The New York State Senate passed Calendar number 16 (Assembly number 94‑41), a chapter amendment to the Public Service Law addressing third-party attachments to utility poles and reporting requirements, after extended floor debate and a procedural appeal.
The day's controversial calendar item provoked questions from members about substantive changes made in the chapter amendment. Opponents and some cosponsors said the initial bill required preregistration and stronger enforcement tools; they objected that the chapter amendment turned preregistration into after‑the‑fact reporting and removed a schedule of fines that had been in the original text. Senator Helming appealed the chair’s ruling that had found the amendment non‑germane and argued in favor of the cost‑transparency amendment; the appeal was decided by a show‑of‑hands vote and the ruling of the chair stood.
Sponsor Senator Ryan defended the chapter amendment on the floor, saying the measure preserves a searchable reporting database and creates a mechanism for the public to report unsafe or inadequate work to the Public Service Commission. Ryan said the database “actually says who's going on the pole, when they're going on the pole, what work was performed,” and argued existing statutory fines and PSC enforcement can address violations. Opponents pressed whether the after‑action reporting timeline (which may allow reporting up to a year after installation) and the removal of the draft penalty schedule would reduce public accountability. Senator Rhodes and others voiced concern that telecommunications companies influenced the chapter amendment and that public preregistration and clearer penalties had been “eviscerated.”
Following explanations of vote, the roll was called and the presiding officer announced that the bill was passed on the controversial calendar; dissenting senators were named in the announced tally. The sponsor said the amendment aims to ensure public safety and an ability to correct inadequate work rather than to prevent installations outright.
The bill, as reported on the floor, relies on searchable post‑installation reporting to the Public Service Commission, includes photo‑evidence provisions and provides for corrective action through existing enforcement mechanisms rather than the earlier, itemized penalty schedule that had been in prior drafts.