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Bill

Bill

S 5062

Relates to producer responsibility

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Joe Addabbo and 7 co-sponsors

S 5062 shifts end-of-life product management and funding from local governments to manufacturers, requiring stewardship plans, funding, and compliance across covered product catego

REFERRED TO ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION
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Bill Summary · S 5062

Summary of Senate Bill S 5062 – Relates to producer responsibility

Status and basic details
- Bill number: S 5062
- Title: Relates to producer responsibility
- Status: Referred to Environmental Conservation
- Introduced: February 18, 2025
- Version actions: Both actions on 2025-02-18 show as “REFERRED TO ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION”
- Related Assembly companion: A 6191 (companion, listed twice in record)
- Sponsors:
- Primary: Monica Martinez
- Cosponsors: Luis R. Sepúlveda, Christopher Ryan, Jessica Scarcella-Spanton, Dean Murray, James Skoufis, Leroy Comrie, Joseph P. Addabbo Jr.

What the bill seeks to do (purpose and intent)
- The bill is categorized under producer responsibility, a policy approach that shifts end-of-life product management and funding from local governments to the manufacturers or brand owners that place products on the market.
- While the exact statutory text is not provided here, bills of this type typically aim to reduce waste, increase recycling and proper disposal, and create formal systems for funding and managing take-back and recycling programs for specific product categories.

Key provisions we would expect (based on standard producer responsibility frameworks)
Note: The following outlines are typical elements found in producer responsibility legislation and are not confirmed specifics of S 5062 without the bill text.
- Scope and covered products: Identification of product categories (e.g., packaging, electronics, batteries, tires, cosmetics, or other consumer goods) subject to stewardship requirements.
- Stewardship plans: Requirements for manufacturers to develop and submit approved collection, recycling, and take-back plans to a state regulatory agency (likely the Department of Environmental Conservation or equivalent), including performance targets.
- Funding and cost recovery: Mechanisms for producers to fund end-of-life management, possibly through fees, reimbursements, or fund contributions, with oversight to ensure fairness and avoid undue burdens on consumers.
- Performance targets and reporting: Quantifiable recycling/collection goals, periodic reporting, and third-party audits to verify compliance.
- Oversight and enforcement: Regulatory authority, penalties for non-compliance, and processes for program adjustments or rulemakings.
- Consumer protections and transparency: Clear consumer information about responsible product disposal and accessible recycling options.
- Transition and timelines: Phase-in schedules for implementing programs, with interim milestones and potential exemptions or transitional provisions.

Who would be affected
- Primary: Manufacturers, brand owners, and importers of covered products who would be responsible for funding and administrating stewardship programs.
- Secondary: Retailers (often required to support take-back programs), municipalities (potentially relieved of certain take-back obligations), and consumers (changes in product disposal options and possibly costs embedded in product prices).
- Regulatory bodies: State agencies responsible for approving plans, monitoring compliance, and enforcing requirements.

Procedural and timeline considerations
- Current status indicates the bill has been referred to the Environmental Conservation committee, with no further publicized action or enacted provisions available in this summary.
- If enacted, the bill would likely include specific effective dates, phased implementation, and regular reporting periods.

Notes and next steps
- The exact text of S 5062 is not provided here. For a precise, provision-by-provision understanding, the bill language and fiscal impact statements should be reviewed.
- A companion bill exists in the Assembly (A 6191); tracking both S 5062 and A 6191 will provide fuller context on the policy design and anticipated timelines.

Would you like me to retrieve the current bill text or any committee memos to provide a more detailed, provision-specific summary?

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

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