Bill Text: NY S08374 | 2021-2022 | General Assembly | Introduced


Bill Title: Requires that a city with a population of one million or more shall establish a residential composting program for all buildings with residential units.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 2-0)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2022-04-26 - REPORTED AND COMMITTED TO FINANCE [S08374 Detail]

Download: New_York-2021-S08374-Introduced.html



                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________

                                          8374

                    IN SENATE

                                    February 17, 2022
                                       ___________

        Introduced  by  Sen. HOYLMAN -- read twice and ordered printed, and when
          printed to be committed to the Committee on Cities 1

        AN ACT to amend the general city law, in relation to  requiring  that  a
          city  with a population of one million or more shall establish a resi-
          dential composting program for all buildings with residential units

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

     1    Section  1.  The  general  city law is amended by adding a new section
     2  20-h to read as follows:
     3    § 20-h. Residential composting. 1. As used in this section:
     4    (a) "Compostable waste" and  "organic  waste"  shall  mean  materials,
     5  including  but  not limited to food scraps, plant trimmings, food-soiled
     6  paper and certified compostable products, that will:
     7    (i) undergo degradation by biological processes during  composting  to
     8  yield  carbon dioxide, water, inorganic compounds, and biomass at a rate
     9  consistent with other known compostable materials; and
    10    (ii) leave no visible, distinguishable or toxic residue, including  no
    11  adverse  impact  on the ability of composts to support plant growth once
    12  the finished compost is placed in soil.
    13    (b) "Latched container" means a solid container that can  be  fastened
    14  such that animals such as rats or pigeons cannot break into the contain-
    15  er.
    16    (c) "Organics recycler" means a facility, permitted by the department,
    17  that  recycles organic waste through use as animal feed or a feed ingre-
    18  dient, rendering, land application, composting, aerobic digestion, anae-
    19  robic digestion, fermentation, or  ethanol  production.  Animal  scraps,
    20  food  soiled paper, and post-consumer food scraps are prohibited for use
    21  as animal feed or as a feed ingredient. The proportion  of  the  product
    22  created  from  organic  waste  by  a  composting  or digestion facility,
    23  including a wastewater treatment plant that operates a digestion facili-
    24  ty, or other treatment system, must be used in a beneficial manner as  a
    25  soil amendment and shall not be disposed of or incinerated.
    26    (d)  "Incinerator"  shall have the same meaning as provided in section
    27  72-0401 of the environmental conservation law.

         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD14544-03-2

        S. 8374                             2

     1    (e) "Landfill" shall have the same  meaning  as  provided  in  section
     2  72-0401 of the environmental conservation law.
     3    (f)  "Transfer  facility"  means  a  solid  waste management facility,
     4  whether owned or operated by a private or public entity,  other  than  a
     5  recyclables  handling  and  recovery  facility,  used oil facility, or a
     6  construction and demolition  debris  processing  facility,  where  solid
     7  waste  is  received  for  the  purpose of subsequent transfer to another
     8  solid waste management  facility  for  processing,  treating,  disposal,
     9  recovery, or further transfer.
    10    2.  Within one year after the effective date of this section, any city
    11  with a population of one million or more shall establish  a  residential
    12  composting program for all buildings with residential units in the city.
    13  Such program shall:
    14    (a) encourage residents to separate compostable waste from garbage and
    15  other recyclables and place the compostable waste in labeled containers;
    16    (b)  consistent with the best waste collection practices to avoid odor
    17  and vermin, establish requirements for composting containers, labels and
    18  liner bags, including a requirement that containers be capable of  being
    19  latched; and
    20    (c) provide collection and education resources for the public, includ-
    21  ing  regular  periodical guidance, training, updates, signage and flyers
    22  for the purposes of teaching  and  retaining  effective  procedures  for
    23  sorting materials for organics and other recycling.
    24    3. Each city subject to the provisions of this section shall:
    25    (a)  arrange  for compostable waste to be transported and/or processed
    26  separately from garbage and recycling;
    27    (b) regulate organics recyclers to ensure that their activities do not
    28  impair water quality or otherwise harm human health and the environment;
    29  and
    30    (c) establish a fine program for building owners and managers  who  do
    31  not comply with the requirements of this section.
    32    4.  Each  city subject to the provisions of this section shall promul-
    33  gate rules requiring, at a minimum, that within six months of  the  date
    34  of establishment of the program:
    35    (a)  residential  building  owners  or managers, including residential
    36  buildings managed by a municipal or state agency, must have one or  more
    37  composting  areas  for  the storage of designated organic waste prior to
    38  collection;
    39    (b) composting areas must be reasonably accessible to residents unless
    40  organic waste is collected directly from individual  dwelling  units  by
    41  building staff;
    42    (c) composting areas must be within the building, unless no reasonably
    43  accessible  area  is available, in which case the composting area can be
    44  in an accessible area behind the property line;
    45    (d) composting areas must be  maintained  by  the  building  owner  or
    46  manager  and designated organic waste materials must be stored so as not
    47  to create a nuisance or sanitary problem;
    48    (e) residential building owners or managers  must  post  and  maintain
    49  labels  and signs created by the municipality with instructions on iden-
    50  tifying and separating compostable waste from garbage  and  recyclables;
    51  and
    52    (f) building owners and managers must ensure containers are latched at
    53  the  time  of storage or set-out and that containers are consistent with
    54  regulations set forth by the municipality.
    55    5. (a) Beginning one year after the establishment of the program,  and
    56  annually thereafter, each local government subject to this section shall

        S. 8374                             3

     1  submit  a  report summarizing the progress of the residential composting
     2  program to the department of environmental conservation, including,  but
     3  not limited to:
     4    (i) the amount of compostable waste collected; and
     5    (ii) the costs associated with such program.
     6    (b)  By  the  year two thousand twenty-three, and annually thereafter,
     7  the department of environmental conservation shall post a report on  its
     8  website  detailing  composting  programs in the state. Such report shall
     9  include an  evaluation  of  the  effectiveness  of  composting  programs
    10  required by this section, and information on costs and collection rates.
    11    6.  (a) Any waste transporter that collects organic waste from a resi-
    12  dential building shall:
    13    (i) deliver organic waste to a transfer  facility  that  will  deliver
    14  such organic waste to an organics recycler; or
    15    (ii) deliver such organic waste directly to an organics recycler.
    16    (b)  Any  waste transporter that transports organic waste from a resi-
    17  dential facility shall take all reasonable precautions  to  not  deliver
    18  the  organic  waste  to  an  incinerator or a landfill nor commingle the
    19  material with any other solid waste unless such commingled waste can  be
    20  processed by an organics recycler.
    21    7.  Every city having a population of one million or more which estab-
    22  lishes and implements an organic waste recovery program pursuant to this
    23  section shall be eligible to apply for  state  assistance  for  a  waste
    24  reduction  project pursuant to  title seven of article fifty-four of the
    25  environmental conservation law.
    26    § 2. Severability. If any clause,  sentence,  paragraph,  subdivision,
    27  section  or part of this act shall be adjudged by any court of competent
    28  jurisdiction  to  be invalid, such judgment shall not affect, impair, or
    29  invalidate the remainder thereof, but shall be confined in its operation
    30  to the clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section or part thereof
    31  directly involved in the controversy in which such judgment  shall  have
    32  been rendered. It is hereby declared to be the intent of the legislature
    33  that  this  act  would have been enacted even if such invalid provisions
    34  had not been included herein.
    35    § 3. This act shall take effect immediately.
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