applicable to certain individuals who lose their jobs due to a labor dispute, such as a strike, and who seek to obtain unemployment insurance benefits (Part BB); requires social services for a city of a population of a million or more shall spend a certain amount of local funds for child care block grants (Part CC); establishes the crime of evading arrest by concealment of identity (Part DD); expands the merit time allowance and limited credit time allowance programs (Part EE); authorizes the commissioner of education to appoint a monitor to oversee the Mount Vernon city school district; requires such monitor to schedule three public hearings; requires the monitor and board of education to develop a proposed financial plan for the 2025--2026 school year and the four subsequent school years (Part FF); relates to the conversion to condominium ownership for the preservation of expiring affordable housing in the city of New York; provides expanded homeownership opportunities from the conversion of certain residential rental buildings to condominium status by property owners that commit to preserve the inventory of expiring affordable housing in the city of New York (Part GG); establishes the housing access voucher pilot program (Part HH); amends section 2 of chapter 868 of the laws of 1975 constituting the New York state financial emergency act for the city of New York, in relation to the effectiveness thereof (Part II); establishes the city of Buffalo parking authority; provides for its powers, duties and obligations (Part JJ); increases the maximum benefit rate for unemployment insurance (Part KK); amends provisions relating to discovery reform (Part LL); provides for the administration of certain funds and accounts related to the 2025-2026 budget; authorizes certain payments and transfers; relates to the administration of certain funds and accounts (Part MM).
Go to top

S03006 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
            S. 3006--C                                            A. 3006--C
 
                SENATE - ASSEMBLY
 
                                    January 22, 2025
                                       ___________
 
        IN  SENATE -- A BUDGET BILL, submitted by the Governor pursuant to arti-
          cle seven of the Constitution -- read twice and ordered  printed,  and
          when  printed to be committed to the Committee on Finance -- committee
          discharged, bill amended, ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted
          to said committee  --  committee  discharged,  bill  amended,  ordered
          reprinted  as  amended  and recommitted to said committee -- committee
          discharged, bill amended, ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted
          to said committee
 
        IN ASSEMBLY -- A BUDGET BILL, submitted  by  the  Governor  pursuant  to
          article  seven  of  the  Constitution -- read once and referred to the
          Committee on Ways and Means --  committee  discharged,  bill  amended,
          ordered  reprinted  as  amended  and  recommitted to said committee --
          again reported from said committee with amendments, ordered  reprinted
          as  amended  and  recommitted to said committee -- again reported from
          said committee with  amendments,  ordered  reprinted  as  amended  and
          recommitted to said committee
 
        AN  ACT  to amend the education law, in relation to contracts for excel-
          lence; to amend the education law, in relation to foundation  aid;  to
          amend  the education law, in relation to the establishment of a state-
          wide dual enrollment program policy; to amend the  education  law,  in
          relation  to allowable transportation expenses; to amend the education
          law, in relation  to  universal  pre-kindergarten  and  the  Statewide
          universal  full-day  pre-kindergarten  program; to amend the education
          law, in relation to state aid adjustments; to amend the education law,
          in relation to the apportionment of moneys for school  aid;  to  amend
          chapter 378 of the laws of 2010 amending the education law relating to
          paperwork  reduction, in relation to extending the provisions thereof;
          to amend the education law and the general business law,  in  relation
          to  requirements for zero-emissions school buses; to amend chapter 756
          of the laws of 1992 relating to  funding  a  program  for  work  force
          education conducted by the consortium for worker education in New York
          city, in relation to reimbursement for the 2025-2026 school year with-
          holding  a  portion  of  employment  preparation  education aid and in
          relation to the effectiveness thereof; to amend the education law,  in
          relation  to  maximum  class  sizes  for  special  classes for certain
          students with disabilities; to amend chapter 82 of the  laws  of  1995
 
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD12572-05-5

        S. 3006--C                          2                         A. 3006--C
 
          amending  the  education  law  and other laws relating to state aid to
          school districts and the appropriation of funds  for  the  support  of
          government,  in relation to the effectiveness thereof; to amend part C
          of chapter 56 of the laws of 2020 directing the commissioner of educa-
          tion  to  appoint  a  monitor  for the Rochester city school district,
          establishing the powers and duties of such monitor and  certain  other
          officers  and  relating  to  the  apportionment  of aid to such school
          district, in relation to the effectiveness thereof; to  amend  chapter
          19  of  the  laws of 2020 authorizing the commissioner of education to
          appoint a monitor to oversee the Hempstead union free school  district
          and establishing the powers and duties of such monitor, in relation to
          the  effectiveness  thereof;  to  amend chapter 18 of the laws of 2020
          authorizing the commissioner of education  to  appoint  a  monitor  to
          oversee  the Wyandanch union free school district and establishing the
          powers and duties of the monitor, in  relation  to  the  effectiveness
          thereof;  to  amend chapter 89 of the laws of 2016 relating to supple-
          mentary funding  for dedicated programs for public school students  in
          the East Ramapo central school district, in relation to the effective-
          ness thereof; to   amend  the  education  law,  in relation to  creat-
          ing   safe   harbors and a phase-in period for compliance with certain
          sections of such law relating to  instruction  at  nonpublic  schools;
          providing for special apportionment for salary expenses; providing for
          special  apportionment  for  public pension accruals; to amend chapter
          121 of the laws of 1996 authorizing the Roosevelt  union  free  school
          district  to  finance  deficits  by  the  issuance of serial bonds, in
          relation to an apportionment for salary expenses; providing for set-a-
          sides from the state funds which certain districts are receiving  from
          the  total  foundation aid; providing for support of public libraries;
          and to repeal certain provisions of  the  education  law  relating  to
          calculation  of  school  aid  (Part A); to amend the education law, in
          relation to establishing a universal free school meals program; and to
          repeal section 925 of the education  law  relating  to  the  community
          eligibility  provision  state subsidy (Part B); to amend the education
          law, in relation to student use of internet-enabled devices during the
          school day (Part C); to amend the education law in relation to  schol-
          arships  awarded  to  part-time  students by the New York state higher
          education  services  corporation;  to  amend  the  education  law,  in
          relation  to  making  conforming changes; to repeal section 666 of the
          education law, relating to tuition awards for part-time  undergraduate
          students;  and to repeal section 667-c-1 of the education law relating
          to the New York state part-time scholarship award program (Part D); to
          amend the education law, in relation to excelsior scholarship  awarded
          to  students  by  the  New York state higher education services corpo-
          ration (Part E); to amend the education law, in relation to creating a
          New York opportunity promise scholarship (Part F); intentionally omit-
          ted (Part G); intentionally omitted (Part  H);  intentionally  omitted
          (Part  I); intentionally omitted (Part J); intentionally omitted (Part
          K); to amend the private housing finance law, in relation to reduction
          of taxes pursuant to shelter  rent  (Part  L);  intentionally  omitted
          (Part M); to utilize reserves in the mortgage insurance fund for vari-
          ous  housing  purposes  (Part N); to amend part N of chapter 56 of the
          laws of 2020, amending the social services law relating to restructur-
          ing financing for residential school placements, in  relation  to  the
          effectiveness  thereof  (Part O); to amend the social services law, in
          relation to certification of  child  care  support  centers  to  place
          substitute  caregivers  in licensed and registered child care programs

        S. 3006--C                          3                         A. 3006--C
 
          (Part P); to amend the social services law, in relation  to  improving
          infancy  health  by increasing public assistance allowances to certain
          persons (Part Q); to amend the social services  law,  in  relation  to
          increasing  the standards of monthly need for aged, blind and disabled
          persons living in the community (Part R); to amend part W  of  chapter
          54  of  the  laws of 2016 amending the social services law relating to
          the powers and duties of the commissioner of social services  relating
          to  the appointment of a temporary operator, in relation to the effec-
          tiveness thereof (Part S); to amend the  labor  law,  in  relation  to
          revising  the  healthy terminals act (Part T); to amend the labor law,
          in relation to limiting liquidated damages in certain frequency of pay
          violations (Part U); to amend the labor  law,  in  relation  to  civil
          penalties  for  violations  of  certain  provisions for the payment of
          wages (Part V); to amend the labor  law,  in  relation  to  the  civil
          penalties  for  violations  of child labor laws (Part W); to amend the
          labor law and the education law, in relation to digitizing the process
          by which minors apply for employment certificates or  working  papers;
          and  to  repeal  certain provisions of the labor law and the education
          law relating thereto (Part X); to amend the veterans' services law, in
          relation to annuity to be paid to parents, spouses, and minor children
          of service members who died while on active duty; and to authorize the
          commissioner of veterans' services to conduct an outreach program  for
          the purpose of informing the public and persons who may be eligible to
          receive  an  annuity  (Part  Y);  intentionally  omitted  (Part Z); in
          relation to requiring the submission of an annual report  on  the  New
          York  state  museum  (Part AA); to amend the labor law, in relation to
          decreasing the length of the suspension period applicable  to  certain
          striking  workers  who  seek to obtain unemployment insurance benefits
          (Part BB); to amend the social services law, in relation to the  main-
          tenance of effort requirements of social services districts in provid-
          ing  child care assistance under the child care block grant (Part CC);
          to amend the penal law, in relation to evading arrest  by  concealment
          of  identity  (Part  DD);  to amend the correction law, in relation to
          merit time allowance and limited credit time allowance (Part  EE);  in
          relation  to  authorizing  the  commissioner of education to appoint a
          monitor to oversee the Mount Vernon city school  district  and  estab-
          lishing  the  powers and duties of such monitor; and providing for the
          repeal of such provisions upon expiration thereof (Part FF); to  amend
          the general business law, the real property law and the administrative
          code  of  the  city  of  New  York,  in relation to providing expanded
          homeownership opportunities from the conversion of certain residential
          rental buildings to condominium status by property owners that  commit
          to  the  stewardship of permanently affordable units and the preserva-
          tion of expiring affordable housing inventory in the city of New York;
          and providing for the repeal of  certain  provisions  upon  expiration
          thereof  (Part  GG);  to  amend the public housing law, in relation to
          establishing the housing access voucher pilot program  (Part  HH);  to
          amend  section  2  of chapter 868 of the laws of 1975 constituting the
          New York state financial emergency act for the city of  New  York,  in
          relation  to  the effectiveness thereof (Part II); to amend the public
          authorities law, in relation to establishing the city of Buffalo park-
          ing authority (Part JJ); to  amend  the  labor  law,  in  relation  to
          increasing  the  maximum benefit rate for unemployment insurance (Part
          KK); to amend the criminal procedure law,  in  relation  to  discovery
          reform  (Part LL); and in relation to providing for the administration
          of certain funds and accounts related to the 2025-2026 budget, author-

        S. 3006--C                          4                         A. 3006--C
 
          izing certain payments and transfers; to amend the state finance  law,
          in  relation  to  the administration of certain funds and accounts, in
          relation to the effectiveness thereof, and  in  relation  to  interest
          owed  on  outstanding balances of debt; to amend part XX of chapter 56
          of the laws of 2024, amending the state finance  law  and  other  laws
          relating  to  providing  for  the  administration of certain funds and
          accounts related to the 2023-2024 budget, in relation  to  the  effec-
          tiveness  thereof;  to amend the state finance law, in relation to the
          school tax relief fund; to amend the state finance law, in relation to
          the dedicated infrastructure investment fund;  authorizing  the  comp-
          troller to transfer up to $25,000,000 from various state bond funds to
          the general debt service fund for the purposes of redeeming or defeas-
          ing  outstanding  state  bonds;   to amend the private housing finance
          law, in relation to housing program bonds  and  notes;  to  amend  the
          public authorities law, in relation to the issuance of bonds and notes
          by  the  dedicated  highway and bridge trust fund; to amend the public
          authorities law, in relation to the issuance of bonds  and  notes  for
          city  university  facilities;  to amend the public authorities law, in
          relation to the issuance of bonds for library  construction  projects;
          to  amend  the  public authorities law, in relation to the issuance of
          bonds for state university educational facilities; to amend the public
          authorities law, in relation to the issuance of bonds  and  notes  for
          locally  sponsored  community  colleges;  to  amend the New York state
          medical care facilities finance agency act, in relation to  the  issu-
          ance of mental health services facilities improvement bonds and notes;
          to amend part K of chapter 81 of the laws of 2002, relating to provid-
          ing  for  the  administration of certain funds and accounts related to
          the 2002-2003 budget, in relation to the issuance of bonds  and  notes
          to  finance  capital  costs related to homeland security; to amend the
          urban development corporation act, in  relation  to  the  issuance  of
          bonds and notes for purposes of funding office of information technol-
          ogy  services project costs; to amend chapter 329 of the laws of 1991,
          amending the state finance law and other laws relating to  the  estab-
          lishment  of  the dedicated highway and bridge trust fund, in relation
          to the issuance of funds to the thruway authority; to amend the  urban
          development  corporation act, in relation to the issuance of bonds and
          notes to fund costs for  statewide  equipment;  to  amend  the  public
          authorities  law, in relation to the issuance of bonds for purposes of
          financing environmental infrastructure projects; to amend  part  D  of
          chapter  389  of  the  laws  of 1997, relating to the financing of the
          correctional  facilities  improvement  fund  and  the  youth  facility
          improvement  fund,  in relation to the issuance of bonds and notes for
          the youth facilities  improvement fund; to amend the  public  authori-
          ties  law,  in  relation  to  the  issuance of bonds and notes for the
          purpose of financing peace  bridge projects and capital costs of state
          and local highways; to amend the urban development corporation act, in
          relation to the issuance of  bonds  for  economic  development  initi-
          atives; to amend part Y of chapter 61 of the laws of 2005, relating to
          providing  for  the  administration  of  certain    funds and accounts
          related to the 2005-2006 budget, in relation to the  issuance of bonds
          and notes for the purpose of financing capital projects for the  divi-
          sion of military and naval affairs and initiative of the state police;
          to  amend  the  public authorities law, in relation to the issuance of
          bonds and notes for the purpose of financing the construction  of  the
          New York state   agriculture and markets food laboratory; to amend the
          public  authorities law, in relation to authorization for the issuance

        S. 3006--C                          5                         A. 3006--C
 
          of bonds for the capital restructuring financing program,  the  health
          care  facility  transformation programs, and the essential health care
          provider program; to amend the public authorities law, in relation  to
          the    issuance  of  bonds  or  notes for the purpose of assisting the
          metropolitan transportation authority in the financing of  transporta-
          tion  facilities;  to amend part D of chapter 389 of the laws of 1997,
          relating to the financing of the correctional  facilities  improvement
          fund and the youth facility improvement fund, in relation to the issu-
          ance  of certain bonds and notes; to amend the public authorities law,
          in relation to funds  for  the  department  of  health  and  financing
          through  the  dormitory  authority; to amend the public health law, in
          relation to the department of health income fund; to amend chapter 174
          of the laws of 1968 constituting  the  urban  development  corporation
          act, in relation to personal income tax revenue anticipation notes; to
          amend  the state finance law, in relation to certain revenue bonds; to
          repeal certain provisions of the state finance  law  relating  to  the
          accident  prevention  course  internet,  and  other  technology  pilot
          program fund, relating to the required contents of the budget,  relat-
          ing  to  the  deposit  of  receipts derived from certain indirect cost
          assessments and relating to the New York state storm recovery  capital
          fund;  to  repeal  certain  provisions of the urban development corpo-
          ration act relating to funding project costs for restoring state prop-
          erties damaged as a result of  Storm  Sandy;  and  providing  for  the
          repeal of certain provisions upon expiration thereof (Part MM)
 
          The  People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
 
     1    Section 1. This act enacts into law major  components  of  legislation
     2  necessary  to  implement  the state education, labor, housing and family
     3  assistance budget for the 2025-2026 state fiscal year. Each component is
     4  wholly contained within a Part identified as Parts  A  through  MM.  The
     5  effective  date for each particular provision contained within such Part
     6  is set forth in the last section of such  Part.  Any  provision  in  any
     7  section  contained  within  a  Part, including the effective date of the
     8  Part, which makes a reference to a section "of this act", when  used  in
     9  connection  with  that particular component, shall be deemed to mean and
    10  refer to the corresponding section of the Part in  which  it  is  found.
    11  Section  three of this act sets forth the general effective date of this
    12  act.
 
    13                                   PART A
 
    14    Section 1. Paragraph e of subdivision 1 of section 211-d of the educa-
    15  tion law, as amended by section 1 of part A of chapter 56 of the laws of
    16  2024, is amended to read as follows:
    17    e. Notwithstanding paragraphs a and b of this  subdivision,  a  school
    18  district  that  submitted a contract for excellence for the two thousand
    19  eight--two thousand nine school year shall submit a contract for  excel-
    20  lence  for  the  two  thousand  nine--two  thousand  ten  school year in
    21  conformity with the requirements of subparagraph (vi) of paragraph a  of
    22  subdivision  two  of this section unless all schools in the district are
    23  identified as in good standing  and  provided  further  that,  a  school
    24  district  that  submitted a contract for excellence for the two thousand
    25  nine--two thousand ten school year, unless all schools in  the  district

        S. 3006--C                          6                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  are  identified  as in good standing, shall submit a contract for excel-
     2  lence for the two thousand eleven--two thousand twelve school year which
     3  shall, notwithstanding the requirements of subparagraph  (vi)  of  para-
     4  graph  a of subdivision two of this section, provide for the expenditure
     5  of an amount which shall be not less than  the  product  of  the  amount
     6  approved  by the commissioner in the contract for excellence for the two
     7  thousand  nine--two  thousand  ten  school  year,  multiplied   by   the
     8  district's  gap  elimination  adjustment percentage and provided further
     9  that, a school district that submitted a contract for excellence for the
    10  two thousand eleven--two thousand twelve school year, unless all schools
    11  in the district are identified as  in  good  standing,  shall  submit  a
    12  contract  for excellence for the two thousand twelve--two thousand thir-
    13  teen school  year  which  shall,  notwithstanding  the  requirements  of
    14  subparagraph  (vi)  of  paragraph  a of subdivision two of this section,
    15  provide for the expenditure of an amount which shall be  not  less  than
    16  the  amount  approved by the commissioner in the contract for excellence
    17  for the  two  thousand  eleven--two  thousand  twelve  school  year  and
    18  provided  further  that, a school district that submitted a contract for
    19  excellence for the two thousand  twelve--two  thousand  thirteen  school
    20  year,  unless  all  schools  in  the  district are identified as in good
    21  standing, shall submit a contract for excellence for  the  two  thousand
    22  thirteen--two thousand fourteen school year which shall, notwithstanding
    23  the  requirements of subparagraph (vi) of paragraph a of subdivision two
    24  of this section, provide for the expenditure of an amount which shall be
    25  not less than the amount approved by the commissioner  in  the  contract
    26  for excellence for the two thousand twelve--two thousand thirteen school
    27  year  and  provided  further  that,  a  school district that submitted a
    28  contract for excellence for  the  two  thousand  thirteen--two  thousand
    29  fourteen  school year, unless all schools in the district are identified
    30  as in good standing, shall submit a contract for excellence for the  two
    31  thousand   fourteen--two  thousand  fifteen  school  year  which  shall,
    32  notwithstanding the requirements of subparagraph (vi) of paragraph a  of
    33  subdivision  two  of  this  section,  provide  for the expenditure of an
    34  amount which shall be not less than the amount approved by  the  commis-
    35  sioner in the contract for excellence for the two thousand thirteen--two
    36  thousand  fourteen  school  year;  and  provided  further that, a school
    37  district that submitted a contract for excellence for the  two  thousand
    38  fourteen--two  thousand  fifteen  school year, unless all schools in the
    39  district are identified as in good standing, shall submit a contract for
    40  excellence for the two thousand  fifteen--two  thousand  sixteen  school
    41  year  which shall, notwithstanding the requirements of subparagraph (vi)
    42  of paragraph a of subdivision two  of  this  section,  provide  for  the
    43  expenditure  of  an  amount  which  shall  be  not  less than the amount
    44  approved by the commissioner in the contract for excellence for the  two
    45  thousand  fourteen--two  thousand  fifteen  school  year;  and  provided
    46  further that a school district that submitted a contract for  excellence
    47  for  the  two thousand fifteen--two thousand sixteen school year, unless
    48  all schools in the district are identified as in  good  standing,  shall
    49  submit a contract for excellence for the two thousand sixteen--two thou-
    50  sand seventeen school year which shall, notwithstanding the requirements
    51  of  subparagraph (vi) of paragraph a of subdivision two of this section,
    52  provide for the expenditure of an amount which shall be  not  less  than
    53  the  amount  approved by the commissioner in the contract for excellence
    54  for the two thousand fifteen--two  thousand  sixteen  school  year;  and
    55  provided  further  that, a school district that submitted a contract for
    56  excellence for the two thousand sixteen--two thousand  seventeen  school

        S. 3006--C                          7                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  year,  unless  all  schools  in  the  district are identified as in good
     2  standing, shall submit a contract for excellence for  the  two  thousand
     3  seventeen--two  thousand eighteen school year which shall, notwithstand-
     4  ing  the requirements of subparagraph (vi) of paragraph a of subdivision
     5  two of this section, provide for the  expenditure  of  an  amount  which
     6  shall  be  not  less than the amount approved by the commissioner in the
     7  contract for excellence  for  the  two  thousand  sixteen--two  thousand
     8  seventeen  school year; and provided further that a school district that
     9  submitted a contract for excellence for the two thousand  seventeen--two
    10  thousand  eighteen  school  year, unless all schools in the district are
    11  identified as in good standing, shall submit a contract  for  excellence
    12  for  the  two thousand eighteen--two thousand nineteen school year which
    13  shall, notwithstanding the requirements of subparagraph  (vi)  of  para-
    14  graph  a of subdivision two of this section, provide for the expenditure
    15  of an amount which shall be not less than the  amount  approved  by  the
    16  commissioner  in the contract for excellence for the two thousand seven-
    17  teen--two thousand eighteen school year; and provided  further  that,  a
    18  school  district  that  submitted  a contract for excellence for the two
    19  thousand eighteen--two thousand nineteen school year, unless all schools
    20  in the district are identified as  in  good  standing,  shall  submit  a
    21  contract  for  excellence  for  the  two thousand nineteen--two thousand
    22  twenty school year which  shall,  notwithstanding  the  requirements  of
    23  subparagraph  (vi)  of  paragraph  a of subdivision two of this section,
    24  provide for the expenditure of an amount which shall be  not  less  than
    25  the  amount  approved by the commissioner in the contract for excellence
    26  for the two thousand eighteen--two thousand nineteen  school  year;  and
    27  provided  further  that, a school district that submitted a contract for
    28  excellence for the two thousand  nineteen--two  thousand  twenty  school
    29  year,  unless  all  schools  in  the  district are identified as in good
    30  standing, shall submit a contract for excellence for  the  two  thousand
    31  twenty--two thousand twenty-one school year which shall, notwithstanding
    32  the  requirements of subparagraph (vi) of paragraph a of subdivision two
    33  of this section, provide for the expenditure of an amount which shall be
    34  not less than the amount approved by the commissioner  in  the  contract
    35  for excellence for the two thousand nineteen--two thousand twenty school
    36  year;  and  provided  further  that,  a school district that submitted a
    37  contract for excellence for the two thousand twenty--two thousand  twen-
    38  ty-one school year, unless all schools in the district are identified as
    39  in  good  standing,  shall  submit a contract for excellence for the two
    40  thousand twenty-one--two thousand twenty-two school  year  which  shall,
    41  notwithstanding  the requirements of subparagraph (vi) of paragraph a of
    42  subdivision two of this section,  provide  for  the  expenditure  of  an
    43  amount  which  shall be not less than the amount approved by the commis-
    44  sioner in the contract for excellence for the two  thousand  twenty--two
    45  thousand  twenty-one  school  year;  and provided further that, a school
    46  district that submitted a contract for excellence for the  two  thousand
    47  twenty-one--two  thousand  twenty-two school year, unless all schools in
    48  the district are identified as in good standing, shall submit a contract
    49  for excellence for the two  thousand  twenty-two--two  thousand  twenty-
    50  three  school  year  which  shall,  notwithstanding  the requirements of
    51  subparagraph (vi) of paragraph a of subdivision  two  of  this  section,
    52  provide  for  the  expenditure of an amount which shall be not less than
    53  the amount approved by the commissioner in the contract  for  excellence
    54  for  the  two  thousand twenty-one--two thousand twenty-two school year;
    55  and provided further that, a school district that submitted  a  contract
    56  for  excellence  for  the  two thousand twenty-two--two thousand twenty-

        S. 3006--C                          8                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  three school year, unless all schools in the district are identified  as
     2  in  good  standing,  shall  submit a contract for excellence for the two
     3  thousand twenty-three--two thousand twenty-four school year which shall,
     4  notwithstanding  the requirements of subparagraph (vi) of paragraph a of
     5  subdivision two of this section,  provide  for  the  expenditure  of  an
     6  amount  which  shall be not less than the amount approved by the commis-
     7  sioner in the contract for excellence for the two thousand  twenty-two--
     8  two  thousand  twenty-three  school  year;  and provided further that, a
     9  school district that submitted a contract for  excellence  for  the  two
    10  thousand  twenty-three--two thousand twenty-four school year, unless all
    11  schools in the district are identified as in good standing, shall submit
    12  a contract for excellence for the two thousand twenty-four--two thousand
    13  twenty-five school year which shall, notwithstanding the requirements of
    14  subparagraph (vi) of paragraph a of subdivision  two  of  this  section,
    15  provide  for  the  expenditure of an amount which shall be not less than
    16  the amount approved by the commissioner in the contract  for  excellence
    17  for the two thousand twenty-three--two thousand twenty-four school year;
    18  and  provided  further  that a school district that submitted a contract
    19  for excellence for the two thousand  twenty-four--two  thousand  twenty-
    20  five  school  year, unless all schools in the district are identified as
    21  in good standing, shall submit a contract for  excellence  for  the  two
    22  thousand  twenty-five--two  thousand twenty-six school year which shall,
    23  notwithstanding the requirements of subparagraph (vi) of paragraph a  of
    24  subdivision  two  of  this  section,  provide  for the expenditure of an
    25  amount which shall be not less than the amount approved by  the  commis-
    26  sioner  in the contract for excellence for the two thousand twenty-four-
    27  -two thousand twenty-five school year; provided,  however,  that,  in  a
    28  city  school  district  in  a city having a population of one million or
    29  more, notwithstanding the requirements of subparagraph (vi) of paragraph
    30  a of subdivision two of this section, the contract for excellence  shall
    31  provide  for  the  expenditure as set forth in subparagraph (v) of para-
    32  graph a of subdivision two of this section.  For purposes of this  para-
    33  graph,  the  "gap elimination adjustment percentage" shall be calculated
    34  as the sum of one minus the quotient of the sum of the school district's
    35  net gap elimination adjustment for two thousand ten--two thousand eleven
    36  computed pursuant to chapter fifty-three of the  laws  of  two  thousand
    37  ten,  making  appropriations  for  the  support  of government, plus the
    38  school district's gap elimination adjustment for two  thousand  eleven--
    39  two  thousand  twelve as computed pursuant to chapter fifty-three of the
    40  laws of two thousand eleven, making appropriations for  the  support  of
    41  the  local  assistance budget, including support for general support for
    42  public schools, divided by the total aid for adjustment computed  pursu-
    43  ant  to  chapter  fifty-three of the laws of two thousand eleven, making
    44  appropriations for the local assistance budget,  including  support  for
    45  general  support for public schools. Provided, further, that such amount
    46  shall be expended to support and maintain allowable programs and  activ-
    47  ities approved in the two thousand nine--two thousand ten school year or
    48  to  support  new  or  expanded  allowable programs and activities in the
    49  current year.
    50    § 2. Paragraph p of subdivision 1 of section 3602 of the education law
    51  is REPEALED.
    52    § 3. The opening paragraph and subparagraphs (i) and (ii) of paragraph
    53  q of subdivision 1 of section 3602 of the education law, as  amended  by
    54  section 16 of part YYY of chapter 59 of the laws of 2017, are amended to
    55  read as follows:

        S. 3006--C                          9                         A. 3006--C
 
     1    "Poverty  count"  shall  mean  the  sum  of the product of the [lunch]
     2  economically  disadvantaged  student  count  multiplied  by   sixty-five
     3  percent,  plus  the  product  of  the [census] SAIPE count multiplied by
     4  sixty-five percent, where:
     5    (i) ["Lunch] "Economically disadvantaged student count" shall mean the
     6  product  of  the  public school enrollment of the school district on the
     7  date enrollment was counted in accordance with this subdivision for  the
     8  base  year  multiplied by the three-year average [free and reduced price
     9  lunch percent] economically disadvantaged rate; and
    10    (ii) ["Census] "SAIPE count" shall mean  the  product  of  the  public
    11  school  enrollment  of  the  school  district on the date enrollment was
    12  counted in accordance with this subdivision for the base year multiplied
    13  by the [census 2000 poverty] three-year average small  area  income  and
    14  poverty estimate rate.
    15    § 4. Subparagraphs (iii), (iv) and (v) of paragraph q of subdivision 1
    16  of section 3602 of the education law are REPEALED.
    17    §  4-a.  Paragraph s of subdivision 1 of section 3602 of the education
    18  law, as amended by section 8 of part A of chapter  56  of  the  laws  of
    19  2022, is amended to read as follows:
    20    s.  "Extraordinary  needs  count" shall mean the sum of the product of
    21  the English language learner count multiplied by [fifty percent] the ELL
    22  weight, plus, the poverty count and the sparsity  count,  provided  that
    23  the  'ELL weight' shall be five tenths (0.50) for the two thousand twen-
    24  ty-four--two thousand twenty-five school year and prior,  and  shall  be
    25  equal  to fifty-three hundredths (0.53) in the two thousand twenty-five-
    26  -two thousand twenty-six school year and thereafter.
    27    § 5. Paragraph kk of subdivision 1 of section 3602  of  the  education
    28  law is REPEALED.
    29    §  6.  Paragraph  ll of subdivision 1 of section 3602 of the education
    30  law, as added by section 11-a of part A of chapter 56  of  the  laws  of
    31  2021, is renumbered subparagraph (iv) of paragraph q of such subdivision
    32  1 and is amended to read as follows:
    33    (iv)  (1)  "Economically  disadvantaged  count"  shall be equal to the
    34  unduplicated count of all children  registered  to  receive  educational
    35  services  in  grades  kindergarten through twelve, including children in
    36  ungraded programs who participate in, or whose family  participates  in,
    37  economic  assistance  programs,  such as the free or reduced-price lunch
    38  programs, Social Security Insurance, Supplemental  Nutrition  Assistance
    39  Program,  Foster  Care, Refugee Assistance (cash or medical assistance),
    40  Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC), Home Energy Assistance Program  (HEAP),
    41  Safety  Net  Assistance (SNA), Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), or Tempo-
    42  rary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF).
    43    (2) "Economically disadvantaged rate" shall mean the quotient  arrived
    44  at  when dividing the economically disadvantaged count by public enroll-
    45  ment as computed pursuant to subparagraph one of  paragraph  n  of  this
    46  subdivision.
    47    (3)  "Three-year  average economically disadvantaged rate" shall equal
    48  the quotient of: (i) the sum of the economically disadvantaged count for
    49  the school year prior to the base year, plus such number for the  school
    50  year  two  years prior to the base year, plus such number for the school
    51  year three years prior to the base year; divided  by  (ii)  the  sum  of
    52  enrollment  as  computed  pursuant to subparagraph one of paragraph n of
    53  this subdivision [one of this section] for the school year prior to  the
    54  base  year,  plus such number for the school year two years prior to the
    55  base year, plus such number for the school year three years prior to the
    56  base year, [computed] rounded to four decimals [without rounding].

        S. 3006--C                         10                         A. 3006--C

     1    § 7. Paragraph mm of subdivision 1 of section 3602  of  the  education
     2  law  is renumbered subparagraph (iii) of paragraph q of such subdivision
     3  1 and is amended to read as follows:
     4    (iii) "Three-year average small area income and poverty estimate rate"
     5  shall  equal  the quotient of: (i) the sum of the number of persons aged
     6  five to seventeen within the school district, based on  the  small  area
     7  income  and  poverty  estimates  produced  by  the  United States census
     8  bureau, whose families had incomes  below  the  poverty  level  for  the
     9  calendar  year prior to the year in which the base year began, plus such
    10  number for the calendar year two years prior to the year  in  which  the
    11  base  year  began,  plus  such  number for the calendar year three years
    12  prior to the year in which the base year began; divided by (ii) the  sum
    13  of  the total number of persons aged five to seventeen within the school
    14  district, based on such census bureau estimates, for the year  prior  to
    15  the  year  in  which the base year began, plus such total number for the
    16  year two years prior to the year in which the base year began, plus such
    17  total number for the year three years prior to the  year  in  which  the
    18  base year began, [computed] rounded to four decimals [without rounding].
    19    § 8. Subparagraph 2 of paragraph g of subdivision 3 of section 3602 of
    20  the  education  law, as amended by section 13 of part B of chapter 57 of
    21  the laws of 2008, is amended to read as follows:
    22    (2) a value computed by subtracting from one the product  obtained  by
    23  multiplying the combined wealth ratio by sixty-four hundredths, provided
    24  however,  that  for the purpose of computing the state sharing ratio for
    25  total foundation aid, the tier two value shall be computed by  subtract-
    26  ing  from  one the product obtained when multiplying the combined wealth
    27  ratio by six hundred sixteen thousandths (0.616) and such  values  shall
    28  be  computed using the combined wealth ratio for total foundation aid in
    29  place of the combined wealth ratio; or
    30    § 9. The closing paragraph of paragraph g of subdivision 3 of  section
    31  3602  of the education law, as amended by section 8 of part A of chapter
    32  56 of the laws of 2024, is amended to read as follows:
    33    Such result shall be expressed as a decimal carried  to  three  places
    34  without  rounding,  but  shall not be greater than ninety hundredths nor
    35  less than zero, provided, however, that for the purpose of computing the
    36  state sharing ratio for total foundation aid in the two  thousand  twen-
    37  ty-four--two  thousand  twenty-five  school  year [and thereafter], such
    38  result shall not be greater than ninety-one hundredths (0.91), and  that
    39  for  the  purpose of computing the state sharing ratio for total founda-
    40  tion aid in the two thousand twenty-five--two thousand twenty-six school
    41  year and thereafter, such result shall not be greater than  ninety-three
    42  hundredths (0.93).
    43    § 10. Subdivision 4 of section 3602 of the education law is amended by
    44  adding a new paragraph f to read as follows:
    45    f.  Foundation  aid payable in the two thousand twenty-five--two thou-
    46  sand twenty-six school year. Notwithstanding any provision of law to the
    47  contrary, foundation aid payable in the  two  thousand  twenty-five--two
    48  thousand twenty-six school year shall equal the greater of total founda-
    49  tion  aid  or the product of one and two hundredths (1.02) multiplied by
    50  the foundation aid base.
    51    § 10-a. Subparagraph 2 of paragraph a of subdivision 4 of section 3602
    52  of the education law, as amended by section 9-b of part CCC  of  chapter
    53  59 of the laws of 2018, is amended to read as follows:
    54    (2)  The regional cost index shall reflect an analysis of labor market
    55  costs based on median salaries in professional occupations that  require
    56  similar  credentials  to  those of positions in the education field, but

        S. 3006--C                         11                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  not including those occupations in the education  field,  provided  that
     2  the regional cost indices for the two thousand seven--two thousand eight
     3  school year and thereafter shall be as follows:
     4            Labor Force Region  Index
     5            Capital District    1.124
     6            Southern Tier       1.045
     7            Western New York    1.091
     8            Hudson Valley       1.314
     9            Long Island/NYC     1.425
    10            Finger Lakes        1.141
    11            Central New York    1.103
    12            Mohawk Valley       1.000
    13            North Country       1.000
    14     Provided  that  in the two thousand twenty-five--two thousand twenty-
    15  six school year and thereafter, the regional cost index for  Westchester
    16  county shall be 1.351.
    17    §  10-b. Paragraph b of subdivision 5 of section 1950 of the education
    18  law, as amended by chapter 130 of the laws of 2022, is amended  to  read
    19  as follows:
    20    b.  The  cost of services herein referred to shall be the amount allo-
    21  cated to each component school district  by  the  board  of  cooperative
    22  educational  services  to  defray  expenses  of  such  board,  including
    23  approved expenses from the testing of potable water systems of  occupied
    24  school  buildings under the board's jurisdiction as required pursuant to
    25  section eleven hundred ten of the public health law provided  that  such
    26  expenses  for testing of potable water systems are not reimbursable from
    27  another state or federal source, except that that  part  of  the  salary
    28  paid  any  teacher, supervisor or other employee of the board of cooper-
    29  ative educational services which is, (i) for  aid  payable  in  the  two
    30  thousand  twenty-five--two  thousand  twenty-six  school  year and prior
    31  school years in excess of thirty thousand dollars, (ii) for aid  payable
    32  in the two thousand twenty-six--two thousand twenty-seven school year in
    33  excess of forty thousand dollars, (iii) for aid payable in the two thou-
    34  sand  twenty-seven--two  thousand  twenty-eight school year in excess of
    35  fifty thousand dollars, and (iv) for aid payable  in  the  two  thousand
    36  twenty-eight--two  thousand  twenty-nine  school year and thereafter, in
    37  excess of sixty thousand dollars, shall not be such an approved expense,
    38  and except also that administrative  and  clerical  expenses  shall  not
    39  exceed  ten  percent of the total expenses for purposes of this computa-
    40  tion. Any gifts, donations or interest earned by the  board  of  cooper-
    41  ative  educational  services  or  on  behalf of the board of cooperative
    42  educational services by the dormitory  authority  or  any  other  source
    43  shall  not  be deducted in determining the cost of services allocated to
    44  each component school district. Any payments made to a component  school
    45  district  by  the  board of cooperative educational services pursuant to
    46  subdivision eleven of section six-p of the general municipal law attrib-
    47  utable to an approved cost of service computed pursuant to this subdivi-
    48  sion shall be deducted from the  cost  of  services  allocated  to  such
    49  component school district. The expense of transportation provided by the
    50  board  of  cooperative  educational  services pursuant to paragraph q of
    51  subdivision four of this section shall be eligible for  aid  apportioned
    52  pursuant  to subdivision seven of section thirty-six hundred two of this
    53  chapter and no board of cooperative educational services  transportation
    54  expense shall be an approved cost of services for the computation of aid
    55  under  this subdivision.  Transportation expense pursuant to paragraph q

        S. 3006--C                         12                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  of subdivision four of this section shall be included in the computation
     2  of the ten percent limitation on administrative and clerical expenses.
     3    § 10-c. Paragraph b of subdivision 10 of section 3602 of the education
     4  law,  as  amended  by  section 16 of part B of chapter 57 of the laws of
     5  2007, is amended to read as follows:
     6    b. (1) Aid for career education. There shall be  apportioned  to  such
     7  city  school  districts and other school districts which were not compo-
     8  nents of a board of cooperative educational services in  the  base  year
     9  for  pupils  in  selected  grades  [ten through twelve] in attendance in
    10  career education programs as such programs are defined  by  the  commis-
    11  sioner,  subject  for  the purposes of this paragraph to the approval of
    12  the director of the budget, an amount for each such pupil to be computed
    13  by multiplying the career education aid ratio  by  three  thousand  nine
    14  hundred  dollars  for  aid  payable in the two thousand twenty-four--two
    15  thousand twenty-five school year and prior and four thousand one hundred
    16  dollars thereafter.   Such aid  will  be  payable  for  weighted  pupils
    17  attending  career education programs operated by the school district and
    18  for weighted pupils for whom such school district contracts with  boards
    19  of  cooperative educational services to attend career education programs
    20  operated by a board of cooperative educational services. Weighted pupils
    21  for the purposes of this paragraph shall mean the sum of the  attendance
    22  of  students in selected grades [ten through twelve] in career education
    23  sequences  in  trade,  industrial,  technical,  agricultural  or  health
    24  programs  plus  the  product  of  sixteen  hundredths  multiplied by the
    25  attendance of students in selected grades [ten through twelve] in career
    26  education sequences in business and marketing as defined by the  commis-
    27  sioner  in regulations. The career education aid ratio shall be computed
    28  by subtracting from one the product obtained by  multiplying  fifty-nine
    29  percent  by the combined wealth ratio. This aid ratio shall be expressed
    30  as a decimal carried to three places without rounding, but not less than
    31  thirty-six percent.    For  purposes  of  this  subparagraph,  "selected
    32  grades"  shall  be  grades ten through twelve for aid payable in the two
    33  thousand twenty-four--two thousand twenty-five school  year  and  prior,
    34  and shall be grades nine through twelve for aid payable in the two thou-
    35  sand twenty-five--two thousand twenty-six school year and thereafter.
    36    (2)  Any  school district that receives aid pursuant to this paragraph
    37  shall be required  to  use  such  amount  to  support  career  education
    38  programs in the current year.
    39    (3)  A  board  of  education which spends less than its local funds as
    40  defined by regulations of the commissioner for career education  in  the
    41  base  year  during  the  current year shall have its apportionment under
    42  this subdivision reduced in an amount equal to such  deficiency  in  the
    43  current  or  a succeeding school year, provided however that the commis-
    44  sioner may waive such reduction upon determination that overall expendi-
    45  tures per pupil in support of career education programs  were  continued
    46  at  a  level equal to or greater than the level of such overall expendi-
    47  tures per pupil in the preceding school year.
    48    § 10-d. The opening paragraph of subdivision 41 of section 3602 of the
    49  education law, as amended by section 20 of part B of chapter 57  of  the
    50  laws  of  2008,  is  amended and a new paragraph (e) is added to read as
    51  follows:
    52    Transitional aid for charter school payments. In addition to any other
    53  apportionment under this section, for the two thousand seven--two  thou-
    54  sand  eight  school  year and thereafter, a school district other than a
    55  city school district in a city having a population  of  one  million  or
    56  more  shall  be  eligible for an apportionment in an amount equal to the

        S. 3006--C                         13                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  greater of the sum of paragraphs (a), (b), and (c), or paragraph (e)  of
     2  this subdivision.
     3    (e)  For  school  districts other than city school districts of cities
     4  having populations of one hundred twenty-five thousand or more as of the
     5  two thousand twenty decennial census, the  product  of  eligible  pupils
     6  multiplied  by  eight-tenths  (0.8)  and  further  multiplied by charter
     7  school basic tuition for the base year as defined  pursuant  to  section
     8  twenty-eight  hundred  fifty-six  of  this chapter. For purposes of this
     9  paragraph, eligible pupils shall be equal to the positive difference, if
    10  any, of the number of resident pupils enrolled in a  charter  school  in
    11  the  base  year less the product of two-tenths (0.2) multiplied by total
    12  resident public school district enrollment in the base year.
    13    § 10-e. Subparagraph 6 of paragraph d and paragraph d-1 of subdivision
    14  14 of section 3602 of the education law, subparagraph 6 of  paragraph  d
    15  as added by section 17-a of part B of chapter 57 of the laws of 2007 and
    16  paragraph  d-1 as amended by section 10-a of part A of chapter 56 of the
    17  laws of 2024, are amended to read as follows:
    18    (6) where such reorganization includes at least two  school  districts
    19  employing  eight or more teachers forming a central high school district
    20  pursuant to section nineteen hundred thirteen of this chapter[,].
    21    (7) such reorganized district shall be entitled  to  an  apportionment
    22  equal  to an additional percent of the apportionment computed in accord-
    23  ance with the provisions of paragraph d-1 of this subdivision; but in no
    24  case shall the sum of such apportionment under this paragraph  plus  the
    25  [selected  operating  aid per pupil] total operating aid base as defined
    26  in this subdivision be more than a total of ninety-five  per  centum  of
    27  the year prior to the base year approved operating expense; for a period
    28  of  five  years  beginning  with the first school year of operation as a
    29  reorganized district such additional percent shall be forty percent; and
    30  thereafter such additional forty percent apportionment to such  district
    31  shall be reduced by four percentage points each year, beginning with the
    32  sixth school year of operation as a reorganized district, and continuing
    33  until   such  additional  forty  percent  apportionment  is  eliminated;
    34  provided, however, that the  total  apportionment  to  such  reorganized
    35  district,  beginning  with the first school year of operation as a reor-
    36  ganized district, and for a period of fifteen years thereafter, shall be
    37  not less than the sum of all apportionments computed in accordance  with
    38  the  provisions  of  this  paragraph  plus the apportionment computed in
    39  accordance with the provisions of paragraph d-1 of this subdivision that
    40  each component school district was entitled to receive and  did  receive
    41  during  the  last school year preceding such first year of operation. In
    42  the event a school district is eligible for incentive operating aid  and
    43  again  reorganizes  pursuant to a new plan or reorganization established
    44  by the commissioner, and where such new reorganization is again eligible
    45  for incentive operating aid, the newly created school district shall  be
    46  entitled  to  receive incentive operating aid pursuant to the provisions
    47  of this paragraph, based on all school districts included  in  any  such
    48  reorganization, provided, however, that incentive operating aid payments
    49  due because of any such former reorganization shall cease.
    50    d-1. For purposes of paragraph d of this subdivision, ["selected oper-
    51  ating  aid  per pupil"] "total operating aid base" shall mean the appor-
    52  tionment computed for the 2006-07 school year, based  on  data  on  file
    53  with  the commissioner as of the date upon which an electronic data file
    54  was created for the purposes of compliance with paragraph b of  subdivi-
    55  sion  twenty-one of section three hundred five of this chapter on Febru-
    56  ary fifteenth, provided further that for school districts which reorgan-

        S. 3006--C                         14                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  ize on or after July first, two thousand twenty-four,  for  purposes  of
     2  paragraph  d  of  this subdivision, ["selected operating aid per pupil"]
     3  "total operating aid base" shall mean the total foundation aid base,  as
     4  defined  pursuant  to  paragraph  j  of subdivision one of this section,
     5  calculated as of the effective date of the reorganization.
     6    § 11. The education law is amended by adding a new section 319 to read
     7  as follows:
     8    § 319.  Establishment  of  dual  enrollment  program  policy.  1.  For
     9  purposes of this section:
    10    (a)  "Dual enrollment program" means any program that is a partnership
    11  between at least one school and  at  least  one  institution  of  higher
    12  education  that  provides  high  school students with the opportunity to
    13  enroll in college courses and earn transferable college credit from  the
    14  institution  or institutions while completing high school graduation and
    15  diploma requirements.
    16    (b) "School" means a charter school, a school district, or a board  of
    17  cooperative educational services.
    18    2. The commissioner shall adopt a statewide policy outlining the defi-
    19  nition  of dual enrollment programs in New York state and guidelines for
    20  participation and data reporting.
    21    3. The policy established pursuant to subdivision two of this  section
    22  shall  require  that  schools and higher education institutions annually
    23  submit to the department data regarding participation in and outcomes of
    24  dual enrollment programs in a form and manner determined by the  commis-
    25  sioner  pursuant  to  subdivision  five  of this section. The department
    26  shall annually publish such data on its public  website  no  later  than
    27  January first in the school year following the school year for which the
    28  data is applicable.
    29    4.  The policy established pursuant to subdivision two of this section
    30  shall require that, by September first,  two  thousand  twenty-six,  all
    31  schools  participating  in a dual enrollment program shall submit to the
    32  department a partnership agreement with the institution or  institutions
    33  of  higher  education  with  which  they are partnered. Such partnership
    34  agreements shall establish the scope and terms of  the  dual  enrollment
    35  program,  as  well  as a protocol for collecting, sharing, and reporting
    36  any data required by the commissioner pursuant to this section. Partner-
    37  ship agreements shall be consistent  with  the  policy  adopted  by  the
    38  commissioner  pursuant  to  subdivision  two  of this section, and shall
    39  contain such other provisions as may be required  by  the  commissioner.
    40  The partnership agreements shall be updated and resubmitted no less than
    41  once  every five years. The commissioner shall develop and make publicly
    42  available the required partnership agreement form for schools and higher
    43  education institutions no later than January first, two  thousand  twen-
    44  ty-six.
    45    5.  On  or  before January first, two thousand twenty-six, the commis-
    46  sioner, the chancellor of the state university of New York, the chancel-
    47  lor of the city university of New York, and the governor  shall  jointly
    48  establish data points to be submitted pursuant to this section.
    49    §  12.  Subdivision 4 of section 3627 of the education law, as amended
    50  by section 13-a of part A of chapter 56 of the laws of 2024, is  amended
    51  to read as follows:
    52    4.  Notwithstanding  any  other  provision of law to the contrary, any
    53  expenditures for transportation provided pursuant to this section in the
    54  two thousand thirteen--two thousand fourteen school year and  thereafter
    55  and  otherwise  eligible  for transportation aid pursuant to subdivision
    56  seven of section thirty-six hundred two of this article shall be consid-

        S. 3006--C                         15                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  ered approved transportation expenses eligible for  transportation  aid,
     2  provided  further that for the two thousand thirteen--two thousand four-
     3  teen school year such aid shall be limited to eight million one  hundred
     4  thousand dollars and for the two thousand fourteen--two thousand fifteen
     5  school  year  such aid shall be limited to the sum of twelve million six
     6  hundred thousand dollars plus the base amount and for the  two  thousand
     7  fifteen--two  thousand  sixteen  school  year through two thousand eigh-
     8  teen--two thousand nineteen school year such aid shall be limited to the
     9  sum of eighteen million eight hundred fifty thousand  dollars  plus  the
    10  base  amount  and  for  the  two  thousand nineteen--two thousand twenty
    11  school year such aid shall be limited to the  sum  of  nineteen  million
    12  three  hundred  fifty  thousand dollars plus the base amount and for the
    13  two thousand twenty--two thousand twenty-one school year such aid  shall
    14  be  limited  to the sum of nineteen million eight hundred fifty thousand
    15  dollars plus the base amount and for the  two  thousand  twenty-two--two
    16  thousand  twenty-three  school year such aid shall be limited to the sum
    17  of twenty-two million three hundred fifty thousand dollars plus the base
    18  amount and for the two thousand twenty-three--two  thousand  twenty-four
    19  school  year such aid shall be limited to the sum of twenty-four million
    20  eight hundred fifty thousand dollars plus the base amount  and  for  the
    21  two  thousand  twenty-four--two  thousand  twenty-five  school year [and
    22  thereafter] such aid shall be limited to the sum of twenty-nine  million
    23  eight  hundred  fifty  thousand dollars plus the base amount and for the
    24  two thousand twenty-five--two thousand twenty-six school year and there-
    25  after such aid shall be limited to the product of (i) the maximum amount
    26  of aid authorized by this subdivision for the base year,  and  (ii)  the
    27  sum  of  one  plus the product of (a) two and one-half multiplied by (b)
    28  the percentage increase in  the consumer price index as defined in para-
    29  graph hh of subdivision one of section thirty-six hundred  two  of  this
    30  article.    For  purposes  of  this subdivision, "base amount" means the
    31  amount of transportation aid paid to the school  district  for  expendi-
    32  tures  incurred in the two thousand twelve--two thousand thirteen school
    33  year for transportation that would have been eligible for  aid  pursuant
    34  to  this  section  had  this section been in effect in such school year,
    35  except that subdivision six of this section shall be deemed not to  have
    36  been  in  effect.  And  provided  further that the school district shall
    37  continue to annually expend for the transportation described in subdivi-
    38  sion one of this section at least the expenditures  used  for  the  base
    39  amount.
    40    §  12-a.  Section  11  of chapter 378 of the laws of 2010 amending the
    41  education law relating to paperwork reduction, as amended by  section  1
    42  of  item  FF of subpart B of part XXX of chapter 58 of the laws of 2020,
    43  is amended to read as follows:
    44    § 11. This act shall take effect immediately; provided, however,  that
    45  the  commissioner of education shall promulgate any rules or regulations
    46  necessary to implement the provisions of this act on or before  July  1,
    47  2010;  provided,  further  that  if  section  ten of this act shall take
    48  effect after July 1, 2010 it shall be deemed to have been in full  force
    49  and  effect on and after July 1, 2010; and provided further that section
    50  ten of this act shall expire and be deemed repealed [on] June 30, [2025]
    51  2030.
    52    § 12-b. Subdivision 4 of section 3638 of the education law,  as  added
    53  by  section  1 of subpart A of part B of chapter 56 of the laws of 2022,
    54  is amended to read as follows:
    55    4. (a) A school district  may  apply  to  the  commissioner,  and  the
    56  department may grant a [one-time extension] maximum of two extensions of

        S. 3006--C                         16                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  up  to twenty-four months each to comply with the requirements of subdi-
     2  vision two of this section. The commissioner  shall  consider  a  school
     3  district's  effort  to  meet the requirements of subdivision two of this
     4  section  and  any  other  factors outside of the control of the district
     5  when granting an extension, including but not  limited  to,  procurement
     6  efforts  made  by the school district, applications for state or federal
     7  funds, changes needed to school district operations to meet the require-
     8  ments of this section, employee training,  [and]  receipt  of  technical
     9  assistance,  [if any. Upon a school district receiving an extension, the
    10  New York state energy research and development authority,  in  consulta-
    11  tion with the department, shall provide any additional technical assist-
    12  ance  necessary  to the district to meet the requirements of subdivision
    13  two of this section] market availability of zero-emission  school  buses
    14  or  supporting  infrastructure,  and  availability  of  state or federal
    15  funds. In order to receive a second extension  pursuant  to  this  para-
    16  graph,  a  school  district must have at least engaged with the New York
    17  state energy research and development authority in  the  initiation  and
    18  development of a fleet electrification plan.
    19    The  commissioner  shall  provide  written  notification  to  a school
    20  district where such school district is granted an  extension  and  shall
    21  detail the grounds for granting such extension.
    22    (b)  The  commissioner shall notify the New York state energy research
    23  and development authority when the  first  extension  is  granted  to  a
    24  school  district  pursuant to paragraph (a) of this subdivision. The New
    25  York state energy research and development  authority  or  its  designee
    26  shall  meet with the school district at least annually during the exten-
    27  sion period to provide  technical  assistance  to  address  the  grounds
    28  detailed in the extension.
    29    (c) The New York state energy research and development authority shall
    30  make  a  recommendation  to  the commissioner if they determine a school
    31  district has the capacity to fulfill the requirements of subdivision two
    32  of this section based on the fleet electrification technical  assessment
    33  and  shall  notify  the  education department and the school district of
    34  such recommendation in writing. No school district  may  be  granted  an
    35  extension  pursuant  to  paragraph (a) of this subdivision where the New
    36  York state energy research and development authority  has  notified  the
    37  commissioner  of  their recommendation that such school district has the
    38  capacity to fulfill the requirements of subdivision two of this section.
    39    (d) The commissioner shall publish  on  the  department's  website  no
    40  later  than December thirty-first, two thousand twenty-five the applica-
    41  tion school districts must use to apply for extensions pursuant to para-
    42  graph (a) of this subdivision and the requirements school districts must
    43  meet to qualify for such extensions.
    44    § 12-c. The general business law is amended by adding  a  new  article
    45  11-C to read as follows:
    46                                 ARTICLE 11-C
    47                     SALE OF ZERO-EMISSION SCHOOL BUSES
    48  Section. 199-o. Independent range estimate required.
    49           199-p. Penalties.
    50    § 199-o. Independent  range  estimate  required.  (a)  Any entity that
    51  sells a zero-emission school bus to a school district or contractor  for
    52  use  in  providing  transportation services to a school district located
    53  within the state of New York shall be required to provide an independent
    54  third-party range estimate to prospective purchasers  prior  to  such  a
    55  sale.  Such  range  estimate  must,  at a minimum, provide the estimated
    56  range on different terrain and different weather conditions.  The  range

        S. 3006--C                         17                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  estimate shall also include the average level of battery degradation per
     2  ten  thousand  miles  traveled.  The  range estimate shall also consider
     3  whether the bus is stored outside or utilizes an indoor garage. For  the
     4  purposes  of this section "zero-emission school bus" shall have the same
     5  meaning as in subdivision one of section thirty-six hundred thirty-eight
     6  of the education law.
     7    (b) Nothing in this section  shall  be  interpreted  to  impact  sales
     8  completed  prior  to  January  first,  two thousand twenty-six, provided
     9  however that if the entity selling such zero-emission school buses later
    10  receives a range estimate for the model or models sold prior to  January
    11  first,  two  thousand  twenty-six, the selling entity shall provide such
    12  range estimate to the purchasing school district or contractor.
    13    § 199-p. Penalties. Any person, firm, corporation, or  association  or
    14  agent  or  employee  thereof who violates the provisions of this article
    15  shall be liable for a civil  penalty  of  not  more  than  one  thousand
    16  dollars  for each violation, which shall accrue to the state of New York
    17  and may be recovered in a civil action brought by the attorney  general.
    18  For the purposes of this article, the noncompliant sale of each zero-em-
    19  ission school bus shall constitute a single violation.
    20    §  12-d.  Subparagraph  2  of  paragraph d of subdivision 3 of section
    21  3623-a of the education law, as added by section 13 of part A of chapter
    22  56 of the laws of 2024, is amended to read as follows:
    23    (2) (i) In the case of allowable expenses for transportation  capital,
    24  debt  service,  or leases which are related to costs associated with the
    25  purchase of or conversion to zero-emission school buses  and  supporting
    26  infrastructure  and which are supported in whole or in part by vouchers,
    27  payments, or grants authorized under section  58-0701  of  the  environ-
    28  mental  conservation  law,  such allowable expenses at the time in which
    29  the expense is claimed for aid shall [not  exceed]  be  reduced  by  the
    30  quotient  of  (A)  the positive difference, if any, of the maximum state
    31  support less allowable expenses, divided by (B) the  transportation  aid
    32  ratio  calculated  pursuant  to  subdivision seven of section thirty-six
    33  hundred two of this article, provided that allowable expenses after such
    34  reduction, if any, shall be greater than zero.
    35    (ii) For purposes of this subparagraph "maximum state  support"  shall
    36  be  equal  to the sum of [(i)] (A) the product of the transportation aid
    37  ratio calculated pursuant to subdivision  seven  of  section  thirty-six
    38  hundred  two  of  this  article  multiplied  by allowable expenses, plus
    39  [(ii)] (B) the final value of any such vouchers  paid  on  behalf  of  a
    40  school  district,  payments, and grants authorized under section 58-0701
    41  of the environmental conservation law.
    42    § 13. Paragraph i of subdivision 12 of section 3602 of  the  education
    43  law,  as  amended  by  section 14 of part A of chapter 56 of the laws of
    44  2024, is amended to read as follows:
    45    i. For the two thousand  twenty-one--two  thousand  twenty-two  school
    46  year  through  the  two thousand [twenty-four] twenty-five--two thousand
    47  [twenty-five] twenty-six school year,  each  school  district  shall  be
    48  entitled  to  an  apportionment  equal  to the amount set forth for such
    49  school district as "ACADEMIC ENHANCEMENT"  under  the  heading  "2020-21
    50  ESTIMATED  AIDS"  in  the  school  aid  computer listing produced by the
    51  commissioner in support of the budget for the two  thousand  twenty--two
    52  thousand  twenty-one school year and entitled "SA202-1", and such appor-
    53  tionment shall be deemed to satisfy the state obligation to  provide  an
    54  apportionment  pursuant  to  subdivision  eight  of  section  thirty-six
    55  hundred forty-one of this article.

        S. 3006--C                         18                         A. 3006--C
 
     1    § 14. The opening paragraph of subdivision 16 of section 3602  of  the
     2  education  law,  as amended by section 15 of part A of chapter 56 of the
     3  laws of 2024, is amended to read as follows:
     4    Each  school  district  shall  be  eligible  to receive a high tax aid
     5  apportionment in the two thousand eight--two thousand nine school  year,
     6  which  shall equal the greater of (i) the sum of the tier 1 high tax aid
     7  apportionment, the tier 2 high tax aid apportionment and the tier 3 high
     8  tax aid apportionment or (ii) the product of the apportionment  received
     9  by  the school district pursuant to this subdivision in the two thousand
    10  seven--two thousand eight school year,  multiplied  by  the  due-minimum
    11  factor,  which shall equal, for districts with an alternate pupil wealth
    12  ratio computed pursuant to paragraph b  of  subdivision  three  of  this
    13  section that is less than two, seventy percent (0.70), and for all other
    14  districts,  fifty percent (0.50). Each school district shall be eligible
    15  to receive a high tax aid apportionment in the  two  thousand  nine--two
    16  thousand  ten  through two thousand twelve--two thousand thirteen school
    17  years in the amount set forth for such school district as "HIGH TAX AID"
    18  under the heading "2008-09 BASE YEAR AIDS" in the  school  aid  computer
    19  listing  produced  by  the commissioner in support of the budget for the
    20  two thousand nine--two thousand ten school year and  entitled  "SA0910".
    21  Each  school district shall be eligible to receive a high tax aid appor-
    22  tionment in the two thousand thirteen--two thousand fourteen through two
    23  thousand [twenty-four] twenty-five--two thousand  [twenty-five]  twenty-
    24  six  school  year  equal  to the greater of (1) the amount set forth for
    25  such school district as "HIGH TAX AID" under the heading  "2008-09  BASE
    26  YEAR  AIDS"  in  the school aid computer listing produced by the commis-
    27  sioner in support of the budget for the two thousand nine--two  thousand
    28  ten  school  year  and entitled "SA0910" or (2) the amount set forth for
    29  such school district as "HIGH TAX AID" under the heading "2013-14  ESTI-
    30  MATED  AIDS"  in the school aid computer listing produced by the commis-
    31  sioner in support of the executive budget for the  2013-14  fiscal  year
    32  and entitled "BT131-4".
    33    §  15.  Subdivision  16  of  section  3602-ee of the education law, as
    34  amended by section 18 of part A of chapter 56 of the laws  of  2024,  is
    35  amended to read as follows:
    36    16.  The authority of the department to administer the universal full-
    37  day pre-kindergarten program shall expire June thirtieth,  two  thousand
    38  [twenty-five]  twenty-six;  provided that the program shall continue and
    39  remain in full effect.
    40    § 16. Intentionally omitted.
    41    § 17. The opening paragraph of section 3609-a of the education law, as
    42  amended by section 23 of part A of chapter 56 of the laws  of  2024,  is
    43  amended to read as follows:
    44    For  aid  payable in the two thousand seven--two thousand eight school
    45  year through the two thousand  [twenty-four]  twenty-five--two  thousand
    46  [twenty-five]  twenty-six  school  year, "moneys apportioned" shall mean
    47  the lesser of (i) the sum of  one  hundred  percent  of  the  respective
    48  amount  set  forth  for each school district as payable pursuant to this
    49  section in the school aid computer listing for the current year produced
    50  by the commissioner in support of the budget which includes  the  appro-
    51  priation  for  the general support for public schools for the prescribed
    52  payments and individualized payments due prior to April  first  for  the
    53  current  year  plus  the apportionment payable during the current school
    54  year pursuant to subdivision six-a and subdivision  fifteen  of  section
    55  thirty-six hundred two of this part minus any reductions to current year
    56  aids pursuant to subdivision seven of section thirty-six hundred four of

        S. 3006--C                         19                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  this  part  or any deduction from apportionment payable pursuant to this
     2  chapter for collection  of  a  school  district  basic  contribution  as
     3  defined  in  subdivision eight of section forty-four hundred one of this
     4  chapter,  less  any  grants  provided  pursuant to subparagraph two-a of
     5  paragraph b of subdivision four of section  ninety-two-c  of  the  state
     6  finance  law,  less  any grants provided pursuant to subdivision five of
     7  section ninety-seven-nnnn of the state  finance  law,  less  any  grants
     8  provided  pursuant  to  subdivision twelve of section thirty-six hundred
     9  forty-one of this article, or (ii) the apportionment calculated  by  the
    10  commissioner based on data on file at the time the payment is processed;
    11  provided however, that for the purposes of any payments made pursuant to
    12  this  section  prior  to  the  first business day of June of the current
    13  year, moneys apportioned shall not include any aids payable pursuant  to
    14  subdivisions  six  and  fourteen,  if  applicable, of section thirty-six
    15  hundred two of this part as current year aid for debt  service  on  bond
    16  anticipation  notes and/or bonds first issued in the current year or any
    17  aids payable for full-day kindergarten for the current year pursuant  to
    18  subdivision  nine  of  section  thirty-six hundred two of this part. The
    19  definitions of "base year" and "current year" as set forth  in  subdivi-
    20  sion  one  of section thirty-six hundred two of this part shall apply to
    21  this section. For aid payable in the two thousand [twenty-four]  twenty-
    22  five--two  thousand  [twenty-five]  twenty-six school year, reference to
    23  such "school aid computer listing for the current year" shall  mean  the
    24  printouts entitled ["SA242-5"] "SA252-6".
    25    §  18.  Subdivision b of section 2 of chapter 756 of the laws of 1992,
    26  relating to funding a program for work force education conducted by  the
    27  consortium  for worker education in New York city, as amended by section
    28  27 of part A of chapter 56 of the laws of 2024, is amended  to  read  as
    29  follows:
    30    b.  Reimbursement for programs approved in accordance with subdivision
    31  a of this section for the reimbursement for the 2018--2019  school  year
    32  shall not exceed 59.4 percent of the lesser of such approvable costs per
    33  contact hour or fourteen dollars and ninety-five cents per contact hour,
    34  reimbursement  for  the  2019--2020  school  year  shall not exceed 57.7
    35  percent of the lesser of such  approvable  costs  per  contact  hour  or
    36  fifteen  dollars  sixty  cents  per  contact hour, reimbursement for the
    37  2020--2021 school year shall not exceed 56.9 percent of  the  lesser  of
    38  such  approvable  costs  per contact hour or sixteen dollars and twenty-
    39  five cents per contact hour, reimbursement  for  the  2021--2022  school
    40  year  shall  not  exceed  56.0  percent of the lesser of such approvable
    41  costs per contact hour or sixteen dollars and forty  cents  per  contact
    42  hour, reimbursement for the 2022--2023 school year shall not exceed 55.7
    43  percent  of  the  lesser  of  such  approvable costs per contact hour or
    44  sixteen dollars and sixty cents per contact hour, reimbursement for  the
    45  2023--2024  school  year  shall not exceed 54.7 percent of the lesser of
    46  such approvable costs per contact hour or seventeen dollars and  seventy
    47  cents  per  contact  hour, [and] reimbursement for the 2024--2025 school
    48  year shall not exceed 56.6 percent of  the  lesser  of  such  approvable
    49  costs per contact hour or eighteen dollars and seventy cents per contact
    50  hour,  and reimbursement for the 2025--2026 school year shall not exceed
    51  58.2 percent of the lesser of such approvable costs per contact hour  or
    52  nineteen  dollars  and  fifty-five  cents  per contact hour, and where a
    53  contact hour represents sixty minutes of instruction  services  provided
    54  to an eligible adult.  Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the
    55  contrary,  for  the  2018--2019 school year such contact hours shall not
    56  exceed one  million  four  hundred  sixty-three  thousand  nine  hundred

        S. 3006--C                         20                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  sixty-three  (1,463,963);  for  the  2019--2020 school year such contact
     2  hours shall not exceed one million four hundred forty-four thousand four
     3  hundred forty-four (1,444,444); for  the  2020--2021  school  year  such
     4  contact  hours  shall  not  exceed one million four hundred six thousand
     5  nine hundred twenty-six (1,406,926); for the 2021--2022 school year such
     6  contact hours shall not exceed one million four hundred sixteen thousand
     7  one hundred twenty-two (1,416,122); for the 2022--2023 school year  such
     8  contact  hours  shall  not  exceed one million four hundred six thousand
     9  nine hundred twenty-six (1,406,926); for the 2023--2024 school year such
    10  contact hours shall not exceed one million three hundred forty-two thou-
    11  sand nine hundred seventy-five (1,342,975);  [and]  for  the  2024--2025
    12  school  year such contact hours shall not exceed one million two hundred
    13  twenty-eight thousand seven hundred thirty-three  (1,228,733);  and  for
    14  the  2025--2026  school  year  such  contact  hours shall not exceed one
    15  million  one  hundred  forty-three  thousand  three  hundred  fifty-nine
    16  (1,143,359).   Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the contra-
    17  ry, the apportionment calculated for the city  school  district  of  the
    18  city  of  New  York  pursuant  to  subdivision 11 of section 3602 of the
    19  education law shall be computed as if such contact hours provided by the
    20  consortium for worker education, not to exceed  the  contact  hours  set
    21  forth herein, were eligible for aid in accordance with the provisions of
    22  such subdivision 11 of section 3602 of the education law.
    23    §  19. Section 4 of chapter 756 of the laws of 1992, relating to fund-
    24  ing a program for work force education conducted by the  consortium  for
    25  worker  education  in New York city, is amended by adding a new subdivi-
    26  sion dd to read as follows:
    27    dd. The provisions of this  subdivision  shall  not  apply  after  the
    28  completion  of  payments for the 2025--2026 school year. Notwithstanding
    29  any inconsistent provisions of law, the commissioner of education  shall
    30  withhold  a  portion  of employment preparation education aid due to the
    31  city school district of the city of New York to support a portion of the
    32  costs of the work force education program. Such moneys shall be credited
    33  to the elementary and secondary education fund-local assistance  account
    34  and shall not exceed thirteen million dollars ($13,000,000).
    35    §  20. Section 6 of chapter 756 of the laws of 1992, relating to fund-
    36  ing a program for work force education conducted by the  consortium  for
    37  worker education in New York city, as amended by section 29 of part A of
    38  chapter 56 of the laws of 2024, is amended to read as follows:
    39    §  6.  This  act  shall  take effect July 1, 1992, and shall be deemed
    40  repealed June 30, [2025] 2026.
    41    § 20-a. Paragraph a-1 of subdivision 11 of section 3602 of the  educa-
    42  tion law, as amended by section 29-a of part A of chapter 56 of the laws
    43  of 2024, is amended to read as follows:
    44    a-1.  Notwithstanding  the  provisions of paragraph a of this subdivi-
    45  sion, for aid payable in the school years two thousand--two thousand one
    46  through two thousand nine--two thousand ten, and two  thousand  eleven--
    47  two  thousand twelve through two thousand [twenty-four] twenty-five--two
    48  thousand [twenty-five] twenty-six, the commissioner  may  set  aside  an
    49  amount  not to exceed two million five hundred thousand dollars from the
    50  funds appropriated for purposes of this subdivision for the  purpose  of
    51  serving  persons  twenty-one  years  of  age  or older who have not been
    52  enrolled in any school for the preceding school year, including  persons
    53  who  have  received  a  high  school  diploma or high school equivalency
    54  diploma but  fail  to  demonstrate  basic  educational  competencies  as
    55  defined  in  regulation  by  the commissioner, when measured by accepted

        S. 3006--C                         21                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  standardized tests, and who shall be eligible to attend employment prep-
     2  aration education programs operated pursuant to this subdivision.
     3    §  21.  Subdivision 6 of section 4402 of the education law, as amended
     4  by section 25 of part A of chapter 56 of the laws of 2024, is amended to
     5  read as follows:
     6    6. Notwithstanding any other law, rule or regulation to the  contrary,
     7  the  board  of  education of a city school district with a population of
     8  one hundred twenty-five thousand or more inhabitants shall be  permitted
     9  to  establish  maximum  class  sizes  for  special  classes  for certain
    10  students with disabilities in accordance with  the  provisions  of  this
    11  subdivision. For the purpose of obtaining relief from any adverse fiscal
    12  impact  from under-utilization of special education resources due to low
    13  student attendance in  special  education  classes  at  the  middle  and
    14  secondary level as determined by the commissioner, such boards of educa-
    15  tion  shall, during the school years nineteen hundred ninety-five--nine-
    16  ty-six through June thirtieth, two thousand [twenty-five] twenty-six, be
    17  authorized  to  increase  class  sizes  in  special  classes  containing
    18  students  with  disabilities whose age ranges are equivalent to those of
    19  students in middle and secondary schools as defined by the  commissioner
    20  for  purposes  of  this  section  by up to but not to exceed one and two
    21  tenths times the applicable maximum class size specified in  regulations
    22  of  the  commissioner  rounded  up to the nearest whole number, provided
    23  that in a city school district having a population  of  one  million  or
    24  more, classes that have a maximum class size of fifteen may be increased
    25  by  no  more  than  one  student and provided that the projected average
    26  class size shall not exceed the  maximum  specified  in  the  applicable
    27  regulation,  provided  that  such  authorization shall terminate on June
    28  thirtieth, two thousand. Such authorization shall be granted upon filing
    29  of a notice by such a board of education with the  commissioner  stating
    30  the  board's  intention to increase such class sizes and a certification
    31  that the board will conduct  a  study  of  attendance  problems  at  the
    32  secondary  level and will implement a corrective action plan to increase
    33  the rate of attendance of students in such classes to at least the  rate
    34  for students attending regular education classes in secondary schools of
    35  the  district.  Such  corrective  action  plan  shall  be  submitted for
    36  approval by the commissioner by a date during the school year  in  which
    37  such  board  increases class sizes as provided pursuant to this subdivi-
    38  sion to be prescribed by the commissioner. Upon  at  least  thirty  days
    39  notice to the board of education, after conclusion of the school year in
    40  which  such  board  increases  class  sizes as provided pursuant to this
    41  subdivision, the commissioner shall  be  authorized  to  terminate  such
    42  authorization  upon  a  finding  that the board has failed to develop or
    43  implement an approved corrective action plan.
    44    § 22. Subdivisions 22 and 24 of section 140 of chapter 82 of the  laws
    45  of 1995, amending the education law and other laws relating to state aid
    46  to  school  districts  and the appropriation of funds for the support of
    47  government, as amended by section 26 of part A of chapter 56 of the laws
    48  of 2024, are amended to read as follows:
    49    (22) sections one hundred twelve, one hundred  thirteen,  one  hundred
    50  fourteen,  one hundred fifteen and one hundred sixteen of this act shall
    51  take effect on July 1, 1995; provided, however, that section one hundred
    52  thirteen of this act shall remain in full force and effect until July 1,
    53  [2025] 2026 at which time it shall be deemed repealed;
    54    (24) sections one hundred eighteen through one hundred thirty of  this
    55  act  shall  be deemed to have been in full force and effect on and after
    56  July 1, 1995; provided further, however, that the amendments made pursu-

        S. 3006--C                         22                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  ant to section one hundred twenty-four of this act shall be deemed to be
     2  repealed on and after July 1, [2025] 2026;
     3    § 22-a. Section 12 of part C of chapter 56 of the laws of 2020 direct-
     4  ing the commissioner of education to appoint a monitor for the Rochester
     5  city school district, establishing the powers and duties of such monitor
     6  and  certain  other officers and relating to the apportionment of aid to
     7  such district, as amended by section 25 of part A of chapter 56  of  the
     8  laws of 2023, is amended to read as follows:
     9    §  12. This act shall take effect immediately, provided, however, that
    10  sections two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine and ten of this
    11  act shall expire and be  deemed  repealed  June  30,  [2025]  2027;  and
    12  provided further, however that sections one and eleven of this act shall
    13  expire and be deemed repealed June 30, 2049.
    14    §  22-b.  Section 12 of chapter 19 of the laws of 2020 authorizing the
    15  commissioner of education to appoint a monitor to oversee the  Hempstead
    16  union  free  school  district  and establishing the powers and duties of
    17  such monitor, is amended to read as follows:
    18    § 12. This act  shall  take  effect  immediately;  provided,  however,
    19  section  one of this act shall take effect on the same date as a chapter
    20  of the laws of 2019, authorizing the commissioner of education  and  the
    21  chancellor  of  the  board of regents, with the approval of the board of
    22  regents, to appoint monitors to oversee the Hempstead union free  school
    23  district,  as  proposed  in legislative bills numbers S.6559 and A.8403,
    24  takes effect; and provided further, however sections two,  three,  four,
    25  five,  six,  seven, eight, nine, ten and eleven of this act shall expire
    26  and be deemed repealed June 30, [2025] 2027.
    27    § 22-c. Section 13 of chapter 18 of the laws of 2020  authorizing  the
    28  commissioner  of education to appoint a monitor to oversee the Wyandanch
    29  union free school district and establishing the powers and duties of the
    30  monitor, is amended to read as follows:
    31    § 13. This act shall take effect immediately, provided however:
    32    Section one of this act shall take effect on the same date as a  chap-
    33  ter  of  the laws of 2019, authorizing the commissioner of education, in
    34  consultation with the comptroller to appoint a monitor  to  oversee  the
    35  Wyandanch  union  free  school  district and establishing the powers and
    36  duties of the monitor, as proposed in legislative bills numbers S.6588-A
    37  and A.8422-A, takes effect.
    38    Sections three through ten of this act  shall  expire  and  be  deemed
    39  repealed June 30, [2025] 2027.
    40    Section eleven shall expire and be deemed repealed June 30 of the last
    41  fiscal  year  during  which  serial bonds or bonds issued to refund such
    42  serial bonds that are outstanding pursuant to such section of this  act,
    43  provided  that  the  superintendent  of  the Wyandanch union free school
    44  district shall notify the legislative bill drafting commission upon such
    45  occurrence in order that the commission may  maintain  an  accurate  and
    46  timely effective data base of the official text of the laws of the state
    47  of  New York in furtherance of effectuating the provisions of section 44
    48  of the legislative law and section 70-b of the public officers law.
    49    Sections two and twelve  of  this  act  shall  expire  and  be  deemed
    50  repealed June 30, 2049.
    51    §  22-d.  Section  13  of  chapter  89 of the laws of 2016 relating to
    52  supplementary funding for dedicated programs for public school  students
    53  in the East Ramapo central school district, as amended by chapter 173 of
    54  the laws of 2021, is amended to read as follows:
    55    §  13. This act shall take effect July 1, 2016 and shall expire and be
    56  deemed repealed June 30, [2025] 2027.

        S. 3006--C                         23                         A. 3006--C
 
     1    § 22-e. Section 3204 of the education law is amended by adding  a  new
     2  subdivision 6 to read as follows:
     3    6. Notwithstanding any law, rule, or regulation to the contrary:
     4    (a)  Instruction  at a nonpublic school satisfies all the requirements
     5  of this part applicable to instruction,  including  subdivision  two  of
     6  this  section, subdivision two of section thirty-two hundred ten of this
     7  part, and any other requirements in this chapter applicable to  instruc-
     8  tion,  and  shall  thereby qualify as and be finally recognized to be at
     9  least substantially equivalent to the instruction  given  to  minors  of
    10  like  age  and attainments at the public schools of the city or district
    11  where the minor resides, if such nonpublic school is:
    12    (i) a registered high school or nonpublic school  serving  grades  one
    13  through eight that has a registered high school;
    14    (ii)  a state-approved private special education school or state-oper-
    15  ated or state-supported school  established  by  the  state  legislature
    16  pursuant  to  article  eighty-five, eighty-seven or eighty-eight of this
    17  chapter;
    18    (iii) a nonpublic school that is accredited or is awarded  provisional
    19  status  by  an  accreditation  body  approved  by  the  commissioner for
    20  purposes of demonstrating  compliance  with  the  requirements  of  this
    21  section,  except  that  such provisional status shall only apply for the
    22  first five years that such nonpublic school has been awarded provisional
    23  status. An accreditation body shall have the knowledge and expertise  to
    24  properly  evaluate the entirety of the day's curriculum of those schools
    25  that it accredits and shall use a  peer  review  process  that  includes
    26  evaluation  by leaders of similar nonpublic schools, appropriately train
    27  all staff and peer reviewers who are involved in the accreditation proc-
    28  ess, accredit based on publicly accessible documented standards, perform
    29  a comprehensive onsite visit of any school seeking  accreditation  while
    30  such  school  is  in session, and  periodically conduct a combination of
    31  interim and full accreditation reviews of the nonpublic schools which it
    32  accredits during at least a ten-year period.  Additionally, such accred-
    33  itation body shall require  nonpublic schools seeking  accreditation  to
    34  have  curriculum  that  is  informed  by  research,  document individual
    35  student progress, and have mechanisms  for  monitoring,  assessing,  and
    36  providing  feedback  on student   progress. The commissioner may, at any
    37  time, revoke such commissioner's approval of an accreditation  body  for
    38  cause, upon notice and hearing;
    39    (iv)  a nonpublic school that participates in the international bacca-
    40  laureate program;
    41    (v) a nonpublic school whose instruction is  approved  by  the  United
    42  States government for instruction on a military base or service academy;
    43    (vi)  a nonpublic school in which the percentage of students who score
    44  "proficient" on a year-end summative or cumulative assessment and  taken
    45  in  the  same  subject areas and for the same grade levels as the annual
    46  New York state testing program to comply with the federal Every  Student
    47  Succeeds  Act  is equal to or greater than one of the following metrics,
    48  and such school has declared the intended use  of  such  metric  at  the
    49  beginning of the school year:
    50    (1)  the percentage of similarly situated public school students scor-
    51  ing at the "proficient" level on New York state  testing  program  tests
    52  taken  in the same subject areas and grade levels in the school district
    53  that serves the same geographic area as the nonpublic school is located;
    54  or

        S. 3006--C                         24                         A. 3006--C
 
     1    (2) the percentage of similarly situated public school students state-
     2  wide scoring at the "proficient" level on New York state testing program
     3  tests taken in the same subject areas and grade levels; or
     4    (vii)  a  nonpublic  school  that  administers a year-end summative or
     5  cumulative assessment taken in substantially the same subject areas  and
     6  same grade levels as the annual New York state testing program to comply
     7  with  the  federal  Every Student Succeeds Act, has a three-year average
     8  participation rate that is equal  to  or  greater  than  the  three-year
     9  statewide average participation rate, and uses the results to assess the
    10  school's  educational program and to seek to improve instruction and its
    11  students' performance on such tests.
    12    (a-1) A nonpublic school's satisfaction of one or more criteria listed
    13  in paragraph (a) of this subdivision in one school year shall not  auto-
    14  matically  be deemed satisfaction of such criteria in later school years
    15  if such school ceases to satisfy such criteria in such later years.
    16    (b) (i) For purposes of subparagraphs (vi) and (vii) of paragraph  (a)
    17  of  this subdivision, the following terms shall have the following mean-
    18  ings:
    19    (1) "Year-end summative or cumulative assessment" shall  mean  one  or
    20  more  assessments selected by the nonpublic school that qualifies as (A)
    21  a New York state testing program test; (B) an assessment approved by the
    22  commissioner; or (C)  a  nationally-recognized,  commercially  published
    23  norm-referenced  achievement test that is: (I) recognized and used in at
    24  least three other states; (II) selected by the nonpublic school from one
    25  of the following: the Iowa Test of Basic Skills, the California Achieve-
    26  ment Test, the Stanford Achievement  Test,  the  Comprehensive  Test  of
    27  Basic Skills, the Metropolitan Achievement Test, i-Ready, a state educa-
    28  tion  department  test,  or;  (III)  another  test approved by the state
    29  education department. All assessments and materials used  in  connection
    30  with  such  assessments  shall be culturally competent and respectful of
    31  cultural curricula and pedagogy. A nonpublic school shall  not  need  to
    32  use  the  same  year-end  summative  or cumulative assessment across all
    33  grades or years and may change assessments used at any time.
    34    (2) "Proficient" shall mean, as applicable, (A)  a  score  of  "profi-
    35  cient"  on a New York state testing program test; (B) a score determined
    36  by the commissioner for an assessment approved by the  commissioner;  or
    37  (C)  a score of at least the thirty-third percentile on a nationally-re-
    38  cognized,  commercially  published  norm-referenced  achievement   test,
    39  unless the commissioner approves a lower percentage for such tests.
    40    (ii)  To  rely  on subparagraph (vi) of paragraph (a) of this subdivi-
    41  sion, a nonpublic school shall demonstrate a student participation  rate
    42  on  its year-end summative or cumulative assessment or assessments equal
    43  to or greater than the three-year average statewide participation rate.
    44    (iii) To allow for adequate preparation of students in connection with
    45  subparagraphs (vi) and (vii) of paragraph (a)  of  this  subdivision,  a
    46  phase-in  period  shall  be  established. During such phase-in period, a
    47  nonpublic school and its affiliated schools shall be deemed to have  met
    48  the  criteria  in  subparagraphs (vi) and (vii) of paragraph (a) of this
    49  subdivision, for purposes of all components of  this  subdivision.  Such
    50  phase-in  status shall commence upon the effective date of this subdivi-
    51  sion, including prior to the administration of any year-end summative or
    52  cumulative assessment, and shall continue until the first cohort  enter-
    53  ing  second  grade  at  such  nonpublic school after such effective date
    54  completes the year-end summative or cumulative assessment for the  third
    55  grade  and  shall  further  continue in the subsequent years, as long as
    56  such nonpublic school continues administering a  year-end  summative  or

        S. 3006--C                         25                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  cumulative assessment for the third grade and adds one additional, high-
     2  er  grade each year until such nonpublic school is administering a year-
     3  end summative or cumulative assessment for grades three through ten. The
     4  phase-in  period  shall end after the two thousand thirty-two--two thou-
     5  sand thirty-three school year. Prior to such cohorts tested using  year-
     6  end  summative  or  cumulative  assessments under subparagraphs (vi) and
     7  (vii) of paragraph (a) of this subdivision, such cohorts may be provided
     8  with practice and/or sample testing  questions  to  begin  familiarizing
     9  themselves  with  standardized testing methodology.  The phase-in period
    10  shall be applicable to all nonpublic  schools,  and  it  shall  only  be
    11  necessary  for  a  nonpublic  school to administer year-end summative or
    12  cumulative assessments for the  phased-in  grades,  notwithstanding  the
    13  nonpublic  school's  past  or current administration of such assessments
    14  for other grades.
    15    (iv) If a nonpublic school meets,  or  has  been  deemed  pursuant  to
    16  subparagraph  (iii)  of  this  paragraph  to  have  met, the criteria in
    17  subparagraph (vi) or (vii) of paragraph (a) of  this  subdivision,  then
    18  during  the phase-in period of subparagraph (iii) of this paragraph, all
    19  affiliated schools shall be deemed to have met such  criteria.    Affil-
    20  iated  schools  are  those with one of the following: the same office of
    21  religious and independent school support (ORISS)  code  under  a  single
    22  basic educational data system (BEDS) code; or the same organization with
    23  a  different  BEDS code in the same location; or the same ORISS code and
    24  leadership but may  have  physical  buildings  in  different  locations.
    25  During  the  phase-in period of subparagraph (iii) of  this paragraph, a
    26  nonpublic school which meets the criteria  of  subparagraph    (vii)  of
    27  paragraph  (a)  of this subdivision shall include its affiliated schools
    28  when using the results of the year-end summative or  cumulative  assess-
    29  ment  to  assess  educational  programming  and  improve instruction and
    30  students' performance on such tests.   During  the  phase-in  period  of
    31  subparagraph  (iii)  of  this paragraph, if a nonpublic school meets the
    32  criteria in subparagraph (iii) of paragraph (a) of this subdivision with
    33  respect to provisional status  then  all  affiliated  schools  shall  be
    34  deemed  to have met such criteria.  If a nonpublic high school meets the
    35  criteria in subparagraph (i) or (vi) of paragraph (a) of  this  subdivi-
    36  sion,  then  all affiliated middle or elementary schools shall be deemed
    37  to have met such criteria.
    38    (c) Nothing in this subdivision shall preclude the  commissioner  from
    39  defining  by  rule  or regulation alternative criteria which may also be
    40  used to demonstrate that instruction at a nonpublic school is in compli-
    41  ance with this section. Compliance with this section may be demonstrated
    42  through any one or more of the criteria established in this  subdivision
    43  and  shall  thereby  qualify as and be finally recognized to be substan-
    44  tially  equivalent  without  any  further  requirements.    A  nonpublic
    45  school's  satisfaction  of one or more criteria in one school year shall
    46  not automatically be deemed  satisfaction  of  such  criteria  in  later
    47  school  years  if  such  school  ceases to satisfy such criteria in such
    48  later years.  A nonpublic school may elect at any time to select differ-
    49  ent criteria. A nonpublic school's  omission  to  satisfy  one  or  more
    50  criteria shall not affect a nonpublic school's ability to satisfy anoth-
    51  er criteria, or such criteria at a later date.
    52    §  23.  Special  apportionment for salary expenses. 1. Notwithstanding
    53  any other provision of law, upon  application  to  the  commissioner  of
    54  education,  not  sooner  than  the first day of the second full business
    55  week of June 2026 and not later than the last  day  of  the  third  full
    56  business week of June 2026, a school district eligible for an apportion-

        S. 3006--C                         26                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  ment  pursuant to section 3602 of the education law shall be eligible to
     2  receive an apportionment pursuant to this section, for the  school  year
     3  ending  June  30, 2026, for salary expenses incurred between April 1 and
     4  June 30, 2025 and such apportionment shall not exceed the sum of (a) the
     5  deficit  reduction assessment of 1990--1991 as determined by the commis-
     6  sioner of education, pursuant to paragraph f of subdivision 1 of section
     7  3602 of the education law, as in effect through June 30, 1993, plus  (b)
     8  186  percent  of such amount for a city school district in a city with a
     9  population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants, plus (c) 209  percent  of
    10  such  amount  for  a city school district in a city with a population of
    11  more than 195,000 inhabitants and less than 219,000 inhabitants  accord-
    12  ing  to  the  latest  federal  census,  plus (d) the net gap elimination
    13  adjustment for 2010--2011, as determined by the commissioner  of  educa-
    14  tion pursuant to chapter 53 of the laws of 2010, plus (e) the gap elimi-
    15  nation  adjustment  for  2011--2012 as determined by the commissioner of
    16  education pursuant to subdivision 17 of section 3602  of  the  education
    17  law,  and provided further that such apportionment shall not exceed such
    18  salary expenses. Such application shall be made by  a  school  district,
    19  after the board of education or trustees have adopted a resolution to do
    20  so and in the case of a city school district in a city with a population
    21  in excess of 125,000 inhabitants, with the approval of the mayor of such
    22  city.
    23    2.  The  claim  for  an  apportionment to be paid to a school district
    24  pursuant to subdivision 1 of this section  shall  be  submitted  to  the
    25  commissioner  of  education  on  a form prescribed for such purpose, and
    26  shall be payable upon determination by such commissioner that  the  form
    27  has been submitted as prescribed. Such approved amounts shall be payable
    28  on  the  same  day in September of the school year following the year in
    29  which application was made as funds provided pursuant to subparagraph  4
    30  of  paragraph  b  of  subdivision 4 of section 92-c of the state finance
    31  law, on the audit and warrant  of  the  state  comptroller  on  vouchers
    32  certified  or  approved  by  the commissioner of education in the manner
    33  prescribed by law from moneys in the state lottery  fund  and  from  the
    34  general  fund  to  the  extent that the amount paid to a school district
    35  pursuant to this section exceeds the amount, if  any,  due  such  school
    36  district  pursuant  to subparagraph 2 of paragraph a of subdivision 1 of
    37  section 3609-a of the education law in the  school  year  following  the
    38  year in which application was made.
    39    3.  Notwithstanding  the provisions of section 3609-a of the education
    40  law, an amount equal to the amount paid to a school district pursuant to
    41  subdivisions 1 and 2 of this section shall first be  deducted  from  the
    42  following  payments  due  the  school  district  during  the school year
    43  following the year in which application was made  pursuant  to  subpara-
    44  graphs  1,  2,  3,  4  and  5 of paragraph a of subdivision 1 of section
    45  3609-a of the education law in the following order: the  lottery  appor-
    46  tionment  payable  pursuant to subparagraph 2 of such paragraph followed
    47  by the fixed fall payments payable pursuant to subparagraph  4  of  such
    48  paragraph  and then followed by the district's payments to the teachers'
    49  retirement system pursuant to subparagraph 1 of such paragraph, and  any
    50  remainder  to  be  deducted  from  the  individualized  payments due the
    51  district pursuant to paragraph b of such subdivision shall  be  deducted
    52  on  a  chronological  basis  starting  with the earliest payment due the
    53  district.
    54    § 24. Special apportionment for public pension accruals. 1.   Notwith-
    55  standing any other provision of law, upon application to the commission-
    56  er  of education, not later than June 30, 2026, a school district eligi-

        S. 3006--C                         27                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  ble for an apportionment pursuant to section 3602 of the  education  law
     2  shall  be eligible to receive an apportionment pursuant to this section,
     3  for the school year ending June 30, 2026 and  such  apportionment  shall
     4  not  exceed  the  additional  accruals  required  to  be  made by school
     5  districts in the 2004--2005 and 2005--2006 school years associated  with
     6  changes  for  such  public pension liabilities. The amount of such addi-
     7  tional accrual shall be certified to the commissioner  of  education  by
     8  the  president of the board of education or the trustees or, in the case
     9  of a city school district in a city  with  a  population  in  excess  of
    10  125,000  inhabitants,  the mayor of such city. Such application shall be
    11  made by a school district, after the board of education or trustees have
    12  adopted a resolution to do so and in the case of a city school  district
    13  in  a  city with a population in excess of 125,000 inhabitants, with the
    14  approval of the mayor of such city.
    15    2. The claim for an apportionment to be  paid  to  a  school  district
    16  pursuant  to  subdivision  one of this section shall be submitted to the
    17  commissioner of education on a form prescribed  for  such  purpose,  and
    18  shall  be  payable upon determination by such commissioner that the form
    19  has been submitted as prescribed. Such approved amounts shall be payable
    20  on the same day in September of the school year following  the  year  in
    21  which  application was made as funds provided pursuant to subparagraph 4
    22  of paragraph b of subdivision 4 of section 92-c  of  the  state  finance
    23  law,  on  the  audit  and  warrant  of the state comptroller on vouchers
    24  certified or approved by the commissioner of  education  in  the  manner
    25  prescribed  by  law  from  moneys in the state lottery fund and from the
    26  general fund to the extent that the amount paid  to  a  school  district
    27  pursuant  to  this  section  exceeds the amount, if any, due such school
    28  district pursuant to subparagraph 2 of paragraph a of subdivision  1  of
    29  section  3609-a  of  the  education law in the school year following the
    30  year in which application was made.
    31    3. Notwithstanding the provisions of section 3609-a of  the  education
    32  law, an amount equal to the amount paid to a school district pursuant to
    33  subdivisions  1  and  2 of this section shall first be deducted from the
    34  following payments due  the  school  district  during  the  school  year
    35  following  the  year  in which application was made pursuant to subpara-
    36  graphs 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 of paragraph  a  of  subdivision  1  of  section
    37  3609-a  of  the education law in the following order: the lottery appor-
    38  tionment payable pursuant to subparagraph 2 of such  paragraph  followed
    39  by  the  fixed  fall payments payable pursuant to subparagraph 4 of such
    40  paragraph and then followed by the district's payments to the  teachers'
    41  retirement  system pursuant to subparagraph 1 of such paragraph, and any
    42  remainder to be  deducted  from  the  individualized  payments  due  the
    43  district  pursuant  to paragraph b of such subdivision shall be deducted
    44  on a chronological basis starting with  the  earliest  payment  due  the
    45  district.
    46    §  24-a. Subdivision a of section 5 of chapter 121 of the laws of 1996
    47  authorizing the Roosevelt union free school district to finance deficits
    48  by the issuance of serial bonds, as amended by section 36-a of part A of
    49  chapter 56 of the laws of 2024, is amended to read as follows:
    50    a. Notwithstanding any other provisions of law,  upon  application  to
    51  the  commissioner of education submitted not sooner than April first and
    52  not later than June thirtieth of the applicable school year, the  Roose-
    53  velt  union  free school district shall be eligible to receive an appor-
    54  tionment pursuant to this chapter for salary expenses, including related
    55  benefits, incurred between April first and June thirtieth of such school
    56  year.  Such apportionment shall not exceed: for the 1996-97 school  year

        S. 3006--C                         28                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  through   the  [2024-25]  2025-26  school  year,  four  million  dollars
     2  ($4,000,000); for the  [2025-26]  2026-27  school  year,  three  million
     3  dollars ($3,000,000); for the [2026-27] 2027-28 school year, two million
     4  dollars ($2,000,000); for the [2027-28] 2028-29 school year, one million
     5  dollars  ($1,000,000);  and  for the [2028-29] 2029-30 school year, zero
     6  dollars.   Such annual application shall be  made  after  the  board  of
     7  education  has  adopted  a  resolution to do so with the approval of the
     8  commissioner of education.
     9    § 25. The amounts specified in this section shall be a set-aside  from
    10  the  state  funds  which  each such district is receiving from the total
    11  foundation aid:
    12    1. for the development, maintenance or expansion of magnet schools  or
    13  magnet  school  programs  for  the  2025--2026 school year. For the city
    14  school district of the city of New York there shall be  a  set-aside  of
    15  foundation  aid  equal  to  forty-eight million one hundred seventy-five
    16  thousand dollars ($48,175,000) including five hundred  thousand  dollars
    17  ($500,000)  for  the  Andrew  Jackson  High School; for the Buffalo city
    18  school  district,  twenty-one  million  twenty-five   thousand   dollars
    19  ($21,025,000);  for  the Rochester city school district, fifteen million
    20  dollars ($15,000,000); for the Syracuse city school  district,  thirteen
    21  million  dollars  ($13,000,000);  for  the Yonkers city school district,
    22  forty-nine million five hundred thousand dollars ($49,500,000); for  the
    23  Newburgh city school district, four million six hundred forty-five thou-
    24  sand  dollars  ($4,645,000);  for the Poughkeepsie city school district,
    25  two million four hundred seventy-five thousand dollars ($2,475,000); for
    26  the Mount Vernon city school district, two million dollars ($2,000,000);
    27  for the New Rochelle city school district, one million four hundred  ten
    28  thousand dollars ($1,410,000); for the Schenectady city school district,
    29  one  million  eight  hundred thousand dollars ($1,800,000); for the Port
    30  Chester city school district, one million  one  hundred  fifty  thousand
    31  dollars  ($1,150,000);  for  the White Plains city school district, nine
    32  hundred thousand dollars ($900,000); for the Niagara Falls  city  school
    33  district,  six  hundred thousand dollars ($600,000); for the Albany city
    34  school district, three  million  five  hundred  fifty  thousand  dollars
    35  ($3,550,000);  for  the  Utica city school district, two million dollars
    36  ($2,000,000); for the Beacon city school district, five  hundred  sixty-
    37  six   thousand  dollars  ($566,000);  for  the  Middletown  city  school
    38  district, four hundred thousand dollars  ($400,000);  for  the  Freeport
    39  union  free  school  district, four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000);
    40  for the Greenburgh  central  school  district,  three  hundred  thousand
    41  dollars  ($300,000);  for  the  Amsterdam  city  school  district, eight
    42  hundred thousand dollars  ($800,000);  for  the  Peekskill  city  school
    43  district,  two  hundred  thousand dollars ($200,000); and for the Hudson
    44  city school district, four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000).
    45    2. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law to the  contrary,
    46  a  school  district  setting  aside such foundation aid pursuant to this
    47  section may use such set-aside  funds  for:  (a)  any  instructional  or
    48  instructional  support  costs  associated with the operation of a magnet
    49  school; or (b) any instructional or instructional support costs  associ-
    50  ated with implementation of an alternative approach to promote diversity
    51  and/or enhancement of the instructional program and raising of standards
    52  in  elementary and secondary schools of school districts having substan-
    53  tial concentrations of minority students.
    54    3. The commissioner of education shall not be authorized  to  withhold
    55  foundation aid from a school district that used such funds in accordance
    56  with  this  paragraph,  notwithstanding any inconsistency with a request

        S. 3006--C                         29                         A. 3006--C

     1  for proposals issued by such commissioner for the purpose of  attendance
     2  improvement  and  dropout prevention for the 2025--2026 school year, and
     3  for any city school district in a city having a population of more  than
     4  one  million,  the  set-aside  for  attendance  improvement  and dropout
     5  prevention shall equal the amount set aside in the base  year.  For  the
     6  2025--2026  school  year,  it  is  further provided that any city school
     7  district in a city having a population of more than  one  million  shall
     8  allocate  at  least  one-third  of any increase from base year levels in
     9  funds set aside pursuant to the requirements of this section to communi-
    10  ty-based organizations. Any increase required pursuant to  this  section
    11  to  community-based  organizations  must  be  in addition to allocations
    12  provided to community-based organizations in the base year.
    13    4. For the purpose of teacher support for the 2025--2026 school  year:
    14  for  the city school district of the city of New York, sixty-two million
    15  seven hundred seven thousand dollars ($62,707,000); for the Buffalo city
    16  school district, one million seven hundred  forty-one  thousand  dollars
    17  ($1,741,000); for the Rochester city school district, one million seven-
    18  ty-six  thousand  dollars  ($1,076,000);  for  the  Yonkers  city school
    19  district,  one  million  one  hundred   forty-seven   thousand   dollars
    20  ($1,147,000);  and  for the Syracuse city school district, eight hundred
    21  nine thousand dollars ($809,000). All funds made available to  a  school
    22  district  pursuant  to  this section shall be distributed among teachers
    23  including prekindergarten teachers and teachers of adult vocational  and
    24  academic  subjects in accordance with this section and shall be in addi-
    25  tion to salaries heretofore or hereafter negotiated or  made  available;
    26  provided,  however,  that all funds distributed pursuant to this section
    27  for the current year shall be deemed to incorporate all  funds  distrib-
    28  uted  pursuant to former subdivision 27 of section 3602 of the education
    29  law for prior years. In school districts where the teachers are  repres-
    30  ented  by  certified  or  recognized  employee organizations, all salary
    31  increases funded pursuant to this section shall be determined  by  sepa-
    32  rate  collective  negotiations  conducted pursuant to the provisions and
    33  procedures of article 14 of the civil service law,  notwithstanding  the
    34  existence  of  a  negotiated  agreement  between a school district and a
    35  certified or recognized employee organization.
    36    § 26. Support of public libraries. The  moneys  appropriated  for  the
    37  support  of  public  libraries by a chapter of the laws of 2025 enacting
    38  the aid to localities budget shall be  apportioned  for  the  2025--2026
    39  state  fiscal  year  in  accordance with the provisions of sections 271,
    40  272, 273, 282, 284, and 285 of the  education  law  as  amended  by  the
    41  provisions  of such chapter and the provisions of this section, provided
    42  that library construction aid pursuant to section 273-a of the education
    43  law shall not be payable from the  appropriations  for  the  support  of
    44  public libraries and provided further that no library, library system or
    45  program, as defined by the commissioner of education, shall receive less
    46  total  system  or  program  aid than it received for the year 2001--2002
    47  except as a result of a reduction adjustment necessary to conform to the
    48  appropriations for support of public libraries.
    49    Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the contrary the  moneys
    50  appropriated for the support of public libraries for the year 2025--2026
    51  by  a  chapter of the laws of 2025 enacting the aid to localities budget
    52  shall fulfill the state's obligation to provide such aid  and,  pursuant
    53  to a plan developed by the commissioner of education and approved by the
    54  director of the budget, the aid payable to libraries and library systems
    55  pursuant  to  such  appropriations  shall  be reduced proportionately to

        S. 3006--C                         30                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  assure that the total amount of aid payable does not  exceed  the  total
     2  appropriations for such purpose.
     3    § 27. Severability. The provisions of this act shall be severable, and
     4  if  the  application  of  any  clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision,
     5  section or part of this act to  any  person  or  circumstance  shall  be
     6  adjudged  by  any  court  of  competent jurisdiction to be invalid, such
     7  judgment shall not necessarily affect, impair or invalidate the applica-
     8  tion of any such clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision,  section,  or
     9  part  of this act or remainder thereof, as the case may be, to any other
    10  person or circumstance, but shall be confined in its  operation  to  the
    11  clause,  sentence,  paragraph,  subdivision,  section  or  part  thereof
    12  directly involved in the controversy in which such judgment  shall  have
    13  been rendered.
    14    §  28.  This act shall take effect immediately, and shall be deemed to
    15  have been in full force and effect on and after April 1, 2025, provided,
    16  however, that:
    17    1. Sections one, two, three, four, four-a, five,  six,  seven,  eight,
    18  nine,  ten,  ten-a,  ten-b, ten-c, ten-d, ten-e, twelve, thirteen, four-
    19  teen, fifteen, seventeen, twenty-one and twenty-five of this  act  shall
    20  take effect July 1, 2025; and
    21    2.  The amendments to chapter 756 of the laws of 1992 made by sections
    22  eighteen and nineteen of this act shall not affect the  repeal  of  such
    23  chapter and shall be deemed repealed therewith.
 
    24                                   PART B
 
    25    Section  1. The education law is amended by adding a new section 915-a
    26  to read as follows:
    27    § 915-a. Universal free school meals. 1. The department shall  require
    28  all  school  districts,  charter  schools  and non-public schools in the
    29  state that participate in the national school lunch  program  or  school
    30  breakfast  program as provided in the Richard B. Russell National School
    31  Lunch Act and the Child Nutrition Act, as amended,  to  serve  breakfast
    32  and  lunch  at no cost to the student. School districts, charter schools
    33  and non-public schools shall maximize federal reimbursement  for  school
    34  breakfast and lunch programs by adopting Provision 2, the federal Commu-
    35  nity  Eligibility  Provision, or any other provision under such Act, the
    36  National School Lunch Act or the National Child Nutrition Act  that,  in
    37  the  opinion  of  the  department,  maximizes  federal funding for meals
    38  served in such programs.  Provided that school food authorities that  do
    39  not qualify as a single entity to participate in the community eligibil-
    40  ity  provision shall be required to group schools within the school food
    41  authority, to the extent possible, for purposes  of  maximizing  partic-
    42  ipation  in  the  community  eligibility provision, and provided further
    43  that school food authorities shall reapply annually  for  the  community
    44  eligibility provision program in the event that doing so would result in
    45  a  higher percentage of meals being reimbursed at the federal reimburse-
    46  ment rate for a free meal.
    47    2. Notwithstanding any provision of law, rule  or  regulation  to  the
    48  contrary,  for  the  two  thousand  twenty-five--two thousand twenty-six
    49  school year and each school year  thereafter,  for  each  breakfast  and
    50  lunch  meal  served,  the  department  shall  reimburse  the school food
    51  authority the difference between (a)  the  combined  state  and  federal
    52  reimbursement  rate  for a reduced-price or paid meal, respectively, for
    53  the  current  school  year  and  (b)  the  combined  state  and  federal
    54  reimbursement rate for a free meal for the current school year, provided

        S. 3006--C                         31                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  that  the  total reimbursement rate for each meal served shall equal the
     2  combined state and federal reimbursement rate for a free  meal  for  the
     3  current school year.
     4    3.  The  department,  in consultation with the office of temporary and
     5  disability assistance, shall promulgate any rule  or  regulation  needed
     6  for  school districts, charter schools and non-public schools to promote
     7  the supplemental nutrition assistance program to a student or person  in
     8  parental  relation  to a student by providing either application assist-
     9  ance or a direct referral to  an  outreach  partner  identified  to  the
    10  department by the office of temporary and disability assistance to maxi-
    11  mize the number of students directly certified for free school meals.
    12    4.  In  addition  to fulfilling any other applicable state and federal
    13  requirements, the  department  shall  provide  technical  assistance  to
    14  assist  school districts, charter schools, and non-public schools in the
    15  transition to universal school meals to ensure successful program  oper-
    16  ations and to maximize federal funding, including but not limited to the
    17  following:
    18    (a)  Assisting school food authorities with one or more schools quali-
    19  fying for the community eligibility provision in meeting any  state  and
    20  federal  requirements  necessary  in  order  to  maximize  reimbursement
    21  through the community eligibility provision,  including  assisting  such
    22  school  food  authorities  in  maximizing participation in the community
    23  eligibility provision.
    24    (b) If a school food authority is ineligible  to  participate  in  and
    25  receive  reimbursement  through  the  community  eligibility  provision,
    26  assisting the school food authority in achieving and  maximizing  eligi-
    27  bility and, if that is not feasible, assisting the school food authority
    28  in  determining  the  viability  of  using  Provision 2 or other special
    29  federal provisions available to schools to maximize  federal  reimburse-
    30  ment.
    31    5.  School  districts,  charter  schools, and non-public schools shall
    32  maximize the number of students eligible for free  meals  by  conducting
    33  the  Direct  Certification  Matching Process at a minimum of three times
    34  per year, designating children as "Other Source Categorically Eligible",
    35  as defined by federal regulations, or, for schools not participating  in
    36  the Community Eligibility Provision or Provision 2, by annually collect-
    37  ing the free and reduced-price meal application.
    38    § 2. Section 925 of the education law is REPEALED.
    39    § 3. This act shall take effect July 1, 2025.
 
    40                                   PART C

    41    Section  1.  The education law is amended by adding a new section 2803
    42  to read as follows:
    43    § 2803. Use of internet-enabled devices during the school day. 1.  For
    44  purposes of this section:
    45    (a)  "Internet-enabled devices" shall mean and include any smartphone,
    46  tablet, smartwatch, or other device capable of connecting to the  inter-
    47  net  and  enabling the user to access content on the internet, including
    48  social media applications;  provided,  however,  that  "internet-enabled
    49  devices" shall not include:
    50    (i)  non-internet-enabled  devices  such  as  cellular phones or other
    51  communication devices not capable  of  connecting  to  the  internet  or
    52  enabling the user to access content on the internet; or

        S. 3006--C                         32                         A. 3006--C
 
     1    (ii) internet-enabled devices supplied by the school district, charter
     2  school,  or  board of cooperative educational services that are used for
     3  an educational purpose.
     4    (b) "School day" shall mean the entirety of every instructional day as
     5  required by subdivision seven of section thirty-six hundred four of this
     6  chapter  during  all  instructional  time  and  non-instructional  time,
     7  including but not limited to  homeroom  periods,  lunch,  recess,  study
     8  halls, and passing time.
     9    (c)  "School  grounds"  shall  mean  in  or on or within any building,
    10  structure, athletic playing field, playground, or land contained  within
    11  the  real property boundary line of a district elementary, intermediate,
    12  junior high, vocational, or high school, a charter school, or a board of
    13  cooperative educational services facility.
    14    2. Notwithstanding paragraph b of subdivision one of  section  twenty-
    15  eight  hundred fifty-four of this chapter, each school district, charter
    16  school, and board of cooperative  educational  services  shall  adopt  a
    17  written  policy  prohibiting  the  use  of  internet-enabled  devices by
    18  students during the school day anywhere on school grounds.  Each  school
    19  district,  charter school, and board of cooperative educational services
    20  shall consult local stakeholders,  including  but  not  limited  to  the
    21  employee  organization  representing  each  bargaining  unit  within the
    22  school building, parents, and students, in the development of such poli-
    23  cy prior to its adoption.
    24    3. The policy adopted and implemented pursuant to subdivision  two  of
    25  this  section  shall include one or more methods for persons in parental
    26  relation to a student to contact the student during the school  day  and
    27  provide for written notification to such persons in parental relation to
    28  a student of these methods at the beginning of each school year and upon
    29  enrollment.
    30    4.  The  policy adopted and implemented pursuant to subdivision two of
    31  this section shall include one or more methods for on-site storage where
    32  students may store their internet-enabled devices during the school day,
    33  which may include student lockers.
    34    5. (a) The policy adopted and implemented pursuant to subdivision  two
    35  of  this section may authorize student use of an internet-enabled device
    36  during the school day on school grounds:
    37    (i) if authorized by a teacher, principal,  or  the  school  district,
    38  charter  school,  or  board  of  cooperative  educational services for a
    39  specific educational purpose;
    40    (ii) where necessary for the management of a student's healthcare;
    41    (iii) in the event of an emergency;
    42    (iv) for translation services;
    43    (v) on a case-by-case basis, upon review and determination by a school
    44  psychologist, school social worker, or school counselor, for  a  student
    45  caregiver  who  is routinely responsible for the care and wellbeing of a
    46  family member; or
    47    (vi) where required by law.
    48    (b) The policy may not prohibit a student's use of an internet-enabled
    49  device where such use is included in the student's:
    50    (i) individualized education program; or
    51    (ii) plan developed pursuant to  section  five  hundred  four  of  the
    52  federal rehabilitation act of 1973, 29 U.S.C. 794.
    53    6.  No  later than August first, two thousand twenty-five, each school
    54  district, charter school, and board of cooperative educational  services
    55  shall  adopt and publish in a clearly visible and accessible location on
    56  its website the internet-enabled device policy established  pursuant  to

        S. 3006--C                         33                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  subdivision  two of this section. Translation of such policy into any of
     2  the twelve most common non-English languages spoken  by  limited-English
     3  proficient  individuals  in  the  state,  based  on the data in the most
     4  recent  American  community survey published by the United States census
     5  bureau, shall be provided upon  request  by  a  student  or  persons  in
     6  parental relation to a student.
     7    7.  (a)  No  later  than September first, two thousand twenty-six, and
     8  each September first thereafter, each school district,  charter  school,
     9  and  board  of  cooperative educational services shall publish an annual
    10  report on its website detailing enforcement of  the  policy  within  the
    11  district,  charter  school, or board of cooperative educational services
    12  in the prior school year, including non-identifiable demographic data of
    13  students who have faced disciplinary action for non-compliance and anal-
    14  ysis of any demographic disparities in enforcement of the policy.  If  a
    15  statistically  significant  disparate  enforcement impact is identified,
    16  such report shall include a mitigation action plan.
    17    (b) Each school district, charter school,  and  board  of  cooperative
    18  educational services shall not permit the suspension of a student if the
    19  sole  grounds  for the suspension is that the student accessed an inter-
    20  net-enabled device in violation of the policy  adopted  and  implemented
    21  pursuant to subdivision two of this section.
    22    § 2. This act shall take effect immediately.
 
    23                                   PART D
 
    24    Section 1. Section 666 of the education law is REPEALED.
    25    §  2.   Paragraph a of subdivision 2 of section 667-c of the education
    26  law, as amended by section 1 of part E of chapter  56  of  the  laws  of
    27  2022, is amended to read as follows:
    28    a.  for  students  defined  in  paragraph a of subdivision one of this
    29  section, a part-time student is one who: (i) is enrolled  [as  a  first-
    30  time  freshman  during the two thousand six--two thousand seven academic
    31  year or thereafter] at a college or university within the state  univer-
    32  sity,  including  a  statutory  or contract college, a community college
    33  established pursuant to article one hundred twenty-six of this  chapter,
    34  the  city  university of New York, or a non-profit college or university
    35  incorporated by the regents or by the legislature;
    36    (ii) is enrolled for at least [six] three but less than twelve  semes-
    37  ter  hours, or the equivalent, per semester in an approved undergraduate
    38  degree program; and
    39    (iii) has a cumulative grade-point average of at least 2.00.
    40    § 3. Section 667-c-1 of the education law is REPEALED.
    41    § 4. Paragraph c of subdivision 5 of section 610 of the education law,
    42  as added by chapter 425 of the laws of  1988,  is  amended  to  read  as
    43  follows:
    44    c.  Any semester, quarter or term of attendance during which a student
    45  receives an award for part-time study pursuant to this section shall  be
    46  counted  as one-half of a semester, quarter or term, as the case may be,
    47  toward the maximum term of eligibility  for  tuition  assistance  awards
    48  pursuant  to  [sections  six  hundred sixty-six and] section six hundred
    49  sixty-seven of this chapter.
    50    § 5. Subdivision 2 of section 667 of the education law, as amended  by
    51  chapter 376 of the laws of 2019, is amended to read as follows:
    52    2.  Duration.  No  undergraduate  shall be eligible for more than four
    53  academic years of study, or five academic years if the program of  study
    54  normally requires five years. Students enrolled in a program of remedial

        S. 3006--C                         34                         A. 3006--C

     1  study,  approved  by the commissioner in an institution of higher educa-
     2  tion and intended to culminate in a degree in undergraduate study shall,
     3  for purposes of this section, be considered as enrolled in a program  of
     4  study  normally  requiring five years. An undergraduate student enrolled
     5  in an eligible two year program of study approved  by  the  commissioner
     6  shall  be  eligible  for  no more than three academic years of study. An
     7  undergraduate student enrolled in an approved two or  four-year  program
     8  of  study  approved  by  the  commissioner  who must transfer to another
     9  institution as a result of permanent college closure shall  be  eligible
    10  for  up  to two additional semesters, or their equivalent, to the extent
    11  credits necessary to complete [his or  her]  the  student's  program  of
    12  study  were  deemed non-transferable from the closed institution or were
    13  deemed not applicable to such student's program  of  study  by  the  new
    14  institution.   Any semester, quarter, or term of attendance during which
    15  a student receives any award under this  article,  after  the  effective
    16  date  of the former scholar incentive program and prior to academic year
    17  nineteen hundred eighty-nine--nineteen hundred ninety, shall be  counted
    18  toward the maximum term of eligibility for tuition assistance under this
    19  section,  except that any semester, quarter or term of attendance during
    20  which a student received  an  award  pursuant  to  section  six  hundred
    21  sixty-six  of  this  subpart shall be counted as one-half of a semester,
    22  quarter or term, as the case may be, toward the maximum term  of  eligi-
    23  bility  under  this section. Any semester, quarter or term of attendance
    24  during which a student received an award pursuant to section six hundred
    25  sixty-seven-a of this subpart shall not be counted  toward  the  maximum
    26  term of eligibility under this section.
    27    § 6. This act shall take effect immediately and shall apply to academ-
    28  ic years 2025-2026 and thereafter.
 
    29                                   PART E
 
    30    Section  1.  Subdivision  2  of section 669-h of the education law, as
    31  amended by section 1 of part G of chapter 56 of the  laws  of  2022,  is
    32  amended to read as follows:
    33    2.  Amount.  Within  amounts appropriated therefor and based on avail-
    34  ability of funds, awards shall be granted [beginning with the two  thou-
    35  sand  seventeen--two  thousand eighteen academic year and thereafter] to
    36  applicants that the corporation has determined are eligible  to  receive
    37  such  awards. The corporation shall grant such awards in an amount up to
    38  [five thousand five hundred dollars or] actual  tuition[,  whichever  is
    39  less];  provided, however, (a) a student who receives educational grants
    40  and/or scholarships that cover the student's  full  cost  of  attendance
    41  shall  not be eligible for an award under this program; and (b) an award
    42  under this program shall be applied to tuition after the application  of
    43  payments  received  under  the  tuition  assistance  program pursuant to
    44  section six hundred sixty-seven of this subpart, tuition credits  pursu-
    45  ant  to  section six hundred eighty-nine-a of this article, federal Pell
    46  grant pursuant to section one thousand seventy of title  twenty  of  the
    47  United  States code, et seq., and any other program that covers the cost
    48  of attendance unless exclusively for non-tuition expenses, and the award
    49  under this program  shall  be  reduced  in  the  amount  equal  to  such
    50  payments,  provided that the combined benefits do not exceed [five thou-
    51  sand five hundred dollars. Upon notification  of  an  award  under  this
    52  program,  the  institution  shall  defer the amount of tuition. Notwith-
    53  standing paragraph h of subdivision two of section three hundred  fifty-
    54  five  and paragraph (a) of subdivision seven of section six thousand two

        S. 3006--C                         35                         A. 3006--C

     1  hundred six of this chapter, and any other law, rule  or  regulation  to
     2  the contrary,] the resident undergraduate tuition charged by [the insti-
     3  tution  to  recipients  of  an  award  shall not exceed the tuition rate
     4  established  by  the institution for the two thousand sixteen--two thou-
     5  sand seventeen academic year provided, however, that in the two thousand
     6  twenty-two--two thousand twenty-three academic year and every year ther-
     7  eafter, the undergraduate tuition charged by the institution to  recipi-
     8  ents of an award shall be reset to equal the tuition rate established by
     9  the institution for the forthcoming academic year, provided further that
    10  the  tuition  credit  calculated pursuant to section six hundred eighty-
    11  nine-a of this article shall be applied toward the tuition rate  charged
    12  for  recipients  of an award under this program.  Provided further that]
    13  the state university of New York [and the city university  of  New  York
    14  shall  provide  an  additional  tuition  credit to students receiving an
    15  award to cover the remaining cost of tuition].
    16    § 2. This act shall take effect immediately and shall be applicable to
    17  academic years 2025-2026 and thereafter.
 
    18                                   PART F
 
    19    Section 1. The education law is amended by adding a new  section  6311
    20  to read as follows:
    21    §  6311.  New  York opportunity promise scholarship. 1. Eligibility. A
    22  New York opportunity promise scholarship shall be awarded to  an  appli-
    23  cant who meets all of the following conditions:
    24    (a) is at least twenty-five years of age or older, but in no case more
    25  than  fifty-five  years of age, as of January first of the calendar year
    26  for the semester for which the applicant makes initial application;
    27    (b) has applied for a New York state tuition assistance program  award
    28  pursuant  to  section six hundred sixty-seven of this chapter, a federal
    29  Pell grant pursuant to section 1070 of title 20  of  the  United  States
    30  code, et. seq., and any other applicable financial aid;
    31    (c)  is matriculated at a community college of the state university of
    32  New York or the city university of New York, as defined  in  subdivision
    33  two  of  section  sixty-three hundred one of this article or subdivision
    34  four of section sixty-two hundred two of this title, respectively, in an
    35  approved program directly leading to an associate's degree in a high-de-
    36  mand field; provided that for the two thousand twenty-five -- two  thou-
    37  sand  twenty-six  academic  year,  such  fields shall include but not be
    38  limited to advanced manufacturing, technology, cybersecurity,  engineer-
    39  ing,  artificial  intelligence,  nursing  and allied health professions,
    40  green and renewable energy, and pathways to teaching in shortage  areas,
    41  provided  further that such fields may be updated annually thereafter by
    42  the department of labor no later than one hundred eighty days  prior  to
    43  the  first  start  date of the fall term of such community colleges, and
    44  provided further that the eligibility of such  approved  program  estab-
    45  lished in the semester for which the applicant makes initial application
    46  shall continue;
    47    (d)  is  eligible  for  the  payment  of tuition and fees at a rate no
    48  greater than that imposed for resident students in  community  colleges;
    49  and
    50    (e)  has  not already obtained any postsecondary degree, provided that
    51  nothing in this paragraph shall be construed to prohibit the eligibility
    52  of a student who is already enrolled in  an  eligible  associate  degree
    53  program  on  the  effective  date  of this section and who meets all the
    54  other eligibility requirements of this subdivision.

        S. 3006--C                         36                         A. 3006--C
 
     1    2. Amount. Within amounts appropriated therefor, and subject to avail-
     2  ability of funds, awards shall be granted for the two  thousand  twenty-
     3  five  --  two thousand twenty-six academic year and thereafter to appli-
     4  cants who are determined to be eligible to receive such  awards.    Such
     5  awards  shall  be  calculated  on a per term basis prior to the start of
     6  each term the applicant is successfully enrolled and  shall  not  exceed
     7  the positive difference, if any, of (a) the sum of actual tuition, fees,
     8  books,  and applicable supplies charged to the applicant and approved by
     9  the applicable community college, less  (b)  the  sum  of  all  payments
    10  received  by the applicant from all sources of financial aid received by
    11  the applicant with the exception of aid  received  pursuant  to  federal
    12  work-study programs authorized under sections 1087-51 through 1087-58 of
    13  title  20  of  the United States code and educational loans taken by the
    14  applicant or guardian.
    15    3. Additional provisions. An  eligible  recipient  shall  complete  at
    16  least  six  credits per semester, for a total of at least twelve credits
    17  per academic year, in an approved program of study. An eligible  recipi-
    18  ent  shall  be  continuously  enrolled  without  a  gap of more than one
    19  academic year, provided that such duration may be extended for an allow-
    20  able interruption of study including, but not limited  to,  death  of  a
    21  family  member,  medical  leave,  military  service, and parental leave.
    22  Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of this section, if an appli-
    23  cant fails to meet the eligibility  criteria  of  this  section  at  any
    24  point, no further awards shall be made to the applicant.
    25    4. Conditions. (a) An eligible recipient shall continue to make satis-
    26  factory academic progress in order to maintain continued eligibility for
    27  an award pursuant to this section.
    28    (b)  Each  campus that enrolls students pursuant to this section shall
    29  take steps consistent with established policy to maximize the  award  of
    30  credit for prior learning for participating students.
    31    (c)  No  student  shall  receive an award pursuant to this section for
    32  greater than ten semesters.
    33    (d) A student who earns college credit pursuant to this section  shall
    34  be  entitled  to transfer such credit to another state university of New
    35  York or city university of New  York  campus  consistent  with  transfer
    36  policies established by the state university of New York or city univer-
    37  sity of New York.
    38    5.  Reporting.  By  September  first,  two thousand twenty-six, and by
    39  September first of each year thereafter, the  chancellor  of  the  state
    40  university  of New York and the chancellor of the city university of New
    41  York shall each submit a report to the  governor,  the  speaker  of  the
    42  assembly,  and  the temporary president of the senate, including but not
    43  limited to the following information:
    44    (a) enrollment data by full and part-time status;
    45    (b) retention and completion rates by full and part-time status;
    46    (c) barriers to student participation;
    47    (d) demographic data related to the program;
    48    (e) average prior learning and transfer credit awarded;
    49    (f) the total amount of  funds  awarded  and  the  average  award  per
    50  student; and
    51    (g)  post-completion  outcomes  including  transfer,  employment,  and
    52  wages, as applicable.
    53    § 2. This act shall take effect immediately.
 
    54                                   PART G

        S. 3006--C                         37                         A. 3006--C
 
     1                            Intentionally Omitted
 
     2                                   PART H
 
     3                            Intentionally Omitted
 
     4                                   PART I
 
     5                            Intentionally Omitted
 
     6                                   PART J

     7                            Intentionally Omitted
 
     8                                   PART K
 
     9                            Intentionally Omitted
 
    10                                   PART L
 
    11    Section 1. Paragraph (a) of subdivision 1 of section 33 of the private
    12  housing  finance  law, as amended by chapter 229 of the laws of 1989, is
    13  amended to read as follows:
    14    (a) Upon the consent of the local legislative body of any municipality
    15  in which a project is or is to  be  located,  the  real  property  in  a
    16  project  shall  be  exempt  from  local  and municipal taxes, other than
    17  assessments for local improvements, to the extent of all or part of  the
    18  value  of  the  property  included  in  such project which represents an
    19  increase over the assessed valuation of the real property, both land and
    20  improvements, acquired for the project at the time of its acquisition by
    21  the limited-profit housing company, provided,  however,  that  the  real
    22  property  in  a project acquired for purposes of rehabilitation shall be
    23  exempt to the extent of all  or  part  of  the  value  of  the  property
    24  included  in  such project, and further provided that the amount of such
    25  taxes to be paid shall not be less than ten per  centum  of  the  annual
    26  shelter  rent  or  carrying  charges  of  such  project  except that for
    27  projects located or to be located in a  city  of  a  population  of  one
    28  million  or more, [upon the consent of the local legislative body of the
    29  municipality, the amount of such taxes to be paid may be set at not less
    30  than (i) the taxes payable with respect to the  real  property  in  such
    31  project  with  respect  to  the year nineteen hundred seventy-three, or,
    32  (ii) if such project was not occupied in such year, not  less  than  ten
    33  per  centum  of the annual shelter rent or carrying charges first estab-
    34  lished pursuant to subdivision one of section thirty-one of  this  arti-
    35  cle]  the  amount of such taxes shall be no more than five per centum of
    36  the annual shelter rent or carrying charges of  the  project.  Upon  the
    37  consent  of  the  local legislative body of a municipality, other than a
    38  city with a population of one million or more, in which the  project  is
    39  located,  the  amount  of  such taxes may be further reduced to five per
    40  centum or less of the annual shelter rent or  carrying  charges  of  the
    41  project.  Any  such  granted  consent to reduce the amount of such taxes

        S. 3006--C                         38                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  shall expire every ten years. If such authorization is not renewed,  the
     2  rate  of  taxation  shall  revert  to  the  level established before the
     3  consent was granted. Shelter rent shall mean the  total  rents  received
     4  from  the occupants of a project less the cost of providing to the occu-
     5  pants electricity, gas, heat and  other  utilities.  Total  rents  shall
     6  include rent supplements and subsidies received from the federal govern-
     7  ment,  the  state  or  a municipality on behalf of such occupants[,] but
     8  shall not include interest reduction payments  pursuant  to  subdivision
     9  (a) of section two hundred one of the Federal Housing and Urban Develop-
    10  ment  Act of nineteen hundred sixty-eight. The tax exemption shall oper-
    11  ate and continue so long as the mortgage loans of the company, including
    12  any additional mortgage loan the proceeds of which  are  used  primarily
    13  for  the  residential  portion  of the project, which additional loan is
    14  approved by the commissioner or the supervising agency, are outstanding.
    15    § 2. Paragraph (c) of subdivision 1 of section 33 of the private hous-
    16  ing finance law, as amended by chapter 229  of  the  laws  of  1989,  is
    17  amended to read as follows:
    18    (c)  Notwithstanding  the provisions of paragraphs (a) and (b) of this
    19  subdivision, the real property of a state urban development  corporation
    20  project  acquired,  owned, constructed, managed or operated by a company
    21  incorporated pursuant to the not-for-profit  corporation  law  and  this
    22  article  shall  be entitled to all the benefits provided by section four
    23  hundred twenty-two of the real property tax law. The real property of  a
    24  state  urban  development  corporation project, other than a state urban
    25  development corporation project acquired, owned, constructed, managed or
    26  operated by a company incorporated pursuant to the not-for-profit corpo-
    27  ration law and this article, shall be exempt from all local and  munici-
    28  pal  taxes, other than assessments for local improvements, to the extent
    29  of the value of the property included in such project as  represents  an
    30  increase over the assessed valuation of the real property, both land and
    31  improvements, acquired for the project on the date of its acquisition by
    32  the  limited-profit  housing  company,  provided that the amount of such
    33  taxes to be paid shall not be less than ten per  centum  of  the  annual
    34  shelter  rent  or  carrying charges of such project, as defined in para-
    35  graph (a) hereof, except that in a city with a population of one million
    36  or more, the amount of such taxes shall be no more than five per  centum
    37  of  the annual shelter rent or carrying charges of the project. Upon the
    38  consent of the local legislative body of the municipality, other than  a
    39  city  with  a population of one million or more, in which the project is
    40  located, the amount of such taxes may be further  reduced  to  five  per
    41  centum  or  less  of  the annual shelter rent or carrying charges of the
    42  project. Any such granted consent to reduce the  amount  of  such  taxes
    43  shall  expire every ten years. If such authorization is not renewed, the
    44  rate of taxation shall  revert  to  the  level  established  before  the
    45  consent  was  granted.  The  tax exemption shall operate and continue so
    46  long as the mortgage loans  of  such  limited  profit  housing  company,
    47  including  any  additional  mortgage loan the proceeds of which are used
    48  primarily for the residential portion of the project,  which  additional
    49  loan  is  approved  by  the  commissioner or the supervising agency, are
    50  outstanding and the project is continued to be operated  as  a  limited-
    51  profit housing project. If a state urban development corporation project
    52  qualifying  for  tax  exemption pursuant to this paragraph is sold, with
    53  the approval of the  commissioner,  to  another  limited-profit  housing
    54  company, such successor company shall be entitled to all the benefits of
    55  this paragraph. In the event that such sale is to a company incorporated
    56  pursuant  to  the  not-for-profit corporation law and this article, such

        S. 3006--C                         39                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  successor company shall be entitled to  all  the  benefits  provided  by
     2  section four hundred twenty-two of the real property tax law.
     3    § 3. Paragraph (d) of subdivision 1 of section 33 of the private hous-
     4  ing  finance  law,  as  amended  by  chapter 744 of the laws of 1977, is
     5  amended to read as follows:
     6    (d) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraphs (a) and (b)  of  this
     7  subdivision, when a project is financed with a mortgage loan pursuant to
     8  this article or article three of this chapter and (i) there is a partic-
     9  ipation,  new  loan  or investment pursuant to section twenty-three-b of
    10  this article or (ii) such mortgage loan is assigned, modified or  satis-
    11  fied  pursuant  to section twenty-three-a or forty-four-b or subdivision
    12  twenty-two-a of section six hundred fifty-four of this chapter, the real
    13  property of the project shall be exempt from  all  local  and  municipal
    14  taxes,  other  than assessments for local improvements, to the extent of
    15  the value of the real property included in such project which represents
    16  an increase over the assessed valuation of the real property, both  land
    17  and  improvements,  acquired for the project on the date of its original
    18  acquisition for the project by the original mortgagor under  a  mortgage
    19  loan pursuant to this article or article three of this chapter, provided
    20  that  the  amount  of  taxes to be paid on the project shall not be less
    21  than ten per centum of the annual shelter rent or  carrying  charges  of
    22  such  project,  as  defined in paragraph (a) of this subdivision, except
    23  that in a city with a population of one million or more, the  amount  of
    24  such  taxes  shall be no more than five per centum of the annual shelter
    25  rent or carrying charges of the project. Upon the consent of  the  local
    26  legislative  body  of  the  municipality, other than a city with a popu-
    27  lation of one million or more, in which  the  project  is  located,  the
    28  amount  of  such taxes may be further reduced to five per centum or less
    29  of the annual shelter rent or carrying charges of the project. Any  such
    30  granted  consent  to  reduce the amount of such taxes shall expire every
    31  ten years. If such authorization is not renewed, the  rate  of  taxation
    32  shall  revert  to  the level established before the consent was granted.
    33  Such tax exemption shall commence in each instance from  the  date  when
    34  the project becomes subject to a mortgage insured by the federal govern-
    35  ment  and  shall  operate  and  continue  so  long as a mortgage on such
    36  project is insured or held by the federal government or so long  as  the
    37  project  is thereafter owned by the federal government or so long as any
    38  residual indebtedness is outstanding, whichever is longer. When there is
    39  a participation, new loan or  investment  pursuant  to  section  twenty-
    40  three-b  of  this  article,  such  participation, new loan or investment
    41  shall be deemed to be the equivalent of a federally insured mortgage for
    42  purposes of this paragraph. Nothing contained in this paragraph shall be
    43  construed to limit or otherwise impair the  benefits  available  to  any
    44  company  eligible  for exemption from taxation pursuant to section thir-
    45  ty-one or section thirty-six-a of this  article,  section  four  hundred
    46  twenty-two  or  section  four hundred sixty-seven-c of the real property
    47  tax law, or section fifty-eight of the public housing law. The foregoing
    48  shall not be deemed to authorize any company to receive the benefits  of
    49  any  exemption  from  taxation  in  contravention  of  the provisions of
    50  section two of article eighteen of the constitution.
    51    § 4. Subdivision 4 of section 33 of the private housing  finance  law,
    52  as  amended  by  chapter  229 of the laws of 1989, is amended to read as
    53  follows:
    54    4. Notwithstanding the provisions of subdivision one  hereof,  when  a
    55  mutual  company is organized under this article to facilitate the acqui-
    56  sition of a building by residents  thereof,  the  amount  of  local  and

        S. 3006--C                         40                         A. 3006--C

     1  municipal  taxes,  other  than assessments for local improvements, to be
     2  paid on the real property  included  in  such  project,  both  land  and
     3  improvements,  shall  not exceed twenty per centum of the annual shelter
     4  rent or carrying charges of such project, as defined in paragraph (a) of
     5  subdivision  one  hereof; provided, however, that where such acquisition
     6  of a building by residents thereof involves the financing  of  rehabili-
     7  tation  or other improvement as well as acquisition, upon the consent of
     8  the local legislative body of the municipality in which the  project  is
     9  located  the  amount  of such taxes may be further reduced provided that
    10  such amount shall not be less than ten per centum of the annual  shelter
    11  rent  or carrying charges of the project, as defined in paragraph (a) of
    12  subdivision one hereof; or the company may in lieu  of  requesting  such
    13  consent  apply for the benefits of the local law, if any, enacted pursu-
    14  ant to section four hundred eighty-nine of the real  property  tax  law.
    15  Notwithstanding  any other provision of this subdivision, in a city with
    16  a population of one million or more, the amount of such taxes  shall  be
    17  no  more  than  five  per  centum of the annual shelter rent or carrying
    18  charges of the project. Upon the consent of the local  legislative  body
    19  of  the municipality, other than a city with a population of one million
    20  or more, in which the project is located, the amount of such  taxes  may
    21  be further reduced to five per centum or less of the annual shelter rent
    22  or  carrying  charges of the project. Any such granted consent to reduce
    23  the amount of such taxes shall expire every ten years. If such  authori-
    24  zation  is  not  renewed, the rate of taxation shall revert to the level
    25  established before the consent was granted. Such tax exemption, if  any,
    26  granted pursuant to this article shall operate and continue so long as a
    27  loan  made  under  this  article  or any subsequent loan approved by the
    28  commissioner or  the  supervising  agency  to  enhance  the  residential
    29  portion  of  the project and the project is continued to be operated for
    30  the purposes set forth in this article is outstanding.
    31    § 5.Section 93 of the private housing finance law is amended by adding
    32  a new subdivision 8 to read as follows:
    33    8. Notwithstanding any other provision of this  section,  the  maximum
    34  combined  local  and  municipal  taxes, other than assessments for local
    35  improvements, that a project operated by a housing  company  established
    36  pursuant  to  this  article,  and  which is eligible for a tax exemption
    37  pursuant to any other subdivision of this section, shall be required  to
    38  pay  in a city with a population of one million or more shall be no more
    39  than the equivalent of five per centum of the  annual  shelter  rent  or
    40  carrying charges of such project. Upon the consent of the local legisla-
    41  tive  body  of  the municipality, other than a city with a population of
    42  one million or more, in which the project is located, the amount of such
    43  taxes may be further reduced to five per centum or less  of  the  annual
    44  shelter  rent  or  carrying  charges  of  the  project. Any such granted
    45  consent to reduce the amount of such taxes shall expire every ten years.
    46  If such authorization is not renewed, the rate of taxation shall  revert
    47  to  the  level  established  before  the  consent  was  granted. For the
    48  purposes of this subdivision, "shelter rent" shall have the same meaning
    49  as such term is defined to have in paragraph a  of  subdivision  one  of
    50  section thirty-three of this chapter.
    51    § 6. This act shall take effect immediately.
 
    52                                   PART M
 
    53                            Intentionally Omitted

        S. 3006--C                         41                         A. 3006--C
 
     1                                   PART N
 
     2    Section  1.  Notwithstanding  any  other provision of law, the housing
     3  trust fund corporation may provide, for  purposes  of  the  neighborhood
     4  preservation  program,  a  sum  not to exceed $18,800,000 for the fiscal
     5  year ending March 31, 2026.  Within this total amount, $250,000 shall be
     6  used for the purpose of entering into a contract with  the  neighborhood
     7  preservation  coalition  to provide technical assistance and services to
     8  companies funded pursuant to article 16 of the private  housing  finance
     9  law.    Notwithstanding  any  other provision of law, and subject to the
    10  approval of the New York state director of  the  budget,  the  board  of
    11  directors  of  the state of New York mortgage agency shall authorize the
    12  transfer to the housing trust fund  corporation,  for  the  purposes  of
    13  reimbursing  any costs associated with neighborhood preservation program
    14  contracts authorized  by  this  section,  a  total  sum  not  to  exceed
    15  $18,800,000,  such  transfer  to be made from (i) the special account of
    16  the mortgage insurance fund created pursuant to section  2429-b  of  the
    17  public  authorities  law,  in  an amount not to exceed the actual excess
    18  balance in the special account of the mortgage insurance fund, as deter-
    19  mined and certified by the state of New York  mortgage  agency  for  the
    20  fiscal  year  2024-2025  in accordance with section 2429-b of the public
    21  authorities law, if any, and/or (ii) provided that the reserves  in  the
    22  project  pool  insurance  account of the mortgage insurance fund created
    23  pursuant to section 2429-b of the public authorities law are  sufficient
    24  to  attain and maintain the credit rating (as determined by the state of
    25  New York mortgage agency) required to accomplish the  purposes  of  such
    26  account,  the  project  pool insurance account of the mortgage insurance
    27  fund, such transfer to be made as soon as practicable but no later  than
    28  June 30, 2025.
    29    §  2.  Notwithstanding  any  other provision of law, the housing trust
    30  fund corporation may provide, for purposes  of  the  rural  preservation
    31  program, a sum not to exceed $8,050,000 for the fiscal year ending March
    32  31,  2026.    Within  this  total amount, $250,000 shall be used for the
    33  purpose of entering into a contract with the rural housing coalition  to
    34  provide  technical  assistance and services to companies funded pursuant
    35  to article 17 of the private housing finance law.   Notwithstanding  any
    36  other  provision  of  law,  and  subject to the approval of the New York
    37  state director of the budget, the board of directors of the state of New
    38  York mortgage agency shall authorize the transfer to the  housing  trust
    39  fund  corporation,  for the purposes of reimbursing any costs associated
    40  with rural preservation program contracts authorized by this section,  a
    41  total  sum  not  to exceed $8,050,000, such transfer to be made from (i)
    42  the special account of the mortgage insurance fund created  pursuant  to
    43  section 2429-b of the public authorities law, in an amount not to exceed
    44  the  actual excess balance in the special account of the mortgage insur-
    45  ance fund, as determined and certified by the state of New York mortgage
    46  agency for the fiscal year 2024-2025 in accordance with  section  2429-b
    47  of  the  public  authorities  law, if any, and/or (ii) provided that the
    48  reserves in the project pool insurance account of the mortgage insurance
    49  fund created pursuant to section 2429-b of the  public  authorities  law
    50  are  sufficient  to attain and maintain the credit rating (as determined
    51  by the state of New York mortgage agency)  required  to  accomplish  the
    52  purposes  of  such  account,  the  project pool insurance account of the
    53  mortgage insurance fund, such transfer to be made as soon as practicable
    54  but no later than June 30, 2025.

        S. 3006--C                         42                         A. 3006--C
 
     1    § 3. Notwithstanding any other provision of  law,  the  housing  trust
     2  fund  corporation  may provide, for purposes of the rural rental assist-
     3  ance program pursuant to article 17-A of  the  private  housing  finance
     4  law,  a  sum  not to exceed $23,455,000 for the fiscal year ending March
     5  31,  2026.    Notwithstanding any other provision of law, and subject to
     6  the approval of the New York state director of the budget, the board  of
     7  directors  of  the state of New York mortgage agency shall authorize the
     8  transfer to the housing trust fund  corporation,  for  the  purposes  of
     9  reimbursing  any  costs  associated with rural rental assistance program
    10  contracts authorized  by  this  section,  a  total  sum  not  to  exceed
    11  $23,455,000,  such  transfer  to be made from (i) the special account of
    12  the mortgage insurance fund created pursuant to section  2429-b  of  the
    13  public  authorities  law,  in  an amount not to exceed the actual excess
    14  balance in the special account of the mortgage insurance fund, as deter-
    15  mined and certified by the state of New York  mortgage  agency  for  the
    16  fiscal  year  2024-2025  in accordance with section 2429-b of the public
    17  authorities law, if any, and/or (ii) provided that the reserves  in  the
    18  project  pool  insurance  account of the mortgage insurance fund created
    19  pursuant to section 2429-b of the public authorities law are  sufficient
    20  to  attain and maintain the credit rating, as determined by the state of
    21  New York mortgage agency, required to accomplish the  purposes  of  such
    22  account,  the  project  pool insurance account of the mortgage insurance
    23  fund, such transfer shall be made as soon as practicable  but  no  later
    24  than June 30, 2025.
    25    §  4. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the homeless housing
    26  and assistance corporation may provide, for purposes  of  the  New  York
    27  state  supportive  housing  program,  the  solutions to end homelessness
    28  program or the operational support for AIDS housing program, or to qual-
    29  ified grantees under such programs, in accordance with the  requirements
    30  of  such  programs,  a sum not to exceed $56,381,000 for the fiscal year
    31  ending March 31, 2026. The homeless housing and  assistance  corporation
    32  may  enter into an agreement with the office of temporary and disability
    33  assistance to administer such sum in accordance with the requirements of
    34  such programs. Notwithstanding any other provision of law,  and  subject
    35  to  the approval of the New York state director of the budget, the board
    36  of directors of the state of New York mortgage  agency  shall  authorize
    37  the transfer to the homeless housing and assistance corporation, a total
    38  sum  not  to  exceed  $56,381,000, such transfer to be made from (i) the
    39  special account of the  mortgage  insurance  fund  created  pursuant  to
    40  section 2429-b of the public authorities law, in an amount not to exceed
    41  the  actual excess balance in the special account of the mortgage insur-
    42  ance fund, as determined and certified by the state of New York mortgage
    43  agency for the fiscal year 2024-2025 in accordance with  section  2429-b
    44  of  the  public  authorities  law, if any, and/or (ii) provided that the
    45  reserves in the project pool insurance account of the mortgage insurance
    46  fund created pursuant to section 2429-b of the  public  authorities  law
    47  are sufficient to attain and maintain the credit rating as determined by
    48  the  state  of  New  York  mortgage  agency,  required to accomplish the
    49  purposes of such account, the project  pool  insurance  account  of  the
    50  mortgage  insurance fund, such transfer shall be made as soon as practi-
    51  cable but no later than March 31, 2026.
    52    § 5. Notwithstanding any other provision of  law,  the  housing  trust
    53  fund  corporation may provide, for grants to non-profit organizations to
    54  assist non-profit affordable housing  owners  in  joining  an  insurance
    55  captive, a sum not to exceed $5,000,000 for the fiscal year ending March
    56  31,  2026.    Notwithstanding any other provision of law, and subject to

        S. 3006--C                         43                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  the approval of the New York state director of the budget, the board  of
     2  directors  of  the state of New York mortgage agency shall authorize the
     3  transfer to the housing trust fund corporation, for the purpose of reim-
     4  bursing  any  grants  to  non-profit  organizations to assist non-profit
     5  affordable housing owners in joining an insurance captive authorized  by
     6  this  section, a total sum not to exceed $5,000,000, such transfer to be
     7  made from (i) the special    account  of  the  mortgage  insurance  fund
     8  created  pursuant to section 2429-b of the public authorities law, in an
     9  amount not to exceed the actual excess balance in the special account of
    10  the mortgage insurance fund, as determined and certified by the state of
    11  New York mortgage agency for the fiscal  year  2024-2025  in  accordance
    12  with  section  2429-b of the public authorities law, if any, and/or (ii)
    13  provided that the reserves in the project pool insurance account of  the
    14  mortgage insurance fund created pursuant to section 2429-b of the public
    15  authorities  law are sufficient to attain and maintain the credit rating
    16  (as determined by the state of New York  mortgage  agency)  required  to
    17  accomplish  the  purposes  of  such  account, the project pool insurance
    18  account of the mortgage insurance fund, such transfer to be made as soon
    19  as practicable but no later than June 30, 2025.
    20    § 6. This act shall take effect immediately.
 
    21                                   PART O
 
    22    Section 1. Section 3 of part N of chapter 56  of  the  laws  of  2020,
    23  amending the social services law relating to restructuring financing for
    24  residential  school  placements,  as  amended  by section 1 of part G of
    25  chapter 56 of the laws of 2024, is amended to read as follows:
    26    § 3. This act shall take effect immediately and shall  expire  and  be
    27  deemed  repealed  April 1, [2025] 2026; provided however that the amend-
    28  ments to subdivision 10 of section 153 of the social services  law  made
    29  by  section  one  of  this  act, shall not affect the expiration of such
    30  subdivision and shall be deemed to expire therewith.
    31    § 2. This act shall take effect immediately and  shall  be  deemed  to
    32  have been in full force and effect on and after April 1, 2025.
 
    33                                   PART P
 
    34    Section  1. The social services law is amended by adding a new section
    35  390-n to read as follows:
    36    § 390-n. Child care support center; operating certificate required. 1.
    37  For purposes of this section, "child care support center" shall mean  an
    38  entity  operating  as  a  child  care  resource  and referral program as
    39  defined in title five-B of this article that is certified by the  office
    40  of children and family services to place individuals as substitute care-
    41  givers  at  child  day care centers, group family day care homes, family
    42  day care homes, or school age child care programs as defined in  section
    43  three  hundred  ninety  of this title for the purpose of providing child
    44  day care.
    45    2. The office of children and family services shall be  authorized  to
    46  certify child care support centers and may, at its discretion, limit the
    47  number  of  operating  certificates issued.   The office of children and
    48  family services shall regulate and monitor child care support centers.
    49    3. No entity  may  place  substitute  caregivers  at  child  day  care
    50  centers,  group  family day care homes, family day care homes, or school
    51  age child care programs unless it possesses a  valid  operating  certif-
    52  icate issued by the office of children and family services.

        S. 3006--C                         44                         A. 3006--C
 
     1    4. Prior to placing an individual as a substitute caregiver at a child
     2  day  care  center,  group family day care home, family day care home, or
     3  school age child care program as defined in section three hundred ninety
     4  of this title for the purpose of providing child day care, a child  care
     5  support center shall verify that the substitute caregiver has met the:
     6    (a)  standards  and  training  requirements set forth in section three
     7  hundred ninety-a of this title for child day care program employees;
     8    (b) criminal history review and background clearance  requirements  of
     9  section  three  hundred ninety-b of this title for prospective employees
    10  of a child day care program; and
    11    (c) any other requirements  established  by  the  regulations  of  the
    12  office of children and family services.
    13    5.  Any child day care program licensed or registered by the office of
    14  children and family services shall be authorized to request placement of
    15  a substitute caregiver by a child care support center in accordance with
    16  procedures established by the child care support center.
    17    6. Operating certificates issued under this section shall remain valid
    18  unless  surrendered  by  the child care support center or revoked by the
    19  office of children and family services. The office of children and fami-
    20  ly services may revoke an operating  certificate  at  any  time  upon  a
    21  determination  that  the  child  care support center has not operated in
    22  accordance with applicable state or federal law.
    23    7. The office of children and family services shall deny  an  applica-
    24  tion  for  certification of a child care support center if the applicant
    25  had an operating certificate revoked within the two years prior  to  the
    26  date of application.
    27    §  2.  Section 390-b of the social services law is amended by adding a
    28  new subdivision 12 to read as follows:
    29    12. A child care support center certified pursuant  to  section  three
    30  hundred ninety-n of this title shall be authorized to request clearances
    31  for  substitute  caregivers  in accordance with this section. Substitute
    32  caregivers shall be considered "prospective employees" of  a  child  day
    33  care  program  under  subparagraph (iii) of paragraph (a) of subdivision
    34  two of this section.
    35    § 3. This act shall take effect one year after it shall have become  a
    36  law.  Effective  immediately,  the addition, amendment, and/or repeal of
    37  any rule or regulation necessary for the implementation of this  act  on
    38  its  effective date are authorized to be made and completed on or before
    39  such effective date.
 
    40                                   PART Q
 
    41    Section 1. Subdivision 5 of section 131-a of the social  services  law
    42  is amended by adding a new paragraph (f-1) to read as follows:
    43    (f-1)  a  one-time  benefit  to  public assistance recipients upon the
    44  birth of a new child, as prescribed by regulations of the department.
    45    § 2. This act shall take effect on the one hundred eightieth day after
    46  it shall have become a law.
 
    47                                   PART R
 
    48    Section 1. Paragraphs (a), (b),  (c)  and  (d)  of  subdivision  1  of
    49  section  131-o  of  the  social services law, as amended by section 1 of
    50  part H of chapter 56 of the  laws  of  2024,  are  amended  to  read  as
    51  follows:

        S. 3006--C                         45                         A. 3006--C

     1    (a)  in  the  case of each individual receiving family care, an amount
     2  equal to at least [$181.00] $186.00 for each month beginning on or after
     3  January first, two thousand [twenty-four] twenty-five.
     4    (b)  in  the  case  of  each individual receiving residential care, an
     5  amount equal to at least [$208.00] $213.00 for each month  beginning  on
     6  or after January first, two thousand [twenty-four] twenty-five.
     7    (c)  in  the  case  of  each individual receiving enhanced residential
     8  care, an amount equal to at  least  [$249.00]  $255.00  for  each  month
     9  beginning  on or after January first, two thousand [twenty-four] twenty-
    10  five.
    11    (d) for the period commencing January  first,  two  thousand  [twenty-
    12  five]  twenty-six,  the  monthly  personal  needs  allowance shall be an
    13  amount equal to the sum of the amounts set forth  in  subparagraphs  one
    14  and two of this paragraph:
    15    (1)  the  amounts  specified  in  paragraphs  (a), (b) and (c) of this
    16  subdivision; and
    17    (2) the amount in subparagraph one of this  paragraph,  multiplied  by
    18  the  percentage  of  any  federal  supplemental  security income cost of
    19  living adjustment which becomes effective on or after January first, two
    20  thousand [twenty-five] twenty-six, but  prior  to  June  thirtieth,  two
    21  thousand [twenty-five] twenty-six, rounded to the nearest whole dollar.
    22    §  2.  Paragraphs  (a), (b), (c), (d), (e) and (f) of subdivision 2 of
    23  section 209 of the social services law, as amended by section 2 of  part
    24  H of chapter 56 of the laws of 2024, are amended to read as follows:
    25    (a)   On   and   after   January  first,  two  thousand  [twenty-four]
    26  twenty-five,  for  an  eligible  individual  living  alone,  [$1,030.00]
    27  $1,054.00;   and  for  an  eligible  couple  living  alone,  [$1,519.00]
    28  $1,554.00.
    29    (b)  On  and  after  January   first,   two   thousand   [twenty-four]
    30  twenty-five, for an eligible individual living with others with or with-
    31  out in-kind income, [$966.00] $990.00; and for an eligible couple living
    32  with others with or without in-kind income, [$1,461.00] $1,496.00.
    33    (c)   On   and   after   January  first,  two  thousand  [twenty-four]
    34  twenty-five, (i) for  an  eligible  individual  receiving  family  care,
    35  [$1,209.48]  $1,233.48  if [he or she] such individual is receiving such
    36  care in the city of New York or the county of Nassau, Suffolk, Westches-
    37  ter or Rockland; and (ii) for an eligible couple receiving  family  care
    38  in the city of New York or the county of Nassau, Suffolk, Westchester or
    39  Rockland,  two  times  the  amount set forth in subparagraph (i) of this
    40  paragraph; or (iii) for an eligible individual receiving  such  care  in
    41  any  other  county  in the state, [$1,171.48] $1,195.48; and (iv) for an
    42  eligible couple receiving such care in any other county  in  the  state,
    43  two times the amount set forth in subparagraph (iii) of this paragraph.
    44    (d)   On   and   after   January  first,  two  thousand  [twenty-four]
    45  twenty-five, (i) for an eligible individual receiving residential  care,
    46  [$1,378.00]  $1,402.00  if [he or she] such individual is receiving such
    47  care in the city of New York or the county of Nassau, Suffolk, Westches-
    48  ter or Rockland; and (ii) for an eligible couple  receiving  residential
    49  care in the city of New York or the county of Nassau, Suffolk, Westches-
    50  ter  or  Rockland, two times the amount set forth in subparagraph (i) of
    51  this paragraph; or (iii) for an eligible individual receiving such  care
    52  in any other county in the state, [$1,348.00] $1,372.00; and (iv) for an
    53  eligible  couple  receiving  such care in any other county in the state,
    54  two times the amount set forth in subparagraph (iii) of this paragraph.
    55    (e)  On  and  after  January   first,   two   thousand   [twenty-four]
    56  twenty-five,  (i) for an eligible individual receiving enhanced residen-

        S. 3006--C                         46                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  tial care, [$1,637.00]  $1,661.00;  and  (ii)  for  an  eligible  couple
     2  receiving  enhanced  residential care, two times the amount set forth in
     3  subparagraph (i) of this paragraph.
     4    (f) The amounts set forth in paragraphs (a) through (e) of this subdi-
     5  vision  shall  be  increased to reflect any increases in federal supple-
     6  mental security income benefits for individuals or couples which  become
     7  effective  on or after January first, two thousand [twenty-five] twenty-
     8  six but prior to June thirtieth, two thousand [twenty-five] twenty-six.
     9    § 3. This act shall take effect December 31, 2025.
 
    10                                   PART S
 
    11    Section 1. Section 4 of part W of chapter  54  of  the  laws  of  2016
    12  amending  the  social services law relating to the powers and duties  of
    13  the commissioner of social services relating to  the  appointment  of  a
    14  temporary  operator,  as amended by section 1 of part T of chapter 56 of
    15  the laws of 2022, is amended to read as follows:
    16    § 4. This act shall take effect immediately and  shall  be  deemed  to
    17  have  been in full force and effect on and after April 1, 2016, provided
    18  further that this act shall expire and  be  deemed  repealed  March  31,
    19  [2025] 2028.
    20    § 2. This act shall take effect immediately.

    21                                   PART T
 
    22    Section  1.  Article  19-D of the labor law, as added by chapter 88 of
    23  the laws of 2021, is amended to read as follows:
 
    24                                 ARTICLE 19-D
    25               MINIMUM WAGE RATES FOR COVERED AIRPORT WORKERS
 
    26    Section 696-a. Definitions.
    27          [696-b. Certification to the commissioner.
    28          696-c.] 696-b. Minimum wage rate for covered airport workers.
    29          [696-d.] 696-c. Commissioner's powers of investigation.
    30          [696-e.] 696-d. Records of employers.
    31          [696-f.] 696-e. Penalties.
    32          [696-g.] 696-f. Civil action.
    33          [696-h.] 696-g. Regulations.
    34          [696-i.] 696-h. Savings clause.
    35    § 696-a. Definitions. As used in this  article:  1.  "Covered  airport
    36  location"  means  John  F.  Kennedy  International Airport and LaGuardia
    37  Airport or any location used to perform [airline catering] work [as such
    38  work is described in subparagraph (iv) of paragraph (a)  of  subdivision
    39  two  of this section] related to the preparation or delivery of food for
    40  consumption on airplanes departing from John  F.  Kennedy  International
    41  Airport or LaGuardia Airport.
    42    2.  (a)  "Covered airport worker" means any person employed to perform
    43  work at a covered airport location [provided at least  one-half  of  the
    44  employee's  time  during  any workweek is performed at a covered airport
    45  location and who works in one of the following covered categories:
    46    (i) Cleaning and related services, which shall mean:
    47    (1) building cleaning,  including  warehouse,  kitchen,  and  terminal
    48  cleaning,  including  common  areas,  gateways,  gates,  lounges, clubs,
    49  concession areas, terminal entryways from ramp and where planes park  at

        S. 3006--C                         47                         A. 3006--C

     1  the  gate, and other nearby facilities used for the preparation, packag-
     2  ing, and storage of inflight meals and supplies; and
     3    (2) aircraft and cabin cleaning, including lavatory and water disposal
     4  and replenishment, lift truck driving and helping, dispatching, cleaning
     5  crew  driving,  and  sorting  and packing of inflight materials, such as
     6  blankets, pillows, and magazines;
     7    (ii) Security related services, including catering  security,  escort-
     8  ing, escort security, passenger aircraft security, fire guarding, termi-
     9  nal  security,  baggage  security,  traffic  security,  cargo screening,
    10  including guarding, warehouse security, concessions and  airport  lounge
    11  security,  security dispatch, and security at nearby facilities used for
    12  the preparation, packaging, and storage of inflight meals; or
    13    (iii) In terminal and passenger handling services,  including  baggage
    14  handling,  sky  cap services, wheelchair attending, wheelchair dispatch-
    15  ing, customer and passenger services, line queue, identification  check-
    16  ing,  porter  services  for  baggage, and passenger and employee shuttle
    17  driving.
    18    (iv) Airline catering, including work related to  the  preparation  or
    19  delivery of food or beverage for consumption on airplanes departing from
    20  a covered airport location or related location; or
    21    (v) Airport lounge services, including food and retail services].
    22    (b)  "Covered  airport  worker"  shall  include any person employed to
    23  perform work at a covered airport location, provided at  least  half  of
    24  the  employee's  time  during  any  workweek  is  performed at a covered
    25  airport location.
    26    [(b)] (c) "Covered airport worker" shall not include [anyone who works
    27  in one of the following non-covered categories:
    28    (i) Non-cleaning and security related cargo and ramp services, includ-
    29  ing ramp baggage and cargo handling,  load  control  and  ramp  communi-
    30  cation,  aircraft  mechanics and fueling of aircraft, provision of cool-
    31  ing, heating, and power, passenger aircraft servicing,  cabin  equipment
    32  maintenance,  guiding  aircraft  in  and  out  of  gates,  and gate side
    33  aircraft maintenance;
    34    (ii) Ramp and tarmac maintenance services, including operation of snow
    35  plows, ramp cleaning vehicles, and tarmac sweepers;
    36    (iii) Concession services, including food service, which includes food
    37  and beverage service, wait service, and cashiers,  and  retail  service,
    38  which includes news, and gifts, and duty-free;
    39    (c) "Covered airport worker" shall not include direct employees of the
    40  Port  Authority  of  New  York  and  New Jersey, or any workers hired by
    41  companies contracted by the Port Authority of New York and  New  Jersey,
    42  that  are  performing  work  under such contract] persons employed in an
    43  executive,  administrative,  or  professional  capacity  as  defined  in
    44  subparagraph  one of paragraph (a) of section thirteen of the Fair Labor
    45  Standards Act of 1938 (29 U.S.C. s.213 et seq.), or persons employed  by
    46  the  Port Authority of New York and New Jersey or any other governmental
    47  agency.
    48    [(d) Covered airport worker shall include only:
    49    (i) Employees employed at a covered airport location on December thir-
    50  tieth, two thousand twenty and who are working an average  of  at  least
    51  thirty hours per week; and
    52    (ii)  Employees  employed  at  a  covered airport location on or after
    53  January first, two thousand twenty-three and  who  are  working  for  an
    54  average of thirty hours per week.
    55    (e)  "Covered  airport worker" shall also not include persons employed
    56  in an executive, administrative, or professional capacity as defined  in

        S. 3006--C                         48                         A. 3006--C

     1  subparagraph  one of paragraph (a) of section thirteen of the Fair Labor
     2  Standards Act of 1938.]
     3    3. "Successor airport employer" means any [person who furnishes clean-
     4  ing  and  related  services,  security related services, in terminal and
     5  passenger  handling  services,  airline  catering,  or  airport   lounge
     6  services]  employer  that  employs  covered  airport workers who provide
     7  services at a covered airport location that are substantially similar to
     8  those that were provided by covered airport workers previously  employed
     9  by another employer at such covered airport location.
    10    4.  "Employer" means any person, corporation, limited liability compa-
    11  ny, or association employing any individual in an occupation,  industry,
    12  trade,  business  or  service.  The  term "employer" shall not include a
    13  governmental agency or employers with ten or fewer employees.
    14    5. [The "standard wage rate" means the greater of:
    15    (a) any minimum wage  rate  that  would  be  otherwise  applicable  to
    16  covered airport workers established by article nineteen of this chapter;
    17  or
    18    (b)  any  otherwise applicable minimum wage rate established through a
    19  policy of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey] The "applicable
    20  standard rate" means the  wage  and  benefit  rates  designated  by  the
    21  commissioner  based  on  the determinations made by the General Services
    22  Administration pursuant to the federal McNamara-O'Hara Service  Contract
    23  Act of 1965 (41 U.S.C. 6701 et seq.), for the appropriate localities and
    24  classifications  of  building service employees; provided, however, that
    25  in no event shall the prevailing  wage  rate  applicable  to  a  covered
    26  airport  worker on and after January first, two thousand twenty-five and
    27  every year thereafter be less than the following:
    28    (a) any otherwise applicable minimum wage rate established  through  a
    29  regulation of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey; and
    30    (b)  an  amount  of  supplemental  wages  or a supplemental healthcare
    31  contribution equal to the rate for health and welfare  for  all  occupa-
    32  tions,  designated  by the commissioner based on the determinations made
    33  by the federal department  of  labor  pursuant  to  the  McNamara-O'Hara
    34  Service Contract Act of 1965 (41 U.S.C. 6701 et seq.) for the geographic
    35  region  in  which the covered airport location is situated and in effect
    36  on the date of the designation by the commissioner; and
    37    (c) paid leave equal to the paid leave requirements designated by  the
    38  commissioner  the  immediately  preceding  January  first,  based on the
    39  determinations made by the General Services Administration  pursuant  to
    40  the  McNamara-O'Hara  Service  Contract  Act  of 1965 (41 U.S.C. 6701 et
    41  seq.).
    42    6. [The "standard benefits supplement rate" means an hourly supplement
    43  of four dollars and fifty-four cents furnished to an employee by provid-
    44  ing at least four dollars and fifty-four cents per hour toward the  cost
    45  of  minimum essential coverage under an eligible employer-sponsored plan
    46  as defined in treasury regulation section 1.5000A-2(c)(1)  beginning  on
    47  July  first,  two  thousand twenty-one. The standard benefits supplement
    48  rate shall apply only to the first forty hours worked  by  each  covered
    49  airport  worker  in  each week and shall not apply to any overtime hours
    50  worked by any covered airport worker. The standard  benefits  supplement
    51  rate  shall  apply  to  any paid leave taken by a covered airport worker
    52  that does not exceed forty hours in a  week]  "Commissioner"  means  the
    53  commissioner of labor of the state of New York.
    54    [7. The "applicable standard rate" shall mean a combination of (a) the
    55  standard wage rate; and (b) the standard benefits supplemental rate.

        S. 3006--C                         49                         A. 3006--C

     1    § 696-b. Certification  to  the  commissioner.  1. No later than March
     2  thirty-first, two  thousand  twenty-one,  each  employer  of  a  covered
     3  airport worker shall submit to the commissioner a sworn statement certi-
     4  fying the total number of workers employed by such employer at a covered
     5  airport  location  to  perform  cleaning  and related services, security
     6  related services, in terminal and passenger handling  services,  airline
     7  catering,  or  airport lounge services, at a covered airport location on
     8  December thirtieth, two thousand twenty, and identifying the number that
     9  is equal to eighty percent of such  total  number  of  employees,  which
    10  shall  be  the December thirtieth, two thousand twenty benchmark for the
    11  purposes of this section. Such statement shall further include an affir-
    12  mation that such employer will ensure that the number of covered airport
    13  workers it employs at a covered airport location between July first, two
    14  thousand twenty-one and December thirty-first, two  thousand  twenty-two
    15  is  no  less than the December thirtieth, two thousand twenty benchmark.
    16  Such sworn statement shall be provided by the commissioner upon  request
    17  by any airport worker performing cleaning and related services, security
    18  related  services,  in terminal and passenger handling services, airline
    19  catering, or airport lounge services, at a covered airport  location  or
    20  any  representative  of  such  airport workers.   Prior to employing any
    21  airport workers to  perform  cleaning  and  related  services,  security
    22  related  services,  in terminal and passenger handling services, airline
    23  catering, or airport lounge services, at a covered airport location, any
    24  successor airport employer shall obtain the applicable December  thirti-
    25  eth,  two  thousand twenty benchmark from the commissioner and submit to
    26  the commissioner an affirmation that such employer will ensure that  the
    27  number  of  covered  airport  workers  it  employs  at a covered airport
    28  location between July first, two thousand twenty-one and December  thir-
    29  ty-first,  two  thousand twenty-two is no less than the December thirti-
    30  eth, two thousand twenty benchmark.
    31    2. Each employer of any covered airport worker employed at  a  covered
    32  airport  location  on  or after January first, two thousand twenty-three
    33  shall submit to the commissioner, in a form and manner proscribed by the
    34  commissioner, a  sworn  statement  affirming  that  such  employer  will
    35  ensure, where applicable, that the proportion of covered airport workers
    36  in  each classification it employs to work an average of at least thirty
    37  hours per week at a covered airport location is the same as such propor-
    38  tion was compared to all workers in the same classification  working  at
    39  such covered airport location in the calendar year two thousand nineteen
    40  workforce.  The commissioner shall publish a list of all covered classi-
    41  fications with the corresponding proportions of all workers employed  to
    42  work  an average of at least thirty hours a week compared to all workers
    43  in the same classification employed to  work  at  each  covered  airport
    44  location  in  the  calendar year two thousand nineteen. The commissioner
    45  shall be empowered to promulgate rules or regulations to  determine  the
    46  method  and  accounting for such information and to verify its accuracy,
    47  including the ability to establish a presumed proportion  where  records
    48  are  missing  or  unavailable  and  provided further that such full-time
    49  levels shall be no less than such December thirtieth, two thousand twen-
    50  ty benchmark. If such proportion is not maintained, consistent with such
    51  rules or regulations promulgated by the  commissioner,  then  the  hours
    52  worked  by such part time workers, which are outside of such proportion,
    53  shall be subject to the provisions of this section as if they worked  an
    54  average  of at least thirty hours per week at a covered airport location
    55  and were otherwise a covered airport worker.

        S. 3006--C                         50                         A. 3006--C

     1    3. Each employer of a covered airport worker  employed  at  a  covered
     2  airport  location  on December thirtieth, two thousand twenty and who is
     3  working an average of at least thirty hours per week shall provide  such
     4  covered  airport  worker the ability to begin or change enrollment in an
     5  eligible  employer-sponsored  plan  as  defined  in  treasury regulation
     6  section 1.5000A-2(c)(1) for coverage beginning on July first, two  thou-
     7  sand twenty-one.
     8    4.  Each  employer  of  any  other covered airport worker at a covered
     9  airport location shall provide such covered airport worker  the  ability
    10  to  begin or change enrollment in an eligible employer-sponsored plan as
    11  defined in treasury  regulation  section  1.5000A-2(c)(1)  for  coverage
    12  beginning  no  later  than  thirty days after becoming a covered airport
    13  worker.]
    14    § [696-c.] 696-b. Minimum wage rate for covered airport  workers.  All
    15  [covered]  employers  at  a  covered  airport location shall ensure that
    16  every covered airport worker is compensated at a rate that  is  no  less
    17  than  the  applicable standard rate. Nothing in this article shall alter
    18  or limit any employer's  obligation  to  pay  any  otherwise  applicable
    19  prevailing wage under article eight or nine of this chapter.
    20    § [696-d.] 696-c. Commissioner's  powers of investigation. The commis-
    21  sioner or [his or her]  such  commissioner's  authorized  representative
    22  shall have the power to:
    23    1.  investigate  the  compensation  of  covered airport workers in the
    24  state;
    25    2. enter the place of business or employment of any employer  for  the
    26  purpose  of  (a)  examining and inspecting any and all books, registers,
    27  payrolls, and other records that in any way relate to or have a  bearing
    28  upon the compensation provided to, or the hours worked by any employees,
    29  and  (b)  ascertaining  whether  the  provisions of this article and the
    30  rules and regulations promulgated hereunder are being complied with; and
    31    3. require from any employer full and correct statements  and  reports
    32  in writing, at such times as the commissioner may deem necessary, of the
    33  compensation provided to and the hours by such employer's employees.
    34    § [696-e.] 696-d. Records  of employers. For every employee covered by
    35  this article, every employer shall establish, maintain, and preserve for
    36  not less than six years  contemporaneous,  true,  and  accurate  payroll
    37  records  showing for each week worked the hours worked, the compensation
    38  provided, plus such other information as the commissioner deems material
    39  and necessary. For all covered airport workers who are not  exempt  from
    40  overtime  compensation as established in the commissioner's minimum wage
    41  orders or otherwise provided by law, rule, or  regulation,  the  payroll
    42  records  shall  include the compensation provided and the regular hourly
    43  rate or rates of pay, the overtime rate or rates of pay, the  number  of
    44  regular  hours  worked, the number of overtime hours worked and the cost
    45  of benefits and/or benefit supplements. On demand,  the  employer  shall
    46  furnish  to  the  commissioner  or [his or her] such commissioner's duly
    47  authorized representative a sworn statement of the hours worked, rate or
    48  rates of compensation, for each covered airport worker, plus such  other
    49  information  as  the  commissioner  deems  material and necessary. Every
    50  employer shall keep such records open to inspection by the  commissioner
    51  or  [his  or  her] such commissioner's duly authorized representative at
    52  any reasonable time. Every employer of a covered  airport  worker  shall
    53  keep a digest and summary of this article which shall be prepared by the
    54  commissioner, posted in a conspicuous place in [his or her] their estab-
    55  lishment  and  shall  also  keep  posted  such additional copies of said
    56  digest and summary as the commissioner prescribes. Employers  shall,  on

        S. 3006--C                         51                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  request,  be furnished with copies of this article and of orders, and of
     2  digests and summaries thereof, without charge.  Employers  shall  permit
     3  the  commissioner  or  [his  or her] such commissioner's duly authorized
     4  representative  to  question  without  interference any employee of such
     5  employer in a private location at the place  of  employment  and  during
     6  working  hours  in  respect to the wages paid to and the hours worked by
     7  such employee or other employees.
     8    § [696-f.] 696-e. Penalties. 1. If the  commissioner  finds  that  any
     9  employer  has  violated  any  provision  of this article or of a rule or
    10  regulation promulgated thereunder, the commissioner may, after an oppor-
    11  tunity for a hearing, and by an order which shall describe  particularly
    12  the  nature of the violation, assess the employer a civil penalty of not
    13  more than ten thousand dollars for the first such violation  within  six
    14  years,  not  more  than  twenty  thousand dollars for a second violation
    15  within six years and not more than fifty thousand dollars for a third or
    16  subsequent violation within six years. Such penalty shall be paid to the
    17  commissioner for deposit in the treasury of the state. In assessing  the
    18  amount  of the penalty, the commissioner shall give due consideration to
    19  the size of the employer's business, the good faith  [of  the  employer]
    20  basis of the employer to believe that its conduct was in compliance with
    21  the  law,  the  gravity  of  the  violation,  the  history  of  previous
    22  violations and the  failure  to  comply  with  record-keeping  or  other
    23  requirements.
    24    2.  Any  order  issued  under subdivision one of this section shall be
    25  deemed a final order of the commissioner and not subject  to  review  by
    26  any court or agency unless the employer files a petition with the indus-
    27  trial  board  of  appeals for a review of the order, pursuant to section
    28  one hundred one of this chapter.
    29    3. The civil penalty provided for in this section shall be in addition
    30  to and may be imposed concurrently with  any  other  remedy  or  penalty
    31  provided for in this chapter.
    32    4.  Upon  a  showing by an employee organization, the commissioner may
    33  investigate by examining payroll records whether  an  employer  withheld
    34  hours  of  work  to employees for the purpose of reducing the employer's
    35  obligations under this article. If, after the opportunity for a hearing,
    36  the commissioner determines that an employer withheld hours of  work  to
    37  employees  for  the purpose of reducing the employer's obligations under
    38  this article, the commissioner may, in addition  to  any  other  penalty
    39  available,  also  require  that  the employer pay the [standard benefits
    40  supplement] applicable standard rate to all of the employer's employees,
    41  regardless of the number of hours worked by the employees.
    42    § [696-g.] 696-f. Civil action. 1.   On behalf of  any  employee  paid
    43  less than the applicable standard rate to which the employee is entitled
    44  under  the  provisions  of  this article, the commissioner may bring any
    45  legal action necessary, including administrative action, to collect such
    46  claim, and the employer shall be required to pay the full amount of  the
    47  underpayment,  plus  costs,  and unless the employer proves a good faith
    48  basis to believe that its underpayment was in compliance with  the  law,
    49  an  additional amount as liquidated damages. Liquidated damages shall be
    50  calculated by the commissioner as no more than one  hundred  percent  of
    51  the  total  amount of underpayments found to be due the employee. In any
    52  action brought by the commissioner in a court of competent jurisdiction,
    53  liquidated damages shall be calculated as an amount equal to one hundred
    54  percent of underpayments found to be due the employee.
    55    2. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, an  action  to  recover
    56  upon  a  liability  imposed by this article must be commenced within six

        S. 3006--C                         52                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  years.  The statute of limitations shall be  tolled  from  the  date  an
     2  employee  files  a  complaint  with the commissioner or the commissioner
     3  commences an investigation, whichever is  earlier,  until  an  order  to
     4  comply  issued  by  the commissioner becomes final, or where the commis-
     5  sioner does not issue an order, until the date on which the commissioner
     6  notifies the complainant that the investigation has concluded.
     7    3. In any civil action by the  commissioner,  the  commissioner  shall
     8  have  the right to collect attorneys' fees and costs incurred in enforc-
     9  ing any court judgment. Any judgment or court  order  awarding  remedies
    10  under  this section shall provide that if any amounts remain unpaid upon
    11  the expiration of ninety days following issuance of judgment, or  ninety
    12  days  after  expiration of the time to appeal and no appeal therefrom is
    13  then pending, whichever is later, the total  amount  of  judgment  shall
    14  automatically increase by fifteen percent.
    15    § [696-h.] 696-g. Regulations.  [1.]  The  commissioner may promulgate
    16  such regulations as [he or she] such commissioner deems  appropriate  to
    17  carry  out the purposes of this article and to safeguard minimum compen-
    18  sation standards.
    19    § [696-i.] 696-h. Savings clause. 1.  If any provision of this article
    20  or the application thereof to any person, occupation or circumstance  is
    21  held  invalid,  the remainder of the article and the application of such
    22  provision to other persons,  employees,  occupations,  or  circumstances
    23  shall not be affected thereby.
    24    2. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section or part of
    25  this article shall be adjudged by any court of competent jurisdiction to
    26  be  invalid,  such  judgment shall not affect, impair, or invalidate the
    27  remainder thereof, but shall be confined in its operation to the clause,
    28  sentence, paragraph,  subdivision,  section  or  part  thereof  directly
    29  involved  in  the  controversy  in  which  such judgment shall have been
    30  rendered. It is hereby declared to be the intent of the legislature that
    31  this article would have been enacted even if such invalid provisions had
    32  not been included herein.
    33    [3. If section six hundred ninety-six-a, section six  hundred  ninety-
    34  six-b,  or  section  six  hundred  ninety-six-c  of  this article or any
    35  portion thereof shall be adjudged, whether by final judgment,  a  tempo-
    36  rary  restraining  order,  or  a preliminary injunction, by any court of
    37  competent jurisdiction to be preempted by federal law, then the  "stand-
    38  ard  benefits supplement rate" defined in subdivision six of section six
    39  hundred ninety-six-a of this article shall immediately mean the  follow-
    40  ing:
    41    (a)  An  hourly  supplement  of  four  dollars  and  fifty-four  cents
    42  furnished to an employee by providing at least four dollars  and  fifty-
    43  four  cents per hour beginning on July first, two thousand twenty-one in
    44  one of the following ways: (i) in the form of health and/or other  bene-
    45  fits,  not  including  paid  leave,  that  cost  the employer the entire
    46  required hourly supplemental amount; (ii) by providing a portion of  the
    47  required  hourly supplement in the form of health and/or other benefits,
    48  not including paid leave, and the balance in cash; or (iii) by providing
    49  the entire supplement in cash.
    50    (b) The value of such supplement shall be no less  than  four  dollars
    51  and fifty-four cents per hour.
    52    (c)  The  standard  benefits  supplement  rate shall apply only to the
    53  first forty hours worked by each covered airport worker in each week and
    54  shall not apply to any overtime hours  worked  by  any  covered  airport
    55  worker.

        S. 3006--C                         53                         A. 3006--C

     1    (d)  The  standard  benefits  supplement  rate shall apply to any paid
     2  leave taken by a covered airport worker that does not exceed forty hours
     3  in a week.
     4    4.  If  section  six hundred ninety-six-a, section six hundred ninety-
     5  six-b, or section six  hundred  ninety-six-c  of  this  article  or  any
     6  portion thereof shall be adjudged by any preliminary relief, including a
     7  temporary restraining order or a preliminary injunction, by any court of
     8  competent  jurisdiction  to  be  preempted  by  federal law but is later
     9  adjudged by the same court not to be preempted by federal law in a final
    10  judgment, then the definition of  "standard  benefits  supplement  rate"
    11  shall  immediately revert to the definition stated in subdivision six of
    12  section six hundred ninety-six-a of this article.]
    13    § 2. This act shall take effect January 1, 2026.
 
    14                                   PART U
 
    15    Section 1. Subdivision 1-a of section 198 of the labor law, as amended
    16  by chapter 362 of the laws of 2015, is amended to read as follows:
    17    1-a. On behalf of any employee paid less than the wage to which [he or
    18  she is] they are entitled under the  provisions  of  this  article,  the
    19  commissioner may bring any legal action necessary, including administra-
    20  tive  action, to collect such claim and as part of such legal action, in
    21  addition to any other remedies and penalties otherwise  available  under
    22  this  article,  the  commissioner  shall assess against the employer the
    23  full amount of any such underpayment, and an additional amount as liqui-
    24  dated damages, unless the employer proves a good faith basis for believ-
    25  ing that its underpayment of wages  was  in  compliance  with  the  law.
    26  Liquidated  damages  shall  be calculated by the commissioner as no more
    27  than one hundred percent of the total amount of wages found to  be  due,
    28  except such liquidated damages may be up to three hundred percent of the
    29  total  amount  of  the  wages found to be due for a willful violation of
    30  section one hundred ninety-four of this article. In  any  action  insti-
    31  tuted in the courts upon a wage claim by an employee or the commissioner
    32  in  which  the employee prevails, the court shall allow such employee to
    33  recover the full amount of any underpayment, all  reasonable  attorney's
    34  fees,  prejudgment interest as required under the civil practice law and
    35  rules, and, unless the employer proves a good  faith  basis  to  believe
    36  that  its underpayment of wages was in compliance with the law, an addi-
    37  tional amount as liquidated damages equal to one hundred percent of  the
    38  total  amount  of  the  wages  found  to  be due, except such liquidated
    39  damages may be up to three hundred percent of the total  amount  of  the
    40  wages  found  to  be  due for a willful violation of section one hundred
    41  ninety-four of this article.  Notwithstanding  the  provisions  of  this
    42  subdivision, liquidated damages shall not be applicable to violations of
    43  paragraph a of subdivision one of section one hundred ninety-one of this
    44  article  where the employer paid the employee wages on a regular payday,
    45  no less frequently than semi-monthly. Such violations shall  be  subject
    46  to damages as follows:
    47    (i)  no more than one hundred percent of the lost interest found to be
    48  due for the delayed payment of wages calculated using a  daily  interest
    49  rate  for  each day payment is late based on the annual rate of interest
    50  then in  effect,  as  prescribed  by  the  superintendent  of  financial
    51  services  pursuant  to  section  fourteen-a  of  the banking law for the
    52  employer's first violation; or
    53    (ii) for conduct occurring after the effective date of this paragraph,
    54  liquidated damages equal to one hundred percent of the total  amount  of

        S. 3006--C                         54                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  wages  found to be due in violation of paragraph a of subdivision one of
     2  section one hundred ninety-one of this article  for  any  employer  who,
     3  after  the  effective date of this paragraph, has been subject to one or
     4  more  previous  findings  and  orders  for  violations of paragraph a of
     5  subdivision one of section one hundred ninety-one of  this  article  for
     6  which no proceeding for administrative or judicial review as provided in
     7  this  chapter  is pending and the time for initiation of such proceeding
     8  shall have expired and relating to employees performing the same work.
     9    For purposes of this subdivision, an order shall mean a  single  final
    10  order  or determination made by the commissioner or a court of competent
    11  jurisdiction, regardless of the number of employees or the  time  period
    12  that was subject to such order.
    13    §  2. This act shall take effect immediately and shall apply to causes
    14  of action pending or commenced on or after such date.
 
    15                                   PART V
 
    16    Section 1. Subdivision 3 of section 218 of the labor law,  as  amended
    17  by chapter 2 of the laws of 2015, is amended to read as follows:
    18    3.  (a)  Provided  that  no  proceeding for administrative or judicial
    19  review as provided in this chapter shall then be pending  and  the  time
    20  for  initiation  of such proceeding shall have expired, the commissioner
    21  may file with the county clerk of the county where the employer  resides
    22  or  has  a place of business the order of the commissioner, or the deci-
    23  sion of the industrial board of appeals containing the amount  found  to
    24  be  due  including  the civil penalty, if any, and at the commissioner's
    25  discretion, an additional fifteen percent damages upon  any  outstanding
    26  monies  owed.  [At]  Notwithstanding  any  provision to the contrary, in
    27  execution of any order or decision filed by the commissioner pursuant to
    28  this section, the commissioner shall have all the powers conferred  upon
    29  sheriffs by article twenty-five of the civil practice law and rules, but
    30  the  commissioner  shall be entitled to no fee or compensation in excess
    31  of the actual expenses paid in  the  performance  of  such  duty.  Addi-
    32  tionally,  at the request of an employee, the commissioner shall assign,
    33  without consideration or liability, that portion of the filed order that
    34  constitutes wages, wage supplements, interest on wages or  wage  supple-
    35  ments, or liquidated damages due that employee, to that employee and may
    36  file  an assignment or order in that amount in the name of that employee
    37  with the county clerk of the county where the employer resides or has  a
    38  place  of  business.  The  filing  of such assignment, order or decision
    39  shall have the full force and effect of a judgment duly docketed in  the
    40  office  of  such  clerk.  The  assignment[,  order  or  decision] may be
    41  enforced [by and in the name of the commissioner, or] by the employee[,]
    42  in the same manner, and with like effect,  as  that  prescribed  by  the
    43  civil practice law and rules for the enforcement of a money judgment.
    44    (b)  In addition and as an alternative to any other remedy provided by
    45  this section and provided that no proceeding for administrative or judi-
    46  cial review as provided in this chapter shall then be  pending  and  the
    47  time  for  initiation of such proceeding shall have expired, the commis-
    48  sioner may issue a  warrant  under  the  commissioner's  official  seal,
    49  directed  to  the  sheriff of any county, commanding the sheriff to levy
    50  upon and sell the real and personal property that may  be  found  within
    51  the  sheriff's county of an employer who has defaulted in the payment of
    52  any sum determined to be due from such employer for the payment of  such
    53  sum  together  with  interest,  penalties, and the cost of executing the
    54  warrant, and to return such warrant to the commissioner and to pay  into

        S. 3006--C                         55                         A. 3006--C

     1  the  fund  the money collected by virtue thereof within sixty days after
     2  the receipt of such warrant.  The sheriff shall, within five days  after
     3  the  receipt  of  the  warrant, file with the clerk of the county a copy
     4  thereof, and thereupon such clerk shall enter in the judgment docket the
     5  name  of  the  employer  mentioned  in the warrant and the amount of the
     6  contribution, interest, and penalties for which the  warrant  is  issued
     7  and  the  date  when  such  copy  is filed. Thereupon the amount of such
     8  warrant so docketed shall become a lien upon the title to  and  interest
     9  in  real  property and chattels of the employer against whom the warrant
    10  is issued in the same manner as a judgment duly docketed in  the  office
    11  of  such  clerk.  The sheriff shall then proceed upon the warrant in the
    12  same manner, and with like effect, as that provided by law in respect to
    13  executions issued against property upon judgments of a court of  record,
    14  and  the  sheriff  shall  be  entitled  to the same fees, which they may
    15  collect in the same manner, for the sheriff's services in executing  the
    16  warrant.
    17    (c)  In  the  discretion of the commissioner, a warrant of like terms,
    18  force, and effect may be issued and directed to any officer or  employee
    19  of  the department of labor who may file a copy of such warrant with the
    20  clerk of any county in the state, and thereupon each  such  clerk  shall
    21  docket  it  and  it  shall become a lien in the same manner and with the
    22  same force and effect as hereinbefore provided with respect to a warrant
    23  issued and directed to and filed by a  sheriff;  and  in  the  execution
    24  thereof  such officer or employee shall have all the powers conferred by
    25  law upon sheriffs, but they shall be entitled to no fee or  compensation
    26  in  excess  of the actual expenses paid in the performance of such duty.
    27  If a warrant is returned not satisfied in full, the  commissioner  shall
    28  have  the  same remedies to enforce the amount thereof as if the commis-
    29  sioner had recovered judgment for the same.
    30    § 2. Subdivision 3 of section 219 of the  labor  law,  as  amended  by
    31  chapter 2 of the laws of 2015, is amended to read as follows:
    32    3.  (a)  Provided  that  no  proceeding for administrative or judicial
    33  review as provided in this chapter shall then be pending  and  the  time
    34  for  initiation  of such proceeding shall have expired, the commissioner
    35  may file with the county clerk of the county where the employer  resides
    36  or has a place of business the order of the commissioner or the decision
    37  of  the  industrial  board  of appeals containing the amount found to be
    38  due, including, at the commissioner's discretion, an additional  fifteen
    39  percent  damages  upon any outstanding monies owed. [At] Notwithstanding
    40  any provision to the contrary, in execution of  any  order  or  decision
    41  filed  by  the  commissioner  pursuant to this section, the commissioner
    42  shall have all the powers conferred upon sheriffs by article twenty-five
    43  of the civil practice law and rules, but the commissioner shall be enti-
    44  tled to no fee or compensation in excess of the actual expenses paid  in
    45  the performance of such duty. Additionally, at the request of an employ-
    46  ee,  the  commissioner shall assign, without consideration or liability,
    47  that portion of the filed order that  constitutes  wages,  wage  supple-
    48  ments,  interest on wages or wage supplements, or liquidated damages due
    49  the employee, to that employee and may file an assignment  or  order  in
    50  that  amount  in  the name of such employee with the county clerk of the
    51  county where the employer resides or has a place of business. The filing
    52  of such assignment, order or decision shall  have  the  full  force  and
    53  effect  of  a  judgment  duly  docketed in the office of such clerk. The
    54  assignment[, order or decision] may be enforced [by and in the  name  of
    55  the  commissioner,  or]  by the employee[,] in the same manner, and with

        S. 3006--C                         56                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  like effect, as that prescribed by the civil practice law and rules  for
     2  the enforcement of a money judgment.
     3    (b)  In addition and as an alternative to any other remedy provided by
     4  this section and provided that no proceeding for administrative or judi-
     5  cial review as provided in this chapter shall then be  pending  and  the
     6  time  for  initiation of such proceeding shall have expired, the commis-
     7  sioner may issue a warrant under the official seal of the  commissioner,
     8  directed  to  the  sheriff of any county, commanding the sheriff to levy
     9  upon and sell the real and personal property that may  be  found  within
    10  the  sheriff's county of an employer who has defaulted in the payment of
    11  any sum determined to be due from such employer for the payment of  such
    12  sum  together  with  interest,  penalties, and the cost of executing the
    13  warrant, and to return such warrant to the commissioner and to pay  into
    14  the  fund  the money collected by virtue thereof within sixty days after
    15  the receipt of such warrant. The sheriff shall, within five  days  after
    16  the  receipt  of  the  warrant, file with the clerk of the county a copy
    17  thereof, and thereupon such clerk shall enter in the judgment docket the
    18  name of the employer mentioned in the warrant  and  the  amount  of  the
    19  contribution,  interest,  and  penalties for which the warrant is issued
    20  and the date when such copy is  filed.  Thereupon  the  amount  of  such
    21  warrant  so  docketed shall become a lien upon the title to and interest
    22  in real property and chattels of the employer against whom  the  warrant
    23  is  issued  in the same manner as a judgment duly docketed in the office
    24  of such clerk. The sheriff shall then proceed upon the  warrant  in  the
    25  same manner, and with like effect, as that provided by law in respect to
    26  executions  issued against property upon judgments of a court of record,
    27  and the sheriff shall be entitled to  the  same  fees,  which  they  may
    28  collect  in the same manner, for the sheriff's services in executing the
    29  warrant.
    30    (c) In the discretion of the commissioner, a warrant  of  like  terms,
    31  force,  and effect may be issued and directed to any officer or employee
    32  of the department of labor who may file a copy of such warrant with  the
    33  clerk  of  any  county in the state, and thereupon each such clerk shall
    34  docket it and it shall become a lien in the same  manner  and  with  the
    35  same force and effect as hereinbefore provided with respect to a warrant
    36  issued  and  directed  to  and  filed by a sheriff; and in the execution
    37  thereof such officer or employee shall have all the powers conferred  by
    38  law  upon sheriffs, but they shall be entitled to no fee or compensation
    39  in excess of the actual expenses paid in the performance of  such  duty.
    40  If  a  warrant is returned not satisfied in full, the commissioner shall
    41  have the same remedies to enforce the amount thereof as if  the  commis-
    42  sioner had recovered judgment for the same.
    43    § 3. This act shall take effect immediately.
 
    44                                   PART W
 
    45    Section  1.  Subdivision 1 of section 141 of the labor law, as amended
    46  by chapter 642 of the laws of 1991, is amended to read as follows:
    47    1. If the  commissioner  finds  that  an  employer  has  violated  any
    48  provision  of this article or of a rule or regulation promulgated there-
    49  under, the commissioner may by an order which shall describe particular-
    50  ly the nature of the violation, assess the employer a civil  penalty  of
    51  not  more  than [one] ten thousand dollars for the first such violation,
    52  at least two thousand but  not  more  than  [two]  twenty-five  thousand
    53  dollars  for  a second violation, and at least ten thousand but not more
    54  than [three] fifty-five thousand  dollars  for  a  third  or  subsequent

        S. 3006--C                         57                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  violation. Such penalty shall be paid to the commissioner for deposit in
     2  the  treasury  of the state. In assessing the amount of the penalty, the
     3  commissioner shall give due consideration to the size of the  employer's
     4  business, the good faith of the employer to believe that its conduct was
     5  in compliance with the law, the gravity of the violation, the history of
     6  previous  violations  and  the  failure to comply with record-keeping or
     7  other  requirements,  provided,  however,  that  where  such   violation
     8  involves illegal employment during which a minor is seriously injured or
     9  dies,  such penalty shall be [treble the maximum penalty allowable under
    10  the law for such violation] at least three thousand dollars but not more
    11  than thirty thousand dollars for the first such violation, at least  six
    12  thousand  but not more than seventy-five thousand dollars for the second
    13  violation, and at least thirty thousand dollars but not  more  than  one
    14  hundred  seventy-five  thousand  dollars  for  the  third  or subsequent
    15  violation.   For the purposes of this  subdivision,  a  minor  shall  be
    16  deemed  to  be  seriously  injured if such injury results in a permanent
    17  partial or permanent total disability  as  determined  by  the  workers'
    18  compensation board.
    19    § 2. This act shall take effect immediately.
 
    20                                   PART X
 
    21    Section 1. Sections 135, 137 and 139 of the labor law are REPEALED.
    22    §  2.  Paragraph c of subdivision 2 of section 130 of the labor law is
    23  REPEALED.
    24    §  3. Section  131 of the labor law, as amended by chapter 975 of  the
    25  laws  of 1966, subdivision 2 and paragraph a of subdivision 3 as amended
    26  by chapter 1017 of the laws of 1971, subparagraph 4 of  paragraph  a  of
    27  subdivision  3 as added by chapter 292 of the laws of 1991, subparagraph
    28  5 of paragraph a of subdivision 3 as added and subparagraph 6  of  para-
    29  graph  a  of  subdivision  3 as renumbered by chapter 123 of the laws of
    30  1997, paragraph b of subdivision 3 as amended by chapter 35 of the  laws
    31  of  2004,  paragraph c of subdivision 3 as amended by chapter 478 of the
    32  laws of 1984, paragraph d of subdivision 3 as amended by chapter 377  of
    33  the  laws  of  1973,  and subdivision 6 as amended by chapter 920 of the
    34  laws of 1982, is amended to read as follows:
    35    § 131. Employment of minors fourteen or fifteen years of  age.  1.  No
    36  minor  fourteen  or  fifteen  years  of  age  shall be employed in or in
    37  connection with any trade, business, or  service  when  attendance  upon
    38  instruction is required by the education law.
    39    2.  When  attendance upon instruction is not required by the education
    40  law, a minor fourteen or fifteen years of age may  be  employed  if  [he
    41  presents]  they  present  an  employment certificate or permit issued in
    42  accordance with the education law;  provided,  however,  that  no  minor
    43  fourteen  or  fifteen years of age shall be employed in or in connection
    44  with a factory.
    45    3. Exceptions:
    46    a. When attendance upon instruction is not required by  the  education
    47  law, a minor fourteen or fifteen years of age may be employed without an
    48  employment certificate or permit in the following occupations:
    49    (1) Caddy service on a golf course;
    50    (2) Service as a baby sitter staying with and at the home of a younger
    51  child  or  children  with  or  without the presence at such home of such
    52  child's  or  children's  [parents  or  guardians]  persons  in  parental
    53  relation;

        S. 3006--C                         58                         A. 3006--C
 
     1    (3)  Casual employment consisting of yard work and household chores in
     2  and about a residence or the premises of  a  non-profit,  non-commercial
     3  organization, not involving the use of power-driven machinery;
     4    (4)  Assisting  a  [parent]  person in parental relation as defined in
     5  section thirty-two hundred twelve of the education law, aunt, uncle,  or
     6  grandparent [or guardian] in the sale of produce of a farm that is owned
     7  or  leased  by  the  minor's [parent] person in parental relation, aunt,
     8  uncle, or grandparent [or guardian], at a farm stand or farmer's  market
     9  stand that is owned or leased by the minor's [parent] person in parental
    10  relation,  aunt,  uncle,  or  grandparent  [or  guardian], at times when
    11  school [in] is not in session  and  the  minor  is  accompanied  by  the
    12  [parent  or  guardian]  person in parental relation or has presented the
    13  written consent  of  the  [parent  or  guardian]    person  in  parental
    14  relation.
    15    (5) Caddie service at a bridge tournament;
    16    (6)  Work  for  [his  parents  or  guardians] their person in parental
    17  relation either on the home farm or at other outdoor work not  connected
    18  with or for any trade, business, or service.
    19    b.  Nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit the employ-
    20  ment of a minor fourteen or fifteen years of age as a child performer in
    21  compliance with section 35.01 of the arts and cultural affairs  law  and
    22  article four-A of this chapter.
    23    c.  Nothing in this section shall be construed to apply to the employ-
    24  ment of a minor fourteen or fifteen years of age as  a  child  model  in
    25  compliance with section 35.05 of the arts and cultural affairs law.
    26    d. [Nothing in this section, or the hours of work requirements of this
    27  chapter,  shall  apply to a newspaper carrier in compliance with section
    28  thirty-two hundred twenty-eight of the education law. The picking up  of
    29  newspapers  at a newspaper plant shall not be construed to be employment
    30  in or in connection with a factory if there is provided a place for  the
    31  picking  up of such newspapers, which place does not contain any danger-
    32  ous machinery or equipment and does not afford access to space in  which
    33  any such dangerous machinery or equipment is located.
    34    e.  Nothing  in  this section shall prohibit the employment of a minor
    35  fifteen years old who is found to be incapable of profiting from further
    36  instruction available and who presents a special employment  certificate
    37  issued in accordance with the education law. Such employment certificate
    38  shall not be valid for work in or in connection with a factory.
    39    f.]  A  minor fourteen or fifteen years of age may be employed in farm
    40  service, when attendance upon instruction is not required by the  educa-
    41  tion  law,  provided  such  minor  presents a farm work permit issued in
    42  accordance with the education law. Such permit shall be valid only  when
    43  signed  by  the  employer  and  it  shall not be valid for work in or in
    44  connection with a factory.
    45    [g.] e. Nothing in this section shall prohibit  the  employment  of  a
    46  minor fourteen or fifteen years of age during the school lunch period in
    47  a  school  cafeteria  at the school which the minor attends if the minor
    48  presents an employment certificate issued in accordance with the  educa-
    49  tion law.
    50    4. Employment in delivery and clerical employments:
    51    a.  Nothing  contained in this article shall be deemed to prohibit the
    52  employment of a minor fourteen or  fifteen  years  of  age  for  whom  a
    53  student non-factory employment certificate has been issued in accordance
    54  with  the  provisions  of  the  education  law, in delivery and clerical
    55  employments:

        S. 3006--C                         59                         A. 3006--C
 
     1    (1) in an office of a factory, provided that such office  is  enclosed
     2  and  separate  from  the  place  where  manufacturing is carried on, and
     3  provided that the minor is not engaged in any manufacturing operation or
     4  process; or
     5    (2)  in  or in connection with dry cleaning stores, tailor shops, shoe
     6  repair shops and similar  service  stores  which  clean,  press,  alter,
     7  repair  or  dye  articles  or  goods belonging to the ultimate consumer,
     8  provided that such employment does not  involve  the  use  of  dangerous
     9  machinery or equipment, or chemical processes.
    10    b.  The  commissioner  may  promulgate rules and regulations which [he
    11  deems] they deem necessary to carry out the provisions of this  subdivi-
    12  sion.
    13    5. Nothing in this section shall be construed to permit the employment
    14  of a minor fourteen or fifteen years of age in any occupation prohibited
    15  by section one hundred thirty-three of this chapter.
    16    6. Nothing in this section shall prevent the rendering of services for
    17  the  public  good  by  a  minor of fourteen or fifteen years pursuant to
    18  section seven hundred fifty-eight-a or 353.6 of the family court act.
    19    § 4. The labor law is amended by adding a new section 135 to  read  as
    20  follows:
    21    § 135. Database for employment of minors; employee registration; minor
    22  employment  certificates.  1.  Creation  of database. The department, in
    23  consultation with the department of education, shall create and maintain
    24  a database for the employment of minors. Except as otherwise provided in
    25  this section, all information pertaining to any employer or  minor  that
    26  is  submitted to the department under this section shall be confidential
    27  and shall not be accessible to the public. Nothing herein shall  prevent
    28  the commissioner from sharing such information for civil or criminal law
    29  enforcement purposes.
    30    2. Employer registration and renewal process. Any employer required to
    31  be  registered  under this section shall provide the department with the
    32  information set forth in this section, as well as any additional  infor-
    33  mation  that  the  department  may  require,  in  the  form  and  manner
    34  prescribed by the department.
    35    3. Employer registration and information. Every employer  that  hires,
    36  employs,  or  otherwise  permits  any minor under the age of eighteen to
    37  work for the employer within the state shall register  in  the  database
    38  and  shall provide, in the form and manner prescribed by the department,
    39  the following information:
    40    (a) the name of the employer;
    41    (b) the email address of the employer;
    42    (c) any location of the  employer's  business  operations  within  the
    43  state, including any location where a minor will be working;
    44    (d)  the number and names of minors who are hired, employed, or other-
    45  wise permitted to work for the employer;
    46    (e) a certified statement from  the  employer  that  the  employer  is
    47  hiring,  employing, or otherwise permitting minors to work only in posi-
    48  tions for the employer as permitted by law, rule, or regulation in order
    49  to ensure their health, safety, and well-being; and
    50    (f) any other information deemed appropriate by the commissioner.
    51    4. Employer recordkeeping. An employer that is required to  be  regis-
    52  tered  under  this  section shall, before employment begins, file at the
    53  place of the minor's employment such employment certificate or permit so
    54  that it may be readily accessible to any person  authorized  by  law  to
    55  examine  such  document. An employer's electronic access to such employ-

        S. 3006--C                         60                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  ment certificate or permit in the database shall meet  the  requirements
     2  of this subdivision.
     3    5.  Minor  registration. Any minor under the age of eighteen who plans
     4  to work for an employer within the state shall complete  a  registration
     5  in  the  database for any employment certificate or permit. All informa-
     6  tion pertaining to the minor shall be  confidential  and  shall  not  be
     7  accessible  by  the  public. When the minor receives a job offer from an
     8  employer, they must update their certificate or permit in  the  database
     9  to  reflect  that  employer in order for the certificate or permit to be
    10  valid.  If the minor plans to work for a different employer, or  for  an
    11  employer  in  addition  to the employer for which the minor first regis-
    12  tered, the minor shall update the minor's registration. The minor  shall
    13  be  required  to  submit  documentation for registration in the form and
    14  manner prescribed by the department.
    15    6. Issuance and revocation of employment certificate  or  permit.  (a)
    16  Any  employment  certificate  or  permit  issued pursuant to part one of
    17  article sixty-five of the education law shall be issued by  the  commis-
    18  sioner  electronically  within  the  database.    Any application for an
    19  employment certificate or permit that is made pursuant to  part  one  of
    20  article  sixty-five  of  the education law shall be made by a minor on a
    21  form prescribed by the department.
    22    (b) The chancellor in the city school district  of  the  city  of  New
    23  York, and elsewhere the superintendent of schools or the district super-
    24  intendent of schools within their respective jurisdictions, or a princi-
    25  pal  of  a nonpublic secondary school, may request that the commissioner
    26  revoke a minor's employment certificate or permit. The  requestor  shall
    27  use  the  database  to  file  this  request  and  electronically upload,
    28  disclose, or otherwise  provide  additional  information  as  necessary.
    29  Additional information may relate to: (i) an evaluation of the student's
    30  overall  academic performance and past academic record; (ii) an examina-
    31  tion of the student's attendance record; (iii) the  willingness  of  the
    32  student  to  participate  in a cooperative education program, work study
    33  program, school to work program or any other  structured  program  which
    34  provides  a  student  with  an  opportunity to earn income while earning
    35  academic credit; (iv) such other factors as the aforementioned officials
    36  identify; and (v) any material submitted by the student. Upon review  of
    37  information  provided  by  schools or gathered on their own, the commis-
    38  sioner may revoke the minor's employment certificate or permit.
    39    7.  Records. The commissioner, in consultation with  the  commissioner
    40  of  education, shall provide a method by which authorized school employ-
    41  ees acting on behalf of a school district, board of  cooperative  educa-
    42  tional  services,  or  nonpublic  school may access the database for the
    43  purpose of compliance with part one of article sixty-five of the  educa-
    44  tion  law.  The  commissioner may share information with such authorized
    45  school employees about registered minors and  request  information  from
    46  such  school  authorized  employees  about  registered  minors or minors
    47  applying for a certificate or permit. Notwithstanding any law, rule,  or
    48  regulation  to  the  contrary,  a  school district, board of cooperative
    49  educational services,  nonpublic  secondary  school  and  the  education
    50  department shall provide the commissioner with such records and informa-
    51  tion  as requested to fulfill the requirements of this section, provided
    52  that, as applied to  student  educational  records,  such  entity  shall
    53  provide  all  protections  afforded  to  parents and persons in parental
    54  relationships, or students where applicable, required  under the  family
    55  educational  rights  and  privacy  act,  20  U.S.C. section 1232g, where
    56  applicable the individuals with  disabilities  education  act,  sections

        S. 3006--C                         61                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  fourteen hundred, et seq. of title twenty of the United States code, and
     2  the federal regulations implementing such statutes.
     3    8.  Regulations.  The commissioner may prescribe regulations necessary
     4  to carry out the provisions of this section.
     5    § 5. Section 140 of the labor law, as amended by chapter  478  of  the
     6  laws of 1984, is amended to read as follows:
     7    §  140.  Enforcement of violations relating to child performers[,] and
     8  child models[, street trades, and newspaper carriers]. The  commissioner
     9  is  hereby  authorized  and empowered to prosecute violations of section
    10  35.01 of the arts and cultural affairs law, relating to  child  perform-
    11  ers, and section 35.05 of the arts and cultural affairs law, relating to
    12  child  models[, section thirty-two hundred twenty-seven of the education
    13  law, relating to street trades, and section thirty-two  hundred  twenty-
    14  eight of the education law, relating to newspaper carriers].
    15    §  6. Section 3215 of the education law, as amended by chapter 1017 of
    16  the laws of 1971, subdivision 1 and paragraph  d  of  subdivision  4  as
    17  amended  by  chapter  919  of  the  laws  of 1974, is amended to read as
    18  follows:
    19    § 3215. Unlawful employment.   1. It  shall  be  unlawful,  except  as
    20  otherwise provided by law, to employ in any trade, business or service a
    21  minor who does not present an employment certificate or permit issued in
    22  accordance  with this article and section one hundred thirty-five of the
    23  labor law.
    24    2. No minor shall be employed during the hours  when  attendance  upon
    25  instruction is required by this chapter.
    26    3.  No  minor  shall  be employed in violation of any provision of the
    27  labor law or other law.
    28    4. Exceptions.  a. When attendance upon instruction is not required by
    29  this chapter, a minor fourteen years of age  or  over  may  be  employed
    30  without  an  employment  certificate  or permit in the following occupa-
    31  tions:
    32    (1) Caddy service on a golf course;
    33    (2) Service as a baby sitter staying with and at the home  of  another
    34  child  or  children  with  or  without the presence at such home of such
    35  child or children's [parents or guardians] persons in parental relation;
    36    (3) Casual employment of a minor fourteen  or  fifteen  years  of  age
    37  consisting of yard work and household chores in and about a residence or
    38  the premises of a non-profit, non-commercial organization, not involving
    39  the use of power-driven machinery; and
    40    (4) Casual employment of a minor sixteen years of age or over consist-
    41  ing  of  yard  work and household chores in and about a residence or the
    42  premises of a non-profit, non-commercial organization, not involving the
    43  use of power-driven machinery other than power-driven machinery ordinar-
    44  ily used in such yard work or household chores.
    45    b. When attendance upon instruction is not required, a  minor  sixteen
    46  years  of  age  or  over  may  be  employed in work on a farm without an
    47  employment certificate or permit.
    48    c. Nothing in this section shall prohibit the employment  of  a  minor
    49  during the school lunch period in a school cafeteria at the school which
    50  the minor attends if the minor presents an employment certificate issued
    51  in accordance with this article.
    52    d.  Nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit the employ-
    53  ment of a minor in accordance with [sections] section thirty-two hundred
    54  twenty-six [through and including section thirty-two hundred thirty]  of
    55  this chapter.

        S. 3006--C                         62                         A. 3006--C
 
     1    e.  Nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit the employ-
     2  ment of a minor twelve years of age or over in work for [his parents  or
     3  guardians]  their  person  in  parental  relation on the home farm or at
     4  other outdoor work not connected with or  for  any  trade,  business  or
     5  service  when  attendance upon instruction is not required by this chap-
     6  ter.
     7    f. Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, an  employment
     8  certificate  or permit shall not be required for a student sixteen years
     9  of age or over who is in attendance at a recognized institution of high-
    10  er learning and who is employed by a non-profit college or university or
    11  by a non-profit college  or  university  fraternity,  sorority,  student
    12  association or faculty association.
    13    §  7.  Section 3215-a of the education law, as amended by chapter 1017
    14  of the laws of 1971 and subdivisions 1 and 2 as amended by  chapter  197
    15  of the laws of 1992, is amended to read as follows:
    16    § 3215-a. General  certification  provisions.  1.  Certificating offi-
    17  cials.  Employment certificates or permits shall be issued by the [chan-
    18  cellor in the city school district of the city of New York, and  by  the
    19  superintendent  of  schools in other school districts, provided that the
    20  district superintendent  of  schools  may  issue  such  certificates  or
    21  permits  for  students  attending classes operated by a board of cooper-
    22  ative educational services, and the principal of a  nonpublic  secondary
    23  school  may  issue  such  certificates or permits for students attending
    24  such school. The chancellor in New York city, or  elsewhere  the  super-
    25  intendent of schools or district superintendent of schools may designate
    26  in  writing the principal of the public school the minor attends or last
    27  attended or other public school official to act as  certificating  offi-
    28  cial  in  his  stead. During the months of July and August, and at other
    29  times in extraordinary circumstances and emergencies, one or more public
    30  school officials shall be designated in writing by the chancellor in New
    31  York city and elsewhere by the superintendent or district superintendent
    32  to act as certificating officials. The designation or  authorization  of
    33  certificating officials in public schools shall be subject to such limi-
    34  tations  or standards as may be prescribed by the chancellor in New York
    35  city and elsewhere by the  superintendent  or  district  superintendent]
    36  commissioner  of labor.   The commissioner of labor may share the status
    37  of a student's certificate or permit with the  chancellor  in  the  city
    38  school  district  of  the city of New York and elsewhere with the super-
    39  intendent of schools or the district superintendent  of  schools  within
    40  their  respective  jurisdictions  or  with  a  principal  of a nonpublic
    41  secondary school for a student attending such school.
    42    2. Revocation. Employment certificates or permits may be revoked  [for
    43  cause]  by  the [chancellor in New York city and elsewhere by the super-
    44  intendent of schools or the district superintendent  of  schools  within
    45  their  respective  jurisdictions,  or,  by  a  principal  of a nonpublic
    46  secondary school for a student attending such school.  Where  a  student
    47  who  is required to attend school pursuant to section thirty-two hundred
    48  five of this article has failed no less than four  academic  courses  in
    49  one  semester, the chancellor in New York city, and elsewhere the super-
    50  intendent of schools or the district superintendent  of  schools  within
    51  their  respective jurisdictions, or a principal of a nonpublic secondary
    52  school may revoke such student's employment certificate  or  permit.  In
    53  determining  whether  to revoke an employment certificate or permit, the
    54  chancellor in New York city, and elsewhere the superintendent of schools
    55  or the district superintendent of schools within their respective juris-
    56  dictions, or a principal of a nonpublic secondary school, shall  consid-

        S. 3006--C                         63                         A. 3006--C

     1  er,  (1) an evaluation of the student's overall academic performance and
     2  past academic record; (2) an examination  of  the  student's  attendance
     3  record;  (3)  the  economic  need of the student's family for the income
     4  provided  by  the student; (4) the willingness of the student to partic-
     5  ipate in a cooperative education program, work study program, school  to
     6  work  program  or  any other structured program which provides a student
     7  with an opportunity to earn income while earning  academic  credit;  (5)
     8  such other factors as the aforementioned officials identify; and (6) any
     9  material  submitted  by  the  student] commissioner of labor pursuant to
    10  section one hundred thirty-five of the labor law.
    11    Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, nothing in  this  section
    12  shall  be  construed to prevent any student from obtaining an employment
    13  certificate or permit for the purpose of working during  the  months  of
    14  July and August.
    15    3.  Approval  of  form  and  contents. The commissioner of [education]
    16  labor,  in  consultation  with  the  commissioner  of  education,  shall
    17  prescribe  [or  approve]  the  form  and  contents  of all certificates,
    18  permits, [physical examination records,] and schooling records  required
    19  by  part one of this article for employment purposes and consistent with
    20  section one hundred thirty-five of the labor  law.  [The  form  of  such
    21  certificates  and  permits  shall also be subject to the approval of the
    22  industrial commissioner] Any employment  certificate  or  permit  issued
    23  pursuant to this part shall be issued electronically within the database
    24  created  and maintained by the department of labor, in consultation with
    25  and with support from the department, pursuant to  section  one  hundred
    26  thirty-five of the labor law.
    27    §  8. Section 3216 of the education law, as amended by chapter 1017 of
    28  the laws of 1971 and subdivision 3 as amended by chapter 919 of the laws
    29  of 1974, is amended to read as follows:
    30    § 3216. Employment certificates.  1. A student non-factory  employment
    31  certificate  may  be  issued to a minor fourteen or fifteen years of age
    32  who is attending day school. The certificate shall be valid for work  in
    33  a  trade,  business or service, but shall not be valid for work in or in
    34  connection with a factory except as  provided  in  subdivision  four  of
    35  section one hundred thirty-one of the labor law.
    36    2.  A  student general employment certificate may be issued to a minor
    37  sixteen or seventeen years of age who is attending day school. It  shall
    38  be valid for work in or in connection with a factory or any other trade,
    39  business or service.
    40    3. A full-time employment certificate may be issued to a minor sixteen
    41  or  seventeen  years  of  age  who  is  not  attending day school or who
    42  declares [his] their intention to leave day school for full-time employ-
    43  ment. It shall be valid for work in or in connection with a  factory  or
    44  any other trade, business or service. A full-time employment certificate
    45  also  may  be  issued  to  a minor who is a graduate of a four-year high
    46  school, but if such minor is under sixteen years of age the  certificate
    47  shall not be valid for work in or in connection with a factory except as
    48  provided  in  subdivision  four of section one hundred and thirty-one of
    49  the labor law.
    50    4. [A limited employment certificate may  be  issued  as  provided  in
    51  subdivision two of section thirty-two hundred twenty of this article.
    52    5.  A  special  employment  certificate  may  be issued as provided in
    53  section thirty-two hundred twenty-five of this article.
    54    6.] An employment certificate shall be valid not only for the  initial
    55  employment  but also for subsequent employments in work permitted by the
    56  particular type of certificate, provided  that  the  minor  has  updated

        S. 3006--C                         64                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  their  electronic  registration  to  reflect  the subsequent employer as
     2  required by section one hundred thirty-five of the labor law.
     3    [7.] 5. An employment certificate shall expire two years from the date
     4  of  its  issuance,  except  as  otherwise  provided  in this article. No
     5  employment certificate shall be valid for employment in violation of any
     6  provision of the labor law or rules issued thereunder.
     7    [8.] 6. An employment certificate shall be kept on file at  the  place
     8  of  the  minor's employment [and shall be returned to the minor when the
     9  employment terminates] or be readily accessible to any person authorized
    10  by law to examine such document in  accordance  with  the  recordkeeping
    11  requirements  set  forth in section one hundred thirty-five of the labor
    12  law.
    13    § 9. Section 3217 of the education law, as amended by chapter 1017  of
    14  the laws of 1971, is amended to read as follows:
    15    § 3217. Procedure  for  issuance  of employment certificates.   1.  An
    16  application for an employment certificate shall be made by a minor [on a
    17  form] in the manner prescribed by the commissioner of [education]  labor
    18  and  consistent with the requirements of section one hundred thirty-five
    19  of the labor law.
    20    2. Before issuing an employment certificate the issuing official shall
    21  require the minor to submit the following:
    22    a. Evidence of age;
    23    b. Written consent of the [parent  or  guardian]  person  in  parental
    24  relation  as  defined in section thirty-two hundred twelve of this part;
    25  and
    26    c. [A certificate of physical fitness; and
    27    d.] If the application is for a full-time  employment  certificate,  a
    28  schooling record.
    29    In  addition,  in a city or school district which, pursuant to section
    30  thirty-two hundred five, subdivision three, of  this  article,  requires
    31  minors  from  sixteen  to seventeen years of age who are not employed to
    32  attend school, the certificating official shall require a minor applying
    33  for a full-time employment certificate to submit the following:
    34    a. A pledge of employment; and
    35    b. A schooling record.
    36    § 10. Section 3219 of the education law is REPEALED.
    37    § 11. Section 3220 of the education law is REPEALED.
    38    § 12. Section 3221 of the education law, as amended by chapter 1017 of
    39  the laws of 1971, is amended to read as follows:
    40    § 3221. Pledge of employment.   The  pledge  of  employment  shall  be
    41  [signed]  completed  in  the  method  prescribed pursuant to section one
    42  hundred thirty-five of the labor law by the initial prospective employer
    43  or [his] their authorized representative and shall show [his] their name
    44  and place of business, the minor's name, the number of days per week and
    45  the number of hours per day and per week during which [he] they will  be
    46  employed,  the  hours  of  the beginning and the ending of work, and the
    47  nature and type of the employment.
    48    § 13. Section 3223 of the education law, as amended by chapter 1017 of
    49  the laws of 1971, is amended to read as follows:
    50    § 3223.  Duties of employers.  The employer of any minor  required  to
    51  have an employment certificate:
    52    1.  Shall [satisfy himself] personally confirm that the minor present-
    53  ing an employment certificate is in fact the minor named therein.
    54    2. Shall before employment begins, physically or  electronically  file
    55  at  the  place of the minor's employment such certificate so that it may
    56  be readily accessible to any authorized person to examine such document.

        S. 3006--C                         65                         A. 3006--C

     1    3. Shall, upon termination of  the  minor's  employment,  [return  the
     2  employment  certificate to the minor] destroy any physical or electronic
     3  copies of such certificate.
     4    §  14.  Section  3224 of the education law, as added by chapter 975 of
     5  the laws of 1966, is amended to read as follows:
     6    § 3224. Temporary services.  a. If an employer is engaged in  a  busi-
     7  ness of assigning employees for temporary services at another establish-
     8  ment,  and  the  employer  compensates  the  employee  for such services
     9  rendered the employer shall keep on file [in his office]  physically  in
    10  office  or  electronically and readily accessible the employment certif-
    11  icate and shall cause to be delivered to each  establishment  where  the
    12  child  will  perform  [his]  the services a true copy of such employment
    13  certificate. Such delivery shall  be  deemed  compliance  with  sections
    14  thirty-two  hundred  sixteen and thirty-two hundred twenty-three of this
    15  [chapter] part and section one hundred thirty-five of the labor law. The
    16  owner of each establishment to which the child is assigned  shall  [keep
    17  on file in his office such] also retain a copy of the employment certif-
    18  icate[,  which  shall  be  deemed  compliance  with  sections thirty-two
    19  hundred sixteen and thirty-two hundred twenty-three  of  this  chapter,]
    20  and  shall  return  such  copy  to the employer at the conclusion of the
    21  child's assignment.  Such employer shall note on the original employment
    22  certificate the existence of each copy.
    23    b. As used in this section, the term "establishment" includes a facto-
    24  ry, mercantile establishment, business office, restaurant, hotel and any
    25  other trade, business or service.
    26    c. The commissioner of education may promulgate rules and  regulations
    27  as  [he  deems]  they  deem necessary to [insure] ensure that employment
    28  under the provisions of this section shall not be harmful or undesirable
    29  from the point of view of the welfare, development, or proper  education
    30  of the child.
    31    § 15. Sections 3225, 3227, and 3228 of the education law are REPEALED.
    32    §  16.  Section  3226 of the education law, as added by chapter 975 of
    33  the laws of 1966, is amended to read as follows:
    34    § 3226. Farm work permits.  1. A farm work permit may be issued  to  a
    35  minor  fourteen  or  fifteen years of age authorizing employment in farm
    36  service.
    37    2. A farm work permit also may be issued to a minor over twelve  years
    38  of  age for employment in assisting in the hand work harvest of berries,
    39  fruits and vegetables pursuant to paragraph  e  of  subdivision  two  of
    40  section one hundred thirty of the labor law.
    41    3.  To  obtain a farm work permit a minor shall present to the issuing
    42  officer the following:
    43    a. Evidence of age; and
    44    b. Written consent of the [parent or guardian; and
    45    c. A certificate of physical fitness] person in parental  relation  as
    46  defined in section thirty-two hundred twelve of this article.
    47    4.  Such  permit  shall  be valid only when signed by the employer and
    48  subject only to the condition that it shall not be valid for work in  or
    49  in connection with a factory.
    50    5.  A  farm  work permit shall not be required for the employment of a
    51  minor sixteen years of age or over in farm service.
    52    § 17. This act shall take effect two years after it shall have  become
    53  a  law.  Effective immediately, the addition, amendment and/or repeal of
    54  any rule or regulation necessary for the implementation of this  act  on
    55  its  effective date are authorized to be made and completed on or before
    56  such date.

        S. 3006--C                         66                         A. 3006--C
 
     1                                   PART Y
 
     2    Section  1. The section heading, paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of subdi-
     3  vision 1, paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of subdivision 2,  and  paragraphs
     4  (a),  (b)  and  (c)  of  subdivision  3  of  section 26 of the veterans'
     5  services law are amended to read as follows:
     6    Payment to [parents] immediate family members of veterans.
     7    (a) (i) A parent, spouse, or minor child identified in 10 USC 1126  as
     8  a gold star parent, spouse, or minor child; or (ii) a parent, spouse, or
     9  minor  child  of  a  veteran  who  [heretofore has died or a parent of a
    10  veteran dying hereafter] died while on active duty, shall upon  applica-
    11  tion  to  the  state  commissioner, be paid an annual annuity out of the
    12  treasury of the state for the sum of five hundred dollars for such  term
    13  as  such  parent, spouse, or minor child shall be entitled thereto under
    14  the provisions of this article. Commencing  in  the  year  two  thousand
    15  nineteen,  the amount of any annuity payable under this section shall be
    16  the same amount as the annuity payable in  the  preceding  year  plus  a
    17  percentage  adjustment  equal to the annual percentage increase, if any,
    18  for compensation and pension benefits administered by the United  States
    19  Department  of  Veterans  Affairs  in the previous year. Such percentage
    20  increase shall be rounded up  to  the  next  highest  one-tenth  of  one
    21  percent  and  shall  not  be  less  than  one percent nor more than four
    22  percent. The commissioner of veterans' services, not later than February
    23  first of each year, shall publish by any reasonable means, including but
    24  not limited to posting on the department's website, the  amount  of  the
    25  annuity  as  adjusted  payable under this section. The term "parent" for
    26  the purposes of this section includes mother, father, stepmother,  step-
    27  father,  mother  through adoption and father through adoption.  The term
    28  "spouse" for the purposes of this section means a  person  who  was  the
    29  spouse  or domestic partner of the veteran at the time of such veteran's
    30  death regardless of whether such person has remarried or entered into  a
    31  new  domestic  partnership  since  such veteran's death. The term "minor
    32  child" for the purposes of this section means a person who is under  the
    33  age of eighteen years, or who, after attaining the age of eighteen years
    34  and  until  completion of education or training, but not after attaining
    35  the age of twenty-three years, is pursuing a course of instruction at an
    36  approved educational institution and who is  the  biological,  step,  or
    37  adopted  child of a veteran. The term "active duty" for purposes of this
    38  section shall have the same meaning as such term is defined  in  section
    39  101  of  title  38 of the United States code, and shall also include any
    40  period of active duty for training during which the individual concerned
    41  died from a disease or injury incurred or  aggravated  in  the  line  of
    42  duty,  or any period of inactive duty training during which the individ-
    43  ual concerned died from an injury incurred or aggravated in the line  of
    44  duty  or  from  an  acute  myocardial infarction, a cardiac arrest, or a
    45  cerebrovascular accident which occurred during such training. The  terms
    46  "active duty for training" and "inactive duty training" for the purposes
    47  of this section shall have the same meaning as such terms are defined in
    48  section 101 of title 38 of the United States code.
    49    (b)  The  entitlement of any parent, spouse, or minor child to receive
    50  the annuity provided by paragraph (a) of this subdivision  shall  termi-
    51  nate  upon  [his or her] such parent's, spouse's, or minor child's death
    52  or upon [his or her] such parent's, spouse's, or minor  child's  ceasing
    53  to  continue to be a resident of and domiciled in the state of New York,
    54  but such entitlement may be reinstated upon  application  to  the  state
    55  commissioner,  if  such  parent, spouse, or minor child shall thereafter

        S. 3006--C                         67                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  resume [his or her] such parent's, spouse's, or minor child's  residence
     2  and domicile in the state.
     3    (c) The effective date of an award of the annuity to a parent, spouse,
     4  or  minor  child shall be the day after the date of death of the veteran
     5  if the application therefor is received within one  year  from  date  of
     6  death.  If the application is received after the expiration of the first
     7  year following the date of the death of the veteran, the effective  date
     8  of  an award of the annuity to a parent, spouse, or minor child shall be
     9  the date of receipt of the application by the state commissioner. If the
    10  application is denied but is granted at a later date upon an application
    11  for reconsideration based upon new evidence, the effective date  of  the
    12  award  of  the  annuity to a parent, spouse, or minor child shall be the
    13  date of the receipt of the application for reconsideration by the  state
    14  commissioner.
    15    (a)  Any gold star parent, spouse, or minor child, [who is the parent]
    16  of a deceased veteran, [and] or a parent, spouse, or minor  child  of  a
    17  veteran  pursuant  to  subparagraph (ii) of paragraph (a) of subdivision
    18  one of this section, who is a resident of and domiciled in the state  of
    19  New York, [shall] may make application to the department.
    20    (b)  No  entitlement shall be paid under this section to or for a gold
    21  star parent, spouse, or minor child, or a parent, spouse, or minor child
    22  of a veteran pursuant to subparagraph (ii) of paragraph (a) of  subdivi-
    23  sion one of this section, who is in prison in a federal, state, or local
    24  penal  institution  as a result of conviction of a felony or misdemeanor
    25  for any part of the period beginning sixty-one days after [his  or  her]
    26  such parent's, spouse's, or minor child's imprisonment begins and ending
    27  with [his or her] such parent's, spouse's, or minor child's release.
    28    (c) Where one or more gold star parents, spouse, or minor children, or
    29  parents, spouse, or minor children of a veteran pursuant to subparagraph
    30  (ii)  of paragraph (a) of subdivision one of this section, are disquali-
    31  fied for the annuity for a period under paragraph (b) of  this  subdivi-
    32  sion,  the  state commissioner shall pay the shares of such disqualified
    33  parents, spouse, or minor children to the other parents or  minor  chil-
    34  dren, if they meet the qualifications on their own.
    35    (a)  Evidence  of the military service of the deceased veteran [of the
    36  gold star parent] for each case shall be furnished  in  the  manner  and
    37  form prescribed by the state commissioner.
    38    (b)  Upon  being satisfied that such service was honorable, that other
    39  facts and statements in  the  application  of  such  gold  star  parent,
    40  spouse,  or  minor  child or parent, spouse, or minor child of a veteran
    41  pursuant to subparagraph (ii) of paragraph (a)  of  subdivision  one  of
    42  this  section,  are  true,  the  state commissioner shall certify to the
    43  state comptroller the name and address of such gold star parent, spouse,
    44  or minor child, or parent, spouse, or minor child of a veteran  pursuant
    45  to  subparagraph  (ii)  of  paragraph  (a)  of  subdivision  one of this
    46  section.
    47    (c) Thereafter, the department of taxation and finance, on  the  audit
    48  and warrant of the comptroller, shall pay such gold star parent, spouse,
    49  or  minor child, or parent, spouse, or minor child of a veteran pursuant
    50  to subparagraph (ii)  of  paragraph  (a)  of  subdivision  one  of  this
    51  section,  such sum as is authorized by the provisions of this section in
    52  semi-annual installments for so long as such qualified gold star parent,
    53  spouse, or minor child, or parent, spouse, or minor child of  a  veteran
    54  pursuant  to  subparagraph  (ii)  of paragraph (a) of subdivision one of
    55  this section, shall meet the requirements of this section.

        S. 3006--C                         68                         A. 3006--C

     1    § 1-a.  The  commissioner  of  veterans'  services  shall  conduct  an
     2  outreach program for the purpose of informing the public and persons who
     3  may  be eligible to receive an annuity under section 26 of the veterans'
     4  services law of the amendments made to such section by  section  one  of
     5  this act. Such outreach activities shall include, but not be limited to,
     6  an announcement on the department of veterans' services official website
     7  and,  to the extent practicable, making contact with any parent, spouse,
     8  domestic partner or minor child of a service member known to  have  died
     9  on active duty prior to the effective date of this act and subsequent to
    10  such  date,  to  inform  such  persons of their potential eligibility to
    11  receive an annuity and to offer assistance in preparing  an  application
    12  for  such  benefit.  The commissioner of veterans' services may seek the
    13  assistance of the division of military and  naval  affairs  and  federal
    14  military  authorities  in  identifying  persons  who  may be eligible to
    15  receive an annuity under section 26 of the veterans' services law.
    16    § 2. This act shall take effect immediately.
 
    17                                   PART Z
 
    18                            Intentionally Omitted
 
    19                                   PART AA
 
    20    Section 1.  On or before September 1, 2025, the commissioner of educa-
    21  tion shall submit a report to the governor, the speaker of the assembly,
    22  and the temporary president of the senate providing information  regard-
    23  ing  usage,  budgeting,  staffing, assets, and functions of the New York
    24  state museum in a form and manner as determined by the director  of  the
    25  budget.    Such report shall include but not be limited to the following
    26  information:
    27    1. Annual statistics for state fiscal years  2004-05  through  2024-25
    28  for the following categories:
    29    (a) visitorship by month;
    30    (b) philanthropic donations, either monetary or in-kind;
    31    (c) school student visitorship;
    32    (d) marketing, advertising, and promotional expenditures;
    33    (e) staffing levels and expenditures for each office of the museum;
    34    (f) capital expenditures;
    35    (g) museum revenue from sources other than state aid; and
    36    (h) balance of total revenues and operating expenses;
    37    2.  A  summary  of current agreements with other cultural institutions
    38  regarding loan or exchange of collections;
    39    3. Current collections on display and length of time on display;
    40    4. Current collections in possession of the museum but not on display;
    41    5. New collections scheduled to go on display in the next five years;
    42    6. A listing of special events, exhibitions, tours, limited or travel-
    43  ing displays, and other events not  included  in  information  regarding
    44  normal displayed collections over the prior five years;
    45    7. A listing of any ancillary services provided at the museum, includ-
    46  ing but not limited to food service, retail, or walking tours; and
    47    8.  Usage  over the prior five years of the state museum collection by
    48  federal agencies, New York state agencies, local governments, and  other
    49  governmental entities, whether for display or research purposes.
    50    §  2.  On  or  before  September  1, 2026 and annually thereafter, the
    51  commissioner shall submit a report to the governor, the speaker  of  the

        S. 3006--C                         69                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  assembly,  and  the  temporary president of the senate including updated
     2  information from the prior state fiscal year supplementing the  informa-
     3  tion provided in the report required by section one of this act.
     4    § 3. This act shall take effect immediately.
 
     5                                   PART BB
 
     6    Section  1.  Subdivisions  1 and 3 of section 592 of the labor law, as
     7  amended by chapter 20 of the laws  of  2020,  are  amended  to  read  as
     8  follows:
     9    1. Industrial controversy. (a) The accumulation of benefit rights by a
    10  claimant  shall  be suspended during a period of [two consecutive weeks]
    11  one week beginning with the day after such claimant lost  [his  or  her]
    12  their  employment  because  of  a strike or other industrial controversy
    13  except for lockouts, including  concerted  activity  not  authorized  or
    14  sanctioned by the recognized or certified bargaining agent of the claim-
    15  ant, and other concerted activity conducted in violation of any existing
    16  collective  bargaining  agreement,  in the establishment in which [he or
    17  she] such claimant was employed, except that benefit rights may be accu-
    18  mulated before the expiration of such [two] one  week  period  beginning
    19  with  the  day  after  such  strike  or other industrial controversy was
    20  terminated.
    21    (b) Benefits shall not be suspended under this section if:
    22    (i) The employer hires a permanent replacement worker for the  employ-
    23  ee's  position.  A  replacement worker shall be presumed to be permanent
    24  unless the employer certifies in writing that the employee will be  able
    25  to return to [his or her] such employee's prior position upon conclusion
    26  of  the  strike, in the event the strike terminates prior to the conclu-
    27  sion of the employee's eligibility for benefit rights under  this  chap-
    28  ter.  In  the  event the employer does not permit such return after such
    29  certification, the employee shall be entitled to  recover  any  benefits
    30  lost  as  a result of the [two] one week suspension of benefits, and the
    31  department may impose a penalty upon the employer of up to seven hundred
    32  fifty dollars per employee  per  week  of  benefits  lost.  The  penalty
    33  collected  shall  be  paid  into the unemployment insurance control fund
    34  established pursuant to section five hundred fifty-two-b of  this  arti-
    35  cle; or
    36    (ii) The commissioner determines that the claimant:
    37    (A)  is not employed by an employer that is involved in the industrial
    38  controversy that caused [his or her] such claimant's unemployment and is
    39  not participating in the industrial controversy; or
    40    (B) is not in a bargaining unit involved in the industrial controversy
    41  that caused [his or her] such claimant's unemployment and is not partic-
    42  ipating in the industrial controversy.
    43    3. Terms of suspension. No waiting  period  may  be  served  during  a
    44  suspension period.
    45    The  suspension  of accumulation of benefit rights shall not be termi-
    46  nated by subsequent employment of the claimant irrespective of when  the
    47  claim is filed except as provided in subdivision one of this section and
    48  shall not be confined to a single benefit year.
    49    A  "week"  as  used in subdivision one of this section means any seven
    50  consecutive calendar days.
    51    § 2. This act shall take effect immediately.
 
    52                                   PART CC

        S. 3006--C                         70                         A. 3006--C
 
     1    Section 1. Section 410-y of the  social  services  law,  as  added  by
     2  section  52  of part B of chapter 436 of the laws of 1997, is amended to
     3  read as follows:
     4    § 410-y. Maintenance of effort. 1. Each social services district shall
     5  maintain the amount of local funds spent for child care assistance under
     6  the  child  care  block  grant  at  a level equal to or greater than the
     7  amount the district spent  for  child  care  assistance  during  federal
     8  fiscal year nineteen hundred ninety-five under title IV-A of the federal
     9  social  security  act,  the  federal  child care development block grant
    10  program and the state low income child care program; provided however, a
    11  social services district for a city of a population of a million or more
    12  shall spend local funds for child care assistance at an amount  no  less
    13  than three hundred twenty-eight million dollars.
    14    2.  If the state fails to meet the level of state and local child care
    15  funding necessary to maintain the federal matching funds for child  care
    16  assistance  available  under  title  IV-a of the federal social security
    17  act, the  state  shall  withhold  funding  from  those  social  services
    18  districts  which  spent  a  lower  amount  of local funds for child care
    19  assistance than the amount [they spent during federal fiscal year  nine-
    20  teen  hundred  ninety-five] required by subdivision one of this section,
    21  based on a formula established in department regulations, equal  to  the
    22  amount of the matching funds which have been lost.
    23    § 2. This act shall take effect October 1, 2025.

    24                                   PART DD
 
    25    Section  1. The penal law is amended by adding a new section 205.35 to
    26  read as follows:
    27  § 205.35 Evading arrest by concealment of identity.
    28    A person is guilty of evading arrest by concealment of identity  when,
    29  in the course of the commission of a felony or class A misdemeanor or in
    30  the  immediate  flight  therefrom,  such  person  wears a mask or facial
    31  covering or otherwise obscures their face, completely or partially,  for
    32  no  legitimate  purpose with the intent to prevent their identification,
    33  apprehension, or arrest for such crime.
    34    Evading arrest by concealment of identity is a class B misdemeanor.
    35    § 2. This shall take effect on the thirtieth day after it  shall  have
    36  become a law.

    37                                   PART EE
 
    38    Section  1.    Subparagraph  (iv) of paragraph (d) of subdivision 1 of
    39  section 803 of the correction law, as separately amended by chapters 242
    40  and 322 of the laws of 2021, is amended to read as follows:
    41    (iv) Such merit time allowance may be  granted  when  an  incarcerated
    42  individual  successfully  participates in the work and treatment program
    43  assigned pursuant to section eight hundred five of this article and when
    44  such incarcerated individual obtains a general equivalency  diploma,  an
    45  alcohol  and  substance  abuse treatment certificate, a vocational trade
    46  certificate following at least six months of vocational programming,  at
    47  least  eighteen  credits  in a program registered by the state education
    48  department  from  a  degree-granting  higher  education  institution  or
    49  performs  at  least four hundred hours of service as part of a community
    50  work crew.  The  commissioner  may  designate  additional  programs  and
    51  achievements for which merit time may be granted.

        S. 3006--C                         71                         A. 3006--C
 
     1    Such  allowance shall be withheld for any serious disciplinary infrac-
     2  tion or upon a judicial determination that the person, while  an  incar-
     3  cerated individual, commenced or continued a civil action, proceeding or
     4  claim  that  was  found to be frivolous as defined in subdivision (c) of
     5  section  eight  thousand three hundred three-a of the civil practice law
     6  and rules, or an order of a federal court pursuant to  rule  11  of  the
     7  federal  rules  of  civil  procedure  imposing  sanctions  in  an action
     8  commenced by a person, while an incarcerated individual, against a state
     9  agency, officer or employee.
    10    § 2. Subparagraph (xii) of paragraph (c) of subdivision 1  of  section
    11  803-b  of  the  correction law, as amended by chapter 322 of the laws of
    12  2021, is amended and a new subparagraph  (xiii)  is  added  to  read  as
    13  follows:
    14    (xii)  receives  a  certificate  from the food production center in an
    15  assigned position following the completion of no less than eight hundred
    16  hours of work in such position, and continues to work for an  additional
    17  eighteen months at the food production center[.]; or
    18    (xiii)  successfully  completes  a  program  of not less than eighteen
    19  months as established by the commissioner.
    20    § 3.  This act shall take effect on  the  one  hundred  twentieth  day
    21  after  it  shall have become a law and shall apply to offenses committed
    22  prior to, on or after the effective date of this act; provided that  the
    23  amendments  to  section 803 of the correction law made by section one of
    24  this act shall be subject  to  the  expiration  and  reversion  of  such
    25  section pursuant to subdivision d of section 74 of chapter 3 of the laws
    26  of 1995, as amended.
 
    27                                   PART FF
 
    28    Section 1. Definitions. As used in this act:
    29    (a) "Commissioner" shall mean the commissioner of education;
    30    (b) "Department" shall mean the state education department;
    31    (c)  "Board of education" or "board" shall mean the board of education
    32  of the Mount Vernon city school district;
    33    (d) "School district" or "district" shall mean the Mount  Vernon  city
    34  school district;
    35    (e) "Superintendent" shall mean the superintendent of the Mount Vernon
    36  city school district; and
    37    (f)  "Relatives"  shall mean a Mount Vernon city school district board
    38  member's spouse, domestic partner, child, stepchild, stepparent, or  any
    39  person who is a direct descendant of the grandparents of a current board
    40  member or a board member's spouse or domestic partner.
    41    §  2.  Appointment  of  a  monitor. The commissioner shall appoint one
    42  monitor to provide oversight, guidance and technical assistance  related
    43  to  the  educational  and fiscal policies, practices, programs and deci-
    44  sions of the school district, the board of education and the superinten-
    45  dent.
    46    (a) The monitor, to the extent practicable, shall have  experience  in
    47  school district finances and one or more of the following areas:
    48    (i) elementary and secondary education;
    49    (ii) the operation of school districts in New York;
    50    (iii) educating students with disabilities; and
    51    (iv) educating English language learners.
    52    (b)  The  monitor shall be a non-voting ex-officio member of the board
    53  of education. The monitor shall be an individual who is not a  resident,

        S. 3006--C                         72                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  employee  of  the  school  district or relative of a board member of the
     2  school district at the time of their appointment.
     3    (c)  The  reasonable  and  necessary  expenses incurred by the monitor
     4  while performing their official duties  shall  be  paid  by  the  school
     5  district.  Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the monitor shall
     6  be entitled to defense and indemnification by the school district to the
     7  same extent as a school district employee.
     8    §  3.  Meetings. (a) The monitor shall be entitled to attend all meet-
     9  ings of the board, including executive sessions; provided however,  such
    10  monitor shall not be considered for purposes of establishing a quorum of
    11  the  board.  The  school district shall fully cooperate with the monitor
    12  including, but not limited to, providing such monitor with access to any
    13  necessary documents and records of  the  district  including  access  to
    14  electronic   information  systems,  databases  and  planning  documents,
    15  consistent with all applicable state and federal statutes including, but
    16  not limited to, Family Education Rights  and  Privacy  Act  (FERPA)  (20
    17  U.S.C. § 1232g) and section 2-d of the education law.
    18    (b)  The  board,  in  consultation  with  the  monitor,  shall adopt a
    19  conflict of interest policy that complies with all  existing  applicable
    20  laws,  rules and regulations that ensures its board members and adminis-
    21  tration act in the school  district's  best  interest  and  comply  with
    22  applicable  legal  requirements.  The  conflict of interest policy shall
    23  include, but not be limited to:
    24    (i) a definition of the circumstances that constitute  a  conflict  of
    25  interest;
    26    (ii) procedures for disclosing a conflict of interest to the board;
    27    (iii)  a requirement that the person with the conflict of interest not
    28  be present at or participate in board  deliberations  or  votes  on  the
    29  matter  giving  rise  to  such  conflict,  provided that nothing in this
    30  subdivision shall prohibit the board from  requesting  that  the  person
    31  with  the  conflict  of  interest  present  information as background or
    32  answer questions at a board meeting prior to the commencement of  delib-
    33  erations or voting relating thereto;
    34    (iv) a prohibition against any attempt by the person with the conflict
    35  to  influence improperly the deliberation or voting on the matter giving
    36  rise to such conflict; and
    37    (v) a requirement that the existence and resolution of the conflict be
    38  documented in the board's records, including in the minutes of any meet-
    39  ing at which the conflict was discussed or voted upon.
    40    § 4. Public hearings. (a) The  monitor  shall  schedule  three  public
    41  hearings  to be held within sixty days of their appointment, which shall
    42  allow public comment from the district's residents,  students,  parents,
    43  employees, board members and administration.
    44    (i)  The first hearing shall take public comment on existing statutory
    45  and regulatory authority of the commissioner,  the  department  and  the
    46  board  of  regents regarding school district governance and intervention
    47  under applicable state law and regulations, including  but  not  limited
    48  to, sections 306, 211-c, and 211-f of the education law.
    49    (ii)  The  second  hearing  shall  take public comment on the academic
    50  performance of the district.
    51    (iii) The third hearing  shall  take  public  comment  on  the  fiscal
    52  performance of the district.
    53    (b) The board of education and the monitor shall consider these public
    54  comments  when  developing  the  financial plan and academic improvement
    55  plan under this act.

        S. 3006--C                         73                         A. 3006--C
 
     1    § 5. Financial plan. (a) No later than November 1, 2025, the board  of
     2  education  and  the  monitor shall develop a proposed financial plan for
     3  the 2025--2026 school year and the four  subsequent  school  years.  The
     4  financial  plan  shall  ensure  that annual aggregate operating expenses
     5  shall  not  exceed  annual  aggregate operating revenues for such school
     6  year and that the major operating funds of the district be  balanced  in
     7  accordance  with generally accepted accounting principles. The financial
     8  plan shall include statements of all estimated  revenues,  expenditures,
     9  and cash flow projections of the district.
    10    (b)  If  the  board  of  education  and  the  monitor agree on all the
    11  elements of the proposed financial plan, the board  of  education  shall
    12  conduct  a  public  hearing  on  the  plan and consider the input of the
    13  community. The proposed financial plan  shall  be  made  public  on  the
    14  district's website at least three business days before such public hear-
    15  ing.  Once the proposed financial plan has been approved by the board of
    16  education, such plan shall be submitted by the monitor  to  the  commis-
    17  sioner  for  approval  and  shall be deemed approved for the purposes of
    18  this act.
    19    (c) If the board of education and the monitor do not agree on all  the
    20  elements  of  the  proposed financial plan, the board of education shall
    21  conduct a public hearing on the proposed plan that details the  elements
    22  of  disagreement between the monitor and the board, including documented
    23  justification for such disagreements and any requested  amendments  from
    24  the  monitor. The proposed financial plan, elements of disagreement, and
    25  requested amendments shall be made public on the district's  website  at
    26  least  three business days before such public hearing. After considering
    27  the input of the community, the board may alter the  proposed  financial
    28  plan and the monitor may alter their requested amendments, and the moni-
    29  tor  shall  submit  the proposed financial plan, their amendments to the
    30  plan, and documentation providing justification for  such  disagreements
    31  and  amendments  to the commissioner no later than December 1, 2025.  By
    32  January 15, 2026, the commissioner shall approve the proposed plan  with
    33  any  of  the monitor's proposed amendments, or make other modifications,
    34  such commissioner  deems  appropriate.  The  board  of  education  shall
    35  provide the commissioner with any information such commissioner requests
    36  to  approve  such  plan within three business days of such request. Upon
    37  the approval of the commissioner, the financial  plan  shall  be  deemed
    38  approved for purposes of this act.
    39    §  6.  Academic  improvement plan. (a) No later than November 1, 2025,
    40  the board of  education  and  the  monitor  shall  develop  an  academic
    41  improvement  plan for the district's 2025--2026 school year and the four
    42  subsequent school years. The academic improvement plan shall  contain  a
    43  series  of  programmatic  recommendations  designed  to improve academic
    44  performance over the period of the plan in those academic areas that the
    45  commissioner deems to be in need  of  improvement  which  shall  include
    46  addressing  the provisions contained in any action plan set forth by the
    47  department.
    48    (b) If the board of  education  and  the  monitor  agree  on  all  the
    49  elements  of the proposed academic improvement plan, the board of educa-
    50  tion shall conduct a public hearing on the plan and consider  the  input
    51  of  the  community. The proposed academic improvement plan shall be made
    52  public on the district's website at least  three  business  days  before
    53  such  public  hearing.  Once  the proposed academic improvement plan has
    54  been approved by the board of education, such plan shall be submitted by
    55  the monitor to  the  commissioner  for  approval  and  shall  be  deemed
    56  approved for the purposes of this act.

        S. 3006--C                         74                         A. 3006--C
 
     1    (c)  If the board of education and the monitor do not agree on all the
     2  elements of the proposed academic improvement plan, the board of  educa-
     3  tion  shall  conduct  a public hearing on the proposed plan that details
     4  the elements of disagreement between the monitor and the board,  includ-
     5  ing  documented  justification  for such disagreements and any requested
     6  amendments from the monitor. The  proposed  academic  improvement  plan,
     7  elements  of disagreement, and requested amendments shall be made public
     8  on the district's website at  least  three  business  days  before  such
     9  public  hearing. After considering the input of the community, the board
    10  may alter the proposed academic improvement plan  and  the  monitor  may
    11  alter  their  requested  amendments,  and  the  monitor shall submit the
    12  proposed academic improvement plan, their amendments to  the  plan,  and
    13  documentation  providing justification for such disagreements and amend-
    14  ments to the commissioner no later than December 1, 2025. By January 15,
    15  2026, the commissioner shall approve the proposed plan with any  of  the
    16  monitor's proposed amendments, or make other modifications, such commis-
    17  sioner  deems  appropriate.  The  board  of  education shall provide the
    18  commissioner with any information such commissioner requests to  approve
    19  such  plan within three business days of such request. Upon the approval
    20  of the commissioner, the  academic  improvement  plan  shall  be  deemed
    21  approved for purposes of this act.
    22    §  7.  Fiscal  and  operational  oversight. (a) The board of education
    23  shall annually submit the school district's proposed budget for the next
    24  succeeding school year to the monitor no later than March first prior to
    25  the school district's annual budget vote. The monitor shall  review  the
    26  proposed  budget  to  ensure  that  it is balanced within the context of
    27  revenue and expenditure estimates and  mandated  programs.  The  monitor
    28  shall also review the proposed budget to ensure that it, to the greatest
    29  extent  possible,  is  consistent with the district academic improvement
    30  plan and financial plan developed and approved pursuant to this act. The
    31  monitor shall present their findings to the board of education  and  the
    32  commissioner  no  later than forty-five days prior to the date scheduled
    33  for the school district's annual budget  vote.  The  commissioner  shall
    34  require the board of education to make amendments to the proposed budget
    35  consistent  with  any recommendations made by the monitor if the commis-
    36  sioner determines such amendments  are  necessary  to  comply  with  the
    37  financial  plan and academic improvement plan under this act. The school
    38  district shall make available on the  district's  website:  the  initial
    39  proposed  budget,  the monitor's findings, and the final proposed budget
    40  at least seven days prior to the date of the  school  district's  budget
    41  hearing.  In  the event of a revote, the board of education, in conjunc-
    42  tion with the monitor, shall develop and submit  the  school  district's
    43  proposed  budget for the next succeeding school year to the commissioner
    44  no later than seven days prior to  the  budget  hearing.  The  board  of
    45  education  shall  provide  the  commissioner  with  any information such
    46  commissioner requests in order to make a determination pursuant to  this
    47  subdivision within three business days of such request.
    48    (b)  The  district  shall provide quarterly reports to the monitor and
    49  annual reports to the commissioner and board of regents on the academic,
    50  fiscal, and operational status of the school district. In addition,  the
    51  monitor  shall provide semi-annual reports to the commissioner, board of
    52  regents, the governor, the temporary president of the  senate,  and  the
    53  speaker  of the assembly on the academic, fiscal, and operational status
    54  of the school district. Such semi-annual report shall  include  all  the
    55  contracts that the district entered into throughout the year.

        S. 3006--C                         75                         A. 3006--C
 
     1    (c)  The monitor shall have the authority to disapprove travel outside
     2  the state paid for by the district.
     3    (d)  The monitor shall work with the district's shared decision-making
     4  committee as defined in  8  NYCRR  100.11  in  developing  the  academic
     5  improvement  plan,  financial  plan,  district  goals, implementation of
     6  district priorities and budgetary recommendations.
     7    (e) The monitor shall assist in resolving any disputes and  conflicts,
     8  including  but  not limited to, those between the superintendent and the
     9  board of education and among the members of the board of education.
    10    (f) The monitor may recommend, and the board shall consider by vote of
    11  a resolution at the next scheduled meeting of  the  board,  cost  saving
    12  measures including, but not limited to, shared service agreements.
    13    § 8. The commissioner may overrule any decision of the monitor, except
    14  for collective bargaining agreements negotiated in accordance with arti-
    15  cle  14  of  the civil service law, if such commissioner deems that such
    16  decision is not aligned with the financial  plan,  academic  improvement
    17  plan, or the school district's budget.
    18    §  9. The monitor may notify the commissioner and the board in writing
    19  when such monitor deems the district is  violating  an  element  of  the
    20  financial plan or academic improvement plan under this act. Within twen-
    21  ty  days,  the  commissioner  shall determine whether the district is in
    22  violation of any of the elements of the plans highlighted by the monitor
    23  and shall order the district to comply immediately with  the  plans  and
    24  remedy any such violation. The school district shall suspend all actions
    25  related  to  the  potential  violation of the financial plan or academic
    26  improvement plan until the commissioner issues a determination.
    27    § 10. Nothing in this section  shall  be  construed  to  abrogate  the
    28  duties  and  responsibilities  of  the  school  district consistent with
    29  applicable state law and regulations.
    30    § 11. The Mount Vernon city school district shall be paid on an accel-
    31  erated schedule as follows:
    32    (a) (i) Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, for  aid  payable
    33  in  the school years 2024-2025 through 2053-2054 upon application to the
    34  commissioner of education submitted not sooner than the second Monday in
    35  June of the school year in which such aid is payable and not later  than
    36  the  Friday  following  the  third  Monday in June of the school year in
    37  which such aid is payable, the Mount Vernon city school  district  shall
    38  be  eligible  to receive an apportionment pursuant to this section in an
    39  amount equal to the product of up to eight million dollars  ($8,000,000)
    40  and  the  quotient of the positive difference of thirty minus the number
    41  of school years elapsed since the 2024-2025 school year divided by thir-
    42  ty, provided, however, that for the 2024-2025 school year such  applica-
    43  tion shall be submitted no later than May 11, 2025.
    44    (ii)  Funds apportioned pursuant to this subdivision shall be used for
    45  services and expenses of the Mount Vernon city school district and shall
    46  be applied to support of its  educational  programs  and  any  liability
    47  incurred  by such city school district in carrying out its functions and
    48  responsibilities under the education law.
    49    (b) The claim for an apportionment to be paid to the Mount Vernon city
    50  school district pursuant to subdivision (a) of  this  section  shall  be
    51  submitted to the commissioner of education on a form prescribed for such
    52  purpose,  and  shall  be payable upon determination by such commissioner
    53  that the form has been submitted  as  prescribed  and  that  the  school
    54  district  has  complied with the reporting requirements of this section.
    55  For each school year in which application is made pursuant  to  subdivi-
    56  sion  (a)  of  this section, such approved amount shall be payable on or

        S. 3006--C                         76                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  before June thirtieth of such school year upon the audit and warrant  of
     2  the  state  comptroller on vouchers certified or approved by the commis-
     3  sioner of education in the manner prescribed by law from  moneys  appro-
     4  priated  for  general support of public schools, provided, however, that
     5  for the 2024-2025 school year such approved amount shall be  payable  on
     6  or before May 20, 2025.
     7    (c)  Notwithstanding the provisions of section 3609-a of the education
     8  law, an amount equal to the amount paid to the Mount Vernon city  school
     9  district  during  the  base year pursuant to subdivisions (a) and (b) of
    10  this section shall first be  deducted  from  general  aid  payments  due
    11  during  the current school year pursuant to subparagraphs (1), (2), (3),
    12  (4) and (5) of paragraph a of subdivision 1 of  section  3609-a  of  the
    13  education  law from the fixed fall payments payable pursuant to subpara-
    14  graph (4) of such paragraph, and any remainder to be deducted  from  the
    15  individualized  payments  due to the district pursuant to paragraph b of
    16  such subdivision shall be deducted on  a  chronological  basis  starting
    17  with the earliest payment due the district.
    18    (d)  Notwithstanding  any other provisions of law, the sum of payments
    19  made to the Mount Vernon city  school  district  during  the  base  year
    20  pursuant  to subdivisions (a) and (b) of this section plus payments made
    21  to such school district during the  current  year  pursuant  to  section
    22  3609-a  of the education law shall be deemed to truly represent all aids
    23  paid to such school district during the current school year pursuant  to
    24  such  section  3609-a  for  the purposes of computing any adjustments to
    25  such aids that may occur in a subsequent school year.
    26    (e) (i) On or before the first day of each  month  beginning  in  July
    27  2025  and  ending  in June 2054, the chief fiscal officer and the super-
    28  intendent of schools of the Mount  Vernon  city  school  district  shall
    29  prepare  and  submit  to  the  board of education a report of the fiscal
    30  condition of the school district, including but not limited to the  most
    31  current  available  data  on  fund  balances  on funds maintained by the
    32  school district and the district's use of  the  apportionments  provided
    33  pursuant to subdivisions (a) and (b) of this section.
    34    (ii)  Such  monthly  report  shall  be  in  a format prescribed by the
    35  commissioner of education. The board of education  shall  either  reject
    36  and return the report to the chief fiscal officer and the superintendent
    37  of  schools  for  appropriate revisions and resubmittal or shall approve
    38  the report and submit copies to the commissioner of  education  and  the
    39  state comptroller of such approved report as submitted or resubmitted.
    40    (iii)  In  the  2024-2025  through  2053-2054  school years, the chief
    41  fiscal officer of the Mount Vernon city school  district  shall  monitor
    42  all  budgets  and  for  each budget, shall prepare a quarterly report of
    43  summarized budget data depicting overall trends of actual  revenues  and
    44  budget  expenditures  for  the  entire budget as well as individual line
    45  items. Such report shall compare revenue estimates and appropriations as
    46  set forth in such budget with the actual revenues and expenditures  made
    47  to  date. All quarterly reports shall be accompanied by a recommendation
    48  from the superintendent of schools or chief fiscal officer to the  board
    49  of education setting forth any remedial actions necessary to resolve any
    50  unfavorable  budget variance including the overestimation of revenue and
    51  underestimation of appropriations. The chief fiscal officer  shall  also
    52  prepare,  as  part  of such report, a quarterly trial balance of general
    53  ledger accounts in accordance with generally accepted accounting princi-
    54  ples as prescribed by  the  state  comptroller.  All  reports  shall  be
    55  completed  within  sixty days after the end of each quarter and shall be
    56  submitted to the chief fiscal officer and the board of education of  the

        S. 3006--C                         77                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  Mount  Vernon  city  school  district, the state division of budget, the
     2  office of the state comptroller,  the  commissioner  of  education,  the
     3  chair  of  the  assembly  ways  and means committee and the chair of the
     4  senate finance committee.
     5    § 12. This act shall take effect immediately, provided, however, that:
     6    (a)  sections  one  through ten of this act shall expire and be deemed
     7  repealed June 30, 2027; and
     8    (b) section eleven of this act shall expire  and  be  deemed  repealed
     9  June 30, 2054.
 
    10                                   PART GG
 
    11    Section 1. The general business law is amended by adding a new section
    12  352-eeeee to read as follows:
    13    § 352-eeeee. Conversions to condominium ownership for the preservation
    14  of  expiring  affordable housing in the city of New York.  1. As used in
    15  this section, the following words and terms  shall  have  the  following
    16  meanings:
    17    (a) "Annual update amendment". An annual update amendment is an amend-
    18  ment  to  the  preservation plan that shall be submitted to the attorney
    19  general every year that a dwelling unit is unsold, with the  first  such
    20  annual update amendment due within forty-five days of the anniversary of
    21  the  acceptance  of the post-closing amendment to the preservation plan.
    22  An annual update amendment shall supply the evidence, data and  informa-
    23  tion  required in this section, and such other information as the attor-
    24  ney general's regulations shall require, so that the attorney general is
    25  satisfied that the preservation plan as amended discloses  the  informa-
    26  tion necessary for a reasonable investor to make their purchase decision
    27  and  that the preservation plan is otherwise complete, current and accu-
    28  rate.
    29    (b) "Bona fide purchaser". A bona  fide  purchaser  is  either  (i)  a
    30  tenant  in occupancy who enters into a purchase agreement for a dwelling
    31  unit pursuant to their or its exercise of one of the rights accorded  to
    32  tenants in occupancy in subdivision five of this section, or (ii) a bona
    33  fide non-tenant purchaser.
    34    (c) "Bona fide non-tenant purchaser". A bona fide non-tenant purchaser
    35  is  a  purchaser  of  a dwelling unit who has represented that they or a
    36  member or members of their immediate family intend to occupy the  dwell-
    37  ing unit when it becomes vacant.  A bona fide non-tenant purchaser shall
    38  not  include  any purchaser who is an offeror, the selling agent, or the
    39  managing agent or is a principal of the offeror, the  selling  agent  or
    40  the  managing  agent  or is related to the sponsor, the selling agent or
    41  the managing agent or to any principal of the  sponsor  or  the  selling
    42  agent or the managing agent by blood, marriage or adoption or as a busi-
    43  ness  associate, an employee, a shareholder or a limited partner; except
    44  that such a purchaser other than the offeror or a principal of the spon-
    45  sor may be included as a bona fide non-tenant purchaser if  the  offeror
    46  has  submitted  proof satisfactory to the department of law establishing
    47  that the purchaser is bona fide.
    48    (d)  "Commercially  reasonable  good  faith  effort".  A  commercially
    49  reasonable good faith effort on the part of an offeror of a preservation
    50  plan  shall,  at  minimum,  include  (i)  the filing of an annual update
    51  amendment to the preservation plan; (ii) all of the condominium's dwell-
    52  ing units other than any income-restricted rental  units  as  the  units
    53  being  offered for sale under the preservation plan, each at an offering
    54  price that is consistent with comparable dwelling  units  recently  sold

        S. 3006--C                         78                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  within  the locality; and (iii) entering into a written agreement with a
     2  licensed real estate broker or selling agent in connection with the sale
     3  of dwelling units offered for sale under the preservation plan. For  the
     4  avoidance  of  doubt,  a commercially reasonable good faith effort shall
     5  not require an offeror to sell dwelling units at a  price  substantially
     6  below  the  market-rate  for  comparable  units recently sold within the
     7  locality, nor shall it require an offeror to  offer  for  sale  dwelling
     8  units that are occupied by non-purchasing tenants.
     9    (e) "Condominium". A condominium shall also include a qualified lease-
    10  hold  condominium  as  defined  in  subdivision  twelve of section three
    11  hundred thirty-nine-e of the real property law.
    12    (f) "Consummation of the preservation plan". Consummation of the pres-
    13  ervation plan shall refer to the  filing  of  the  declaration  for  the
    14  condominium  and  the  first transfer of title to at least one purchaser
    15  under the preservation plan following a declaration of effectiveness  by
    16  the department of law declaring the preservation plan effective.
    17    (g)  "Eligible  disabled  persons". Non-purchasing tenants who have an
    18  impairment which results from anatomical, physiological or psychological
    19  conditions, other than addiction to alcohol, gambling, or any controlled
    20  substance, which are demonstrable by medically acceptable  clinical  and
    21  laboratory diagnostic techniques, and which are expected to be permanent
    22  and  which  prevent  the tenant from engaging in any substantial gainful
    23  employment on the date the preservation plan is submitted to the depart-
    24  ment of law or on the date the attorney general has accepted the preser-
    25  vation plan for filing, and the spouses of  any  such  tenants  on  such
    26  date,  and who have elected, within sixty days of the date the preserva-
    27  tion plan is submitted to the department of  law  or  on  the  date  the
    28  attorney general has accepted the preservation plan for filing, on forms
    29  promulgated by the attorney general and presented to such tenants by the
    30  offeror,  to  become non-purchasing tenants under the provisions of this
    31  section; provided, however, that if the disability  first  occurs  after
    32  acceptance  of  the preservation plan for filing, then such election may
    33  be made within sixty days following the onset of such disability  unless
    34  during  the  period subsequent to sixty days following the acceptance of
    35  the preservation plan for filing but prior to such election, the offeror
    36  accepts a written agreement to purchase the apartment from a  bona  fide
    37  purchaser;  and  provided  further that such election shall not preclude
    38  any such tenant from subsequently purchasing the dwelling  unit  on  the
    39  terms then offered to tenants in occupancy.
    40    (h)  "Eligible project". An eligible project shall refer to a building
    41  or group of buildings or development with one hundred or  more  dwelling
    42  units  built  after nineteen hundred ninety-six that is the subject of a
    43  preservation plan under this section, which shall meet the criteria  set
    44  forth in subdivision two of this section.  An eligible project shall not
    45  include  any  building  or group of buildings or development owned under
    46  article two, four or five of the private housing finance  law.  For  the
    47  avoidance of doubt, no building, group of buildings or development other
    48  than  an eligible project shall convert to condominium status under this
    49  section, the status of which shall be confirmed by the relevant  housing
    50  finance agency prior to the date of submission of the preservation plan.
    51    (i)  "Eligible senior citizens". Non-purchasing tenants who are sixty-
    52  two years of age or older on the date the preservation plan is submitted
    53  to the department of law  or  on  the  date  the  attorney  general  has
    54  accepted  the  preservation plan for filing, and the spouses of any such
    55  tenants on such date, and who have elected, within  sixty  days  of  the
    56  date  the  preservation plan is submitted to the department of law or on

        S. 3006--C                         79                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  the date the attorney general has accepted  the  preservation  plan  for
     2  filing,  on  forms  promulgated by the attorney general and presented to
     3  such tenants by the offeror, to become non-purchasing tenants under  the
     4  provisions  of  this  section;  provided  that  such  election shall not
     5  preclude any such tenant from subsequently purchasing the dwelling  unit
     6  on the terms then offered to tenants in occupancy.
     7    (j) "Extended affordability term". The extended affordability term for
     8  the income-restricted rental units shall be in perpetuity for so long as
     9  the  building or group of buildings or development are in existence, and
    10  subject to any obligation to  rebuild  in  the  event  of  condemnation,
    11  damage  or  destruction  required  by  the regulatory agreement with the
    12  relevant housing finance agency.
    13    (k) "Inclusionary housing unit". An inclusionary housing  unit  is  an
    14  income-restricted  rental  unit  that  is located within a building that
    15  received an increase in the maximum permitted  floor  area  pursuant  to
    16  sections  23-154  and  23-90 of the zoning resolution or is located in a
    17  mandatory inclusionary housing area, as such  sections  may  be  amended
    18  from time to time.
    19    (l)  "Inclusionary  housing  designated area". An inclusionary housing
    20  designated area is a specified area in which  the  inclusionary  housing
    21  program  (also  known  as the voluntary inclusionary housing program) is
    22  applicable, pursuant to the regulations set  forth  for  such  areas  in
    23  section  23-90  of the zoning resolution, as such section may be amended
    24  from time to time.   The locations of  inclusionary  housing  designated
    25  areas are identified in either (i) appendix "F" of the zoning resolution
    26  or  (ii) in a special purpose district as described in section 15-011 of
    27  the zoning resolution, as such appendix or section may be  amended  from
    28  time to time.
    29    (m)  "Income-restricted rental unit". An income-restricted rental unit
    30  shall refer to a dwelling unit located in a building or group of  build-
    31  ings  or  development  of  an  eligible project that is the subject of a
    32  preservation plan submitted to the attorney  general  pursuant  to  this
    33  section, and such dwelling unit:
    34    (i)  meets  the  definition  of  a  "low-income  unit" as such term is
    35  defined in section forty-two of the internal revenue code and is subject
    36  to a regulatory agreement with a relevant housing finance agency; or
    37    (ii) meets the definition of a  "low-income  unit"  as  such  term  is
    38  defined  in  subdivision  (d)  of  section  one hundred forty-two of the
    39  internal revenue code and is subject to a regulatory  agreement  with  a
    40  relevant housing finance agency; or
    41    (iii)  previously  met the definition of "low-income unit" pursuant to
    42  subparagraph (i) or (ii) of  this  paragraph,  and  notwithstanding  the
    43  expiration  of  a  regulatory  agreement with a relevant housing finance
    44  agency, the owner of such dwelling unit affirms, under  the  penalty  of
    45  perjury  and  provides  other  documentation  to the satisfaction of the
    46  relevant housing finance agency, that it has continuously  operated  and
    47  rented  the  dwelling  unit  (A)  as if it remained an income-restricted
    48  rental unit and (B) as if all of the restrictions of the expired regula-
    49  tory agreement had continuously been extended or otherwise  remained  in
    50  effect; or
    51    (iv)  is  a dwelling unit located within a building or group of build-
    52  ings or development that, in accordance with provisions of  subdivisions
    53  one  through  fifteen  of  section four hundred twenty-one-a of the real
    54  property tax  law,  the  relevant  housing  finance  agency  shall  have
    55  required to be a unit affordable to families of low and moderate income;

        S. 3006--C                         80                         A. 3006--C
 
     1    (v)  is  a  dwelling  unit  that is rented to persons of low income or
     2  families of low income as defined in subdivision nineteen of section two
     3  of the private housing finance law or as otherwise required by a  feder-
     4  al, state, or local law or mandate; or
     5    (vi)  is  a dwelling unit located in a building, group of buildings or
     6  development subject to a regulatory  agreement  due  to  bond  financing
     7  provided  by  the relevant housing finance agency that required dwelling
     8  units be affordable to families of low or moderate income.
     9    (n) "Mandatory inclusionary housing area".  A  mandatory  inclusionary
    10  housing  area  is  a  specified  area  in which the inclusionary housing
    11  program is applicable, pursuant to the regulations set  forth  for  such
    12  areas  in section 23-90 of the zoning resolution, as such section may be
    13  amended from time to time.   The  locations  of  mandatory  inclusionary
    14  housing  areas  are  identified in either (i) appendix "F" of the zoning
    15  resolution or (ii) in a special purpose district as described in section
    16  15-011 of the zoning resolution, as such  appendix  or  section  may  be
    17  amended from time to time.
    18    (o)  "Non-purchasing tenant". A person who has not purchased under the
    19  preservation  plan  from  offeror  and  who  is  a  tenant  entitled  to
    20  possession  at the time the preservation plan is declared effective or a
    21  person to whom a dwelling unit is rented from offeror after the  preser-
    22  vation  plan  was  declared effective, which solely for purposes of this
    23  section, shall include any person who is a tenant regardless of  whether
    24  (i)  such  person  was  a  tenant entitled to possession at the time the
    25  preservation plan was declared effective, or (ii) such person  rented  a
    26  dwelling  unit  from  offeror  after  the preservation plan was declared
    27  effective. A person who sublets a dwelling unit from a  purchaser  under
    28  the  preservation  plan  shall  not be deemed a non-purchasing tenant. A
    29  tenant entitled to possession of an income-restricted rental unit at the
    30  time the preservation plan is declared effective or a person to whom  an
    31  income-restricted  rental unit is rented from offeror or qualified owner
    32  after the preservation plan is declared effective  is  a  non-purchasing
    33  tenant,  notwithstanding that the income-restricted rental units are not
    34  offered for sale pursuant to such preservation plan.
    35    (p) "Post-closing amendment". A post-closing amendment is an amendment
    36  to a preservation plan filed with the attorney general  confirming  that
    37  the  preservation  plan  has been consummated.  A post-closing amendment
    38  must be submitted to the attorney general no more than  forty-five  days
    39  after  the  first  closing  of  a dwelling unit to a bona fide purchaser
    40  under the preservation plan.
    41    (q) "Preservation plan". An offering statement or prospectus submitted
    42  to the department of law pursuant to this section for the conversion  of
    43  a  building  or group of buildings or development of an eligible project
    44  from rental status to condominium ownership, wherein the  offeror  docu-
    45  ments  that  it  has entered into a regulatory agreement with a relevant
    46  housing finance agency in which it agreed to an  extended  affordability
    47  term  for  the  income-restricted  rental  units with a relevant housing
    48  finance agency.
    49    (r) "Purchaser under the preservation plan".  A  purchaser  under  the
    50  preservation plan is a person who purchases a dwelling unit from offeror
    51  pursuant  to the terms of a preservation plan that has been accepted for
    52  filing by the attorney general. A person or entity that acquires  dwell-
    53  ing  units  and  assumes  certain  obligations  of  offeror shall not be
    54  considered a purchaser under the preservation plan.
    55    (s) "Qualified owner". A qualified owner refers to the entity approved
    56  by the relevant  housing  finance  agency  on  or  before  the  date  of

        S. 3006--C                         81                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  submission  of  a  preservation  plan to the department of law that will
     2  own, operate and maintain the income-restricted  rental  unit  or  units
     3  that are in the building, group of buildings or development that are the
     4  subject  of the preservation plan. The entity which is a qualified owner
     5  shall only be either: (i) a housing development  fund  company  incorpo-
     6  rated  pursuant to article eleven of the private finance housing law; or
     7  (ii) a community land trust or other  charitable  corporation  organized
     8  under  the not-for-profit corporation law that has as its primary chari-
     9  table purpose the ownership, operation and  maintenance  of  multifamily
    10  housing for persons and families of low income as defined by subdivision
    11  nineteen of section two of the private finance housing law.
    12    (t) "Relevant housing finance agency". Relevant housing finance agency
    13  shall  refer  to  a city or state agency with oversight over income-res-
    14  tricted rental units prior to the date of submission of  a  preservation
    15  plan.  For  purposes  of this section, a relevant housing finance agency
    16  shall also refer to the city or state agency that will continue to  have
    17  oversight  of  income-restricted  rental units after consummation of the
    18  preservation plan and in accordance  with  the  terms  of  a  regulatory
    19  agreement.
    20    (u)  "Regulatory agreement". A regulatory agreement shall refer to the
    21  written agreement with a relevant housing finance agency that  restricts
    22  the  income  and rents of income-restricted rental units that is either:
    23  (i) in effect prior to the date of submission of a preservation plan; or
    24  (ii) in effect after consummation of the preservation plan. Any  regula-
    25  tory  agreement in effect at the date of the submission of the preserva-
    26  tion plan shall remain in effect until the consummation of the preserva-
    27  tion plan unless otherwise agreed to by  the  relevant  housing  finance
    28  agency. A regulatory agreement that shall take effect after consummation
    29  of  the  preservation plan shall require that at least twenty percent of
    30  all units be income-restricted rental units, and  require  further  that
    31  all existing income-restricted rental units, as of the effective date of
    32  this act, shall remain income-restricted in perpetuity.
    33    (v) "Rent stabilization". Rent stabilization shall mean, collectively,
    34  the  rent  stabilization  law  of nineteen sixty-nine, and the emergency
    35  tenant protection act of nineteen seventy-four together with  any  other
    36  successor statutes thereto.
    37    (w)  "Zoning  resolution". Zoning resolution shall refer to the zoning
    38  resolution of the city of New York.
    39    2. The attorney general shall refuse to accept for submission a  pres-
    40  ervation  plan for the conversion of a building or group of buildings or
    41  development if the relevant housing finance agency has not confirmed  in
    42  writing  through  the  issuance  of  a letter of support as described in
    43  subdivision three of this section and that the preservation plan is  for
    44  an  eligible  project,  which shall be defined as a building or group of
    45  buildings or development  that  meets  the  definition  of  an  eligible
    46  project  and one or more of the following requirements as of the date of
    47  submission of the preservation plan:
    48    (a) The preservation plan is for a building or group of  buildings  or
    49  development  that (i) receives a partial property tax exemption pursuant
    50  to subdivisions one through fifteen of section four hundred twenty-one-a
    51  of the real property tax law,  (ii)  contains  income-restricted  rental
    52  units,  and  (iii) is not otherwise prohibited by any federal, state, or
    53  local law, rule, or regulation or  subject  to  an  existing  regulatory
    54  agreement  that prohibits the conversion of the dwelling units to condo-
    55  minium ownership; or

        S. 3006--C                         82                         A. 3006--C
 
     1    (b) The preservation plan is for a building or group of  buildings  or
     2  development that (i) receives low income housing tax credits pursuant to
     3  section  forty-two  of  the internal revenue code, (ii) contains income-
     4  restricted rental units, (iii) is not subject to any agreement providing
     5  for  a  right  of first refusal with a not-for-profit corporation unless
     6  evidence deemed satisfactory to the department of law has been  provided
     7  that  such  right  of first refusal has either expired or that such not-
     8  for-profit declined to exercise such right, and (iv)  is  not  otherwise
     9  prohibited  by  any federal, state, or local law, rule, or regulation or
    10  subject to an existing regulatory agreement that prohibits  the  conver-
    11  sion of the dwelling units to condominium ownership; or
    12    (c)  The  preservation plan is for a building or group of buildings or
    13  development that (i) receives bond financing  under  subsection  (d)  of
    14  section  one  hundred  forty-two  of  the  internal  revenue  code, (ii)
    15  contains income-restricted rental units,  and  (iii)  is  not  otherwise
    16  prohibited  by  any federal, state, or local law, rule, or regulation or
    17  subject to an existing regulatory agreement that prohibits  the  conver-
    18  sion of the dwelling units to condominium ownership; or
    19    (d)  The  preservation plan is for a building or group of buildings or
    20  development, that (i) contains one or more inclusionary  housing  units,
    21  (ii)  is  not  otherwise prohibited by any federal, state, or local law,
    22  rule, or regulation or subject to an existing regulatory agreement  that
    23  prohibits the conversion of the dwelling units to condominium ownership,
    24  and  (iii)  contains a representation that an agreement has been reached
    25  with the relevant housing finance agency to increase the total number of
    26  income-restricted rental units in the building or group of buildings  or
    27  development  to  thirty percent for the extended affordability term upon
    28  consummation of the preservation plan; or
    29    (e) The preservation plan is for a building or group of  buildings  or
    30  development  that  (i)  contains  exclusively  moderate  income units as
    31  required for bond financing with the relevant  housing  finance  agency,
    32  (ii)  the total number of income-restricted rental units in the building
    33  or group of buildings or development is less than twenty percent,  (iii)
    34  is  not  subject  to an existing regulatory agreement that prohibits the
    35  conversion of the dwelling units  to  condominium  ownership,  and  (iv)
    36  contains  a  representation  that an agreement has been reached with the
    37  relevant housing finance agency to increase the total number of  income-
    38  restricted  rental units in the building or group of buildings or devel-
    39  opment to at least twenty percent for the  extended  affordability  term
    40  upon consummation of the preservation plan.
    41    3.  At  the  time  of submission of the preservation plan, the offeror
    42  shall provide a letter of support  from  the  relevant  housing  finance
    43  agency  demonstrating  that a regulatory agreement has been entered into
    44  between the offeror, the  qualified  owner,  and  the  relevant  housing
    45  finance  agency  regarding the income-restricted rental units during the
    46  extended affordability term, and that such  regulatory  agreement  will,
    47  among other things, require the offeror to include the following disclo-
    48  sures in the preservation plan:
    49    (a) A list of the proposed income-restricted rental units;
    50    (b)  The  proposed  qualified  owner  of  the income-restricted rental
    51  units, which qualified owner shall take title to  the  income-restricted
    52  rental  units  no later than three hundred sixty-five days from the date
    53  of consummation of the preservation plan;
    54    (c) The operating expenses and revenues applicable to the  income-res-
    55  tricted rental units, which shall be reflected in the updated Schedule A
    56  and  Schedule  B for the first year of operation of the condominium, the

        S. 3006--C                         83                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  allocation of common interests, projected common charges, estimated real
     2  estate taxes, and rents to  be  collected  from  each  income-restricted
     3  rental  unit,  and the allocation of common expenses under section three
     4  hundred  thirty-nine-m  of  the  real  property  law,  applicable to the
     5  income-restricted rental units, which shall be  used  to  limit  certain
     6  condominium expenses allocable to the income-restricted rental units and
     7  to  cover  any  shortfall in the revenue from rent to cover the costs of
     8  operation of the income-restricted rental units;
     9    (d) A description of any financing encumbering  the  income-restricted
    10  rental  units,  and  whether a tax exemption or abatement is in place to
    11  reduce real estate taxes for the income-restricted rental units;
    12    (e) A description of any regulatory  agreement  or  agreements  to  be
    13  recorded against the income-restricted rental units and the term thereof
    14  and  the  relevant  housing  finance agency or agencies with supervisory
    15  oversight;
    16    (f) A description of the provisions of the declaration and by-laws for
    17  the condominium that provides  for  the  special  allocation  of  common
    18  expenses  in  accordance with section three hundred thirty-nine-m of the
    19  real property law, and any specific requirements set forth in a  regula-
    20  tory  agreement  requiring  unit  owners in the condominium to cover any
    21  shortfall in the revenue from rent to cover the costs  of  operation  of
    22  the income-restricted rental units;
    23    (g) A description of the contemplated structure of the board of manag-
    24  ers  of the condominium, including specifically an explanation as to how
    25  the interests of the qualified owner  of  the  income-restricted  rental
    26  units are to be adequately represented;
    27    (h)  A description of the building-wide amenities and a representation
    28  that the declaration and by-laws for the condominium shall require  that
    29  tenants of the income-restricted rental units be provided an opportunity
    30  to  use  commonly accessible amenities of the condominium and not unique
    31  to an individual unit, including but  not  limited  to:  pools,  fitness
    32  centers,  storage  spaces, parking, and roofs or gardens accessible on a
    33  building-wide basis, and  that  the  tenants  of  the  income-restricted
    34  rental  units  may only be charged a nominal and reasonable fee for such
    35  use, as approved by the relevant housing finance  agency  in  accordance
    36  with  the  regulatory  agreement, and which shall not be treated as rent
    37  under any rental agreement;
    38    (i) The name, address and contact details  for  the  relevant  housing
    39  finance agency or agencies with supervisory oversight of the income-res-
    40  tricted rental units and the occupants within;
    41    (j)  That the regulatory agreement contains a provision which requires
    42  that once a vacancy occurs of an income-restricted  rental  unit,  after
    43  consummation  of  the  preservation  plan,  then said unit shall only be
    44  leased to low income households whose annual  household  income  is  not
    45  greater  than  sixty  percent  of  area median income at the time of the
    46  initial lease, and such unit shall be marketed and leased in  compliance
    47  with  the  relevant housing finance agency's leasing requirements, which
    48  may include leasing through New York city's housing connect portal;
    49    (k) A representation by offeror that the regulatory agreement includes
    50  and accounts for (i)  all  of  the  existing  on-site  income-restricted
    51  rental  units  in an existing building or group of buildings or develop-
    52  ment, or (ii) all of the income-restricted rental units associated  with
    53  an  existing  building or group of buildings or development located on a
    54  zoning lot where one or more buildings  were  set  aside  as  affordable
    55  housing  for purposes of qualifying for a partial property tax exemption

        S. 3006--C                         84                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  pursuant to section four hundred twenty-one-a of the real  property  tax
     2  law;
     3    (l)  To  the  extent  not already subject thereto prior to the consum-
     4  mation of the preservation plan, a representation by  offeror  that  the
     5  regulatory agreement shall require all income-restricted rental units be
     6  subject  to  rent  stabilization during the extended affordability term,
     7  and that no income-restricted rental units shall be  removed  from  rent
     8  stabilization pursuant to the exemption for units owned as a condominium
     9  under section 26-504 of the administrative code of the city of New York;
    10  and
    11    (m)  The  recording of the condominium declaration and commencement of
    12  condominium operations does not modify  the  requirement  under  section
    13  four hundred twenty-one-a of the real property tax law that all residen-
    14  tial rental apartments are subject to rent stabilization.
    15    4.  Upon submission of the preservation plan to the department of law,
    16  each tenant in occupancy of any unit, including but not limited  to  any
    17  income-restricted  rental  unit,  in  the  eligible  project that is the
    18  subject of such preservation plan  shall  be  provided  with  a  written
    19  notice  stating  that  such  preservation plan has been submitted to the
    20  department of law. Written notice to  each  tenant  in  occupancy  shall
    21  contain or be accompanied by:
    22    (a)  a  copy of the proposed preservation plan that has been submitted
    23  to the department of law;
    24    (b) a statement that tenants of the dwelling units being  offered  for
    25  sale  pursuant  to  the  preservation  plan or their representatives may
    26  physically inspect the premises at any time subsequent to the submission
    27  of the preservation plan to the department of law, during  normal  busi-
    28  ness  hours,  upon written request made by them to the offeror, provided
    29  such representatives are registered architects or professional engineers
    30  licensed by the office of the professions of the education department of
    31  the state of New York; and
    32    (c) a statement to tenants of the income-restricted rental units  that
    33  the dwelling units they occupy are not being offered for sale, but their
    34  tenancies  shall continue undisturbed during and after the conversion of
    35  the property to condominium ownership. The statement shall also disclose
    36  that all  income-restricted  rental  units  shall  be  subject  to  rent
    37  stabilization throughout the extended affordability term.
    38    5.  The  tenants in occupancy of dwelling units being offered for sale
    39  on the date the attorney  general  accepts  the  preservation  plan  for
    40  filing  shall  have the exclusive right to purchase their dwelling units
    41  for ninety days after the preservation plan has been accepted for filing
    42  by the attorney general, during which time the offering price  available
    43  to  the tenant in occupancy shall not be increased and a tenant's dwell-
    44  ing unit shall not be shown to a third party unless such tenant has,  in
    45  writing, waived their right to purchase. Subsequent to the expiration of
    46  such ninety-day period, a tenant in occupancy of a dwelling unit who has
    47  not  purchased  shall be given the exclusive right for an additional six
    48  months from said expiration date to purchase said dwelling unit  on  the
    49  same  terms  and conditions as are contained in any executed contract to
    50  purchase said dwelling unit entered into by a purchaser under the  pres-
    51  ervation  plan,  such  exclusive  right to be exercisable within fifteen
    52  days from the date of mailing  by  registered  mail  of  notice  of  the
    53  execution  of  a  contract of sale together with a copy of said executed
    54  purchase agreement to said tenant.
    55    6. The preservation plan shall also disclose that the offeror shall:

        S. 3006--C                         85                         A. 3006--C

     1    (a) market and sell all the dwelling units (other than the income-res-
     2  tricted rental units) in the building or group of buildings or  develop-
     3  ment,  as  each  such dwelling unit becomes vacant, to a purchaser under
     4  the preservation plan through the use of  commercially  reasonable  good
     5  faith efforts;
     6    (b) fund the reserve fund and dedicated capital fund in the manner and
     7  amounts  as provided in section three hundred thirty-nine-mm of the real
     8  property law;
     9    (c) file an annual update amendment every year which shall include  an
    10  updated  Schedule  A  of all dwelling units being offered for sale under
    11  the preservation plan; and
    12    (d) exercise commercially reasonable good faith  efforts  to  sell  at
    13  least  fifty-one  percent  of the total number of dwelling units offered
    14  for sale under the preservation plan  (excluding  any  income-restricted
    15  rental  units  not  offered for sale) within five years from the date of
    16  consummation of the preservation plan.
    17    7. After the issuance of the letter from the attorney general  stating
    18  that  the  preservation  plan  has been accepted for filing, the offeror
    19  shall, on the thirtieth, sixtieth, eighty-eighth and ninetieth day after
    20  such date and at least once every thirty  days  until  the  preservation
    21  plan  is declared effective or abandoned, as the case may be, and on the
    22  second day before  the  expiration  of  any  exclusive  purchase  period
    23  provided in a substantial amendment to the preservation plan:
    24    (a)  file  with  the  attorney  general a written statement under oath
    25  setting forth the percentage of bona fide tenants in  occupancy  of  all
    26  dwelling  units  in the building or group of buildings or development on
    27  the date the preservation plan was accepted for filing by  the  attorney
    28  general  who  have executed and delivered written agreements to purchase
    29  under the preservation plan as of the date  of  such  written  statement
    30  under oath; and
    31    (b) before noon on the day such statement is filed post a copy of such
    32  written  statement  under  oath  in  a prominent place accessible to all
    33  tenants in each building covered by the preservation plan.
    34    8. A preservation plan shall not be declared effective  until  written
    35  purchase  agreements  have  been  executed  and  delivered  for at least
    36  fifteen percent of all dwelling units offered for sale in  the  building
    37  or  group  of buildings or development from either (a) bona fide tenants
    38  who were in occupancy on the date a letter was issued  by  the  attorney
    39  general  accepting  the  preservation  plan  for filing or (b) bona fide
    40  non-tenant purchasers. The purchase  agreement  shall  be  executed  and
    41  delivered  pursuant  to an offering made in good faith without fraud and
    42  discriminatory repurchase agreements  or  other  discriminatory  induce-
    43  ments.  A negotiated reduction from the original offering price extended
    44  shall not, by itself, be deemed a discriminatory inducement.
    45    9. Those written statements under oath that the offeror is required to
    46  file with the attorney general pursuant to  subdivision  seven  of  this
    47  section shall also include:
    48    (a) the total number of written agreements to purchase under the pres-
    49  ervation plan received from bona fide non-tenant purchasers;
    50    (b) the total number of written agreements to purchase under the pres-
    51  ervation plan received from all bona fide tenants in occupancy;
    52    (c)  the  percentage  of  dwelling units under contract, calculated by
    53  adding the number of written purchase agreements for a  unit  that  were
    54  received  from (i) all bona fide tenants in occupancy plus (ii) all bona
    55  fide non-tenant purchasers and  then  dividing  the  sum  of  those  two

        S. 3006--C                         86                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  numbers by the total number of dwelling units offered for sale under the
     2  preservation plan;
     3    (d)  whether  or not the offeror intends to claim a credit against the
     4  mandatory initial contribution the offeror is obligated to deposit  into
     5  the  condominium's reserve fund pursuant to subdivision three of section
     6  three hundred thirty-nine-mm of the real property  law  for  the  actual
     7  cost of capital replacements which the offeror has begun after the pres-
     8  ervation  plan  was  submitted  for  filing to the department of law but
     9  before the preservation plan is declared effective, together with  their
    10  actual  or estimated costs which credit shall not exceed the actual cost
    11  of the credit;
    12    (e) whether or not the  offeror  shall  be  making  its  reserve  fund
    13  contributions  required pursuant to section three hundred thirty-nine-mm
    14  earlier or in an amount greater than required; and
    15    (f) a representation that no purchaser counted for purposes of declar-
    16  ing the preservation plan effective is the offeror, the selling agent or
    17  the managing agent, or is a principal of the offeror, the selling agent,
    18  or the managing agent or is related to any principal of the offeror, any
    19  principal of the selling agent or any principal of the managing agent by
    20  blood, marriage, or adoption, or is an affiliate, business associate, an
    21  employee, a shareholder, a member, a manager, a director, an officer,  a
    22  limited partner of the offeror, selling agent or managing agent.
    23    10.  The  preservation plan shall provide that it will be deemed aban-
    24  doned, void and of no effect if it  does  not  become  effective  within
    25  fifteen  months  from  the  date  of issue of the letter of the attorney
    26  general stating that the preservation plan has been accepted for  filing
    27  and,  in  the  event of such abandonment, no new plan, including but not
    28  limited to a preservation plan, for the conversion of such  building  or
    29  group  of  buildings  or  development shall be submitted to the attorney
    30  general for at least twelve months after such abandonment.
    31    11. No closings of title of a dwelling unit to a purchaser  under  the
    32  preservation plan shall take place until the attorney general shall have
    33  also  accepted  for  filing  an amendment that declares the preservation
    34  plan effective. Within forty-five days of the first closing of title  of
    35  a  dwelling unit to a purchaser under the preservation plan, the offeror
    36  shall submit to the attorney general its post-closing amendment  to  the
    37  preservation  plan.  Thereafter, the preservation plan shall continually
    38  be updated with the filing of an annual update amendment, no later  than
    39  thirty  days  from  the  anniversary  of  the  date the attorney general
    40  accepted the post-closing amendment for filing. An offeror or  successor
    41  offeror  shall  only  be  relieved  of  its obligation to file an annual
    42  update amendment to the preservation plan after the last  dwelling  unit
    43  offered for sale is conveyed to a purchaser under the preservation plan.
    44    12. After the date of acceptance for filing of the post-closing amend-
    45  ment,  the  offeror  or successor offeror shall continue to make commer-
    46  cially reasonable good faith efforts to sell the dwelling units it owns.
    47    13. The attorney general shall refuse to accept for filing  an  annual
    48  update amendment to the preservation plan unless:
    49    (a)  The  annual  update amendment discloses, in addition to the other
    50  disclosures required elsewhere in this section or the regulations of the
    51  attorney general, the following data and information:
    52    (i) an accounting of the dwelling units sold and closed by the offeror
    53  in the preceding twelve months, with an indication if the dwelling  unit
    54  was  conveyed to a purchaser under the preservation plan or to a succes-
    55  sor offeror;

        S. 3006--C                         87                         A. 3006--C
 
     1    (ii) an inventory of the offeror's unsold dwelling units at the end of
     2  the preceding twelve months, in form and substance as shall satisfy  the
     3  attorney general; and
     4    (iii)  all the information, data and literature presented by the board
     5  of managers in its semi-annual reports on the status of the reserve fund
     6  as required under subdivision five of section three hundred thirty-nine-
     7  mm of the real property law.
     8    (b) The annual update amendment shall be accompanied by  an  affidavit
     9  from  a  principal  of  the  offeror attesting to the following data and
    10  information with respect to all the  dwelling  units  the  offeror  then
    11  owns:
    12    (i) the dwelling units' identifying information and general location;
    13    (ii)  whether,  on  the date of submission of the annual update amend-
    14  ment, the unsold dwelling unit is subject to a fully  executed  purchase
    15  agreement,  and  if  so,  whether the purchaser is a purchaser under the
    16  preservation plan or otherwise;
    17    (iii) whether, on the date of submission of the annual  update  amend-
    18  ment, the dwelling unit is occupied or vacant, and if occupied, an indi-
    19  cation that occupancy is:
    20    (A) by a rent-regulated tenant;
    21    (B) by a market-rate tenant;
    22    (C) a month-to-month tenancy;
    23    (D) a tenancy at sufferance; or
    24    (E) other.
    25    (iv) regardless of the occupancy status of a dwelling unit on the date
    26  of  submission  of  the  annual  update  amendment, an indication if the
    27  dwelling unit was vacant for more  than  one  of  the  twelve  preceding
    28  months.  For  each  dwelling  unit  so indicated, the offeror shall also
    29  disclose:
    30    (A) the date range that the dwelling unit was vacant;
    31    (B) the date range for any period of time that the dwelling  unit  was
    32  marketed for sale;
    33    (C) date of sale;
    34    (D) the date the dwelling unit was leased by a tenant; and
    35    (E) the date the lease is set to expire (if applicable).
    36    14.  No  eviction  proceedings  shall be commenced at any time against
    37  non-purchasing tenants for failure to purchase or for any  other  reason
    38  applicable  to expiration of tenancy; provided that such proceedings may
    39  be commenced for non-payment of rent, illegal use or  occupancy  of  the
    40  premises,  refusal of reasonable access to the owner or a similar breach
    41  by the non-purchasing tenant of their obligations to the  owner  of  the
    42  dwelling  unit;  and  provided further that an owner of a unit shall not
    43  commence an action to recover possession of a dwelling unit from a  non-
    44  purchasing  tenant  on  the grounds that they seek the dwelling unit for
    45  the use and occupancy of themself or their family's use and occupancy.
    46    15. No eviction proceedings shall be commenced, except as provided  in
    47  this subdivision, at any time against either eligible senior citizens or
    48  eligible  disabled  persons. The rentals of eligible senior citizens and
    49  eligible disabled persons who reside in dwelling units  not  subject  to
    50  government regulation as to rentals and continued occupancy and eligible
    51  senior  citizens  and  eligible  disabled persons who reside in dwelling
    52  units with respect to which government  regulation  as  to  rentals  and
    53  continued  occupancy  is  eliminated  or  becomes inapplicable after the
    54  preservation plan has been accepted for filing shall not be  subject  to
    55  unconscionable increases which, solely for the purposes of this subdivi-
    56  sion,  and  notwithstanding  any  exemptions  for housing accommodations

        S. 3006--C                         88                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  owned as condominiums provided for under subdivision  seven  of  section
     2  two hundred fourteen of the real property law, and regardless of whether
     3  such  non-purchasing  tenant  has a rent that exceeds two hundred forty-
     4  five  percent  of  the fair market rent, all rent increases for eligible
     5  senior citizens and eligible disabled persons shall be considered uncon-
     6  scionable if such increases exceed the  permissible  increases  provided
     7  for  under  the  good cause eviction law under article six-A of the real
     8  property law; provided that such proceedings may  be  commenced  against
     9  such  tenants  for  non-payment of rent, illegal use or occupancy of the
    10  premises, refusal of reasonable access to the owner or a similar  breach
    11  by the tenant of their obligations to the owner of the dwelling unit.
    12    16.  Eligible senior citizens and eligible disabled persons who reside
    13  in dwelling units subject to government regulation  as  to  rentals  and
    14  continued occupancy shall continue to be subject thereto.
    15    17.  The rights granted under the preservation plan to eligible senior
    16  citizens and eligible disabled persons shall not be abrogated or reduced
    17  notwithstanding any expiration of, or amendment to, this section.
    18    18. Any offeror who disputes the election by a person to be an  eligi-
    19  ble  senior  citizen  or  an eligible disabled person shall apply to the
    20  attorney general within thirty days of the receipt of the election forms
    21  for a determination by the attorney general of such  person's  eligibil-
    22  ity.  The attorney general shall, within thirty days thereafter, issue a
    23  determination of eligibility. The foregoing shall,  in  the  absence  of
    24  fraud,  be  the  sole  method  for determining a dispute as to whether a
    25  person is an eligible senior citizen or an eligible disabled person. The
    26  determination of the attorney general shall be reviewable only through a
    27  proceeding under article seventy-eight of the  civil  practice  law  and
    28  rules, which proceeding shall be commenced within thirty days after such
    29  determination by the attorney general becomes final.
    30    19.  Non-purchasing  tenants  who  reside in dwelling units subject to
    31  government regulation as to rentals and continued occupancy prior to the
    32  conversion of the building or  group  of  buildings  or  development  to
    33  condominium ownership shall continue to be subject thereto.
    34    20. The rentals of non-purchasing tenants who reside in dwelling units
    35  not  subject  to government regulation as to rentals and continued occu-
    36  pancy and non-purchasing tenants  who  reside  in  dwelling  units  with
    37  respect to which government regulation as to rentals and continued occu-
    38  pancy  is eliminated or becomes inapplicable after the preservation plan
    39  has been accepted for filing  by  the  attorney  general  shall  not  be
    40  subject  to  unconscionable  increases which, solely for the purposes of
    41  this subdivision, and notwithstanding any exemptions for housing  accom-
    42  modations  owned as condominiums provided for under subdivision seven of
    43  section two hundred fourteen of the real property law, in the event  the
    44  rent  of  a  non-purchasing tenant shall be less than two hundred forty-
    45  five percent of the fair market rent, then such increases for such  non-
    46  purchasing tenant shall be governed by article six-A of the real proper-
    47  ty law.
    48    21. The rights granted under the preservation plan to purchasers under
    49  the  preservation  plan and to non-purchasing tenants shall not be abro-
    50  gated or reduced notwithstanding any expiration  of,  or  amendment  to,
    51  this section.
    52    22.  Any  local  legislative body may adopt local laws and any agency,
    53  officer or public body may prescribe rules and regulations with  respect
    54  to  the  continued  occupancy  by  tenants  of  dwelling units which are
    55  subject to regulation as to rentals and continued occupancy pursuant  to
    56  law,  provided  that in the event that any such local law, rule or regu-

        S. 3006--C                         89                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  lation shall be inconsistent with the provisions of  this  section,  the
     2  provisions of this section shall control.
     3    23. The attorney general shall refuse to accept for filing a preserva-
     4  tion  plan when the attorney general determines: (a) that one or more of
     5  the income-restricted rental units within the building, group of  build-
     6  ings  or development was vacant on the date of submission; or (b) of the
     7  dwelling units that are not income-restricted rental units, an excessive
     8  number of long-term vacancies existed on the date that the  preservation
     9  plan  was first submitted to the department of law. For purposes of this
    10  subdivision, "long-term vacancies" shall mean dwelling units not  leased
    11  or  occupied by bona fide tenants for more than five months prior to the
    12  date of such submission to the department of law; and "excessive"  shall
    13  mean a vacancy rate in excess of the greater of (i) ten percent and (ii)
    14  a  percentage  that  is  double  the normal average vacancy rate for the
    15  building or group of buildings or development for two years prior to the
    16  January preceding the date the preservation plan was first submitted  to
    17  the department of law.
    18    24.  All  dwelling  units  occupied by non-purchasing tenants shall be
    19  managed by the same managing agent who manages all other dwelling  units
    20  in  the  building  or  group  of buildings or development. Such managing
    21  agent shall provide to non-purchasing tenants all services  and  facili-
    22  ties  required  by law on a non-discriminatory basis.  The offeror shall
    23  guarantee the obligation of the  managing  agent  to  provide  all  such
    24  services  and  facilities  until  such  time  as  the offeror surrenders
    25  control of the board of managers, at which time the board of managers of
    26  the condominium shall assume responsibility for  the  provision  of  all
    27  services  and  facilities required by law on a non-discriminatory basis.
    28  Such managing agent shall also ensure  that  non-purchasing  tenants  be
    29  provided  an  opportunity  to  use  commonly accessible amenities of the
    30  condominium and not unique to an  individual  unit,  including  but  not
    31  limited  to pools, fitness centers, storage spaces, parking and roofs or
    32  gardens accessible on a building-wide basis, and that the tenants of the
    33  income-restricted rental units may only be charged a nominal and reason-
    34  able fee for such use, as approved by the relevant housing finance agen-
    35  cy in accordance with the regulatory agreement, and which shall  not  be
    36  treated as rent under any rental agreement.
    37    25.  It  shall  be  unlawful for any person to engage in any course of
    38  conduct, including, but not limited to, interruption  or  discontinuance
    39  of  essential  services, which substantially interferes with or disturbs
    40  the comfort, repose, peace or quiet of any tenant in their use or  occu-
    41  pancy  of  their  dwelling  unit  or the facilities related thereto. The
    42  attorney general may apply to a court of competent jurisdiction  for  an
    43  order  restraining  such  conduct  and,  if they deem it appropriate, an
    44  order restraining the owner from selling the  dwelling  unit  itself  or
    45  from  proceeding with the preservation plan of conversion; provided that
    46  nothing contained herein shall be deemed to  preclude  the  tenant  from
    47  applying on their own behalf for similar relief.
    48    26.  Any provision of a lease or other rental agreement which purports
    49  to waive a tenant's rights under this section or rules  and  regulations
    50  promulgated pursuant hereto shall be void as contrary to public policy.
    51    27.  Notwithstanding  the  requirements  of this section regarding the
    52  preservation of an income-restricted rental unit or units as permanently
    53  affordable, and to the extent permitted under existing law as it relates
    54  to the income-restricted rental unit  or  units,  the  income-restricted
    55  rental  unit or units in a building or group of buildings or development
    56  of an eligible project may be converted  to  a  limited  equity  housing

        S. 3006--C                         90                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  cooperative  pursuant  to  article eleven of the private housing finance
     2  law under a separate offering statement or prospectus, if  the  relevant
     3  housing  finance  agency ensures that the proposed offering statement or
     4  prospectus discloses that the regulatory agreement provides as follows:
     5    (a)  the offering prices are affordable to the existing tenants and/or
     6  the qualified low-income purchasers who meet the definition  of  persons
     7  of  low income or families of low income as defined by subdivision nine-
     8  teen of section two of the private housing finance law;
     9    (b) any tenant of an income-restricted rental unit that chooses not to
    10  buy the income-restricted rental unit such tenant occupies shall contin-
    11  ue to be protected under rent stabilization throughout  the  process  of
    12  conversion  to  a limited equity housing cooperative and thereafter, and
    13  that no existing tenant of an income-restricted  rental  unit  shall  be
    14  evicted  solely  due  to  such  tenant's  decision not to purchase their
    15  income-restricted rental unit;
    16    (c) the regulatory agreement and certificate of incorporation  of  the
    17  limited  equity  housing  cooperative  shall ensure that the income-res-
    18  tricted rental units converted to a limited equity  housing  cooperative
    19  shall be reserved for occupancy by persons of low income and families of
    20  low income in perpetuity;
    21    (d)  the  regulatory agreement and certificate of incorporation of the
    22  limited equity housing cooperative shall  ensure  that,  notwithstanding
    23  the creation of a separate condominium, any obligations that the non-in-
    24  come-restricted  rental  unit  owners  may  have to ensure the financial
    25  viability and delivery of services in a non-discriminatory manner, prior
    26  to the date of conversion to a limited equity housing cooperative, shall
    27  not be abrogated and shall remain in full force and effect;
    28    (e) the relevant housing finance agency shall have oversight authority
    29  over the limited equity housing cooperative in the regulatory agreement,
    30  condominium declaration, condominium by-laws and certificate of incorpo-
    31  ration of the limited equity housing cooperative, including the  ability
    32  to  appoint a new board of directors of the limited equity housing coop-
    33  erative in the event of a violation of a term of, or an event of default
    34  by the limited equity housing cooperative under  any  of  its  governing
    35  documents,  requiring  purchasers  of such units to attend homeownership
    36  training, and providing for the procedures to sell the units upon vacan-
    37  cy; and
    38    (f) that the ownership of the dedicated capital account by the  quali-
    39  fied  owner,  and  the  funding  of the dedicated capital account by the
    40  offeror of the preservation plan, shall each be subject to the oversight
    41  authority of the relevant housing finance agency as provided in  section
    42  three hundred thirty-nine-mm of the real property law.
    43    28.  It shall be unlawful for an offeror, its designees and/or succes-
    44  sors to have or exercise voting control of the  condominium's  board  of
    45  managers  for  more  than ninety days from the fifth anniversary date of
    46  the first closing of title to a dwelling unit, or  whenever  the  unsold
    47  dwelling  units  constitute less than fifty percent of the common inter-
    48  ests appurtenant to all dwelling units, whichever is sooner.
    49    29. The attorney general may, in their discretion, waive the  require-
    50  ment in paragraph (d) of subdivision six of this section that an offeror
    51  sell  at  least fifty-one percent of the dwelling units offered for sale
    52  under the preservation plan when the offeror provides proof satisfactory
    53  to the attorney general that five years of commercially reasonable  good
    54  faith  efforts  did  not  result in the sale of fifty-one percent of the
    55  dwelling units. If such waiver is granted, the offeror shall be required
    56  to disclose the new date by  which  it  will  sell  at  least  fifty-one

        S. 3006--C                         91                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  percent  of  the  dwelling units offered for sale under the preservation
     2  plan in its subsequent annual update amendment. Any waiver granted here-
     3  under shall not alleviate an offeror, its designees and/or successors of
     4  the obligation set forth in subdivision twenty-eight of this section.
     5    30.  Within three hundred and sixty-five days of the effective date of
     6  this section, the attorney general shall submit  a  notice  of  proposed
     7  rulemaking for publication in the state register which shall contain the
     8  suitable  rules  necessary  to carry out the provisions of this section.
     9  The authority of the attorney general  to  promulgate,  adopt,  publish,
    10  notify,  review, amend, modify, reconsider, or rescind any rule or regu-
    11  lation as may be conferred anywhere within  this  section  shall  comply
    12  with  the  state administrative procedure act in all respects.  Notwith-
    13  standing the foregoing, an offeror may submit a preservation plan to the
    14  department of law regardless of whether the attorney general has adopted
    15  suitable rules to carry out this section,  and  the  department  of  law
    16  shall not rely on the lack of rulemaking to refuse to accept a preserva-
    17  tion  plan  for  submission  or filing if offeror has otherwise complied
    18  with the requirements of this section.
    19    31. For any offering statement or prospectus (including, without limi-
    20  tation, a preservation plan and any amended filings thereto),  submitted
    21  to  the  department of law pursuant to this section, the filing fees set
    22  forth in paragraph (a) of subdivision seven  of  section  three  hundred
    23  fifty-two-e  of  this article shall not apply. Instead, an offeror shall
    24  tender the following filing fee with and for its submission:
    25    (a) seven hundred fifty dollars for every offering not  in  excess  of
    26  two hundred fifty thousand dollars;
    27    (b)  for  every  offering  in  excess  of  two  hundred fifty thousand
    28  dollars, four-tenths of one percent of the total amount of the  offering
    29  but  not  in excess of sixty thousand dollars, of which one-half of said
    30  amount shall be a nonrefundable deposit paid at the time  of  submitting
    31  the  preservation  plan  to  the  department  of  law for review and the
    32  balance payable upon the attorney general's  issuance  of  a  letter  of
    33  acceptance of the preservation plan for filing;
    34    (c)  seven  hundred fifty dollars for each price change amendment to a
    35  preservation plan;
    36    (d) seven hundred fifty dollars for any other amendment to a preserva-
    37  tion plan; and
    38    (e) seven hundred fifty dollars for  each  such  application,  and  an
    39  additional  seven  hundred  fifty  dollars  for each and every amendment
    40  submitted in furtherance of such an application to permit an offeror  to
    41  solicit  public  interest  prior to the filing of a preservation plan to
    42  the department of law.
    43    32. The relevant housing finance agency  may  promulgate  regulations,
    44  rules,   and  other  guidance  documents  necessary  to  carry  out  the
    45  provisions of this section, as it deems necessary.
    46    33. The provisions of this section shall only  be  applicable  in  the
    47  city of New York.
    48    34. The attorney general shall make any offering statement or prospec-
    49  tus  (including, without limitation, a preservation plan and any amended
    50  filings thereto), submitted pursuant to this section  available  to  the
    51  public in a searchable repository on its official internet website.
    52    §  2. Section 339-e of the real property law is amended by adding nine
    53  new subdivisions 1-a, 6-a, 7-a, 8-a, 10-a, 11-a, 12-a, 12-b and 13-a  to
    54  read as follows:
    55    1-a.  "Capital  replacement"  means  a  building-wide replacement of a
    56  major component of any of the following systems:

        S. 3006--C                         92                         A. 3006--C
 
     1    (a) elevator;
     2    (b) heating, ventilation and air conditioning;
     3    (c) environmental and sustainability upgrades;
     4    (d) plumbing;
     5    (e) wiring;
     6    (f) window; or
     7    (g) a major structural replacement to the building; provided, however,
     8  that  major  structural  replacements  made  to  cure code violations of
     9  record shall not be included.
    10    6-a. "Consummation of the preservation plan" means, in the context  of
    11  a preservation plan for the conversion of residential rental property to
    12  condominium  ownership  that has been accepted for filing by the depart-
    13  ment of law pursuant to section three  hundred  fifty-two-eeeee  of  the
    14  general  business  law  and  subsequently  amended to disclose that said
    15  preservation plan has been declared effective, (i) the recording of  the
    16  declaration  for  the  condominium  and  (ii)  the closing of title to a
    17  dwelling unit with a purchaser under the preservation plan.
    18    7-a. "Income-restricted rental unit", as used in section three hundred
    19  thirty-nine-mm of this article, means a unit that also meets  the  defi-
    20  nition  of  "income-restricted  rental  unit" set forth in section three
    21  hundred fifty-two-eeeee of the general business law.
    22    8-a. "Offeror", as used in section  three  hundred  thirty-nine-mm  of
    23  this  article, means the offeror of a preservation plan to convert resi-
    24  dential rental property to condominium  ownership  pursuant  to  section
    25  three hundred fifty-two-eeeee of the general business law, together with
    26  their or its nominees, assignees and successors in interest.
    27    10-a.  "Preservation  plan",  as used in section three hundred thirty-
    28  nine-mm of this article,  means  an  offering  statement  or  prospectus
    29  submitted  to  the  department  of law pursuant to section three hundred
    30  fifty-two-eeeee of the general business law  for  the  conversion  of  a
    31  building  or  group  of  buildings  or development from rental status to
    32  condominium ownership, wherein the offeror documents that it has entered
    33  into a regulatory agreement with a relevant housing  finance  agency  in
    34  which  it  agreed  to an extended affordability term for the income-res-
    35  tricted rental units.
    36    11-a. "Purchaser under the preservation plan", when  used  in  section
    37  three hundred thirty-nine-mm of this article, means a bona fide purchas-
    38  er  under  the preservation plan shall refer to a person who purchases a
    39  dwelling unit from the offeror pursuant to the terms of  a  preservation
    40  plan that has been accepted for filing by the attorney general. A person
    41  or  entity  that acquires dwelling units and assumes certain obligations
    42  of the offeror shall not be considered a purchaser under  the  preserva-
    43  tion plan.
    44    12-a. "Qualified owner", as used in section three hundred thirty-nine-
    45  mm  of  this  article,  shall  refer to a unit owner that also meets the
    46  definition of "qualified owner" as set forth in  section  three  hundred
    47  fifty-two-eeeee of the general business law.
    48    12-b.  "Relevant  housing  finance  agency",  as used in section three
    49  hundred thirty-nine-mm of this article, shall have the same  meaning  as
    50  set  forth in section three hundred fifty-two-eeeee of the general busi-
    51  ness law.
    52    13-a. "Total price", when used in section three hundred thirty-nine-mm
    53  of this article, means the sum of the cost of all units in the offering,
    54  but excluding any income-restricted rental units owned or to  be  trans-
    55  ferred  to  a  qualified  owner,  at the last price which was offered to

        S. 3006--C                         93                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  tenants in occupancy prior to the effective  date  of  the  preservation
     2  plan regardless of the number of sales made.
     3    §  3.  The real property law is amended by adding a new section 339-mm
     4  to read as follows:
     5    § 339-mm. Establishment of reserve fund and dedicated capital fund for
     6  buildings  converting  to  condominium  ownership  under  section  three
     7  hundred  fifty-two-eeeee  of the general business law.  1. Within thirty
     8  days after the consummation of a preservation plan, the offeror  thereof
     9  (and/or  its designee or designees and/or successor or successors) shall
    10  establish and transfer:
    11    (a) to the condominium board of managers a reserve  fund  to  be  used
    12  exclusively  for  making  capital repairs, replacements and improvements
    13  necessary for the health and safety of the  residents  (including  resi-
    14  dents  of  the income-restricted rental units) of such building or group
    15  of buildings or development.  Such reserve fund shall  be  exclusive  of
    16  any  other  funds required to be reserved under the preservation plan or
    17  applicable law or regulation of the attorney general, except a fund  for
    18  capital  repairs, replacements and improvements substantially similar in
    19  purpose to and in an amount not less than the reserve fund  mandated  by
    20  this  section.  Such reserve fund shall also be exclusive of any working
    21  capital fund or dedicated capital fund  and  shall  not  be  subject  to
    22  reduction for closing apportionments.
    23    (b)  to the qualified owner of the income-restricted rental units, and
    24  subject to the oversight of the  relevant  housing  finance  agency  set
    25  forth  in  a  regulatory  agreement, a dedicated capital fund to be used
    26  exclusively for  making  unit  repairs,  replacements  and  improvements
    27  necessary  for  the health and safety of the residents of an income-res-
    28  tricted rental unit or units of such building or group of  buildings  or
    29  development.  Such dedicated capital fund shall be exclusive and supple-
    30  mental of any other funds required to be reserved under the preservation
    31  plan or applicable law or regulation. Such dedicated capital fund  shall
    32  also  be exclusive and supplemental of any reserve fund or working capi-
    33  tal fund and shall not be subject to reduction  for  closing  apportion-
    34  ments.  The  dedicated capital fund shall not be used towards any build-
    35  ing-wide capital replacement, and instead shall be used solely for  unit
    36  repairs,  replacements  and improvements of the income-restricted rental
    37  units.
    38    1-a. In the event that the funds are insufficient, unless the relevant
    39  housing finance agency provides otherwise, repairs and capital  improve-
    40  ments necessary for the health and safety of the residents in all common
    41  areas  and  building  infrastructure shall be at the sole expense of the
    42  condominium board of managers. The relevant housing finance  agency  may
    43  establish  penalties  for  failure  to  comply with legal and regulatory
    44  requirements.
    45    2. (a) Such reserve fund shall be established in an  amount  equal  to
    46  either  (i)  three percent of the total price or, (ii) (A) three percent
    47  of the actual sales price of all condominium units sold by  the  offeror
    48  at  the  time  the  preservation  plan  is declared effective, provided,
    49  however, that if such amount is less  than  one  percent  of  the  total
    50  price, then the fund shall be established as a minimum of one percent of
    51  the  total  price; plus (B) supplemental contributions to be made by the
    52  offeror at a rate of three percent of the actual sales price  of  condo-
    53  minium  units  for  each  unit held by the offeror and sold to bona fide
    54  purchasers subsequent to the effective date of the preservation plan and
    55  within five years of the consummation of the preservation plan, notwith-
    56  standing that the total amount contributed may exceed three  percent  of

        S. 3006--C                         94                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  the  total  price; and provided, further, that if five years from thirty
     2  days after the consummation of the preservation plan the total  contrib-
     3  utions  by  the  offeror  to the fund are less than three percent of the
     4  total  price  the  offeror  shall  pay the difference between the amount
     5  contributed and three percent of the total price.  Supplemental contrib-
     6  utions shall be made within thirty days of each sale.
     7    (b) Such dedicated capital fund shall  be  established  in  an  amount
     8  equal to one-half of one percent of the total price, and shall be trans-
     9  ferred  in  full  within  thirty days of the date of consummation of the
    10  preservation plan into an account at a financial  institution  regulated
    11  by  the  department  of financial services of the state of New York that
    12  shall have been opened by, and shall at all  times  be  subject  to  the
    13  oversight authority of the relevant housing finance agency of the quali-
    14  fied owner of the income-restricted rental unit or units.
    15    3.  Notwithstanding the provisions of subdivisions one and two of this
    16  section, the contributions required pursuant to this section may be made
    17  earlier or in an amount greater than so provided, including  as  may  be
    18  directed  by  the  relevant housing finance agency. An offeror may claim
    19  and receive credit against the mandatory  initial  contribution  to  the
    20  reserve  fund  for  the  actual  cost of capital replacements which such
    21  offeror has begun after the preservation plan is submitted for filing to
    22  the department of law and  before  the  preservation  plan  is  declared
    23  effective;  provided,  however,  that any such replacements shall be set
    24  forth in the preservation plan together with their actual  or  estimated
    25  costs and further provided, that such credit shall not exceed the lesser
    26  of the actual cost of the capital replacements or one and a half percent
    27  of the total price.
    28    4.  The  condominium board of managers shall report to unit owners and
    29  the relevant housing finance agency, and shall  make  available  to  all
    30  tenants  in  each  building,  on a semi-annual basis with respect to all
    31  deposits into and withdrawals from the reserve fund  mandated  by  para-
    32  graph (a) of subdivision two of this section.
    33    5. The offeror, not later than the thirtieth day following the accept-
    34  ance of a preservation plan for filing by the department of law pursuant
    35  to section three hundred fifty-two-eeeee of the general business law and
    36  until the consummation of the preservation plan, shall post and maintain
    37  in a prominent place, accessible to all tenants in each building covered
    38  by  the preservation plan, a listing of all violations of record against
    39  such buildings as determined by the department of buildings of the  city
    40  of  New  York and the department of housing preservation and development
    41  of the city of New York. All newly issued  violations  shall  be  posted
    42  within  forty-eight  hours of their issuance and maintained as described
    43  in this subdivision. The offeror may satisfy the  requirements  of  this
    44  section  by  designating an agent on the premises with whom such listing
    45  shall be made available for inspection by the tenants.  Any penalty  for
    46  failure to comply with a state or local building and housing maintenance
    47  law  or regulation shall be paid by, and the sole responsibility of, the
    48  condominium board of managers.
    49    6. Any provision purporting to waive the provisions of this section in
    50  any contract to purchase, any agreement between an offeror  and  a  unit
    51  purchaser, any agreement between an offeror and the condominium board of
    52  managers  created  under  a  preservation plan, any agreement between an
    53  offeror and the owner of the  income-restricted  rental  unit  or  units
    54  shall be void as against public policy.
    55    7.  (a) Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (b) of this subdivi-
    56  sion, any person who knowingly violates or assists in the  violation  of

        S. 3006--C                         95                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  any provision of this section shall be subject to a civil penalty of one
     2  hundred  dollars per day per unit for each day that a building is not in
     3  compliance with the provisions of such section; provided, however,  that
     4  such civil penalty shall not exceed one thousand dollars per unit.
     5    (b) Any person who violates or assists in the violation of subdivision
     6  two  of  this  section  shall  also be subject to a civil penalty of one
     7  thousand dollars per day for each day that the reserve fund required  by
     8  subdivision  two  of this section is not established; provided, however,
     9  that such civil penalty shall not  exceed  the  amount  required  to  be
    10  reserved pursuant to subdivision two of this section.
    11    (c) Any other action or proceeding in any court of competent jurisdic-
    12  tion  that  may  be  appropriate or necessary for the enforcement of the
    13  provisions of this section may be brought in the name of the  people  of
    14  the  state  of  New  York  by the attorney general, including actions to
    15  secure permanent injunctions  enjoining  any  acts  or  practices  which
    16  constitute  a  violation  of  any  provision  of this section, mandating
    17  compliance with the provisions of this section or for such other  relief
    18  as  may  be  appropriate. In any such action or proceeding, the attorney
    19  general may apply to any court of competent jurisdiction, or to a  judge
    20  or  justice  thereof,  for  a temporary restraining order or preliminary
    21  injunction enjoining and restraining  all  persons  from  violating  any
    22  provision  of  this section, mandating compliance with the provisions of
    23  this section, or for such other relief as may be appropriate, until  the
    24  hearing  and determination of such action or proceeding and the entry of
    25  final judgment or order therein. The court, or judge or justice thereof,
    26  to whom such application is made, is hereby authorized to  make  any  or
    27  all  of  the  orders  specified in this paragraph, as may be required in
    28  such application, with notice, and to make such other or further  orders
    29  or  directions  as  may  be  necessary  to render the same effectual. No
    30  undertaking shall be required as a condition of the granting or  issuing
    31  of such order, or by reason thereof.
    32    (d)  Nothing  contained in this section shall impair any rights, reme-
    33  dies or causes of action accrued or accruing to purchasers of  condomin-
    34  ium  units  with  regard  to the funding of the reserve fund and capital
    35  fund under this section.
    36    § 4. Subdivision 2, subparagraph (i) of paragraph (a)  of  subdivision
    37  2-a, and paragraphs (a) and (c) of subdivision 7 of section 352-e of the
    38  general  business  law,  subdivision 2 as amended by chapter 1042 of the
    39  laws of 1981, subparagraph (i) of paragraph (a) of  subdivision  2-a  as
    40  added by chapter 771 of the laws of 1983, paragraph (a) of subdivision 7
    41  as amended by section 1 of part BBB-1 of chapter 57 of the laws of 2008,
    42  and paragraph (c) of subdivision 7 as amended by chapter 637 of the laws
    43  of 1989, are amended to read as follows:
    44    2.  Unless  otherwise  provided  by  regulation issued by the attorney
    45  general, the offering statement or statements or prospectus required  in
    46  subdivision  one  of  this section shall be filed with the department of
    47  law at its office in the city of New York, prior to the public  offering
    48  of  the security involved. No offer, advertisement or sale of such secu-
    49  rities shall be made in or from the state of New York until the attorney
    50  general has issued to the issuer or other  [offerer]  offeror  a  letter
    51  stating  that  the  offering  has  been filed. The attorney general, not
    52  later than thirty days after the submission of such filing, shall  issue
    53  such a letter or, in the alternative, a notification in writing indicat-
    54  ing  deficiencies  in  the offering statement, statements or prospectus;
    55  provided, however, that in the case of a building or group of  buildings
    56  to  be  converted to cooperative or condominium ownership which is occu-

        S. 3006--C                         96                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  pied in whole or in part for residential purposes and which is  not  the
     2  subject  of  a  preservation  plan  submitted  pursuant to section three
     3  hundred fifty-two-eeeee of this article,  such  letter  or  notification
     4  shall  be  issued  in not sooner than four months and not later than six
     5  months from the date of submission of such filing. The attorney  general
     6  may also refuse to issue a letter stating that the offering statement or
     7  statements  or  prospectus  has  been filed whenever it appears that the
     8  offering statement or statements or  prospectus  does  not  clearly  set
     9  forth the specific property or properties to be purchased, leased, mort-
    10  gaged,  or otherwise to be acquired, financed or the subject of specific
    11  investment with a substantial portion of the offering proceeds.
    12    (i) "Plan". Every offering statement or prospectus  submitted  to  the
    13  department of law for the conversion of a building or group of buildings
    14  or  development  from residential rental status to cooperative or condo-
    15  minium ownership, other than a plan governed by the provisions of either
    16  section three hundred fifty-two-eee [or], three  hundred  fifty-two-eeee
    17  or section three hundred fifty-two-eeeee of this [chapter] article, or a
    18  plan for such conversion pursuant to article two, eight or eleven of the
    19  private housing finance law.
    20    (a)  The  department  of  law shall collect the following fees for the
    21  filing of each offering statement or prospectus as described in subdivi-
    22  sion one of this section: seven hundred fifty dollars for every offering
    23  not in excess of two hundred fifty thousand dollars; for every  offering
    24  in  excess  of  two  hundred  fifty thousand dollars, four-tenths of one
    25  percent of the total amount of the offering but not in excess of  [thir-
    26  ty]  sixty  thousand dollars of which one-half of said amount shall be a
    27  nonrefundable deposit paid at the time of submitting the offering state-
    28  ment to the department of law for review and the  balance  payable  upon
    29  the  issuance  of a letter of acceptance for filing said offering state-
    30  ment. The department of law shall, in addition, collect a  fee  of  [two
    31  hundred  twenty-five]  seven hundred fifty dollars for each other amend-
    32  ment to an offering statement.  For  each  application  granted  by  the
    33  department  of law, which permits the applicant to solicit public inter-
    34  est or public funds preliminary to the filing of an  offering  statement
    35  or  for  the issuance of a "no-filing required" letter and any amendment
    36  thereto, the department of law  shall  collect  a  fee  of  [two]  seven
    37  hundred [twenty-five] fifty dollars. [In the event the sponsor thereaft-
    38  er  files an offering statement, the fee paid for the preliminary appli-
    39  cation shall be credited against the balance of the fee due and  payable
    40  on  filing.]  For  each  application  granted  pursuant to section three
    41  hundred fifty-two-g of this article, the department of law shall collect
    42  a fee of two-tenths of one percent of the  amount  of  the  offering  of
    43  securities;  however,  the  minimum  fee  shall  be  seven hundred fifty
    44  dollars, and the maximum fee shall be [thirty] sixty  thousand  dollars.
    45  All  revenue from that portion of any fee imposed pursuant to this para-
    46  graph, which exceeds twenty thousand dollars  for  offering  statements,
    47  and  five  hundred  twenty-five  dollars for all other filings, shall be
    48  paid by the department of law to the state comptroller to  be  deposited
    49  in  and  credited  to  the  real estate finance bureau fund, established
    50  pursuant to section eighty of the state finance law.
    51    (c) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph (a) of  this  subdivi-
    52  sion, the department of law shall not collect any fees for the filing of
    53  an  offering  statement  or prospectus or any amended filings thereto as
    54  described in subdivision one of this section whenever: (i) a  conversion
    55  of  a  mobile  home  park, building or group of buildings or development
    56  from residential rental status to cooperative or  condominium  ownership

        S. 3006--C                         97                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  is  being  made pursuant to article eleven, eighteen, nineteen or twenty
     2  of the private housing finance law; or (ii) the  offering  statement  or
     3  prospectus  or  amendment  thereto is submitted to the department of law
     4  pursuant  to section three hundred fifty-two-eeeee of this article.  For
     5  submissions made pursuant to section three  hundred  fifty-two-eeeee  of
     6  this  article,  the department of law shall instead collect the fees set
     7  forth in subdivision thirty-one of such section. All revenue  from  that
     8  portion of any fee imposed pursuant to subdivision thirty-one of section
     9  three  hundred  fifty-two-eeeee  of  this  article  shall be paid by the
    10  department of law to the state comptroller to be deposited in and  cred-
    11  ited  to  the  real  estate finance bureau fund, established pursuant to
    12  section eighty of the state finance law.
    13    § 5. Paragraph (a) of subdivision 1 of section 352-eeee of the general
    14  business law, as amended by section 1 of part N of  chapter  36  of  the
    15  laws of 2019, is amended to read as follows:
    16    (a)  "Plan".  Every  offering statement or prospectus submitted to the
    17  department of law pursuant to section three hundred fifty-two-e of  this
    18  article for the conversion of a building or group of buildings or devel-
    19  opment  from  residential  rental  status  to cooperative or condominium
    20  ownership or other form of cooperative interest in realty, other than an
    21  offering statement or prospectus for such conversion pursuant to section
    22  three hundred fifty-two-eeeee of this article or article two,  eight  or
    23  eleven of the private housing finance law.
    24    §  6.  The opening paragraph of subdivision a of section 26-504 of the
    25  administrative code of the city of  New  York  is  amended  to  read  as
    26  follows:
    27    Class  A  multiple dwellings not owned as a cooperative or as a condo-
    28  minium, except as provided in section three  hundred  fifty-two-eeee  of
    29  the  general business law or as provided in section three hundred fifty-
    30  two-eeeee of the general business law, containing six or  more  dwelling
    31  units which:
    32    § 7. This act shall take effect on the one hundred eightieth day after
    33  it  shall  have become a law; provided that sections one, two, and three
    34  of this act shall expire and be deemed repealed 6 years after such date;
    35  provided further, that such repeal shall not abrogate  any  requirements
    36  or  responsibilities imposed on offerors or condominium boards of direc-
    37  tors as set forth in such sections, including but  not  limited  to  any
    38  such requirements or responsibilities contained in any regulatory agree-
    39  ments  entered  into  pursuant to this act; and provided that the amend-
    40  ments to section 26-504 of chapter 4 of title 26 of  the  administrative
    41  code  of  the  city  of  New  York made by section six of this act shall
    42  expire on the same date as such law expires and  shall  not  affect  the
    43  expiration of such law as provided under section 26-520 of such law.
 
    44                                   PART HH
 
    45    Section  1.  The public housing law is amended by adding a new article
    46  14-A to read as follows:
    47                                ARTICLE 14-A
    48                    HOUSING ACCESS VOUCHER PILOT PROGRAM
    49  Section 605. Definitions.
    50          606. Housing access voucher pilot program.
    51          607. Eligibility.
    52          608. Funding allocation and distribution.
    53          609. Payment of housing vouchers.
    54          610. Leases and tenancy.

        S. 3006--C                         98                         A. 3006--C
 
     1          611. Rental obligation.
     2          612. Monthly assistance payment.
     3          613. Inspection of units.
     4          614. Rent.
     5          615. Vacated units.
     6          616. Leasing  of  units  owned by a housing access voucher local
     7                 administrator.
     8          617. Verification of income.
     9          618. Division of an assisted family.
    10          619. Maintenance of effort.
    11          620. Vouchers statewide.
    12          621. Applicable codes.
    13          622. Housing choice.
    14          623. Annual reports.
    15    § 605. Definitions. For the purposes of this  article,  the  following
    16  terms shall have the following meanings:
    17    1.  "Homeless" means  lacking a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime
    18  residence; having a primary nighttime residence  that  is  a  public  or
    19  private  place not designed for or ordinarily used as a regular sleeping
    20  accommodation for human beings, including a car, park, abandoned  build-
    21  ing, bus or train station, airport, campground, or other place not meant
    22  for human habitation; living in a supervised publicly or privately oper-
    23  ated   shelter  designated  to  provide  temporary  living  arrangements
    24  (including hotels and motels paid for by federal, state or local govern-
    25  ment programs for low-income individuals or by charitable organizations,
    26  congregate shelters, or transitional housing);  exiting  an  institution
    27  where  an  individual  or family has resided and lacking a regular fixed
    28  and adequate nighttime residence upon release or discharge;  individuals
    29  released  or  scheduled  to be released from incarceration and lacking a
    30  regular  fixed  and  adequate  nighttime  residence  upon   release   or
    31  discharge;  being a homeless family with children or unaccompanied youth
    32  defined as homeless under 42 U.S.C. §  11302(a);  having  experienced  a
    33  long-term  period  without  living independently in permanent housing or
    34  having experienced persistent instability as measured by frequent  moves
    35  and being reasonably expected to continue in such status for an extended
    36  period  of time because of chronic disabilities, chronic physical health
    37  or mental health conditions, substance addiction, histories of  domestic
    38  violence  or  childhood  abuse,  the presence of a child or youth with a
    39  disability, multiple barriers to employment, or other dangerous or life-
    40  threatening conditions, including conditions  that  relate  to  violence
    41  against an individual or a family member.
    42    2.  "Imminent  loss  of housing" means having received a verified rent
    43  demand or a petition for eviction; having received a court order result-
    44  ing from an eviction action that notifies the individual or family  that
    45  they  must  leave  their  housing; facing loss of housing due to a court
    46  order to vacate the premises due  to  hazardous  conditions,  which  may
    47  include  but not be limited to asbestos, lead exposure, mold, and radon;
    48  having a primary nighttime residence that is a room in a hotel or  motel
    49  and  lacking the resources necessary to stay; facing loss of the primary
    50  nighttime residence, which may include living in  the  home  of  another
    51  household,  where  the owner or renter of the housing will not allow the
    52  individual or family to stay, provided further, that an  assertion  from
    53  an  individual  or  family member alleging such loss of housing or home-
    54  lessness shall be sufficient to establish  eligibility;  or  fleeing  or
    55  attempting  to  flee domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault,
    56  stalking, human  trafficking  or  other  dangerous  or  life-threatening

        S. 3006--C                         99                         A. 3006--C
 
     1  conditions  that  relate  to violence against the individual or a family
     2  member, provided further that an assertion from an individual or  family
     3  member  alleging  such  abuse and loss of housing shall be sufficient to
     4  establish eligibility.
     5    3.  "Public  housing  agency" means any county, municipality, or other
     6  governmental entity or public body that is authorized to administer  any
     7  public housing program (or an agency or instrumentality of such an enti-
     8  ty),  and any other public or private non-profit entity that administers
     9  any other public housing program or assistance.
    10    4. "Section 8 local administrator" means a public housing agency  that
    11  administers the Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher program under section 8
    12  of  the  United States housing act of 1937 within a community, county or
    13  region, or statewide, on behalf of and under contract with  the  housing
    14  trust fund corporation.
    15    5. "Housing access voucher local administrator" means a public housing
    16  agency,  as  defined  in subdivision three of this section, or Section 8
    17  local administrator designated to administer the housing access  voucher
    18  pilot  program  within  a  community, county or region, or statewide, on
    19  behalf of and under contract with the housing  trust  fund  corporation.
    20  In  the city of New York, the housing access voucher local administrator
    21  shall be the New York city department of housing preservation and devel-
    22  opment, or the New York city housing authority, or both.
    23    6. "Family" means a group of persons  residing  together.  Such  group
    24  includes,  but  is  not  limited to a family with or without children (a
    25  child who is temporarily away from the  home  because  of  placement  in
    26  foster  care  is  considered  a  member  of the family) or any remaining
    27  members of a tenant family. The commissioner shall have  the  discretion
    28  to determine if any other group of persons qualifies as a family.
    29    7. "Owner" means any private person or any entity, including a cooper-
    30  ative,  an agency of the federal government, or a public housing agency,
    31  having the legal right to lease or sublease dwelling units.
    32    8. "Dwelling unit" means  a single-family dwelling, including attached
    33  structures such as porches and stoops; or a single-family dwelling  unit
    34  in a structure that contains more than one separate residential dwelling
    35  unit, and in which each such unit is used or occupied, or intended to be
    36  used  or  occupied, in whole or in part, as the residence of one or more
    37  persons.
    38    9. "Income" shall mean the same as it is defined by 24 CFR § 5.609 and
    39  any amendments thereto.
    40    10. "Adjusted income" shall mean the same as it is defined by 24 CFR §
    41  5.611 and any amendments thereto.
    42    11. "Reasonable rent" means rent not more than  the  rent  charged  on
    43  comparable  units  in the private unassisted market and rent charged for
    44  comparable unassisted units in the premises.
    45    12. "Fair market rent" means the fair market rent for each rental area
    46  as promulgated annually by the United States department of  housing  and
    47  urban development pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 1437f.
    48    13. "Voucher" means a document issued by the housing trust fund corpo-
    49  ration  pursuant to this article to an individual or family selected for
    50  admission to the housing access voucher pilot program,  which  describes
    51  such pilot program and the procedures for approval of a unit selected by
    52  the  family and states the obligations of the individual or family under
    53  the pilot program.
    54    14. "Lease" means a written agreement between an owner  and  a  tenant
    55  for  the leasing of a dwelling unit to the tenant. The lease establishes
    56  the conditions for occupancy of the dwelling unit by  an  individual  or

        S. 3006--C                         100                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  family  with  housing  assistance  payments under a contract between the
     2  owner and the housing access voucher local administrator.
     3    15. "Dependent" means any member of the family who is neither the head
     4  of household, nor the head of the household's spouse, and who is:
     5    (a) under the age of eighteen;
     6    (b) a person with a disability; or
     7    (c) a full-time student.
     8    16. "Elderly" means a person sixty-two years of age or older.
     9    17. "Child care expenses" means expenses relating to the care of chil-
    10  dren under the age of thirteen.
    11    18.  "Severely rent burdened" means those individuals and families who
    12  pay more than fifty percent of their income in rent as  defined  by  the
    13  United States census bureau.
    14    19. "Disability" means:
    15    (a)  the  inability  to  engage in any substantial gainful activity by
    16  reason of any medically determinable physical or mental impairment which
    17  can be expected to result in  death  or  which  has  lasted  or  can  be
    18  expected to last for a continuous period of not less than twelve months;
    19  or
    20    (b)  in  the  case of an individual who has attained the age of fifty-
    21  five and is blind, the inability by reason of such blindness  to  engage
    22  in substantial gainful activity requiring skills or abilities comparable
    23  to  those  of any gainful activity in which they have previously engaged
    24  with some regularity and over a substantial period of time; or
    25    (c) a physical, mental, or emotional impairment which:
    26    (i) is expected to be of long-continued and indefinite duration;
    27    (ii) substantially impedes their ability to live independently; and
    28    (iii) is of such a nature that such ability could be improved by  more
    29  suitable housing conditions; or
    30    (d) a developmental disability that is a severe, chronic disability of
    31  an individual that:
    32    (i)  is attributable to a mental or physical impairment or combination
    33  of mental and physical impairments;
    34    (ii) is manifested before the individual attains age twenty-two;
    35    (iii) is likely to continue indefinitely;
    36    (iv) results in substantial functional limitations in three or more of
    37  the following areas of major life activity:
    38    (A) self-care;
    39    (B) receptive and expressive language;
    40    (C) learning;
    41    (D) mobility;
    42    (E) self-direction;
    43    (F) capacity for independent living; or
    44    (G) economic self-sufficiency; and
    45    (v) reflects the individual's need for a combination and  sequence  of
    46  special,   interdisciplinary,   or   generic   services,  individualized
    47  supports, or other forms of assistance that are of lifelong or  extended
    48  duration and are individually planned and coordinated.
    49    § 606. Housing  access  voucher  pilot  program.    The  commissioner,
    50  subject to the appropriation of funds for this purpose, shall  implement
    51  a  four-year  pilot  program to provide rental assistance in the form of
    52  housing vouchers for eligible individuals and families who are  homeless
    53  or  who  face  an  imminent  loss  of  housing  in  accordance  with the
    54  provisions of this article.  The housing trust  fund  corporation  shall
    55  issue vouchers pursuant to this article beginning March first, two thou-
    56  sand twenty-six, subject to appropriation of funds for this purpose, and

        S. 3006--C                         101                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  may  contract  with  the  division  of  housing and community renewal to
     2  administer any aspect of this  pilot  program  in  accordance  with  the
     3  provisions  of  this  article.  The  commissioner  shall  designate  and
     4  contract  with  housing access voucher local administrators in the state
     5  to make vouchers available to such individuals  and  families  beginning
     6  March  first, two thousand twenty-six and to administer other aspects of
     7  the pilot program in accordance with the provisions of this article.
     8    § 607. Eligibility. The commissioner shall  promulgate  standards  for
     9  determining  eligibility for assistance under this pilot program.  Indi-
    10  viduals and families who meet the standards shall be eligible regardless
    11  of immigration status. Eligibility shall be limited to  individuals  and
    12  families  who  are  homeless or facing imminent loss of housing. Housing
    13  access voucher local administrators may rely on a certification  from  a
    14  social  services  provider  serving homeless individuals, including, but
    15  not limited to, homeless shelters  to  determine  whether  an  applicant
    16  qualifies as a homeless individual or family.
    17    1. An individual or family shall be eligible for this pilot program if
    18  they  are homeless or facing imminent loss of housing and have an income
    19  of no more than fifty percent of the area median income, as  defined  by
    20  the United States department of housing and urban development.
    21    2. An individual or family in receipt of rental assistance pursuant to
    22  this  pilot  program  shall  be  no longer financially eligible for such
    23  assistance under this pilot program when thirty percent of the  individ-
    24  ual's  or family's adjusted income is greater than or equal to the total
    25  rent for the dwelling unit.
    26    3. When an individual or family  becomes  financially  ineligible  for
    27  rental  assistance  under this pilot program pursuant to subdivision two
    28  of this section, the individual or family shall retain rental assistance
    29  for a period no shorter than one year, subject to appropriation of funds
    30  for this purpose.
    31    4. Income eligibility shall be verified  prior  to  a  housing  access
    32  voucher  local  administrator's  initial determination to provide rental
    33  assistance for this pilot program and upon determination of such  eligi-
    34  bility,  an individual or family shall annually certify their income for
    35  the purpose of determining continued eligibility and any adjustments  to
    36  such rental assistance.
    37    5.  The  commissioner may collaborate with the office of temporary and
    38  disability assistance and other state and city agencies to allow a hous-
    39  ing access voucher local administrator to access income information  for
    40  the  purpose  of  determining  an  individual's  or family's initial and
    41  continued eligibility for the pilot program.
    42    6.  Reviews of income shall be made no less frequently than annually.
    43    § 608. Funding allocation and distribution. 1.  Subject  to  appropri-
    44  ation,  funding  shall  be  allocated by the commissioner in each county
    45  except for those counties located within  the  city  of  New  York,  the
    46  initial allocation shall be in proportion to the number of households in
    47  each county or the city of New York who are severely rent burdened based
    48  on data published by the United States census bureau.  Funding for coun-
    49  ties  located within the city of New York shall be allocated directly to
    50  the New York city department of  housing  preservation  and  development
    51  and/or  the  New York city housing authority, as appropriate, in propor-
    52  tion to the number of households in New York city  as  compared  to  the
    53  rest  of  the  state of New York who are severely rent burdened based on
    54  data published by the United States census bureau.
    55    2. The commissioner shall be responsible for  distributing  the  funds
    56  allocated  in  each county not located within the city of New York among

        S. 3006--C                         102                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  housing access voucher local administrators operating in each county  or
     2  in the city of New York.
     3    3. Priority shall be given to applicants who are homeless. The commis-
     4  sioner  shall  have  the  discretion  to establish further priorities as
     5  appropriate.
     6    4. Up to ten percent of the funds allocated may be used by the commis-
     7  sioner and the housing access voucher local administrator  for  adminis-
     8  trative expenses attributable to administering the housing access vouch-
     9  er pilot program.
    10    § 609. Payment  of  housing  vouchers. 1. The housing voucher shall be
    11  paid directly to any owner under a contract between  the  owner  of  the
    12  dwelling  unit to be occupied by the voucher recipient and the appropri-
    13  ate housing access voucher local administrator. The  commissioner  shall
    14  determine  the  form  of the housing assistance payment contract and the
    15  method of payment. A housing assistance payment  contract  entered  into
    16  pursuant to this section shall establish the payment standard (including
    17  utilities and all maintenance and management charges) which the owner is
    18  entitled  to  receive  for each dwelling unit with respect to which such
    19  assistance payments are to be  made.  The  payment  standard  shall  not
    20  exceed one hundred twenty percent nor be less than ninety percent of the
    21  fair  market  rent  for  the  rental  area in which it is located.  Fair
    22  market rent shall be determined pursuant to the procedures and standards
    23  as set forth in the Federal Housing Choice voucher program, as set forth
    24  in the applicable sections of Part 888 of Title 24 of the Code of Feder-
    25  al Regulations.  Fair market rent for a rental area shall  be  published
    26  not  less  than annually by the commissioner and shall be made available
    27  on the website of New York state homes and community renewal.
    28    2. A housing assistance payment  contract  entered  into  pursuant  to
    29  subdivision one of this section may provide for an initial payment of up
    30  to  five months of rent arrears that have accrued during prior occupancy
    31  of a dwelling unit by a voucher recipient if such payment of arrears  is
    32  necessary  to continue such voucher recipient's occupancy of such dwell-
    33  ing unit, and thereby prevent imminent loss of housing.
    34    § 610. Leases and tenancy. Each housing  assistance  payment  contract
    35  entered  into  by  a  housing access voucher local administrator and the
    36  owner of a dwelling unit shall provide:
    37    1. that the lease between the tenant and the owner shall be for a term
    38  of not less than one year, except that the housing access voucher  local
    39  administrator  may  approve  a shorter term for an initial lease between
    40  the tenant and the dwelling unit owner if  the  housing  access  voucher
    41  local  administrator  determines  that  such  shorter term would improve
    42  housing opportunities for the tenant and if such shorter term is consid-
    43  ered to be a prevailing local market practice;
    44    2. that the dwelling unit owner shall offer leases to tenants assisted
    45  under this article that:
    46    (a) are in a standard form used in the locality by the  dwelling  unit
    47  owner; and
    48    (b) contain terms and conditions that:
    49    (i) are consistent with state and local law; and
    50    (ii)  apply  generally to tenants in the property who are not assisted
    51  under this article;
    52    (c) shall provide that during the term of the lease, the  owner  shall
    53  not  terminate  the  tenancy except for serious or repeated violation of
    54  the terms and conditions of the lease, for violation of applicable state
    55  or local law, or for other good cause, including, but  not  limited  to,
    56  the  non-payment  of  the  tenant's portion of the rent owed, and in the

        S. 3006--C                         103                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  case of an owner who is an immediate successor in interest  pursuant  to
     2  foreclosure  during the term of the lease vacating the property prior to
     3  sale shall not constitute other good cause, except that  the  owner  may
     4  terminate  the  tenancy effective on the date of transfer of the unit to
     5  the owner if the owner:
     6    (i) will occupy the unit as a primary residence; and
     7    (ii) has provided the tenant a notice to vacate at least  ninety  days
     8  before the effective date of such notice;
     9    (d)  shall  provide that any termination of tenancy under this section
    10  shall be preceded by the provision of written notice by the owner to the
    11  tenant specifying the grounds for that action, and any relief  shall  be
    12  consistent with applicable state and local law;
    13    3.  that  any  unit under an assistance contract originated under this
    14  article shall only be occupied by the individual or family designated in
    15  said contract and shall be the designated individual or family's primary
    16  residence. Contracts shall not be transferable between units  and  shall
    17  not  be  transferable  between  recipients.  A  family or individual may
    18  transfer their voucher to a different unit under a new contract pursuant
    19  to this article;
    20    4. that an owner shall not charge  more  than  a  reasonable  rent  as
    21  defined in section six hundred five of this article.
    22    § 611. Rental  obligation.  The monthly rental obligation for an indi-
    23  vidual or family receiving housing assistance pursuant  to  the  housing
    24  access voucher pilot program shall be the greater of:
    25    1.  thirty  percent  of  the  monthly adjusted income of the family or
    26  individual; or
    27    2. If the family or  individual  is  receiving  payments  for  welfare
    28  assistance  from  a public agency and a part of those payments, adjusted
    29  in accordance with the actual housing costs of the  family,  is  specif-
    30  ically  designated by that agency to meet the housing costs of the fami-
    31  ly, the portion of those payments that is so designated. These  payments
    32  include,  but  are  not  limited  to  any  shelter assistance or housing
    33  assistance administered by any federal, state or local agency.
    34    § 612. Monthly assistance  payment.  1.  The  amount  of  the  monthly
    35  assistance  payment  with  respect  to  any  dwelling  unit shall be the
    36  difference between the maximum monthly rent which the contract  provides
    37  that the owner is to receive for the unit and the rent the individual or
    38  family is required to pay under section six hundred eleven of this arti-
    39  cle.
    40    2.  The commissioner shall establish maximum rent levels for different
    41  sized rentals in each rental area in a manner that promotes the  use  of
    42  the pilot program in all localities based on the fair market rent of the
    43  rental  area.  Rental areas shall be determined by the commissioner. The
    44  commissioner may rely on data or other information  promulgated  by  any
    45  other  state  or federal agency in determining the rental areas and fair
    46  market rent.
    47    3. The payment standard for each size of dwelling  unit  in  a  rental
    48  area  shall  not  be  less  than ninety percent and shall not exceed one
    49  hundred twenty percent of the fair market rent as defined in section six
    50  hundred five of this article for the same size of dwelling unit  in  the
    51  same  rental area, except that the commissioner shall not be required as
    52  a result of a reduction in the fair market rent to  reduce  the  payment
    53  standard  applied  to  a family continuing to reside in a unit for which
    54  the family was receiving assistance under this article at the  time  the
    55  fair market rent was reduced.

        S. 3006--C                         104                        A. 3006--C
 
     1    § 613. Inspection  of  units.   Inspection of units shall be conducted
     2  pursuant to the procedures and standards of the Federal  Housing  Choice
     3  voucher  program, as set forth in the applicable sections of Part 982 of
     4  Title 24 of the Code of Federal Regulations.
     5    § 614. Rent.  1.  The  rent  for  dwelling  units  for which a housing
     6  assistance payment contract is established under this article  shall  be
     7  reasonable  in  comparison  with  rents  charged for comparable dwelling
     8  units in the private, unassisted local market.
     9    2. A housing access voucher local administrator (or other  entity,  as
    10  provided  in  section  six  hundred sixteen of this article) may, at the
    11  request of an individual or family receiving assistance under this arti-
    12  cle, assist that individual or family in negotiating a  reasonable  rent
    13  with a dwelling unit owner. A housing access voucher local administrator
    14  (or  other such entity) shall review the rent for a unit under consider-
    15  ation by the individual or family (and  all  rent  increases  for  units
    16  under  lease  by the individual or family) to determine whether the rent
    17  (or rent increase) requested by the owner is reasonable.  If  a  housing
    18  access  voucher  local  administrator  (or other such entity) determines
    19  that the rent (or rent increase) for a dwelling unit is not  reasonable,
    20  the  housing  access  voucher local administrator (or other such entity)
    21  shall not make housing assistance  payments  to  the  owner  under  this
    22  subdivision with respect to that unit.
    23    3.  If a dwelling unit for which a housing assistance payment contract
    24  is established under this article is  exempt  from  local  rent  control
    25  provisions  during  the  term  of  that contract, the rent for that unit
    26  shall be reasonable in comparison with other units in  the  rental  area
    27  that are exempt from local rent control provisions.
    28    4.  Each  housing access voucher local administrator shall make timely
    29  payment of any amounts due to a dwelling unit owner under this  section,
    30  subject to appropriation of funds for this purpose.
    31    § 615. Vacated  units.  If  an assisted family vacates a dwelling unit
    32  for which rental assistance  is  provided  under  a  housing  assistance
    33  payment  contract before the expiration of the term of the lease for the
    34  unit, rental assistance pursuant to such contract may  not  be  provided
    35  for the unit after the month during which the unit was vacated.
    36    § 616. Leasing of units owned by a housing access voucher local admin-
    37  istrator.  1.  If  an  eligible individual or family assisted under this
    38  article leases a dwelling unit (other than  a  public  housing  dwelling
    39  unit)  that  is  owned  by  a housing access voucher local administrator
    40  administering  assistance  to  that  individual  or  family  under  this
    41  section,  the  commissioner  shall  require  the  unit  of general local
    42  government or another entity  approved  by  the  commissioner,  to  make
    43  inspections  required under section six hundred thirteen of this article
    44  and rent determinations required under section six hundred  fourteen  of
    45  this  article.  The  housing access voucher local administrator shall be
    46  responsible for any expenses of  such  inspections  and  determinations,
    47  subject to the appropriation of funds for this purpose.
    48    2.  For  purposes of this section, the term "owned by a housing access
    49  voucher local administrator" means, with respect  to  a  dwelling  unit,
    50  that the dwelling unit is in a project that is owned by such administra-
    51  tor,  by  an  entity  wholly  controlled  by such administrator, or by a
    52  limited liability company or limited partnership in which such  adminis-
    53  trator  (or  an  entity wholly controlled by such administrator) holds a
    54  controlling interest in the managing member or general partner. A dwell-
    55  ing unit shall not be deemed to be owned by  a  housing  access  voucher
    56  local  administrator  for purposes of this section because such adminis-

        S. 3006--C                         105                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  trator holds a fee interest as ground lessor in the  property  on  which
     2  the unit is situated, holds a security interest under a mortgage or deed
     3  of  trust  on the unit, or holds a non-controlling interest in an entity
     4  which  owns  the unit or in the managing member or general partner of an
     5  entity which owns the unit.
     6    § 617. Verification of income. The commissioner shall establish proce-
     7  dures which are appropriate and necessary to  assure  that  income  data
     8  provided to the housing access voucher local administrator and owners by
     9  individuals and families applying for or receiving assistance under this
    10  article  is  complete and accurate. In establishing such procedures, the
    11  commissioner shall randomly, regularly, and periodically select a sample
    12  of families to authorize the commissioner to obtain information on these
    13  families for the purpose of income verification, or to allow those fami-
    14  lies to  provide  such  information  themselves.  Such  information  may
    15  include,  but  is  not  limited to, data concerning unemployment compen-
    16  sation and federal income taxation and data relating  to  benefits  made
    17  available under the social security act, 42 U.S.C. 301 et seq., the food
    18  and  nutrition  act  of  2008, 7 U.S.C. 2011 et seq., or title 38 of the
    19  United States Code. Any  such  information  received  pursuant  to  this
    20  section shall remain confidential and shall be used only for the purpose
    21  of  verifying  incomes  in order to determine eligibility of individuals
    22  and families for benefits (and the amount  of  such  benefits,  if  any)
    23  under this article.
    24    § 618. Division  of  an assisted family. 1. In those instances where a
    25  family assisted under this article becomes divided  into  two  otherwise
    26  eligible individuals or families due to divorce, legal separation or the
    27  division  of the family, where such individuals or families cannot agree
    28  as to which such individual or family should  continue  to  receive  the
    29  assistance,  and where there is no determination by a court, the housing
    30  access voucher local administrator shall consider the following  factors
    31  to  determine  which  of the individuals or families will continue to be
    32  assisted:
    33    (a) which of such individuals or families  has  custody  of  dependent
    34  children;
    35    (b)  which  such individual was the head of household when the voucher
    36  was initially issued as listed on the initial application;
    37    (c) the composition of such individuals and families  and  which  such
    38  family includes elderly or disabled members;
    39    (d)  whether  domestic  violence  was  involved in the breakup of such
    40  family;
    41    (e) which family members remain in the unit; and
    42    (f) recommendations of social services professionals.
    43    2. Documentation of these factors will be the  responsibility  of  the
    44  requesting parties. If documentation is not provided, the housing access
    45  voucher  local  administrator  will terminate assistance on the basis of
    46  failure to provide information necessary for a recertification.
    47    § 619. Maintenance of effort. Any funds  made  available  pursuant  to
    48  this  article  shall not be used to offset or reduce the amount of funds
    49  previously expended for the same or similar programs in a prior year  in
    50  any  county  or in the city of New York, but shall be used to supplement
    51  any prior year's expenditures. The commissioner may grant  an  exception
    52  to  this  requirement if any county, municipality, or other governmental
    53  entity or public body can affirmatively show that such amount  of  funds
    54  previously  expended  is  in  excess  of the amount necessary to provide
    55  assistance to all individuals and families within the area in which  the

        S. 3006--C                         106                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  funds  were  previously  expended who are homeless or facing an imminent
     2  loss of housing.
     3    § 620. Vouchers  statewide. Notwithstanding section six hundred ten of
     4  this article, any voucher issued pursuant to this article  may  be  used
     5  for housing anywhere in the state. The commissioner shall inform voucher
     6  holders  that  a  voucher  may be used anywhere in the state and, to the
     7  extent practicable, the commissioner shall  assist  voucher  holders  in
     8  finding housing in the area of their choice.  Provided further, however,
     9  that  a  voucher  must  be used in the county in which it was issued, or
    10  within the city of New York, if the voucher was issued within  the  city
    11  of  New  York,  for  no  less  than  one year before it can be used in a
    12  different jurisdiction, unless the issuing housing access voucher  local
    13  administrator grants a waiver, or the voucher holder, or a family member
    14  thereof,  is  or  has  been  the  victim  of  domestic  violence, dating
    15  violence, sexual assault, or stalking.
    16    § 621. Applicable codes. Housing eligible  for  participation  in  the
    17  housing  access voucher pilot program shall comply with applicable state
    18  and local health, housing, building and safety codes.
    19    § 622. Housing choice. 1. The commissioner shall administer the  hous-
    20  ing  access  voucher pilot program under this article to promote housing
    21  choice for voucher holders. The commissioner shall affirmatively promote
    22  fair housing to the extent possible under this pilot program.
    23    2. Nothing in this article shall lessen or abridge  any  fair  housing
    24  obligations  promulgated  by  municipalities,  localities,  or any other
    25  applicable jurisdiction.
    26    § 623. Annual reports. The commissioner shall, on or  before  November
    27  first, two thousand twenty-six and annually thereafter until the conclu-
    28  sion  of  the  pilot  program created pursuant to this article, submit a
    29  report on the implementation of this article in counties located outside
    30  of the city of New York to the governor, the temporary president of  the
    31  senate,  the  speaker of the assembly, the chair of the senate committee
    32  on housing, the chair of the senate finance committee, the chair of  the
    33  assembly  committee  on  housing, and the chair of the assembly ways and
    34  means committee. The commissioner of the New  York  city  department  of
    35  housing  preservation and development, or the chief executive officer of
    36  the New York city housing authority, or both, shall, on or before Novem-
    37  ber first, two thousand twenty-six and  annually  thereafter  until  the
    38  conclusion of the pilot program created pursuant to this article, submit
    39  a  report  on the implementation of this article in the city of New York
    40  to the governor, the temporary president of the senate, the  speaker  of
    41  the assembly, the chair of the senate committee on housing, the chair of
    42  the  senate  finance  committee,  the chair of the assembly committee on
    43  housing, and the chair of the assembly ways and  means  committee.  Such
    44  report shall include, but need not be limited to, the following: (i) the
    45  amount  of funding allocated for each county or the city of New York for
    46  vouchers pursuant to this article, (ii) the  number  of  individuals  or
    47  families  who  applied  for vouchers pursuant to this article, (iii) the
    48  number of individuals or families placed on waiting lists  for  vouchers
    49  pursuant  to  this  article,  if  any such waiting lists exist, (iv) the
    50  number of individuals or families issued vouchers pursuant to this arti-
    51  cle, (v) the number of individuals or families who were  homeless  prior
    52  to receiving a voucher pursuant to this article, (vi) the voucher utili-
    53  zation  rate  for  vouchers  pursuant  to this article, (vii) the median
    54  income of individuals or families issued vouchers pursuant to this arti-
    55  cle, (viii) the median payment standard per dwelling unit, including the
    56  monthly assistance payment and monthly  rent  obligation,  for  vouchers

        S. 3006--C                         107                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  pursuant to this article, and (ix) the number of individuals or families
     2  who  had been issued vouchers pursuant to this article but who became no
     3  longer financially eligible for vouchers pursuant to this article during
     4  the reporting period.
     5    §  2.  This act shall take effect immediately and shall remain in full
     6  force and effect until May 1, 2030.  Any rule, regulation, plan or guid-
     7  ance document necessary for the implementation of this  act  promulgated
     8  by  the  commissioner  of  the division of housing and community renewal
     9  shall apply only to those counties located outside of the  city  of  New
    10  York.  The New York city department of housing preservation and develop-
    11  ment and the New York  city  housing  authority,  as  applicable,  shall
    12  promulgate or release rules, regulations, plans or guidance documents as
    13  necessary  for  the  implementation  of  this act within the city of New
    14  York.
 
    15                                   PART II
 
    16    Section 1.  Section 13 of section 2 of chapter 868 of the laws of 1975
    17  constituting the New York state financial emergency act for the city  of
    18  New  York,  as amended by section 2 of part K of chapter 686 of the laws
    19  of 2003, is amended to read as follows:
    20    § 13. Termination. This act shall terminate on the later of  (a)  July
    21  first,  two  thousand  [eight]  thirty-five or (b) the date (i) when all
    22  bonds and notes containing the pledge and agreement authorized by subdi-
    23  vision one  of  section  ten-a  of  this  act  are  refunded,  redeemed,
    24  discharged  or otherwise defeased, or (ii) when there shall no longer be
    25  outstanding any guarantee by the United States of America or any  agency
    26  or  instrumentality thereof as to payment of principal of or interest on
    27  any note or bond issued by the city or a state financing agency,  which-
    28  ever of (i) or (ii) shall occur later.
    29    § 2. This act shall take effect immediately.
 
    30                                   PART JJ
 
    31    Section  1.  Article  7  of  the  public authorities law is amended by
    32  adding a new title 5 to read as follows:
    33                                   TITLE 5
    34                      CITY OF BUFFALO PARKING AUTHORITY
    35  Section 1500-a. Short title.
    36          1500-b. Definitions.
    37          1500-c. City of Buffalo parking authority.
    38          1500-d. Purpose and powers of the authority.
    39          1500-e. Conveyance of property by the  city  to  the  authority;
    40                    acquisition of property by the city or by the authori-
    41                    ty.
    42          1500-f. Construction and purchase contracts.
    43          1500-g. Contract for employees.
    44          1500-h. Moneys of the authority.
    45          1500-i. Bonds or notes of the authority.
    46          1500-j. Agreements of New York state.
    47          1500-k. Agreements of the city.
    48          1500-l. State and city not liable on bonds.
    49          1500-m. Bonds legal investments for public officers.
    50          1500-n. Tax exemptions.
    51          1500-o. Tax contract by the state.
    52          1500-p. Remedies of bondholders.

        S. 3006--C                         108                        A. 3006--C
 
     1          1500-q. Actions against the authority.
     2          1500-r. Defense and indemnification.
     3          1500-s. Code of ethics.
     4          1500-t. Contracting for municipal services.
     5          1500-u. Termination of authority.
     6          1500-v. Title  not affected if in part unconstitutional or inef-
     7                    fective.
     8          1500-w. Inconsistent provisions in other acts superseded.
     9    § 1500-a. Short title. This title shall be known and may be  cited  as
    10  the "city of Buffalo parking authority act".
    11    §  1500-b. Definitions. As used or referred to in this title, unless a
    12  different meaning clearly appears from the context:
    13    1. The term "authority" shall mean the corporation created by  section
    14  fifteen hundred-c of this title;
    15    2. The term "city" shall mean the city of Buffalo;
    16    3.  The term "bonds" shall mean the bonds, notes or other evidences of
    17  indebtedness issued by the authority pursuant to this title relating  to
    18  bonds and bondholders;
    19    4. The term "board" shall mean the members of the authority;
    20    5.  The term "real property" shall mean lands, structures, franchises,
    21  and interest in lands, and any and all things  usually  included  within
    22  the  said  term, and includes not only fees simple absolute but also any
    23  and all lesser interest, such as easements, rights of way, uses, leases,
    24  licenses, and all other  incorporeal  hereditaments  and  every  estate,
    25  interest  or  right,  legal  or equitable, including terms of years, and
    26  liens thereon by way of judgments,  mortgages  or  otherwise,  and  also
    27  claims for damage to real estate, in the area of the city;
    28    6.  The  term "project" shall mean any area or place operated or to be
    29  operated by the authority for the parking or storing of motor and  other
    30  vehicles and shall, without limiting the foregoing, include all real and
    31  personal  property,  driveways, roads, approaches, structures, terminals
    32  of all kinds, garages, meters, mechanical equipment,  and  all  appurte-
    33  nances  and  facilities  on, above or under the ground which are used or
    34  usable in connection with such parking or storing of  such  vehicles  in
    35  the  area  of  the  city  or which facilitates electric vehicle charging
    36  infrastructure;
    37    7. The term "projects" shall mean more than one covered projects.
    38    8. The term "covered project" shall mean a project located on a public
    39  parking facility owned by the city at the time  this  title  shall  take
    40  effect.
    41    9. The term "Buffalo fiscal stability authority" shall mean the public
    42  benefit  corporation  established pursuant to title two of article ten-D
    43  of this chapter.
    44    § 1500-c. City of Buffalo parking authority. 1. A board to be known as
    45  the "city of Buffalo parking authority" is hereby  created.  Such  board
    46  shall  be  a  body  corporate and politic, constituting a public benefit
    47  corporation, and its existence shall commence upon  the  appointment  of
    48  the  members  as  herein  provided. It shall consist of a chair and four
    49  other members, who shall be appointed  by  the  mayor  of  the  city  of
    50  Buffalo, with the advice and consent of the city of Buffalo common coun-
    51  cil.  The  mayor  of  the  city  may  remove any member of the board for
    52  neglect of duty or misconduct in office, giving such member  a  copy  of
    53  the charges against them and an opportunity of being heard in person, or
    54  by counsel, in their defense upon not less than ten days notice.  Of the
    55  members  first  appointed,  one  shall  be appointed for a period of one
    56  year, one for a period of two years, one for a period  of  three  years,

        S. 3006--C                         109                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  one  for  a period of four years, and one for a period of five years. At
     2  the expiration of such terms, the terms of office  of  their  successors
     3  shall  be  five  years.  Each  member  shall continue to serve until the
     4  appointment  and  qualification  of a successor. Vacancies in such board
     5  occurring otherwise than by the expiration of term shall be  filled  for
     6  the  unexpired  term.  The  members of the board shall choose from their
     7  number a vice-chair. The members of the board shall not  be  compensated
     8  for  their services, however, members shall be entitled to reimbursement
     9  for any actual and necessary expenses incurred  in  the  performance  of
    10  such  member's  official  duties.   The powers of the authority shall be
    11  vested in and exercised by a majority of the members of the board.  Such
    12  board  may  delegate  to  one or more of its members or to its officers,
    13  agents and employees such powers and duties as it may deem proper.
    14    2. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provisions of any general, special
    15  or local law, ordinance, resolution or charter, no  officer,  member  or
    16  employee  of  the  state  or  of any public authority shall forfeit such
    17  officer, member or employee's office or employment  by  reason  of  such
    18  acceptance  of  appointment  as  a  member,  officer  or employee of the
    19  authority, nor shall service as such  member,  officer  or  employee  be
    20  deemed  incompatible  or  in  conflict  with  such office, membership or
    21  employment.
    22    3. (a) The mayor of the city shall file on or before December  thirty-
    23  first  of  the year in which this title shall take effect, in the office
    24  of the secretary of state, a certificate signed  by  the  mayor  setting
    25  forth:
    26    (i) the name of the authority;
    27    (ii)  the names of the members of the board and their terms of office;
    28  and
    29    (iii) the effective date of this title.
    30    (b) If such certificate is not filed with the secretary of state on or
    31  before such date, then the corporate existence of  the  authority  shall
    32  thereupon  terminate and it shall thereupon be deemed to be and shall be
    33  dissolved.
    34    4. The city of Buffalo parking authority shall not  be  authorized  to
    35  exercise  the  powers,  duties,  and  functions outlined in this article
    36  until all initial members and the initial chair are appointed.
    37    § 1500-d. Purpose and powers of the  authority.  The  purpose  of  the
    38  authority  shall  be to aquire, reconstruct, operate and maintain one or
    39  more covered projects in the  city.  To  carry  out  said  purpose,  the
    40  authority shall have power:
    41    1. To sue and be sued;
    42    2. To have a seal and alter the same at pleasure;
    43    3. To acquire, hold and dispose of personal property for its corporate
    44  purposes;
    45    4.  To  make by-laws for the management and regulation of its affairs,
    46  and, subject to agreements with bondholders, for the regulation  of  the
    47  covered projects;
    48    5.  With the consent of the city, to use agents, employees and facili-
    49  ties of the city, paying to  the  city  its  agreed  proportion  of  the
    50  compensation or costs;
    51    6. To appoint officers, agents and employees, to prescribe their qual-
    52  ifications  and  to  fix  their  compensation;  subject, however, to the
    53  provisions of the civil service law, as hereinafter provided;
    54    7. To appoint an attorney, who may be the corporation counsel  of  the
    55  city, and to fix such attorney's compensation;

        S. 3006--C                         110                        A. 3006--C
 
     1    8. To make contracts and leases, and to execute all instruments neces-
     2  sary for its corporate purpose;
     3    9.  To  construct  such buildings, structures and facilities as may be
     4  necessary for its corporate purpose;
     5    10. To reconstruct, improve, maintain, repair and operate the  covered
     6  projects;
     7    11.  To  accept grants, loans or contributions from the United States,
     8  the state of New York, or any agency or  instrumentality  of  either  of
     9  them,  or  the  city,  or an individual, by bequest or otherwise, and to
    10  expend the proceeds for any purposes of the authority;
    11    12. To fix and collect rentals, fees and other charges for the use  of
    12  the  covered  projects subject to and in accordance with such agreements
    13  with bondholders as may be made as hereinafter provided; and
    14    13. To construct, operate or maintain  in  the  covered  projects  all
    15  facilities  necessary  or  convenient  in  connection  therewith; and to
    16  contract for the construction, operation or  maintenance  of  any  parts
    17  thereof  or  for  services  to  be performed; to rent parts thereof, and
    18  grant concessions, all on such terms and conditions as it may determine;
    19  provided however, that neither the authority, the city or any agency  of
    20  the  authority  or city, or any other person, firm or corporation shall,
    21  within or on any property comprising  a  part  of  any  covered  project
    22  authorized by this title, sell, dispense or otherwise handle any product
    23  used  in  or for the servicing of any motor vehicle using any project or
    24  facility authorized  by  this  title,  and  provided  further  that  the
    25  location  of sites of the covered projects shall be subject to the prior
    26  approval of the planning board and common council of the city.
    27    § 1500-e. Conveyance of property by the city to the authority;  acqui-
    28  sition  of property by the city or by the authority. 1. The city may, by
    29  resolution or resolutions  of  the  common  council  or  by  instruments
    30  authorized  by  such resolutions, convey, with or without consideration,
    31  and upon appropriate conditions as to outstanding city bonds  appertain-
    32  ing  thereto,  to  the authority real and personal property owned by the
    33  city for use by the authority as a covered project or  covered  projects
    34  or a part thereof. In case of real property so conveyed, the title ther-
    35  eto  shall  remain  in the city but the authority shall have the use and
    36  occupancy thereof for so long as its corporate existence shall continue.
    37  In the case of personal property so conveyed, the title  shall  pass  to
    38  the authority.
    39    2. The city may acquire in the name of the city by purchase or condem-
    40  nation  real property in the city for any of the covered projects or for
    41  the widening of existing roads, streets, avenues or highways, or for new
    42  roads, streets, avenues or highways within a radius of one mile  to  any
    43  of  the  covered  projects,  or  partly for such purposes and partly for
    44  other city purposes, by purchase or condemnation in the manner  provided
    45  by  law  for  the  acquisition  of  real  property by the city. For like
    46  purposes, the city may close such streets, roads, avenues,  or  highways
    47  as  may  be  necessary  or  convenient,  except as to state highways and
    48  arterial ways which shall not be closed without the consent of  the  New
    49  York state commissioner of transportation.
    50    3.  Subject  to  the  approval of the common council, contracts may be
    51  entered into between the city and the authority providing for the  prop-
    52  erty to be conveyed by the city to the authority, the additional proper-
    53  ty  to  be  acquired  by  the  city and so conveyed, the streets, roads,
    54  avenues, and highways to be closed by the city and  the  amounts,  terms
    55  and  conditions  of payment to be made by the authority.  Such contracts
    56  may also contain covenants by the city as to the  road,  street,  avenue

        S. 3006--C                         111                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  and  highway  improvements  to  be  made by the city. Any such contracts
     2  between the city and the authority may be pledged by  the  authority  to
     3  secure  its  bonds and may not be modified thereafter except as provided
     4  by  the  terms  of  the  pledge.  The  common council may authorize such
     5  contracts between the city and the authority and no other  authorization
     6  on  the part of the city for such contracts shall be necessary. Any such
     7  contracts may be so authorized and entered into by the city and in  such
     8  manner as the common council may determine, and the payments required to
     9  be  made  by  the  city may be made and financed notwithstanding that no
    10  provisions therefor shall have first been made in the  annual  appropri-
    11  ations  of  the  city.  All contractual or other obligations of the city
    12  incurred in carrying out the provisions of this title shall be  included
    13  in  and provided for by each annual appropriation of the city thereafter
    14  made, if and to the extent that they may appropriately be included ther-
    15  ein.
    16    4. The authority may, subject to the approval of the common council of
    17  the city, itself acquire real property for a covered project in the name
    18  of the city at the cost and expense of the authority  by  purchase.  The
    19  authority shall have the use and occupancy of such real property so long
    20  as its corporate existence shall continue.
    21    5.  In case the authority shall have the use and occupancy of any real
    22  property which it shall determine is no longer required  for  a  covered
    23  project  then,  if such property was acquired at the cost and expense of
    24  the city, the authority shall have the power to surrender  its  use  and
    25  occupancy thereof to the city, or, if such real property was acquired at
    26  the cost and expense of the authority, then the authority shall have the
    27  power  to  sell,  lease  or  otherwise  dispose of said real property at
    28  public or private sale, subject to applicable  provisions  of  law,  and
    29  shall retain and have the power to use the proceeds of sale, rentals, or
    30  other moneys derived from the disposition thereof for its purposes.
    31    § 1500-f. Construction and purchase contracts. The authority shall let
    32  contracts for construction in the same manner, so far as practicable, as
    33  is  provided by law for contracts of the city, including but not limited
    34  to section one hundred three of the general municipal  law.  Nothing  in
    35  this  section  shall be construed to limit the power of the authority to
    36  do any construction directly by the officers, agents  and  employees  of
    37  the  authority.    Contracts  for the purchase of supplies, material and
    38  equipment shall be let in the same manner as  is  provided  by  law  for
    39  contracts of the city.
    40    §  1500-g.  Contract for employees. The authority is hereby authorized
    41  to enter into  contracts  under  which  such  contractor  would  provide
    42  employees  to the authority for the purpose of operation and maintenance
    43  of the projects of the authority. All employees  currently  employed  by
    44  the  city  or by a contractor to support operations currently managed by
    45  the city shall be retained by any contractor retained pursuant  to  this
    46  section.  The  authority  shall not begin operation of any project until
    47  such a contract shall be in force. Such contract shall provide that  all
    48  employees  engaged  in  the  operation  and maintenance of any authority
    49  project shall be employees of the contractor and not  employees  of  the
    50  authority. Such employees shall receive their total compensation and any
    51  employee  benefits  directly  from  the  contractor  for  whom  they are
    52  employed provided any  relevant  local  regulation,  rule  or  ordinance
    53  related  to  wage shall apply. Except for roles considered to be manage-
    54  ment or confidential pursuant to article fourteen of the  civil  service
    55  law,  including  the  board  of  the  authority,  established by section
    56  fifteen hundred-c of this title, the authority shall have  no  employees

        S. 3006--C                         112                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  other  than  the  employees  of  the contractor pursuant to any contract
     2  authorized by this section.
     3    §  1500-h.  Moneys  of the authority. All moneys of the authority from
     4  whatever source derived shall be paid to the treasurer of  the  city  as
     5  agent  of  the  authority,  who shall not commingle such moneys with any
     6  other moneys. Such moneys shall be deposited in a separate bank  account
     7  or  accounts. The money in such accounts shall be paid out by the treas-
     8  urer on requisition of the chair of the authority or of such  person  or
     9  persons  as  the authority may authorize to make such requisitions after
    10  audit by and upon the warrant of the city comptroller. All  deposits  of
    11  such  moneys  shall,  if  required by the treasurer or the authority, be
    12  secured by obligations of the United States or the state of New York  or
    13  of  any  municipality of a market value equal at all times to the amount
    14  of the deposit, and all banks and trust companies are authorized to give
    15  such security for such deposits.  To the extent practicable,  consistent
    16  with  the  cash  requirements of the authority, all such monies shall be
    17  deposited in interest bearing accounts.  The  treasurer  and  a  legally
    18  authorized  representative of the treasurer are authorized and empowered
    19  from time to time to examine the accounts and books  of  the  authority,
    20  including its receipts, disbursements, contracts, leases, sinking funds,
    21  investments  and  any other records and papers relating to its financial
    22  standing. The account of the authority shall be subject  to  the  super-
    23  vision of the New York state comptroller, and such comptroller or legal-
    24  ly  authorized  representatives  of  the  comptroller are authorized and
    25  empowered from time to time to examine the accounts  and  books  of  the
    26  authority,  including  its  receipts,  disbursements, contracts, leases,
    27  sinking funds, investments and any other records and papers relating  to
    28  its  financial  standing  and fiscal affairs.   The authority shall have
    29  power, notwithstanding the provisions of this section, to contract  with
    30  the holders of any of its bonds as to the custody, collection, securing,
    31  investment and payment of any moneys of the authority or any moneys held
    32  in  trust  or otherwise for the payment of bonds or in any way to secure
    33  bonds, and to carry out any  such  contract  notwithstanding  that  such
    34  contract  may  be  inconsistent  with  the  previous  provisions of this
    35  section. Moneys held in trust or otherwise for the payment of  bonds  or
    36  in  any  way to secure bonds and deposits of such moneys may be acquired
    37  in the same manner as moneys of the authority, and all banks  and  trust
    38  companies  are  authorized  to give such security for such deposits. Any
    39  monies of the authority not required for immediate use  or  disbursement
    40  may, at the discretion of the authority, be invested pursuant to section
    41  ninety-eight-a  of  the  state finance law in accordance with guidelines
    42  established by the board and amended from time to time. Subject  to  the
    43  provisions of any contract with bondholders and with the approval of the
    44  state  comptroller,  the authority shall prescribe a system of accounts,
    45  provided however, the authority shall render a complete  annual  account
    46  of its proceedings to the common council at its first meeting in January
    47  of  each  and  every year. The authority shall enter into agreement with
    48  the city to pay and transfer a certain portion of excess revenues of the
    49  authority to the city each fiscal year. Within ninety days after the end
    50  of each fiscal year, an annual financial and  management  audit  of  the
    51  authority's performance and operations shall be prepared by an independ-
    52  ent certified public accountancy firm. Such firm shall be chosen from an
    53  approved  list  of  auditors  prescribed  by  the  city comptroller, the
    54  expense of which shall be treated as an expense of the authority.
    55    § 1500-i. Bonds or notes of the authority. 1. The authority shall have
    56  the power and is hereby authorized from time to  time  to  issue  bonds,

        S. 3006--C                         113                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  notes,  or other obligations in conformity with applicable provisions of
     2  the uniform commercial code to: (a) pay the cost of acquisition of prop-
     3  erty in any covered project; (b) pay the cost of  reconstructing,  main-
     4  taining,  improving  or  repairing  any  covered  project;  (c) pay such
     5  expenses as may be deemed by the board necessary  or  desirable  to  the
     6  financing  thereof  and  placing  such covered project in operation; (d)
     7  establish reserves to secure the bonds; and (e) pay  the  principal  of,
     8  premium, if any, and interest on the bonds and the payment of incidental
     9  expenses in connection therewith. The aggregate principal amount of such
    10  bonds,  notes  or  other obligations shall not exceed sixty-five million
    11  dollars, excluding bonds, notes or other obligations issued to refund or
    12  repay bonds, notes  or  other  obligations  therefore  issued  for  such
    13  purposes;  provided,  however, that upon any such refunding or repayment
    14  the total aggregate principal amount  of  outstanding  bonds,  notes  or
    15  other  obligations  may be greater than sixty-five million dollars, only
    16  if the present value of the aggregate debt service of the  refunding  or
    17  repayment  of  bonds,  notes or other obligations to be issued shall not
    18  exceed the present value of the aggregate debt  service  of  the  bonds,
    19  notes  or other obligations so to be refunded or repaid. For the purpose
    20  of this section, the present value of the aggregate debt service of  the
    21  refunding  or repayment bonds, notes or other obligations and the aggre-
    22  gate debt service of the bonds, notes or other obligations  refunded  or
    23  repaid  shall  be calculated by utilizing the effective interest rate of
    24  the refunding or repayment of bonds, notes or other  obligations,  which
    25  shall  be that rate arrived at by doubling the semi-annual interest rate
    26  (compounded  semi-annually)  necessary  to  discount  the  debt  service
    27  payments  on  the  refunding or repayment of bonds, notes or other obli-
    28  gations from payment of dates thereof  to  the  date  of  issue  of  the
    29  refunding  or  repayment of bonds, notes or other obligations and to the
    30  price bid including estimated accrued interest from  the  sale  thereof.
    31  The  authority  shall  have  the power and is hereby authorized to enter
    32  into such agreements and perform such acts as may be required under  any
    33  applicable federal law, rule or regulation to secure a federal guarantee
    34  to  any  bonds. With respect to any proposed borrowing by the authority,
    35  the authority shall notify the Buffalo  fiscal  stability  authority  of
    36  each  proposed  issue of bonds or notes to be issued to give the Buffalo
    37  fiscal stability authority an opportunity to review  the  terms  of  and
    38  comment  on  the prudence of each proposed issue of bonds or notes to be
    39  issued by the parking authority for a period of no less  than  ten  days
    40  prior to issuing such bonds or notes.
    41    2. The authority shall have the power from time to time to renew bonds
    42  or to issue renewal bonds for such purpose, to issue bonds to pay bonds,
    43  and,  whenever  it  deems refunding expedient, to refund any bond by the
    44  issuance of new bonds, whether the bonds to be refunded have or have not
    45  matured, and may issue bonds, partly to refund  bonds  then  outstanding
    46  and  partly  for  any  other  purpose of the authority. Bonds issued for
    47  refunding purposes shall  be  sold  and  the  proceeds  applied  to  the
    48  purchase, redemption or payment of the bonds or notes to be refunded.
    49    3. Bonds issued by the authority may be general obligations secured by
    50  the  faith  and  credit  of  the authority or may be special obligations
    51  payable solely out of particular revenues or  other  monies  as  may  be
    52  designated  in  the  proceedings  of the authority under which the bonds
    53  shall be authorized to be issued, subject as to  priority  only  to  any
    54  agreements with the holders of outstanding bonds pledging any particular
    55  property,  revenues  or  monies.  The authority may also enter into loan
    56  agreements, lines of credit and other security agreements and obtain for

        S. 3006--C                         114                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  or on its behalf letters of credit, insurance, guarantees or other cred-
     2  it enhancements to the extent now or hereafter available, in  each  case
     3  for  securing  its bonds or to provide direct payment of any costs which
     4  the authority is authorized to pay.
     5    4.  (a) Bonds shall be authorized by resolution of the authority be in
     6  such denominations and bear such date or dates and mature at  such  time
     7  or  times,  as  such  resolution  may  provide,  provided that bonds and
     8  renewals thereof shall mature within  thirty  years  from  the  date  of
     9  original issuance of any such bonds.
    10    (b)  Bonds shall be subject to such terms of redemption, bear interest
    11  at such rate or rates, be payable at such times, be in such form, either
    12  coupon or registered, carry such registration privileges, be executed in
    13  such manner, be payable in such medium of payment at such place or plac-
    14  es, and be subject to such terms and conditions as such  resolution  may
    15  provide.  Notwithstanding  any  other provision of law, the bonds of the
    16  authority issued pursuant to this section shall be sold  to  the  bidder
    17  offering  the  lowest  true interest cost, taking into consideration any
    18  premium or discount not less than  four  nor  more  than  fifteen  days,
    19  Sunday excepted, after a notice of such sale has been published at least
    20  once  in  a  newspaper  of general circulation in the area served by the
    21  authority, which shall state the terms of the sale.  The  terms  of  the
    22  sale  may  not  change unless notice of such change is published in such
    23  newspaper at least one day prior to the date of the sale as set forth in
    24  the original notice of sale. Advertisements shall contain a provision to
    25  the effect that the authority, in its discretion, may reject any or  all
    26  bids  made  pursuant  to  such  advertisements, and in the event of such
    27  rejection, the authority is authorized to negotiate a private or  public
    28  sale  or  readvertise for bids in the form and manner described above in
    29  this paragraph as many times as, in its judgment, may  be  necessary  to
    30  effect satisfactory sale.
    31    (c)  Notwithstanding  the provisions of paragraph (b) of this subdivi-
    32  sion, whenever in the judgment of the authority  the  interests  of  the
    33  authority  will be served thereby, the board, on the written recommenda-
    34  tion of the chairperson may authorize the sale of such bonds at  private
    35  or public sale on a negotiated basis or on either a competitive or nego-
    36  tiated basis. The authority shall set guidelines governing the terms and
    37  conditions  of  any  such private or public sales. The private or public
    38  bond sale guidelines set by the authority  shall  include,  but  not  be
    39  limited to, a requirement that where the interests of the authority will
    40  be  served  by  a  private  or public sale of bonds, the authority shall
    41  select underwriters taking into account, among other things,  qualifica-
    42  tions  of  underwriters as to experience, their ability to structure and
    43  sell authority bond issues, anticipated  costs  to  the  authority,  the
    44  prior experience of the authority with the firm, if any, the capitaliza-
    45  tion  of such firms, participation of qualified minority and women-owned
    46  business enterprise firms in such private or public sales  of  bonds  of
    47  the  authority  and  the experience and ability of firms under consider-
    48  ation to work with minority and women-owned business enterprises  so  as
    49  to promote and assist participation by such enterprises.
    50    (d) The authority shall have the power from time to time to amend such
    51  private  bond  sale guidelines in accordance with the provisions of this
    52  subdivision.
    53    (e) No private or public bond sale on  a  negotiated  basis  shall  be
    54  conducted  by  the  authority  without prior approval of the state comp-
    55  troller. The authority shall annually prepare and approve  a  bond  sale
    56  report which shall include the private or public bond sale guidelines as

        S. 3006--C                         115                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  specified  in  this subdivision, amendments to such guidelines since the
     2  last private or public bond sale report, an explanation of the bond sale
     3  guidelines and  amendments,  and  the  results  of  any  sale  of  bonds
     4  conducted during the fiscal year. Such bond sale report may be a part of
     5  any other annual report that the authority is required to make.
     6    (f)  The  authority  shall annually submit its bond sale report to the
     7  Buffalo fiscal stability authority and the state comptroller and  copies
     8  thereof  to the senate finance committee and the assembly ways and means
     9  committee.
    10    (g) The authority shall make available to the  public  copies  of  its
    11  bond sale report upon reasonable request thereof.
    12    (h)  Nothing  contained  in this subdivision shall be deemed to alter,
    13  affect the validity of, modify the terms of, or impair any  contract  or
    14  agreement  made  or  entered into in violation of, or without compliance
    15  with, the provisions of this subdivision.
    16    5. Any resolution or resolutions authorizing bonds  or  any  issue  of
    17  bonds by the authority may contain provisions which may be a part of the
    18  contract with the holders of the bonds thereby authorized as to:
    19    (a)  pledging  all  or  part  of the revenues, together with any other
    20  monies or property of the authority to secure the payment of the  bonds,
    21  or  any  costs  of  issuance  thereof, including but not limited to, any
    22  contracts, earnings or proceeds of any grant to the  authority  received
    23  from  any private or public source subject to such agreements with bond-
    24  holders as may then exist;
    25    (b) the setting aside of reserves and the creation  of  sinking  funds
    26  and the regulation and disposition thereof;
    27    (c)  limitations on the purpose to which the proceeds from the sale of
    28  bonds may be applied;
    29    (d) the rates, rents, fees and other charges to be fixed and collected
    30  by the authority and the amount to be raised in each  year  thereby  and
    31  the use and disposition of revenues;
    32    (e) limitations on the right of the authority to restrict and regulate
    33  the  use of the covered project or part thereof in connection with which
    34  bonds are issued;
    35    (f) limitations on the issuance of additional bonds,  the  terms  upon
    36  which  additional  bonds  may be issued and secured and the refunding of
    37  outstanding or other bonds;
    38    (g) the procedure, if any, by which the terms  of  any  contract  with
    39  bondholders  may  be  amended  or abrogated, including the proportion of
    40  bondholders which must consent thereto, and the  manner  in  which  such
    41  consent may be given;
    42    (h)  the  creation  of special funds into which any revenues or monies
    43  may be deposited;
    44    (i) the terms and provisions of any trust, mortgage, deed or indenture
    45  securing the bonds under which the bonds may be issued;
    46    (j) vesting in a trustee or trustees such properties,  rights,  powers
    47  and duties in trust as the authority may determine which may include any
    48  or all of the rights, powers and duties of the trustees appointed by the
    49  bondholders  pursuant  to  this title or limiting the rights, duties and
    50  powers of such trustee;
    51    (k) defining the acts or omissions  to  act  which  may  constitute  a
    52  default  in the obligations and duties of the authority to the bondhold-
    53  ers and providing for the rights and remedies of the bondholders in  the
    54  event  of  such default, including as a matter of right appointment of a
    55  receiver, provided, however, that such rights and remedies shall not  be

        S. 3006--C                         116                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  inconsistent  with  the  laws  of the state and other provisions of this
     2  title;
     3    (l)  limitations  on  the  power of the authority to sell or otherwise
     4  dispose of any covered project or any part thereof or other property;
     5    (m) limitations on the amount of  revenues  and  other  monies  to  be
     6  expended for operating, administrative or other expenses of the authori-
     7  ty;
     8    (n) the payment of the proceeds of bonds, revenues and other monies to
     9  a trustee or other depository, and for the method of disbursement there-
    10  of with such safeguards and restrictions as the authority may determine;
    11  and
    12    (o)  any other matters of like or different character which in any way
    13  affect the security or protection of the bonds or the rights  and  reme-
    14  dies of the bondholders.
    15    6.  In  addition  to  the  powers  conferred  by this section upon the
    16  authority to secure its bonds, the authority   shall have the  power  in
    17  connection  with  the  issuance  of bonds to adopt resolutions and enter
    18  into such trust indentures,  agreements  or  other  instruments  as  the
    19  authority may deem necessary, convenient or desirable concerning the use
    20  or  disposition  of  its revenues or other monies or property, including
    21  the mortgaging of any property and the entrusting, pledging or  creation
    22  of  any other security interest in any such revenues, monies or property
    23  and the doing of any act, including refraining from doing any act  which
    24  the  authority  would have the right to do in the absence of such resol-
    25  utions, trust indentures, agreements  or other instruments. The authori-
    26  ty shall have power to enter into amendments of  any  such  resolutions,
    27  trust  indentures,  agreements  or  other  instruments within the powers
    28  granted to the authority by this title and to perform such  resolutions,
    29  trust indentures, agreements or other instruments. The provisions of any
    30  such  resolutions, trust indentures, agreements or other instruments may
    31  be made a part of the contract with the holders of bonds of the authori-
    32  ty.
    33    7. Any provision of  the  uniform  commercial  code  to  the  contrary
    34  notwithstanding,  any  pledge of or other security interest in revenues,
    35  monies, accounts, contract rights, general intangibles or other personal
    36  property made or created by the authority shall be  valid,  binding  and
    37  perfected  from  the  time  when  such  pledge is made or other security
    38  interest attaches without any physical delivery  of  the  collateral  or
    39  further  act, and the lien of any such pledge or other security interest
    40  shall be valid, binding and perfected against all parties having  claims
    41  of  any  kind in tort, contract or otherwise against the authority irre-
    42  spective of whether or not such parties have notice thereof. No  instru-
    43  ment  by  which  such  a  pledge or security interest is created nor any
    44  financing statement need be recorded or filed.
    45    8. Whether or not the bonds of the authority  are  of  such  form  and
    46  character as to be negotiable instruments under the terms of the uniform
    47  commercial code, the bonds are hereby made negotiable instruments within
    48  the  meaning of and for all the purposes of the uniform commercial code,
    49  subject only to the provisions of the bonds for registration.
    50    9. Neither the members nor the  officers  of  the  authority  nor  any
    51  person executing its bonds shall be liable personally on its bonds or be
    52  subject  to  any  personal  liability or accountability by reason of the
    53  issuance thereof.
    54    10. Subject to such agreements with bondholders as may then exist, the
    55  authority shall have the power to purchase the bonds of  the  authority,
    56  in  lieu  of redemption, out of any funds available therefor, at a price

        S. 3006--C                         117                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  not exceeding, if the bonds are then redeemable,  the  redemption  price
     2  then applicable plus accrued interest to the next interest payment date,
     3  or,  if the bonds are not then redeemable, the redemption price applica-
     4  ble  on  the  first date after such purchase upon which the bonds become
     5  subject to redemption plus accrued interest to the next interest payment
     6  date. Bonds so purchased shall there upon be canceled.
     7    11. The authority shall have power and is hereby authorized  to  issue
     8  negotiable  bond  anticipation  notes  in conformity with the applicable
     9  provisions of the uniform commercial code and may renew  the  same  from
    10  time  to  time  but  the  maximum  maturity  of any such note, including
    11  renewals thereof, shall not exceed two years from the date of  issue  of
    12  such original note.
    13    §  1500-j.  Agreements of New York state. The state does hereby pledge
    14  to and agree with the holders of  any  bonds  issued  by  the  authority
    15  pursuant  to this title and with those persons or public authorities who
    16  may enter into contracts with the authority pursuant to  the  provisions
    17  of  this title that the state will not alter, limit or impair the rights
    18  vested in the authority by this title to purchase,  construct,  own  and
    19  operate, maintain, repair, improve, reconstruct, renovate, rehabilitate,
    20  enlarge,  increase and extend, or dispose of any covered project, or any
    21  part or parts thereof for which bonds of the authority shall  have  been
    22  issued,  to  establish  and  collect  rentals,  fees  and  other charges
    23  referred to in this title, to fulfill the  terms  of  any  contracts  or
    24  agreements  made with or for the benefit of the holders of the bonds, or
    25  with any person or public  authority  with  reference  to  such  covered
    26  project or part thereof, or in any way to impair the rights and remedies
    27  of  the  bondholders,  until  the bonds, together with interest thereon,
    28  including interest on any unpaid installments of interest and all  costs
    29  and expenses in connection with any action or proceeding by or on behalf
    30  of the holders of bonds, are fully met and discharged and such contracts
    31  are  fully  performed  on  the  part  of the authority. The authority is
    32  authorized to include this pledge and agreement  of  the  state  in  any
    33  agreement with the holders of bonds.
    34    §  1500-k.  Agreements  of  the  city. 1. The city is   authorized  to
    35  pledge to and agree with the holders of any bonds issued by the authori-
    36  ty pursuant to this title and with those persons or  public  authorities
    37  who  may  enter  into  contracts  with  the  authority  pursuant  to the
    38  provisions of this title that the city will not alter, limit  or  impair
    39  the  rights  hereby vested in the authority by this  title  to purchase,
    40  construct, own and  operate,  maintain,  repair,  improve,  reconstruct,
    41  renovate,  rehabilitate, enlarge, increase and extend, or dispose of any
    42  covered project, or any part or parts thereof, for  which  bonds of  the
    43  authority  shall  have  been  issued,  to  establish, collect and adjust
    44  rates, rents, fees and other charges  referred  to  in  this  title,  to
    45  fulfill  the  terms of any agreements made with the holders of the bonds
    46  or with any public authority or person with reference to such project or
    47  part thereof, or in any way impair the rights and remedies of the  hold-
    48  ers of bonds, until the bonds, together with interest thereon, including
    49  interest  on  any  unpaid  installments  of interest, and all costs  and
    50  expenses in connection with any action or proceeding by or on behalf  of
    51  the  holders  of bonds, are fully met and discharged and  such contracts
    52  are fully performed on the part of the authority.
    53    2. The authority is hereby authorized, in its discretion, for  and  on
    54  behalf  of  itself and subject to approval by the common council and the
    55  mayor, to covenant and agree with the holders of the  bonds,  with  such
    56  exceptions  and limitations as it may deem to be in the public interest,

        S. 3006--C                         118                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  that no public parking areas except those acquired  and operated by  the
     2  authority will be constructed or operated in the city by the city, or by
     3  any public benefit or other corporation the members or some of which are
     4  elected  or are appointed by city officials, until either (a) the bonds,
     5  together with interest thereon, interest on any unpaid  installments  of
     6  interest  and  all  costs  and expenses in connection with any action or
     7  proceeding by or  on  behalf  of  the  bondholders  are  fully  met  and
     8  discharged  or  (b)  principal  or interest of any of the bonds shall be
     9  overdue and unpaid for a period of three years or  more,  provided  that
    10  nothing  in this section shall be deemed to impair the right of the city
    11  to install and operate parking meters on the public streets of the city.
    12    § 1500-l. State and city not liable on  bonds.  The  bonds  and  other
    13  obligations  of  the  authority  shall not be a debt of the state of New
    14  York or of the city, and neither the state nor the city shall be  liable
    15  thereon,  nor shall they be payable out of any funds other than those of
    16  the authority.
    17    § 1500-m. Bonds legal investments for public officers. The  bonds  are
    18  hereby  made  securities in which all public officers and bodies of this
    19  state and all municipalities and municipal subdivisions,  all  insurance
    20  companies  and  associations  and other persons carrying on an insurance
    21  business, all banks, bankers, trust companies, savings banks and savings
    22  associations, including savings and loan associations, building and loan
    23  associations, investment companies and other persons carrying on a bank-
    24  ing business, and all other persons  whatsoever  except  as  hereinafter
    25  provided,  who are now or may hereafter be authorized to invest in bonds
    26  or other obligations of the state, may properly and legally invest funds
    27  including capital in their control or belonging to them; provided  that,
    28  notwithstanding  the  provisions  of any other general or special law to
    29  the contrary, such bonds shall not be eligible  for  the  investment  of
    30  funds,  including capital, of trusts, estates or guardianships under the
    31  control of individual administrators, guardians, executors, trustees and
    32  other individual fiduciaries. The bonds are also hereby made  securities
    33  which may be deposited with and shall be received by all public officers
    34  and  bodies  of this state and all municipalities and municipal subdivi-
    35  sions for any purpose for which the deposit  of  bonds  or  other  obli-
    36  gations of this state is now or may hereafter be authorized.
    37    § 1500-n. Tax exemptions. 1. It is hereby determined that the creation
    38  of  the  authority  and the carrying out of its corporate purposes is in
    39  all respects for the benefit of the people of the city and its environs,
    40  and is a public purpose, and the authority shall be regarded as perform-
    41  ing a governmental function in the exercise of the powers conferred upon
    42  it by this title and shall be required to pay no  taxes  or  assessments
    43  upon  any  of  the  property acquired by it or under its jurisdiction or
    44  control or supervision or upon its activities.
    45    2. Any bonds or notes issued pursuant to this title, together with the
    46  income therefrom, as well as the property of  the  authority,  shall  be
    47  exempt  from  taxation,  except  for  estate  or gift taxes and taxes on
    48  transfers.
    49    § 1500-o. Tax contract by the state. The state of New  York  covenants
    50  with  the  purchasers and with all subsequent holders and transferees of
    51  bonds or notes issued by  the  authority  pursuant  to  this  title,  in
    52  consideration  of  the acceptance of and payment for the bonds or notes,
    53  that the bonds and notes of the authority issued pursuant to this  title
    54  and  the income therefrom, and all moneys, funds and revenues pledged to
    55  pay or secure the payment of such bonds or notes shall at all  times  be

        S. 3006--C                         119                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  free  from  taxation except for estate or gift taxes and taxes on trans-
     2  fers.
     3    §  1500-p. Remedies of bondholders. 1. In the event that the authority
     4  shall default in the payment of principal of or interest on any issue of
     5  the bonds after the same shall become due, whether at maturity  or  upon
     6  call  for  redemption,  and  such default shall continue for a period of
     7  thirty days, or in the event that the authority shall fail or refuse  to
     8  comply with the provisions of this title, or shall default in any agree-
     9  ment  made  with  the  holders of any issue of the bonds, the holders of
    10  twenty-five per centum in aggregate principal amount  of  the  bonds  of
    11  such  issue  then outstanding, by instrument or instruments filed in the
    12  office of the clerk of the county of Erie and proved or acknowledged  in
    13  the  same  manner  as  a  deed  to be recorded, may appoint a trustee to
    14  represent the holders of such bonds for the purposes herein provided.
    15    2. Such trustee may, and upon written request of the holders of  twen-
    16  ty-five  per  centum  in principal amount of such bonds then outstanding
    17  shall, in such trustee's own name:
    18    (a) by action or special proceeding enforce all rights  of  the  bond-
    19  holders,  including the right to require the authority to collect reven-
    20  ues adequate to carry out by any agreement as to,  or  pledge  of,  such
    21  revenues, and to require the authority to carry out any other agreements
    22  with  the  holders  of  such  bonds and to perform its duties under this
    23  title;
    24    (b) bring suit upon such bonds;
    25    (c) by action or special proceeding, require the authority to  account
    26  as  if  it  were the trustee of an express trust for the holders of such
    27  bonds;
    28    (d) by action or special proceeding, enjoin any acts or  things  which
    29  may  be  unlawful  or  in violation of the rights of the holders of such
    30  bonds;
    31    (e) declare all such bonds due and payable, and if all defaults  shall
    32  be  made  good  then  with the consent of the holders of twenty-five per
    33  centum of the principal amount of such bonds then outstanding, to  annul
    34  such declaration and its consequences.
    35    3.  The  supreme  court shall have jurisdiction of any suit, action or
    36  proceeding by the trustee on behalf of bondholders.  The  venue  of  any
    37  such suit, action or proceeding shall be laid in the county of Erie.
    38    4.  Before  declaring the principal of all such bonds due and payable,
    39  the trustee shall first give thirty  days'  notice  in  writing  to  the
    40  authority.
    41    5.  Any such trustee, whether or not the issue of bonds represented by
    42  such trustee has been declared due and payable, shall be entitled as  of
    43  right  to  the  appointment  of  a  receiver of any part or parts of the
    44  covered project the revenues of which are pledged for  the  security  of
    45  the bonds of such issue, and such receiver may enter and take possession
    46  of  such part or parts of the covered project and, subject to any pledge
    47  or agreement with bondholders, shall take possession of all  moneys  and
    48  other   property   derived   from  or  applicable  to  the  acquisition,
    49  construction, operation, maintenance and reconstruction of such part  or
    50  parts  of  the  covered  project and proceed with the acquisition of any
    51  necessary real property in connection with the covered project that  the
    52  authority  has  covenanted to construct, and with any construction which
    53  the authority is under obligation to do and  to  operate,  maintain  and
    54  reconstruct  such  part  or parts of the covered project and collect and
    55  receive all revenues thereafter arising therefrom subject to any  pledge
    56  thereof  or  agreement with bondholders relating thereto and perform the

        S. 3006--C                         120                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  public duties and carry  out  the  agreements  and  obligations  of  the
     2  authority  under  the  direction  of  the  court. In any suit, action or
     3  proceeding by the trustee, the fee, counsel fees  and  expenses  of  the
     4  trustee  and of the receiver, if any, shall constitute taxable disburse-
     5  ments and all costs and disbursements allowed by the court  shall  be  a
     6  first charge on any revenues derived from such project.
     7    6.  Such trustee shall, in addition to the foregoing, have and possess
     8  all of the powers necessary or appropriate for the exercise of any func-
     9  tions specifically set forth herein or incident to the general represen-
    10  tation of bondholders in the enforcement and protection of their rights.
    11    § 1500-q. Actions against the authority. 1. In  every  action  against
    12  the authority for damages, for injuries to real or personal property, or
    13  for  the  destruction  thereof,  or  for personal injuries or death, the
    14  complaint shall contain an allegation that at  least  ninety  days  have
    15  elapsed  since  the  demand,  claim  or claims upon which such action is
    16  founded were presented to a member of the authority, or  to  its  secre-
    17  tary,  or  to  its  chief  executive  officer and that the authority has
    18  neglected or refused to make an adjustment or payment thereof for ninety
    19  days after such presentment.
    20    2. Except in an action for  wrongful  death,  an  action  against  the
    21  authority  for damages for injuries to real or personal property, or for
    22  the destruction thereof, or for personal injuries, alleged to have  been
    23  sustained,  shall  not  be  commenced more than one year and ninety days
    24  after the cause of action therefor shall  have  accrued,  nor  unless  a
    25  notice  of claim shall have been served on the authority within the time
    26  limit established by, and in compliance with all requirements of section
    27  fifty-e of the general municipal law. An action  against  the  authority
    28  for  wrongful  death shall be commenced in accordance with the notice of
    29  claim and time limitation provisions of title eleven of article nine  of
    30  this chapter.
    31    § 1500-r. Defense and indemnification. The authority shall not execute
    32  any  of its powers, except as necessary to commence its corporate exist-
    33  ence, until the authority confers upon its  members  the  provisions  of
    34  section eighteen of the public officers law, pursuant to subdivision two
    35  of  such  section; provided, however, that nothing contained within this
    36  section shall be deemed to permit the authority to extend the provisions
    37  of section eighteen of the public  officers  law  upon  any  independent
    38  contractor.
    39    §  1500-s.  Code  of  ethics.  1.  As  used  in this section, the term
    40  "authority employee"  shall  mean  any  member,  officer,  employee,  or
    41  contracted employee of the authority.
    42    2.  No authority employee shall have any interest, financial or other-
    43  wise, direct or indirect, or engage in any business  or  transaction  or
    44  professional activity or incur any obligation of any nature, which is in
    45  substantial conflict with the proper discharge of such authority employ-
    46  ee's duties in the public interest.
    47    3. (a) No authority employee shall accept other employment, which will
    48  impair  such  authority employee's independence of judgment in the exer-
    49  cise of such employee's official duties.
    50    (b) No authority employee shall accept employment  or  engage  in  any
    51  business  or  professional  activity  which will require the employee to
    52  disclose confidential information which  such  employee  has  gained  by
    53  reason of their official position or authority.
    54    (c)  No  authority  employee  shall  disclose confidential information
    55  acquired by the employee in  the  course  of  such  employee's  official
    56  duties nor use such information to further any personal interests.

        S. 3006--C                         121                        A. 3006--C

     1    (d)  No authority employee shall use or attempt to use such employee's
     2  official position to secure unwarranted  privileges  or  exemptions  for
     3  personal gain or the personal gain of others.
     4    (e) No authority employee shall engage in any transaction as represen-
     5  tative  or agent of the authority with any business entity in which such
     6  employee has a direct or indirect financial interest that might  reason-
     7  ably tend to conflict with the proper discharge of such employee's offi-
     8  cial duties.
     9    (f)  An  authority  employee shall not by such employee's conduct give
    10  reasonable basis for the  impression  that  any  person  can  improperly
    11  influence  such  employee  or  unduly enjoy such employee's favor in the
    12  performance of their official duties, or that such employee is  affected
    13  by the kinship, rank, position or influence of any party or person.
    14    (g)  An  authority employee shall abstain from making personal invest-
    15  ments in enterprises which such authority employee has reason to believe
    16  may be directly involved in decisions to be  made  by  the  employee  or
    17  which will otherwise create substantial conflict between such employee's
    18  duty in the public interest and their private interest.
    19    (h) An authority employee shall endeavor to pursue a course of conduct
    20  which  will  not  raise suspicion among the public that such employee is
    21  likely to be engaged in acts that are in violation of public trust.
    22    (i) No authority employee who is employed on a full-time basis by  any
    23  firm,  company,  or  association,  is a member of such firm, company or,
    24  association, or owns or controls, directly or indirectly, a  substantial
    25  portion of stock of such firm, company, or association which sells goods
    26  or  services  shall  sell  such  goods  or services to any person, firm,
    27  corporation or association which is licensed or whose rates are fixed by
    28  the authority in which such employee serves or is employed.
    29    (j) If any authority  employee  shall  have  any  financial  interest,
    30  direct  or  indirect,  having a value of ten thousand dollars or more in
    31  any activity which is subject to the jurisdiction of a regulatory  agen-
    32  cy,  such  authority  employee  shall file with the secretary of state a
    33  written statement that such employee has such a  financial  interest  in
    34  such activity. Such statement shall be open to public inspection.
    35    4.  In  addition  to  any  applicable  provision of law, any authority
    36  employee who shall  knowingly  and  intentionally  violate  any  of  the
    37  provisions  of  this  section  may  be fined, suspended, or removed from
    38  office or employment.
    39    § 1500-t. Contracting for municipal services. In addition to any other
    40  general or special powers vested in public benefit corporations for  the
    41  performance  of their respective functions, powers or duties on an indi-
    42  vidual, cooperative, joint, or contract basis, the authority shall  have
    43  power  to  enter  into, amend, cancel, and terminate agreements with the
    44  city of Buffalo for the provision and  reimbursement  of  services.  Any
    45  agreement  entered  into hereunder shall be subject to prior approval of
    46  the common council of the city of Buffalo and the authority by a majori-
    47  ty vote of the voting strength of its governing body.
    48    § 1500-u. Termination of authority. Whenever all bonds or notes issued
    49  by the authority shall have been redeemed or cancelled, and  all  trans-
    50  actions,  debt, and such other obligations have been satisfied or other-
    51  wise terminated, the agency shall cease to exist and all rights, titles,
    52  interest, and assets thereof vested in or  possessed  by  the  authority
    53  shall thereupon vest in and be possessed by the city of Buffalo.
    54    §  1500-v.  Title not affected if in part unconstitutional or ineffec-
    55  tive.  If any section, clause or provision of this title shall be uncon-
    56  stitutional or be ineffective in whole or in part, to the extent that it

        S. 3006--C                         122                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  is not unconstitutional or ineffective, it shall be valid and  effective
     2  and  no  other  section, clause or provision shall on account thereof be
     3  deemed invalid or ineffective.
     4    § 1500-w. Inconsistent provisions in other acts superseded. Insofar as
     5  the provisions of this title are inconsistent with the provisions of any
     6  other  act,  general  or  special,  or of any local law of the city, the
     7  provisions of this title shall be controlling.
     8    § 2. This act shall take effect immediately.
 
     9                                   PART KK
 
    10    Section 1. Paragraph (a) of subdivision 1 of section 518 of the  labor
    11  law,  as  amended  by  section  1 of part O of chapter 57 of the laws of
    12  2013, is amended to read as follows:
    13    (a) "Wages" means all remuneration paid, except that  such  term  does
    14  not  include remuneration paid to an employee by an employer after eight
    15  thousand five hundred dollars have been paid to such  employee  by  such
    16  employer  with  respect  to  employment during any calendar year, except
    17  that such term does not include remuneration paid to an employee  by  an
    18  employer  with  respect to employment during any calendar year beginning
    19  with the first day of
    20                                          that exceeds
    21               January 2014                  $10,300
    22               January 2015                  $10,500
    23               January 2016                  $10,700
    24               January 2017                  $10,900
    25               January 2018                  $11,100
    26               January 2019                  $11,400
    27               January 2020                  $11,600
    28               January 2021                  $11,800
    29               January 2022                  $12,000
    30               January 2023                  $12,300
    31               January 2024                  $12,500
    32               January 2025                  $12,800
    33               [January 2026                 $13,000]
    34  and each year thereafter on  the  first  day  of  January  that  exceeds
    35  [sixteen]  eighteen percent of the state's average annual wage as deter-
    36  mined by the commissioner on an annual basis pursuant  to  section  five
    37  hundred  twenty-nine of this [article] title; provided, however, that in
    38  calculating such maximum amount of remuneration, the amount  arrived  at
    39  by  multiplying the state's average annual wage times [sixteen] eighteen
    40  percent shall be rounded up to the nearest hundred dollars. In no  event
    41  shall  the state's annual average wage be reduced from the amount deter-
    42  mined in the previous year.  The  term  "employment"  includes  for  the
    43  purposes  of this subdivision services constituting employment under any
    44  unemployment compensation law of another state or the United States.
    45    § 2. Subdivision 1 of section 529  of  the  labor  law,  as  added  by
    46  section  3  of  part  O of chapter 57 of the laws of 2013, is amended to
    47  read as follows:
    48    1. The "average annual wage" shall be the average annual wage  of  the
    49  state  of  New  York for the previous calendar year as determined by the
    50  commissioner no later than the thirty-first day of  May  of  each  year.
    51  For  purposes of calculating "wages" pursuant to paragraph (a) of subdi-
    52  vision one of section five hundred eighteen  of  this  title  only,  the
    53  "average  annual  wage"  shall  be calculated using the four most recent

        S. 3006--C                         123                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  quarters of published New York state quarterly census of employment  and
     2  wages data.
     3    §  3.  Subdivision  5  of  section 590 of the labor law, as amended by
     4  section 8, paragraph (b) as added by section 10 of part O of chapter  57
     5  of  the  laws  of  2013 and paragraph (c) as added by chapter 277 of the
     6  laws of 2021, is amended to read as follows:
     7    5. Benefit rate. (a) A claimant's weekly benefit amount shall  be  one
     8  twenty-sixth  of the remuneration paid during the highest calendar quar-
     9  ter of the  base  period  by  employers,  liable  for  contributions  or
    10  payments  in  lieu  of  contributions  under  this article, provided the
    11  claimant has remuneration paid in all four calendar quarters during [his
    12  or her] such claimant's base period or alternate base  period.  However,
    13  for any claimant who has remuneration paid in all four calendar quarters
    14  during [his or her] such claimant's base period or alternate base period
    15  and  whose  high calendar quarter remuneration during the base period is
    16  three thousand five hundred seventy-five dollars or  less,  the  benefit
    17  amount  shall  be  one  twenty-fifth of the remuneration paid during the
    18  highest calendar quarter of the base  period  by  employers  liable  for
    19  contributions or payments in lieu of contributions under this article. A
    20  claimant's  weekly  benefit  shall  be  one  twenty-sixth of the average
    21  remuneration paid in the two highest quarters paid during the base peri-
    22  od or alternate base period by employers  liable  for  contributions  or
    23  payments  in  lieu of contributions under this article when the claimant
    24  has remuneration paid in two or three calendar quarters provided  howev-
    25  er, that a claimant whose high calendar quarter is four thousand dollars
    26  or  less  but  greater  than  three  thousand  five hundred seventy-five
    27  dollars shall have a weekly benefit amount of one twenty-sixth  of  such
    28  high  calendar  quarter.  However, for any claimant who has remuneration
    29  paid in two or three calendar quarters during [his or her]  such  claim-
    30  ant's base period or alternate base period and whose high calendar quar-
    31  ter  remuneration  during the base period is three thousand five hundred
    32  seventy-five dollars or less, the benefit amount shall  be  one  twenty-
    33  fifth  of  the  remuneration paid during the highest calendar quarter of
    34  the base period by employers liable for  contributions  or  payments  in
    35  lieu of contributions under this article. Any claimant whose high calen-
    36  dar quarter remuneration during the base period is more than three thou-
    37  sand  five  hundred seventy-five dollars shall not have a weekly benefit
    38  amount less than one hundred forty-three  dollars.  The  weekly  benefit
    39  amount,  so  computed,  that  is  not  a multiple of one dollar shall be
    40  lowered to the next multiple of one  dollar.  On  the  first  Monday  of
    41  September, nineteen hundred ninety-eight the weekly benefit amount shall
    42  not  exceed  three  hundred  sixty-five  dollars  nor be less than forty
    43  dollars, until the first Monday of September,  two  thousand,  at  which
    44  time  the  maximum  benefit  payable  pursuant to this subdivision shall
    45  equal one-half of the state average weekly wage for  covered  employment
    46  as  calculated by the department no sooner than July first, two thousand
    47  and no later than August first, two thousand, rounded down to the lowest
    48  dollar. On and after the first Monday of October, two thousand fourteen,
    49  the weekly benefit shall not be less than one hundred dollars, nor shall
    50  it exceed four hundred twenty dollars until the first Monday of October,
    51  two thousand fifteen when the  maximum  benefit  amount  shall  be  four
    52  hundred  twenty-five  dollars,  until  the  first Monday of October, two
    53  thousand sixteen when the maximum benefit amount shall be  four  hundred
    54  thirty  dollars,  until the first Monday of October, two thousand seven-
    55  teen when the maximum benefit amount shall be four  hundred  thirty-five
    56  dollars,  until  the first Monday of October, two thousand eighteen when

        S. 3006--C                         124                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  the maximum benefit amount shall be four hundred  fifty  dollars,  until
     2  the  first  Monday  of  October,  two thousand nineteen when the maximum
     3  benefit amount shall be thirty-six percent of the  average  weekly  wage
     4  until the first Monday of October[, two thousand twenty when the maximum
     5  benefit amount shall be thirty-eight percent of the average weekly wage,
     6  until the first Monday of October two thousand twenty-one when the maxi-
     7  mum  benefit  amount  shall be forty percent of the average weekly wage,
     8  until the first Monday of October,  two  thousand  twenty-two  when  the
     9  maximum  benefit amount shall be forty-two percent of the average weekly
    10  wage, until the first Monday of October, two thousand twenty-three  when
    11  the  maximum  benefit  amount shall be forty-four percent of the average
    12  weekly wage, until the first Monday of October, two thousand twenty-four
    13  when the maximum benefit amount shall be forty-six percent of the  aver-
    14  age  weekly wage, until the first Monday of October], two thousand twen-
    15  ty-five when the maximum benefit amount shall be [forty-eight percent of
    16  the average weekly wage] eight hundred  sixty-nine  dollars,  until  the
    17  first Monday of October, two thousand twenty-six and each year thereaft-
    18  er  on the first Monday of October when the maximum benefit amount shall
    19  be fifty percent of the average weekly wage provided, however,  that  in
    20  no  event  shall the maximum benefit amount be reduced from the previous
    21  year.
    22    (b) Notwithstanding the foregoing, except  for  the  increase  to  the
    23  maximum benefit amount that is scheduled to occur on the first Monday of
    24  October in the year two thousand twenty-five, the maximum benefit amount
    25  shall  not  be  increased  in  accordance with the schedule set forth in
    26  paragraph (a) of this subdivision in any year in which  the  balance  of
    27  the  fund  is  determined  by  the  commissioner  to not have reached or
    28  exceeded thirty percent of the average high cost multiple, as defined in
    29  20 CFR Part 606 as the standard for  receipt  of  interest-free  federal
    30  loans, on at least one day between April first and June thirtieth of the
    31  same calendar year as the increase shall take effect. If, following such
    32  suspension of an increase in the maximum benefit amount, the commission-
    33  er  shall  determine,  on  at least one day between April first and June
    34  thirtieth that the balance of the  fund  is  greater  than  such  thirty
    35  percent  average  high  cost  multiple,  then the maximum benefit amount
    36  shall increase to the percentage for the year previously scheduled to be
    37  established pursuant to  paragraph  (a)  of  this  subdivision  had  the
    38  increase not been suspended and increased annually thereafter in accord-
    39  ance  with  the schedule set forth in paragraph (a) of this subdivision.
    40  In no case shall such suspension result in a reduction  of  the  maximum
    41  benefit amount to less than the amount provided in the most recent year.
    42    (c) Benefit for partial unemployment. [Except as provided in paragraph
    43  (d)  of  this subdivision, any] Any claimant who is partially unemployed
    44  with respect to any effective week shall be paid, with respect  to  such
    45  effective  week, a benefit equal to [his] their weekly benefit rate less
    46  the total of the remuneration, if any, paid or  payable  to  [him]  them
    47  with  respect  to such week for services performed which is in excess of
    48  [his] their partial benefit credit.
    49    § 4. This act shall take effect upon the transfer of sufficient funds,
    50  as determined by the commissioner of labor, to the  unemployment  insur-
    51  ance trust fund to permit changes to provisions of the labor law made by
    52  this  act;  provided the commissioner of labor shall notify the legisla-
    53  tive bill drafting commission of such transfer of such sufficient  funds
    54  in  order that the commission may maintain an accurate and timely effec-
    55  tive database of the official text of the laws of the state of New  York

        S. 3006--C                         125                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  in  furtherance  of  effectuating  the  provisions  of section 44 of the
     2  legislative law and section 70-b of the public officers law.
 
     3                                   PART LL

     4    Section  1.  Paragraph  (c)  of subdivision 1 of section 245.10 of the
     5  criminal procedure law, as added by section 2 of part LLL of chapter  59
     6  of the laws of 2019, is amended to read as follows:
     7    (c)  The  prosecution  shall  disclose  statements of the defendant as
     8  described in paragraph (a) of subdivision one of section 245.20 of  this
     9  article  to  any  defendant  who  has been arraigned in a local criminal
    10  court upon a  currently  undisposed  of  felony  complaint  charging  an
    11  offense  which  is  a  subject  of  a  prospective or pending grand jury
    12  proceeding, no later than forty-eight hours before  the  time  scheduled
    13  for  the  defendant  to  testify  at a grand jury proceeding pursuant to
    14  subdivision five of section 190.50 of this part. Provided, however, that
    15  if no grand jury is open and available to hear cases in the  time  frame
    16  necessary to allow the prosecution to provide a forty-eight hour notice,
    17  such  statement  shall be provided no later than twenty-four hours prior
    18  to the scheduled time for the defendant to testify before the grand jury
    19  pursuant to subdivision five of section 190.50 of this part.
    20    § 2. The opening paragraph, paragraphs (a), (b), (e), (h),  (i),  (k),
    21  (l),  (m),  (n)  and subparagraph (i) of paragraph (u) of subdivision 1,
    22  and subdivisions 2 and 6 of section 245.20  of  the  criminal  procedure
    23  law,  as  added  by  section  2 of part LLL of chapter 59 of the laws of
    24  2019, are amended, and subdivision 1 is amended by adding  a  new  para-
    25  graph (v) to read as follows:
    26    The  prosecution  shall  disclose  to  the  defendant,  and permit the
    27  defendant to discover, inspect, copy, photograph and test[,  all  items]
    28  the  following  material  and  information  [that  relate to the subject
    29  matter of the case and are] in the possession, custody or control of the
    30  prosecution or persons under the prosecution's  direction  or  control[,
    31  including but not limited to]:
    32    (a)  All written or recorded statements, and the substance of all oral
    33  statements, made by the defendant or a co-defendant to a public  servant
    34  engaged  in  law  enforcement  activity or to a person then acting under
    35  [his or her] their direction or in cooperation with [him  or  her]  them
    36  that  relate  to the subject matter of the charges against the defendant
    37  or co-defendant in the instant case, or a defense thereto.
    38    (b) All transcripts of the testimony of a  person  who  has  testified
    39  before  a  grand  jury  that relate to the subject matter of the charges
    40  against the defendant in the instant case, including but not limited  to
    41  the  defendant or a co-defendant. If in the exercise of reasonable dili-
    42  gence, and due to the limited availability of transcription resources, a
    43  transcript is unavailable for disclosure within the time  period  speci-
    44  fied  in  subdivision  one  of section 245.10 of this article, such time
    45  period may be stayed by up to an additional thirty calendar days without
    46  need for a motion pursuant to subdivision two of section 245.70 of  this
    47  article;  except that such disclosure shall be made as soon as practica-
    48  ble and not later than thirty calendar days before the  first  scheduled
    49  trial  date,  unless  an order is obtained pursuant to section 245.70 of
    50  this article.  When the court is required to  review  grand  jury  tran-
    51  scripts,  the  prosecution  shall disclose such transcripts to the court
    52  expeditiously upon receipt by the prosecutor, notwithstanding the other-
    53  wise-applicable time periods for disclosure in this article.

        S. 3006--C                         126                        A. 3006--C
 
     1    (e) All statements related to the subject matter of the case,  written
     2  or  recorded  or summarized in any writing or recording, made by persons
     3  who have evidence or information relevant to any offense charged  or  to
     4  any  potential  defense  thereto, including all police reports, notes of
     5  police  and  other investigators, [and] law enforcement agency reports[.
     6  This provision also includes], and statements, written  or  recorded  or
     7  summarized  in  any  writing  or  recording,  by persons to be called as
     8  witnesses at pre-trial hearings.
     9    (h) All photographs and drawings that relate to the subject matter  of
    10  the charges against the defendant in the instant case or a defense ther-
    11  eto  made  or  completed  by a public servant engaged in law enforcement
    12  activity, or which were made by a person whom the prosecutor intends  to
    13  call  as  a witness at trial or a pre-trial hearing[, or which relate to
    14  the subject matter of the case].
    15    (i) All photographs, photocopies and reproductions made by or  at  the
    16  direction  of  law  enforcement personnel of any property that relate to
    17  the subject matter of the charges against the defendant in  the  instant
    18  case  or  a  defense  thereto  prior  to its release pursuant to section
    19  450.10 of the penal law.
    20    (k) All evidence and information that relate to the subject matter  of
    21  the  case, including that which is known to police or other law enforce-
    22  ment agencies acting on the government's behalf in the case, that  tends
    23  to:  (i)  negate  the  defendant's  guilt  as to a charged offense; (ii)
    24  reduce the degree of or mitigate the defendant's  culpability  as  to  a
    25  charged offense; (iii) support a potential defense to a charged offense;
    26  (iv)  impeach  the  credibility of a testifying prosecution witness; (v)
    27  undermine evidence of the defendant's identity as  a  perpetrator  of  a
    28  charged offense; (vi) provide a basis for a motion to suppress evidence;
    29  or  (vii) mitigate punishment.  Information under this subdivision shall
    30  be disclosed whether or not such information  is  recorded  in  tangible
    31  form and irrespective of whether the prosecutor credits the information.
    32  The  prosecutor  shall  disclose  the information expeditiously upon its
    33  receipt and shall not delay disclosure if it is  obtained  earlier  than
    34  the  time  period for disclosure in subdivision one of section 245.10 of
    35  this article.
    36    (l) A summary  of  all  promises,  rewards  and  inducements  made  in
    37  connection  with the instant case to, or in favor of, persons who may be
    38  called as witnesses, as well as requests for  consideration  by  persons
    39  who may be called as witnesses and copies of all documents relevant to a
    40  promise, reward or inducement.
    41    (m)  A  list  of  all  tangible  objects  obtained  from, or allegedly
    42  possessed by, the defendant or a co-defendant  in  connection  with  the
    43  criminal  action  or proceeding. The list shall include a designation by
    44  the prosecutor as to which objects  were  physically  or  constructively
    45  possessed by the defendant and were recovered during a search or seizure
    46  by a public servant or an agent thereof, and which tangible objects were
    47  recovered  by a public servant or an agent thereof after allegedly being
    48  abandoned by the defendant. If the  prosecution  intends  to  prove  the
    49  defendant's  possession  of any tangible objects by means of a statutory
    50  presumption of possession, it shall designate such intention as to  each
    51  such  object.  If  reasonably  practicable,  the  prosecution shall also
    52  designate the location from which each tangible  object  was  recovered.
    53  There  is  also a right to inspect, copy, photograph and test the listed
    54  tangible objects.
    55    (n) Whether a search warrant has been executed in connection with  the
    56  criminal  action  or  proceeding  and  all  documents  relating thereto,

        S. 3006--C                         127                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  including but not limited  to  the  warrant,  the  warrant  application,
     2  supporting  affidavits,  a police inventory of all property seized under
     3  the warrant, and a transcript of all testimony or  other  oral  communi-
     4  cations offered in support of the warrant application.
     5    (i)  A copy of all electronically created or stored information seized
     6  or obtained by or on behalf of law enforcement from: (A)  the  defendant
     7  as  described  in  subparagraph  (ii) of this paragraph; or (B) a source
     8  other than the defendant which relates to  the  subject  matter  of  the
     9  charges against the defendant in the instant case or a defense thereto.
    10    (v)  Any other material and information relevant to the subject matter
    11  of the charges against the defendant in the instant case  or  a  defense
    12  thereto  that  are  not designated in paragraphs (a) through (u) of this
    13  subdivision.
    14    2. Duties of the prosecution. The prosecutor shall  make  a  diligent,
    15  good  faith effort to ascertain the existence of material or information
    16  discoverable under subdivision one of this section  and  to  cause  such
    17  material  or  information  to  be  made available for discovery where it
    18  exists but  is  not  within  the  prosecutor's  possession,  custody  or
    19  control[;  provided  that the prosecutor shall not be required to obtain
    20  by subpoena duces tecum material or information which the defendant  may
    21  thereby obtain]. The prosecutor shall not be required to obtain material
    22  or  information if it may be obtained with use of a subpoena duces tecum
    23  where the defense is able to obtain the same material with the use of  a
    24  subpoena  duces  tecum. For purposes of subdivision one of this section,
    25  all items and information related to the prosecution of a charge in  the
    26  possession  of  any  New  York  state or local police or law enforcement
    27  agency shall be deemed to be in the possession of the  prosecution.  The
    28  prosecution  shall  also  identify  any  laboratory  having contact with
    29  evidence related to the prosecution of a charge. This subdivision  shall
    30  not  require  the prosecutor to ascertain the existence of witnesses not
    31  known to the police or another law enforcement agency, or the written or
    32  recorded statements thereof, under paragraph (c) or (e)  of  subdivision
    33  one of this section.
    34    6.  Redactions  permitted.  (a)  Either party may redact the following
    35  without the need to move for a  protective  order  pursuant  to  section
    36  245.70 of this article: social security numbers [and]; tax numbers [from
    37  disclosures  under  this article]; the physical addresses or other forms
    38  of contact information of  witnesses,  provided  that  for  any  witness
    39  disclosed  under  paragraph  (c) of subdivision one of this section, the
    40  disclosing party provides at least one form of adequate contact informa-
    41  tion; and material or information not otherwise required to be disclosed
    42  under subdivision one of this section,  so  long  as  the  party  making
    43  redactions  based  on  the  material  not being required to be disclosed
    44  under subdivision one of this section provides the underlying reason for
    45  the redactions.
    46    (b) If the contact information disclosed pursuant to paragraph (a)  of
    47  this  subdivision  is  incorrect or inoperative, the party that made the
    48  disclosure shall, upon request, furnish an alternative form of  adequate
    49  contact information for such witness.
    50    § 3. Subdivision 1 of section 245.30 of the criminal procedure law, as
    51  added  by  section  2  of part LLL of chapter 59 of the laws of 2019, is
    52  amended to read as follows:
    53    1. Order to preserve evidence. At any time, a party  may  move  for  a
    54  court  order  to  any  individual, agency or other entity in possession,
    55  custody or control of items which [relate to the subject matter  of  the
    56  case  or  are  otherwise  relevant]  are  required to be disclosed under

        S. 3006--C                         128                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  subdivision one of section 245.20 of this article, requiring  that  such
     2  items  be preserved for a specified period of time. The court shall hear
     3  and rule upon such motions expeditiously. The court may modify or vacate
     4  such  an  order  upon a showing that preservation of particular evidence
     5  will create significant hardship to such individual, agency  or  entity,
     6  on condition that the probative value of that evidence is preserved by a
     7  specified alternative means.
     8    §  4. Subdivisions 1, 3 and 4 of section 245.50 of the criminal proce-
     9  dure law, subdivisions 1 and 3 as amended by section 7 of  part  HHH  of
    10  chapter 56 of the laws of 2020 and subdivision 4 as amended by section 1
    11  of  subpart  D of part UU of chapter 56 of the laws of 2022, are amended
    12  and two new subdivisions 5 and 6 are added to read as follows:
    13    1. By the prosecution. When the prosecution has  [provided],  pursuant
    14  to  this  section,  exercised  due  diligence and acted in good faith in
    15  making reasonable inquiries  and  efforts  to  obtain  and  provide  the
    16  discovery required by subdivision one of section 245.20 of this article,
    17  except  for discovery that is lost or destroyed as provided by paragraph
    18  (b) of subdivision one of section 245.80 of this article and except  for
    19  any  [items]  material  or  information  that [are] is the subject of an
    20  order pursuant to section 245.70 of this article, it  shall  serve  upon
    21  the  defendant  and file with the court a certificate of compliance. The
    22  certificate of compliance shall state that, after exercising  due  dili-
    23  gence  and  making  reasonable  inquiries  and  efforts to ascertain the
    24  existence of, obtain, and disclose material and information  subject  to
    25  discovery, the [prosecutor] prosecution has disclosed and made available
    26  all known material and information it has obtained subject to discovery.
    27  It  shall  also identify the items provided. [If additional discovery is
    28  subsequently provided] The prosecution shall  also  identify  the  items
    29  that  the  prosecution  is  required to disclose and of which the prose-
    30  cution is aware, but has been unable to obtain despite the  exercise  of
    31  due  diligence  as  evaluated  under  this  section.  If the prosecution
    32  provides additional discovery prior to trial pursuant to section  245.60
    33  of  this  article,  a  supplemental certificate shall be served upon the
    34  defendant and filed with the court identifying the  additional  material
    35  and  information  provided. No adverse consequence to the prosecution or
    36  the prosecutor shall result from the filing of a certificate of  compli-
    37  ance in good faith and reasonable under the circumstances; but the court
    38  may  grant a remedy or sanction for a discovery violation as provided in
    39  section 245.80 of this article. The filing of a supplemental certificate
    40  of compliance shall not impact the validity of the original  certificate
    41  of  compliance if filed in good faith and after exercising due diligence
    42  as assessed under this section.
    43    3. Trial readiness. Notwithstanding the provisions of any  other  law,
    44  absent an individualized finding of special circumstances in the instant
    45  case  by  the  court before which the charge is pending, the prosecution
    46  shall not be deemed ready for trial for purposes  of  section  30.30  of
    47  this chapter until it has filed a [proper] valid certificate pursuant to
    48  subdivision  one of this section. A court may deem the prosecution ready
    49  for trial pursuant to section 30.30 of this  chapter  where  information
    50  that  might  be  considered  discoverable  under  this article cannot be
    51  disclosed because it has been lost, destroyed, or otherwise  unavailable
    52  as  provided  by  paragraph  (b) of subdivision one of section 245.80 of
    53  this article, despite diligent and good faith efforts, reasonable  under
    54  the  circumstances. Provided, however, that the court may grant a remedy
    55  or sanction for a discovery violation as provided by section  245.80  of
    56  this article.

        S. 3006--C                         129                        A. 3006--C
 
     1    4.  Challenges.  (a)  Challenges to, or questions related to a certif-
     2  icate of compliance shall be addressed by motion.
     3    (b)  To  the  extent  that the party is aware of a potential defect or
     4  deficiency related  to  a  certificate  of  compliance  or  supplemental
     5  certificate of compliance, the party entitled to disclosure shall notify
     6  or  alert the opposing party [as soon as practicable] in accordance with
     7  the procedure set forth in this subdivision.
     8    (c) Challenges [related to the  sufficiency]  to  the  validity  of  a
     9  certificate  of  compliance  or  supplemental certificates of compliance
    10  served on the defense and filed with the court pursuant  to  subdivision
    11  one  of  this section shall be addressed by motion [as soon as practica-
    12  ble, provided that nothing in this section shall be construed to waive a
    13  party's right to make further challenges, including but not limited to a
    14  motion pursuant to section 30.30 of  this  chapter]  within  thirty-five
    15  days of the service of the certificate provided that the prosecution has
    16  filed  an  indictment  or information prior to filing the certificate of
    17  compliance. Nothing in this  section  shall  be  construed  to  waive  a
    18  party's right to file a motion pursuant to section 30.30 of this chapter
    19  on  grounds  unrelated  to  the validity of a certificate of compliance.
    20  Provided, however, that any challenges to a certificate of compliance or
    21  supplemental certificate of compliance shall be accompanied by an affir-
    22  mation by the moving party  that,  after  the  filing  of  the  opposing
    23  party's certificate of compliance, such moving party timely conferred in
    24  good faith or timely made good faith efforts to confer with the opposing
    25  party  regarding  the  specific  and  particularized matters forming the
    26  basis for such challenge, that efforts to obtain the  missing  discovery
    27  from  the  opposing  party  or  otherwise resolve the issues raised were
    28  unsuccessful, and that  no  accommodation  could  be  reached.  For  the
    29  purposes of this subdivision, the parties may confer informally, includ-
    30  ing  but  not limited to communication by email, telephone, or any other
    31  reasonable means.
    32    (i) Upon request, the court may extend the time period to challenge  a
    33  certificate  of  compliance  or  supplemental  certificate of compliance
    34  beyond the thirty-five days for good cause shown. A request  for  exten-
    35  sion shall be made before the expiration of the thirty-five days. Unless
    36  the  court  finds that the prosecutor unreasonably delayed in responding
    37  to the defense's good faith efforts to confer or that the prosecutor did
    38  not file the certificate of compliance in good faith, any such extension
    39  shall be excluded from a speedy trial calculation pursuant to  paragraph
    40  (b) of subdivision four of section 30.30 of this chapter.
    41    (ii)  Notwithstanding  the provisions of this subdivision, a party may
    42  challenge the validity of the certificate of compliance after the  expi-
    43  ration  of  the  thirty-five day period where the grounds for such chal-
    44  lenge are based upon a material change in circumstances,  including  but
    45  not  limited to the belated disclosure of discoverable material pursuant
    46  to section 245.20 of this article,  or,  where  the  party  entitled  to
    47  disclosure could not, with due diligence, have known of the specific and
    48  particularized  matters  forming the basis of the challenge prior to the
    49  expiration of such period.
    50    (iii) Nothing in this subdivision shall limit the court's authority to
    51  facilitate compliance pursuant to section 245.35 of  this  article.  Any
    52  extension  of  time granted pursuant to section 245.35 shall be excluded
    53  from a speedy trial calculation pursuant to paragraph (b) of subdivision
    54  four of section 30.30 of this chapter.
    55    5. Assessing due diligence. In assessing a party's due diligence,  the
    56  court  shall  look at the totality of the party's efforts to comply with

        S. 3006--C                         130                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  the provisions of this article, rather than assess the  party's  efforts
     2  item by item.
     3    (a)  Relevant  factors  for  assessing  the prosecutor's due diligence
     4  include, but are not limited to: the efforts made by the  prosecutor  to
     5  comply  with  the  requirements of this article; the volume of discovery
     6  provided and the volume of discovery outstanding; the complexity of  the
     7  case;  whether  the  prosecutor  knew  that  the  belatedly disclosed or
     8  allegedly missing material existed;  the  explanation  for  any  alleged
     9  discovery lapse; the prosecutor's response when apprised of any alleged-
    10  ly  missing  discovery;  whether the belated discovery was substantively
    11  duplicative, insignificant, or easily remedied; whether the omission was
    12  corrected; whether the prosecution  self-reported  the  error  and  took
    13  prompt remedial action without court intervention; and whether the pros-
    14  ecution's delayed disclosure of discovery was prejudicial to the defense
    15  or  otherwise  impeded  the defense's ability to effectively investigate
    16  the case or prepare for trial.
    17    (b) The court's determination shall be based on consideration  of  all
    18  factors  listed  in  paragraph (a) of this subdivision and no one factor
    19  shall be determinative.   The court shall  explain  the  basis  for  its
    20  determination on the record or in writing.
    21    (c)  A finding of a valid certificate under this section shall consti-
    22  tute a valid certificate pursuant to subdivision five of  section  30.30
    23  of this chapter. Upon a finding of a valid certificate, the court shall,
    24  if  warranted,  fashion  an  appropriate and proportional remedy for any
    25  discovery violation resulting from the belated  disclosure  pursuant  to
    26  subdivision two of section 245.80 of this article.
    27    6.  Determinations by the court.  Notwithstanding any other section of
    28  law to the contrary, a court  shall  not  invalidate  a  certificate  of
    29  compliance where the party has exercised due diligence and acted in good
    30  faith  in  making reasonable inquiries and efforts to obtain and provide
    31  the material required to be disclosed pursuant to section 245.20 of this
    32  article.
    33    § 5. The criminal procedure law is amended by  adding  a  new  section
    34  245.90 to read as follows:
    35  § 245.90 Federal and state constitutional obligations.
    36    Nothing in this article shall be construed to limit the people's obli-
    37  gations to comply with federal and state constitutional law.
    38    §  6. Subdivision 5 of section 30.30 of the criminal procedure law, as
    39  amended by section 1 of part KKK of chapter 59 of the laws of  2019,  is
    40  amended to read as follows:
    41    5. (a) Whenever pursuant to this section a prosecutor states or other-
    42  wise  provides  notice  that  the  people are ready for trial, the court
    43  shall make inquiry on the record as to their actual readiness. If, after
    44  conducting its inquiry, the court determines that  the  people  are  not
    45  ready to proceed to trial, the prosecutor's statement or notice of read-
    46  iness shall not be valid for purposes of this section. [Any statement of
    47  trial  readiness  must  be accompanied or preceded by a certification of
    48  good faith compliance with the disclosure requirements of section 245.20
    49  of this chapter and the defense shall be afforded an opportunity  to  be
    50  heard  on the record as to whether the disclosure requirements have been
    51  met.] The court may deem the people not ready for  trial  based  on  the
    52  people's  failure  to  comply with the provisions of article two hundred
    53  forty-five of this chapter only if it finds that  the  people's  certif-
    54  icate  of compliance that accompanied or preceded the people's statement
    55  of readiness at issue was invalid under section 245.50 of this chapter.

        S. 3006--C                         131                        A. 3006--C
 
     1    (b) Pursuant to section 245.50 of this  chapter,  the  certificate  of
     2  compliance  is  deemed invalid when the court determined that the people
     3  did not exercise due diligence and, in making  such  determination,  the
     4  court looked at the totality of the prosecution's efforts to comply with
     5  the provisions of article two hundred forty-five of this chapter, rather
     6  than  assess  the prosecution's efforts item by item, and considered the
     7  factors relevant to assessing due diligence, which include, but are  not
     8  limited  to:  the  efforts  made  by  the  prosecutor to comply with the
     9  requirements of article two hundred  forty-five  of  this  chapter;  the
    10  volume  of  discovery  provided and the volume of discovery outstanding;
    11  the complexity of the case; whether the prosecutor knew that the  belat-
    12  edly  disclosed  or  allegedly missing material existed; the explanation
    13  for any alleged discovery lapse; the prosecutor's response when apprised
    14  of any allegedly missing discovery; whether the  belated  discovery  was
    15  substantively  duplicative,  insignificant,  or easily remedied; whether
    16  the omission was corrected; whether the  prosecution  self-reported  the
    17  error  and  took  prompt remedial action without court intervention; and
    18  whether the prosecution's delayed disclosure of discovery  was  prejudi-
    19  cial to the defense or otherwise impeded the defense's ability to effec-
    20  tively investigate the case or prepare for trial.
    21    § 7. Section 245.70 of the criminal procedure law is amended by adding
    22  a new subdivision 8 to read as follows:
    23    8.  A motion filed in good faith pursuant to subdivision one or two of
    24  this section shall be deemed a pre-trial  motion  for  the  purposes  of
    25  paragraph (a) of subdivision four of section 30.30 of this chapter.
    26    §  8.  This  act shall take effect on the ninetieth day after it shall
    27  have become a law and shall apply to all  criminal  actions  pending  on
    28  such  date  and  all  actions commenced on or after such date. Any time-
    29  frames provided in this act regarding the time limitation to challenge a
    30  certificate of compliance shall run from the effective date of this act.
 
    31                                   PART MM
 
    32    Section 1. The state comptroller is hereby authorized and directed  to
    33  loan  money in accordance with the provisions set forth in subdivision 5
    34  of section 4 of the state finance law  to  the  following  funds  and/or
    35  accounts:
    36    1. DOL-Child performer protection account (20401).
    37    2. Local government records management account (20501).
    38    3. Child health plus program account (20810).
    39    4. EPIC premium account (20818).
    40    5. Education - New (20901).
    41    6. VLT - Sound basic education fund (20904).
    42    7.   Sewage  treatment  program  management  and  administration  fund
    43  (21000).
    44    8. Hazardous bulk storage account (21061).
    45    9. Utility environmental regulatory account (21064).
    46    10. Federal grants indirect cost recovery account (21065).
    47    11. Low level radioactive waste account (21066).
    48    12. Recreation account (21067).
    49    13. Public safety recovery account (21077).
    50    14. Environmental regulatory account (21081).
    51    15. Natural resource account (21082).
    52    16. Mined land reclamation program account (21084).
    53    17. Great lakes restoration initiative account (21087).
    54    18. Environmental protection and oil spill compensation fund (21200).

        S. 3006--C                         132                        A. 3006--C
 
     1    19. Public transportation systems account (21401).
     2    20. Metropolitan mass transportation (21402).
     3    21. Operating permit program account (21451).
     4    22. Mobile source account (21452).
     5    23. Statewide   planning   and  research  cooperative  system  account
     6  (21902).
     7    24. New York state thruway authority account (21905).
     8    25. Financial control board account (21911).
     9    26. Regulation of racing account (21912).
    10    27. State university dormitory income reimbursable account (21937).
    11    28. Criminal justice improvement account (21945).
    12    29. Environmental laboratory reference fee account (21959).
    13    30. Training, management and evaluation account (21961).
    14    31. Clinical laboratory reference system assessment account (21962).
    15    32. Indirect cost recovery account (21978).
    16    33. Multi-agency training account (21989).
    17    34. Bell jar collection account (22003).
    18    35. Industry and utility service account (22004).
    19    36. Real property disposition account (22006).
    20    37. Parking account (22007).
    21    38. Courts special grants (22008).
    22    39. Asbestos safety training program account (22009).
    23    40. Batavia school for the blind account (22032).
    24    41. Investment services account (22034).
    25    42. Surplus property account (22036).
    26    43. Financial oversight account (22039).
    27    44. Regulation of Indian gaming account (22046).
    28    45. Rome school for the deaf account (22053).
    29    46. Seized assets account (22054).
    30    47. Administrative adjudication account (22055).
    31    48. New York City assessment account (22062).
    32    49. Cultural education account (22063).
    33    50. Local services account (22078).
    34    51. DHCR mortgage servicing account (22085).
    35    52. Housing indirect cost recovery account (22090).
    36    53. Voting Machine Examinations account (22099).
    37    54. DHCR-HCA application fee account (22100).
    38    55. Low income housing monitoring account (22130).
    39    56. Restitution account (22134).
    40    57. Corporation administration account (22135).
    41    58. New York State  Home  for  Veterans  in  the  Lower-Hudson  Valley
    42  account (22144).
    43    59. Deferred compensation administration account (22151).
    44    60. Rent revenue other New York City account (22156).
    45    61. Rent revenue account (22158).
    46    62. Transportation aviation account (22165).
    47    63. Tax revenue arrearage account (22168).
    48    64. New York State Campaign Finance Fund account (22211).
    49    65. New York state medical indemnity fund account (22240).
    50    66. Behavioral health parity compliance fund (22246).
    51    67. Pharmacy benefit manager regulatory fund (22255).
    52    68. Virtual currency assessments account (22262).
    53    69. Employers assessment account (22269).
    54    70. State university general income offset account (22654).
    55    71. Lake George park trust fund account (22751).
    56    72. Highway safety program account (23001).

        S. 3006--C                         133                        A. 3006--C
 
     1    73. DOH drinking water program account (23102).
     2    74. NYCCC operating offset account (23151).
     3    75. Commercial gaming revenue account (23701).
     4    76. Commercial gaming regulation account (23702).
     5    77. Highway use tax administration account (23801).
     6    78. New York state secure choice administrative account (23806).
     7    79. New York state cannabis revenue fund (24800).
     8    80. Cannabis education account (24801).
     9    81. Fantasy sports administration account (24951).
    10    82. Mobile sports wagering fund (24955).
    11    83. Highway and bridge capital account (30051).
    12    84. State university residence hall rehabilitation fund (30100).
    13    85. State parks infrastructure account (30351).
    14    86. Clean water/clean air implementation fund (30500).
    15    87. Hazardous waste remedial cleanup account (31506).
    16    88. Youth facilities improvement account (31701).
    17    89. Housing assistance fund (31800).
    18    90. Housing program fund (31850).
    19    91. Highway facility purpose account (31951).
    20    92. New York racing account (32213).
    21    93. Capital miscellaneous gifts account (32214).
    22    94. Information technology capital financing account (32215).
    23    95.  New  York  environmental protection and spill remediation account
    24  (32219).
    25    96. Department of financial services IT modernization capital  account
    26  (32230).
    27    97. Mental hygiene facilities capital improvement fund (32300).
    28    98. Correctional facilities capital improvement fund (32350).
    29    99. OGS convention center account (50318).
    30    100. Empire Plaza Gift Shop (50327).
    31    101.  Unemployment Insurance Benefit Fund, Interest Assessment Account
    32  (50651).
    33    102. Centralized services fund (55000).
    34    103. Archives records management account (55052).
    35    104. Federal single audit account (55053).
    36    105. Civil service administration account (55055).
    37    106. Civil service EHS occupational health program account (55056).
    38    107. Banking services account (55057).
    39    108. Cultural resources survey account (55058).
    40    109. Neighborhood work project account (55059).
    41    110. Automation & printing chargeback account (55060).
    42    111. OFT NYT account (55061).
    43    112. Data center account (55062).
    44    113. Intrusion detection account (55066).
    45    114. Domestic violence grant account (55067).
    46    115. Centralized technology services account (55069).
    47    116. Labor contact center account (55071).
    48    117. Human services contact center account (55072).
    49    118. Tax contact center account (55073).
    50    119. Department of law civil recoveries account (55074).
    51    120. Executive direction internal audit account (55251).
    52    121. CIO Information technology centralized services account (55252).
    53    122. Health insurance internal service account (55300).
    54    123. Civil service employee benefits division  administrative  account
    55  (55301).
    56    124. Correctional industries revolving fund (55350).

        S. 3006--C                         134                        A. 3006--C
 
     1    125. Employees health insurance account (60201).
     2    126. Medicaid management information system escrow fund (60900).
     3    127. Animal shelter regulation account.
     4    128. Climate initiative account.
     5    129. Fire Island project account.
     6    §  2.  The state comptroller is hereby authorized and directed to loan
     7  money in accordance with the provisions set forth in  subdivision  5  of
     8  section  4  of the state finance law to any account within the following
     9  federal funds, provided the comptroller has made  a  determination  that
    10  sufficient  federal grant award authority is available to reimburse such
    11  loans:
    12    1. Federal USDA-food and nutrition services fund (25000).
    13    2. Federal health and human services fund (25100).
    14    3. Federal education fund (25200).
    15    4. Federal block grant fund (25250).
    16    5. Federal miscellaneous operating grants fund (25300).
    17    6. Federal unemployment insurance administration fund (25900).
    18    7. Federal unemployment insurance occupational training fund (25950).
    19    8. Federal emergency employment act fund (26000).
    20    9. Federal capital projects fund (31350).
    21    § 3. Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, and in  accordance  with
    22  section 4 of the state finance law, the comptroller is hereby authorized
    23  and directed to transfer, upon request of the director of the budget, on
    24  or  before March 31, 2026, up to the unencumbered balance or the follow-
    25  ing amounts:
    26    Economic Development and Public Authorities:
    27    1. An amount up to the unencumbered  balance  from  the  miscellaneous
    28  special  revenue  fund,  underground  facilities safety training account
    29  (22172), to the general fund.
    30    2. An amount up to the unencumbered  balance  from  the  miscellaneous
    31  special  revenue  fund, business and licensing services account (21977),
    32  to the general fund.
    33    3. $19,810,000 from  the  miscellaneous  special  revenue  fund,  code
    34  enforcement account (21904), to the general fund.
    35    4.  $3,000,000  from  the  general  fund  to the miscellaneous special
    36  revenue fund, tax revenue arrearage account (22168).
    37    Education:
    38    1. $2,591,119,000 from the general fund to  the  state  lottery  fund,
    39  education  account (20901), as reimbursement for disbursements made from
    40  such fund for supplemental aid to education pursuant to section 92-c  of
    41  the  state  finance  law  that are in excess of the amounts deposited in
    42  such fund for such purposes pursuant to section 1612 of the tax law.
    43    2. $1,131,000,000 from the general fund to the state lottery fund, VLT
    44  education account (20904), as reimbursement for disbursements made  from
    45  such  fund for supplemental aid to education pursuant to section 92-c of
    46  the state finance law that are in excess of  the  amounts  deposited  in
    47  such fund for such purposes pursuant to section 1612 of the tax law.
    48    3. $134,682,000 from the general fund to the New York state commercial
    49  gaming fund, commercial gaming revenue account (23701), as reimbursement
    50  for  disbursements made from such fund for supplemental aid to education
    51  pursuant to section 97-nnnn of the state finance law that are in  excess
    52  of  the  amounts deposited in such fund for purposes pursuant to section
    53  1352 of the racing, pari-mutuel wagering and breeding law.
    54    4. $1,457,339,000 from the general fund to the mobile sports  wagering
    55  fund, education account (24955), as reimbursement for disbursements made
    56  from  such  fund  for  supplemental aid to education pursuant to section

        S. 3006--C                         135                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  92-c of the state finance law that are in excess of the amounts deposit-
     2  ed in such fund for such  purposes  pursuant  to  section  1367  of  the
     3  racing, pari-mutuel wagering and breeding law.
     4    5. $5,000,000 from the interactive fantasy sports fund, fantasy sports
     5  education  account (24950), to the state lottery fund, education account
     6  (20901), as reimbursement for disbursements  made  from  such  fund  for
     7  supplemental  aid  to  education  pursuant  to section 92-c of the state
     8  finance law.
     9    6. $4,856,000  from  the  cannabis  revenue  fund  cannabis  education
    10  account  (24801),  to the state lottery fund, education account (20901),
    11  as reimbursement for disbursements made from such fund for  supplemental
    12  aid to education pursuant to section 99-ii of the state finance law.
    13    7.  An  amount up to the unencumbered balance in the fund on March 31,
    14  2025 from the charitable gifts  trust  fund,  elementary  and  secondary
    15  education  account  (24901), to the general fund, for payment of general
    16  support for public schools pursuant to section 3609-a of  the  education
    17  law.
    18    8. Moneys from the state lottery fund (20900) up to an amount deposit-
    19  ed in such fund pursuant to section 1612 of the tax law in excess of the
    20  current year appropriation for supplemental aid to education pursuant to
    21  section 92-c of the state finance law.
    22    9.  $300,000  from the New York state local government records manage-
    23  ment improvement  fund,  local  government  records  management  account
    24  (20501), to the New York state archives partnership trust fund, archives
    25  partnership trust maintenance account (20351).
    26    10. $900,000 from the general fund to the miscellaneous special reven-
    27  ue fund, Batavia school for the blind account (22032).
    28    11. $900,000 from the general fund to the miscellaneous special reven-
    29  ue fund, Rome school for the deaf account (22053).
    30    12.  $343,400,000  from  the  state  university  dormitory income fund
    31  (40350) to the miscellaneous  special  revenue  fund,  state  university
    32  dormitory income reimbursable account (21937).
    33    13.  $24,000,000  from any of the state education department's special
    34  revenue and internal service funds to the miscellaneous special  revenue
    35  fund, indirect cost recovery account (21978).
    36    14.  $4,200,000  from  any of the state education department's special
    37  revenue or internal service funds to the capital projects fund (30000).
    38    15. $30,013,000 from the general fund  to  the  miscellaneous  special
    39  revenue fund, HESC-insurance premium payments account (21960).
    40    16.  $312,000,000 from the state university income fund, state univer-
    41  sity hospitals  income  reimbursable  account  (22656),  and  the  state
    42  university  income  fund,  state  university-wide  hospital reimbursable
    43  account (22658) to the General Fund for the payment  of  SUNY  Hospitals
    44  Health Insurance premiums on or before March 31, 2026.
    45    17.  $25,000,000  from  the  general fund to the miscellaneous capital
    46  projects fund, state university of New York green energy loan fund.
    47    Environmental Affairs:
    48    1. $16,000,000 from any of the department of  environmental  conserva-
    49  tion's  special  revenue federal funds, and/or federal capital funds, to
    50  the environmental conservation special revenue  fund,  federal  indirect
    51  recovery account (21065).
    52    2.  $5,000,000  from  any of the department of environmental conserva-
    53  tion's special revenue federal funds, and/or federal capital  funds,  to
    54  the  conservation  fund  (21150)  or Marine Resources Account (21151) as
    55  necessary to avoid diversion of conservation funds.

        S. 3006--C                         136                        A. 3006--C
 
     1    3. $3,000,000 from any of the office of parks, recreation and historic
     2  preservation capital projects federal funds and special revenue  federal
     3  funds  to the miscellaneous special revenue fund, federal grant indirect
     4  cost recovery account (22188).
     5    4.  $125,000,000 from the general fund to the environmental protection
     6  fund, environmental protection fund transfer account (30451).
     7    5. $10,000,000 from the general fund to the hazardous  waste  remedial
     8  fund, hazardous waste cleanup account (31506).
     9    6.  An  amount  up  to or equal to the cash balance within the special
    10  revenue-other waste management & cleanup account (21053) to the  capital
    11  projects  fund  (30000) for services and capital expenses related to the
    12  management and cleanup program as put forth in section  27-1915  of  the
    13  environmental conservation law.
    14    7.  $1,800,000  from  the  miscellaneous  special revenue fund, public
    15  service account (22011) to the miscellaneous special revenue fund, util-
    16  ity environmental regulatory account (21064).
    17    8. $7,000,000 from the general fund to the enterprise fund, state fair
    18  account (50051).
    19    9. $3,000,000 from the waste management & cleanup account  (21053)  to
    20  the general fund.
    21    10.  $3,000,000 from the waste management & cleanup account (21053) to
    22  the environmental protection fund transfer account (30451).
    23    11. $14,000,000 from the general fund  to  the  miscellaneous  special
    24  revenue fund, patron services account (22163).
    25    12.  $15,000,000 from the enterprise fund, golf account (50332) to the
    26  state  park  infrastructure  fund,  state  park  infrastructure  account
    27  (30351).
    28    13.  $10,000,000 from the general fund to the environmental protection
    29  and oil spill compensation fund (21203).
    30    14. $5,000,000 from the general fund  to  the  enterprise  fund,  golf
    31  account (50332).
    32    Family Assistance:
    33    1.  $7,000,000 from any of the office of children and family services,
    34  office of temporary and disability assistance, or department  of  health
    35  special  revenue  federal funds and the general fund, in accordance with
    36  agreements with social services districts, to the miscellaneous  special
    37  revenue  fund, office of human resources development state match account
    38  (21967).
    39    2. $4,000,000 from any of the office of children and  family  services
    40  or office of temporary and disability assistance special revenue federal
    41  funds to the miscellaneous special revenue fund, family preservation and
    42  support services and family violence services account (22082).
    43    3. $18,670,000 from any of the office of children and family services,
    44  office  of  temporary and disability assistance, or department of health
    45  special revenue federal  funds  and  any  other  miscellaneous  revenues
    46  generated  from  the operation of office of children and family services
    47  programs to the general fund.
    48    4. $205,000,000 from any of the office  of  temporary  and  disability
    49  assistance  or department of health special revenue funds to the general
    50  fund.
    51    5. $2,500,000 from any of  the  office  of  temporary  and  disability
    52  assistance  special  revenue  funds to the miscellaneous special revenue
    53  fund, office of temporary  and  disability  assistance  program  account
    54  (21980).
    55    6. $35,000,000 from any of the office of children and family services,
    56  office  of temporary and disability assistance, department of labor, and

        S. 3006--C                         137                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  department of health special revenue federal  funds  to  the  office  of
     2  children  and family services miscellaneous special revenue fund, multi-
     3  agency training contract account (21989).
     4    7.  $205,000,000  from  the  miscellaneous special revenue fund, youth
     5  facility per diem account (22186), to the general fund.
     6    8. $788,000 from the general fund to the combined gifts,  grants,  and
     7  bequests fund, WB Hoyt Memorial account (20128).
     8    9.  $5,000,000  from  the  miscellaneous  special  revenue fund, state
     9  central registry (22028), to the general fund.
    10    10. $900,000 from the general fund to the  Veterans'  Remembrance  and
    11  Cemetery Maintenance and Operation account (20201).
    12    11.  $7,000,000  from  the  general  fund  to the housing program fund
    13  (31850).
    14    12. $15,000,000 from any of the office of children and family services
    15  special revenue federal funds to  the  office  of  court  administration
    16  special revenue other federal iv-e funds account.
    17    13. $10,000,000 from any of the office of children and family services
    18  special  revenue  federal funds to the office of indigent legal services
    19  special revenue other federal iv-e funds account.
    20    General Government:
    21    1. $9,000,000 from the general fund to the health insurance  revolving
    22  fund (55300).
    23    2.  $292,400,000  from  the  health  insurance  reserve  receipts fund
    24  (60550) to the general fund.
    25    3. $150,000 from the general fund to the not-for-profit revolving loan
    26  fund (20650).
    27    4. $150,000 from the not-for-profit revolving loan fund (20650) to the
    28  general fund.
    29    5. $3,000,000 from the miscellaneous  special  revenue  fund,  surplus
    30  property account (22036), to the general fund.
    31    6.  $19,000,000  from  the miscellaneous special revenue fund, revenue
    32  arrearage account (22024), to the general fund.
    33    7. $3,828,000 from the miscellaneous  special  revenue  fund,  revenue
    34  arrearage  account  (22024),  to the miscellaneous special revenue fund,
    35  authority budget office account (22138).
    36    8. $1,000,000 from the miscellaneous  special  revenue  fund,  parking
    37  account (22007), to the general fund, for the purpose of reimbursing the
    38  costs of debt service related to state parking facilities.
    39    9.  $11,460,000 from the general fund to the agencies internal service
    40  fund, central technology services account (55069), for  the  purpose  of
    41  enterprise technology projects.
    42    10. $10,000,000 from the general fund to the agencies internal service
    43  fund, state data center account (55062).
    44    11.  $12,000,000  from the miscellaneous special revenue fund, parking
    45  account (22007), to the centralized services, building support  services
    46  account (55018).
    47    12.  $33,000,000  from  the general fund to the internal service fund,
    48  business services center account (55022).
    49    13. $9,500,000 from the general fund to  the  internal  service  fund,
    50  building support services account (55018).
    51    14.  $1,500,000 from the combined expendable trust fund, plaza special
    52  events account (20120), to the general fund.
    53    15. $50,000,000 from the New York State cannabis revenue fund  (24800)
    54  to the general fund.

        S. 3006--C                         138                        A. 3006--C
 
     1    16.  A  transfer  from  the  general fund to the miscellaneous special
     2  revenue fund, New York State Campaign Finance Fund Account  (22211),  up
     3  to an amount equal to total reimbursements due to qualified candidates.
     4    17.  $6,000,000 from the miscellaneous special revenue fund, standards
     5  and purchasing account (22019), to the general fund.
     6    18. $12,400,000 from  the  banking  department  special  revenue  fund
     7  (21970) funded by the assessment to defray operating expenses authorized
     8  by  section  206  of  the financial services law to the IT Modernization
     9  Capital Fund.
    10    19. $12,400,000 from the insurance  department  special  revenue  fund
    11  (21994) funded by the assessment to defray operating expenses authorized
    12  by  section  206  of  the financial services law to the IT Modernization
    13  Capital Fund.
    14    20. $1,550,000 from the pharmacy benefits bureau special revenue  fund
    15  (22255) funded by the assessment to defray operating expenses authorized
    16  by  section  206  of the financial services law, to the IT Modernization
    17  Capital Fund.
    18    21. $4,650,000 from the virtual currency special revenue fund  (22262)
    19  funded  by  the  assessment  to  defray operating expenses authorized by
    20  section 206 of the financial services law, to the IT Modernization Capi-
    21  tal Fund.
    22    Health:
    23    1. A transfer from the general fund to the combined gifts, grants  and
    24  bequests  fund, breast cancer research and education account (20155), up
    25  to an amount equal to the  monies  collected  and  deposited  into  that
    26  account in the previous fiscal year.
    27    2.  A transfer from the general fund to the combined gifts, grants and
    28  bequests  fund,  prostate  cancer  research,  detection,  and  education
    29  account  (20183),  up  to  an  amount  equal to the moneys collected and
    30  deposited into that account in the previous fiscal year.
    31    3. A transfer from the general fund to the combined gifts, grants  and
    32  bequests  fund,  Alzheimer's  disease  research  and  assistance account
    33  (20143), up to an amount equal to the  moneys  collected  and  deposited
    34  into that account in the previous fiscal year.
    35    4. $3,600,000 from the miscellaneous special revenue fund, certificate
    36  of  need  account  (21920),  to the miscellaneous capital projects fund,
    37  healthcare IT capital subfund (32216).
    38    5. $4,000,000 from  the  miscellaneous  special  revenue  fund,  vital
    39  health  records  account  (22103), to the miscellaneous capital projects
    40  fund, healthcare IT capital subfund (32216).
    41    6. $6,000,000 from the miscellaneous  special  revenue  fund,  profes-
    42  sional  medical  conduct  account  (22088), to the miscellaneous capital
    43  projects fund, healthcare IT capital subfund (32216).
    44    7. $127,000,000 from the HCRA resources fund (20800)  to  the  capital
    45  projects fund (30000).
    46    8.  $6,550,000  from  the  general  fund to the medical cannabis trust
    47  fund, health operation and oversight account (23755).
    48    9. An amount up to the unencumbered balance from the charitable  gifts
    49  trust  fund, health charitable account (24900), to the general fund, for
    50  payment of general support for primary, preventive, and inpatient health
    51  care, dental and vision care, hunger prevention and nutritional  assist-
    52  ance,  and  other services for New York state residents with the overall
    53  goal of ensuring that New York state residents have  access  to  quality
    54  health care and other related services.

        S. 3006--C                         139                        A. 3006--C
 
     1    10.  $500,000  from  the  miscellaneous special revenue fund, New York
     2  State cannabis revenue fund (24800), to the miscellaneous special reven-
     3  ue fund, environmental laboratory fee account (21959).
     4    11.  An  amount  up to the unencumbered balance from the public health
     5  emergency charitable gifts trust fund (23816), to the general fund,  for
     6  payment  of  goods  and services necessary to respond to a public health
     7  disaster emergency or to assist or aid in responding to such a disaster.
     8    12. $1,000,000,000 from the general fund to the health care  transfor-
     9  mation fund (24850).
    10    13.  $2,590,000  from  the miscellaneous special revenue fund, patient
    11  safety center account (22139), to the general fund.
    12    14. $1,000,000 from the miscellaneous special  revenue  fund,  nursing
    13  home receivership account (21925), to the general fund.
    14    15.  $130,000  from the miscellaneous special revenue fund, quality of
    15  care account (21915), to the general fund.
    16    16. $2,200,000 from the miscellaneous special revenue fund, adult home
    17  quality enhancement account (22091), to the general fund.
    18    17. $17,283,000 from the general fund, to  the  miscellaneous  special
    19  revenue fund, helen hayes hospital account (22140).
    20    18.  $3,672,000  from  the  general fund, to the miscellaneous special
    21  revenue fund, New York city veterans' home account (22141).
    22    19. $2,731,000 from the general fund,  to  the  miscellaneous  special
    23  revenue  fund, New York state home for veterans' and their dependents at
    24  oxford account (22142).
    25    20. $1,455,000 from the general fund,  to  the  miscellaneous  special
    26  revenue fund, western New York veterans' home account (22143).
    27    21.  $4,683,000  from  the  general fund, to the miscellaneous special
    28  revenue fund, New York state for veterans  in  the  lower-hudson  valley
    29  account (22144).
    30    22.  $350,000,000  from the general fund, to the miscellaneous special
    31  revenue fund, healthcare stability fund account (22267).
    32    23. $5,000,000 from the general fund to the occupational health  clin-
    33  ics account (22177).
    34    24. $88,000 from the miscellaneous special revenue fund, veterans home
    35  assistance  account  (20208), to the miscellaneous special revenue fund,
    36  New York city veterans' home account (22141).
    37    25. $88,000 from the miscellaneous special revenue fund, veterans home
    38  assistance account (20208), to the miscellaneous special  revenue  fund,
    39  New York state home for veterans' and their dependents at oxford account
    40  (22142).
    41    26.  $88,000  from  the  miscellaneous  special revenue fund, veterans
    42  assistance account (20208), to the miscellaneous special  revenue  fund,
    43  western New York veterans' home account (22143).
    44    27.  $88,000  from  the  miscellaneous  special revenue fund, veterans
    45  assistance account (20208), to the miscellaneous special  revenue  fund,
    46  New York state for veterans in the lower-Hudson valley account (22144).
    47    28.  $88,000  from  the  miscellaneous  special revenue fund, veterans
    48  assistance account (20208), to the state university  income  fund,  Long
    49  Island Veterans' Home Account (22652).
    50    29.  $159,000,000 from the miscellaneous special revenue fund, health-
    51  care stability fund account (22267) to the  HCRA  resources  fund,  HCRA
    52  program account (20807).
    53    Labor:
    54    1.  $600,000  from the miscellaneous special revenue fund, DOL fee and
    55  penalty account (21923), to the child performer's protection fund, child
    56  performer protection account (20401).

        S. 3006--C                         140                        A. 3006--C
 
     1    2. $11,700,000 from the unemployment insurance  interest  and  penalty
     2  fund,  unemployment  insurance  special  interest  and  penalty  account
     3  (23601), to the general fund.
     4    3. $50,000,000 from the DOL fee and penalty account (21923), unemploy-
     5  ment  insurance special interest and penalty account (23601), and public
     6  work enforcement account (21998), to the general fund.
     7    4. $850,000 from the miscellaneous special revenue fund, DOL  elevator
     8  safety  program  fund (22252) to the miscellaneous special revenue fund,
     9  DOL fee and penalty account (21923).
    10    5. $22,000,000 from the miscellaneous special revenue  fund,  Interest
    11  and  Penalty  Account  (23601), to the Training and Education Program on
    12  Occupation Safety and Health Fund, OSHA Training and  Education  Account
    13  (21251).
    14    6. $1,000,000 from the miscellaneous special revenue fund, Public Work
    15  Enforcement  account  (21998),  to the Training and Education Program on
    16  Occupation Safety and Health Fund, OSHA Training and  Education  Account
    17  (21251).
    18    7.  $250,000,000  from  the general fund to the enterprise fund, unem-
    19  ployment insurance benefit fund, interest assessment account (50651).
    20    8. $4,000,000 from the miscellaneous special revenue fund, Public Work
    21  Enforcement account (21998), to the Training and  Education  Program  on
    22  Occupational Safety and Health Fund, OSHA Inspection Account (21252).
    23    9.  $8,000,000,000 from the general fund to the enterprise fund, unem-
    24  ployment insurance benefit fund, unemployment insurance benefit  account
    25  (50650).
    26    Mental Hygiene:
    27    1.  $2,000,000 from the general fund, to the mental hygiene facilities
    28  capital improvement fund (32300).
    29    2. $20,000,000 from the opioid settlement fund (23817) to the  miscel-
    30  laneous   capital  projects  fund,  opioid  settlement  capital  account
    31  (32200).
    32    3. $20,000,000 from the miscellaneous capital  projects  fund,  opioid
    33  settlement  capital  account  (32200)  to  the  opioid  settlement  fund
    34  (23817).
    35    Public Protection:
    36    1. $2,587,000 from the  general  fund  to  the  miscellaneous  special
    37  revenue fund, recruitment incentive account (22171).
    38    2.  $23,773,000  from  the general fund to the correctional industries
    39  revolving  fund,  correctional  industries  internal   service   account
    40  (55350).
    41    3.  $2,000,000,000  from  any of the division of homeland security and
    42  emergency services special revenue federal funds to the general fund.
    43    4. $115,420,000 from the state police motor  vehicle  law  enforcement
    44  and  motor  vehicle  theft  and  insurance  fraud prevention fund, state
    45  police motor vehicle enforcement account (22802), to  the  general  fund
    46  for state operation expenses of the division of state police.
    47    5.  $138,272,000  from the general fund to the correctional facilities
    48  capital improvement fund (32350).
    49    6. $5,000,000 from the general  fund  to  the  dedicated  highway  and
    50  bridge trust fund (30050) for the purpose of work zone safety activities
    51  provided by the division of state police for the department of transpor-
    52  tation.
    53    7.  $10,000,000 from the miscellaneous special revenue fund, statewide
    54  public safety communications account (22123), to  the  capital  projects
    55  fund (30000).

        S. 3006--C                         141                        A. 3006--C
 
     1    8.  $9,830,000  from  the  miscellaneous  special  revenue fund, legal
     2  services assistance account (22096), to the general fund.
     3    9.  $1,000,000  from the general fund to the agencies internal service
     4  fund, neighborhood work project account (55059).
     5    10. $7,980,000 from the miscellaneous special  revenue  fund,  finger-
     6  print identification & technology account (21950), to the general fund.
     7    11. $1,100,000 from the state police motor vehicle law enforcement and
     8  motor  vehicle  theft and insurance fraud prevention fund, motor vehicle
     9  theft and insurance fraud account (22801), to the general fund.
    10    12. $38,938,000 from the general fund  to  the  miscellaneous  special
    11  revenue fund, criminal justice improvement account (21945).
    12    13.  $6,000,000  from  the  general  fund to the miscellaneous special
    13  revenue fund, hazard mitigation revolving loan account (22266).
    14    14. $234,000,000 from the indigent legal services fund, indigent legal
    15  services account (23551) to the general fund.
    16    Transportation:
    17    1. $20,000,000 from the general fund to the mass transportation  oper-
    18  ating  assistance  fund, public transportation systems operating assist-
    19  ance account (21401), of which $12,000,000 constitutes the base need for
    20  operations.
    21    2. $727,500,000 from the general fund to  the  dedicated  highway  and
    22  bridge trust fund (30050).
    23    3.  $244,250,000 from the general fund to the MTA financial assistance
    24  fund, mobility tax trust account (23651).
    25    4. $477,000 from the miscellaneous special revenue fund, traffic adju-
    26  dication account (22055), to the general fund.
    27    5. $5,000,000 from the miscellaneous special revenue fund, transporta-
    28  tion regulation account (22067) to the general fund,  for  disbursements
    29  made  from  such fund for motor carrier safety that are in excess of the
    30  amounts deposited in the general  fund  for  such  purpose  pursuant  to
    31  section 94 of the transportation law.
    32    Miscellaneous:
    33    1. $250,000,000 from the general fund to any funds or accounts for the
    34  purpose of reimbursing certain outstanding accounts receivable balances.
    35    2.  $500,000,000  from  the general fund to the debt reduction reserve
    36  fund (40000).
    37    3. $15,500,000 from the general fund, community  projects  account  GG
    38  (10256), to the general fund, state purposes account (10050).
    39    4.  $100,000,000  from any special revenue federal fund to the general
    40  fund, state purposes account (10050).
    41    5. An amount up to the unencumbered balance from the  special  revenue
    42  federal fund, ARPA-Fiscal Recovery Fund (25546) to the general fund.
    43    6. $1,000,000,000 from the general fund to the hazardous waste cleanup
    44  account  (31506),  State  parks infrastructure account (30351), environ-
    45  mental protection fund transfer account (30451), the correctional facil-
    46  ities capital improvement fund (32350), housing program fund (31850), or
    47  the Mental hygiene facilities capital improvement fund (32300), up to an
    48  amount equal to certain outstanding accounts receivable balances.
    49    § 4. Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, and in  accordance  with
    50  section 4 of the state finance law, the comptroller is hereby authorized
    51  and directed to transfer, on or before March 31, 2026:
    52    1.  Upon request of the commissioner of environmental conservation, up
    53  to $12,745,400 from revenues credited to any of the department of  envi-
    54  ronmental  conservation special revenue funds, including $4,000,000 from
    55  the environmental protection and oil spill  compensation  fund  (21200),

        S. 3006--C                         142                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  and  $1,834,600 from the conservation fund (21150), to the environmental
     2  conservation special revenue fund, indirect charges account (21060).
     3    2.  Upon request of the commissioner of agriculture and markets, up to
     4  $3,000,000 from any special revenue fund or enterprise fund  within  the
     5  department of agriculture and markets to the general fund, to pay appro-
     6  priate administrative expenses.
     7    3.  Upon  request  of  the commissioner of the division of housing and
     8  community renewal, up to $6,221,000 from revenues credited to any  divi-
     9  sion  of  housing and community renewal federal or miscellaneous special
    10  revenue fund to the miscellaneous special revenue fund, housing indirect
    11  cost recovery account (22090).
    12    4. Upon request of the commissioner of the  division  of  housing  and
    13  community  renewal, up to $5,500,000 may be transferred from any miscel-
    14  laneous special revenue  fund  account,  to  any  miscellaneous  special
    15  revenue fund.
    16    5.  Upon  request of the commissioner of health up to $13,694,000 from
    17  revenues credited to any of the department of health's  special  revenue
    18  funds, to the miscellaneous special revenue fund, administration account
    19  (21982).
    20    6.  Upon  the  request  of the attorney general, up to $5,000,000 from
    21  revenues credited to the federal health and human services fund, federal
    22  health and human services account (25117) or the  miscellaneous  special
    23  revenue  fund,  recoveries and revenue account (22041), to the miscella-
    24  neous special revenue fund, litigation  settlement  and  civil  recovery
    25  account (22117).
    26    § 5. On or before March 31, 2026, the comptroller is hereby authorized
    27  and  directed  to  deposit  earnings  that would otherwise accrue to the
    28  general fund that are attributable to the operation of section  98-a  of
    29  the  state  finance  law, to the agencies internal service fund, banking
    30  services account (55057), for the purpose  of  meeting  direct  payments
    31  from such account.
    32    §  6.  Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, and in accordance with
    33  section 4 of the state finance law, the comptroller is hereby authorized
    34  and directed to transfer, upon request of the director of the budget and
    35  upon consultation with the state university chancellor or  their  desig-
    36  nee,  on  or  before  March  31,  2026, up to $16,000,000 from the state
    37  university income fund general revenue  account  (22653)  to  the  state
    38  general  fund for debt service costs related to campus supported capital
    39  project costs for the  NY-SUNY  2020  challenge  grant  program  at  the
    40  University at Buffalo.
    41    §  7.  Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, and in accordance with
    42  section 4 of the state finance law, the comptroller is hereby authorized
    43  and directed to transfer, upon request of the director of the budget and
    44  upon consultation with the state university chancellor or  their  desig-
    45  nee,  on  or  before  March  31,  2026,  up to $6,500,000 from the state
    46  university income fund general revenue  account  (22653)  to  the  state
    47  general  fund for debt service costs related to campus supported capital
    48  project costs for the  NY-SUNY  2020  challenge  grant  program  at  the
    49  University at Albany.
    50    §  8.  Notwithstanding  any  law to the contrary, the state university
    51  chancellor or their designee is  authorized  and  directed  to  transfer
    52  estimated  tuition revenue balances from the state university collection
    53  fund (61000) to the  state  university  income  fund,  state  university
    54  general revenue offset account (22655) on or before March 31, 2026.
    55    § 8-a. Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, and in accordance with
    56  section 4 of the state finance law, the comptroller is hereby authorized

        S. 3006--C                         143                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  and  directed to transfer, upon request of the director of the budget, a
     2  total of up to $100,000,000 from the general fund to the state universi-
     3  ty income fund, state university general revenue offset account  (22655)
     4  and/or  the  state  university  income  fund, state university hospitals
     5  income reimbursable account (22656)  during  the  period  July  1,  2025
     6  through  June 30, 2026 to pay costs attributable to the state university
     7  health science center at Brooklyn and/or the  state  university  of  New
     8  York  hospital at Brooklyn, respectively, pursuant to a plan approved by
     9  the director of the budget.
    10    § 9. Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, and in  accordance  with
    11  section 4 of the state finance law, the comptroller is hereby authorized
    12  and directed to transfer, upon request of the director of the budget, up
    13  to  $1,522,673,500  from the general fund to the state university income
    14  fund, state university general revenue offset account (22655) during the
    15  period of July 1, 2025 through June 30, 2026 to  support  operations  at
    16  the state university.
    17    §  10. Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, and in accordance with
    18  section 4 of the state finance law, the comptroller is hereby authorized
    19  and directed to transfer, upon request of the director of the budget, up
    20  to $55,848,000 from the general fund  to  the  state  university  income
    21  fund, state university general revenue offset account (22655) during the
    22  period  of  July  1,  2025  to  June 30, 2026 for general fund operating
    23  support pursuant to subparagraph (4-b) of paragraph h of  subdivision  2
    24  of section three hundred fifty-five of the education law.
    25    §  11.  Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, upon the direction of
    26  the director of the budget and the chancellor of the state university of
    27  New York or their designee, and in accordance  with  section  4  of  the
    28  state  finance law, the comptroller is hereby authorized and directed to
    29  transfer monies from any special revenue fund of the state university of
    30  New York to the state university of New York green energy loan fund  for
    31  the  discrete  purposes of the state university of New York green energy
    32  loan fund and from the state university of New York  green  energy  loan
    33  fund  to any special revenue fund of the state university of New York to
    34  support such activity in an amount not to exceed $25,000,000  from  each
    35  fund for the time period of July 1 to June 30 annually.
    36    §  12. Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, and in accordance with
    37  section 4 of the state finance law, the comptroller is hereby authorized
    38  and directed to transfer, upon request of the state university  chancel-
    39  lor  or  their  designee,  up  to  $55,000,000 from the state university
    40  income fund, state  university  hospitals  income  reimbursable  account
    41  (22656),  for  services  and expenses of hospital operations and capital
    42  expenditures at the state university hospitals; and the state university
    43  income fund, Long Island veterans' home account  (22652)  to  the  state
    44  university capital projects fund (32400) on or before June 30, 2026.
    45    §  13. Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, and in accordance with
    46  section 4 of the state finance law, the comptroller, after  consultation
    47  with  the  state  university  chancellor  or  their  designee, is hereby
    48  authorized and directed to transfer moneys, in the first instance,  from
    49  the  state  university  collection fund, Stony Brook hospital collection
    50  account (61006), Brooklyn hospital collection account (61007), and Syra-
    51  cuse hospital collection account (61008) to the state university  income
    52  fund,  state university hospitals income reimbursable account (22656) in
    53  the event insufficient funds  are  available  in  the  state  university
    54  income  fund,  state  university  hospitals  income reimbursable account
    55  (22656) to permit the full transfer of moneys authorized  for  transfer,
    56  to  the  general  fund  for  payment of debt service related to the SUNY

        S. 3006--C                         144                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  hospitals. Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, the  comptroller  is
     2  also  hereby  authorized and directed, after consultation with the state
     3  university chancellor or their designee, to  transfer  moneys  from  the
     4  state  university income fund to the state university income fund, state
     5  university hospitals income reimbursable account (22656)  in  the  event
     6  insufficient  funds  are  available in the state university income fund,
     7  state university hospitals income reimbursable account  (22656)  to  pay
     8  hospital  operating  costs  or  to  permit  the  full transfer of moneys
     9  authorized for transfer, to the general fund for payment of debt service
    10  related to the SUNY hospitals on or before March 31, 2026.
    11    § 14. Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, upon the  direction  of
    12  the director of the budget and the chancellor of the state university of
    13  New  York  or  their  designee,  and in accordance with section 4 of the
    14  state finance law, the comptroller is hereby authorized and directed  to
    15  transfer  monies from the state university dormitory income fund (40350)
    16  to the state university residence hall rehabilitation fund (30100),  and
    17  from  the state university residence hall rehabilitation fund (30100) to
    18  the state university dormitory income fund (40350), in an amount not  to
    19  exceed $125 million from each fund.
    20    §  15. Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, and in accordance with
    21  section 4 of the state finance law, the comptroller is hereby authorized
    22  and directed to transfer, at the request of the director of the  budget,
    23  up to $1,000,000,000 from the unencumbered balance of any special reven-
    24  ue  fund  or  account,  agency fund or account, internal service fund or
    25  account, enterprise fund or account, or any combination  of  such  funds
    26  and  accounts,  to the general fund. The amounts transferred pursuant to
    27  this authorization shall be in addition to any other transfers expressly
    28  authorized in the 2025-26 budget. Transfers  from  federal  funds,  debt
    29  service  funds,  capital projects funds, the community projects fund, or
    30  funds that would result in the loss of eligibility for federal  benefits
    31  or federal funds pursuant to federal law, rule, or regulation as assent-
    32  ed  to in chapter 683 of the laws of 1938 and chapter 700 of the laws of
    33  1951 are not permitted pursuant to this authorization.
    34    § 16. Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, and in accordance  with
    35  section 4 of the state finance law, the comptroller is hereby authorized
    36  and  directed to transfer, at the request of the director of the budget,
    37  up to $100 million from any non-general fund or account, or  combination
    38  of  funds and accounts, to the miscellaneous special revenue fund, tech-
    39  nology financing account (22207),  the  miscellaneous  capital  projects
    40  fund, the federal capital projects account (31350), information technol-
    41  ogy  capital  financing  account  (32215), or the centralized technology
    42  services account (55069), for the purpose  of  consolidating  technology
    43  procurement  and  services. The amounts transferred to the miscellaneous
    44  special revenue fund, technology financing account (22207)  pursuant  to
    45  this  authorization  shall  be  equal to or less than the amount of such
    46  monies intended  to  support  information  technology  costs  which  are
    47  attributable,  according to a plan, to such account made in pursuance to
    48  an appropriation by law. Transfers to the technology  financing  account
    49  shall  be  completed  from  amounts  collected  by  non-general funds or
    50  accounts pursuant to a fund deposit schedule or permanent  statute,  and
    51  shall  be  transferred to the technology financing account pursuant to a
    52  schedule agreed upon by the affected agency commissioner. Transfers from
    53  funds that would result in the loss of eligibility for federal  benefits
    54  or federal funds pursuant to federal law, rule, or regulation as assent-
    55  ed  to in chapter 683 of the laws of 1938 and chapter 700 of the laws of
    56  1951 are not permitted pursuant to this authorization.

        S. 3006--C                         145                        A. 3006--C
 
     1    § 17. Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, and in accordance  with
     2  section 4 of the state finance law, the comptroller is hereby authorized
     3  and  directed to transfer, at the request of the director of the budget,
     4  up to $400 million from any non-general fund or account, or  combination
     5  of  funds  and  accounts, to the general fund for the purpose of consol-
     6  idating technology procurement and  services.  The  amounts  transferred
     7  pursuant to this authorization shall be equal to or less than the amount
     8  of  such  monies  intended to support information technology costs which
     9  are attributable, according to a plan, to such account made in pursuance
    10  to an appropriation by law. Transfers  to  the  general  fund  shall  be
    11  completed from amounts collected by non-general funds or accounts pursu-
    12  ant  to a fund deposit schedule.  Transfers from funds that would result
    13  in the loss of eligibility for federal benefits or federal funds  pursu-
    14  ant to federal law, rule, or regulation as assented to in chapter 683 of
    15  the  laws  of 1938 and chapter 700 of the laws of 1951 are not permitted
    16  pursuant to this authorization.
    17    § 18. Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, as  deemed
    18  feasible and advisable by its trustees, the power authority of the state
    19  of New York is authorized and directed to transfer to the state treasury
    20  to the credit of the general fund up to $10,000,000 for the state fiscal
    21  year commencing April 1, 2025, the proceeds of which will be utilized to
    22  support energy-related state activities.
    23    §  19. Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, as deemed
    24  feasible and advisable by its trustees, the power authority of the state
    25  of New York is authorized to transfer to the state treasury to the cred-
    26  it of the general fund up to  $25,000,000  for  the  state  fiscal  year
    27  commencing  April  1,  2025,  the  proceeds of which will be utilized to
    28  support programs established or implemented by or within the  department
    29  of labor, including but not limited to the office of just energy transi-
    30  tion  and  programs  for  workforce  training and retraining, to prepare
    31  workers for employment for work in the renewable energy field.
    32    § 20. Notwithstanding any provision of law, rule or regulation to  the
    33  contrary,  the  New York state energy research and development authority
    34  is authorized and directed to contribute $913,000 to the state  treasury
    35  to the credit of the general fund on or before March 31, 2026.
    36    §  21. Notwithstanding any provision of law, rule or regulation to the
    37  contrary, the New York state energy research and  development  authority
    38  is authorized and directed to transfer five million dollars to the cred-
    39  it of the Environmental Protection Fund on or before March 31, 2026 from
    40  proceeds  collected  by the authority from the auction or sale of carbon
    41  dioxide emission allowances allocated by the department of environmental
    42  conservation.
    43    § 22. Section 56 of part XX of chapter 56 of the laws of 2024,  amend-
    44  ing  the  state finance law and other laws relating to providing for the
    45  administration of certain funds and accounts related  to  the  2023-2024
    46  budget,  authorizing  certain payments and transfers, is amended to read
    47  as follows:
    48    § 56. This act shall take effect immediately and shall  be  deemed  to
    49  have been in full force and effect on and after April 1, 2024; provided,
    50  however,  that  the  provisions of sections one, two, three, four, five,
    51  six, seven, eight,  fourteen,  fifteen,  sixteen,  seventeen,  eighteen,
    52  nineteen,  twenty,  twenty-one,  twenty-two, [twenty-three,] and twenty-
    53  four of this act shall expire March 31,  2025;  and  provided,  further,
    54  that  sections twenty-five and twenty-six of this act shall expire March
    55  31, 2027, when upon such dates the provisions of such sections shall  be
    56  deemed repealed.

        S. 3006--C                         146                        A. 3006--C
 
     1    §  23.  Subdivision  5  of section 97-rrr of the state finance law, as
     2  amended by section 23 of part XX of chapter 56 of the laws of  2024,  is
     3  amended to read as follows:
     4    5. Notwithstanding the provisions of section one hundred seventy-one-a
     5  of  the  tax law, as separately amended by chapters four hundred eighty-
     6  one and four hundred eighty-four of the laws of nineteen hundred  eight-
     7  y-one,  and notwithstanding the provisions of chapter ninety-four of the
     8  laws of two thousand eleven, or any  other  provisions  of  law  to  the
     9  contrary,  during  the  fiscal  year beginning April first, two thousand
    10  [twenty-four] twenty-five, the state comptroller  is  hereby  authorized
    11  and  directed  to  deposit  to the fund created pursuant to this section
    12  from amounts collected pursuant to article twenty-two of the tax law and
    13  pursuant to a schedule submitted by the director of the  budget,  up  to
    14  [$1,575,393,000]  $1,396,911,000 as may be certified in such schedule as
    15  necessary to meet the purposes of such fund for the fiscal  year  begin-
    16  ning April first, two thousand [twenty-four] twenty-five.
    17    §  24.  Subdivision  2  of  section  8-b  of  the state finance law is
    18  REPEALED.
    19    § 24-a. The opening paragraph of subdivision 3 of section 93-b of  the
    20  state finance law, as amended by section 23 of part JJJ of chapter 59 of
    21  the laws of 2021, is amended to read as follows:
    22    Notwithstanding  any other provisions of law to the contrary, commenc-
    23  ing on April first, two thousand [twenty-one] twenty-five, and  continu-
    24  ing  through  March thirty-first, two thousand [twenty-five] thirty, the
    25  comptroller is hereby authorized to transfer monies from  the  dedicated
    26  infrastructure investment fund to the general fund, and from the general
    27  fund  to  the  dedicated  infrastructure  investment  fund, in an amount
    28  determined by the director of the budget to the extent moneys are avail-
    29  able in the fund;  provided,  however,  that  the  comptroller  is  only
    30  authorized  to transfer monies from the dedicated infrastructure invest-
    31  ment fund to the general fund in the event of an  economic  downturn  as
    32  described in paragraph (a) of this subdivision; and/or to fulfill disal-
    33  lowances and/or settlements related to over-payments of federal medicare
    34  and  medicaid  revenues  in  excess  of one hundred million dollars from
    35  anticipated levels, as determined by the  director  of  the  budget  and
    36  described in paragraph (b) of this subdivision.
    37    §  25.  Notwithstanding  any  law  to the contrary, the comptroller is
    38  hereby authorized and directed to transfer, upon request of the director
    39  of the budget, on or before March 31, 2026, the following  amounts  from
    40  the  following  special  revenue  accounts  to the capital projects fund
    41  (30000), for the purposes of reimbursement to  such  fund  for  expenses
    42  related to the maintenance and preservation of state assets:
    43    1. $43,000 from the miscellaneous special revenue fund, administrative
    44  program account (21982).
    45    2. $1,583,110 from the miscellaneous special revenue fund, helen hayes
    46  hospital account (22140).
    47    3. $488,220 from the miscellaneous special revenue fund, New York city
    48  veterans' home account (22141).
    49    4.  $610,790  from  the  miscellaneous  special revenue fund, New York
    50  state home for veterans' and their dependents at oxford account (22142).
    51    5. $182,310 from the miscellaneous special revenue fund,  western  New
    52  York veterans' home account (22143).
    53    6.  $422,524  from  the  miscellaneous  special revenue fund, New York
    54  state for veterans in the lower-hudson valley account (22144).
    55    7. $2,550,000 from the  miscellaneous  special  revenue  fund,  patron
    56  services account (22163).

        S. 3006--C                         147                        A. 3006--C
 
     1    8.  $11,909,000  from  the  miscellaneous  special revenue fund, state
     2  university general income reimbursable account (22653).
     3    9.  $182,988,000  from  the  miscellaneous special revenue fund, state
     4  university revenue offset account (22655).
     5    10. $55,103,000 from the state university dormitory income fund, state
     6  university dormitory income fund (40350).
     7    11. $1,000,000 from the miscellaneous special revenue fund, litigation
     8  settlement and civil recovery account (22117).
     9    § 26. Section 89-g of the state finance law is REPEALED.
    10    § 27. Section 22 of the state finance law, as amended by  chapter  762
    11  of  the laws of 1992, subdivisions 1-c, 14, 15 and 16 as added and para-
    12  graphs d-2, e, e-2 and i of subdivision 3 and subdivision 4  as  amended
    13  by  chapter 1 of the laws of 2007, paragraphs a-1, a-2 and a-3 of subdi-
    14  vision 3 as added by chapter 10 of the laws  of  2006,  paragraph  j  of
    15  subdivision 3 as added by chapter 453 of the laws of 2015, subdivision 9
    16  as  amended by chapter 260 of the laws of 1993 and subdivisions 5, 6, 7,
    17  8, 9, 10, 11, 12 and 13 as renumbered by section 2 of part F of  chapter
    18  389 of the laws of 1997, is amended to read as follows:
    19    §  22.  The  budget;  contents.  The  budget submitted annually by the
    20  governor to the legislature, in accordance with  article  seven  of  the
    21  constitution,  in  addition to the information required by the constitu-
    22  tion to be set forth therein, shall:
    23    1. include a summary financial plan showing for each  of  the  govern-
    24  mental fund types: (a) the disbursements estimated to be made before the
    25  close  of  the current fiscal year and the moneys estimated to be avail-
    26  able from receipts and other sources therefor; and (b) the disbursements
    27  proposed to be made during the ensuing fiscal year, and the moneys esti-
    28  mated to be available from receipts and other sources therefor inclusive
    29  of any receipts which are expected to result from  proposed  legislation
    30  which  [he]  the governor deems necessary to provide receipts sufficient
    31  to meet such proposed disbursements. For the purposes  of  this  summary
    32  financial  plan,  disbursements  shall  be  presented  by  the following
    33  purposes: state  purposes,  local  assistance,  capital  projects,  debt
    34  service, and general state charges; receipts shall be presented for each
    35  fund  type  by  each  revenue source which accounts for at least one per
    36  centum of all such receipts  and  otherwise  by  categories  of  revenue
    37  sources;  receipts  and disbursements for special revenue funds shall be
    38  presented separately for federal funds and  all  other  special  revenue
    39  funds.  Whenever receipts or disbursements are proposed to be moved to a
    40  different fund type, each significant amount so moved shall  be  identi-
    41  fied.
    42    1-a.  within  ten days following the submission of the financial plans
    43  presented in accordance with subdivision one of this section, the direc-
    44  tor of the budget shall submit to the chairs of the senate  finance  and
    45  the  assembly  ways  and  means  committees  and the comptroller summary
    46  financial plans of receipts and disbursements for the internal  service,
    47  enterprise, and fiduciary fund types.
    48    1-b.  within  ten days of the submission of the financial plan for the
    49  special revenue fund type, the director of the budget  shall  submit  to
    50  the  chairs of the senate finance and assembly ways and means committees
    51  a schedule of receipts and disbursements by account within each  special
    52  revenue  fund,  excluding  those which are financed primarily by federal
    53  grants.
    54    1-c. within ten days following the submission of the  financial  plans
    55  presented in accordance with subdivision one of this section, the direc-
    56  tor  of  the budget shall submit to the chairs of the senate finance and

        S. 3006--C                         148                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  the assembly ways and means committees and the comptroller  an  estimate
     2  of  the  fiscal  impact  of the executive budget general fund changes on
     3  local governments and, where practicable, the  fiscal  impact  on  local
     4  governments  of  the  executive  budget  all fund changes concerning the
     5  medicaid program, homeland security program,  and  workforce  investment
     6  programs.  Such estimate shall be presented by class of local government
     7  and shall measure all of the impacts of the executive budget,  including
     8  aid program changes, reimbursement changes, statutory changes in author-
     9  izations  for  local  taxation,  mandates on local governments and other
    10  requirements. Such estimate shall show the impact on  local  governments
    11  by  local  fiscal  years affected and shall cover the first local fiscal
    12  year affected as well as the ensuing local  fiscal  year.    Where  such
    13  estimate  depends  on  any  local  option  or action, the estimate shall
    14  explicitly describe the assumptions used to calculate the estimate. When
    15  under existing law a local tax option or program would end and the exec-
    16  utive budget proposes the continuation  thereof,  the  impact  shall  be
    17  identified  as a "deferral of sunset" and shall be calculated as a sepa-
    18  rate component of such estimate.
    19    2. [include a summary financial plan showing for each of  the  govern-
    20  mental  fund types: (a) all of the expenditures estimated to be made, in
    21  accordance with generally accepted  accounting  principles,  before  the
    22  close of the current fiscal year and all of the expenditures proposed to
    23  be  made,  in  accordance with generally accepted accounting principles,
    24  during the ensuing fiscal year; and (b) all of the revenues estimated to
    25  accrue, in accordance with  generally  accepted  accounting  principles,
    26  before  the  close  of  the  current  fiscal year and during the ensuing
    27  fiscal year inclusive of any revenues which are expected to result  from
    28  the  proposed  legislation  which he deems necessary to provide receipts
    29  sufficient to meet proposed disbursements.  For  the  purposes  of  this
    30  summary financial plan, expenditures shall be presented by the following
    31  purposes:  state  purposes,  local  assistance,  capital  projects, debt
    32  service, and general state charges; and revenues shall be  presented  by
    33  each  revenue  source  which accounts for at least one per centum of all
    34  such revenues and otherwise by categories of revenue sources.
    35    3.] show for each fund type (unless otherwise  specified)  in  a  form
    36  suitable for comparison:
    37    a.  The  appropriations,  including  reappropriations,  made  for  the
    38  current fiscal year, the appropriations and reappropriations recommended
    39  for the ensuing fiscal year, the  disbursements  estimated  to  be  made
    40  before  the  close  of  the  current fiscal year and proposed to be made
    41  during the ensuing fiscal year  based  upon  available  and  recommended
    42  appropriations  and  reappropriations. Disbursements proposed to be made
    43  shall be  shown  in  separate  parts  as  follows:  those  disbursements
    44  proposed  to  be made for state purposes shall be set forth in one part,
    45  those disbursements proposed to be made for local  assistance  shall  be
    46  set  forth  in  another  separate and distinct part, those disbursements
    47  proposed to be made for capital projects shall be set forth in  a  third
    48  separate  and  distinct part and those disbursements proposed to be made
    49  for debt service shall be set forth in a fourth  separate  and  distinct
    50  part. The effect of any proposed changes in the payment dates of partic-
    51  ular  disbursements  on  the financial plan presented in accordance with
    52  subdivision one of this section shall be set forth separately.
    53    a-1. For each state agency, the appropriations, including  reappropri-
    54  ations, made for the current fiscal year and recommended for the ensuing
    55  fiscal year for contracts for services made for state purposes.

        S. 3006--C                         149                        A. 3006--C
 
     1    a-2.  For  each  state  agency, the disbursements estimated to be made
     2  before the close of the current fiscal year  and  proposed  to  be  made
     3  during the ensuing fiscal year for contracts for services made for state
     4  purposes.
     5    a-3.  For  each  state agency, the estimated number of employees hired
     6  for the current fiscal year and anticipated to be hired during the ensu-
     7  ing fiscal year pursuant  to  contracts  for  services  made  for  state
     8  purposes  based  upon annual employment reports submitted by contractors
     9  pursuant to section one hundred sixty-three of this chapter.
    10    b. In separate sections for each fund type, the receipts actually  had
    11  and received during the preceding fiscal year, the receipts estimated to
    12  be  available  and  received during the current and ensuing fiscal years
    13  respectively listed by each  major  source,  including  statistical  and
    14  summary  tables  and  a  narrative  which  includes  a discussion of the
    15  assumptions used in estimating such receipts. The effect of any proposed
    16  changes in the rates, bases, payment dates or other aspects  of  partic-
    17  ular  sources  of receipts on the financial plan presented in accordance
    18  with subdivision one of this section shall be set forth  separately  and
    19  the assumptions used in calculating such effect. Whenever a new fee or a
    20  new  financing  mechanism  is  proposed,  a  schedule  of the new fee or
    21  financing mechanism shall be included for purposes of showing the effect
    22  of the new fee or financing mechanism on the financial plan.
    23    c. [The expenditures estimated to be made in accordance with generally
    24  accepted accounting principles before the close of  the  current  fiscal
    25  year  and  proposed  to  be  made  in accordance with generally accepted
    26  accounting principles during the ensuing fiscal year. Expenditures esti-
    27  mated and proposed to be made  shall  be  shown  in  separate  parts  as
    28  follows: those expenditures for state purposes shall be set forth in one
    29  part,  those  expenditures  for  local  assistance shall be set forth in
    30  another separate and  distinct  part,  those  expenditures  for  capital
    31  projects  shall  be set forth in a third separate and distinct part, and
    32  those expenditures for debt service shall be set forth in a fourth sepa-
    33  rate and distinct part.
    34    d. The revenues actually accrued in the  preceding  fiscal  year,  the
    35  revenues  estimated  to  accrue  during current and ensuing fiscal years
    36  respectively. Revenues from each tax shall be shown both  in  total  and
    37  net of refunds.
    38    d-1.  A  schedule for the general fund showing the differences between
    39  projected operating results on a cash basis and those on  the  basis  of
    40  generally accepted accounting principles.
    41    d-2.]  Within ten days following the submission of the financial plans
    42  presented in accordance with [subdivisions] subdivision one [and two] of
    43  this section, the director of the budget shall submit to the comptroller
    44  and the chairs of the senate finance committee and the assembly ways and
    45  means committee:
    46    (i) a detailed schedule by fund  of  the  receipts  and  disbursements
    47  comprising such summary financial plan;
    48    (ii) [a schedule for each governmental fund type other than the gener-
    49  al fund showing the differences between projected operating results on a
    50  cash basis and those on the basis of generally accepted accounting prin-
    51  ciples;
    52    (iii)  a detailed schedule by fund of revenues and expenditures within
    53  the general fund;
    54    (iv)] a detailed schedule by fund of receipts for the  prior,  current
    55  and  next  three  fiscal  years.  Such  schedule shall present the major

        S. 3006--C                         150                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  revenue sources for each fund, including detail for each major tax,  and
     2  major components of miscellaneous receipts; and
     3    [(v)]  (iii)  an  itemized  list  of transfers to and from the general
     4  fund.
     5    [e.] d. The anticipated general fund  quarterly  schedule  and  fiscal
     6  year  total  for  the  prior,  current and next ensuing fiscal years of:
     7  disbursements; receipts; repayments of advances; total tax refunds;  and
     8  refunds  for  the  tax  imposed under article twenty-two of the tax law.
     9  Such information shall be presented in the  same  form  as  the  summary
    10  financial  plans presented in accordance with [subdivisions] subdivision
    11  one [and two] of this section. A  separate,  detailed,  report  of  such
    12  schedule  shall  be  provided  with receipts shown by each major revenue
    13  category, including detail for each major tax and  major  components  of
    14  miscellaneous  receipts,  and with disbursements shown by major function
    15  or program. The director of the division  of  the  budget  shall  submit
    16  concurrent  with the submission of the financial plan to the legislature
    17  pursuant to subdivision [two] one of this section and with  each  update
    18  thereafter  a  revised  monthly  general  fund  cash  flow projection of
    19  receipts and  disbursements  for  the  current  fiscal  year  that:  (1)
    20  compares  actual  results  to (i) actual results through the same period
    21  for the prior year and (ii) the most recent prior update to  the  finan-
    22  cial  plan  and to the enacted budget financial plan; (2) summarizes the
    23  reasons for any variances; and (3) describes the revisions to  the  cash
    24  flow projections. The monthly general fund cash flow projection shall be
    25  stated  by major category of local assistance, personal service, nonper-
    26  sonal service, general state charges, and debt  service,  and  by  major
    27  category  of  revenue.  Such  reports  shall utilize a format that shall
    28  facilitate comparison and analysis with those reports submitted  to  the
    29  legislature  by  the office of audit and control pursuant to subdivision
    30  nine of section eight of this chapter.
    31    [e-1.] d-1. Within ten days following the submission of the  financial
    32  plans  presented  in accordance with [subdivisions] subdivision one [and
    33  two] of this section, the anticipated general fund monthly  and  govern-
    34  mental fund types quarterly schedule and fiscal year total for the ensu-
    35  ing  fiscal  year of:   disbursements; receipts; repayments of advances;
    36  total tax refunds; and refunds for the tax imposed under  article  twen-
    37  ty-two  of the tax law.  Such information shall be presented in the same
    38  form as the summary financial plans presented in accordance with [subdi-
    39  visions] subdivision one [and two] of this section.
    40    [e-2.] d-2. A description of employment levels for each state  depart-
    41  ment, division or office, for the prior, current and next ensuing fiscal
    42  year containing:
    43    (1) separate schedules for each fund type; and
    44    (2)  an  all  funds  summary. Such information shall be presented in a
    45  form that facilitates  comparisons  among  agencies  and  across  fiscal
    46  years, and shall include:
    47    (i) actual and projected full-time equivalents; and
    48    (ii)  proposed  changes  to  the  work  force in the executive budget,
    49  including but not limited to: new  positions,  layoffs,  attrition,  and
    50  changes  in  funding sources. To the extent practicable, the division of
    51  the budget shall facilitate the provision of other relevant  information
    52  on  employment  to  the  legislature in a timely manner during the state
    53  fiscal year.
    54    [f.] e. A statement explaining any differences between the significant
    55  accounting policies used in the preparation of the documents required to
    56  be submitted pursuant to this section and those used by the  comptroller

        S. 3006--C                         151                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  in  the  preparation of the financial statements contained in the annual
     2  report to the legislature for the preceding fiscal year issued  pursuant
     3  to subdivision nine of section eight of this chapter.
     4    [g.]  f.  The  estimated  borrowings in anticipation of the receipt of
     5  taxes and revenues and the amount of interest estimated to be paid ther-
     6  eon during the current and ensuing fiscal years  respectively,  and  the
     7  amounts  actually  so  borrowed  and  the interest actually paid thereon
     8  during the preceding fiscal year.
     9    [h.] g. In connection with  each  statement  of  receipts  from  taxes
    10  imposed  pursuant to state law, the total amounts collected or estimated
    11  to be collected therefrom.
    12    [i.] h. A statement setting forth  state  involvement  in  the  fiscal
    13  operations  of  those public authorities and public benefit corporations
    14  which may be part of the development of  a  comprehensive  state  budget
    15  system and provided therefor in the state financial plan. Such statement
    16  shall  include  those public authorities and public benefit corporations
    17  with disbursements which  are  not  currently  reflected  in  the  state
    18  central  accounting system from proceeds of any notes or bonds issued by
    19  any public authority, and which bonds or notes would  be  considered  as
    20  state-supported  debt  as defined in section sixty-seven-a of this chap-
    21  ter. Such statement shall set forth the amount  of  all  of  the  bonds,
    22  notes  and  other  obligations  of each public authority, public benefit
    23  corporation and all other agencies and instrumentalities  of  the  state
    24  for  which the full faith and credit of the state has been pledged or on
    25  account of which the state has by law given its pledge or assurance  for
    26  the  continued  operation  and  solvency of the authority, public corpo-
    27  ration, or other agency or instrumentality of the state, as the case may
    28  be. Such statement shall also set forth all proposed  appropriations  to
    29  be  made  to  any  public authority, public benefit corporation, and any
    30  other agency or instrumentality of the state which has been  created  or
    31  continued  by  law  and  which  is  separate and distinct from the state
    32  itself.
    33    [j.] i. Include a summary financial plan for the funds  of  the  state
    34  receiving  tax  check-off  monies  which  shall include estimates of all
    35  receipts and all disbursements for the  current  and  succeeding  fiscal
    36  years, along with the actual results from the prior fiscal year.
    37    [4.  a.]  3.  Include  a  three  year financial projection showing the
    38  anticipated disbursements and receipts for each of the governmental fund
    39  types of the state. For  the  purposes  of  this  three  year  financial
    40  projection,  disbursements shall be presented by the following purposes:
    41  state purposes, local assistance, capital projects, debt service, trans-
    42  fers and general state charges with each major function or major program
    43  identified  separately  within  each  purpose;  and  receipts  shall  be
    44  presented  by  each  major  revenue  category, including detail for each
    45  major tax, and major  components  of  miscellaneous  receipts  and  with
    46  disbursements  shown  by  major  function or program for the prior year,
    47  current year and next three fiscal years, and otherwise  by  each  major
    48  source which is separately estimated and presented pursuant to paragraph
    49  b of subdivision [three] two of this section. Receipts and disbursements
    50  for  special  revenue  funds  shall  be presented separately for federal
    51  funds and  all  other  special  revenue  funds.  Whenever  receipts  and
    52  disbursements  are  proposed  to be moved to a different fund type, each
    53  significant amount so moved shall be explained. This three  year  finan-
    54  cial  projection  shall  include  an  explanation  of any changes to the
    55  financial plans submitted in accordance with  subdivision  one  of  this
    56  section  and  include  explanations of the economic, statutory and other

        S. 3006--C                         152                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  assumptions used to estimate the disbursements and  receipts  which  are
     2  presented.  Whenever  the projections for receipts and disbursements are
     3  based on assumptions other than the  current  levels  of  service,  such
     4  assumptions shall be separately identified and explained. The three year
     5  financial projections shall include a description of any projected defi-
     6  cits or surpluses.
     7    [5.]  4. Include a summary statement of operations for the proprietary
     8  and fiduciary fund types. Such summary  statement  of  operations  shall
     9  include  the  estimated and projected receipts of and disbursements from
    10  appropriations and reappropriations available or recommended  from  such
    11  fund  types  in  the  budget bills submitted by the governor pursuant to
    12  section twenty-four of this [chapter] article.   Such summary  statement
    13  of  operations shall be revised as soon as is practical after the legis-
    14  lature has completed action on such budget bills.
    15    [6.] 5. Include a list of proposed legislation submitted  pursuant  to
    16  section three of article seven of the constitution.
    17    [7.]  6. Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, budgets
    18  submitted pursuant to this section shall not  recommend  first  instance
    19  expenditures.  Any  anticipated  reimbursement  of proposed expenditures
    20  shall be shown as receipts or revenues to the appropriate fund.
    21    [8.] 7. Within ten days following the submission of the budget by  the
    22  governor, the director of the budget shall transmit to the chairs of the
    23  senate  finance  committee  and  the assembly ways and means committee a
    24  report, by agency, program, and fund, including but not limited to,  the
    25  following  information pertaining to financed equipment acquisitions for
    26  state departments, agencies and units of the state  university  and  the
    27  city  university of New York including those financed equipment acquisi-
    28  tions financed by the issuance of certificates of participation or simi-
    29  lar instruments for state departments, agencies and units of  the  state
    30  and city universities of New York:
    31    [1.]  a. For new financed equipment acquisitions to be financed in the
    32  ensuing fiscal year:
    33    [(a)] (1) An  identification  of  the  purposes  of  such  financings,
    34  including:
    35    [(1)] (i) The nature of the equipment to be financed.
    36    [(2)]  (ii) Whether the purposes are new financings or refinancings of
    37  outstanding lease purchase and installment purchase agreements.
    38    [(3)] (iii) The recommended method of financing.
    39    [(b)] (2) The estimated purchase cost of the  equipment  if  purchased
    40  outright.
    41    [(c)] (3) The estimated interest rate and term of such financings.
    42    [(d)]  (4)  The  estimated  expenses for the issuances of such certif-
    43  icates or similar instruments as such expenses are  defined  in  section
    44  sixty-six-b of this chapter.
    45    [(e)]  (5)  A  schedule  of estimated lease purchase payments by state
    46  fiscal year for such financings, and estimated total financing costs.
    47    [2.] b. For outstanding financed equipment acquisitions  as  of  April
    48  first of the ensuing fiscal year the total estimated amount for lease or
    49  installment purchase payments for the ensuing fiscal year.
    50    [3.]  c.  For  outstanding financed equipment acquisitions financed by
    51  certificates of participation the financing costs of outstanding certif-
    52  icates of participation  and  similar  instruments  issued  pursuant  to
    53  section  sixty-six-b of this chapter with estimated payment schedules of
    54  all such outstanding obligations.
    55    [9.] 8. Include a  summary  of  disbursements  by  function  of  state
    56  government for the preceding fiscal year and the estimated disbursements

        S. 3006--C                         153                        A. 3006--C

     1  for  the current and ensuing fiscal years in a form suitable for compar-
     2  ison. Such summary shall present such disbursements by  purpose  as  set
     3  forth  in  subdivision  one  of  this section and also including special
     4  revenue  funds-federal  and  special  revenue  funds-other. Such summary
     5  shall also describe the state  entities,  as  defined  by  [subdivisions
     6  five,  six,  seven  and  eight of] section two-a of this chapter, within
     7  each function. For the fiscal year beginning in nineteen  hundred  nine-
     8  ty-three,  such summary shall be presented within ten days of the budget
     9  submission for the general fund, special  revenue  funds-other,  capital
    10  projects  funds and debt service funds. For the fiscal year beginning in
    11  nineteen hundred ninety-four, such summary shall be presented  with  the
    12  budget for the general fund and within ten days of the budget submission
    13  for special revenue funds-other, capital projects funds and debt service
    14  funds.  For  fiscal  years beginning in nineteen hundred ninety-five and
    15  thereafter, such summary shall be presented with the budget.
    16    [10.] 9. Include a statement showing projected  disbursement  for  the
    17  current  fiscal  year  and proposed disbursements for the ensuing fiscal
    18  year by agency and bill and fund type. For the fiscal year beginning  in
    19  nineteen  hundred ninety-three, such statement shall be presented within
    20  ten days of the budget submission for the general fund, special  revenue
    21  funds-other,  capital  projects  funds  and  debt service funds. For the
    22  fiscal year beginning in  nineteen  hundred  ninety-four,  such  summary
    23  shall  be  presented with the budget for the general fund and within ten
    24  days of the budget submission for special revenue  funds-other,  capital
    25  projects  funds  and  debt  service funds. For fiscal years beginning in
    26  nineteen hundred ninety-five  and  thereafter,  such  summary  shall  be
    27  presented with the budget.
    28    [11.]  10.  Within  ten days following the submission of the financial
    29  plans presented in accordance with [subdivisions] subdivision  one  [and
    30  two]  of  this  section,  the director of the budget shall submit to the
    31  chairs of the senate finance committee and the assembly ways  and  means
    32  committee  for  the  prior,  the  current  and next ensuing fiscal years
    33  detailed schedules by agency  for  the  general  fund  showing  proposed
    34  appropriations  in  the  state  operations  and aid to localities budget
    35  bills with disbursements to be made against such appropriations, as well
    36  as disbursements to be made against any existing appropriations.
    37    [12.] 11. a. With respect  to  any  proposed  appropriations  for  the
    38  purpose  of  remedying  state  agency violations or past problems of the
    39  environmental conservation law or regulations adopted thereunder  within
    40  the  proposed  budget submitted annually by the governor to the legisla-
    41  ture shall, set forth the amount recommended to remedy  each  functional
    42  category  of  violation. A priority criterion to be considered in deter-
    43  mining such recommended appropriations shall  be  the  ranking  of  such
    44  violations  and  past  problems  as determined by the agency pursuant to
    45  paragraph b of subdivision one of section 3-0311  of  the  environmental
    46  conservation  law,  with any reordering of rankings as determined by the
    47  department of environmental conservation. Amounts appropriated shall  be
    48  disbursed  for remediation of the violation or problem only after review
    49  and determination by the department of environmental conservation of the
    50  adequacy of the remedial plan pursuant to  paragraph  g  of  subdivision
    51  three of section 3-0311 of the environmental conservation law.
    52    b.  Within  thirty  days following the submission of the budget by the
    53  governor for each fiscal year, beginning with the nineteen hundred nine-
    54  ty-three--ninety-four fiscal year, the  director  of  the  budget  shall
    55  transmit  to the chairs of the senate finance committee and the assembly
    56  ways and means committee a report which includes project specific infor-

        S. 3006--C                         154                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  mation for proposed appropriations for the purposes of  remedying  state
     2  agency  environmental  violations or problems, as identified pursuant to
     3  section 3-0311 of the environmental conservation law,  contained  within
     4  such submitted budget.
     5    [13.] 12. Include a summary financial plan for all research institutes
     6  which shall set forth:
     7    a.  estimates  of  all  revenues  and all expenses for the current and
     8  succeeding fiscal years, along with the actual results  from  the  prior
     9  fiscal year; and
    10    b.  any  agreement  whereby  any  state  agency will provide financial
    11  support or any other assistance to cover any  operating  loss  for  such
    12  research institute.
    13    [14.]  13. a. With respect to information technology projects, depend-
    14  ent on funding in the executive budget, involving one or more  contracts
    15  projected  to  total  ten  million  dollars  or more, within thirty days
    16  following the submission of the budget by the governor for  each  fiscal
    17  year,  beginning  with  the two thousand eight--two thousand nine fiscal
    18  year, the director of the budget shall transmit to  the  chairs  of  the
    19  senate  finance  committee  and  the assembly ways and means committee a
    20  report which shall set forth the following:
    21    (1) project summary describing the project purpose, proposed approach,
    22  key milestones, current status and timetable;
    23    (2) the proposed method of procurement, including whether the  project
    24  will,  in  whole  or  in part, utilize a centralized contract or a sole-
    25  source contract; and
    26    (3) the proposed funding source, financing method and estimated  costs
    27  by fiscal year.
    28    b.  Information  provided  pursuant to paragraph a of this subdivision
    29  may not be disclosed to any party other than a  governmental  entity  as
    30  defined  in  section  one hundred thirty-nine-j of this chapter, if such
    31  disclosure would impair the fairness or competitiveness of a pending  or
    32  potential procurement process.
    33    Estimated costs by fiscal year shall not be disclosed.
    34    [15.] 14. The division of the budget shall prepare the reports, sched-
    35  ules, and other information described in this subdivision. To the extent
    36  practicable,  such  reports,  schedules,  and  information shall be in a
    37  form, and presented at a level of detail, that facilitates comparison on
    38  an annual basis and against actual results, as  appropriate,  and  in  a
    39  manner  consistent  with  the other reporting requirements enumerated in
    40  this section. The reports, schedules, and other information required  by
    41  this  subdivision  shall be submitted to the chair of the senate finance
    42  committee, the chair of the  assembly  ways  and  means  committee,  the
    43  minority  leaders  of  both houses, and the comptroller according to the
    44  schedules set forth in this section. In determining  the  final  content
    45  and  format of the information required by this section, the division of
    46  the budget shall consult annually with the designees  of  the  temporary
    47  president of the senate, the speaker of the assembly, the minority lead-
    48  ers  of  both  houses, and the comptroller. All information described in
    49  this subdivision shall be made available to the public.
    50    a. The executive budget, the enacted budget report and each  quarterly
    51  update to the financial plan shall include an updated general fund fore-
    52  cast  of  receipts  and disbursements for the current and two succeeding
    53  fiscal years. Such updated forecast shall clearly identify  and  explain
    54  the  revisions  to  the  receipts and disbursements projections from the
    55  most recent prior update to the  financial  plan,  and  any  significant
    56  revisions to the underlying factors affecting receipts and disbursements

        S. 3006--C                         155                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  by  major  function,  and may include, but not be limited to:  caseload,
     2  service, and utilization rates; demographic trends; economic  variables;
     3  pension fund performance; incarceration rates; prescription drug prices;
     4  health  insurance  premiums;  inflation;  contractual obligations; liti-
     5  gation; and state employment trends.
     6    b. The capital  program  and  financing  plan  submitted  pursuant  to
     7  section  twenty-two-c  of  this article, and the update thereto required
     8  pursuant to section twenty-three of this article, shall include a report
     9  on the management of state-supported debt. Such report may include,  but
    10  is not limited to: (1) an assessment of the affordability of state debt,
    11  including  debt  as  a  percent of personal income, debt per capita, and
    12  debt service costs as a percent of the budget; (2) a summary and  analy-
    13  sis of the interest rate exchange agreements and variable rate exposure;
    14  and  (3) an assessment of financing opportunities related to the state's
    15  debt portfolio.
    16    [16.] 15. The governor shall make all practicable efforts to amend  or
    17  supplement the budget and submit supplemental bills or amendments to any
    18  bills  pursuant  to  article seven of the constitution within twenty-one
    19  days after the budget is submitted to the legislature.
    20    16. The amended executive budget required to be submitted within thir-
    21  ty days after the submission of the executive budget to the  legislature
    22  in accordance with article seven of the constitution of the state of New
    23  York, in addition to the information required by the constitution of the
    24  state of New York to be set forth therein, shall include:
    25    a.  a summary financial plan showing for each of the governmental fund
    26  types: (1) all of the expenditures estimated to be made,  in  accordance
    27  with  generally  accepted accounting principles, before the close of the
    28  current fiscal year and all of the expenditures proposed to be made,  in
    29  accordance  with  generally  accepted  accounting principles, during the
    30  ensuing fiscal year; and (2) all of the revenues estimated to accrue, in
    31  accordance with generally accepted  accounting  principles,  before  the
    32  close  of  the  current  fiscal  year and during the ensuing fiscal year
    33  inclusive of any revenues which are expected to result from the proposed
    34  legislation which is deemed necessary to provide receipts sufficient  to
    35  meet  proposed disbursements. For the purposes of such summary financial
    36  plan, expenditures shall be presented by the following  purposes:  state
    37  purposes,  local assistance, capital projects, debt service, and general
    38  state charges; and revenues shall be presented by  each  revenue  source
    39  which  accounts  for  at  least  one per centum of all such revenues and
    40  otherwise by categories of revenue sources;
    41    b. the expenditures estimated to be made in accordance with  generally
    42  accepted  accounting  principles  before the close of the current fiscal
    43  year and proposed to be  made  in  accordance  with  generally  accepted
    44  accounting principles during the ensuing fiscal year. Expenditures esti-
    45  mated  and  proposed  to  be  made  shall  be shown in separate parts as
    46  follows: those expenditures for state purposes shall be set forth in one
    47  part, those expenditures for local assistance  shall  be  set  forth  in
    48  another  separate  and  distinct  part,  those  expenditures for capital
    49  projects shall be set forth in a third separate and distinct  part,  and
    50  those expenditures for debt service shall be set forth in a fourth sepa-
    51  rate and distinct part;
    52    c.  the revenues actually accrued in the preceding fiscal year and the
    53  revenues estimated to accrue during current and  ensuing  fiscal  years,
    54  respectively.  Revenues  from  each tax shall be shown both in total and
    55  net of refunds;

        S. 3006--C                         156                        A. 3006--C
 
     1    d. a schedule for the general fund  showing  the  differences  between
     2  projected  operating  results  on a cash basis and those on the basis of
     3  generally accepted accounting principles;
     4    e.  a  schedule for each governmental fund type other than the general
     5  fund showing the differences between projected operating  results  on  a
     6  cash basis and those on the basis of generally accepted accounting prin-
     7  ciples; and
     8    f. a detailed schedule by fund of revenues and expenditures within the
     9  general fund.
    10    §  28.  Subparagraph (vi) of paragraph (d) of subdivision 3 of section
    11  22-c of the state finance law, as amended by section  3  of  part  F  of
    12  chapter 389 of the laws of 1997, is amended to read as follows:
    13    (vi) the total amount of disbursements for the project estimated to be
    14  made  during the current fiscal year and during each of the next ensuing
    15  five fiscal years, provided however, that (A) the  information  required
    16  by  this subparagraph may be provided for groupings of projects in those
    17  cases where the governor determines it cannot be provided on  a  project
    18  by  project  basis,  and (B) the total of all disbursements estimated in
    19  accordance with the requirements of this subparagraph to be made for all
    20  capital projects during the current fiscal year and during each  of  the
    21  next ensuing five fiscal  years, excluding those disbursements which are
    22  estimated in accordance with the requirements of this subparagraph to be
    23  made  by public benefit corporations and which are not subject to appro-
    24  priations, shall be equal, respectively, to the total of  all  disburse-
    25  ments  estimated,  in the financial projections required by subdivisions
    26  one and [four] three of section twenty-two of this article, to  be  made
    27  for  all capital projects during the then current fiscal year and during
    28  each of the next ensuing five fiscal years,
    29    § 29. Subdivisions 3 and 4 of section 23 of the state finance law,  as
    30  amended  by  chapter  1  of  the  laws  of  2007, are amended to read as
    31  follows:
    32    3. Financial plans and capital  improvement  program;  revisions.  Not
    33  later than thirty days after the legislature has completed action on the
    34  budget bills submitted by the governor and the period for the governor's
    35  review  has  elapsed,  the  governor  shall cause to be submitted to the
    36  legislature the revisions to the financial plans and  the  capital  plan
    37  required  by subdivisions one, two, three, four and [five] paragraph (a)
    38  of subdivision sixteen of section twenty-two  of  this  article  as  are
    39  necessary  to  account  for all enactments affecting the financial plans
    40  and the capital plan. The financial plan shall also contain a cash  flow
    41  analysis  of  projected  receipts  and disbursements and other financing
    42  sources or uses for each month of the state's fiscal year. Notwithstand-
    43  ing any other law to the contrary, such revised plans  and  accompanying
    44  cash  flow  analysis shall be submitted to the legislature and the comp-
    45  troller in the same form as the plans required by such subdivisions.
    46    4. Financial plan updates. Quarterly, throughout the fiscal year,  the
    47  governor  shall  submit  to  the  comptroller,  the chairs of the senate
    48  finance and the assembly ways and means committees, within  thirty  days
    49  of  the  close  of the quarter to which it shall pertain, a report which
    50  summarizes the actual experience to date and projections for the remain-
    51  ing quarters of the current fiscal year and for each  of  the  next  two
    52  fiscal  years of receipts, disbursements, tax refunds, and repayments of
    53  advances presented in forms suitable for comparison with  the  financial
    54  plan submitted pursuant to subdivisions one, three and four[, and five,]
    55  of section twenty-two of this article and revised in accordance with the
    56  provisions  of  subdivision  three  of  this section. The governor shall

        S. 3006--C                         157                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  submit with the budget a similar  report  that  summarizes  revenue  and
     2  expenditure  experience  to  date in a form suitable for comparison with
     3  the financial plan submitted pursuant  to  paragraph  a  of  subdivision
     4  [two]  sixteen  of  section  twenty-two  of  this article and revised in
     5  accordance with the provisions of subdivision  three  of  this  section.
     6  Such  reports  shall  provide  an explanation of the causes of any major
     7  deviations from the revised financial plans and, shall provide  for  the
     8  amendment of the plan or plans to reflect those deviations. The governor
     9  may, if [he] the governor determines it advisable, provide more frequent
    10  reports  to  the  legislature regarding actual experience as compared to
    11  the financial plans. The quarterly financial plan update most  proximate
    12  to  October  thirty-first  of each year shall include the calculation of
    13  the limitations on the issuance of state-supported debt computed  pursu-
    14  ant  to the provisions of subdivisions one and two of section sixty-sev-
    15  en-b of this chapter.
    16    § 30. Notwithstanding any law to  the  contrary,  the  comptroller  is
    17  hereby authorized and directed to transfer, upon request of the director
    18  of  the  budget,  on or before March 31, 2026 the following amounts from
    19  the following special revenue accounts or enterprise funds to the gener-
    20  al fund, for the  purposes of offsetting principal and  interest  costs,
    21  incurred by the state pursuant to section 53 of part PP of chapter 56 of
    22  the  laws of 2023, provided that the annual amount of the transfer shall
    23  be no more than the principal and interest  that  would  have  otherwise
    24  been due to the power authority of the state of New York, from any state
    25  agency,  in  a  given state fiscal year.   Amounts pertaining to special
    26  revenue accounts assigned to the state university of New York  shall  be
    27  considered   interchangeable  between  the  designated  special  revenue
    28  accounts as to meet the requirements of this section and section  52  of
    29  part RR of chapter 56 of the laws of 2023:
    30    1.  $15,000,000  from  the  miscellaneous  special revenue fund, state
    31  university general income reimbursable account (22653).
    32    2. $5,000,000 from  state  university  dormitory  income  fund,  state
    33  university dormitory income fund (40350).
    34    3. $5,000,000 from the enterprise fund, city university senior college
    35  operating fund (60851).
    36    §  31.  Notwithstanding  any  law  to the contrary, the comptroller is
    37  hereby authorized to transfer, on  or  before  March  31,  2026,  up  to
    38  $25,000,000  from  various state bond funds (30600 through 30690) to the
    39  general debt service fund (40150), for  the  purposes  of  redeeming  or
    40  defeasing outstanding state bonds.
    41    §  32.  Paragraph  (a) of subdivision 2 of section 47-e of the private
    42  housing finance law, as amended by section 29 of part XX of  chapter  56
    43  of the laws of 2024, is amended to read as follows:
    44    (a) Subject to the provisions of chapter fifty-nine of the laws of two
    45  thousand,  in  order  to  enhance and encourage the promotion of housing
    46  programs and thereby achieve the stated purposes and objectives of  such
    47  housing  programs, the agency shall have the power and is hereby author-
    48  ized from time to time to issue negotiable  housing  program  bonds  and
    49  notes  in  such principal amount as shall be necessary to provide suffi-
    50  cient funds for the repayment of amounts disbursed (and  not  previously
    51  reimbursed)  pursuant  to law or any prior year making capital appropri-
    52  ations or reappropriations for the  purposes  of  the  housing  program;
    53  provided,  however, that the agency may issue such bonds and notes in an
    54  aggregate principal amount not exceeding [fourteen billion five  hundred
    55  twenty-six  million eighty-nine thousand dollars $14,526,089,000, plus a
    56  principal amount of bonds issued to fund the debt service  reserve  fund

        S. 3006--C                         158                        A. 3006--C

     1  in accordance with the debt service reserve fund requirement established
     2  by  the agency and to fund any other reserves that the agency reasonably
     3  deems necessary for the security or marketability of such bonds  and  to
     4  provide  for the payment of fees and other charges and expenses, includ-
     5  ing underwriters' discount, trustee and rating agency fees, bond  insur-
     6  ance,  credit enhancement and liquidity enhancement related to the issu-
     7  ance  of  such  bonds  and  notes]   sixteen   billion   seven   hundred
     8  seventy-seven   million   nine   hundred   sixty-four  thousand  dollars
     9  $16,777,964,000, excluding bonds issued after April first, two  thousand
    10  twenty-five to (i) fund one or more debt service reserve funds, (ii) pay
    11  costs  of  issuance  of  such bonds, and (iii) refund or otherwise repay
    12  such bonds or notes previously  issued,  provided  that  nothing  herein
    13  shall  affect the exclusion of refunding debt issued prior to such date.
    14  No reserve fund securing the housing program bonds shall be entitled  or
    15  eligible  to receive state funds apportioned or appropriated to maintain
    16  or restore such reserve fund at or to a particular level, except to  the
    17  extent of any deficiency resulting directly or indirectly from a failure
    18  of  the  state  to appropriate or pay the agreed amount under any of the
    19  contracts provided for in subdivision four of this section.
    20    § 33. Paragraph (b) of subdivision 1 of  section  385  of  the  public
    21  authorities  law,  as  amended by section 30 of part XX of chapter 56 of
    22  the laws of 2024, is amended to read as follows:
    23    (b) The  authority  is  hereby  authorized,  as  additional  corporate
    24  purposes  thereof solely upon the request of the director of the budget:
    25  (i) to issue special emergency highway and bridge trust fund  bonds  and
    26  notes  for  a  term  not to exceed thirty years and to incur obligations
    27  secured by the moneys appropriated from the dedicated highway and bridge
    28  trust fund established in section eighty-nine-b  of  the  state  finance
    29  law; (ii) to make available the proceeds in accordance with instructions
    30  provided  by  the  director  of the budget from the sale of such special
    31  emergency highway and bridge trust fund  bonds,  notes  or  other  obli-
    32  gations,  net of all costs to the authority in connection therewith, for
    33  the purposes of financing all or a portion of the  costs  of  activities
    34  for  which  moneys in the dedicated highway and bridge trust fund estab-
    35  lished in section eighty-nine-b of the state finance law are  authorized
    36  to  be  utilized or for the financing of disbursements made by the state
    37  for the activities authorized pursuant to section eighty-nine-b  of  the
    38  state  finance  law; and (iii) to enter into agreements with the commis-
    39  sioner of transportation pursuant to section ten-e of  the  highway  law
    40  with  respect  to  financing  for  any activities authorized pursuant to
    41  section eighty-nine-b of the state finance law, or agreements  with  the
    42  commissioner  of  transportation pursuant to sections ten-f and ten-g of
    43  the highway law in connection with activities on state highways pursuant
    44  to these sections, and (iv) to enter into service contracts,  contracts,
    45  agreements,  deeds  and  leases  with  the director of the budget or the
    46  commissioner of  transportation  and  project  sponsors  and  others  to
    47  provide  for  the  financing  by  the authority of activities authorized
    48  pursuant to section eighty-nine-b of the state finance law, and each  of
    49  the  director  of  the budget and the commissioner of transportation are
    50  hereby authorized to enter into  service  contracts,  contracts,  agree-
    51  ments,  deeds  and leases with the authority, project sponsors or others
    52  to provide for such financing. The authority shall not issue  any  bonds
    53  or  notes  in  an  amount  in excess of [twenty-one billion four hundred
    54  fifty-eight million three hundred nine thousand dollars $21,458,309,000]
    55  twenty-two billion three hundred nine million  two  hundred  ninety-four
    56  thousand  dollars  $22,309,294,000,  plus a principal amount of bonds or

        S. 3006--C                         159                        A. 3006--C

     1  notes: (A) to fund capital reserve funds;  (B)  to  provide  capitalized
     2  interest; and, (C) to fund other costs of issuance. In computing for the
     3  purposes  of  this  subdivision,  the  aggregate  amount of indebtedness
     4  evidenced  by  bonds  and notes of the authority issued pursuant to this
     5  section, as amended by a chapter of the laws of nineteen  hundred  nine-
     6  ty-six, there shall be excluded the amount of bonds or notes issued that
     7  would  constitute interest under the United States Internal Revenue Code
     8  of 1986, as amended, and the amount of indebtedness issued to refund  or
     9  otherwise repay bonds or notes.
    10    §  34.  Paragraph  (c) of subdivision 14 of section 1680 of the public
    11  authorities law, as amended by section 31 of part XX of  chapter  56  of
    12  the laws of 2024, is amended to read as follows:
    13    (c) Subject to the provisions of chapter fifty-nine of the laws of two
    14  thousand,  (i)  the  dormitory  authority  shall not deliver a series of
    15  bonds for city university community college facilities, except to refund
    16  or to be substituted for or in lieu of other bonds in relation  to  city
    17  university  community college facilities pursuant to a resolution of the
    18  dormitory authority adopted before July first, nineteen hundred  eighty-
    19  five  or any resolution supplemental thereto, if the principal amount of
    20  bonds so to be issued when added  to  all  principal  amounts  of  bonds
    21  previously  issued by the dormitory authority for city university commu-
    22  nity college facilities, except to refund or to be substituted  in  lieu
    23  of  other bonds in relation to city university community college facili-
    24  ties will exceed the sum of four hundred twenty-five million dollars and
    25  (ii) the dormitory authority shall not deliver a series of bonds  issued
    26  for  city university facilities, including community college facilities,
    27  pursuant to a resolution of the dormitory authority adopted on or  after
    28  July  first,  nineteen  hundred  eighty-five,  except to refund or to be
    29  substituted for or in lieu of other bonds in relation to city university
    30  facilities and except for bonds issued pursuant to a resolution  supple-
    31  mental  to a resolution of the dormitory authority adopted prior to July
    32  first, nineteen hundred eighty-five, if the principal amount of bonds so
    33  to be issued when added to the  principal  amount  of  bonds  previously
    34  issued pursuant to any such resolution, except bonds issued to refund or
    35  to  be  substituted  for  or  in lieu of other bonds in relation to city
    36  university facilities, will exceed [eleven billion seven hundred  sixty-
    37  three   million  twenty-two  thousand  dollars  $11,763,022,000]  twelve
    38  billion three hundred million three hundred sixty-eight thousand dollars
    39  $12,300,368,000, excluding bonds issued after April first, two  thousand
    40  twenty-five to (i) fund one or more debt service reserve funds, (ii) pay
    41  costs  of  issuance  of  such bonds, and (iii) refund or otherwise repay
    42  such bonds or notes previously  issued,  provided  that  nothing  herein
    43  shall  affect the exclusion of refunding debt issued prior to such date.
    44  The legislature reserves the right to amend or repeal  such  limit,  and
    45  the state of New York, the dormitory authority, the city university, and
    46  the  fund are prohibited from covenanting or making any other agreements
    47  with or for the benefit of bondholders which might  in  any  way  affect
    48  such right.
    49    §  35.  Subdivision 1 of section 1689-i of the public authorities law,
    50  as amended by section 32 of part XX of chapter 56 of the laws  of  2024,
    51  is amended to read as follows:
    52    1.  The  dormitory  authority  is  authorized  to  issue bonds, at the
    53  request of the commissioner of education, to  finance  eligible  library
    54  construction projects pursuant to section two hundred seventy-three-a of
    55  the  education  law,  in  amounts  certified by such commissioner not to

        S. 3006--C                         160                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  exceed a total principal amount of [four hundred eleven million  dollars
     2  $411,000,000] four hundred fifty-five million dollars $455,000,000.
     3    §  36.  Paragraph  (c) of subdivision 19 of section 1680 of the public
     4  authorities law, as amended by section 33 of part XX of  chapter  56  of
     5  the laws of 2024, is amended to read as follows:
     6    (c) Subject to the provisions of chapter fifty-nine of the laws of two
     7  thousand,  the  dormitory  authority shall not issue any bonds for state
     8  university educational facilities purposes if the  principal  amount  of
     9  bonds to be issued when added to the aggregate principal amount of bonds
    10  issued  by  the  dormitory  authority  on and after July first, nineteen
    11  hundred eighty-eight for state university  educational  facilities  will
    12  exceed  [eighteen  billion nine hundred eighty-eight million one hundred
    13  sixty-four thousand dollars  $18,988,164,000;  provided,  however,  that
    14  bonds  issued or to be issued shall be excluded from such limitation if:
    15  (1) such bonds are issued to refund state university construction  bonds
    16  and state university construction notes previously issued by the housing
    17  finance  agency;  or  (2)  such  bonds are issued to refund bonds of the
    18  authority or other obligations issued for state  university  educational
    19  facilities  purposes and the present value of the aggregate debt service
    20  on the refunding bonds does not exceed the present value of  the  aggre-
    21  gate  debt service on the bonds refunded thereby; provided, further that
    22  upon certification by the director of the budget that  the  issuance  of
    23  refunding  bonds  or other obligations issued between April first, nine-
    24  teen hundred ninety-two and March thirty-first, nineteen  hundred  nine-
    25  ty-three  will  generate  long  term  economic benefits to the state, as
    26  assessed on a present value basis, such issuance will be deemed to  have
    27  met  the  present  value test noted above. For purposes of this subdivi-
    28  sion, the present value of the aggregate debt service of  the  refunding
    29  bonds  and  the  aggregate  debt service of the bonds refunded, shall be
    30  calculated by utilizing the true interest cost of the  refunding  bonds,
    31  which shall be that rate arrived at by doubling the semi-annual interest
    32  rate  (compounded  semi-annually) necessary to discount the debt service
    33  payments on the refunding bonds from the payment dates  thereof  to  the
    34  date  of  issue  of  the  refunding  bonds  to the purchase price of the
    35  refunding bonds, including interest accrued thereon prior to  the  issu-
    36  ance  thereof.  The  maturity  of such bonds, other than bonds issued to
    37  refund outstanding bonds, shall not exceed the weighted average economic
    38  life, as certified by the state university  construction  fund,  of  the
    39  facilities  in  connection  with  which the bonds are issued, and in any
    40  case not later than the earlier of thirty years or the expiration of the
    41  term of  any  lease,  sublease  or  other  agreement  relating  thereto;
    42  provided  that  no  note, including renewals thereof, shall mature later
    43  than five years after the date of issuance of such note] twenty  billion
    44  nine hundred forty-eight million one hundred sixty-four thousand dollars
    45  $20,948,164,000,  excluding bonds issued after April first, two thousand
    46  twenty-five to (i) fund one or more debt service reserve funds, (ii) pay
    47  costs of issuance of such bonds, and (iii)  refund  or  otherwise  repay
    48  such  bonds  or  notes  previously  issued, provided that nothing herein
    49  shall affect the exclusion of refunding debt issued prior to such  date.
    50  The  legislature  reserves  the right to amend or repeal such limit, and
    51  the state of New York, the dormitory authority, the state university  of
    52  New York, and the state university construction fund are prohibited from
    53  covenanting  or  making  any other agreements with or for the benefit of
    54  bondholders which might in any way affect such right.

        S. 3006--C                         161                        A. 3006--C

     1    § 37. Subdivision 10-a of section 1680 of the public authorities  law,
     2  as  amended  by section 34 of part XX of chapter 56 of the laws of 2024,
     3  is amended to read as follows:
     4    10-a.  Subject  to the provisions of chapter fifty-nine of the laws of
     5  two thousand, but notwithstanding any other provision of the law to  the
     6  contrary, the maximum amount of bonds and notes to be issued after March
     7  thirty-first,  two  thousand two, on behalf of the state, in relation to
     8  any locally sponsored community college, shall  be  [one  billion  three
     9  hundred   sixty-five   million  three  hundred  eight  thousand  dollars
    10  $1,365,308,000] one  billion  four  hundred  ninety-five  million  seven
    11  hundred seventy-four thousand dollars $1,495,774,000.  Such amount shall
    12  be  exclusive  of  bonds  and  notes  issued to fund any reserve fund or
    13  funds, costs of issuance and to refund any outstanding bonds and  notes,
    14  issued on behalf of the state, relating to a locally sponsored community
    15  college.
    16    §  38.  Paragraph  b  of  subdivision 2 of section 9-a of section 1 of
    17  chapter 392 of the laws of 1973, constituting the New York state medical
    18  care facilities finance agency act, as amended by section 35 of part  XX
    19  of chapter 56 of the laws of 2024, is amended to read as follows:
    20    b.  The  agency shall have power and is hereby authorized from time to
    21  time to issue negotiable bonds and notes in conformity  with  applicable
    22  provisions  of  the uniform commercial code in such principal amount as,
    23  in the opinion of the agency, shall  be  necessary,  after  taking  into
    24  account  other moneys which may be available for the purpose, to provide
    25  sufficient funds to  the  facilities  development  corporation,  or  any
    26  successor agency, for the financing or refinancing of or for the design,
    27  construction, acquisition, reconstruction, rehabilitation or improvement
    28  of  mental  health  services  facilities pursuant to paragraph a of this
    29  subdivision, the payment of interest on mental health services  improve-
    30  ment  bonds and mental health services improvement notes issued for such
    31  purposes, the establishment of reserves to secure such bonds and  notes,
    32  the  cost  or  premium  of  bond insurance or the costs of any financial
    33  mechanisms which may be used to reduce the debt service  that  would  be
    34  payable  by the agency on its mental health services facilities improve-
    35  ment bonds and notes and all other expenditures of the  agency  incident
    36  to  and  necessary or convenient to providing the facilities development
    37  corporation, or any successor agency, with funds for  the  financing  or
    38  refinancing of or for any such design, construction, acquisition, recon-
    39  struction, rehabilitation or improvement and for the refunding of mental
    40  hygiene improvement bonds issued pursuant to section 47-b of the private
    41  housing  finance law; provided, however, that the agency shall not issue
    42  mental health services facilities improvement bonds  and  mental  health
    43  services  facilities  improvement notes in an aggregate principal amount
    44  exceeding [twelve billion nine hundred twenty-one million seven  hundred
    45  fifty-six  thousand  dollars  $12,921,756,000,  excluding  mental health
    46  services facilities improvement bonds and mental health services facili-
    47  ties improvement  notes  issued  to  refund  outstanding  mental  health
    48  services facilities improvement bonds and mental health services facili-
    49  ties  improvement notes; provided, however, that upon any such refunding
    50  or repayment of mental  health  services  facilities  improvement  bonds
    51  and/or  mental  health  services  facilities improvement notes the total
    52  aggregate principal amount of outstanding mental health services facili-
    53  ties improvement bonds and mental health  facilities  improvement  notes
    54  may be greater than twelve billion nine hundred twenty-one million seven
    55  hundred  fifty-six  thousand dollars $12,921,756,000, only if, except as
    56  hereinafter provided with respect to mental health  services  facilities

        S. 3006--C                         162                        A. 3006--C

     1  bonds  and  mental  health  services  facilities  notes issued to refund
     2  mental hygiene improvement bonds authorized to be issued pursuant to the
     3  provisions of section 47-b of the private housing finance law, the pres-
     4  ent  value  of  the aggregate debt service of the refunding or repayment
     5  bonds to be issued shall not exceed the present value of  the  aggregate
     6  debt service of the bonds to be refunded or repaid. For purposes hereof,
     7  the  present  values  of  the aggregate debt service of the refunding or
     8  repayment bonds, notes or other obligations and of  the  aggregate  debt
     9  service  of the bonds, notes or other obligations so refunded or repaid,
    10  shall be calculated by utilizing the  effective  interest  rate  of  the
    11  refunding or repayment bonds, notes or other obligations, which shall be
    12  that   rate  arrived  at  by  doubling  the  semi-annual  interest  rate
    13  (compounded  semi-annually)  necessary  to  discount  the  debt  service
    14  payments on the refunding or repayment bonds, notes or other obligations
    15  from  the payment dates thereof to the date of issue of the refunding or
    16  repayment bonds, notes or other obligations and to the price bid includ-
    17  ing estimated accrued interest or proceeds  received  by  the  authority
    18  including  estimated accrued interest from the sale thereof. Such bonds,
    19  other than bonds issued to refund outstanding bonds, shall be  scheduled
    20  to  mature  over a term not to exceed the average useful life, as certi-
    21  fied by the facilities development  corporation,  of  the  projects  for
    22  which  the  bonds  are  issued,  and in any case shall not exceed thirty
    23  years and the maximum maturity of notes or any  renewals  thereof  shall
    24  not exceed five years from the date of the original issue of such notes.
    25  Notwithstanding  the  provisions  of this section, the agency shall have
    26  the power and is hereby  authorized  to  issue  mental  health  services
    27  facilities  improvement  bonds  and/or mental health services facilities
    28  improvement notes to refund outstanding mental hygiene improvement bonds
    29  authorized to be issued pursuant to the provisions of  section  47-b  of
    30  the  private  housing  finance  law  and  the  amount of bonds issued or
    31  outstanding for such purposes shall not  be  included  for  purposes  of
    32  determining  the  amount of bonds issued pursuant to this section] thir-
    33  teen billion six hundred thirty-nine  million  five  hundred  fifty-four
    34  thousand  dollars  $13,639,554,000,  excluding  bonds issued after April
    35  first, two thousand twenty-five to (i) fund one  or  more  debt  service
    36  reserve  funds,  (ii)  pay  costs  of  issuance of such bonds, and (iii)
    37  refund or  otherwise  repay  such  bonds  or  notes  previously  issued,
    38  provided  that  nothing  herein  shall affect the exclusion of refunding
    39  debt issued prior to such date.  The director of the budget shall  allo-
    40  cate the aggregate principal authorized to be issued by the agency among
    41  the  office of mental health, office for people with developmental disa-
    42  bilities, and the office of addiction services and supports, in  consul-
    43  tation with their respective commissioners to finance bondable appropri-
    44  ations previously approved by the legislature.
    45    §  39.  Subdivision  (a)  of section 48 of part K of chapter 81 of the
    46  laws of 2002, relating to providing for the  administration  of  certain
    47  funds  and  accounts  related  to  the  2002-2003  budget, as amended by
    48  section 36 of part XX of chapter 56 of the laws of 2024, is  amended  to
    49  read as follows:
    50    (a)  Subject  to  the provisions of chapter 59 of the laws of 2000 but
    51  notwithstanding the provisions of section 18 of  the  urban  development
    52  corporation  act, the corporation is hereby authorized to issue bonds or
    53  notes in one or more series in an  aggregate  principal  amount  not  to
    54  exceed  [five  hundred  twenty-two million five hundred thousand dollars
    55  $522,500,000] five hundred fifty million five hundred  thousand  dollars
    56  $550,500,000,  excluding  bonds  issued to fund one or more debt service

        S. 3006--C                         163                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  reserve funds, to pay costs of issuance of  such  bonds,  and  bonds  or
     2  notes issued to refund or otherwise repay such bonds or notes previously
     3  issued,  for  the purpose of financing capital costs related to homeland
     4  security  and  training facilities for the division of state police, the
     5  division of military and naval affairs,  and  any  other  state  agency,
     6  including  the  reimbursement  of  any disbursements made from the state
     7  capital projects fund, and is hereby authorized to issue bonds or  notes
     8  in  one  or  more  series in an aggregate principal amount not to exceed
     9  [one billion eight hundred fifty-five  million  two  hundred  eighty-six
    10  thousand  dollars  $1,855,286,000]  two  billion one hundred sixty-eight
    11  million  three  hundred  thirty-one  thousand  dollars   $2,168,331,000,
    12  excluding  bonds  issued to fund one or more debt service reserve funds,
    13  to pay costs of issuance of such bonds, and bonds  or  notes  issued  to
    14  refund or otherwise repay such bonds or notes previously issued, for the
    15  purpose  of  financing  improvements to State office buildings and other
    16  facilities  located  statewide,  including  the  reimbursement  of   any
    17  disbursements  made from the state capital projects fund. Such bonds and
    18  notes of the corporation shall not be a debt of the state, and the state
    19  shall not be liable thereon, nor shall they be payable out of any  funds
    20  other  than  those appropriated by the state to the corporation for debt
    21  service and related expenses pursuant to any service contracts  executed
    22  pursuant  to  subdivision  (b) of this section, and such bonds and notes
    23  shall contain on the face thereof a statement to such effect.
    24    § 40. Subdivision 1 of section 47 of section 1 of chapter 174  of  the
    25  laws  of  1968, constituting the New York state urban development corpo-
    26  ration act, as amended by section 37 of part XX of  chapter  56  of  the
    27  laws of 2024, is amended to read as follows:
    28    1.  Notwithstanding  the  provisions of any other law to the contrary,
    29  the dormitory authority and the corporation  are  hereby  authorized  to
    30  issue  bonds  or  notes in one or more series for the purpose of funding
    31  project costs for the office of information technology services, depart-
    32  ment of  law,  and  other  state  costs  associated  with  such  capital
    33  projects.  The  aggregate  principal  amount  of  bonds authorized to be
    34  issued pursuant to this section shall  not  exceed  [one  billion  seven
    35  hundred   forty-two   million  seven  hundred  twelve  thousand  dollars
    36  $1,742,712,000] one billion eight  hundred  seventy-three  million  four
    37  hundred  twelve  thousand dollars $1,873,412,000, excluding bonds issued
    38  to fund one or more debt service reserve funds, to pay costs of issuance
    39  of such bonds, and bonds or notes issued to refund  or  otherwise  repay
    40  such  bonds  or  notes  previously  issued.  Such bonds and notes of the
    41  dormitory authority and the corporation shall  not  be  a  debt  of  the
    42  state,  and  the  state  shall  not be liable thereon, nor shall they be
    43  payable out of any funds other than those appropriated by the  state  to
    44  the dormitory authority and the corporation for principal, interest, and
    45  related expenses pursuant to a service contract and such bonds and notes
    46  shall contain on the face thereof a statement to such effect. Except for
    47  purposes  of  complying  with  the  internal  revenue code, any interest
    48  income earned on bond proceeds shall only be used to pay debt service on
    49  such bonds.
    50    § 41. Subdivision (b) of section 11 of chapter  329  of  the  laws  of
    51  1991,  amending  the  state  finance  law and other laws relating to the
    52  establishment of the dedicated highway and bridge trust fund, as amended
    53  by section 38 of part XX of chapter 56 of the laws of 2024,  is  amended
    54  to read as follows:
    55    (b) Any service contract or contracts for projects authorized pursuant
    56  to  sections  10-c,  10-f,  10-g and 80-b of the highway law and section

        S. 3006--C                         164                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  14-k of the transportation law, and entered into pursuant to subdivision
     2  (a) of this section, shall provide  for  state  commitments  to  provide
     3  annually  to  the  thruway  authority a sum or sums, upon such terms and
     4  conditions as shall be deemed appropriate by the director of the budget,
     5  to fund, or fund the debt service requirements of any bonds or any obli-
     6  gations  of  the  thruway  authority  issued to fund or to reimburse the
     7  state for funding such projects having a cost not in excess of [fourteen
     8  billion eight hundred forty-four million five hundred eighty-seven thou-
     9  sand dollars $14,844,587,000 cumulatively by  the  end  of  fiscal  year
    10  2024-25]  fifteen billion eight hundred twenty-two million three hundred
    11  eighty-four thousand dollars $15,822,384,000. Such limit  shall  exclude
    12  bonds issued after April first, two thousand twenty-five to (i) fund one
    13  or  more  debt service reserve funds, (ii) pay costs of issuance of such
    14  bonds, and (iii) refund or otherwise repay such bonds or notes previous-
    15  ly issued, provided that nothing herein shall affect  the  exclusion  of
    16  refunding  debt issued prior to such date. For purposes of this subdivi-
    17  sion, such projects shall be deemed to include capital grants to cities,
    18  towns and villages for the reimbursement of eligible  capital  costs  of
    19  local  highway and bridge projects within such municipality, where allo-
    20  cations to cities, towns and villages are based on the total  number  of
    21  New  York  or United States or interstate signed touring route miles for
    22  which such municipality  has  capital  maintenance  responsibility,  and
    23  where  such eligible capital costs include the costs of construction and
    24  repair of  highways,  bridges,  highway-railroad  crossings,  and  other
    25  transportation  facilities for projects with a service life of ten years
    26  or more.
    27    § 42. Subdivision 1 of section 53 of section 1 of chapter 174  of  the
    28  laws  of  1968, constituting the New York state urban development corpo-
    29  ration act, as amended by section 39 of part XX of  chapter  56  of  the
    30  laws of 2024, is amended to read as follows:
    31    1.  Notwithstanding  the  provisions of any other law to the contrary,
    32  the dormitory authority and the urban development corporation are hereby
    33  authorized to issue bonds or notes in one or more series for the purpose
    34  of funding project costs for the acquisition of equipment, including but
    35  not limited to the creation or modernization of  information  technology
    36  systems and related research and development equipment, health and safe-
    37  ty equipment, heavy equipment and machinery, the creation or improvement
    38  of  security  systems,  and  laboratory  equipment and other state costs
    39  associated with such capital projects.  The aggregate  principal  amount
    40  of  bonds  authorized  to  be  issued pursuant to this section shall not
    41  exceed [five hundred  ninety-three  million  dollars  $593,000,000]  six
    42  hundred  ninety-three  million  dollars  $693,000,000,  excluding  bonds
    43  issued to fund one or more debt service reserve funds, to pay  costs  of
    44  issuance of such bonds, and bonds or notes issued to refund or otherwise
    45  repay such bonds or notes previously issued. Such bonds and notes of the
    46  dormitory authority and the urban development corporation shall not be a
    47  debt  of the state, and the state shall not be liable thereon, nor shall
    48  they be payable out of any funds other than those  appropriated  by  the
    49  state  to  the dormitory authority and the urban development corporation
    50  for principal, interest, and related  expenses  pursuant  to  a  service
    51  contract  and  such  bonds and notes shall contain on the face thereof a
    52  statement to such effect.   Except for purposes of  complying  with  the
    53  internal revenue code, any interest income earned on bond proceeds shall
    54  only be used to pay debt service on such bonds.

        S. 3006--C                         165                        A. 3006--C
 
     1    §  43.  Subdivision 3 of section 1285-p of the public authorities law,
     2  as amended by section 40 of part XX of chapter 56 of the laws  of  2024,
     3  is amended to read as follows:
     4    3.  The  maximum amount of bonds that may be issued for the purpose of
     5  financing  environmental  infrastructure  projects  authorized  by  this
     6  section  shall  be  [ten  billion  eight  hundred sixty-six million five
     7  hundred sixty thousand dollars $10,866,560,000]  fourteen  billion  four
     8  hundred   eighty   million   eight   hundred   sixty   thousand  dollars
     9  $14,480,860,000, exclusive of bonds issued  to  fund  any  debt  service
    10  reserve  funds,  pay costs of issuance of such bonds, and bonds or notes
    11  issued to refund or otherwise repay bonds or  notes  previously  issued.
    12  Such  bonds  and  notes  of  the  corporation shall not be a debt of the
    13  state, and the state shall not be liable  thereon,  nor  shall  they  be
    14  payable  out  of any funds other than those appropriated by the state to
    15  the corporation for debt service and related expenses  pursuant  to  any
    16  service  contracts executed pursuant to subdivision one of this section,
    17  and such bonds and notes shall contain on the face thereof  a  statement
    18  to such effect.
    19    §  44.  Subdivision 1 and paragraph (a) of subdivision 2 of section 17
    20  of part D of chapter 389 of the laws of 1997, relating to the  financing
    21  of  the  correctional facilities improvement fund and the youth facility
    22  improvement fund, subdivision 1 as amended by section 41 of part  XX  of
    23  chapter  56  of  the laws of 2024, and paragraph (a) of subdivision 2 as
    24  amended by section 20 of part P2 of chapter 62 of the laws of 2003,  are
    25  amended to read as follows:
    26    1.  Subject  to  the provisions of chapter 59 of the laws of 2000, but
    27  notwithstanding the provisions of section 18 of section 1 of chapter 174
    28  of the laws of 1968, the New York state urban development corporation is
    29  hereby authorized to issue bonds, notes  and  other  obligations  in  an
    30  aggregate  principal amount not to exceed [one billion sixty-six million
    31  seven hundred fifty-five thousand  dollars  $1,066,755,000,  which]  one
    32  billion  two hundred seventeen million seven hundred fifty-five thousand
    33  dollars $1,217,755,000, excluding bonds issued after  April  first,  two
    34  thousand twenty-five to (a) fund one or more debt service reserve funds,
    35  (b)  to pay costs of issuance of such bonds, and (c) refund or otherwise
    36  repay such bonds or notes previously issued, provided that nothing here-
    37  in shall affect the exclusion of refunding debt  issued  prior  to  such
    38  date.  Which  authorization  increases the aggregate principal amount of
    39  bonds, notes and other obligations authorized by section 40  of  chapter
    40  309  of  the  laws of 1996, and shall include all bonds, notes and other
    41  obligations issued pursuant to chapter 211  of  the  laws  of  1990,  as
    42  amended  or  supplemented.  The  proceeds  of such bonds, notes or other
    43  obligations shall be paid to the state, for deposit in the youth facili-
    44  ties improvement fund or the capital projects fund, to pay  for  all  or
    45  any  portion  of  the amount or amounts paid by the state from appropri-
    46  ations or reappropriations made to the office  of  children  and  family
    47  services  from  the  youth  facilities  improvement  fund or the capital
    48  projects fund for capital projects.  [The  aggregate  amount  of  bonds,
    49  notes  and  other  obligations  authorized to be issued pursuant to this
    50  section shall exclude bonds, notes or other obligations issued to refund
    51  or otherwise repay bonds, notes or other obligations theretofore issued,
    52  the proceeds of which were paid to the state for all or a portion of the
    53  amounts expended by the state from  appropriations  or  reappropriations
    54  made  to  the office of children and family services; provided, however,
    55  that upon any such refunding or repayment the total aggregate  principal
    56  amount  of  outstanding bonds, notes or other obligations may be greater

        S. 3006--C                         166                        A. 3006--C

     1  than one billion sixty-six million  seven  hundred  fifty-five  thousand
     2  dollars  $1,066,755,000, only if the present value of the aggregate debt
     3  service of the refunding or repayment bonds, notes or other  obligations
     4  to  be  issued  shall not exceed the present value of the aggregate debt
     5  service of the bonds, notes or other obligations so to  be  refunded  or
     6  repaid. For the purposes hereof, the present value of the aggregate debt
     7  service  of the refunding or repayment bonds, notes or other obligations
     8  and of the aggregate debt service of the bonds,  notes  or  other  obli-
     9  gations  so  refunded  or  repaid,  shall be calculated by utilizing the
    10  effective interest rate of the refunding or repayment  bonds,  notes  or
    11  other  obligations,  which shall be that rate arrived at by doubling the
    12  semi-annual  interest  rate  (compounded  semi-annually)  necessary   to
    13  discount  the debt service payments on the refunding or repayment bonds,
    14  notes or other obligations from the payment dates thereof to the date of
    15  issue of the refunding or repayment bonds, notes  or  other  obligations
    16  and  to  the  price bid including estimated accrued interest or proceeds
    17  received by the corporation including estimated  accrued  interest  from
    18  the sale thereof.]
    19    (a) The New York state office of general services shall be responsible
    20  for  the  undertaking  of  studies,  planning, site acquisition, design,
    21  construction, reconstruction, renovation and development of youth facil-
    22  ities and the Tonawanda Indian Community House, including the making  of
    23  any  purchases therefor, on behalf of the New York state office of chil-
    24  dren and family services.
    25    § 45. Subdivision 1 of section 386-b of the public authorities law, as
    26  amended by section 42 of part XX of chapter 56 of the laws of  2024,  is
    27  amended to read as follows:
    28    1.  Notwithstanding  any  other  provision of law to the contrary, the
    29  authority, the dormitory authority and the urban development corporation
    30  are hereby authorized to issue bonds or notes in one or more series  for
    31  the  purpose  of  financing  peace  bridge projects and capital costs of
    32  state and local highways, parkways, bridges, the New York state thruway,
    33  Indian reservation roads, and facilities, and transportation infrastruc-
    34  ture  projects  including  aviation  projects,  non-MTA   mass   transit
    35  projects,  and rail service preservation projects, including work appur-
    36  tenant and ancillary thereto. The aggregate principal  amount  of  bonds
    37  authorized  to  be  issued  pursuant  to  this  section shall not exceed
    38  [fifteen billion two hundred forty million six hundred sixty-nine  thou-
    39  sand  dollars  $15,240,669,000] seventeen billion thirty million twenty-
    40  seven thousand dollars $17,030,027,000, excluding bonds issued  to  fund
    41  one or more debt service reserve funds, to pay costs of issuance of such
    42  bonds,  and  to refund or otherwise repay such bonds or notes previously
    43  issued. Such bonds and notes of the authority, the  dormitory  authority
    44  and  the urban development corporation shall not be a debt of the state,
    45  and the state shall not be liable thereon, nor shall they be payable out
    46  of any funds other than those appropriated by the state to the  authori-
    47  ty,  the  dormitory  authority and the urban development corporation for
    48  principal, interest, and related expenses pursuant to a service contract
    49  and such bonds and notes shall contain on the face thereof  a  statement
    50  to  such  effect.  Except  for  purposes  of complying with the internal
    51  revenue code, any interest income earned on bond proceeds shall only  be
    52  used to pay debt service on such bonds.
    53    §  46.  Subdivision 1 of section 44 of section 1 of chapter 174 of the
    54  laws of 1968, constituting the New York state urban  development  corpo-
    55  ration  act,  as  amended  by section 43 of part XX of chapter 56 of the
    56  laws of 2024, is amended to read as follows:

        S. 3006--C                         167                        A. 3006--C
 
     1    1. Notwithstanding the provisions of any other law  to  the  contrary,
     2  the  dormitory  authority  and  the corporation are hereby authorized to
     3  issue bonds or notes in one or more series for the  purpose  of  funding
     4  project  costs for the regional economic development council initiative,
     5  the  economic  transformation  program,  state  university  of  New York
     6  college for nanoscale and science engineering, projects within the  city
     7  of Buffalo or surrounding environs, the New York works economic develop-
     8  ment  fund, projects for the retention of professional football in west-
     9  ern New York, the empire state economic development fund, the  clarkson-
    10  trudeau  partnership, the New York genome center, the Cornell university
    11  college of veterinary medicine, the olympic regional development author-
    12  ity, projects at nano Utica, Onondaga  county  revitalization  projects,
    13  Binghamton  university  school  of  pharmacy, New York power electronics
    14  manufacturing consortium, regional infrastructure  projects,  high  tech
    15  innovation  and  economic development infrastructure program, high tech-
    16  nology manufacturing projects in Chautauqua and Erie county,  an  indus-
    17  trial scale research and development facility in Clinton county, upstate
    18  revitalization initiative projects, downstate revitalization initiative,
    19  market  New York projects, fairground buildings, equipment or facilities
    20  used to house and promote agriculture, the state fair, the empire  state
    21  trail,  the moynihan station development project, the Kingsbridge armory
    22  project, strategic economic development projects, the cultural, arts and
    23  public spaces fund, water infrastructure in the city of Auburn and  town
    24  of Owasco, a life sciences laboratory public health initiative, not-for-
    25  profit  pounds, shelters and humane societies, arts and cultural facili-
    26  ties improvement program, restore  New  York's  communities  initiative,
    27  heavy  equipment,  economic  development  and  infrastructure  projects,
    28  Roosevelt Island operating corporation capital  projects,  Lake  Ontario
    29  regional  projects,  Pennsylvania  station  and  other transit projects,
    30  athletic facilities for professional football in Orchard Park, New York,
    31  Rush - NY, New York AI Consortium, New York Creates UEV Tool, and  other
    32  state  costs  associated  with  such  projects.  The aggregate principal
    33  amount of bonds authorized to be issued pursuant to this  section  shall
    34  not  exceed  [twenty  billion  eight  hundred  seventy-eight million one
    35  hundred  ninety-four  thousand  dollars  $20,878,194,000]   twenty-three
    36  billion  seven  hundred  five  million  two hundred fifty-three thousand
    37  dollars $23,705,253,000, excluding bonds issued to fund one or more debt
    38  service reserve funds, to pay costs of issuance of such bonds, and bonds
    39  or notes issued to refund or otherwise repay such bonds or notes  previ-
    40  ously  issued.  Such  bonds and notes of the dormitory authority and the
    41  corporation shall not be a debt of the state, and the state shall not be
    42  liable thereon, nor shall they be payable out of any  funds  other  than
    43  those  appropriated  by  the  state  to  the dormitory authority and the
    44  corporation for principal, interest, and related expenses pursuant to  a
    45  service  contract  and  such  bonds  and notes shall contain on the face
    46  thereof a statement to such effect. Except  for  purposes  of  complying
    47  with  the  internal  revenue  code,  any  interest income earned on bond
    48  proceeds shall only be used to pay debt service on such bonds.
    49    § 47. Subdivision (a) of section 28 of part Y of  chapter  61  of  the
    50  laws  of  2005,  relating to providing for the administration of certain
    51  funds and accounts related  to  the  2005-2006  budget,  as  amended  by
    52  section  44  of part XX of chapter 56 of the laws of 2024, is amended to
    53  read as follows:
    54    (a) Subject to the provisions of chapter 59 of the laws of  2000,  but
    55  notwithstanding  any  provisions  of  law  to  the contrary, one or more
    56  authorized issuers as defined by section 68-a of the state  finance  law

        S. 3006--C                         168                        A. 3006--C

     1  are  hereby  authorized to issue bonds or notes in one or more series in
     2  an aggregate principal amount not to exceed  [two  hundred  ninety-seven
     3  million dollars $297,000,000] three hundred ninety-seven million dollars
     4  $397,000,000, excluding bonds issued to finance one or more debt service
     5  reserve  funds,  to  pay  costs  of issuance of such bonds, and bonds or
     6  notes issued to refund or otherwise repay such bonds or notes previously
     7  issued, for  the  purpose  of  financing  capital  projects  for  public
     8  protection  facilities  in  the  Division of Military and Naval Affairs,
     9  debt service and leases; and to reimburse the  state  general  fund  for
    10  disbursements  made  therefor.  Such  bonds and notes of such authorized
    11  issuer shall not be a debt of the state, and  the  state  shall  not  be
    12  liable  thereon,  nor  shall they be payable out of any funds other than
    13  those appropriated by the state  to  such  authorized  issuer  for  debt
    14  service  and  related expenses pursuant to any service contract executed
    15  pursuant to subdivision (b) of this section and  such  bonds  and  notes
    16  shall contain on the face thereof a statement to such effect. Except for
    17  purposes  of  complying  with  the  internal  revenue code, any interest
    18  income earned on bond proceeds shall only be used to pay debt service on
    19  such bonds.
    20    § 48. Subdivision 1 of section 50 of section 1 of chapter 174  of  the
    21  laws  of  1968, constituting the New York state urban development corpo-
    22  ration act, as amended by section 45 of part XX of  chapter  56  of  the
    23  laws of 2024, is amended to read as follows:
    24    1.  Notwithstanding  the  provisions of any other law to the contrary,
    25  the dormitory authority and the urban development corporation are hereby
    26  authorized to issue bonds or notes in one or more series for the purpose
    27  of funding project costs undertaken by or on behalf of the state  educa-
    28  tion  department,  special act school districts, state-supported schools
    29  for the blind and deaf,  approved  private  special  education  schools,
    30  non-public  schools, community centers, day care facilities, residential
    31  camps, day camps, Native American Indian Nation schools, and other state
    32  costs associated with such capital  projects.  The  aggregate  principal
    33  amount  of  bonds authorized to be issued pursuant to this section shall
    34  not exceed [three hundred ninety-six million eight hundred  ninety-eight
    35  thousand  dollars $396,898,000] four hundred forty million three hundred
    36  ninety-seven thousand dollars $440,397,000, excluding  bonds  issued  to
    37  fund one or more debt service reserve funds, to pay costs of issuance of
    38  such  bonds, and bonds or notes issued to refund or otherwise repay such
    39  bonds or notes previously issued. Such bonds and notes of the  dormitory
    40  authority  and  the urban development corporation shall not be a debt of
    41  the state, and the state shall not be liable thereon, nor shall they  be
    42  payable  out  of any funds other than those appropriated by the state to
    43  the dormitory authority and the urban development corporation for  prin-
    44  cipal, interest, and related expenses pursuant to a service contract and
    45  such  bonds  and  notes shall contain on the face thereof a statement to
    46  such effect. Except for purposes of complying with the internal  revenue
    47  code,  any interest income earned on bond proceeds shall only be used to
    48  pay debt service on such bonds.
    49    § 49. Subdivision 1 of section 1680-k of the public  authorities  law,
    50  as  amended  by section 46 of part XX of chapter 56 of the laws of 2024,
    51  is amended to read as follows:
    52    1. Subject to the provisions of chapter fifty-nine of the laws of  two
    53  thousand, but notwithstanding any provisions of law to the contrary, the
    54  dormitory  authority is hereby authorized to issue bonds or notes in one
    55  or more series in an aggregate principal amount not to exceed [forty-one
    56  million  sixty  thousand  dollars  $41,060,000]  forty-one  million  one

        S. 3006--C                         169                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  hundred  seventy-five  thousand  dollars  $41,175,000,  excluding  bonds
     2  issued to finance one or more debt service reserve funds, to  pay  costs
     3  of issuance of such bonds, and bonds or notes issued to refund or other-
     4  wise  repay  such  bonds  or notes previously issued, for the purpose of
     5  financing the construction of the New York state agriculture and markets
     6  food laboratory. Eligible project costs may include, but not be  limited
     7  to  the cost of design, financing, site investigations, site acquisition
     8  and preparation, demolition, construction,  rehabilitation,  acquisition
     9  of  machinery and equipment, and infrastructure improvements. Such bonds
    10  and notes of such authorized issuers shall not be a debt of  the  state,
    11  and the state shall not be liable thereon, nor shall they be payable out
    12  of  any funds other than those appropriated by the state to such author-
    13  ized issuers for debt service  and  related  expenses  pursuant  to  any
    14  service  contract  executed  pursuant to subdivision two of this section
    15  and such bonds and notes shall contain on the face thereof  a  statement
    16  to  such  effect.  Except  for  purposes  of complying with the internal
    17  revenue code, any interest income earned on bond proceeds shall only  be
    18  used to pay debt service on such bonds.
    19    §  50.  Subdivision 1 of section 1680-r of the public authorities law,
    20  as amended by section 46 of part PP of chapter 56 of the laws  of  2023,
    21  is amended to read as follows:
    22    1.  Notwithstanding  the  provisions of any other law to the contrary,
    23  the dormitory authority and the urban development corporation are hereby
    24  authorized to issue bonds or notes in one or more series for the purpose
    25  of funding project costs for the capital restructuring financing program
    26  for health care and related facilities licensed pursuant to  the  public
    27  health  law  or  the mental hygiene law and other state costs associated
    28  with such capital projects,  the  health  care  facility  transformation
    29  programs,  the  essential health care provider program, and other health
    30  care capital project costs. The  aggregate  principal  amount  of  bonds
    31  authorized  to be issued pursuant to this section shall not exceed [five
    32  billion one hundred  fifty-three  million  dollars  $5,153,000,000]  six
    33  billion  one hundred sixty-eight million dollars $6,168,000,000, exclud-
    34  ing bonds issued to fund one or more debt service reserve funds, to  pay
    35  costs  of issuance of such bonds, and bonds or notes issued to refund or
    36  otherwise repay such bonds or notes previously issued.  Such  bonds  and
    37  notes  of  the dormitory authority and the urban development corporation
    38  shall not be a debt of the state, and the  state  shall  not  be  liable
    39  thereon,  nor  shall  they  be payable out of any funds other than those
    40  appropriated by the state to  the  dormitory  authority  and  the  urban
    41  development  corporation  for  principal, interest, and related expenses
    42  pursuant to a service contract and such bonds and notes shall contain on
    43  the face thereof a statement to such  effect.  Except  for  purposes  of
    44  complying  with the internal revenue code, any interest income earned on
    45  bond proceeds shall only be used to pay debt service on such bonds.
    46    § 51. Subdivision 1 of section 386-a of the public authorities law, as
    47  amended by section 55 of part XX of chapter 56 of the laws of  2024,  is
    48  amended to read as follows:
    49    1.  Notwithstanding  any  other  provision of law to the contrary, the
    50  authority, the dormitory authority and the urban development corporation
    51  are hereby authorized to issue bonds or notes in one or more series  for
    52  the  purpose  of  assisting the metropolitan transportation authority in
    53  the financing of transportation facilities  as  defined  in  subdivision
    54  seventeen  of  section twelve hundred sixty-one of this chapter or other
    55  capital projects. The aggregate principal amount of bonds authorized  to
    56  be issued pursuant to this section shall not exceed [twelve billion five

        S. 3006--C                         170                        A. 3006--C

     1  hundred   fifteen  million  eight  hundred  fifty-six  thousand  dollars
     2  $12,515,856,000] fifteen billion  five  hundred  fifteen  million  eight
     3  hundred  fifty-six  thousand  dollars  $15,515,856,000,  excluding bonds
     4  issued  to  fund one or more debt service reserve funds, to pay costs of
     5  issuance of such bonds, and to refund or otherwise repay such  bonds  or
     6  notes  previously  issued.  Such  bonds  and notes of the authority, the
     7  dormitory authority and the urban development corporation shall not be a
     8  debt of the state, and the state shall not be liable thereon, nor  shall
     9  they  be  payable  out of any funds other than those appropriated by the
    10  state to the authority, the dormitory authority and the  urban  develop-
    11  ment  corporation for principal, interest, and related expenses pursuant
    12  to a service contract and such bonds and notes shall contain on the face
    13  thereof a statement to such effect. Except  for  purposes  of  complying
    14  with  the  internal  revenue  code,  any  interest income earned on bond
    15  proceeds shall only be used to pay debt service on such bonds.  Notwith-
    16  standing any other provision of law to the contrary, including the limi-
    17  tations  contained  in  subdivision four of section sixty-seven-b of the
    18  state finance law, (A) any bonds and notes issued prior to April  first,
    19  two  thousand twenty-seven pursuant to this section may be issued with a
    20  maximum maturity of fifty years, and (B) any bonds issued to refund such
    21  bonds and notes may be issued with a maximum  maturity  of  fifty  years
    22  from the respective date of original issuance of such bonds and notes.
    23    §  52.  Subdivision  (a)  of section 27 of part Y of chapter 61 of the
    24  laws of 2005, relating to providing for the  administration  of  certain
    25  funds  and  accounts  related  to  the  2005-2006  budget, as amended by
    26  section 28 of part PP of chapter 56 of the laws of 2023, is  amended  to
    27  read as follows:
    28    (a)  Subject  to the provisions of chapter 59 of the laws of 2000, but
    29  notwithstanding any provisions of law to the contrary, the urban  devel-
    30  opment  corporation  is hereby authorized to issue bonds or notes in one
    31  or more series in an aggregate principal  amount  not  to  exceed  [five
    32  hundred  thirty-eight million one hundred thousand dollars $538,100,000]
    33  five hundred fifty million one hundred  thousand  dollars  $550,100,000,
    34  excluding  bonds  issued  to  finance  one  or more debt service reserve
    35  funds, to pay costs of issuance of such bonds, and bonds or notes issued
    36  to refund or otherwise repay such bonds or notes previously issued,  for
    37  the  purpose  of financing capital projects including IT initiatives for
    38  the division of state police, debt service and leases; and to  reimburse
    39  the  state  general fund for disbursements made therefor. Such bonds and
    40  notes of such authorized issuer shall not be a debt of  the  state,  and
    41  the  state shall not be liable thereon, nor shall they be payable out of
    42  any funds other than those appropriated by the state to such  authorized
    43  issuer  for  debt  service  and related expenses pursuant to any service
    44  contract executed pursuant to subdivision (b) of this section  and  such
    45  bonds  and  notes  shall contain on the face thereof a statement to such
    46  effect. Except for purposes of complying with the internal revenue code,
    47  any interest income earned on bond proceeds shall only be  used  to  pay
    48  debt service on such bonds.
    49    § 53. Subdivision 1 of section 16 of part D of chapter 389 of the laws
    50  of  1997,  relating  to  the  financing  of  the correctional facilities
    51  improvement fund and the youth facility improvement fund, as amended  by
    52  section  28  of part XX of chapter 56 of the laws of 2024, is amended to
    53  read as follows:
    54    1. Subject to the provisions of chapter 59 of the laws  of  2000,  but
    55  notwithstanding the provisions of section 18 of section 1 of chapter 174
    56  of the laws of 1968, the New York state urban development corporation is

        S. 3006--C                         171                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  hereby  authorized  to  issue  bonds,  notes and other obligations in an
     2  aggregate principal amount not to exceed [ten billion two hundred  nine-
     3  ty-nine    million    three    hundred   fifty-nine   thousand   dollars
     4  $10,299,359,000,  and  shall  include  all  bonds, notes and other obli-
     5  gations issued pursuant to chapter 56 of the laws of 1983, as amended or
     6  supplemented. The proceeds of such bonds,  notes  or  other  obligations
     7  shall  be  paid to the state, for deposit in the correctional facilities
     8  capital improvement fund to pay for all or any portion of the amount  or
     9  amounts  paid  by the state from appropriations or reappropriations made
    10  to the department of corrections  and  community  supervision  from  the
    11  correctional  facilities  capital improvement fund for capital projects.
    12  The aggregate amount of bonds, notes or other obligations authorized  to
    13  be  issued  pursuant to this section shall exclude bonds, notes or other
    14  obligations issued to refund or otherwise repay bonds,  notes  or  other
    15  obligations  theretofore  issued, the proceeds of which were paid to the
    16  state for all or a portion of the amounts expended  by  the  state  from
    17  appropriations or reappropriations made to the department of corrections
    18  and community supervision; provided, however, that upon any such refund-
    19  ing  or  repayment  the  total aggregate principal amount of outstanding
    20  bonds, notes or other obligations may be greater than  ten  billion  two
    21  hundred  ninety-nine  million  three hundred fifty-nine thousand dollars
    22  $10,299,359,000, only if the present value of the aggregate debt service
    23  of the refunding or repayment bonds, notes or other  obligations  to  be
    24  issued  shall not exceed the present value of the aggregate debt service
    25  of the bonds, notes or other obligations so to be  refunded  or  repaid.
    26  For the purposes hereof, the present value of the aggregate debt service
    27  of  the  refunding or repayment bonds, notes or other obligations and of
    28  the aggregate debt service of the bonds, notes or other  obligations  so
    29  refunded  or  repaid,  shall  be  calculated  by utilizing the effective
    30  interest rate of the refunding or repayment bonds, notes or other  obli-
    31  gations, which shall be that rate arrived at by doubling the semi-annual
    32  interest  rate (compounded semi-annually) necessary to discount the debt
    33  service payments on the refunding or repayment  bonds,  notes  or  other
    34  obligations  from  the payment dates thereof to the date of issue of the
    35  refunding or repayment bonds, notes or  other  obligations  and  to  the
    36  price  bid  including estimated accrued interest or proceeds received by
    37  the corporation including estimated accrued interest from the sale ther-
    38  eof] eleven billion one hundred seventeen million three  hundred  fifty-
    39  nine  thousand  dollars  $11,117,359,000,  excluding  bonds issued after
    40  April first, two thousand twenty-five to  (i)  fund  one  or  more  debt
    41  service  reserve  funds,  (ii)  pay costs of issuance of such bonds, and
    42  (iii) refund or otherwise repay such bonds or notes  previously  issued,
    43  provided  that  nothing  herein  shall affect the exclusion of refunding
    44  debt issued prior to such date.
    45    § 54. The opening paragraph of section 3573 of the public  authorities
    46  law,  as  added  by chapter 5 of the laws of 1997, is amended to read as
    47  follows:
    48    Notwithstanding any provision of this article or any  other  provision
    49  of law to the contrary, so long as bonds issued by the dormitory author-
    50  ity  [to  finance  facilities  for] on or before March thirty-first, two
    51  thousand twenty-five to make loans to the department of  health  of  the
    52  state of New York to finance state hospital facilities listed in section
    53  four  hundred  three  of  the  public  health  law remain outstanding as
    54  defined in the bond resolution under which such bonds were  issued,  the
    55  following provisions shall be applicable:

        S. 3006--C                         172                        A. 3006--C
 
     1    §  55.  Paragraph  (a)  of  subdivision 2 of section 409 of the public
     2  health law, as amended by chapter 5 of the laws of 1997, is amended  and
     3  a new subdivision 6 is added to read as follows:
     4    (a)  The  commissioner  shall,  after  the first day of July, nineteen
     5  hundred seventy-one, pay over moneys received by the department  includ-
     6  ing,  subject  to  subdivision six of this section, moneys received from
     7  the Roswell Park Cancer Institute corporation for the care,  maintenance
     8  and  treatment  of  patients  at  state  hospitals  in the department as
     9  enumerated in section four hundred three of this chapter, together  with
    10  money  received  from  fees, including parking fees, refunds, reimburse-
    11  ments, payments received pursuant  to  leases,  sales  of  property  and
    12  miscellaneous  receipts  of  such  hospitals  other  than gifts, grants,
    13  bequests and moneys received  under  research  contracts,  and  clinical
    14  practice  income  received  pursuant  to a clinical practice plan estab-
    15  lished pursuant to subdivision fourteen of section two  hundred  six  of
    16  this  chapter except for the amount of money required by the comptroller
    17  to be maintained on deposit in the  department  of  health  income  fund
    18  pursuant  to paragraph (c) of this subdivision less payments required to
    19  be made into pools created by this chapter and  for  assessments  estab-
    20  lished  pursuant  to this chapter and less refunds made pursuant to law,
    21  to the comptroller to be deposited  by  [him]  the  comptroller  in  the
    22  department of health income fund. Such moneys shall be kept separate and
    23  shall  not be commingled with any other moneys in the hands of the comp-
    24  troller. All deposits of such money shall,  if  required  by  the  comp-
    25  troller,  be secured by obligations of the United States or of the state
    26  of market value equal at all times to the amount of the deposit and  all
    27  banks  and  trust  companies  are authorized to give such securities for
    28  such deposits. The commissioner shall identify to the comptroller moneys
    29  received from Roswell Park Cancer Institute corporation or  its  subsid-
    30  iaries.
    31    6.  Notwithstanding the foregoing provisions of this section, upon the
    32  payment or provision for payment of all outstanding bonds issued  on  or
    33  before  March  thirty-first,  two  thousand twenty-five by the dormitory
    34  authority to make loans to the department to finance or refinance  state
    35  hospital  facilities in accordance with the terms of the bond resolution
    36  under which such bonds were issued, the provisions of  subdivisions  two
    37  and five of this section requiring (i) the payment and identification by
    38  the  department  to  the comptroller of moneys received from the Roswell
    39  Park Cancer Institute corporation, (ii) the deposit and  maintenance  of
    40  such  moneys  from  the Roswell Park Cancer Institute corporation by the
    41  comptroller in the department of  health  income  fund,  and  (iii)  the
    42  release  of excess moneys in the department of health income fund attri-
    43  buted to the operation of the Roswell Park Cancer Institute  corporation
    44  or  its subsidiaries, shall no longer be applicable and, thereafter, all
    45  such moneys from the operation of  the  Roswell  Park  Cancer  Institute
    46  corporation  shall  remain  in  the custody and/or control of the corpo-
    47  ration and/or its subsidiaries.
    48    § 56. Paragraph (b) of subdivision 1 of section 54-b of section  1  of
    49  chapter  174  of  the  laws  of  1968 constituting the urban development
    50  corporation act, as amended by section 54 of part XX of  chapter  56  of
    51  the laws of 2024, is amended to read as follows:
    52    (b)  Notwithstanding  any  other  provision  of  law  to the contrary,
    53  including, specifically, the provisions of chapter 59  of  the  laws  of
    54  2000  and  section sixty-seven-b of the state finance law, the dormitory
    55  authority of the state of  New  York  and  the  corporation  are  hereby
    56  authorized  to issue personal income tax revenue anticipation notes with

        S. 3006--C                         173                        A. 3006--C
 
     1  a maturity no later than March 31, [2025] 2026, in one or more series in
     2  an aggregate principal amount for each fiscal year not to  exceed  three
     3  billion  dollars,  and  to  pay costs of issuance of such notes, for the
     4  purpose  of  temporarily  financing  budgetary  needs of the state. Such
     5  purpose shall constitute an authorized purpose under subdivision two  of
     6  section sixty-eight-a of the state finance law for all purposes of arti-
     7  cle five-C of the state finance law with respect to the notes authorized
     8  by  this  paragraph.  Such  notes  shall  not  be  renewed,  extended or
     9  refunded. For so long as any notes authorized by this paragraph shall be
    10  outstanding, the restrictions, limitations and requirements contained in
    11  article five-B of the state finance law shall not apply.
    12    § 57. Subdivision 8 of section 68-b  of  the  state  finance  law,  as
    13  amended  by section 60 of part JJJ of chapter 59 of the laws of 2021, is
    14  amended to read as follows:
    15    8. Revenue bonds may  only  be  issued  for  authorized  purposes,  as
    16  defined  in  section  sixty-eight-a of this article. Notwithstanding the
    17  foregoing, the dormitory authority of the state of New York,  the  urban
    18  development  corporation  and  the  New York state thruway authority may
    19  issue revenue bonds for any authorized purpose of any other such author-
    20  ized issuer through March thirty-first, two thousand [twenty-five] thir-
    21  ty. Any such revenue bonds issued by the New York state thruway authori-
    22  ty shall be subject to  the  approval  of  the  New  York  state  public
    23  authorities  control  board, pursuant to section fifty-one of the public
    24  authorities law. The authorized issuers  shall  not  issue  any  revenue
    25  bonds  in  an  amount  in  excess  of  statutory authorizations for such
    26  authorized purposes.  Authorizations for such authorized purposes  shall
    27  be  reduced in an amount equal to the amount of revenue bonds issued for
    28  such authorized purposes under this article. Such reduction shall not be
    29  made in relation to revenue bonds issued to fund reserve funds, if  any,
    30  and  costs  of  issuance, [if these items are not counted under existing
    31  authorizations,] nor shall revenue bonds issued to refund  bonds  issued
    32  under existing authorizations reduce the amount of such authorizations.
    33    § 58. Section 93-a of the state finance law is REPEALED.
    34    §  59.  Section  46  of  section 1 of chapter 174 of the laws of 1968,
    35  constituting the New York state urban development  corporation  act,  is
    36  REPEALED.
    37    §  60.  This  act shall take effect immediately and shall be deemed to
    38  have been in full force and effect on and after April 1, 2025; provided,
    39  however, that the provisions of sections one, two,  three,  four,  five,
    40  six,  seven,  eight,  thirteen,  fourteen,  fifteen, sixteen, seventeen,
    41  eighteen, nineteen, twenty and twenty-one of this act shall expire March
    42  31, 2026.
    43    § 2. Severability clause. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivi-
    44  sion, section or part of this act shall be  adjudged  by  any  court  of
    45  competent  jurisdiction  to  be invalid, such judgment shall not affect,
    46  impair, or invalidate the remainder thereof, but shall  be  confined  in
    47  its  operation  to the clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section
    48  or part thereof directly involved in the controversy in which such judg-
    49  ment shall have been rendered. It is hereby declared to be the intent of
    50  the legislature that this act would  have  been  enacted  even  if  such
    51  invalid provisions had not been included herein.
    52    §  3.  This  act shall take effect immediately provided, however, that
    53  the applicable effective date of Parts A through MM of this act shall be
    54  as specifically set forth in the last section of such Parts.
Go to top