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S 537

Authorizes the county of Nassau assessor to accept an application for a real property tax exemption from Gurdwara Guru Tegh Bahadur Sahib, Inc.

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Jack Martins

Creates a permanent MA emergency stockpile of PPE, meds, and tests; builds planning, modeling, and distribution to ensure timely access for hospitals, schools, and the public.

REFERRED TO REAL PROPERTY TAXATION
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Bill Summary · S 537

Summary — S.537: "An Act to strengthen the Commonwealth's strategic preparedness stockpiles"

Note on metadata: the bill text submitted is a Massachusetts state-law amendment (inserting Section 5T into Chapter 111 of the Massachusetts General Laws) authored/presented by State Senator William J. Driscoll, Jr. Some provided metadata (a different short title about Nassau assessor and a list of U.S. Senate cosponsors) appears inconsistent with the bill text. This summary focuses on the bill text establishing and governing strategic emergency stockpiles for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

Purpose / Intent

To create and maintain a permanent, state-managed stockpile of strategic emergency readiness supplies (e.g., PPE, medications, testing kits) and to establish planning, modeling, distribution, reporting, and funding practices that ensure timely access to those supplies during public‑health emergencies at local, state, regional, or national levels.

Key provisions

  • Creates a new Section 5T in Chapter 111 directing the Massachusetts Department of Public Health (DPH), in collaboration with MEMA and other stakeholders, to establish and maintain a permanent emergency stockpile of strategic supplies.
  • Requires demand planning and stockpile modeling for three distinct stockpiles:
    1. Healthcare settings (hospitals, primary care, outpatient centers, ERs, etc.)
    2. Education settings (pre-K, K–12, technical schools, colleges/universities — public and private)
    3. General public use during major disasters
  • Specifies modeling/report requirements to include:
    • Recommended item types for each stockpile
    • Anticipated demand across various public‑health emergency scenarios
    • Recommended quantities per item
    • Estimated procurement, management, and maintenance costs
    • Supply rotation strategies to minimize expirations
    • Access mechanisms for municipalities and schools during emergencies
    • Distribution planning (emergency dispensing sites, mobile distribution)
    • Cost‑reduction strategies (e.g., vendor‑managed inventory)
  • Reporting and review schedule:
    • DPH must file a findings report within 1 year of enactment to legislative leadership and relevant committee chairs/clerks.
    • Biennial reassessment (every 2 years) with adjustments or reaffirmation of models.
    • Quarterly reports to the Speaker of the House, Senate President, Joint Committee on Ways & Means, Joint Committee on Public Health, and Joint Committee on COVID‑19 and Emergency Preparedness & Management detailing current stockpile supplies and funds on hand.
  • Fiscal approach:
    • DPH must seek to maximize available federal and state funding to procure and maintain the stockpiles.

Who is affected

  • State agencies: Department of Public Health (lead), Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency (MEMA), Executive Office of Technology Services & Security, Department of Elementary & Secondary Education, and other identified stakeholders.
  • Institutions: hospitals, clinics, schools (public and private), colleges/universities.
  • Local governments and municipalities: access to stockpiles and distribution mechanisms during emergencies.
  • General public: intended beneficiary of the public-facing stockpile.
  • Vendors/suppliers: potential contracting for procurement, inventory management, and distribution.

Procedural / timeline aspects

  • Reporting: initial report within 1 year; ongoing quarterly inventory/funding reports; biennial model reassessments.
  • Funding: the statute does not appropriate funds; implementation will likely require budget appropriations or federal grants. DPH is directed to pursue federal/state funding sources.

Potential impacts and considerations

  • Improves state readiness and ability to rapidly supply PPE, meds, and testing during crises.
  • May reduce shortages and inefficiencies by pre‑positioning supplies and planning distribution.
  • Requires ongoing funding, inventory management, warehousing, and logistics capacity.
  • Successful implementation depends on interagency coordination and sustainable financing; cost estimates must be developed as part of required modeling.

If you want, I can: (1) extract the bill’s exact report deadlines and recipients into a short checklist, (2) prepare a one‑page fiscal impact checklist (questions DPH will need to answer), or (3) draft suggested committee questions for legislative hearings.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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