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S2708A

An act to amend the Public Service Law — 2026-04-20 · Calendar #454

The New York State Senate passed legislation requiring utilities to submit implementation plans for advanced transmission technologies to the Public Service Commission, which may direct their deployment if cost-effective for ratepayers. Senate Print 2708A, sponsored by Sen. May, passed 40-18 on a roll call vote. The bill expands upon a previous version that was vetoed last year, now encompassing a broader range of advanced transmission technologies beyond grid-enhancing technologies. Sen. May argued the measure would reduce peak energy costs and save ratepayers tens of millions annually by enabling utilities to employ battery storage, grid optimization, and other technologies already proven effective in other states like Pennsylvania, where some markets have seen rate reductions up to 40 percent. Sen. Walczyk led opposition, contending the bill creates duplicative and expensive processes by requiring both utility implementation plans and a concurrent NYSERDA study, both funded by ratepayers. He also objected to language requiring utilities to plan for data center growth and argued the PSC's authority to "direct the timely deployment" of technologies makes implementation mandatory rather than voluntary. Sen. Harckham countered that the state's grid operates at only 50 percent efficiency and the bill simply requires studying technologies already in use nationwide. The bill takes effect 90 days after becoming law.
Passed Senate Ayes: 40 · Nays: 18

Debate Summary

The bill requires utilities to submit implementation plans for advanced transmission technologies to the Public Service Commission, which may direct their deployment if consistent with the public interest and cost-effective for ratepayers. Sen. Walczyk raised concerns about duplicative costs with a concurrent NYSERDA study, utility monopolization of battery storage, and requirements to plan for data center growth at ratepayer expense. Sen. May argued the bill addresses grid inefficiency and would save ratepayers tens of millions annually by enabling cheaper energy delivery through technologies like battery storage and grid optimization, citing Pennsylvania's 40 percent rate reductions in some markets.

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
Harckham aye Democrat
May aye Democrat
Skoufis aye Democrat
Ashby nay Republican
Borrello nay Republican
Canzoneri-Fitzpatrick nay Republican
Gallivan nay Republican
Griffo nay Republican
Helming nay Republican
Lanza nay Republican
Martins nay Republican
Mattera nay Republican
Murray nay Republican
O'Mara nay Republican
Oberacker nay Republican
Ortt nay Republican
Rhoads nay Republican
Stec nay Republican
Tedisco nay Republican
Walczyk nay Republican
Weik nay Republican

An act to amend the Transportation Law — 2024-06-04 · Calendar #1685

The New York State Senate passed legislation requiring the Bridge Authority to install means-restricted fencing on its five Hudson River bridges to prevent suicides, with a vote of 60-0. Sen. Harckham, the bill's sponsor, cited a suicide crisis on the bridges, noting over 100 completed suicides since 2007 and 35 fatalities in the past five years alone. The legislation comes after the Bridge Authority, despite previously agreeing to study the proposal, failed to include means-restriction fencing in a recent request for proposals for Bear Mountain Bridge. Harckham emphasized that such suicides are preventable, noting that 80-90 percent of people reconsider suicide attempts if stopped the first time. The bill, which takes effect three years after becoming law, was supported by Sens. Skoufis, Hinchey, and Rolison, among others. The unanimous passage signals strong legislative support for addressing the ongoing suicide crisis at the state-operated bridges.
Passed Senate Ayes: 60 · Nays: unknown

Debate Summary

Sen. Harckham presented legislation requiring the Bridge Authority of New York to install means-restricted fencing on its five Hudson River bridges to prevent suicides. He cited over 100 completed suicides since 2007 and 35 fatalities in the past five years on these bridges. Harckham stated the Bridge Authority had agreed to study the proposal but failed to include means-restriction fencing in a recent RFP for Bear Mountain Bridge, prompting the legislative push to compel action.