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A 6270

Requires DCA to resume Reconstruction, Rehabilitation, Elevation and Mitigation program with remaining funds for unmet recovery and rebuilding needs for Superstorm Sandy-impacted homeowners.

2024-2025 Regular Session

Streamlines and standardizes residential solar and storage permitting to cut delays, reduce fees, and speed installation for homeowners.

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Bill Summary · A 6270

Summary — A6270: Relates to residential solar and energy storage permitting (Print 6270B)

Bill number: A 6270 (Print 6270B)
Title: Relates to residential solar and energy storage permitting
Introduced: March 3, 2025
Current status / recent actions: Referred to Assembly Energy (3/3/2025); amended and recommitted to Energy and printed as 6270A (3/7/2025); further amended and printed as 6270B (6/10/2025).
Primary sponsor: Assemblymember Brian Cunningham (with many cosponsors)
Companion: S5781 (Senate)

Note: The full bill text was not provided. The summary below describes the bill’s stated purpose and the types of provisions such a bill typically contains based on its title and legislative context. For precise statutory changes and operative language, consult the official bill text (Print 6270B).

Purpose / intent

A6270 is intended to reduce permitting-related barriers to residential rooftop solar and behind-the-meter battery (energy storage) installations. The bill aims to streamline and standardize permitting procedures so more homeowners can install distributed clean energy resources quickly, safely, and affordably.

Key provisions likely included (based on title and common policy practice)

  • Standardization of local permit requirements for residential solar photovoltaic (PV) systems and residential energy storage (batteries), including checklists or standard permit application forms.
  • Specified review timelines for permit authorities (e.g., a defined number of business days for administrative review) to avoid lengthy delays.
  • Limits or caps on permitting or inspection fees for residential solar and battery systems to reduce “soft costs.”
  • Authorization for online permit submissions and electronic plan review to speed processing.
  • Baseline safety and code requirements (fire, electrical, interconnection) that installers must meet; possible cross-reference to State building or fire codes.
  • Requirements for municipal or county permit authorities to accept standardized documentation from qualified installers (e.g., standardized diagrams, manufacturer specs, or certifications).
  • Training or certification requirements for inspectors or local officials to ensure consistent reviews.
  • Preemption or constraints on overly restrictive local ordinances that effectively prohibit residential solar or storage (depending on bill language).
  • Administrative or reporting requirements for state energy agencies to track permitting times, fees, and installations.

Who is affected

  • Homeowners seeking rooftop solar or home battery installations (faster, lower-cost permitting).
  • Solar and battery installers and contractors (reduced administrative burden; clearer requirements).
  • Local permitting authorities/municipalities (must adopt standardized processes and meet timelines).
  • Utilities and state energy agencies (coordination on interconnection and reporting).
  • Public safety officials (ensuring compliance with fire/electrical safety standards).

Potential impacts

  • Short-term: Reduced permitting delays and lower soft costs for residential solar and storage installations. Increased administrative alignment across jurisdictions.
  • Medium/long-term: Faster deployment of distributed generation and storage, contributing to greenhouse gas reduction goals and resilience (backup power). Municipal fee revenue impacts if permit fees are limited.
  • Implementation demands: training and system upgrades for permit offices; potential statutory preemption questions if local rules are constrained.

Procedural / next steps

  • Currently in the Assembly Energy Committee; has been amended and reprinted as 6270B (6/10/2025). Companion S5781 exists in the Senate. Further committee consideration, possible floor votes in each house, and reconciliation (if House/Senate versions differ) would follow.

For precise operative language, fee limits, exact timelines, and statutory changes, review the official bill text (Print 6270B) and the companion Senate bill S5781.

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

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