Bill Text: NY S04574 | 2025-2026 | General Assembly | Introduced


Bill Title: Enacts the "PFAS discharge disclosure act"; requires certain SPDES permit holders to conduct PFAS monitoring and disclose the results from such monitoring.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)

Status: (Introduced) 2025-02-07 - REFERRED TO ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION [S04574 Detail]

Download: New_York-2025-S04574-Introduced.html



                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________

                                          4574

                               2025-2026 Regular Sessions

                    IN SENATE

                                    February 7, 2025
                                       ___________

        Introduced  by  Sen.  MAY  --  read  twice and ordered printed, and when
          printed to be committed to the Committee on Environmental Conservation

        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 in 2020.
    11  New York has also designated twenty-three additional PFAS  chemicals  as
    12  emerging contaminants under section 1112 of the public health law, which
    13  requires statewide drinking water testing and public notification.
    14    3. In December 2022, the Federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
    15  published  guidance  encouraging states to require permitted industries,
    16  Publicly Owned Treatment Works (POTWs), and industrial  sources  sending
    17  waste  to  POTWs  to  monitor  for  and disclose the presence of PFAS in
    18  wastewater discharged into waterways. The treatment technology at  POTWs
    19  is  not designed to remove PFAS from wastewater, meaning any PFAS intro-
    20  duced to the POTW by an industrial source will  pass  through  into  the
    21  waters of the state.
    22    4.  In  2023,  the  NYS Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC)
    23  adopted numeric guidance values limiting the acceptable amounts of  PFOA
    24  and PFOS that can be discharged into waters of the state by state Pollu-
    25  tant Discharge Elimination System (SPDES) permittees.

         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD01682-02-5

        S. 4574                             2

     1    5.  However,  DEC's  permitting guidance has only applied these limits
     2  and PFAS testing requirements to a subset of  facilities,  meaning  that
     3  many  potential  polluters  directly  or indirectly discharging into the
     4  waters of the state,  including  industrial  sources  sending  waste  to
     5  POTWs,  have  not  yet  been required to test for PFAS. DEC's permitting
     6  guidance does not align with EPA's minimum recommendations made in 2022.
     7    6. The lack of information about the suite of PFAS chemicals currently
     8  entering New York's waterways is a barrier to developing regulations  to
     9  protect  people and the environment from the harms of PFAS in our water-
    10  ways.
    11    7. Legislation is necessary to align New York state law with EPA guid-
    12  ance and ensure key facilities currently  discharging  or  proposing  to
    13  discharge into waters in New York disclose the presence of these forever
    14  chemicals to the public.
    15    §  3.  The  environmental  conservation law is amended by adding a new
    16  section 17-0833 to read as follows:
    17  § 17-0833. PFAS discharge disclosure requirement.
    18    1. Definitions. As used in this section,  the  following  terms  shall
    19  have the following meanings:
    20    (a)  "Perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances" or "PFAS" means a
    21  class of fluorinated organic chemicals containing  at  least  one  fully
    22  fluorinated carbon atom.
    23    (b)  "Industrial  discharger" means a facility with or seeking a SPDES
    24  permit to discharge industrial wastewater into the waters of the state.
    25    (c) "Industrial source" means a facility  introducing  or  seeking  to
    26  introduce  industrial  wastewater  to  a POTW for treatment before being
    27  discharged into the waters of the state.
    28    (d) "POTW" means a publicly owned treatment works with  or  seeking  a
    29  SPDES permit to discharge sewage into the waters of the state.
    30    (e) "Industrial wastewater" means liquid industrial waste.
    31    (f)  "PFAS  monitoring"  means  sampling  of  industrial wastewater or
    32  sewage from each outlet to determine the concentration of PFAS present.
    33    2. Every industrial discharger or POTW making an application for a new
    34  SPDES permit shall submit as part of such application the  projected  or
    35  estimated results of PFAS monitoring.
    36    3.  All  new  SPDES  permits issued to industrial dischargers or POTWs
    37  shall require such facilities to conduct PFAS monitoring at least  quar-
    38  terly  for  one  year and submit the first results of such monitoring to
    39  the department within ninety days of the commencement of the  discharge.
    40  If  any  PFAS  are  detected  during the PFAS monitoring, the department
    41  shall modify the SPDES permit of the industrial discharger  or  POTW  to
    42  require quarterly PFAS monitoring for the duration of the permit term.
    43    4. Every industrial discharger or POTW seeking to renew a SPDES permit
    44  shall,  as  part  of  its  renewal  application,  submit PFAS monitoring
    45  results to the department not less than one hundred eighty days prior to
    46  the expiration of the existing SPDES permit. If any  PFAS  are  detected
    47  during  the  PFAS monitoring, the department shall modify the facility's
    48  SPDES permit to require quarterly PFAS monitoring for  the  duration  of
    49  the permit term.
    50    5.  Any industrial discharger or POTW that is lawfully operating under
    51  an expired or administratively renewed SPDES permit  shall  submit  PFAS
    52  monitoring  results to the department within six months of the effective
    53  date of this section and at least once every five years thereafter.
    54    6. A POTW shall require any new industrial source seeking to introduce
    55  industrial wastewater into the  POTW  to  conduct  PFAS  monitoring  and
    56  submit  the  results  of  such monitoring to the POTW and the department

        S. 4574                             3

     1  prior to receiving authorization to introduce industrial  wastewater  to
     2  the POTW.
     3    7. Every industrial source with an existing authorization to introduce
     4  industrial  wastewater to a POTW shall conduct PFAS monitoring quarterly
     5  for one year. Such industrial sources shall submit the results  of  PFAS
     6  monitoring  quarterly  to  the  POTW and the department and shall submit
     7  their first monitoring results within ninety days of the effective  date
     8  of  this  section.  Any  industrial  source  that detects any PFAS shall
     9  continue to conduct quarterly PFAS monitoring and submit such results to
    10  the POTW and the department.
    11    8. All PFAS monitoring shall be conducted using a PFAS testing  method
    12  or  methods  authorized  by the department, including but not limited to
    13  the federal environmental protection agency's method 1633.  The  depart-
    14  ment shall authorize additional methods that detect more PFAS or PFAS at
    15  lower levels as appropriate.
    16    9.  The  department  shall make publicly available on the department's
    17  website all PFAS monitoring  results  submitted  to  the  department  by
    18  industrial  dischargers,  industrial  sources,  and POTWs, including any
    19  results submitted by such facilities  within  six  years  prior  to  the
    20  effective  date  of  this section. The website shall be updated at least
    21  annually with all new monitoring results received.
    22    § 4. This act shall take effect one year after it shall have become  a
    23  law. Effective immediately, the addition, amendment and/or repeal of any
    24  rule  or  regulation necessary for the implementation of this act on its
    25  effective date are authorized to be made and completed on or before such
    26  effective date.
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