New York State Senate Bill 1185C (2022) - (Amended)

NY
01/05/2022
01/08/2021
Original
New York State Senate Bill 1185 (2021) (S1185)
Introduced
01/27/2021
Version 2
New York State Senate Bill 1185A (2021) (S1185A)
Amended
03/10/2021
Version 3
New York State Senate Bill 1185B (2021) (S1185B)
Amended
05/19/2021
Version 4
New York State Senate Bill 1185C (2021) (S1185C)
Amended
01/05/2022
Version 5
New York State Senate Bill 1185C (2022) (S1185C-2)
Re-Introduced

Overview

New York State Senate Bill 1185C details the development of a producer responsibility program for packaging, paper products, and single-use plastics. Under this program, producers are required to implement a producer responsibility plan, either individually or as a Producer Responsibility Organization (PRO). The bill was first, amended on January 27th, 2021. The bill was further amended on March 10th, 2021, and May 19th, 2021. This version, S1185C, specifies the inclusion of certain single-use plastic items (i.e. straws, utensils, cups) and excludes a larger variety of paper products (periodical, magazines, and newspapers) as covered materials or products. This version removes the advertiser exemption option introduced in the previous version. The amendments also add a public health specialist and producer to the stakeholder advisory board.

The New York state legislative session is two years long. This bill remained active throughout 2021 and was re-referred to the Environmental Conservation Committee at the start of 2022.

All Packaging Types

Containers and packaging are any part of a package or container, regardless of recyclability or compostability, that includes material used for containment, protection, handling, delivery, and presentation of goods that are sold, offered for sale, or distributed in the state.

Containers and packaging are further defined to include paper, cartons, plastic, glass, metal, or combinations used secondary and tertiary packaging, and intended for short-term or single use.

Paper Products

Paper products are defined as products made from paper and other cellulosic fibers, containers or packaging used to deliver printed matter to a consumer or recipient, and various printed materials (with the exception of periodicals, magazines, newspapers or literary, text, and reference bound books).

Material Specific

Single-use plastics are defined as plastic products, determined by the state, that frequent the residential waste stream or have the effect of severely disrupting recycling processes,. This includes single-use plastic items such as straws, utensils, cups, plates, and plastic bags.

Exclusions

Packaging that is used for long-term protection or storage of a product (over 5 years) is excluded from coverage. Several other exclusions are listed:

  1. Materials or products that could become unsafe or unsanitary to recycle due to their intended use.
  2. Periodicals, magazines, newspapers or literary, text, and reference bound books.
  3. Beverage containers that already qualify for deposit/redemption regulations.
  4. Paint containers covered by existing EPR law.
  5. Medical devices and covered materials and products regulated as a drug, medical device, or dietary supplement.
  6. Animal biologics, including vaccines, bacterins, antisera, diagnostic kits, and other products of biological origin.
  7. Packaging used to contain toxic or hazardous materials.
Household/​Residential

The producer responsibility program must provide curbside recycling that is as convenient as the existing collection plan. The bill includes service to residential units in the definition of curbside recycling.

Government, Institutional, or Academic

The bill extends curbside recycling to include schools, state or local agencies, or institutions which were eligible to be served under a contract with a municipality or a private sector hauler as of the effective date of the legislation.

Brands

The term producer is defined as a hierarchy based on priority of responsibility for covered products. The highest priority is the person or company who uses the covered material or product under their own name or brand and who sells or offers for sale the product that uses covered material in the state.

Licensees

The second tier is the person or company who imports the product that uses covered material as the owner or licensee of a trademark or brand under which the product is sold or distributed in the state

Importers/​Distributors

The third tier is the person or company that offers for sale, sells, or distributes the product that uses the covered material or product in the state.

Small Businesses

Producers are exempt if they generate less than $1 million in annual revenue, less than one ton of covered materials per year in the state, or operates as a single point of retail (not part of a franchise).

Governments

Municipalities or local governments are not included under the definition of producer.

Charities

Registered 501(c)(3) charitable organizations and 501(c)(4) social welfare organizations are excluded.

Retailers

Retailers that are not producers are excluded from program requirements.

Collective Producer Responsibility

Producers may form a Producer Responsibility Organization (PRO), and that organization will assume program responsibilities defined in this bill.

Individual Producer Responsibility Option

Producers may comply individually.

Nonprofit Requirement

PRO(s) must be nonprofit organizations.

Financial and Partial Operational

The producers or PRO are responsible for all financial costs of the program. The PRO will reimburse municipalities that choose to continue providing service, either directly or through providers. If a municipality does not choose to provide service, the PRO is responsible for contracting private service providers to fulfill program requirements.

Operational Costs

The program must cover collection and processing of covered materials and products.

Education and Outreach

The individual producer, or PRO, is required to provide effective outreach, education, and communications to consumers in the state.

Administration

The program must cover administrative costs associated with registering, operating, and updating the program.

Market Development

The program plan must describe how PROs will strategically invest in existing and future reuse and recycling infrastructure and market development in the state, including equipment to improve sorting and reduce contamination, and capital expenditures for new technology, equipment, and facilities.

Infrastructure Improvements

The program plan must describe how PROs will strategically invest in existing and future reuse and recycling infrastructure and market development in the state, including equipment to improve sorting and reduce contamination, and capital expenditures for new technology, equipment, and facilities.

Modulated

The fee structure will be developed in the program plan. Within this structure, fees may vary based on costs associated with collection and processing, as well design features such as ease of recyclability or reusability, and the percentage of post-consumer recycled content used (eco-modulation).

Recycled Content

Fees detailed in the producer responsibility plan will be adjusted based on percentage of post-consumer recycled material content.

Reuse

The bill suggests criteria for eco-modulation, but the structure will be determined in the development of the producer responsibility plan. The bill states that fees can encourage packaging specifically designed to be reusable or refillable and have high reuse or refill rates.

Recyclability

Fees detailed in the producer responsibility plan should disincentivize covered materials that would typically be readily-recyclable but are made less recyclable by design features (labels, inks, adhesives containing heavy metals, other hazardous contaminants).

Rate Targets

The producer responsibility plan must include a proposed minimum recycling rate and minimum recovery rate for covered materials.

Recycled Content Targets

Within five years after a plan is approved, producers will be required to meet the minimum recovery, recycling, and post-consumer recycled material content rate for a covered material or product as approved by the state in the producer responsibility plan.

Material Specific Targets

The plan must include specific content and recycling rates for covered materials, including paper products, glass, metal, and plastics.

Adjustable Targets

The producer responsibility plan must include a plan to adjust the minimum post-consumer content rate and recovery and recycling rate targets on an annual basis, taking into account changes in market conditions, recycling rates, availability of recycled materials, infrastructure capacity, and utilization rates.

Convenience Standards

A producer or PRO must provide for widespread, convenient, and equitable access to collection opportunities. The producer responsibility program must cover the costs of curbside collection or other level of service that is, at minimum, as convenient as curbside collection or as convenient as the previous recycling collection service in the particular jurisdiction. If recycling was not previously provided, the service must be as convenient as the previous refuse collection service.

Infrastructure Improvements

The program plan must describe how PROs will strategically invest in existing and future reuse and recycling infrastructure and market development in the state, including equipment to improve sorting and reduce contamination, and capital expenditures for new technology, equipment, and facilities.

Date of Implementation

The date of program implementation is four years from the effective date of this legislation.

Plan Review and Approval

The state has the authority to review and approve plans submitted by producers or PROs. The state may also require a plan to be reviewed or revised prior to the five year period if the PRO is not on target to meet minimum post-consumer recycled material content rates, minimum recycling rates, or other required components.

Enforcement and Monitoring

If the state has required a producer or PRO to revise their plan or meet additional measures due to failure to meet required rates established under the plan, the state may take corrective action to address the defaults or deficiencies and impose penalties.

Reporting Requirements

Each producer or PRO must submit a report annually. The report must cover operational methods, convenience assessment, status in achieving targets, program costs, weight and type of materials collected, audit results, educational efforts, and infrastructure and market developments.

Penalties

Civil penalties apply to producers who do not comply with the regulation.

Community Outreach

The PRO must consult stakeholders in the development of education and outreach materials, and must develop and provide outreach and education to the diverse ethnic populations in the state.

Product Labeling

The PRO must have a plan to work with producers to label covered products with information to assist consumers in responsibly managing and recycling covered materials.

End-of-Life Instructions

Education, outreach, and communication must cover proper end-of-life management of covered materials and products. The recycling and composting instructions must be consistent statewide (unless exceptions exist), easy to understand, and easily accessible.

Litter Prevention Campaigns

Education, outreach, and communication must cover how to prevent litter of covered materials in the process of collection.

Program Awareness

Consumers must be made aware of the location and availability of curbside and drop-off collection opportunities.

Outreach and education materials must incorporate, at a minimum, electronic, print, web-based, and social media elements that municipalities could utilize at their discretion.

Sole Responsibility of PRO

The producer or PRO shall consult with municipalities on the development of educational materials and may coordinate with municipalities on outreach and communication.

Required Consultation During Plan Development

Producer responsibility plans must be submitted to an advisory board, which will determine if it meets the criteria of the legislation. Plans must include a detailed description of how the producer or PRO consulted with the advisory board in the development of the plan and to what extent the advisory board's input was incorporated.

Stakeholder Advisory Committee

This bill requires the establishment of a producer responsibility advisory board, to receive and review the producer responsibility plans and make recommendations regarding the plan's approval. The advisory board must be composed of an odd number of members, with at least one member from each of the following:

  1. A municipality association or municipal recycling program, including an additional municipal representative from cities with a population of one million or more residents.
  2. A statewide environmental organization.
  3. A representative of environmental justice communities or organizations.
  4. A statewide waste disposal association.
  5. A materials recovery facility located within the state of New York.
  6. A recycling collection provider.
  7. A manufacturer of packaging materials utilizing post-consumer recycled content.
  8. A manufacturer of paper materials utilizing post-consumer recycled content.
  9. A consumer advocate.
  10. A retailer.
  11. A public health specialist.
  12. A producer or PRO (as non-voting members).
Defines "Recyclable"

This bill ties the definition of readily-recyclable to covered materials or products included in the minimum recyclables list. This list will be created by the PRO based on available collection and processing infrastructure and recycling markets for covered materials and products. This list will be updated on an annual basis in response to collection and processing improvements and changes in recycling end markets. Readily-recyclable does not include materials that contain toxic substances.

Defines "Recycling"

Recycling is defined as the reprocessing, by means of a manufacturing process, of a used material into a product, a component incorporated into a product, or a secondary (recycled) raw material. It does not include energy recovery or energy generation by means of combustion, use as a fuel, or landfill disposal of discarded covered materials or products or discarded product component materials or chemical conversion processes.

Excludes Advanced Recycling

Recycling, for the purpose of this bill, does not include chemical conversion processes that have been determined by the state to not qualify as recycling.

Antitrust Protections

This bill extends antitrust protections to members of a PRO for actions taken in accordance with this regulation.

No Point-of-Sale Fees

A point-of-sale fee may not be charged to consumers by a retailer to recoup the costs of meeting producer obligations.

Needs Assessment

This bill requires a statewide needs assessment to be conducted prior to the approval of a producer responsibility plan. The assessment will be funded by the producers or PRO, and conducted by an independent third party. The assessment will evaluate the capacity, costs, gaps, and needs for the following factors:

  1. Current funding needs impacting recycling access and availability.
  2. Existing state statutory provisions and funding sources for recycling, reuse, reduction, and recovery.
  3. The collection and hauling system for recyclable materials in the state.
  4. The processing capacity and infrastructure for recyclable materials in the state and regionally, and necessary capital investments to existing and future reuse and recycling infrastructure.
  5. The market conditions and opportunities for recyclable materials in the state and regionally.
  6. Consumer education needs for recycling, reuse, and reduction of covered materials and products.