Bill Text: NY A02101 | 2025-2026 | General Assembly | Introduced


Bill Title: Establishes the green affordable pre-electrification program to assist owners and tenants in residential properties in curing structural and building code defects which render the properties ineligible for climate change adaptation and resiliency project grants.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 14-0)

Status: (Introduced) 2025-01-15 - referred to corporations, authorities and commissions [A02101 Detail]

Download: New_York-2025-A02101-Introduced.html



                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________

                                          2101

                               2025-2026 Regular Sessions

                   IN ASSEMBLY

                                    January 15, 2025
                                       ___________

        Introduced  by  M.  of A. KELLES, BURDICK, ROSENTHAL, DAVILA, LEVENBERG,
          MAMDANI, MITAYNES, RAGA, SHRESTHA, FORREST, TAPIA,  GALLAGHER,  SIMON,
          SCHIAVONI  -- read once and referred to the Committee on Corporations,
          Authorities and Commissions

        AN ACT to amend the public authorities law, in relation to  establishing
          the green affordable pre-electrification program

          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 "green affordable pre-electrification fund" (GAP fund).
     3    §  2.  Legislative  intent.  The  legislature finds that a significant
     4  portion of the state's residential buildings are old and  in  disrepair.
     5  This  limits the suitability and eligibility of low- and moderate-income
     6  households for residential energy efficiency, electrification, weatheri-
     7  zation, installation of insulation, and resiliency programs.  There is a
     8  critical need to identify and remediate environmental hazards like mold,
     9  lead-based paint, and friable  asbestos,  water  intrusion,  indoor  air
    10  pollution, and other hazards before insulation and air sealing to ensure
    11  that  any  renovations  to  the  home  do not create or exacerbate toxic
    12  conditions.  These programs often do not cover the costs associated with
    13  renovations that would make such homes eligible for such programs. Given
    14  the limitation of these programs to  help  make  these  homes  eligible,
    15  there  is  a  critical need to fund such improvements if the state is to
    16  comprehensively reduce emissions from residential buildings and  achieve
    17  our climate goals.  This need was recognized by the State Climate Action
    18  Council  in  their  2022  Final  Scoping  Plan, which stated: "The State
    19  should create a new Retrofit and Electrification Readiness Fund for  LMI
    20  (low-moderate  income)  households,  affordable  housing, rent regulated
    21  housing, public housing,  and  residential  buildings  in  Disadvantaged
    22  Communities  to cover costs of non-energy building improvements that are

         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD04396-01-5

        A. 2101                             2

     1  necessary to install energy measures and  broadband  installation  costs
     2  when funding energy projects."
     3    §  3.  The  public  authorities law is amended by adding a new section
     4  1872-b to read as follows:
     5    § 1872-b. Green affordable  pre-electrification  program.  1.    Defi-
     6  nitions. For the purposes of this section:
     7    (a)  "Residential building" shall mean a residential dwelling which is
     8  owner or tenant occupied.
     9    (b) "Eligible applicant" shall mean an owner or tenant of  a  residen-
    10  tial  building  who would be ineligible for, or who has been denied, any
    11  local, state or federal incentives,  assistance,  subsidies,  grants  or
    12  loans  for  improvements  or projects relating to energy savings, green-
    13  house gas emissions reductions, climate change adaptation and resiliency
    14  due to structural deficiencies, health hazards, or code violations which
    15  make the building or property ineligible or unsuitable for such improve-
    16  ments or projects. The authority may also include as an eligible  appli-
    17  cant; a city, town or village; a housing development fund company incor-
    18  porated  pursuant  to  article eleven of the private housing finance law
    19  which has as one of its primary purposes the improvement of  housing;  a
    20  municipal  housing authority created pursuant to the public housing law;
    21  a public benefit corporation formed to assist particular  municipalities
    22  with their housing, community development or renewal needs; or a county,
    23  provided, however, that the county acts as an administrator of a program
    24  under which projects are constructed, rehabilitated or improved by other
    25  eligible applicants or acts in any other capacity as permitted by law.
    26    (c)  "Financial  awards"  shall  mean  incentives, grants or loans, as
    27  determined appropriate by the authority.
    28    (d) "Eligible rehabilitation projects" shall mean any  work  necessary
    29  to bring a complete structure or unit of a structure, where appropriate,
    30  into  compliance with applicable building codes and regulations or other
    31  improvements, including but not limited to repairs, upgrades, removal or
    32  mitigation of health hazards, such as mold,  lead,  asbestos,  radon  or
    33  tests,  replacement  of  insulation,  air  sealing, ventilation systems,
    34  septic and plumbing systems, roof repairs or replacements, water  intru-
    35  sion mitigation, foundation repair, wall repair, moisture control, elec-
    36  trical  upgrades,  correcting  potential  electrical  hazards,  and safe
    37  repair or removal of fossil fuel systems  which  are  needed  to  enable
    38  participation  in local, state, or federal programs, incentives, grants,
    39  or loans for implementing home  improvements  regarding  climate  change
    40  adaptation, mitigation and resiliency or economic efficiency, including,
    41  but  not limited to, energy efficiency, electrification, weatherization,
    42  or the installation of insulation.  Projects under this section may also
    43  include measures needed to make the dwelling accessible  to  individuals
    44  with disabilities when those measures are combined with other qualifying
    45  measures.    Projects under this section shall not include the installa-
    46  tion, or updating of equipment which uses fossil  fuels  including,  but
    47  not  limited  to,  gasoline,  natural  gas, diesel, home heating oil, or
    48  coal.
    49    2. General and administrative provisions. The authority shall  promul-
    50  gate  rules  and  regulations for the administration of this section, in
    51  consultation with the division of  housing  and  community  renewal,  to
    52  provide  financial and technical assistance for the completion of eligi-
    53  ble rehabilitation projects. Such rules and  regulations  shall  include
    54  provisions  concerning  the  eligibility of grantees for state financial
    55  awards; funding criteria and the funding determination  process;  super-
    56  vision and evaluation of the awardees; and such other matters not incon-

        A. 2101                             3

     1  sistent with the purposes and provisions of this section as the authori-
     2  ty  shall  deem  necessary.    The  rules  and regulations shall require
     3  awardees to conduct, through NYSERDA-approved contractors, an inspection
     4  and  risk  assessment  to  determine  if the home contains any hazardous
     5  condition due to the presence of  lead-based  paint,  mold,  or  friable
     6  asbestos.  The  inspection  and risk assessment may be paid for with the
     7  financial award if the official reports are provided to  the  authority.
     8  The authority may provide technical services and assistance, or contract
     9  to  provide technical services and assistance, to awardees to facilitate
    10  compliance with the provisions and intent  of  this  section  which  may
    11  include, but shall not be limited to, construction skills training, home
    12  inspection,  financial  packaging,  and  engineering  and  architectural
    13  services necessary for the preparation of proposals  for  entering  into
    14  contracts or for the continued operation of projects.
    15    3.  Green rehabilitation contracts. (a) Subject to available appropri-
    16  ations, the authority is hereby authorized to enter into contracts  with
    17  eligible  applicants  to  provide financial awards for the completion of
    18  eligible rehabilitation projects, subject to the terms and conditions of
    19  this section. Any financial award received by a  municipality  hereunder
    20  shall  not  be  deemed  to be municipal funds.   Recipients of financial
    21  awards shall utilize funds provided pursuant to this section  solely  to
    22  cover  or  reduce  the  cost of eligible rehabilitation projects.   Such
    23  funds as may be appropriated  shall  be  equitably  divided  across  the
    24  state's  ten  regions, including western New York, the finger lakes, the
    25  southern tier, central New York, the Mohawk valley, the capital  region,
    26  mid-Hudson  region,  New  York City, Long Island, and the north country.
    27  Awards shall be made with the goal of prioritizing disadvantaged  commu-
    28  nities,  as defined in section 75-0101 of the environmental conservation
    29  law and using criteria developed by the climate  justice  working  group
    30  pursuant  to  section  75-0111 of the environmental conservation law, to
    31  receive no less than forty percent of the overall amount awarded.
    32    (b) The authority shall streamline the application process by incorpo-
    33  rating the green affordable pre-electrification program into the  eligi-
    34  bility  section of existing program applications offered by the authori-
    35  ty.
    36    (c) Applicants may apply to the green  affordable  pre-electrification
    37  program  concurrently  with other existing programs upon the applicant's
    38  provision of information detailing eligible rehabilitation projects that
    39  would cause the applicant to be  denied  funding  under  other  existing
    40  programs.  Notwithstanding  any  section  of  law  to the contrary, such
    41  concurrent application or the provision of  a  financial  award  by  the
    42  authority  shall  not be cause to deny the application for funding under
    43  other existing programs.
    44    (d) Financial awards provided pursuant to this section shall cover one
    45  hundred percent of associated costs for owners or tenants  with  incomes
    46  up  to  eighty percent of the state median income or area median income,
    47  whichever is greater, and seventy-five percent of associated  costs  for
    48  owners  or tenants with incomes between eighty-one and one hundred fifty
    49  percent of the area median income, whichever is greater.   Notwithstand-
    50  ing the foregoing, the authority may cap total financial awards for each
    51  project pursuant to the following schedule:
    52    (i)  For  a residential building with up to four dwelling units: (A) a
    53  maximum award of forty thousand dollars  multiplied  by  the  number  of
    54  units  in the building where owners or tenants have incomes up to eighty
    55  percent of the state or the area median income,  whichever  is  greater;
    56  and  (B)  a  maximum award of thirty-five thousand dollars multiplied by

        A. 2101                             4

     1  the number of units in the building where owners or tenants have incomes
     2  between eighty-one and one hundred fifty percent of  the  state  or  the
     3  area median income, whichever is greater;
     4    (ii)  For  a  residential  building  with more than four but less than
     5  fifty dwelling units:  (A)  a  maximum  award  of  twenty-five  thousand
     6  dollars  multiplied  by the number of units in the building where owners
     7  or tenants have incomes up to eighty percent of the state  or  the  area
     8  median  income,  whichever is greater; and (B) a maximum award of twenty
     9  thousand dollars multiplied by the number of units in the building where
    10  owners or tenants have incomes between eighty-one and one hundred  fifty
    11  percent  of  the  state or the area median income, whichever is greater;
    12  and
    13    (iii) For a residential building with more than fifty dwelling units a
    14  maximum award of fifteen thousand dollars multiplied by  the  number  of
    15  units  in  the  building  where owners or tenants have incomes up to one
    16  hundred fifty percent of the state or the area median income,  whichever
    17  is greater.
    18    (e)  The  authority may cap total financial awards for each project or
    19  each individual improvement within a project to ensure that each  neces-
    20  sary  improvement is made, as long as the cap does not create a singular
    21  obstacle to the project moving forward.
    22    (f) The authority shall provide an  answer  to  the  applicant  within
    23  sixty days after it receives the application, stating whether or not the
    24  applicant  is  eligible for funding, or if more information is needed to
    25  determine eligibility. The authority shall also state  the  cap  amounts
    26  for  each  project  or  each  improvement  within  each  project  in its
    27  response.
    28    (g) The eligible applicant shall be responsible to secure  all  neces-
    29  sary  descriptions  of  expenses  for  eligible  projects and associated
    30  costs.
    31    (h) Eligible rehabilitation projects, if not completed by  a  not-for-
    32  profit  corporation,  may  be  completed  by  a NYSERDA-approved private
    33  contractor headquartered in New York state or within ten  miles  of  the
    34  border of New York state with another state.  The authority shall estab-
    35  lish  cost  control  measures  such  as  per-measure payment formulas to
    36  ensure prices charged by contractors are reasonable.
    37    (i) The authority shall prioritize the contracting of financial awards
    38  to projects located within an area which  is  an  environmental  justice
    39  community,  blighted,  deteriorated or deteriorating, or has a blighting
    40  influence on the surrounding area, or is in danger of becoming a slum or
    41  a blighted area because of the  existence  of  substandard,  unsanitary,
    42  deteriorating  or deteriorated conditions, aged housing stock, or vacant
    43  non-residential property, or other factors indicating  an  inability  or
    44  unwillingness  of the private sector unaided to cause the rehabilitation
    45  of homes for which financial awards under this section are provided.
    46    (j) The authority shall compile a list of eligible contractors  organ-
    47  ized by region to facilitate projects under this program.
    48    (k)  The  authority shall provide applicants with a list of conditions
    49  that must be met prior to entering into  a  contract  pursuant  to  this
    50  section.  Within fifteen working days of receipt by the authority of all
    51  documents in satisfaction of the list, the authority  shall  notify  the
    52  applicant  of  the  sufficiency  or  insufficiency of the documentation.
    53  After satisfaction by the applicant of all conditions  required  by  the
    54  authority, and a determination of eligibility, the authority shall enter
    55  into the contract within forty-five working days of satisfaction of such
    56  conditions provided, however, that sufficient funding is available.

        A. 2101                             5

     1    (l)  In  the  case  of  projects that receive financial awards of over
     2  forty thousand dollars, the authority may establish restrictions on  the
     3  sale of the residence or its subunits to qualified low-income homebuyers
     4  for  a  period  of  at  least  sixty years, but no more than ninety-nine
     5  years,  and  the  authority  may  ensure this restriction by use of deed
     6  restrictions,  community  land  trusts,  or  limited-equity  cooperative
     7  ownership structures.
     8    (m)  For  all  projects  that  receive financial awards, the following
     9  restrictions shall apply and be in force for a period of not  less  than
    10  five  years: (i) the owner of a building assisted with GAP funds may not
    11  raise the rent of any units more than  three  percent  annually  in  the
    12  building  or  the current maximum rent increases set forth in local rent
    13  stabilization law, whichever is lower; and (ii) an owner of  a  building
    14  assisted  with  GAP funds may not evict, harass, or involuntarily remove
    15  any tenant in a weatherized unit, unless the tenant is found  to  be  in
    16  violation of the lease terms agreed upon by the tenant and landlord;
    17    (n)  The  owner  and  the  authority  shall be jointly responsible for
    18  informing tenants in a building about any upcoming project for which GAP
    19  funds have been awarded and which will  impact  them  and  of  informing
    20  tenants  about the building owner agreement with the state made pursuant
    21  to the award of GAP funds for the project. The authority  shall  provide
    22  owners  with  templates  for  a  tenant  synopsis and notification to be
    23  placed in common areas of the building. The notification shall summarize
    24  work that will occur in the building, any specific work to be  performed
    25  in  the  tenant's  unit,  the timing of the work and the owner agreement
    26  with the state. The tenant synopsis shall explain  that  rent  increases
    27  are restricted for five years following the granting of the award of GAP
    28  funds, and that such restrictions bind successive owners if the building
    29  is  sold.  The tenant synopsis shall list the conditions under which the
    30  owner may increase the rent and other rights tenants have, including the
    31  ability to file a claim in court against improper rent increases and the
    32  right to view a copy of the owner agreement for the building  where  the
    33  tenant  resides.  The owner shall be required to attest, in writing that
    34  they have provided a tenant synopsis to each tenant and posted appropri-
    35  ate notices in common areas of the building, and shall provide a list of
    36  tenant addresses to the authority so that the authority can also send  a
    37  copy of the tenant synopsis to all residents of the building.
    38    (o)  In  determining  financial  awards  pursuant to this section, the
    39  authority shall give preference to applications based upon the extent to
    40  which the proposed rehabilitation project will:
    41    (i) serve the lowest income households in disadvantaged communities or
    42  communities in which buildings are  deteriorated  or  deteriorating,  or
    43  have an injurious influence on the surrounding area, or are in danger of
    44  becoming  a  deteriorating area because of the existence of substandard,
    45  unsanitary, aged housing stock or vacant non-residential  properties  or
    46  other  factors  indicating  an inability or unwillingness of the private
    47  sector, unaided, to cause the rehabilitation of  homes,  and  which  are
    48  designed  to continue to be affordable to such households for a substan-
    49  tial period of time;
    50    (ii) leverage private and other public investment so as to reduce  the
    51  amount  of  assistance  appropriated  pursuant  to this section which is
    52  necessary to complete such projects;
    53    (iii) contribute to the rehabilitation of the neighborhood or communi-
    54  ty in which the program is located;
    55    (iv) not directly displace current low- and moderate-income  residents
    56  of such neighborhood or community;

        A. 2101                             6

     1    (v) be undertaken and completed in a timely fashion; and
     2    (vi) utilize innovative, cost-effective design techniques and building
     3  materials  which  enable  the  deconstruction of structures and reuse or
     4  recycling  of   such   deconstructed   materials,   and   which   reduce
     5  construction, rehabilitation, or operating costs.
     6    (p)  No  more  than  five percent of funds under this program shall be
     7  allocated to any single building per year.
     8    (q) The authority shall provide for the review, at periodic  intervals
     9  not  less than annually, of the performance of contracted applicants and
    10  related rehabilitation projects receiving financial awards  pursuant  to
    11  this section. Such review shall, among other things, be for the purposes
    12  of  ascertaining  conformity  to  contractual  provisions, the financial
    13  integrity and efficiency of awardees and the evaluation of their  activ-
    14  ities.  Contracts  entered  into  pursuant to this section may be termi-
    15  nated, funds may be withheld and unspent funds recaptured by the author-
    16  ity upon a finding  of  substantial  nonperformance  or  breach  by  the
    17  awardee of its obligations under its contract.
    18    4. Reporting. No later than September first following the first fiscal
    19  year  commencing  after  the  effective  date  of this section, and each
    20  September first thereafter, the authority shall prepare a report on  the
    21  green  affordable  pre-electrification  program pursuant to this section
    22  and submit such report to the governor, the temporary president  of  the
    23  senate,  and the speaker of the assembly. Such report shall include, but
    24  not be limited to: (a)  the  total  number  of  applicants  to  relevant
    25  programs  for  which eligible applicants under this section would apply,
    26  as defined under paragraph (b) of subdivision one of this  section;  (b)
    27  the  number  of applications pending for that fiscal year; (c) the total
    28  number and value of financial awards disbursed and  the  nonprofits  and
    29  private contractors which received such award; (d) the number of recipi-
    30  ents  of  funds  under this program who entered into and completed other
    31  relevant programs; (e) complaints by tenants and homeowners relating  to
    32  projects  completed  under  this  program; and (f) the identification of
    33  barriers to the utilization of financial awards and  proposed  solutions
    34  for  the  removal of those barriers to effectuate disbursal of financial
    35  awards.
    36    5. Labor standards. The authority shall establish a  quality  control,
    37  corrective action, and inspection process to ensure that work quality is
    38  acceptable  and  durable.  Any  contractor  performing  work  under this
    39  section shall verify that they have entered into a labor peace agreement
    40  with a bona fide labor organization that is actively engaged in  repres-
    41  enting  or  attempting  to  represent  the applicant's employees and the
    42  maintenance of such a labor peace agreement shall be an ongoing material
    43  condition of receiving funds from the authority.   Any  projects  funded
    44  pursuant  to  this  section  shall  be  performed in accordance with the
    45  provisions of articles eight and nine of the labor law.
    46    6. Funding.  Funding  for  the  green  affordable  pre-electrification
    47  program  shall  consist of all revenue received pursuant to an appropri-
    48  ation therefor, and any other monies appropriated,  credited  or  trans-
    49  ferred  from  any other source pursuant to law.  Nothing in this section
    50  shall be deemed to prevent the state from  receiving  grants,  gifts  or
    51  bequests for the purposes of this program.
    52    §  4.  Severability.  If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision,
    53  section or part of this act shall be adjudged by any court of  competent
    54  jurisdiction  to  be invalid, such judgment shall not affect, impair, or
    55  invalidate the remainder thereof, but shall be confined in its operation
    56  to the clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section or part thereof

        A. 2101                             7

     1  directly involved in the controversy in which such judgment  shall  have
     2  been rendered. It is hereby declared to be the intent of the legislature
     3  that  this  act  would have been enacted even if such invalid provisions
     4  had not been included herein.
     5    § 5. This act shall take effect immediately.
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