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A3318

An act to amend the General Business Law — 2026-04-21 · Calendar #411

Assembly Bill 3318, an act to amend the General Business Law and sponsored by Assemblymember Dinowitz, was laid aside on the Senate floor at the request of Sen. Lanza.

An act to amend the General Business Law — 2026-04-21 · Calendar #411

The New York State Senate passed a bill requiring arbitration organizations to publicly disclose detailed information about consumer disputes, with a 39-23 vote on Calendar 411 (A3318). The measure, sponsored by Sen. Kavanagh, would require private arbitration organizations handling 50 or more consumer cases annually to report data including parties' identities, case outcomes, arbitrator fees, and disposition information. Kavanagh argued the bill creates necessary transparency and prevents conflicts of interest, citing successful implementation in Washington D.C., Maryland, and California over nearly two decades. However, opponents including Sen. Canzoneri-Fitzpatrick and Sen. Martins argued the bill imposes unnecessary regulatory burdens on financial services companies and arbitration organizations, potentially driving them out of New York State. They contended arbitration is a private dispute resolution process where parties have agreed to confidentiality and that existing oversight by organizations like the American Arbitration Association and FINRA is sufficient. The bill takes effect 180 days after enactment and applies to arbitrations commenced on or after January 1, 2027. Twenty-three senators, primarily Republicans, voted against the measure.
Passed Senate Ayes: 39 · Nays: 23

Debate Summary

The bill would require private arbitration organizations handling 50 or more consumer cases annually to publicly report detailed information about arbitrations, including parties' identities, outcomes, arbitrator fees, and disposition data. Sen. Kavanagh argued the bill creates necessary transparency and prevents conflicts of interest, citing successful implementation in Washington D.C., Maryland, and California. Opponents, including Sen. Canzoneri-Fitzpatrick and Sen. Martins, contended that arbitration is a private dispute resolution process where parties have agreed to confidentiality, that the bill imposes unnecessary regulatory burdens on financial services companies and arbitration organizations, and that existing oversight by organizations like the American Arbitration Association and FINRA is sufficient.

Transcript Mentions

These votes were extracted from the floor transcript by AI. NYS Senate roll calls are read in full, but AI extraction may not capture every senator — so this list is incomplete and skews toward named dissenting votes. Use the Official API Data table above for the complete roll call.

Senator Vote Party
Ashby nay Republican
Borrello nay Republican
Canzoneri-Fitzpatrick nay Republican
Chan nay Republican
Gallivan nay Republican
Griffo nay Republican
Helming nay Republican
Lanza nay Republican
Martinez nay Democrat
Martins nay Republican
Mattera nay Republican
Murray nay Republican
O'Mara nay Republican
Oberacker nay Republican
Ortt nay Republican
Palumbo nay Republican
Rhoads nay Republican
Rolison nay Republican
Stec nay Republican
Tedisco nay Republican
Walczyk nay Republican
Weber nay Republican
Weik nay Republican