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Committee advances four Senate bills on public-authority disposals, IDA oversight, lobbying limits and confirmations

March 10, 2026 | 2026 Legislature NY, New York


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Committee advances four Senate bills on public-authority disposals, IDA oversight, lobbying limits and confirmations
The Community and Corporations, Authorities and Commissions committee passed four Senate bills at its March 10, 2026 meeting, clearing measures on public-authority land disposals, local oversight of industrial development agencies, restrictions on authorities hiring private lobbyists, and Senate confirmation timing for certain chief executives. The committee’s presiding member announced each result and repeatedly said, "This bill is passed and reported to the floor."

The first measure, S.2556, was read as a bill "to amend the Public Authorities Law in relation to disposals and contracts for disposal of property," and was described in discussion as requiring safeguards when an authority disposes of land above a specified fair-market-value threshold. The committee moved and seconded the bill (a motion was recorded on the floor and seconded by Senator Vazquez) and the chair reported it passed and would be reported to the full Senate.

The committee next advanced S.5563, read as an act to amend the General Municipal Law to allow county controllers to examine projects and actions by industrial development agencies (IDAs) and not-for-profit corporations. The motion to move the bill was recorded as made by Aaron Clare; after a voice vote the chair announced the bill would be forwarded to the floor.

S.7681 was presented as an amendment to the Public Authorities Law prohibiting a state or local authority from employing or designating a private lobbyist to engage in lobbying. Members responded briefly in support and the committee voted the bill passed and reported it to the floor.

The final bill, S.7858, was read as an act concerning confirmation of certain chief executive officers and a repeal of section 2852 of the Public Authorities Law; the measure seeks to restore a requirement that the Senate vote to confirm certain appointments within a statutory time period. The bill was moved and seconded (seconders recorded as Claire and Archer) and the committee chair announced the measure passed and was forwarded to the floor.

Committee director Nia James read bill titles and descriptions on the record and confirmed the quorum before proceedings began. The meeting closed with the chair thanking members, "Thank you all for coming this morning."

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