Bill Text: NY S00227 | 2023-2024 | General Assembly | Amended


Bill Title: Enacts the "PFAS discharge disclosure act"; requires certain SPDES permit holders to disclose the measurement of PFAS chemicals found in any discharges from outfalls.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 6-0)

Status: (Engrossed - Dead) 2024-01-03 - REFERRED TO ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION [S00227 Detail]

Download: New_York-2023-S00227-Amended.html



                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________

                                         227--B
            Cal. No. 608

                               2023-2024 Regular Sessions

                    IN SENATE

                                       (Prefiled)

                                     January 4, 2023
                                       ___________

        Introduced by Sens. MAY, COMRIE, HOYLMAN-SIGAL -- 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  --  reported
          favorably  from  said  committee,  ordered to first and second report,
          ordered to a third reading, amended and ordered  reprinted,  retaining
          its place in the order of third reading

        AN  ACT  to  amend  the  environmental  conservation law, in relation to
          enacting the "PFAS discharge disclosure act"

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

     1    Section  1.  Short  title. This act shall be known and may be cited as
     2  the "PFAS discharge disclosure act".
     3    § 2. Legislative intent.  The  legislature  finds  and  declares   the
     4  following:
     5    1.  PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances) are a class of persist-
     6  ent,  bioaccumulative,  and  toxic  chemicals  which  have  contaminated
     7  surface waters and groundwater in New York and across the country.
     8    2. New York has led the nation by limiting two PFAS--perfluorooctanoic
     9  acid  (PFOA) and perfluorooctane sulfonic acid (PFOS)--in drinking water
    10  by setting a maximum contaminant level for these two chemicals. However,
    11  there are currently no enforceable limits  on  PFAS  discharges  to  our
    12  waters. Further, those proposing to discharge pollutants into New York's
    13  waterways  are  not  even  required  to  disclose whether their proposed
    14  discharges contain PFAS.  Publicly owned treatment works' (POTW)  sewage
    15  treatment  technology,  for example, is not designed to remove PFAS from
    16  wastewater, meaning any PFAS introduced into a  POTW  by  an  industrial
    17  source will pass through into the surface water.
    18    3. The lack of information about the suite of PFAS chemicals currently
    19  entering  New York's waterways is a barrier to developing regulations to

         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD00616-08-3

        S. 227--B                           2

     1  protect people and the environment from the harms of PFAS in our  water-
     2  ways.
     3    4.  In  December  2022,  the  US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
     4  published guidance encouraging states to require facilities  discharging
     5  into  New York's waters, as well as industrial sources discharging waste
     6  into POTWs, to monitor for and disclose the presence of  PFAS.    Legis-
     7  lation  is  necessary  to align New York state law with EPA guidance and
     8  ensure key facilities currently discharging or  proposing  to  discharge
     9  into waters in New York disclose and monitor their discharges for PFAS.
    10    §  3.  The  environmental  conservation law is amended by adding a new
    11  section 17-0833 to read as follows:
    12  § 17-0833. PFAS discharge disclosure requirement.
    13    1. Definitions. As used in this section,  the  following  terms  shall
    14  have the following meanings:
    15    (a)  "Perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances" or "PFAS" means a
    16  class of fluorinated organic chemicals containing  at  least  one  fully
    17  fluorinated carbon atom.
    18    (b) "Covered permit" means all SPDES permits except SPDES permits:
    19    (i)  issued  with  respect to discharges by livestock or poultry oper-
    20  ations including concentrated animal feeding operations  and  all  other
    21  confined  animal  feeding  operations, aquatic animal production facili-
    22  ties, aquaculture projects, and municipal separate storm sewer  systems;
    23  and
    24    (ii)  general permits, provided, however, that such term shall include
    25  SPDES multi-sector general permits for stormwater discharges  associated
    26  with industrial activity.
    27    (c) "Covered permittee" means the holder of a covered permit.
    28    (d) "Discharge" means the addition of any pollutant into the waters of
    29  the state.
    30    (e) "Industrial source" means a source of industrial wastewater into a
    31  POTW.
    32    (f)  "Industrial  wastewater"  means  a  type  of  industrial waste as
    33  defined by section 17-0105 of this article.
    34    (g) "Outfall" means outlet as defined by section 17-0105 of this arti-
    35  cle.
    36    (h) "POTW" means any publicly owned or operated treatment works.
    37    (i) "Publicly owned or operated" means owned or operated by the state,
    38  a municipality, or other public body (created by or  pursuant  to  state
    39  law)  having  jurisdiction  over  disposal of sewage, industrial wastes,
    40  storm water, or other wastes, including a sewer district, flood  control
    41  district  or drainage district, or similar entity, or an Indian tribe or
    42  an authorized Indian tribal organization, or a designated  and  approved
    43  management agency under section two hundred eight of the Act, as defined
    44  by section 17-0801 of this title, that discharges into waters.
    45    2.  All  covered  permittees  shall monitor their discharges from each
    46  outfall for PFAS quarterly for one year. Covered permittees shall submit
    47  the results of such monitoring  quarterly  to  the  department.  Covered
    48  permittees  shall  submit  their  first monitoring results within thirty
    49  days of the effective date of this section.
    50    3. The department shall require  that  every  application  for  a  new
    51  covered  permit  shall include a statement indicating whether the appli-
    52  cant knows or has reason to believe that any PFAS  are  discharged  from
    53  each outfall.
    54    4. All new covered permits shall require covered permittees to monitor
    55  discharges  from  each  outfall  for PFAS and submit the results of such
    56  monitoring within ninety days of the commencement of the discharge.

        S. 227--B                           3

     1    5. The department shall require that every covered  permittee  seeking
     2  to  renew a covered permit shall, as part of its complete renewal appli-
     3  cation, monitor discharges from each outfall for  PFAS  and  submit  the
     4  results  of  such monitoring to the department not less than one hundred
     5  eighty  days  prior  to  the  expiration of the existing permit. Covered
     6  permittees seeking to renew a covered permit  within  one  year  of  the
     7  effective  date  of this section may use monitoring conducted in compli-
     8  ance with subdivision two of this section to comply  with  the  require-
     9  ments of this subdivision.
    10    6.  If a covered permittee detects PFAS of any amount in its discharge
    11  from any outfall, such covered permittee shall continue to monitor  PFAS
    12  from  such outfall on a quarterly basis, for the duration of the covered
    13  permit, including any period after the expiration of the covered  permit
    14  term  when the covered permittee is authorized to discharge. The covered
    15  permittee shall submit the results of such monitoring quarterly  to  the
    16  department.    The department may reduce required monitoring to annually
    17  for any covered permittee who detects PFAS within the  initial  year  of
    18  testing  but  subsequently  submits at least two consecutive quarters of
    19  test results with all analyzed PFAS at non-detect.
    20    7. The department shall require any new industrial source  seeking  to
    21  introduce  pollutants  into  any POTW to monitor for PFAS and submit the
    22  results of such monitoring to the  POTW  and  the  department  prior  to
    23  receiving initial approval to introduce pollutants to the POTW.
    24    8.  Every industrial source introducing pollutants into any POTW shall
    25  monitor for PFAS quarterly for one year. Industrial sources shall submit
    26  the results of such monitoring quarterly to the POTW and the department.
    27  Industrial sources shall submit their first  monitoring  results  within
    28  thirty days of the effective date of this section.
    29    9.  If an industrial source introducing pollutants into a POTW detects
    30  PFAS of any amount, such industrial source shall, on a quarterly  basis,
    31  monitor  for PFAS and submit the results of such monitoring quarterly to
    32  the POTW and the department.  The department may reduce  required  moni-
    33  toring to annually for any industrial source who detects PFAS within the
    34  initial  year  of  testing but subsequently submits at least two consec-
    35  utive quarters of test results with all analyzed PFAS at non-detect.
    36    10. All PFAS monitoring shall be conducted using a PFAS testing method
    37  or methods authorized by the department. The department shall immediate-
    38  ly authorize the use of EPA method 1633. The department shall  authorize
    39  additional  methods  that  detect more PFAS as they become available and
    40  shall require that the method that detects the largest  number  of  PFAS
    41  shall be used.
    42    11.  The  department shall make publicly available on the department's
    43  website all PFAS monitoring results submitted  to  the  department.  The
    44  website  shall  be  updated  at  least quarterly with all new monitoring
    45  results received.
    46    § 4. This act shall take effect one year after it shall have become  a
    47  law. Effective immediately, the addition, amendment and/or repeal of any
    48  rule  or  regulation necessary for the implementation of this act on its
    49  effective date are authorized to be made and completed on or before such
    50  effective date.
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