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Bill > A3973
NJ A3973
NJ A3973Modifies provisions concerning licenses for persons who transport, broker, or process solid waste or soil and fill recyclable materials.
summary
Introduced
01/13/2026
01/13/2026
In Committee
01/13/2026
01/13/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
01/13/2026
01/13/2026
Dead
Signed/Enacted/Adopted
01/13/2026
01/13/2026
Introduced Session
2026-2027 Regular Session
Bill Summary
This bill would modify certain provisions concerning the licenses issued under P.L.1983, c.392 (C.13:1E-126 et seq.), colloquially known as the "A-901" law, and P.L.2019, c.397 (C.13:1E-127.1 et al.), colloquially known as the "Dirty Dirt" law. Specifically, the bill would exempt the "intra-utility transportation or processing" of soil and fill recyclable materials from the provisions of the Dirty Dirt law. Under the bill, the "intra-utility transportation or processing" of soil and fill recyclable materials would include cases where a public utility, or a utility contractor, generates the materials at a utility facility and the materials are transported by a public utility or utility contractor to a utility facility that accepts soil, fill, and solid waste managed by the public utility or its utility contractor for temporary storage, characterization, and other management prior to final disposal or recycling. The bill would establish certain requirements, in the definition of "intra-utility transportation or processing," in order for an activity to be considered exempt. The bill would also amend the definition of "key employee" in the A-901 law to exclude brokers, consultants, and salespeople employed by, or who do business with, an applicant for an A-901 license. Under current law, these persons are considered "key employees" and are thus required to undergo fingerprinting and complete a personal history disclosure form. This bill would remove these requirements. The bill would also amend the definition of "broker" in the A-901 law to clarify that a person who, on the person's own behalf, retains the services of a licensed business concern to provide for the collection, transportation, treatment, storage, processing, transfer, or disposal of solid waste or hazardous waste, or the provision of soil and fill recycling services, at a property, would not be considered a broker by the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP). In addition, the bill would modify the definition of "soil and fill recyclable materials" to modify the types of soil that would be included in the definition. For example, the bill would exclude alternative fill material approved for use at a site under the direction and oversight of a licensed site remediation professional (LSRP). The bill would also exclude, from the definition of "soil and fill recycling services," the excavation, transportation, placement, or processing of soil and fill recyclable materials under the oversight of a LSRP. The bill would also exempt the purchase and sale of soil and fill recyclable materials from the provisions the Dirty Dirt law, meaning that only persons involved in the collection, transportation, processing, brokering, storage, or disposition of soil and fill recyclable materials would be covered under that law. The bill would also establish a de minimis exemption from the provisions of the Dirty Dirt law, namely for persons that transport less than 200 cubic yards of soil and fill recyclable materials to or from a single site, or store less than 200 cubic yards of soil and fill recyclable materials at a single site. Finally, the bill would require persons covered under the Dirty Dirt law to submit an application for a soil and fill recycling license within 45 days, rather than 30 days as in current law, after the DEP adopts rules and regulations to implement the Dirty Dirt law.
AI Summary
This bill modifies provisions of two existing laws, the "A-901" law and the "Dirty Dirt" law, which regulate licenses for businesses involved in transporting, brokering, or processing solid waste or soil and fill recyclable materials. Key changes include exempting the "intra-utility transportation or processing" of soil and fill recyclable materials from the "Dirty Dirt" law, which refers to a public utility or its contractor generating and moving these materials between utility facilities for temporary management before final disposal or recycling, provided certain conditions are met. The bill also amends the definition of "key employee" under the A-901 law to exclude brokers, consultants, and salespeople, meaning they will no longer be required to undergo fingerprinting or submit personal history forms. Additionally, the definition of "broker" is clarified to exclude individuals who hire licensed businesses for waste or recycling services on their own property. The bill also refines the definition of "soil and fill recyclable materials" to exclude alternative fill approved by a licensed site remediation professional (LSRP) and exempts activities overseen by an LSRP from the definition of "soil and fill recycling services." Furthermore, the purchase and sale of these materials are excluded from the "Dirty Dirt" law's purview, and a "de minimis" exemption is introduced for those transporting or storing less than 200 cubic yards of soil and fill recyclable materials at a single site. Finally, the deadline for businesses covered by the "Dirty Dirt" law to apply for a soil and fill recycling license is extended from 30 to 45 days after the relevant rules are adopted.
Committee Categories
Agriculture and Natural Resources
Sponsors (1)
Last Action
Withdrawn Because Approved P.L.2025, c.330. (on 01/13/2026)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location |
|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://www.njleg.state.nj.us/bill-search/2026/A3973 |
| BillText | https://pub.njleg.gov/Bills/2026/A4000/3973_I1.HTM |
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