Bill Text: NY A07235 | 2023-2024 | General Assembly | Amended


Bill Title: Requires certain documents and forms to be provided in the twelve most common non-English languages spoken by limited English proficient immigrants of five years or less according to the American community survey, as published by the United States census bureau.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 55-2)

Status: (Introduced) 2024-05-29 - reported referred to ways and means [A07235 Detail]

Download: New_York-2023-A07235-Amended.html



                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________

                                         7235--A

                               2023-2024 Regular Sessions

                   IN ASSEMBLY

                                      May 15, 2023
                                       ___________

        Introduced  by  M.  of  A. DE LOS SANTOS, KELLES, SHIMSKY, CRUZ, COLTON,
          ALVAREZ, EPSTEIN, STIRPE,  REYES,  SAYEGH,  FORREST,  TAYLOR,  WALKER,
          GLICK,  GIBBS,  ROZIC,  JACOBSON, LEVENBERG, RAMOS, CUNNINGHAM, SIMON,
          RAGA, BURDICK, CLARK, HEVESI, CHANG, J. A. GIGLIO, DINOWITZ,  MAMDANI,
          LAVINE,  BURGOS,  DICKENS,  SEPTIMO, GONZALEZ-ROJAS, SHRESTHA, ARDILA,
          LEE, SOLAGES, SEAWRIGHT, L. ROSENTHAL, MEEKS, ZACCARO,  DAVILA,  OTIS,
          RIVERA,   TAPIA,   BICHOTTE HERMELYN,   SILLITTI,  CARROLL,  ANDERSON,
          MITAYNES, SIMONE, GUNTHER, KIM  --  read  once  and  referred  to  the
          Committee  on  Governmental Operations -- recommitted to the Committee
          on Governmental Operations in accordance with Assembly Rule 3, sec.  2
          --  committee  discharged,  bill amended, ordered reprinted as amended
          and recommitted to said committee

        AN ACT to amend the executive law, the public authorities  law  and  the
          county law, in relation to requiring certain documents and forms to be
          provided in multiple languages

          The  People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:

     1    Section 1. Subdivision 1 of section 202-a of  the  executive  law,  as
     2  added  by  section  1  of  part GG of chapter 56 of the laws of 2022, is
     3  amended to read as follows:
     4    1. (a) Each state agency that provides direct public services  in  New
     5  York  state  shall  translate  all  vital documents relevant to services
     6  offered by the agency, including  essential  public  documents  such  as
     7  forms and instructions provided to or completed by program beneficiaries
     8  or  participants,  into  the  twelve  most  common non-English languages
     9  spoken by  limited-English  proficient  individuals  in  the  state  who
    10  arrived within the last five years, based on the data in the most recent
    11  American  Community  Survey  published  by  United States Census Bureau,
    12  including but not limited to data collected  by  public  schools,  local
    13  interpreting  agencies, federal refugee resettlement programs, and state
    14  agencies. [Agencies subject to this section, in  their  discretion,  may

         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD02785-06-4

        A. 7235--A                          2

     1  offer  up  to  four  additional  languages beyond the twelve most common
     2  languages.   Such additional languages shall be  decided  by  the  state
     3  agency  in consultation with the office of general services and approved
     4  by the office of general services based on the number of limited-English
     5  proficient immigrants of five years or less in New York state in need of
     6  language  translation  services  according  to  the  American  Community
     7  Survey, including the  growth  of  recent  arrival  populations  in  the
     8  geographic regions in which the agency's services are offered, the popu-
     9  lation  of  limited-English proficient individuals served by the agency,
    10  feedback from impacted community or advocacy groups, and any other rele-
    11  vant data published by the United States Census Bureau.]
    12    (b) Each agency shall additionally make  such  translations  available
    13  within each region of the state, as established by article eleven of the
    14  economic development law, in the three most common non-English languages
    15  which  are  spoken in that region and are not already included among the
    16  twelve languages specified in paragraph (a) of  this  subdivision.  Such
    17  additional  languages  shall be decided by the state agency in consulta-
    18  tion with the office of general services and approved by the  office  of
    19  general services based on the number of limited-English proficient immi-
    20  grants  who  have  arrived in New York state within the last five years,
    21  according to the United States  census  bureau  and  American  community
    22  survey,  including  the  growth  of  recent  arrival  populations in the
    23  geographic regions in which the agency's services are offered, the popu-
    24  lation of limited-English proficient individuals served by  the  agency,
    25  feedback  from  impacted  community  or  advocacy  groups,  and any data
    26  collected from the sources listed in paragraph (a) of this subdivision.
    27    (c) The list of most common  languages  shall  be  updated  every  two
    28  years,  based  on  the most recent   data collected by the United States
    29  census bureau and American community survey, including but  not  limited
    30  to the data sources listed in paragraph (a) of this subdivision.
    31    (d)  Each  agency  shall   provide competent and timely interpretation
    32  services to individuals in their  primary  or  preferred  language  with
    33  respect  to  the provisions of services and benefits. This includes both
    34  in-office services, and services  provided  outside  of  the  department
    35  office.  Competent interpretation shall mean spoken or signed, real-time
    36  communication in which the qualified human interpreter is fluent in both
    37  the source and target language and is trained as an interpreter.
    38    § 2. Subparagraphs (viii) and (ix) of paragraph (c) of  subdivision  3
    39  of  section 202-a of the executive law, as added by section 1 of part GG
    40  of chapter 56 of the laws of 2022, are amended and  three  new  subpara-
    41  graphs (x), (xi) and (xii) are added to read as follows:
    42    (viii) an explanation as to how the agency determined it would provide
    43  any additional language beyond the top twelve languages required by this
    44  section; [and]
    45    (ix) the identity of the agency's language access coordinator[.];
    46    (x)    accommodations for communication access shall be available upon
    47  request including American sign language interpretation via  an  on-site
    48  interpreter, video remote interpreter, or communication access real-time
    49  translation  for individuals who are deaf, hard of hearing or have hear-
    50  ing loss;
    51    (xi) a phone number or email address by which  the  public  can  lodge
    52  complaints  against  the agency for noncompliance, such complaints shall
    53  be kept for a minimum of two years; and
    54    (xii) a process to make public  the  number  of  complaints  during  a
    55  twelve  month  period  against  noncompliance  and  resolution  to  such
    56  complaints.

        A. 7235--A                          3

     1    § 3. Article 9 of the public authorities law is amended  by  adding  a
     2  new title 13 to read as follows:
     3                                  TITLE 13
     4                               LANGUAGE ACCESS
     5  Section 2988. Language access.
     6    § 2988. Language access. 1. For the purposes of this section, "covered
     7  state  authorities"  shall mean state authorities that are determined by
     8  the office of language access to provide direct  public-facing  services
     9  that  have  an  impact on a significant amount of residents of New York.
    10  Covered state authorities shall  translate  vital  documents,  including
    11  essential public documents such as forms and instructions provided to or
    12  completed  by  program  beneficiaries  or  participants. The translation
    13  shall be available in  the  twelve  most  common  non-English  languages
    14  spoken by limited English proficient immigrants in the state who arrived
    15  within  the  last five years according to the American community survey,
    16  as published by the United States census bureau.
    17    2. Covered state authorities  shall  make  translations  available  in
    18  correspondence  with the region of the state such covered state authori-
    19  ties serve, in the three most common  non-English  languages  which  are
    20  spoken  in  that  region  by  limited  English proficient immigrants who
    21  arrived within the last five years according to the  American  community
    22  survey,  as  published by the United States census bureau, which are not
    23  already included among the twelve languages specified in subdivision one
    24  of this section.
    25    3. The list of most common languages shall be  updated  no  less  than
    26  every  two  years  from the effective date of this section, based on the
    27  most recent American community survey, as published by the United States
    28  census bureau.
    29    4. Each covered state authority shall provide interpretation  services
    30  between  the  authority  and  an individual in such individual's primary
    31  language,  including  American  sign  language,  with  respect  to   the
    32  provision  of  services  or  benefits.    This  includes  both in-office
    33  services, and services provided outside of the authority office.
    34    5. Within ninety days of the effective date of this  section,  covered
    35  state  authorities  shall  publish a language access plan which reflects
    36  how the authority will comply  with  the  language  access  requirements
    37  pursuant to this section, and shall set forth, at a minimum:
    38    a. core communication principles with respect to people in the limited
    39  English proficient community;
    40    b.  when  and  by  what means the authority will provide or is already
    41  providing language access services;
    42    c. the titles of all available translated documents and the  languages
    43  into which they have been translated;
    44    d.  the  number  of  public contact positions in the authority and the
    45  number of bilingual employees in public contact positions including  the
    46  languages they speak;
    47    e.  a training plan for employees which includes, at a minimum, annual
    48  training on the language access policies of the  authority  and  how  to
    49  provide language assistance services;
    50    f.  a  plan  of  how the authority intends to notify the population of
    51  offered language assistance services;
    52    g. a language access  coordinator  at  the  authority,  who  shall  be
    53  publicly identified;
    54    h.  accommodations  for  communication  access shall be available upon
    55  request including American sign language interpretation via  an  on-site
    56  interpreter, video remote interpreter, or communication access real-time

        A. 7235--A                          4

     1  translation  for individuals who are deaf, hard of hearing or have hear-
     2  ing loss;
     3    i.  a  phone  number  or  email  address by which the public can lodge
     4  complaints against the agency for noncompliance. Such  complaints  shall
     5  be kept for a minimum of two years; and
     6    j.  make  public the number of complaints during a twelve month period
     7  against noncompliance and resolutions to such complaints.
     8    § 4. The county law is amended by adding a new article 24-A to read as
     9  follows:
    10                                ARTICLE 24-A
    11                               LANGUAGE ACCESS
    12  Section 950. Language access.
    13    § 950. Language access. 1. Every county of New York state shall trans-
    14  late vital documents, including essential public documents such as forms
    15  and instructions provided to or completed by  program  beneficiaries  or
    16  participants.  The  translation  shall  be  available in the twelve most
    17  common non-English languages spoken by limited English proficient  immi-
    18  grants  in the state who arrived within the last five years according to
    19  the American community survey, as published by the United States  census
    20  bureau.
    21    2.  Each  such county shall make such translations available in corre-
    22  spondence  with  the  region,  in  the  three  most  common  non-English
    23  languages  which are spoken in that region by limited English proficient
    24  immigrants who arrived within the last five years according to the Amer-
    25  ican community survey, as published by the United States census  bureau,
    26  which  are  not already included among the twelve languages specified in
    27  subdivision one of this section.
    28    3. Notwithstanding the provisions of subdivision one of this  section,
    29  a  county may add additional languages as necessary to accommodate local
    30  variances from statewide languages, provided such  languages  are  added
    31  after public notice and opportunity to comment.
    32    4.  The  list  of  most common languages shall be updated no less than
    33  every two years from the effective date of this section,  based  on  the
    34  most recent American community survey, as published by the United States
    35  census  bureau, and any additional languages such county shall choose to
    36  select.
    37    5. Each such county shall provide interpretation services between  the
    38  entity  and  an  individual  in  such individual's primary language with
    39  respect to the provision of services or benefits.
    40    6. Within ninety days of the effective date of this section, each such
    41  county shall publish a language access plan which reflects how the coun-
    42  ty will comply with the language access requirements  pursuant  to  this
    43  section, and shall set forth, at a minimum:
    44    (a) core communication principles with respect to people in the limit-
    45  ed English proficient community;
    46    (b)  when  and  by  what  means the county shall provide or is already
    47  providing language access services;
    48    (c) the titles of all available translated documents and the languages
    49  into which they have been translated;
    50    (d) the number of public contact  positions  in  the  county  and  the
    51  number  of bilingual employees in public contact positions including the
    52  languages they speak;
    53    (e) a training plan for employees of the county, which includes, at  a
    54  minimum,  annual  training on the language access policies of the county
    55  and how to provide language assistance services;

        A. 7235--A                          5

     1    (f) a plan of how the county  intends  to  notify  the  population  of
     2  offered language assistance services;
     3    (g) a language access coordinator employed by the county, who shall be
     4  publicly identified;
     5    (h)  accommodations  for  communication access shall be available upon
     6  request including American sign language interpretation via  an  on-site
     7  interpreter, video remote interpreter, or communication access real-time
     8  translation  for individuals who are deaf, hard of hearing or have hear-
     9  ing loss;
    10    (i) a  phone  number  or  email  address by which the public can lodge
    11  complaints against the county for noncompliance. Such complaints   shall
    12  be kept for a minimum of two years; and
    13    (j) make  public the number of complaints during a twelve month period
    14  against noncompliance and resolutions to such complaints.
    15    §  5.  This  act shall take effect one year after it shall have become
    16  law.
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