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Bill

S 563

Enacts the Good Jobs Guarantee Act for workforce training

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Joe Addabbo and 8 co-sponsors

Massachusetts S.563 creates a capital-outlay program to rehabilitate and expand state water infrastructure, fund MWRA capacity, and support PFAS cleanup and housing-focused projects.

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Bill Summary · S 563

Summary — Bill S 563 (materials provided contain multiple, inconsistent texts)

Note up front: the materials you provided under “S 563” contain fragments of multiple different bills and jurisdictions (a New Mexico / federal-sounding “Ohkay Owingeh Rio Chama” settlement, a Massachusetts Senate capital/water-infrastructure appropriation (Senate No. 563, Cronin), and a New Jersey criminal‑code amendment on desecration). The bill title you gave (“Enacts the Good Jobs Guarantee Act for workforce training”) does not match any of the texts supplied. Below I summarize the substantive provisions present in the supplied documents and flag the inconsistencies so you can confirm which bill you want a final, authoritative summary for.

1) Massachusetts: “An Act relative to meeting the Commonwealth’s water infrastructure future” (Senate No. 563 — Cronin)

Purpose
- Establish a capital outlay program to rehabilitate, modernize and expand state-aided water infrastructure across Massachusetts.

Key provisions and funding (line-item highlights)
- $78,500,000 — Commonwealth Sewer Rate Relief Fund (Chapter 29, §2Z).
- $138,000,000 — Massachusetts Clean Water Trust; prioritized for contract assistance on debt service to improve affordability; unused debt‑service funds may be used for principal forgiveness or to reopen solicitations.
- $2,000,000,000 — Expansion of Massachusetts Water Resources Authority (MWRA) capacity to serve new cities/towns; MWRA must prioritize expansions that increase housing capacity and address PFAS contamination. Annual report due by March 14 with allocations, outreach, timeline and barriers.
- $375,000,000 — HousingWorks infrastructure program: grants for sewer/septic/water projects that advance housing; set-asides: ≥$100M for sewer/water supporting housing; ≥$50M for municipalities compliant with multi‑family zoning under G.L. ch.40A §3A and showing additional housing effort; ≥$50M for towns that adopted/ch.44B and spend ≥10% of those revenues on community housing.
- $10,000,000 — 1:1 matching program (G.L. ch.21 §31A) prioritizing communities seeking regional water authority service due to water quality, stressed basin, or development constraints.
- $13,800,000 — Regional Water Entity Reimbursement Fund (prioritize collection system rehabilitation).
- $200,000,000 — DEP grant program for replacement/upgrade of water infrastructure (prioritized as grants).
- $200,000 — Biohub research into biosolids and PFAS binding/transport/management.
- $10,000,000 — DEP-administered grants for adaptation planning to protect wastewater infrastructure from storm/flood damage (for NPDES compliance).

Other
- Section 3 (Interbasin transfer authority) is truncated in the supplied text.
- Emphasis throughout on affordability, PFAS remediation, housing support, and resilience.

Potential impacts
- Significant state investment (multi‑hundreds of millions and a $2B MWRA item) aimed at water quality, regionalization, housing-enabled infrastructure, and climate resilience. Targets municipalities, regional authorities, publicly owned treatment works, and communities facing PFAS or capacity constraints.

2) Ohkay Owingeh Rio Chama Water Rights Settlement Act of 2025 (fragment)

What’s included
- Act short title and table of contents listing 12 sections: short title; purposes; definitions; ratification of agreement; pueblo water rights; settlement trust fund; funding; enforceability date; waivers/releases; satisfaction of claims; miscellaneous; antideficiency.
What’s missing
- The substantive settlement text and funding details are not included in the fragment provided.
Implication
- The Act appears intended to ratify and implement a water‑rights settlement (likely tribal/federal/state) for Ohkay Owingeh and the Rio Chama, but no specifics available in supplied excerpt.

3) New Jersey: Amendment to desecration statute (N.J.S.2C:33‑9) (short draft)

Purpose
- Make purposeful desecration of a military monument a third‑degree crime.
Key points
- “Desecrate” defined as defacing, damaging or polluting.
- “Military monument” defined as monuments erected to honor current/former armed forces members or commemorate military actions/battles.
- Effective immediately (per text).
Scope
- Criminalizes conduct against military monuments at a higher level than general venerated objects (which remain a disorderly persons offense).

Legislative actions / sponsors — inconsistent

  • The actions list contains references to U.S. Senate committees (Indian Affairs), Massachusetts committee hearings (Environment & Natural Resources), and other referrals — indicating multiple bills were conflated.
  • Sponsor list names U.S. senators and state legislators (e.g., Martin Heinrich, Michael Gianaris, John Cronin) that do not all align to a single jurisdictional bill.
  • Related bill numbers listed (HR 1323, SD 1195, A 5491, etc.) suggest cross-filed or companion measures, but it is not possible to map them confidently to one coherent bill from the mixed materials.

Recommendation / Next steps

Please confirm which specific bill you want summarized:
- S 563 (Massachusetts Senate No. 563 by John Cronin — water infrastructure capital/appropriations), or
- S 563 titled “Good Jobs Guarantee Act” (provide its full text), or
- The Ohkay Owingeh Rio Chama settlement bill (provide complete text), or
- The New Jersey amendment to N.J.S.2C:33‑9.

If you provide the intended bill text or specify the jurisdiction and sponsor, I will produce a single, authoritative summary focused only on that bill.

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

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