WeVote

Bill

Bill

S 561

Relates to notice regarding the rent increase exemption for low income elderly persons and persons with disabilities programs

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Cordell Cleare and 5 co-sponsors

Exempts zero- and near-zero-emission rail infrastructure and related power upgrades from MEPA environmental impact reports, speeding electrification projects.

REFERRED TO AGING
0
WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · S 561

Summary — S.561 (An Act to streamline permitting for rail electrification)

Status: Introduced January 17, 2025; amended (561A); Passed Senate (May 13, 2025); delivered to House and referred to committee(s). Hearing scheduled Sept 16, 2025. Current referral listed to Committee on Aging in the provided record.

Purpose

The bill seeks to accelerate deployment of electrified and low‑emission rail by exempting certain rail electrification projects from the statutory requirement to prepare environmental impact reports under Chapter 30, §62E (Massachusetts’ MEPA process). The sponsor frames the measure as a way to streamline permitting for rail electrification and related power‑infrastructure upgrades.

Key provisions

  • Adds two statutory definitions to Chapter 30, §62:
    • “Near‑zero‑emission rail infrastructure”: rail infrastructure supporting services that combine a conventional engine with a battery charged from the electrical grid.
    • “Zero‑emission rail infrastructure”: rail infrastructure supporting services that produce zero exhaust emissions under all operational modes.
  • Inserts a new Section 62E1/2 in Chapter 30 that:
    • (a) Directs the Executive Office of Environmental Affairs (EOEA) to exempt projects that construct or upgrade zero‑emission or near‑zero‑emission rail vehicle infrastructure from the requirement to produce Environmental Impact Reports (EIRs) under §62E.
    • (b) Similarly exempts projects constructing or upgrading the power infrastructure needed to support zero‑emission or near‑zero‑emission rail vehicles from EIR requirements.
  • The exemptions are framed as overriding §62B and “any other general or special law to the contrary”; EOEA is identified as the authority to effect the exemption.

Who would be affected

  • Transit agencies and project sponsors (e.g., MBTA, MassDOT, regional rail authorities, municipal rail projects) proposing electrification or battery‑hybrid rail projects.
  • Utilities and other entities building/ upgrading electrical power infrastructure to serve rail systems.
  • EOEA, which would implement and apply the exemptions.
  • Local governments, residents, environmental groups and other stakeholders who normally engage in MEPA review and public comment.

Procedural and timeline notes

  • Introduced in the 194th Massachusetts General Court (2025–2026) and amended on third reading (561A).
  • Passed the Senate May 13, 2025; referred to House committees thereafter with hearings scheduled for Sept 16, 2025.
  • The bill’s language gives EOEA the authority to identify and exempt covered projects; timing of exemptions would depend on EOEA rulemaking/administrative action if the bill becomes law.

Potential impacts and considerations

  • Potential benefits: could shorten review timelines, lower pre‑construction costs, and speed electrification projects that reduce greenhouse gas and local air pollutant emissions.
  • Potential concerns: removing EIR requirements reduces formal environmental review and public disclosure/participation afforded by MEPA; cumulative and local impacts (habitat, stormwater, noise, visual impacts, construction traffic) might receive less independent assessment.
  • Implementation details (criteria for exemption, any mitigation or public notice requirements, and how EOEA will exercise authority) are not specified in the bill and would be important for assessing environmental protections and procedural fairness.

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

Sign in to ask a question.