WeVote

Bill

Bill

S 558

Prohibits any person from transporting or selling a nonambulatory animal unless such animal is humanely euthanized

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Joe Addabbo and 4 co-sponsors

A five-year pilot by EOEEA tests, standardizes, and streamlines nature-based climate solutions for adaptation, with annual reporting on effectiveness and permitting changes.

REFERRED TO AGRICULTURE
0
WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · S 558

Summary — S.558 (2025): Pilot Program for Nature‑Based Solutions to Climate Change

Note on source materials: the bill text supplied is a Massachusetts Senate bill (filed by Sen. Brendan P. Crighton) establishing a pilot program for nature‑based climate solutions. Some of the surrounding metadata (title about nonambulatory animals, lists of federal senators as cosponsors, committee actions) appears inconsistent with that text; this summary is based on the bill language included in the docket (An Act establishing a pilot program for nature‑based solutions to climate change).

Purpose

Create a 5‑year, state‑level pilot program administered by the Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs (EOEEA) to test, standardize, and demonstrate nature‑based solutions (per chapter 21N, §1) for climate change adaptation and resilience.

Key provisions

  • Establishment and scope
    • EOEEA shall create the pilot program for research activities and demonstration projects involving nature‑based solutions.
  • Standards and categories
    • The program must define categories of nature‑based solutions and develop standards for their use.
  • Permitting and review
    • The program shall coordinate, streamline, and expedite permitting and review processes for approved activities and projects.
    • The Secretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs and permitting agency commissioners/directors may modify specific performance standards for nature‑based solutions on a project‑by‑project basis.
  • Prioritization
    • Priority given to projects that: advance scientific knowledge, provide conservation benefits, and minimize impacts to existing wetlands.
  • Duration and reporting
    • Pilot begins on the act’s effective date and runs for 5 years.
    • EOEEA must file an initial report within 1 year of the act’s effective date and then annually with the Senate and House clerks and the Joint Committee on Environment and Natural Resources. Each report must:
    • Detail categories of nature‑based solutions;
    • Analyze permit approval times for each approved research/demo project;
    • Specify any modified performance standards applied;
    • Provide data on the effectiveness of each approved activity/project.

Who is affected

  • State government: EOEEA, permitting agencies and their commissioners/directors.
  • Project proponents: universities, municipal governments, non‑profits, private developers, and researchers proposing nature‑based solutions projects.
  • Resource protection interests: wetland regulators, conservation organizations, and communities reliant on wetland/ecosystem services.
  • General public: residents in coastal and flood‑prone areas who may benefit from increased resiliency measures.

Potential impacts and considerations

  • Benefits: could accelerate deployment of proven nature‑based approaches, create consistent standards, reduce permitting delays, and generate empirical data on effectiveness and environmental impacts.
  • Risks/concerns: allowing modifications to performance standards may raise oversight and wetland protection concerns; careful monitoring and transparency in annual reports will be important.
  • Next steps to watch: EOEEA rulemaking or guidance defining categories/standards, project approvals under the pilot, and the content/timing of the first annual report (within 1 year of enactment).

Timeline / Procedural notes

  • Pilot effective immediately on enactment; 5‑year term.
  • First required EOEEA report due within one year; then annually thereafter.
  • Secretary and permitting agency heads may apply modified performance standards as projects are approved.

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

Sign in to ask a question.