SENATE ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY COMMITTEE

 

STATEMENT TO

 

SENATE, No. 3324

 

with committee amendments

 

STATE OF NEW JERSEY

 

DATED:  MARCH 4, 2021

 

      The Senate Environment and Energy Committee favorably reports Senate Bill No. 3324 with committee amendments.

      This bill would set specific, up-to-date efficiency standards for selected residential and commercial products. The energy and water efficiency standards are based on various sources including ENERGY STAR and WaterSense specifications and standards developed and adopted by the California Energy Commission.

      The bill would prohibit the sale, offer for sale, or lease of a new air purifier, cold temperature fluorescent lamp, commercial dishwasher, commercial fryer, commercial hot-food holding cabinet, commercial oven, commercial steam cooker, computer, computer monitor, electrical vehicle service equipment, high color rendering index fluorescent lamp, impact-resistant fluorescent lamp, faucet, showerhead, toilet, urinal, portable electric spa, residential ventilating fan, state-regulated general service lamp; spray sprinkler body, urinal, or water cooler in the State unless the new product meets or exceeds the efficiency standards adopted in rules and regulations by the Commissioner of Community Affairs (commissioner).

      The commissioner may require an updated test method when a new test procedure becomes available for a product regulated under the bill.  The commissioner is to identify each product regulated under the bill and is required to allow the use of existing marks, labels, or tags, to denote compliance with the efficiency requirements of this bill, pursuant to rules and regulations adopted pursuant to the "Administrative Procedure Act."

      A manufacturer of a product regulated under the bill is to annually test samples of its products in accordance with the test procedures adopted under the bill, annually certify to the commissioner that the product is in compliance with the provisions of the bill, and identify that each product offered for sale in the State is in compliance with the provisions of the bill by means of a mark, label, or tag on the product and packaging at the time of sale.  With prior notice, the commissioner may periodically inspect distributors or retailers of new products regulated under the bill in order to determine compliance with the provisions of the bill.

      The commissioner would be required to investigate complaints received concerning violations of this bill and to report the results of such investigations to the Attorney General. A manufacturer, distributor, retailer, or person who violates the provisions of this bill, is to be issued a warning by the commissioner for a first violation and is to be subject to a civil penalty of up to $100 for each subsequent offense. Third and subsequent violations are subject to a civil penalty of not more than $500 for each offense. Each violation is to constitute a separate offense, and each day that such violation continues is to constitute a separate offense.

      If a product regulated under the bill is found not to be in compliance with the minimum efficiency standards established under this bill, the commissioner is required to issue a violation to the manufacturer of such product which would subject the manufacturer to a civil penalty equal to the cost of product purchase and testing. The commissioner will be required to make information available to the Attorney General and the public on products found not to be in compliance with the standards.

      A civil penalty imposed under this bill is to be collected in a summary manner under the “Penalty Enforcement Law of 1999.”

      The committee amendments:

      (1)  amend the title of the bill to change the title number of the statutes the bill’s provisions are to supplement; and

      (2)  make technical and clarifying corrections to the bill.