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Bill

Bill

S 10200

Relates to energy efficiency improvements and certain alterations to multiple dwellings

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Brian Kavanagh and 1 co-sponsor

Promotes energy efficiency upgrades in multifamily buildings by authorizing necessary alterations and ensuring safety, permitting, and tenant protections during work.

ORDERED TO THIRD READING CAL.1510
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WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · S 10200

Summary of Bill S 10200 (2025-2026) – New York

Purpose and intent

  • Relates to energy efficiency improvements and certain alterations to multiple dwellings.
  • The bill appears aimed at promoting energy efficiency upgrades in multifamily housing and streamlining or authorizing associated alterations, with potential impacts on building operations, tenant environments, and local housing quality standards.

Key provisions and changes (as described by title and context)

  • Encourages or authorizes energy efficiency improvements in multiple dwelling buildings. This could include measures such as insulation, upgraded windows, more efficient heating and cooling systems, energy-efficient lighting, and other retrofits designed to reduce energy consumption and utility costs.
  • Addresses alterations to multiple dwellings that may be necessary to implement energy efficiency projects. This could cover structural or mechanical modifications, electrical upgrades, or other changes required to install or support efficiency measures.
  • Likely includes standards or requirements to ensure safety, building code compliance, and tenant protections during and after improvements. While specifics are not provided in the brief, typical provisions in similar bills cover permitting, inspection, and timelines to complete work.

Affected parties and scope

  • Primary: Owners, managers, and developers of multiple dwelling buildings (apartment buildings, co-ops, or rental properties) in New York.
  • Tenants: Residents of these buildings may experience improved energy efficiency, potential disruptions during construction, and changes in utility bills or comfort levels depending on the scope of work.
  • Local governments and housing agencies: May be involved in permitting, compliance, and oversight related to energy efficiency upgrades.

Procedural and timeline aspects

  • Action history indicates committee activity:
    • June 1, 2026: Committee discharged and committed to Rules; order to third reading (Cal. 1510).
    • May 5, 2026: Referred to Housing, Construction and Community Development.
  • The progression suggests the bill has moved through committee and is advancing toward consideration on the floor, with a potential third reading scheduled.

Potential impacts and considerations

  • Environmental and energy: Could lead to increased energy efficiency in multifamily housing, reducing utility costs for tenants and lowering building greenhouse gas emissions.
  • Housing and housing policy: May intersect with existing New York housing code, rent stabilization rules, and building retrofit financing programs.
  • Construction and operations: May impose requirements for contractor qualifications, timelines, safety standards, and tenant communications during work.
  • Economic: Upfront capital for energy efficiency upgrades could be offset by incentives, subsidies, or financing mechanisms (often explored in related bills), influencing ownership decisions and property values.

Note: The summary reflects the bill’s stated focus and typical features of energy-efficiency/alteration provisions for multifamily housing. For precise language, definitions, specific requirements, exceptions, funding mechanisms, and enforcement details, the bill’s text and the sponsor memo should be consulted once publicly available.

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

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