Bill

Bill > A1043


NJ A1043

NJ A1043
Requires owners of certain buildings to test drinking water for Legionella bacteria.


summary

Introduced
01/13/2026
In Committee
01/13/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

2026-2027 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill would require owner of certain buildings to test the drinking water of the building for the presence of Legionella bacteria. Specifically, the bill would apply to acute care facilities, assisted living facilities, boarding houses, county correctional facilities, hospitals, multiple dwellings, nursing homes, units of public housing that have received funding from the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, rooming houses, and State correctional facilities. The bill would require the building owner to test water from a tap in the building, at least once per year. The water sampling and testing would be required to be performed using a set of best practices developed by the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP), under the bill. In addition, the water testing would be required to be performed by a laboratory accredited by the DEP. The bill would also require the building owner to transmit the test results to the DEP. If the test results reveal the presence of excessive Legionella contamination, according to a standard to be developed by the DEP under the bill, the building owner would be required to immediately notify residents and other users of the building. If the drinking water in the service line connected to the building has been tested for Legionella in the previous month, and the test result was negative, the bill would require the building owner to begin remediation of the Legionella contamination within 30 days, and the remediation would be required to be completed within six months. A violation of the bill's provisions would be considered a violation of the "Safe Drinking Water Act," P.L.1977, c.224 (C.58:12A-1 et seq.), which could result in civil administrative penalties of up to $25,000 per violation.

AI Summary

This bill requires owners of specific types of buildings, including hospitals, nursing homes, assisted living facilities, and certain public housing units, to test their drinking water for Legionella bacteria at least once a year. Legionella is a type of bacteria that can cause a serious lung infection called Legionnaires' disease. The testing must follow best practices developed by the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) and be conducted by a DEP-accredited laboratory, with the results reported to the DEP. If the tests reveal excessive contamination, building owners must immediately inform residents and, if the building's main water supply line has recently tested negative for high levels of Legionella, begin remediation within 30 days and complete it within six months. Violations of these requirements will be treated as violations of the Safe Drinking Water Act and could result in significant civil penalties. The DEP is tasked with developing specific standards for acceptable Legionella levels and best practices for testing within 18 months of the bill's effective date.

Committee Categories

Transportation and Infrastructure

Sponsors (2)

Last Action

Introduced, Referred to Assembly Telecommunications and Utilities Committee (on 01/13/2026)

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