Bill

Bill > A3425


NJ A3425

NJ A3425
Authorizes foraging fruits, fungi, nuts, plants, and parts thereof in State parks and forests for personal use of the forager.


summary

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

Introduced Session

2026-2027 Regular Session

Bill Summary

The bill permits a person to forage for their personal use, fruits, fungi, nuts, plants, or parts thereof in State parks or forests, provided that the person does not negligently forage any plant or part thereof, fruit or nut from a plant, or fungi that is identified by the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) as a threatened, endangered, rare, or vulnerable species of plant or fungi, or a plant species of concern pursuant to P.L.1989, c.56 (C.13:1B:15.151 et seq.). The bill also provides that the person engaging in foraging would do so at their own risk, and the State, and its agencies and departments, would not be liable or responsible for the person's safety, foraging, consumption of the fruits, fungi, nuts, or plants foraged, or any consequences of sharing the foraged fruits, fungi, nuts, plants, or parts thereof with another person. The bill defines "personal use" as consumption by the person, the person's family, or the person's friends, and does not include any selling, bartering, or offering for sale or barter of the foraged fruit, fungi, nuts, plants, or parts thereof. In addition, the bill provides that: 1) the DEP may limit foraging in areas where the department identifies such limits to be necessary for the protection of the environment or public safety, including, not limited to, protection of nesting birds, prevention of erosion, protection of newly planted vegetation, protection of environmentally sensitive areas, or protection of the public from a physical hazard; and 2) park personnel who determine that foraging activity in a certain area may pose a threat to wildlife or damage to the land or ecology of the area, or poses a public safety risk, may establish a temporary barrier with a posted notice that limits foraging in the area, and so notify the DEP. The bill requires the DEP to investigate the notice and determine whether foraging activity may continue in the area. Finally, the bill establishes a fine of up to $500 for each violation for a person who negligently forages any plant or part thereof, fruit or nut from a plant, or fungi that is identified by the DEP as a threatened, endangered, rare, or vulnerable species of plant or fungi, or a plant species of concern pursuant to P.L.1989, c.56 (C.13:1B:15.151 et seq.).

AI Summary

This bill allows individuals to gather fruits, fungi, nuts, plants, and their parts from State parks and forests for their own personal use, meaning for consumption by themselves, their family, or friends, and not for sale or trade. However, this foraging is permitted only if the individual does not negligently collect any species identified by the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) as threatened, endangered, rare, vulnerable, or a plant species of concern. Individuals who forage do so at their own risk, and the State will not be held liable for their safety or any consequences of their foraging or consumption. The DEP can restrict foraging in certain areas for environmental or public safety reasons, such as protecting nesting birds or sensitive ecosystems, and park personnel can temporarily limit access to areas posing a risk to wildlife, land, or public safety, with the DEP having the final say on whether foraging can resume. Violating these provisions by negligently foraging protected species can result in a fine of up to $500 per offense.

Committee Categories

Education

Sponsors (3)

Last Action

Introduced, Referred to Assembly Children, Families and Food Security Committee (on 01/13/2026)

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