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Committee debates soil-testing requirement for solar projects amid farm liability concerns

March 14, 2026 | Environment, House of Representatives, Committees, Legislative, Connecticut


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Committee debates soil-testing requirement for solar projects amid farm liability concerns
Senate Bill 316, described as "an act concerning the testing of soils at certain solar facilities" (LCO 3180), was introduced and discussed in the Environment Committee.

Representative Mashinsky said she had not seen evidence of a need for specific soil testing and warned the measure "may be designed to slow down new solar facilities." She said she intended to vote no and asked that the bill not be placed on consent.

Representative Bumgarner, speaking from an agriculture perspective, urged caution about assigning new liability to farmers. "Hope we can maybe... allay some of those concerns from the farming community to ensure that liability isn't placed on them," he said.

Representative Callahan explained the sponsors’ intent: the bill would provide a baseline so manufacturers or installers would test to ensure developments do not cause contamination, and the committee could structure the requirement so costs would fall to installers rather than landowners. "The intent of the bill is so the manufacturers or the installers of these solar fields... we have a baseline... to make sure there's no soil contamination," he said.

The clerk called the roll for SB316; multiple members were recorded voting yes and a few voting no on the record. Chair Parker reminded the committee that votes would be held open until the 11:00 a.m. public hearing, so the transcript does not contain a final certified tally or final disposition.

Next steps: Sponsors and committee staff said they expect to continue discussion with agricultural stakeholders to address liability and implementation details before the bill advances further.

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