Add Art 27 Title 8 §§27-0801 - 27-0805, Title 6 §§27-0601 - 27-0607, En Con L; add Art 11-C §151-p, Ag & Mkts
L; add §95-l, St Fin L
 
Relates to the management of PFAS in biosolids in the state by establishing a moratorium on land application of biosolids and requiring testing and reporting of certain groundwater, biosolids, and soil; establishes the PFAS agricultural response program and fund to assist farms found to have levels of PFAS contamination which exceed regulatory standards; establishes the NYS biosolids task force to evaluate the risks and benefits of various methods of biosolids disposal; provides for the repeal of the moratorium upon the expiration thereof.
STATE OF NEW YORK
________________________________________________________________________
5759--A
2025-2026 Regular Sessions
IN SENATE
February 28, 2025
___________
Introduced by Sens. HARCKHAM, FAHY, JACKSON -- read twice and ordered
printed, and when printed to be committed to the Committee on Environ-
mental Conservation -- committee discharged, bill amended, ordered
reprinted as amended and recommitted to said committee
AN ACT to amend the environmental conservation law, in relation to the
management of PFAS in biosolids and establishing the New York state
biosolids task force; to amend the agriculture and markets law and the
state finance law, in relation to establishing the PFAS agricultural
response program and the agricultural PFAS response fund; and provid-
ing for the repeal of certain provisions upon expiration thereof
The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-bly, do enact as follows:
1 Section 1. Article 27 of the environmental conservation law is amended
2 by adding a new title 8 to read as follows:
3 TITLE 8
4 MANAGEMENT OF PFAS IN BIOSOLIDS
5 Section 27-0801. Definitions.
6 27-0803. Moratorium on land application of biosolids.
7 27-0805. Testing and reporting.
8 § 27-0801. Definitions.
9 As used in this title:
10 1. "Biosolids" means the accumulated semi-solids, solids or liquids
11 resulting from treatment of wastewaters from publicly or privately owned
12 or operated sewage treatment plants.
13 2. "Enterprise budget" means an estimation of the revenue, costs, and
14 profits for a farm.
15 3. "Monitoring" means sampling of biosolids from wastewater treatment
16 facilities, soil samples and/or water samples from agricultural land to
17 determine the concentration of PFAS present.
EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
[] is old law to be omitted.
LBD10313-07-5
S. 5759--A 2
1 4. "Perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances" or "PFAS" means a
2 class of fluorinated organic chemicals containing at least one fully
3 fluorinated carbon atom.
4 5. "Permit holder" means a farmer or other landowner authorized to
5 spread biosolids under a permit granted pursuant to NYCRR 361-2.4.
6 6. "Previous permit holder" means a permit holder who has a permit
7 that has expired within the five years previous to the effective date of
8 this title.
9 7. "Wastewater treatment facility" means any facility that treats
10 wastewater, including but not limited to municipal sewage treatment
11 plants, industrial wastewater treatment plants, and septage treatment
12 facilities.
13 § 27-0803. Moratorium on land application of biosolids.
14 1. For the period commencing on the effective date of this title and
15 ending five years after such date, a moratorium shall be established on
16 the land application of:
17 (a) biosolids generated from a publicly or privately owned or operated
18 wastewater treatment plant;
19 (b) compost material that included in its production biosolids gener-
20 ated from a publicly or privately owned or operated wastewater treatment
21 plant;
22 (c) any other product or material that is intended for use as a ferti-
23 lizer, soil amendment, topsoil replacement or mulch, or for other simi-
24 lar agricultural purposes including parks, golf courses, or other non-
25 crop land applications, that is derived from or contains biosolids
26 generated from a publicly or privately owned or operated wastewater
27 treatment plant.
28 2. The moratorium shall apply to all existing permits, renewals, and
29 new applications.
30 3. The moratorium shall not apply to:
31 (a) the disposal or placement at a solid waste landfill of any of the
32 materials that are prohibited from application, spreading, sale or
33 distribution by this section; or
34 (b) the land application of or the sale or distribution of compost
35 materials or other agricultural products or materials derived from or
36 containing residuals generated as a result of the processing or culti-
37 vation of food, food waste, crops or vegetative material, or any other
38 product or material that is not derived from or does not contain bioso-
39 lids.
40 § 27-0805. Testing and reporting.
41 1. The department shall promulgate rules and regulations which add
42 perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances as a parameter of concern
43 for analysis within NYCRR Part 361.2.4.
44 (a) Within one year of the effective date of this title, the depart-
45 ment shall promulgate regulations establishing a perfluoroalkyl and
46 polyfluoroalkyl substances biosolids testing and reporting program that
47 shall, at a minimum, do the following:
48 (i) establish protocols for soil testing, requiring all permit holders
49 and previous permit holders to test lands where biosolids have been
50 applied at least quarterly for one year;
51 (ii) establish protocols for testing drinking water wells at least
52 quarterly for one year where such wells are within one half mile of
53 lands where biosolids have been applied;
54 (iii) establish protocols for testing surface water at least quarterly
55 for one year where such surface water is within one mile of lands where
56 biosolids have been applied;
S. 5759--A 3
1 (b) Regulations promulgated pursuant to this title regarding testing
2 protocols and the timing of sampling for testing of well water and
3 surface water shall take into account the effects of rainfall events
4 and precipitation patterns, as well as weather and temperature changes
5 in determining the timing of sampling.
6 (c) Permit holders shall submit the results of such monitoring to the
7 department quarterly; provided, however, that permit holders shall
8 submit their first monitoring results within six months from the effec-
9 tive date of this title.
10 2. The department shall require all wastewater treatment facilities to
11 test biosolids for PFAS chemicals quarterly for five years and report
12 the results to the department.
13 3. Testing and evaluation of permitted sites shall be conducted using
14 a PFAS testing method or methods authorized by the department. The
15 department shall immediately authorize EPA Method 1633A as an approved
16 testing method. The department shall authorize additional methods that
17 detect more PFAS as such methods become available and shall require that
18 the method that detects the largest number of PFAS (at equal or lower
19 detection limits than EPA Method 1633A) shall be used.
20 4. The department shall establish and maintain a publicly accessible
21 database of disaggregated soil, biosolid (differentiating biosolid data
22 sourced from wastewater treatment facility and from permit holders), and
23 water testing results within six months of the effective date of this
24 title. Such database shall use best practices standards for data
25 collection and dissemination, including standardization and cleaning of
26 data, and shall make such data available to the public in commonly used
27 data formats. Data collected from soil or water samples taken from
28 private lands and wells shall be aggregated by department of environ-
29 mental conservation region, in a form which excludes specific addresses,
30 locations, or other personally identifying information. The database
31 shall also include records for all previously conducted testing of
32 biosolids for PFAS funded with public monies with New York state.
33 § 2. The agriculture and markets law is amended by adding a new arti-
34 cle 11-C to read as follows:
35 ARTICLE 11-C
36 SOIL HEALTH AND PFAS AGRICULTURE RESPONSE PROGRAM
37 § 151-p. PFAS agricultural response program.
38 § 151-p. PFAS agricultural response program. 1. For the purposes of
39 this article:
40 (a) "Biosolids" means the accumulated semi-solids or solids resulting
41 from treatment of wastewaters from publicly or privately owned or oper-
42 ated sewage treatment plants.
43 (b) "Enterprise budget" means an estimation of the revenue, costs and
44 profits for a farm.
45 (c) "Monitoring" means sampling of biosolids from soil samples and/or
46 water samples from agricultural land to determine the concentration of
47 PFAS present.
48 (d) "Perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances" or "PFAS" means a
49 class of fluorinated organic chemicals containing at least one fully
50 fluorinated carbon atom.
51 2. Within one year of the effective date of this article, the depart-
52 ment, in consultation with the department of environmental conservation,
53 shall establish a PFAS agricultural response program to assist farms
54 found to have levels of PFAS contamination which exceed regulatory stan-
55 dards established pursuant to title eight of article twenty-seven of the
56 environmental conservation law.
S. 5759--A 4
1 3. The program shall, at a minimum:
2 (a) pursuant to an appropriation therefor, provide grants to farmers
3 and other landowners with land found to exceed the thresholds for PFAS
4 established pursuant to title eight of article twenty-seven of the envi-
5 ronmental conservation law for the purpose of short-term income supple-
6 mentation or replacement, including but not limited to, reimbursing
7 farmers for the value of crops lost as a result of PFAS contamination;
8 (b) assist farmers and other landowners with planning and the develop-
9 ment of enterprise budgets to address land or water found to be contam-
10 inated by PFAS. Such enterprise budgets may include, but need not be
11 limited to, costs associated with the implementation of:
12 (i) alternative cropping systems;
13 (ii) remediation strategies;
14 (iii) technological adaptations;
15 (iv) transitioning to alternative revenue streams, including but not
16 limited to transitioning to alternative land use systems; and
17 (v) locating alternative viable farmland;
18 (c) pursuant to an appropriation therefor, provide grants for the
19 purchase of transitional equipment and infrastructure for farmers and
20 other landowners to: (i) support a transition to an alternative cropping
21 system; and (ii) implement remediation strategies, technological adapta-
22 tions, or other modifications to the farmer or other landowner's oper-
23 ations in response to PFAS contamination;
24 (d) develop best practices to mitigate further PFAS contamination,
25 including but not limited to, alternative cropping systems; and
26 (e) provide for testing of agricultural products, livestock, soil and
27 water of adjacent properties where it is suspected there may be contam-
28 ination related to the spreading of biosolids, and feedstock produced on
29 lands where biosolids were spread. During the five-year moratorium on
30 land application of biosolids pursuant to section 27-0803 of the envi-
31 ronmental conservation law, the department shall provide notice of such
32 monitoring and testing to the public, including to adjacent impacted
33 communities, through public outreach to community members and by posting
34 information on the department's website.
35 § 3. The state finance law is amended by adding a new section 95-l to
36 read as follows:
37 § 95-l. Agricultural PFAS response fund. 1. There is hereby estab-
38 lished in the joint custody of the comptroller and the commissioner of
39 taxation and finance a special fund to be known as the "agricultural
40 PFAS response fund".
41 2. Such fund shall consist of monies appropriated, credited, or trans-
42 ferred thereto from any other fund or source pursuant to law.
43 3. All monies deposited in the agricultural PFAS response fund shall
44 be available for the purposes of the PFAS agricultural response program
45 pursuant to article eleven-C of the agriculture and markets law.
46 4. Monies shall be payable from the fund on the audit and warrant of
47 the comptroller on vouchers approved and certified by the commissioner
48 of the department of agriculture and markets.
49 § 4. Article 27 of the environmental conservation law is amended by
50 adding a new title 6 to read as follows:
51 TITLE 6
52 NEW YORK STATE BIOSOLIDS TASK FORCE
53 Section 27-0601. New York State biosolids task force.
54 27-0603. Definitions.
55 27-0605. Task force composition.
56 27-0607. Powers and duties.
S. 5759--A 5
1 § 27-0601. New York State biosolids task force.
2 There is hereby established within the department the New York state
3 biosolids task force to evaluate the risks and benefits of various meth-
4 ods of biosolids disposal within the state with respect to the risks
5 posed by PFAS chemicals and to investigate a path forward for New York
6 state biosolid disposal that is maximally protective of human and
7 ecosystem health.
8 § 27-0603. Definitions.
9 As used in this title:
10 1. "Biosolids" means the accumulated semi-solids or solids resulting
11 from treatment of wastewaters from publicly or privately owned or oper-
12 ated sewage treatment plants.
13 2. "Enterprise budget" means an estimation of the planning and esti-
14 mation of revenue, costs, and profits for a farm.
15 3. "Monitoring" means sampling of biosolids from wastewater treatment
16 facilities, soil samples and/or groundwater samples from agricultural
17 land to determine the concentration of PFAS present.
18 4. "Perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances" or "PFAS" means a
19 class of fluorinated organic chemicals containing at least one fully
20 fluorinated carbon atom.
21 5. "Previous permit holder" means a permit holder who has a permit
22 that has expired within the five years previous to the effective date of
23 this article.
24 6. "Wastewater treatment facility" means any facility that treats
25 wastewater, including but not limited to municipal sewage treatment
26 plants, industrial wastewater treatment plants, and septage treatment
27 facilities.
28 § 27-0605. Task force composition.
29 1. The task force shall be composed of thirteen members as follows:
30 (a) the commissioner, or the commissioner's designee, who shall be the
31 chair of the task force;
32 (b) one member from the department;
33 (c) one member from the department of health;
34 (d) one member from the department of agriculture and markets;
35 (e) three members appointed by the governor as follows:
36 (i) one of whom shall represent wastewater treatment utilities;
37 (ii) one of whom shall have a background or expertise in solid waste
38 and organics recycling; and
39 (iii) one of whom shall have a background or expertise in soil and
40 crop health and toxic contamination;
41 (f) two members appointed by the temporary president of the senate,
42 one of whom shall represent the public and shall have a background or
43 expertise in PFAS contamination and/or toxicology and health risk
44 assessment;
45 (g) two members appointed by the speaker of the assembly, one of whom
46 shall represent the public and shall have a background or expertise in
47 PFAS contamination and/or toxicology and health risk assessment;
48 (h) one member appointed by the minority leader of the senate; and
49 (i) one member appointed by the minority leader of the assembly.
50 2. The members of the task force shall receive no compensation for
51 their services but shall be allowed their actual and necessary expenses
52 incurred in the performance of their duties pursuant to this title.
53 3. The task force shall meet at such times and places as may be deter-
54 mined by its chair; provided, however, that the task force shall meet at
55 a minimum of six times per year.
S. 5759--A 6
1 4. A majority of the members of the task force shall constitute a
2 quorum for the transaction of business. Action may be taken, and motions
3 and resolutions adopted, at any meeting by the affirmative vote of a
4 majority of the full membership of the task force.
5 § 27-0607. Powers and duties.
6 1. The task force shall:
7 (a) Review the draft "Sewage Sludge Risk Assessment for Perfluoroocta-
8 noic Acid (PFOA) CASRN 335-67-1 and Perfluorooctane Sulfonic Acid (PFOS)
9 CASRN 1763-23-1", dated January two thousand twenty-five, and monitor
10 comments provided to the United States environmental protection agency
11 and any revisions to the risk analysis;
12 (b) Analyze the pathways of human exposure to PFAS and how biosolids
13 applied to land contribute to such exposure;
14 (c) Support the department in any regulatory processes related to PFAS
15 in biosolids, prioritizing efficient processes and applying the best
16 available science;
17 (d) Evaluate mitigation strategies to reduce the risk of human,
18 ecosystem, and wildlife exposure from land application of biosolids;
19 (e) Review and summarize, including but not limited to the actions of
20 other states and regional and federal agencies to understand the risks
21 and consequences of such actions, the use and effects of PFAS and bioso-
22 lids, including, but not limited to:
23 (i) Continued land application;
24 (ii) Allowances for and use of biosolid derived fertilizer products;
25 (iii) Land application bans;
26 (iv) Landfilling;
27 (v) Incineration; and
28 (vi) Mitigation of PFAS through industrial pretreatment programs and
29 source identification;
30 (f) Work with the department to summarize current data and provide
31 recommendations, including recommendations for where more data may be
32 required;
33 (g) Review existing standards for PFAS contamination within soil,
34 water, air, and biosolids, both in New York and at the federal level;
35 (h) Review possible PFAS remediation strategies for PFAS contamination
36 within soil, water, air, and biosolids;
37 (i) Review and summarize the remaining capacity of landfills and
38 incineration facilities to accept biosolids. Such review shall consider
39 the impact across the different regions within the state and environ-
40 mental justice areas, including the impact of PFAS-rich landfill leac-
41 hate disposal via wastewater treatment plants;
42 (j) Review and evaluate alternative methods of and emergent technolo-
43 gies for managing contaminated biosolids;
44 (k) Review and evaluate PFAS destroying technologies, including the
45 risks to human and environmental health, and the current state of
46 deployment and barriers to the deployment of such technologies;
47 (l) Determine financial, environmental, and health impacts of differ-
48 ent pathways for managing biosolids;
49 (m) Evaluate the risks, implications, and levels of PFAS in food
50 products grown on land where biosolids have been applied or livestock
51 fed crops grown on land where biosolids have been applied;
52 (n) Where possible, work with other regional authorities to understand
53 their intent of biosolids management in their jurisdictions to determine
54 impacts of the limitations of biosolids disposal and end uses;
55 (o) Conduct a minimum of two public hearings for input annually;
S. 5759--A 7
1 (p) Issue an interim progress report at the end of the first year. The
2 interim report shall be delivered to the department and the legislature
3 and be posted publicly on the department's website; and
4 (q) Issue a final report at the end of the second year. The final
5 report shall be delivered to the department and the legislature and be
6 posted publicly on the department's website.
7 2. The task force shall have the power to:
8 (a) contract for professional and technical assistance and advice;
9 (b) conduct scientific and environmental studies.
10 3. The department, the department of agriculture and markets, and the
11 department of health shall provide the task force with such facilities,
12 assistance and data as will enable the task force to carry out its
13 powers and duties. Additionally, all other agencies of the state or
14 subdivisions thereof shall, at the request of the chair, provide the
15 task force with such facilities, assistance, and data as will enable the
16 task force to carry out its powers and duties.
17 § 5. This act shall take effect immediately; provided, however, that
18 sections 27-0801 and 27-0805 of the environmental conservation law as
19 added by section one of this act and sections two, three, and four of
20 this act shall take effect on the one hundred eightieth day after it
21 shall have become a law; provided further, however, that section 27-0803
22 of the environmental conservation law as added by section one of this
23 act shall expire five years after such effective date when upon such
24 date the provisions of such section shall be deemed repealed; provided
25 further, however, that section four of this act shall expire and be
26 deemed repealed one hundred twenty days after the New York State bioso-
27 lids task force has submitted its final report pursuant to section
28 27-0607 of the environmental conservation law as added by section four
29 of this act; provided further, however, that the commissioner of envi-
30 ronmental conservation shall notify the legislative bill drafting
31 commission upon the submission of the final report pursuant to section
32 27-0607 of the environmental conservation law as added by section four
33 of this act in order that the commission may maintain an accurate and
34 timely effective data base of the official text of the laws of the state
35 of New York in furtherance of effectuating the provisions of section 44
36 of the legislative law and section 70-b of the public officers law.