New York Laws
DEA - Defense Emergency Act 1951 784/51

(a) establishing lines of succession of elected and appointed
officers, and
(b) modifying the quorum requirements of legislative or governing
bodies to permit the continuance of official action under emergency
conditions.
21. Make provision for the storage of essential governmental records.
D. Public Order.
22. Recruit, equip and train auxiliary police or special deputy
sheriffs in sufficient number to maintain order and control traffic in
the event of an attack and to perform such other police and emergency
civil defense functions as may be required during and subsequent to
attack.
23. Control pedestrian and vehicular traffic during tests and drills
and during and subsequent to attack.
24. Recruit, equip and train either directly or through other
political subdivisions of the state auxiliary firemen in sufficient
numbers to permit the most effective utilization of all fire apparatus
and to perform such other fire fighting and emergency civil defense
functions as may be required during and subsequent to attack.
E. Recovery and Rehabilitation.
25. Provide means and methods for the recovery and rehabilitation of
such city or county following an attack.

26. Recruit, train and equip an organization to care for persons in
need of defense emergency aid as a result of attack.
§ 23-a. Authority of political subdivisions to provide facilities and
materials essential to public safety. Each political subdivision of the
state, the board of higher education in the city of New York, and, with
respect to property located in the state of New York, the port of New
York authority and the waterfront commission of New York harbor, shall
have power:
a. To acquire, construct, install and maintain shelters, including
fallout shelters, and other civil defense facilities and to acquire,
store and maintain materials, such shelters, facilities and materials
being for the protection, safety and health of students, faculty,
administrative staff, employees and the public at large during and
subsequent to attack, provided
i. such acquisition, construction, installation, maintenance and
storage is not inconsistent with the plan, regulations or orders of the
commission or with the applicable local plan promulgated pursuant to
subdivision one of section twenty-three of this act; and
ii. such acquisition, construction, installation, maintenance and
storage is effected by contract, let in the manner provided by law, by
employees of such political subdivision, board, authority or commission,
by agreement for the effectuation thereof by the owner of the building,
structure or real property to be used in connection therewith or in any
manner authorized by other provisions of law.
b. To utilize any publicly owned building, structure, real property or
personal property in connection with such acquisition, construction,
installation, maintenance and storage with the approval of the
appropriate officer or agency having control thereof, subject to such
terms and conditions as may be agreed to by such officer or agency.
c. To acquire in connection with such acquisition, construction,
installation, maintenance and storage any real or personal property, or
any interest therein, or the right to use the same for a temporary
period by purchase, lease or other agreement with the owner thereof or
by authorization to use without consideration. Nothing contained in this
section shall limit the power of such political subdivision, board,
authority or commission to condemn or otherwise acquire real or personal
property for such purposes under other provisions of law.
§ 23-b. State civil defense aid for counties and cities. 1. Subject to
the conditions prescribed in this section, counties, except those
contained in the city of New York, and cities shall be eligible to
receive state civil defense aid for expenditures made pursuant to the
provisions of section twenty-three-a of this act for the acquisition,
construction and installation of protected emergency operating centers.
2. To the extent that the federal government shall provide aid for at
least one-half of such expenditures, state civil defense aid in an
amount equal to one-half of the difference between such expenditures and
such federal aid shall be paid to such counties and cities, provided
that such expenditures shall have been made with the prior approval of
the state comptroller and the commission and in accordance with section
twenty-three-a of this act.
3. Claims for such state aid shall be certified by the local director
and submitted to the state director on such dates, with such information
and in such form as he may prescribe. Such state aid shall be paid upon
such claims as are approved by the state director and after audit by and
on warrant of the state comptroller.
4. Where the county or city has issued obligations pursuant to
paragraph (a) of subdivision two of section twenty-nine of this act for
the acquisition, construction and installation of protected emergency

operating centers, state civil defense aid received pursuant to this
section shall be applied to the payment of the interest on and principal
of any such obligations as may be outstanding.
5. Subject to the provisions of paragraph u. of subdivision three of
section twenty-one and section one hundred fifteen of this act, the
department of taxation and finance shall have power to receive any and
all moneys made available by the federal government for such aid or for
other civil defense or defense effort purposes. The moneys so received
shall be deposited by the department of taxation and finance in a
special fund or funds and shall be paid out or used by the state
exclusively for the purposes and subject to the terms and conditions
specified by the appropriate federal officer or agency. Moneys shall be
paid out from such fund or funds in the same manner as is applicable to
the payment out of state moneys.
6. In addition to any moneys appropriated or made available therefor
and in the event of the necessity therefor in order to defend the people
of the state, the state comptroller shall have power to issue notes to
pay the costs incurred by the state for the acquisition, construction,
installation, storage and maintenance of facilities and materials
essential for shelter use and the safety and health of the people in the
event of attack and for the payment of state civil defense aid to
counties and cities pursuant to this section. Each such note shall
mature within a period of not to exceed two years from the date of
original issue thereof, but may contain provision for payment thereof
within such two year period. Unless the legislature shall provide for
the issuance of bonds to redeem such notes, such notes shall be paid not
later than their respective maturity dates. The comptroller shall report
to the legislature at the opening of its next regular or extraordinary
session all action taken by him pursuant to this subdivision.
§ 23-c. Purchase of civil defense resources, materials and facilities
through the federal government. Notwithstanding any inconsistent
provision of law, with the approval of the director of the budget and
the commission, the state commissioner of general services, on behalf of
the commission or of a political subdivision, may contract to purchase
resources, materials and facilities for civil defense through any
federal agency authorized to so purchase on their behalf; provided, that
no purchase may be made on behalf of a political subdivision, pursuant
to the authority here granted, unless such political subdivision accepts
sole responsibility for any liability arising pursuant to such contract,
and for the payment of all moneys due or which may become payable
pursuant thereto. For the purpose of this section, each political
subdivision is hereby empowered, notwithstanding any inconsistent
provision of law, to purchase resources, materials and facilities for
civil defense pursuant to this section.
§ 23-d. Taking necessary steps for continuing the operation of
essential railroads. If cessation of operation of a railroad, whose
continued operation is essential in order that it will be available as
an operating transportation facility for materials and otherwise, in the
interest of the public safety and security and the health of the people
in the event of attack, has occurred or is impending, such railroad
being in receivership by order of a court having jurisdiction of an
action or proceeding in which receivers have been appointed for such
railroad, the state civil defense commission may take all necessary
steps for the continued operation of such railroad, and for such purpose
the commission shall employ the moneys appropriated to it by this act.
§ 24. Special provisions relating to cities of over one hundred
thousand. In addition to the requirements of sections twenty-two and

twenty-three every city having a population of over hundred thousand
shall:
1. Recruit, train and equip shelter captains in a ratio based upon
maximum shelter occupancies available in the city to be approved by the
commission as consistent with reasonable requirements for the safety and
welfare of shelter occupants.
2. Organize and train an emergency mortuary service capable of dealing
effectively with conditions probable in the event of attack.
3. Designate, prepare and integrate emergency medical facilities,
including supply depots, emergency hospitals, clearing stations and
mobile medical units and recruit and train the medical staff required
for each such facility.
4. Install, maintain and operate a public warning system capable of
disseminating quickly throughout such city warnings established by the
commission.
§ 25. Powers in event of attack. 1. Notwithstanding any other law, in
the event of attack within the state or a state with which this state
has a mutual aid compact for civil defense, to the extent it deems it
necessary or proper, the commission may: (a) assume direct operational
control of any or all civil defense forces; (b) order, direct, require
and use the personnel, materials, facilities and services of any agency,
public officer, or political subdivision of the state, or any part
thereof, at any place within the state where in the opinion of the
commission they are needed to effect the purposes of this article; (c)
with the approval of the governor, order, direct, require and use such
personnel, materials, facilities and services without the state to
implement any mutual aid arrangement, agreement or compact; (d) take,
use or destroy any and all real or personal property, or any interest
therein, necessary or proper for the purposes of civil defense; (e)
execute any or all of the civil defense powers and duties of any county
or city after notifying the chief executive officer of such county or
city if such notification is possible.
2. Notwithstanding any other law, subject to the plans, regulations
and orders of the council and commission: (a) in the event of or in
anticipation of attack within such county or city or so near thereto
that it jeopardizes the safety or health of the people thereof or within
a county or city with which it has agreements or arrangements for mutual
aid, a county or city may provide for and compel the evacuation of any
person if such person has no home or if the continued use of his home
jeopardizes his own safety or that of others; (b) in the event of such
attack such county or city shall control all pedestrian and vehicular
traffic, transportation and communication facilities and public
utilities; provide medical treatment, food, clothing, shelter and care
for the injured and needy; provide for public safety and the protection
and conservation of property; provide for the identification and
disposition of the dead; and provide for the restoration of essential
services and facilities; (c) in the event of such attack and to the
extent necessary to perform such functions, and as authorized by the
council or commission, it may take, use or destroy real or personal
property and impress persons into service for the performance of such
work.
3. The taking of private property pursuant to this section by or at
the express order of the commission, whether for temporary or permanent
use or for destruction, shall be in the name of and payment shall be
made by the state. An appropriate record, in the form prescribed by the
commission, shall be kept and a copy thereof furnished, whenever
possible, to the owner from whom the property is taken. Each such owner
shall be entitled to just compensation for the taking and may file a

claim, to be designated as an "emergency claim," pursuant to the court
of claims act, against the state for such compensation. To the extent
necessary to expedite the hearing, determination and payment of such
claims, the governor shall appoint, as emergency claims referees, one or
more qualified attorneys admitted to practice before the courts of this
state. Such referees shall be paid out of funds appropriated for such
purpose at a rate to be fixed by the governor within the amount of the
appropriation or allocation therefor.
When an emergency claim has been filed with the court of claims, the
presiding judge forthwith may refer it to an emergency claims referee.
The referee forthwith and on notice to the claimant and to the
attorney-general shall set a date and place for the hearing and
determination of the claim. The referee shall have all the powers now
vested in the court of claims, or in a judge thereof, in the hearing and
determination of the claim. His determination shall be in writing and
shall be made within thirty days after the hearing shall have been
closed. It shall be filed forthwith in the office of the clerk of the
court of claims and shall be entered in the official records as a
judgment or order of that court. Any claimant or the state shall have
the right to appeal, as now provided by law, from such determination and
judgment. The provisions of the court of claims act, with respect to
real property taken by appropriation, shall apply to the taking of real
property pursuant to this section so far as practicable.
The procedure herein provided shall not be deemed exclusive and no
claim shall be required to be filed, heard and determined as an
"emergency claim" if the claimant elects to proceed as otherwise
provided by the court of claims act.
Such court or referee may defer action on any emergency claim pursuant
to this section pending consideration by the federal civil defense
administrator or any agency of the federal government of a claim based
on the same taking. The award by such court or referee shall take into
consideration any moneys that may be made available by the federal
government with respect to such taking.
4. Except as provided in subdivision three of this section, the taking
of private property by a county or city pursuant to this section shall
be in the name of such county or city. An appropriate record, in the
form prescribed by the commission, shall be kept and a copy thereof
furnished, whenever possible, to the owner from whom the property is
taken. Such county or city shall make just compensation to the owner
thereof in the manner provided by law for the determination of
compensation to be paid for the taking of real property by such county
or city.
§ 25-a. Defense emergency aid. 1. As used in this section:
(a) "Defense emergency aid" shall mean food, shelter, clothing, care
or treatment furnished pursuant to the provisions of this section.
(b) "Local social services official" shall mean the county
commissioner of social services, a city commissioner of social services,
a town social services or service officer or city social services or
service officer who in a particular case would be authorized to make a
grant of home relief.
2. In the event of attack and pursuant to rules promulgated by the
commission, each local social services official shall, out of any funds
available therefor, including funds made available for home relief,
furnish defense emergency aid to persons residing or found in his
territory and in need thereof because of such attack. Such aid may be
furnished wholly or partially by cash, order or in kind.
3. Local social services officials in performing their duties under
this section, shall cooperate with each other and seek the cooperation

of all local and volunteer agencies and coordinate their efforts with
the activities of other agencies, public and private, concerned with the
health and welfare of persons under their jurisdiction, in order that
there may be no duplication of effort and that the work of agencies,
both public and private, may be united in an effort to relieve the
distress caused by an attack.
4. A county, town or city may finance the local share of the cost of
furnishing defense emergency aid by the issuance of obligations pursuant
to the local finance law, from the proceeds of taxes raised for such
purpose or from any funds available thereof. The period of probable
usefulness of such object or purpose for which any such expenditure may
be made is determind to be ten years. The limitations of paragraph d of
section 25.00 of the local finance law, with respect to the amount of
revenue anticipation notes which may be issued in anticipation of moneys
to be received from the state or the United States government in
connection with such aid, shall not be applicable; provided, however,
that such notes shall not be issued in anticipation of such revenues in
an amount greater than the amount reasonably estimated to be received by
the county, town or city from such sources.
5. Subject to the provisions of this section, the state shall
reimburse counties, towns and cities for expenditures for defense
emergency aid, made out of any funds appropriated by such
municipalities, provided such expenditures shall have been approved by
the state department of social services, to the extent of eighty per
centum of the amount expended for persons who resided or were found in
such county, town or city on the date of the attack and to the extent of
one hundred per centum of the amount expended for persons who came or
were brought into such county, town or city after such date; provided,
however, that the state commissioner of social services, with the
approval of the council, may make such grant or additional
reimbursement, out of funds available therefor, as he may deem equitable
in exceptional circumstances.
6. The comptroller, upon audit and warrant, shall pay from the state
treasury, out of funds made available for home relief or for defense
emergency aid, such grants and reimbursements on claims certified by the
state department of social services. Payments shall be made by the
comptroller to the fiscal officer of the county or city and, in the case
of towns such payments shall be to the fiscal officer of the county for
the account of and reimbursement to the towns therein. No state
reimbursement shall be payable under this section for administrative
costs nor for expenditures for which agencies of local government other
than the local social services officials are normally responsible or may
become responsible under an emergency; nor for defense emergency aid
payments made from or in anticipation of the receipt of federal funds.
§ 26. Conscription for civil defense forces. 1. When authorized by
regulation of the council, a county or a city may conscript persons to
perform the duties specified in sections twenty-three and twenty-four of
this chapter. Selection of such personnel shall be on a fair and
impartial basis and in accordance with the regulations of the council.
2. A regulation of the council authorizing such action shall be
effective only under the following circumstances:
a. If after the effective date of this act the United States declares
war, or
b. If an attack occurs upon any part of the United States, or its
bases, territories or possessions, or
c. If the personnel necessary to make effective a plan of civil
defense of any county or city is not supplied by volunteers in
accordance with the following schedule: within three months after the

approval of such plan, twenty-five per cent; within six months after
such approval, fifty per cent; within twelve months after such approval,
seventy-five per cent.
3. Such regulation by the council shall provide for selection of
personnel on a fair and impartial basis by age, training, occupation,
ability or such other classification as the council finds appropriate
and shall specify any exceptions to such classifications in connection
with physical condition, family needs, callings, vocations or
professions which must be followed or performed during or after attack,
unusual occupational demands, or similar matters.
4. Whenever practicable the appropriate selective service officers and
other state and federal agencies having powers and duties with respect
to manpower shall be informed of action taken pursuant to this section
and such action shall be coordinated with the action of those agencies.
5. If the legislature is in regular session the council through the
governor shall within five days transmit to the legislature for its
consideration a report of any action taken pursuant to this section. If
the legislature is not in session and consideration of such report has
not been included in the governor's call for an extraordinary session of
the legislature, the governor shall transmit such report to the
legislature at the opening of its next regular session.
6. Regular or duly ordained ministers of religion and members of
recognized religious orders shall be exempt from the application of the
powers granted by this section.
§ 27. Consolidation of local offices. 1. With the approval of their
governing bodies and of the commission, the chief executive officer of
any county not within a city, including in counties not having an
executive the chairman or other presiding officer of the legislative
body of the county as defined in subdivision seven of section two of the
municipal home rule law, and the chief executive officer or officers of
any city or cities within the county may agree to create a consolidated
county office of civil defense for the purpose of performing any or all
civil defense functions for both the county and such city or cities. The
jurisdiction of a consolidated county office shall include the territory
of the county outside the cities therein, and the territory of any such
city or cities which join in the consolidation to the extent necessary
for the performance of its functions in such city or cities. Such an
office shall be in charge of a county director, who may be the chief
executive officer of the county or one of the cities, who may be
appointed and at pleasure removed by the chief executive officer of the
county. The county may pay a salary to such director and,
notwithstanding the provisions of section two hundred of the county law,
or of any other law, a county may pay compensation to a member of its
legislative body as defined in subdivision seven of section two of the
municipal home rule law, other than the chief executive officer, for
service as the director of its consolidated county office. Such a county
director may appoint and remove, with the approval of the chief
executive officer of each city affected, a deputy county director of
such city. The salary of such deputy may be paid by the county. Where a
consolidated county office is established, unless the county and the
city or cities joining in such consolidation otherwise agree, the
expenses of such office shall be paid and the deputies, assistants and
employees appointed and removed, their duties prescribed and their
salaries fixed and paid in the manner prescribed for a county office in
sections twenty-two and twenty-nine of this act.
2. With the approval of the governing bodies, the chief executive
officers of two or more adjacent cities within a county may agree to
create a consolidated city office of civil defense, the jurisdiction of

which office shall include the territory of such cities. Such an office
shall be in charge of a city director who shall be appointed jointly by
such officers and hold office at their pleasure. Such city director may
be paid such compensation as may be fixed by the chief executive
officers of such cities within the amount of the appropriations made
therefor.
3. In the event of the creation of a consolidated office by order of
the commission pursuant to section twenty-one of this act, the chief
executive officers of the county and of all cities in the county
affected by the order shall appoint and remove, at their pleasure, a
county director. Such county director may be the chief executive officer
of the county or one of the cities affected by the order. The provisions
of subdivision one shall be applicable to a consolidated county office
so created.
4. With the approval of their respective governing bodies and of the
commission, the chief executive officer of a county, including in
counties not having an executive the chairman or other presiding officer
of the legislative body of the county as defined in subdivision seven of
section two of the municipal home rule law, and the chief executive
officer or officers of a city or cities, or the chief executive officers
of two or more cities may agree to dissolve a consolidated county or a
consolidated city office of civil defense as the case may be or, upon
one hundred eighty days notice to the other participants and to the
commission, such an officer, with the approval of the governing body of
his county or city, may unilaterally withdraw from such an office. Upon
the effective date of such dissolution of or withdrawal from a
consolidated office of civil defense, the chief executive officer of
each affected county or city shall forthwith re-establish an office of
civil defense for such county or city, which office shall be headed by a
local director as required by this act and which office shall have
jurisdiction, powers and duties as provided in this act and other
applicable provisions of law.
§ 28. Mutual aid. Subject to the approval of the commission, two or
more political subdivisions of the state may enter into mutual aid
agreements for reciprocal aid and assistance to effectuate any purpose
of this article. State agencies, with the approval of the director of
the budget, may participate in such agreements.
§ 29. Local financial provisions. 1. All civil defense expenditures of
a city, including but not limited to the cost of maintenance and
operation of its city office, if any, shall be a city charge. All civil
defense expenditures of a county, including but not limited to the cost
of maintenance and operation of a county office, shall be a general
county charge, provided however that where a city, town or village has
provided facilities pursuant to section twenty-three-a of this act, the
charge for the expenditures thereafter made by such county for providing
facilities pursuant to section twenty-three-a of this act shall be
equitably allocated by the legislative body of the county as defined in
subdivision seven of section two of the municipal home rule law. All
civil defense expenditures of a town shall be a general town charge,
provided however that where a deputy director for a village not wholly
within one town is appointed pursuant to subdivision two of section
twenty-two of this act, the expenditures made by such town pursuant to
such subdivision shall be a charge against the area of the town
exclusive of such village. Where a village has provided facilities
pursuant to section twenty-three-a of this act, the charge for the
expenditures thereafter made by such town for providing facilities
pursuant to section twenty-three-a of this act shall be equitably

allocated by the town board. All civil defense expenditures of a village
shall be a village charge.
2. Each political subdivision of the state shall have the power:
(a) To appropriate and spend money in the manner provided by law for
the acquisition, construction and installation of shelters, fallout
shelters and other civil defense facilities and the acquisition of
materials pursuant to section twenty-three-a of this act. Any
expenditure by a political subdivision having power to contract
indebtedness pursuant to the local finance law for such shelters,
fallout shelters, civil defense facilities and materials may be financed
by the issuance of obligations pursuant to such law, from the proceeds
of taxes raised for such purpose or from any available funds of the
political subdivision. The period of probable usefulness of any such
shelter or fallout shelter is determined to be twenty years unless a
longer period is prescribed by the local finance law and the period of
probable usefulness of any other civil defense facilities and materials
is determined to be ten years unless a longer period is prescribed by
the local finance law. The provisions of section 107.00 of the local
finance law shall not apply to the financing of any such object or
purpose.
(b) To appropriate and spend money in the manner provided by law for
other civil defense measures contemplated by this article or by section
thirty-four of this act, provided such expenditures are not inconsistent
with the plan, regulations or orders of the commission or with the
applicable local plan promulgated under this act. The limitations of
section 29.00 of the local finance law, with respect to the amount of
budget notes which may be issued in any fiscal year, shall not apply to
budget notes issued to finance such measures and, notwithstanding any
provision of the local finance law, budget notes for such measures may
be authorized by at least a majority vote of the voting strength of the
finance board. In addition to the issuance of budget notes for such
measures, a political subdivision having the power to contract
indebtedness pursuant to the local finance law, with the approval of the
commission, shall have power to issue serial bonds or capital notes
pursuant to such law in an amount not to exceed one hundred thousand
dollars in any fiscal year. The commission shall not give any approval
pursuant to this paragraph until after it shall have obtained the advice
of the state comptroller with respect to the financial condition of the
political subdivision. If no period of probable usefulness is provided
in the local finance law for any such measures, the period of probable
usefulness therefor shall be three years. The provisions of section
107.00 of the local finance law shall not apply to the financing of any
such object or purpose.
(c) To participate in providing shelter protection against radioactive
fallout for the inhabitants of such political subdivision by cooperating
with the commission and with schools, colleges and universities located
within such political subdivision in the acquisition, construction or
installation of fallout shelter at such schools, colleges and
universities for which state civil defense aid is payable pursuant to
section thirty-five of this act and by paying in consideration for such
shelter protection for its inhabitants a portion of the cost of such
fallout shelters, provided that no such payment shall exceed the
aggregate cost of such fallout shelters less the amount of state civil
defense aid payable pursuant to that section.
3. Indebtedness contracted or proposed to be contracted by a school
district, other than a school district coterminous with, or partly
within, or wholly within a city, to finance the acquisition,
construction and installation of a shelter or fallout shelter by such

school district pursuant to section twenty-three-a of this act may be
excluded from the indebtedness of such school district in ascertaining
its power under section 104.00 of the local finance law to contract
indebtedness, but only to the extent to which such indebtedness, at the
time it was contracted or is to be contracted, did not or will not
exceed fifty dollars multiplied by the planned shelter occupancy of such
shelter.
4. In addition to powers otherwise conferred by law and
notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law:
a. Each political subdivision of the state shall have the power to
appropriate and spend money to demolish unsafe structures owned by it or
under its care, custody or control, to remove debris from any property
owned by it or under its care, custody or control, and to reconstruct,
replace or repair capital improvements, equipment, machinery, apparatus
and furnishings, when such demolition, removal, reconstruction,
replacement or repair is necessitated because of attack. Any such
reconstruction or replacement of a capital improvement may be made upon
a new site or upon the same site.
b. Any city, town or village shall have the power to appropriate and
spend money to demolish any unsafe structures, whether publicly or
privately owned, and may remove debris from any property, whether
publicly or privately owned, if the governing board of the municipality
determines such structures or debris to be a peril to the lives and
property of the citizens of the municipality, when such demolition or
removal is necessitated because of attack, except that such expenditures
shall not be made by a town within a city located in such town or by a
town within a village located in whole or part in such town.
Any expenditure for an object or purpose described in this subdivision
by a political subdivision having power to contract indebtedness
pursuant to the local finance law may be financed by the issuance of
obligations pursuant to such law, from the proceeds of taxes raised for
such purpose or from any available funds of the political subdivision.
The period of probable usefulness of the objects and purposes for which
any such expenditure may be made is determined to be ten years unless a
longer period is prescribed by the local finance law. The provisions of
section 107.00 of the local finance law shall not apply to the financing
of any such object or purpose. Any provisions of law:
(1) Requiring the holding of hearings on or the publication of notices
in relation to the effectuation of any such purpose or work or the
financing thereof,
(2) Requiring that the effectuation of any such purpose or work or the
financing thereof be subject to a vote at any election, to a mandatory
or permissive referendum, or to the voting of a tax to be collected in
one or more installments,
(3) Requiring that the effectuation of any such purpose or work or the
financing thereof be initiated only upon petition,
(4) Permitting the issuance of obligations only after the completion
of the effectuation of any such purpose or work or the levy of
assessments therefor,
(5) Requiring the approval of any public board or body other than the
governing board or the finance board, for the effectuation of any such
purpose or work or the financing thereof, the advertisement for bids or
the letting of contracts therefor after competitive bidding, and any
other provisions of law insofar as they tend to prevent, hamper or delay
the effectuation of any such purpose or work or the financing thereof,
shall be inoperative for the purposes of this subdivision, except that
the provisions of sections 57.00, 58.00, 59.00, 60.00, 60.10, 60.20,
63.00, 81.00, 82.00, 83.00, 102.00, 104.00, 104.10, other than

subdivision one thereof, 109.00, 150.00, 151.00, 152.00 and 165.10 of
the local finance law shall continue to be applicable to the financing
thereof when obligations are issued.
Notwithstanding the fact that the effectuation of any such purpose or
work may be required pursuant to law to be undertaken wholly or partly
at the expense of the real property especially benefited thereby, it may
be undertaken at the expense of the political subdivision at large
without charging any part of the cost thereof to real property
especially benefited.
§ 29-a. Continuity of political subdivisions. In conformity with the
plan, regulations or orders of the commission, every county, except
those contained within the city of New York, every city, every town and
every village shall have power to provide by local law, and every other
political subdivision shall have power to provide by resolution, for its
continuity and that of its elective and appointive officers, including
members of its legislative or governing body, where, as a result of an
attack, any of such officers is unable to discharge the powers and
duties of his office or is absent from the political subdivision. In any
such local law or resolution, provision may be made that the removal of
a disability or the termination of an absence from the political
subdivision of an officer higher on a list or order of succession to an
office shall not terminate the service in such office of an individual
lower on such list or order of succession who is temporarily filling
such office. Notwithstanding the provisions of any law, a local law or
resolution adopted pursuant to this section may be made effective
without approval at a mandatory or permissive referendum but in no case
shall such local law or resolution become effective until one certified
copy thereof has been filed with the clerk of the political subdivision
or other appropriate official designated for such purpose by the
respective legislative or governing body, one certified copy thereof has
been filed in the office of the state comptroller and three certified
copies thereof have been filed in the office of the secretary of state.
No provision of this section shall be construed or interpreted as
affecting the validity of any ordinance enacted prior to July first,
nineteen hundred sixty-six, or actions taken thereunder by the
government of any county, city, town or village.
§ 30. Removal or suspension of public officers. 1. A local director
may be removed by the governor after such director has been given a copy
of the charges against him and an opportunity to be heard in his
defense. Pending the preparation and disposition of charges, the
governor may suspend such director for a period not exceeding thirty
days. The power of removal provided for in this subdivision shall be
deemed to be in addition to the power of removal otherwise provided for
in this act or in any other law and shall apply notwithstanding any
inconsistent provisions of this act or of any other law.
2. Notwithstanding any provision of law, and in addition to any other
penalty fixed by law, willful failure by a public officer having
administrative responsibilities under this article to obey an order or
regulation adopted or made pursuant to this article relating to his
administrative responsibilities shall be cause for removal from office.
Subject to the provisions of the state constitution, such removal shall
be by the governor upon charges by the council or commission after
service upon such public officer of a copy of the charges and giving him
an opportunity to be heard in his defense. Pending the preparation and
disposition of charges, the governor may suspend such public officer for
a period not exceeding thirty days.
3. A vacancy resulting from removal pursuant to this section shall be
filled by the governor until it is filled as otherwise provided by law.

4. In the event of attack or in the event of the failure of a county
or city to carry out the provisions of this act or the plan, regulations
or orders adopted pursuant thereto, the governor may direct the
commission to assume direct operational control of any or all agencies
or public offices having administrative responsibilities pursuant to
this act to the extent necessary for the performance of such
responsibilities and in such event, the officers in charge of such
agencies and offices shall only exercise such powers and perform such
duties as are required of them by the commission or the person managing
and conducting such agencies or offices pursuant to order of the
commission. In all such cases all expenses incurred by the commission to
conduct such agencies or offices, including the salary or other
compensation of all persons employed, shall be a charge upon the
political subdivision or subdivisions of the state otherwise liable for
the expense of such agency or office.
§ 31. Utilization of existing services and facilities. The commission
and each local director shall utilize as far as possible the services,
resources, materials and facilities of existing officers and agencies
and all such officers and agencies shall cooperate with the commission
and such directors.
§ 32. Privileges and immunities. Notwithstanding any inconsistent
provision of law, members of civil defense forces in the state and
members of the civil defense forces of other states or of the federal
government or of the dominion of Canada or of a province or subdivision
thereof performing civil defense services at any place in this state
pursuant to any law, any rule, regulation or order duly promulgated or
issued pursuant to this act, any federal law, or any agreement, compact,
or arrangement for mutual aid and assistance, to which the state or a
political subdivision thereof is a party, shall possess the same powers,
duties, immunities and privileges they would ordinarily possess if
performing their duties in the jurisdiction in which normally employed
or rendering services.
§ 33. Administration of civil defense oaths. 1. The commission and
each local director shall have power by regulation or order to designate
or provide for the designation of members of civil defense forces under
their respective jurisdictions to administer the written oath which the
federal civil defense act of nineteen hundred fifty requires persons in
state or local organizations for civil defense to take before entering
upon their duties therein.
2. Each such designation of a person serving under the jurisdiction of
the commission shall be filed in the department of state. Each such
designation of a person serving under the jurisdiction of a county
director shall be filed in the office of the clerk of the county and
each such designation of a person serving under the jurisdiction of a
city director shall be filed in the office of the city clerk.
3. Designations so made may be revoked in the same manner in which
they may be made pursuant hereto, provided that notice thereof is given
to each person whose designation is so revoked.
4. In addition to the requirements of any other law, the certificate
of a person administering an oath pursuant to such a designation shall
specify (a) county clerk's or city clerk's office in which his
designation was filed and (b) that such designation has not been
revoked.
ARTICLE 3-A
SHELTER PROTECTION

Section 34. Responsibilities of commission and local directors for
shelter protection.

35. State civil defense aid for fallout protection at schools,
colleges and universities.
36. Implied warranty in contracts for shelters.
37. Consumer protection against substandard shelters.
38. Compliance with local building regulations and restrictive
covenants.
§ 34. Responsibilities of commission and local directors for shelter
protection. 1. The commission shall:
a. Include in the comprehensive plan for the civil defense of the
state provision for the protection of every inhabitant thereof against
fallout radiation resulting from attack and against such other dangers
resulting from attack as the commission may deem necessary.
b. Provide, through local offices or otherwise, an information and
counseling service available to the public generally and to those
concerned with providing shelter protection for others, including all
political subdivisions, schools, colleges and universities, employers,
landlords, architects, engineers, contractors, hospitals, voluntary
institutions and places of public assembly. The service to be provided
shall include, among other things, detailed information and technical
advice relating to
i. the achievement of fallout protection which will meet the standards
for fallout shelters set forth in the plan, regulations or orders of the
commission relating thereto;
ii. the financial assistance available for the construction of
shelters from governmental sources or private lending institutions,
including insured mortgage loans, and the usual terms thereof;
iii. the financial assistance, if any, available from governmental
sources or private lending institutions for equipping and provisioning
shelters, and the usual terms thereof;
iv. the exemption from local real property taxation, special ad
valorem levies and special assessments provided in section four hundred
seventy-nine of the real property tax law for the increase in value
attributable to the construction or installation of a fallout shelter;
v. the maximum and minimum shelter occupancies which will qualify for
state civil defense aid and any comparable federal aid; and
vi. the materials recommended by federal civil defense authorities or
by the commission for inclusion in shelters, which information and
advice may include the names of specific trade products and their
manufacturers so long as the commission makes clear that other products
of comparable quality and meeting the same standards are included within
the general recommendations although not specified by name.
c. Have power to test, approve and recommend materials for inclusion
in shelters.
d. Upon the request of a political subdivision, board, authority or
commission which desires to acquire, construct or install a shelter
pursuant to section twenty-three-a of this act, review the plans and
specifications of such shelter and certify whether it will comply with
the plan, regulations or orders of the commission.
e. Publicize the availability of the detailed information and
technical advice described in this section.
f. Specifically urge county and city governments which do not yet have
protected emergency operating centers constructed or under way to
initiate the construction of such centers promptly pursuant to the
provisions of federal law and section twenty-three-b of this act.
g. Report to the governor and the legislature annually on or before
February first as to:
i. The action taken by it and by others to meet the objectives set
forth in this act of assuring the availability of effective shelter

protection for every inhabitant of the state and the rehabilitation and
recovery of the state and its inhabitants after attack.
ii. Its recomendations, if any, for changes in the provisions of this
act relating to shelter protection and to rehabilitation and recovery
after attack, including changes considered by it to be necessary or
desirable to stimulate and encourage the further acquisition,
construction or installation of shelters and protected stockpiles of
materials in accordance with its plan, regulations or orders.
2. Local directors, in accordance with the regulations and orders of
the commission, shall:
a. Participate in the information and counseling service referred to
in paragraph b. of subdivision one of this section and in publicizing
the availability of such service.
b. Assist the state director in any investigation conducted by him
pursuant to section thirty-seven of this act.
c. Have power to inspect from time to time at reasonable hours
completed shelters within the area under the jurisdiction of the local
office.
d. Report to the state director the results of inspections of
completed shelters in such form and detail as the state director may
from time to time require.
§ 35. State civil defense aid for fallout protection at schools,
colleges and universities. 1. Subject to the limitations and conditions
prescribed in this section, the trustees or board of education of every
school district, the board of higher education in the city of New York
and the governing body, by whatever name known, of all other elementary
schools, secondary schools, colleges and universities in the state shall
be eligible to receive state civil defense aid, within the amounts
appropriated to the commission for this purpose, in consideration for
the provision by such schools, colleges and universities of shelter
protection against radioactive fallout for inhabitants of the state.
2. The amount of state civil defense aid payable pursuant to this
section with respect to a fallout shelter acquired, constructed or
installed at any school, college or university after the effective date
of this section shall be twenty-five dollars multiplied by the maximum
reimbursable shelter occupancy, but in no event shall such amount exceed
fifty per cent of the cost of such shelter.
3. For purposes of this section, the "maximum reimbursable shelter
occupancy" shall mean
a. In the case of a fallout shelter acquired, constructed or installed
at existing schools, colleges and universities:
i. the largest number of students enrolled plus faculty,
administrative staff and other personnel employed at the school, college
or university who are reasonably estimated to have been present at any
one time during any day within one year prior to the date of application
for the payment of state civil defense aid under this section minus the
planned shelter occupancy of all other fallout shelters at the school,
college or university, for which occupancy state civil defense aid has
been approved by the state director pursuant to this section, or
ii. the planned shelter occupancy of the fallout shelter with respect
to which the application for state civil defense aid under this section
is made,
whichever is less.
b. In the case of a fallout shelter acquired, constructed or installed
at a new school:
i. the largest number of students plus faculty, administrative staff
and other personnel which the school is designed to accommodate at any
one time minus the planned shelter occupancy of all other fallout

shelters at the school, for which occupancy state civil defense aid has
been approved by the state director pursuant to this section, or
ii. the planned shelter occupancy of the fallout shelter with respect
to which the application for state civil defense aid under this section
is made,
whichever is less.
4. No payment of any state civil defense aid shall be made with
respect to any fallout shelter pursuant to this section unless:
a. The plans and specifications for the shelter, and any modifications
thereof, are certified by the commission to be in compliance with the
provisions of this act and the plan, regulations or orders of the
commission promulgated thereunder; provided, however, that the
commission may designate the state commissioner of education or the
commissioner of public works of the city of New York as its agent for
the purpose of certifying such compliance with respect to shelters
acquired, constructed or installed by school districts, public colleges
or public universities which are required under other provisions of law
to submit plans and specifications for school buildings to the officer
designated.
b. The shelter is completed in accordance with the plans and
specifications, and any modifications thereof, certified by the
commission or its designated agent pursuant to the immediately preceding
paragraph a.
c. The trustees, board or governing body of the school, college or
university at which the fallout shelter is located shall by written
agreement grant to the commission, and to such local directors as the
commission may designate, exclusive control of the use of such shelter
at any time for civil defense purposes, the right to schedule civil
defense drills involving the use of such shelter at any time after
consultation with the appropriate school authorities and to supervise
such drills, and the right to inspect the shelter from time to time for
compliance with the storage, preparedness and other standards set forth
in the plan, regulations or orders of the commission. The grant shall be
in such form and detail as the commission may by regulation prescribe
and shall specify that any use of the shelter for purposes unrelated to
civil defense shall not interfere with the use or readiness thereof for
civil defense purposes and shall conform with the plan, regulations or
orders of the commission relating thereto.
5. At any time within five years of the date of the original
application for state civil defense aid for a specified fallout shelter
pursuant to this section, an application may be submitted for
recomputation of the amount of state civil defense aid payable with
respect thereto and in such case the date of application for the
recomputation shall be used in determining the maximum reimbursable
shelter occupancy of such shelter. If the amount of state civil defense
aid payable upon recomputation exceeds the amount paid upon the original
application, the difference shall be payable as state civil defense aid
pursuant to this section.
6. Applications for payments of state civil defense aid pursuant to
this section shall be certified by the local director and submitted to
the state director on such dates, with such information and in such form
as he may prescribe; provided, however, that nothing contained in this
section shall be deemed to prevent two or more schools, colleges and
universities from submitting a joint application for state civil defense
aid with respect to any fallout shelter jointly acquired, constructed or
installed. State civil defense aid pursuant to this section shall be
paid upon applications approved by the state director after audit by and
on warrant of the state comptroller.

7. Where a school district has issued obligations pursuant to
paragraph a of subdivision two of section twenty-nine of this act, state
civil defense aid received pursuant to this section shall be applied to
the payment of the interest on and principal of any such obligations as
may be outstanding.
8. In addition to any moneys appropriated or made available therefor
and in the event of the necessity therefor in order to defend the people
of the state, the state comptroller shall have power to issue notes to
pay the costs incurred by the state in the acquisition, construction,
installation, storage and maintenance of facilities and materials
essential for shelter use and the safety and health of the people in the
event of attack and for the payment of state civil defense aid pursuant
to this section. Each such note shall mature within a period of not to
exceed two years from the date of original issue thereof, but may
contain provision for payment thereof within such two year period.
Unless the legislature shall provide for the issuance of bonds to redeem
such notes, such notes shall be paid not later than their respective
maturity dates. The comptroller shall report to the legislature at the
opening of its next regular or extraordinary session all action taken by
him pursuant to this subdivision.
§ 36. Implied warranty in contracts for shelters. 1. In any sale of or
in any contract
(a) to sell,
(b) to construct, or
(c) to alter or improve any area or portion of a building, structure,
or other real property in order to provide
any facility represented, expressly or impliedly, to reduce the
intensity of fallout radiation, there is an implied warranty or
condition that such facility complies with the plan, regulations or
orders of the commission which are in effect pertaining to shelters,
unless there is prompt and full disclosure in accordance with the
regulations of the commission of the fact that such facility does not
comply in this respect with such plan, regulations or orders of the
commission.
2. For purposes of this section, the plan, regulations or orders of
the commission pertaining to shelters and to the form and manner by
which disclosure is to be made shall take effect thirty days after
filing by the commission in the office of the department of state.
§ 37. Consumer protection against substandard shelters. 1. It shall be
unlawful for any person, firm, association or corporation, or for any
agent, officer, employee or member thereof to fail to make prompt and
full disclosure of the fact that a facility does not comply with the
plan, regulations or orders of the commission which are in effect
pertaining to shelters:
(a) in selling or in offering for sale,
(b) in constructing or in offering to construct, or
(c) in altering or improving or in offering to alter or improve any
area or portion of a building, structure or other real property in order
to provide
any facility which is represented, either expressly or impliedly, to
reduce the intensity of fallout radiation and which fails to comply in
this respect with such plan, regulations or orders of the commission.
Such disclosure shall be made in such form and manner as the commission
may by regulation prescribe.
2. For purposes of this section, the plan, regulations or orders of
the commission pertaining to shelters and to the form and manner by
which disclosure is to be made shall take effect thirty days after
filing by the commission in the office of the department of state.

3. Any person, firm, association or corporation, or any agent,
officer, employee or member thereof, who violates the provisions of
subdivision one of this section shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and on
conviction thereof shall, if a natural person, be punished by a fine not
exceeding five hundred dollars, or by imprisonment for not longer than
six months; and if a firm, association or a corporation by a fine of not
exceeding five thousand dollars.
4. In the alternative, any person, firm, association or corporation,
or any agent, officer, employee or member thereof, who violates any of
the provisions of subdivision one of this section shall be subject, if a
natural person, to a civil penalty not exceeding five hundred dollars,
and, if a firm, association or corporation to a civil penalty not
exceeding five thousand dollars.
5. Whenever the state director shall know or have a reasonable basis
to believe that there has been a violation of the provisions of
subdivision one of this section, he shall report all facts supporting
such knowledge or belief to the attorney general unless he determines to
proceed administratively pursuant to subdivision eight of this section.
The attorney general may prosecute any person, firm, association or
corporation, or any agent, officer, employee or member thereof, charged
with violating the provisions of subdivision one of this section. In all
such criminal proceedings the attorney general may appear in person or
by his deputy before any court of record or any grand jury and exercise
all the powers and perform all the duties in respect thereof which the
district attorney would otherwise be authorized or required to exercise
or perform; or the attorney general may in his discretion transmit
evidence, proof and information as to such offense to the district
attorney of the county in which the accused resides or has its principal
office or to the district attorney of the county in which the alleged
violation has occurred, and every district attorney to whom such
evidence, proof and information is so transmitted shall forthwith
proceed to prosecute the person, firm, association or corporation, or
any agent, officer, employee or member thereof charged with such
violation. In any proceeding wherein the attorney general has appeared
in person or by deputy, the district attorney shall exercise only such
powers and perform only such duties as are required of him by the
attorney general or his deputy.
Alternatively, the attorney general may cause an action or proceeding
to be brought in the name and in behalf of the people of the state
against any person, firm, association or corporation, or any agent,
officer, employee or member thereof for the recovery of the civil
penalty referred to in subdivision four of this section. Such action may
be brought in the county where the defendant resides or has its
principal office or in the county where the alleged violation has
occurred.
Every action or proceeding, criminal or civil, brought pursuant to
this section must be commenced within three years after the commission
of the acts upon which the action or proceeding is based.
6. All moneys recovered as penalties or fines pursuant to this section
shall be the property of the state.
7. A violation of the provisions of this section shall not be
considered an infraction for purposes of this act.
8. (a) The state director may, on his own motion, investigate or make
inquiry as to any suspected failure to comply with the provisions of
subdivision one of this section.
(b) Whenever it shall appear to the state director, after
investigation, that there has been a violation of the provisions of

subdivision one of this section, he may give written notice to the
alleged violator or violators
(i) setting forth the circumstances upon which the alleged violation
is based, and
(ii) requiring each respondent to appear in person or by attorney
before the state director or his duly designated representative, at the
time and place specified and answer the charges set forth.
At least twenty days notice of such hearing shall be given.
(c) The state director, or any person designated by him for this
purpose, may issue subpoenas and administer oaths in connection with any
investigation or hearing conducted pursuant to this subdivision, and it
shall be the duty of the state director and any persons designated by
him for such purpose to issue subpoenas at the request of and in behalf
of any respondent.
(d) The state director, or any person designated by him for this
purpose, shall not be bound by the law of evidence in conducting the
hearing, but any determination shall be founded upon sufficient legal
evidence to sustain it.
(e) In the hearing, each respondent shall have the right to cross
examine witnesses against him and to produce witnesses and evidence in
his defense.
(f) Upon the conclusion of the hearing, the state director or other
person conducting the hearing shall make such findings and
determinations as he deems warranted by the legal evidence before him
and if a violation of the provisions of subdivision one of this section
is found and determined, the state director may assess a penalty not
exceeding five hundred dollars for each such violation if the respondent
is a natural person and not exceeding five thousand dollars for each
such violation if the respondent is a firm, association or corporation.
The state director shall notify the respondent personally of such
decision in writing or by certified mail.
(g) All findings, determinations and assessments of the state director
pursuant to this subdivision shall be subject to review as provided in
article seventy-eight of the civil practice law and rules. Application
for such review must be made within sixty days after receipt by the
respondent of notification of the decision of the state director.
9. In construing and enforcing the provisions of this section the
action of an agent, officer, employee or member of a person, firm,
association or corporation shall be presumed to be the act of such
person, firm, association or corporation.
§ 38. Compliance with local building regulations and restrictive
covenants. 1. As used in this section:
"Department" shall mean the department, bureau, division, agency or
person, including any joint agency, of a county, city, town or village,
charged with the enforcement of the applicable building code, multiple
dwelling law, multiple residence law or other law, as defined in section
three of this act, relating to the construction, maintenance and use of
buildings, structures or other real property and to the control of land
uses in such county, city, town or village.
"Owner" shall mean the owner or owners of the freehold of the premises
or any lesser estate therein, a mortgagee or vendee in possession, an
assignee of rents, a receiver, executor, trustee, lessee, agent or other
person, firm or corporation directly or indirectly in control of a
building, structure or other real property.
2. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, as defined in
section three of this act, any shelter constructed or installed or
proposed to be constructed or installed in accordance with the plan,
regulations or orders of the commission pertaining to shelters shall be

deemed to comply with all provisions of law relating to the
construction, maintenance and use of buildings, structures, or other
real property and to the control of land uses, and the owner shall be
entitled to apply for and obtain, and the department shall issue, upon a
showing of compliance with such plan, regulations or orders of the
commission and upon payment of the appropriate fees, if any, any permit,
license, certificate, authorization or other document for such
construction, maintenance or use required by such provisions of law;
provided, however, that no such shelter constructed or installed or
proposed to be constructed or installed in accordance with the plan,
regulations or orders of the commission pertaining to shelters shall be
deemed to comply with such provisions of law nor shall any such permit,
license, certificate, authorization or other document be issued if the
department shall determine that such shelter will, because of its
structural arrangement, location design or other factor, substantially
deviate from the reasonable requirements of such provisions of law and
that such substantial deviation is unnecessary, at approximately the
same cost to the owner, to effectuate the purposes of this act with
respect to the provision of shelter protection.
3. Each county, city, town or village shall have power to adopt local
laws, and each department shall have power, in the manner provided by
law, to adopt rules and regulations, not inconsistent with this act and
the plan, regulations or orders of the commission promulgated
thereunder, necessary to execute and implement the powers granted and
the duties imposed by this section.
No provision of this subdivision shall be construed or interpreted as
affecting the validity of any ordinance enacted prior to July first,
nineteen hundred sixty-six, or actions taken thereunder by the
government of any county, city, town or village.
4. (a) The failure to grant an application for such permit, license,
certificate, authorization or document within sixty days after
submission thereof, may be reviewed by an owner in the manner provided
by law for appeals from determinations of the department made in
enforcing the multiple dwelling law, the multiple residence law, the
state building construction code or any other provision of law relating
to the construction, maintenance or use of buildings, structures or
other real property or to the control of land uses.
(b) On any such appeal wherein a party relies for ground of relief or
defense or raises issue or brings into question the construction or
validity of any of the provisions of this act or the plan, regulations
or orders of the commission promulgated thereunder relating to shelters,
the court or agency having jurisdiction of the appeal, action or
proceeding may at any stage certify such fact to the commission. The
commission may intervene in any such appeal, action or proceeding.
5. The construction, installation or maintenance of a shelter in
accordance with the plan, regulations or orders of the commission
pertaining to shelters shall not be deemed a breach of a restriction on
the use of land heretofore or hereafter created by a covenant, promise,
negative easement, special limitation or condition subsequent and no
reverter shall occur, no possessory estate shall result and no right of
entry shall accrue by reason of such construction. No action or
proceeding may be commenced in any court in the state where such action
or proceeding is based on a claim or allegation that such construction,
installation or maintenance (a) constitutes a breach of such
restriction, (b) causes such a reverter, or (c) results in the creation
of such a possessory estate or the accrual of such a right of entry.
ARTICLE 4
POWERS OF AGENCIES

Section 40. Powers of certain state officers and agencies.
41. Waiver of type, weight and size limitations for certain
vehicles.
42. Contracts for research work in health matters related to the
defense emergency.
43. Emergency health and sanitation areas.
44. Emergency measures to protect milk supply.
46. Production and sale of prison-made articles and materials
essential to the defense effort.
§ 40. Powers of certain state officers and agencies.
Nothwithstanding the provisions of any law, for the purpose of
providing during the defense emergency (a) for unanticipated or
emergency needs for the protection of the safety and health of
the people of the state in the event of attack, or (b) for the
mobilization and efficient utilization of all of the resources
and facilities in the state in aid of the defense effort, or (c)
for the orderly conduct of public or private affairs in a manner
consistent with the requirements of the defense effort, the
following officers or agencies of the state shall have power to
take action or to adopt, promulgate and make effective plans,
regulations or orders, consistent with the provisions of this
act and with any actions taken or plans, regulations or orders
adopted and promulgated by the council, with respect to the
following matters:
1. The civil service commission, upon a finding that because
of the manpower requirements of the armed services and the
defense effort vacancies exist which cannot otherwise be
readily, equitably and satisfactorily filled, shall have such
power with respect to (a) extension of provisional appointments
until lists are established and appointments are made therefrom;
(b) extension of eligible lists; (c) waiver of residence or
citizenship requirements relating to public offices or
employments; (d) restriction of leaves of absence except for
illness, entrance into the armed forces of the United States, or
for other reasons which are in the public interest; (e)
employment for temporary periods of officers or employees in
agencies other than those in which they are regularly employed;
(f) authorization of the employment of public officers and
employees in additional public offices or employment; and (g)
authorization of compensated employment as public officers or
employees, of persons receiving pensions or retirement
allowances where such compensated employment is not already
authorized by law, provided that adequate provision is made
whereby the value of the pension or retirement allowance is
deducted from the compensation paid for such employment. The
commission may determine that it will exercise any such power
with respect to municipal civil service administration only upon
the written request of the appropriate civil service commission.
2. The comptroller (a) upon a finding that because of shortage
of supply or because of danger to health and safety immediate
action is necessary, shall have such power with respect to
suspension of provisions of law relating to public purchasing or
letting of public contracts and regulation of the manner in
which such purchasing or letting is to be accomplished during
the period of such suspension; and (b) in the event of attack,
shall have power to issue notes for the purpose of paying
expenses incurred by the state or, to the extent authorized by
the legislature, by any political subdivision of the state, for

the purpose of repelling invasion, suppressing insurrection or
defending the state in war. Each such note shall mature within a
period of not to exceed two years from the date of original
issue thereof, but may contain provision for payment thereof
within such two year period. Unless the legislature shall
provide for the issuance of bonds to redeem such notes, such
notes shall be paid not later than their respective maturity
dates. The comptroller shall report to the legislature at the
opening of its regular or extraordinary session all action taken
by him pursuant to this subdivision.
3. The industrial commissioner shall have such power with
respect to safety and record of manufacture, sale, possession,
use or ownership of fireworks or explosives and the manufacture
and transportation of firearms, but such powers shall not apply
to the personal possession, use or ownership of firearms and
ammunition therefor.
4. The public service commission, upon a finding that it is
necessary for public health or safety, shall have such power
with respect to (a) maintenance, restriction, limitation,
extension or interconnection of public utility services, whether
privately or publicly owned; and (b) means or devices of
communication other than those exclusively regulated by federal
authorities.
5. The secretary of state shall have such power with respect
to (a) extension or restriction of the hours during which public
business may be conducted, public offices kept open, and
officers and employees required to perform their powers and
duties therein; and (b) designation of substitute places where
public offices may be located or public business conducted.
6. The commissioner of transportation, upon a finding that
there is a shortage of equipment, gasoline, oil or other
supplies necessary for the use of motor vehicles or upon the
request of the president of the United States or of the head of
a federal department or agency having responsibility relative to
the defense effort, or upon a finding that it is necessary for
public health or safety, shall have such power with respect to
transportation or travel subject to his jurisdiction, including
the speeds at which and the conditions under which such
transportation or travel may be conducted.
7. Heads of departments in charge of institutions shall have
such power with respect to health or safety of incarcerated
individuals thereof, including transportation of incarcerated
individuals to, from and between such institutions.
§ 41. Waiver of type, weight and size limitations for certain
vehicles. 1. As used in this section "public highway" shall mean
and include any highway, road, street, avenue, alley, public
place, public driveway, parkway, bridge or any other public way
in the state.
2. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, the
state commissioner of transportation, whenever he deems it
necessary in the interest of the defense effort, may issue
permits subject to such conditions as he deems necessary for
safety for the operation or movement upon any public highway in
the state of vehicles or the combinations thereof, the types,
weights or dimensions of which are inconsistent with or exceed
the restrictions of limitations prescribed by or pursuant to
law.

§ 42. Contracts for research work in health matters related to
the defense emergency. The state commissioner of health and the
state commissioner of mental hygiene shall have power,
individually and collectively, to contract for the
accomplishment of research work for the armed forces of the
United States or in connection with health matters related to
the defense emergency. They shall for such purpose have power,
subject to the approval of the director of the budget, to obtain
and provide the necessary personnel, facilities, material,
equipment and supplies for such work by contract, on the open
market and without advertising or competitive bidding.
§ 43. Emergency health and sanitation areas. 1. Whenever the
governor shall determine that (a) because of the existence of
any military or naval establishment of the United States, or of
any other establishment or facility constructed, enlarged or
placed in operation subsequent to June twenty-fifth, nineteen
hundred fifty for the purposes of or in connection with the
defense effort, there has been an increase in the population of
any area in the state to such an extent as to produce problems
of health and sanitation, or (b) an emergency exists as the
result of attack, or (c) as a result of conditions created
directly or indirectly by the defense effort, insufficient or
inadequate medical or health personnel or facilities are
available in any area, he may, upon the recommendation of the
state commissioner of health or whenever he determines that such
action is deemed necessary for the protection of public health,
designate any area in the state so affected as an emergency
health and sanitation area and fix the boundaries thereof.
2. Whenever a special emergency health and sanitation area is
established, as herein provided, it shall be the duty of the
local board or boards of health of the territory within such
area, to make and enforce rules and regulations consistent with
the provisions of the public health law (a) to prevent or limit
the introduction or spread of any contagious or infectious
disease and (b) to protect the public health within the area.
3. If in the judgment of the governor, any local board of
health in the territory within such area is unable or fails to
make and enforce adequate rules and regulations for the
protection of the public health therein, he may direct the state
commissioner of health to make and enforce such rules and
regulations, and for this purpose the state commissioner of
health is authorized and empowered to assume any or all of the
powers and authority now or hereafter conferred by law upon
local boards of health.
4. Any local board of health having jurisdiction over
territory within an emergency health and sanitation area may, by
application in writing, request the commissioner of health to
undertake the protection of the area over which the local board
has jurisdiction. Upon his approval of any such request, the
state commissioner of health is hereby authorized and empowered
to make and enforce rules and regulations in such area and for
this purpose, the state commissioner of health is authorized and
empowered to assume any and all power and authority now or
hereafter conferred by law upon local boards of health.
5. Whenever the governor has designated an emergency health
and sanitation area because of the insufficiency or inadequacy
of medical or other health personnel or facilities, the state
commissioner of health is authorized, directed and empowered to

designate, appoint, employ for service therein and supervise
necessary medical and health personnel and to make such other
provisions as may be necessary or desirable for the protection
of public health.
6. The commissioner of health is hereby authorized to
cooperate with and utilize the services of local, state and
federal health and welfare agencies in formulating and
effectuating state, interstate and federal health and sanitation
programs.
§ 44. Emergency measures to protect milk supply. When in the
opinion of the commissioner of health a milk or cream supply has
been so contaminated as to be potentially dangerous to health or
serious curtailment of such a supply is threatened as a result
of accident, sabotage or enemy action, he is hereby authorized
to embargo any part of any such milk or cream supply pending
investigation and, notwithstanding any contrary provisions of
law, to authorize the transfer of milk and cream from one plant
to another or from one political subdivision to another for
pasteurization, bottling or sale, and to waive or modify any
requirements, regulations or standards pertaining to or
affecting the production, processing, handling, storage,
transportation, sale, resale or distribution of milk and cream,
or any operations or procedures incident thereto until
conditions warrant normal operation.
§ 46. Production and sale of prison-made articles and
materials essential to the defense effort. Notwithstanding any
inconsistent provision of law, and during the defense emergency,
under and pursuant to such regulations as may be adopted jointly
by the state commissioner of correction, the state commissioner
of commerce and the state commissioner of general services which
they determine will best utilize the labor of prisoners to aid
the defense effort, equipment, goods, products, articles and
materials essential to the defense effort may be manufactured,
produced, processed, reprocessed, treated, altered or repaired
in any prison, reformatory, penitentiary or jail or other
correctional institution in the state with the labor of
prisoners therein and distributed or sold in accordance with
such regulations. Such regulations may be amended or repealed
from time to time but no such regulation or amendment or repeal
thereof shall become effective until approved by the council.
All of the provisions of article seven of the correction law,
not inconsistent with the provisions of this section or
inconsistent with the regulations adopted pursuant to this
section, shall be applicable to the work performed and actions
taken under the provisions of this section.
ARTICLE 5
POWER OF DISPENSATION FROM CERTAIN LIMITATIONS OF LAW

Section 70. Definition.
71. Dispensing power.
72. Dispensing power on public work.
73. Legislative standards and limits of dispensing power.
74. Application for dispensation.
75. Appeals.
76. Misrepresentation.
77. Liabilities under dispensation.
78. Temporary restriction of jurisdiction of the board of
standards and appeals.

§ 70. Definition. As used in this article: "Defense work" shall mean
noncombatant service performed in connection with (a) the manufacture,
production and distribution of articles and materials for defense on or
for contracts for the armed forces of the United States, or for any
other agency of the United States, or for any associated power of the
United States, (b) any other work related thereto, or (c) any other
occupation, activity or employment essential to the defense effort or
necessary to promote and protect the public health and welfare and the
safety and security of the people of the state.
§ 71. Dispensing power. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of
law the industrial commissioner is hereby authorized, during the defense
emergency and subject to the provisions of this article, to grant
dispensations to employers engaged in defense work from requirements
imposed by or pursuant to law which prevent or interfere with maximum
possible production in defense work and to permit operation or
employment in such defense work (a) on a seven day basis; (b) on a
multiple shift basis; (c) under waiver of section two hundred one-a of
the labor law; or (d) under waiver of such other provisions of law as
may regulate or restrict operation, hours, equipment, places or
conditions of employment, persons that may be employed, or types of work
in which certain persons may engage.
§ 72. Dispensing power on public work. During the existence of the
defense emergency and subject to the provisions of this article, the
industrial commissioner and, on appeal, the New York state board of
standards and appeals are hereby authorized to grant dispensations to
prevent the provisions of subdivision two of section two hundred twenty
of the labor law from interfering with speedy construction of public
work related to the defense effort and necessary for the success of the
defense effort. Conditions and restrictions with respect to hours,
wages, equipment, places or conditions of employment, persons that may
be employed, or types of work in which certain persons may engage may be
imposed in connection with such dispensations. Such an application by an
agency of the state or of a political subdivision which will be a party
to a public work contract may be made only prior to the letting of such
contract.
§ 73. Legislative standards and limits of dispensing power. The
granting of dispensations pursuant to this article shall be subject to
the following standards and limits:
(a) No dispensation shall be granted to any employer with respect to
the employment of minors under the age of sixteen;
(b) No dispensation shall be granted for a period in excess of six
months, provided, however, that upon reconsideration of all of the facts
and circumstances of a particular case, a continuance of a dispensation
may be granted.
(c) No dispensation shall be granted which does not safeguard the
health and welfare of the worker and which is not demanded by the
necessities of adjusting state policy to requirements of the defense
effort.
(d) No dispensation shall be granted to any employer who can by
utilization of available labor supply or by organizational or other
reasonable adjustments maintain maximum efficiency and production
without such dispensation.
(e) No dispensation shall be granted except where necessary to prevent
the normal restrictions of law from interfering with the paramount duty
of maximum possible production in defense work.
§ 74. Application for dispensation. 1. Employers in defense work may
make applications for dispensation pursuant to this article in such
manner and upon such forms as the commissioner of labor shall prescribe.

The commissioner of labor may, after hearing upon due notice, revoke
dispensations not necessary to maintain maximum possible production in
defense work.
2. Where immediate dispensation is necessary in order to prevent
interference with maximum possible production in defense work, the
commissioner of labor may grant such dispensation provisionally for a
period not to exceed one month. Such a provisional dispensation may be
revoked upon notice if subsequent investigation demonstrates that the
dispensation is unwarranted.
§ 75. Appeals. Any person in interest who is aggrieved by any
determination of the industrial commissioner with respect to an
application for or grant, denial or revocation of a dispensation under
this article may appeal to the New York state board of standards and
appeals. Such an appeal may be taken within twenty days after the date
notice of such determination is given to the applicant by such
commissioner. The applicant for the dispensation shall have the burden
of proving that the granting or continuance of a dispensation is
warranted in his particular case. The board is hereby authorized to
affirm, reverse or modify any determination of the industrial
commissioner under this article. The board shall order a hearing if it
deems a hearing necessary in order to enable it to decide the issues
raised. In a case where a hearing is not so ordered, the board may
decide the appeal upon written submissions. The determinations of the
board upon questions of fact shall be conclusive. Within twenty days
after notice of the determination of the board is given to the
applicant, an appeal may be taken upon questions of law to the appellate
division of the supreme court, third department. The filing of a
petition of appeal with the board of standards and appeals in accordance
with that board's rules of procedure, or the filing of a notice of
appeal with such court, shall not stay the determination of the
industrial commissioner under this article.
§ 76. Misrepresentation. Any person who wilfully makes a material
misrepresentation of fact or purpose to the industrial commissioner or
to the board of standards and appeals in an application or appeal for
dispensation under this article is guilty of a misdemeanor and any
dispensation issued upon the basis of such misrepresentation shall not
constitute a defense for any violation of the law from which
dispensation was thus obtained.
§ 77. Liabilities under dispensation. Except as provided in section
seventy-six of this act, no person, firm or corporation engaged in
defense work to whom a dispensation granted pursuant to this article is
in effect, shall be liable, under any penal or civil law, for operation
or employment as authorized in such dispensation.
§ 78. Temporary restriction of jurisdiction of the board of standards
and appeals. For the limited purposes and duration of this article,
subdivision five of section one hundred sixty-one of the labor law is
hereby modified so as to relieve the board of standards and appeals of
jurisdiction to grant variations thereunder to employers engaged in
defense work and sole authority to grant dispensations hereunder to such
employers is hereby vested in the industrial commissioner subject to
appeal as provided in section seventy-five hereof. In other respects the
jurisdiction of the board of standards and appeals remains as
established.
ARTICLE 6
CLOSING OR RESTRICTING USE OF HIGHWAYS; POSTING OF PROPERTY

Section 80. Definitions.

81. Petition to close or restrict use of travel upon highways or
to post property.
82. Order of commissioner closing or restricting use of
highways.
83. Authority to post.
84. Violations; penalty.
85. Powers of peace officers.
86. Construction.
§ 80. Definitions. As used in this article the following terms shall
mean and include:
1. "Highway." Any private or public highway, street, way, waterway, or
other place used for travel.
2. "Commissioner." The state commissioner of transportation.
§ 81. Petition to close or restrict use of travel upon highways or to
post property. (a) Any agency of the United States engaged in or
concerned with the defense effort, (b) any agency of the state, (c) the
chief executive officer or the governing body of any political
subdivision of the state or (d) an individual, partnership, association
or corporation using or preparing to use real property in connection
with the operation of a public utility, an airport, a dock, or a wharf,
or the manufacture, transportation, distribution or storage of
explosives, firearms, inflammable liquids, gas, oil, coal, electricity,
water or any product to be used in the defense effort by this state, of
any state of the United States, or a political subdivision, by the
United States or any associated power thereof, may petition the
commissioner for an order to close or to direct the appropriate official
or body to close to public use and travel and to restrict public use and
travel upon, any highway or part thereof or to post property, on which
such use and travel or entrance by the general public is deemed
dangerous to the public safety and security or to the defense effort, or
to the safety of property of the petitioner.
§ 82. Order of commissioner closing or restricting use of highways. 1.
If the commissioner is satisfied that the public safety and security,
the defense effort, or the safety of property of the petitioner so
require, he shall, in the case of a highway under his supervision and
control, make an order closing to public use and travel or reasonably
restricting the use of and travel upon such highway or part thereof; in
the case of a highway not under his supervision and control he shall
make an order directing the appropriate official or body having
supervision and control of such highway or part thereof to close to
public use and travel or restrict the use of and travel upon such
highway or part thereof, in accordance with the terms of such order.
2. Copies of the order shall be filed as follows:
(a) One copy in the office of the council, one copy in the office of
the state department of transportation, and one copy in the office of
the department of state;
(b) If any portion of such a highway is part of a county road, one
copy of the order shall be filed in the office of the county
superintendent of highways and one in the office of the clerk of the
board of supervisors of the county affected by the order;
(c) If any portion of such a highway is part of a town highway, one
copy of the order shall be filed in the office of the town
superintendent of highways and one in the office of the town clerk of
the town affected by the order;
(d) If any portion is a city street or part of a city street, the copy
of such order shall be filed in the office of the city clerk of the city
affected by the order; and
(e) If any portion is a village street or part of a village street,
the copy of such order shall be filed in the office of the village clerk
of the village affected by the order.
3. The commissioner shall post and keep posted or authorize and direct
the appropriate official or body having such supervision and control to
post and keep posted appropriate notices in letters at least three
inches high reading "Closed By Order Under State Defense Emergency Act."
Such notices shall be posted conspicuously at each end and intersection
of any highway or part thereof so closed or restricted by such order; in
the case of a waterway such notices shall be posted conspicuously at
such locations and in such manner as in the opinion of the commissioner
will reasonably place the public on notice of such closing or
restriction. The commissioner, in addition, in a proper case may in his
discretion order, authorize and direct the petitioner or the appropriate
office or body having such supervision and control to erect and maintain
suitable and sufficient barricades across any highway or portion thereof
to close and prevent individuals from entering the same or to restrict
public use and travel thereon; in the case of a highway under his
supervision and control, such an order may provide for such barricades.
4. The commissioner may revoke or modify any order theretofore made
and shall cause or require copies of such a revocation or modification
to be filed in the same offices as the original order.
5. In the case of any order to close and barricade a highway or part
thereof within, adjacent to or in the vicinity of a reservation,
installation or facility maintained by the armed forces of the United
States, the provisions of any law relating to the maintenance and repair
of streets and highways in the state and applicable to the state, or to
any political subdivision of the state, shall be deemed to be suspended
from the date notices are so posted and barricades, if any, are so
erected until the order of the commissioner shall be revoked or the
reservation, installation or facility shall cease to be maintained under
the jurisdiction of such armed forces. Neither the state, nor any
political subdivision shall be liable for damages to persons or property
sustained on any such highway or portion thereof from and after the date
of posting of such notices and the erection of such barricades, if any,
until the order of the commissioner is revoked or such reservation,
installation or facility shall cease to be maintained under the
jurisdiction of such armed forces; provided that during such period such
notices and barricades, if any, shall continue to be maintained suitably
in accordance with the order of the commissioner.
6. Nothing in this section shall prevent the lawful temporary closing
of any highway or part thereof otherwise authorized by or pursuant to
law.
§ 83. Authority to post. If the commissioner is satisfied that the
public safety or security, the defense effort or the safety of property
of the petitioner so require, he may grant a petition to post property
and issue an order authorizing the petitioner to post any part of or all
such property, whether enclosed or not, with a sign or signs reading "No
Entry Without Permission By Order Under State Defense Emergency Act."
Such sign or signs shall be placed in such locations and in such manner
as the commissioner shall approve as reasonably to place the public on
notice that such premises so posted are not to be entered without
permission of the owner or person in charge thereof.
§ 84. Violations; penalty. 1. Any person who wilfully violates an
order made pursuant to this article shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and
be punished upon conviction by an imprisonment for not more than ten
days, or a fine of not more fifty dollars, or both.

§ 85. Powers of peace officers. Any peace officer or any person
employed as watchman, guard or in a supervisory capacity on premises
posted in accordance with the provisions of section eighty-three of this
act may stop any person found on any premises so posted and may detain
him for the purpose of demanding, and may demand, of him his name,
address and reason for being in such place. If such peace officer or
employee has reason to believe from the answers of the person so
interrogated or from his behavior or other attendant facts or
circumstances that such person does not have permission to be in such
place, such peace officer may forthwith arrest such person without a
warrant on the charge of violating the provisions of such section or
such employee may forthwith turn him over to a peace officer, who may
arrest him without a warrant on the charge of violating the provisions
of such section.
§ 86. Construction. Nothing in this article shall impair, curtail or
destroy the rights of employees or their representatives to
self-organization, to form, join or assist labor organizations to
bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing or to
engage in lawful concerted activities for the purpose of collective
bargaining or other mutual aids or protection.
ARTICLE 7
Banking

Section 90. Definitions.
91. Change of location.
92. Emergency boards of directors.
93. Powers of the superintendent.
95. General provisions.
§ 90. Definitions. 1. "Institution," when used in this article, shall
mean and include any banking organization or licensed lender within the
meaning of such terms as defined in section two of the banking law, any
branch or agency of a foreign banking corporation licensed to do
business in this state pursuant to article two of such law, any casher
of checks licensed pursuant to article nine-A of such law, any bank
holding company within the meaning of such term as defined in section
one hundred forty-one of such law, the New York business development
corporation created by article five-A of such law, the savings and loan
bank of the state of New York organized pursuant to article ten-B of
such law, any mutual trust investment company organized pursuant to
article twelve-A of such law, any fund as defined in subdivision two of
this section, and any branch or office of any institution.
2. "Fund," when used in this article, shall mean any fund established
pursuant to article six-B, article ten-A or article eleven-A of such
law, of which fund there is a board of individual trustees.
3. "Corporate institution," when used in this article, shall mean any
institution which is a corporation organized under the laws of the state
of New York and, insofar as the provisions of this article may
appropriately apply thereto, any fund.
4. "Charter," when used in this article, shall mean and include the
certificate of organization or incorporation or special law
incorporating a corporation together with its bylaws, or the agreement
establishing a fund.
5. "Acute emergency," when used in this article, shall mean a
condition in which, by reason of loss of life, epidemic disease,
destruction or damage of property, contamination of property by
radiological, chemical or bacteriological means, or disruption of the
means of transportation and communication, resulting from an attack, it
is impossible or impracticable for any institution to conduct its

ordinary business in compliance with the laws other than this article
and, if a corporate institution, in compliance with the provisions of
its charter.
6. "Director" and "board of directors," when used in this article,
shall include respectively "trustee" and "board of trustees," including
an individual trustee and a board of individual trustees of any fund.
7. "Acting director" and "acting officer" when used in this article,
shall mean, respectively, an acting director or acting officer elected
or appointed in accordance with the provisions of this article.
8. "Quorum," when used in this article, shall mean with respect to any
item of business which may come before any meeting of directors of a
corporate institution the minimum number of directors required by the
provisions of law other than this article and by the charter of such
institution to be present for valid action to be taken at such meeting
with respect to such business.
9. "Superintendent," when used in this article, shall mean the
superintendent of financial services.
§ 91. Change of location. Any institution, without complying with any
provision of law requiring approval or application for approval of a
change of location of its place or places of business, may from time to
time change the location of any of its places of business with respect
to which an acute emergency exists to another location within this state
which shall be as near as practicable to the place at which such place
of business was located at the commencement of the period of acute
emergency, and may carry on its business at such new location during
such period of acute emergency and thereafter for a reasonable time. Any
institution changing the location of any place of business pursuant to
the provisions of this paragraph shall notify the superintendent thereof
in writing as soon as practicable before or after the date of such
change, stating the address of the place of business whose location is
being changed, the address of the location to which such place of
business is being changed, and the dates when the institution is ceasing
to do business at the former location and commencing to do business at
the latter location.
§ 92. Emergency boards of directors. 1. Notwithstanding any other law
or any provision of the charter of any corporate institution to the
contrary, if at any time during a period of acute emergency with respect
to any corporate institution, no person otherwise empowered to call
meetings of the board of directors of such institution shall be present
and capable of acting, meetings of directors and acting directors may be
called by any director or acting director, or if no director or acting
director be present and capable of acting, by any officer or acting
officer. If it shall be impracticable or impossible to give notice of a
meeting of directors or acting directors of such an institution in the
manner otherwise prescribed, the person calling such a meeting may give
notice thereof by making such reasonable efforts as circumstances may
permit to notify each director and acting director of the meeting. Such
notification may be oral or written, and shall specify the time and
place of the meeting, but need not specify the purposes thereof. Failure
of any director or acting director to receive actual notice of a meeting
of directors and acting directors shall not affect the power of the
directors and acting directors present at such meeting to exercise the
powers of an emergency board of directors as prescribed in this section.
Nothing contained in this article shall be construed as requiring a
meeting of directors of such an institution to be convened in any manner
different from that prescribed by its charter and by the provisions of
law other than this article.

2. The directors and acting directors of any corporate institution, if
three or more in number, who are present at any meeting convened during
a period of acute emergency affecting such institution pursuant to call
made or notice given in the manner described in subdivision one of this
section or at any meeting convened during such period pursuant to other
lawful call and notice at which a quorum is not present, shall
constitute an emergency board of directors which, notwithstanding any
provision of the charter of such institution or any provision of law
other than this article to the contrary, shall have the power, subject
to the limitations prescribed in this article, by a majority of such
persons present, to take any and every action which may be necessary to
meet the exigencies of the acute emergency or to enable such institution
to conduct its business during such period, but no other powers. The
powers of an emergency board of directors shall include but shall not be
limited to the following powers:
(a) At any meeting, to elect such acting directors as it may deem
necessary, without regard to the number of directors which would
otherwise be required, to serve in any positions on such board which are
vacant or in place of any directors or acting directors who are absent
from such meeting, but not to elect any director on a permanent basis.
(b) To elect such acting officers as it may deem necessary, without
regard to the number of officers which would otherwise be required, to
serve in any offices which are vacant or in place of any officers or
acting officers who fail to appear and assume their duties, to fix the
compensation and determine the powers and duties of acting officers and
to remove acting officers but not to remove any officer or to fill any
vacancy on a permanent basis or to cause the institution to enter into
any contract of employment for a term of over one year.
(c) To cause the institution to change the location of any of its
places of business pursuant to section ninety-one of this chapter, and
to authorize such action as it may deem appropriate to acquire space and
facilities at the new locations, but not to acquire any property in fee
or for a term of over one year.
(d) To postpone any meeting of the stockholders or members or
directors of such institution, or any directors' examination of such
institution if, in the judgment of the majority of the members of such
emergency board of directors, it would be impracticable to hold such
meeting or conduct such examination at the time it would otherwise have
been held or conducted.
(e) If it shall appear to an emergency board of directors that a
quorum of the board of directors cannot be assembled within a reasonable
time, to call a meeting of the stockholders or members of the
institution to be held as soon as the circumstances may reasonably
permit, at a place to be designated by the emergency board of directors
within this state or a contiguous state, for the purpose of electing
directors to fill vacancies on the board of directors, but for no other
purpose, and to propose nominees for such election. No meeting of
stockholders or members shall be held pursuant to such call except upon
notice given in accordance with the provisions of law other than this
article and the charter of the institution.
3. As soon as practicable after each meeting of an emergency board of
directors, the person who presided thereat shall notify the
superintendent in writing of the time and place of such meeting, of the
efforts made to give notice thereof to the directors and acting
directors who failed to appear, of the persons present at such meeting,
of any changes in the directors, acting directors, officers and acting
officers and of all actions taken at such meeting.

4. No person prohibited by law or by the charter of a corporate
institution from serving as a director of such institution shall be
eligible to serve as an acting director except that no person shall be
disqualified to serve as an acting director by reason of his not being a
stockholder of such institution, by reason of his not being a resident
of this state or of a contiguous state, or by reason of the number of
the directors or acting directors who are officers, acting officers or
employees of the institution. Any person may serve as an acting
director of a fund who is a director, acting director, officer or acting
officer of an institution which is a party to the agreement creating the
fund. No oath of acting directors shall be required.
5. Acting directors elected pursuant to the provisions of this section
or appointed pursuant to the provisions of section ninety-three of this
chapter shall be entitled to notice of and to vote at all meetings of an
emergency board of directors equally with directors. Acting directors
shall not be entitled to take part in the deliberations or to vote at
any meeting of directors duly convened in accordance with the applicable
provisions of law other than this section and with the provisions of the
charter of the institution at which a quorum of the directors is
present. Each acting director shall serve until the director or acting
director in whose place he was elected or appointed shall attend a
meeting or until a director is duly elected to fill the vacancy in which
such acting director has been serving, whichever event occurs the
earlier. Acting directors shall be entitled to any compensation payable
to directors.
6. Acting officers elected pursuant to this subdivision shall have
such powers and duties and receive such compensation as may from time to
time be determined by the board of directors or an emergency board of
directors. Each acting officer shall serve until the officer in whose
place he was elected shall appear and assume his duties or until his
successor officer or acting officer shall be elected, whichever event
occurs the earlier.
§ 93. Powers of the superintendent. 1. In the event that at any time
during a period of acute emergency, the number of directors or acting
directors of an institution which is a corporation who are present and
capable of acting shall be less than three, the superintendent shall
have the power to designate additional acting directors in such number
as will bring to three the number of directors and acting directors who
are present and capable of acting.
2. Upon a determination that such action will tend to promote the safe
and sound and orderly conduct of the business of any institution or to
prevent controversy as to the power of any group of persons purporting
to act as an emergency board of directors so to act, the superintendent
shall have power to issue orders declaring that any such group shall or
shall not have the powers of an emergency board of directors, or
confirming, modifying or vacating in whole or in part any action taken
or purportedly taken by any such group or removing any acting director.
3. (a) At any time after an attack, upon his determination that such
action will tend to promote certainty as to the powers of institutions
or individuals pursuant to this article or that such action is desirable
to enable institutions to take preparatory precautions prior to the
occurrence of an acute emergency, the superintendent shall have power to
declare that any provision of this article which he may specify shall be
operative with respect to any institution which he may designate. Upon
such declaration such institution and its directors, officers, acting
directors and acting officers shall have all powers conferred by such
provisions of this article. The failure of the superintendent so to
declare shall not be deemed to limit the powers of any institution or

its directors, officers, acting directors or acting officers where an
acute emergency exists in fact.
(b) At any time after the commencement of an acute emergency or after
the superintendent shall have declared any provision of this article
operative pursuant to paragraph (a) of this subdivision, upon his
determination that an institution is able, in whole or in part, to carry
on its business in compliance with its charter and the laws other than
this article, the superintendent shall have power to declare that any
provision of this article which he may specify shall be inoperative with
respect to any institution which he may designate. Upon such
declaration, such institution shall be governed by its charter and the
provisions of law other than this article, except insofar as other
provisions of this article remain operative.
4. Upon his determination that, as a result of an acute emergency, the
business and affairs of an institution cannot otherwise be conducted in
a safe and sound manner, the superintendent may forthwith take
possession of the institution and its business and property. The
provisions of section six hundred six through six hundred thirty-two,
inclusive, of the banking law shall be applicable in any case in which
the superintendent takes possession of an institution pursuant to this
subdivision as though the institution were a banking organization or
foreign banking corporation of which the superintendent had taken
possession pursuant to section six hundred six of such law, except that
no such provision shall be applicable which the superintendent shall
have declared inapplicable pursuant to this subdivision. The
superintendent shall have power to declare inapplicable any such
provision upon his determination that the same is inappropriate or
unnecessary to protect the interests of the public or the stockholders
or creditors of the institution, in view of the acute emergency and the
nature of the institution. This subdivision shall not be construed as
conferring upon the superintendent the power to declare inapplicable the
provisions of section six hundred seven of such law.
5. The superintendent shall have power to issue general and specific
regulations, directives and orders consistent with and in furtherance of
the purposes of this article.
§ 95. General provisions. 1. In any action or proceeding it shall be
presumed that a condition of acute emergency existing within any city or
county within the state constitutes a condition of acute emergency with
respect to every institution within such city or county.
2. The board of directors of every corporate institution shall, during
any period of acute emergency, have all of the powers of an emergency
board of directors as provided by this article. This article shall not
be construed as limiting the powers of any institution or of the
stockholders or members or board of directors of any corporate
institution.
3. This article shall not be construed as permitting or requiring any
corporation organized under the laws of any other state of the United
States or of any foreign country, or of Puerto Rico, or any branch,
office, or agency of such corporation, or the board of directors,
officers, or stockholders of any such corporation to do anything which
they could not lawfully and validly do under the laws of the
jurisdiction under whose laws such corporation was organized.
ARTICLE 7-A
Insurance

Section 96. Definitions; interpretation of article.
97. Emergency by-laws.
98. Changes of location; emergency boards of directors.

99. Powers of the superintendent.
99-a. General provisions.
§ 96. Definitions; interpretation of article. 1. When used in this
article, the following terms shall mean and include the following:
(a) "Organization"--any insurer, rating organization, service or
advisory organization, joint underwriting association, welfare or
pension fund, which is subject, in whole or in part, to the insurance
law of this state.
(b) "Domestic organization"--any "organization" which is domiciled in
this state, including, insofar as the provisions of this article may
appropriately apply thereto, any welfare or pension fund or United
States branch of an alien insurer.
(c) "Charter"--the certificate of organization or incorporation or
special law incorporating a corporation together with its by-laws, or
the agreement establishing a fund or association together with its
constitution and by-laws.
(d) "Acute emergency"--a period in which, by reason of loss of life,
epidemic disease, destruction or damage of property, contamination of
property by radiological, chemical or bacteriological means, or
disruption of the means of transportation and communication, resulting
from an attack, as defined in subdivision two of section three of this
chapter, it is impossible or impracticable for the business of insurance
in this state to be conducted in strict accord with the provisions of
law or "charters" applicable thereto.
(e) "Board"--the board of directors, board of trustees, committee or
similar body having control of the affairs of an "organization."
(f) "Director"--a director, trustee, or member of a "board".
(g) "Acting director"--an acting "director" elected or appointed in
accordance with this article.
(h) "Officer"--an officer of a "domestic organization".
(i) "Acting officer"--an acting "officer" appointed in accordance with
this article.
(j) "Quorum"--the minimum number of "directors" required by charter
and law other than this article, to be present for valid action to be
taken at a meeting of a "board" with respect to each particular item of
business which may come before such meeting.
(k) "Superintendent"--the superintendent of financial services or
person duly designated to exercise the powers of that office during an
"acute emergency".
2. This article does not, and shall not be construed to, limit the
powers of any organization or permit or require any organization which
is not domiciled in this state or any branch, office, or agency of such
organization or the directors, officers, members, policyholders or
stockholders of any such organization to act, or fail to act, in such
fashion as would violate the laws of the jurisdiction wherein such
organization has its domicile.
§ 97. Emergency by-laws. 1. With the approval of the superintendent,
any domestic organization may, at any time, adopt, in the same manner as
in the case of ordinary by-laws, emergency by-laws to become operative
during a period of acute emergency. Emergency by-laws may contain
provisions with respect to the number of directors capable of acting
which shall constitute its board, the number of such directors which
shall constitute a quorum at a meeting of the board, the number of votes
necessary for action by such board, the manner in which vacancies on the
board shall be filled, the line of succession of its officers, and the
interim management of the affairs of the organization; such provisions,
if approved by the superintendent, need not comply with the requirements
of the charter of such domestic organization or of the general

corporation law, the stock corporation law, the business corporation
law, the membership corporation law and the insurance law.
2. Except as provided in subdivision two of section ninety-nine-a, the
provisions of subdivisions two through seven of section ninety-eight and
the subdivisions two and three of section ninety-nine shall not be
applicable, during a period of acute emergency, to any domestic
organization operating in accordance with emergency by-laws approved by
the superintendent to the extent that the procedures set forth in such
emergency by-laws relate to subject matter contained in subdivisions two
through seven of section ninety-eight.
§ 98. Change of location; emergency boards of directors. 1.
Notwithstanding any provision of its charter, any domestic organization,
without complying with any provision of law requiring approval or
application for approval of a change of location of its principal
office, may from time to time change the location thereof during an
acute emergency to a suitable location within the United States, and may
carry on its business at such new location during such acute emergency
and for a reasonable time thereafter. Any organization which changes the
location of its principal office during an acute emergency shall notify
the superintendent thereof in writing as soon as practicable, stating
the address of the new location, the address of the former location, and
the dates when business is ceasing at the former location and commencing
at the latter location.
2. Notwithstanding any contrary provision of law or of its charter, if
at any time during an acute emergency affecting any domestic
organization, no person otherwise empowered to call meetings of its
board is capable of acting, a meeting thereof may be called by any
director or acting director, or if no director or acting director is
capable of acting, by any officer or acting officer. If it shall be
impracticable or impossible to give notice of a meeting of the board in
the manner prescribed by charter and law other than this article, the
person calling such a meeting may give notice thereof by making such
reasonable efforts as circumstances may permit to notify each director
and acting director of the time and place of the meeting, but need not
specify the purposes thereof. Failure of any director or acting director
to receive actual notice of a meeting of directors and acting directors
shall not affect the power of the directors and acting directors present
at such meeting to exercise the powers of an emergency board of
directors as prescribed in this section. Nothing contained in this
article shall be construed as requiring a meeting of the board of such
an organization to be convened in any manner different from that
prescribed by its charter and by the provisions of law other than this
article.
3. If three or more directors and/or acting directors of any domestic
organization are present at any meeting of its board duly convened
during an acute emergency affecting such domestic organization, they
shall constitute its emergency board of directors which, notwithstanding
any contrary provision of law or of its charter, shall have the power,
subject to the limitations prescribed in this article, by a majority of
those present, to take any and every action which may be necessary to
enable such domestic organization to meet the exigencies of the acute
emergency and conduct its business during such period, but no other
powers. The powers of an emergency board of directors shall include but
shall not be limited to the following powers:
(a) At any meeting, to elect such acting directors as it may deem
necessary, without regard to the number of directors which would
otherwise be required, to serve in any positions on such board which are

vacant or in place of any directors or acting directors who are absent
from such meeting, but not to elect any director on a permanent basis.
(b) To elect such acting officers as it may deem necessary, without
regard to the number of officers which would otherwise be required, to
serve in any offices which are vacant or in place of any officers or
acting officers who fail to appear and assume their duties, to fix the
compensation and determine the powers and duties of acting officers and
to remove acting officers but not to remove any officer or to fill any
vacancy on a permanent basis or to cause the organization to enter into
any contract of employment for a term of over one year.
(c) To cause the organization to change the location of its principal
office, pursuant to subdivision one hereof, or any of its places of
business, and to authorize such action as it may deem appropriate to
acquire space and facilities at the new locations, but not to acquire
for use as its principal office property in fee or for a term of over
one year.
(d) To postpone any meeting of the stockholders, policyholders or
members or directors of such organization if, in the judgment of the
majority of the members of such emergency board of directors, it would
be impracticable to hold such meeting at the time it would otherwise
have been held or conducted.
(e) If it shall appear to an emergency board of directors that a
quorum of the board cannot be assembled within a reasonable time, to
call a meeting of the stockholders, policyholders, or members of the
organization to be held as soon as the circumstances may reasonably
permit, at a place to be designated by the emergency board of directors
within this state or a contiguous state, for the purpose of electing
directors to fill vacancies on the board, but for no other purpose, and
to propose nominees for such election. Any such meeting of stockholders,
policyholders, or members shall be held upon notice given in accordance
with the charter of the organization and applicable law other than this
article.
4. As soon as practicable after each meeting of an emergency board of
directors, the person who presided thereat shall notify the
superintendent in writing of the time and place of such meeting, of the
manner in which notice thereof was given, of the persons present, and of
all actions taken at such meeting.
5. No person prohibited by law or by the charter of a domestic
organization from serving as a member of its board shall be eligible to
serve as an acting director except that no person shall be disqualified
to serve as an acting director by reason of his not being a stockholder,
policyholder or member of such organization, by reason of his not being
a resident of this state or of a contiguous state, or by reason of the
number of the directors or acting directors who are officers, acting
officers or employees of the organization. Any person may serve as an
acting director of a fund who is a director, acting director, officer or
acting officer of an organization which is a party to the agreement
creating the fund. No oath of acting directors shall be required.
6. Acting directors elected pursuant to the provisions of this section
or appointed pursuant to the provisions of section ninety-nine of this
article shall be entitled to notice of and to vote at all meetings of an
emergency board of directors equally with directors. Acting directors
shall not be entitled to take part in the deliberations or to vote at
any meeting of the board which is duly convened in accordance with the
applicable provisions of its charter and of law other than this article
and at which a quorum is present. Each acting director shall serve until
the director or acting director in whose place he was elected or
appointed shall attend a meeting of the board or until a director is

duly elected to fill the vacancy in which such acting director has been
serving, whichever event occurs earlier. An acting director shall be
entitled to the compensation, if any, payable to a director.
7. Acting officers elected pursuant to this section shall have such
powers and duties and receive such compensation as may from time to time
be determined by the board or emergency board of directors. Each acting
officer shall serve until the officer in whose place he was elected
shall appear and assume his duties or until his successor officer or
acting officer shall be elected, whichever event occurs earlier.
§ 99. Powers of the superintendent. 1. If at any time during an acute
emergency, the number of directors or acting directors of a domestic
organization who are capable of acting shall be less than three, the
superintendent shall have the power to designate additional acting
directors in such number as will bring to three the number of directors
and acting directors who are capable of acting.
2. To resolve controversy as to the power of any group of persons
purporting to act as an emergency board of directors so to act, the
superintendent shall, upon a determination that such action will tend to
promote the safe and sound and orderly conduct of the business of any
domestic organization, have power to issue orders declaring that any
such group shall or shall not have the powers of an emergency board of
directors, or confirming, modifying or vacating in whole or in part any
action taken or purportedly taken by any such group or removing any
acting director.
3. (a) At any time after an attack, upon his determination that such
action will tend to promote certainty as to the powers of organizations
or individuals pursuant to this article or that such action is desirable
to enable organizations to take preparatory precautions prior to the
occurrence of an acute emergency, the superintendent shall have power to
declare that any provision of this article which he may specify shall be
operative with respect to any domestic organization or to the New York
business of any other organization which he may designate. Upon such
declaration such organization and its directors, officers, acting
directors and acting officers shall have all powers conferred by such
provisions of this article. The failure of the superintendent so to
declare shall not be deemed to limit the powers of any organization or
its directors, officers, acting directors or acting officers where an
acute emergency exists in fact.
(b) At any time after the commencement of an acute emergency or after
the superintendent shall have declared any provision of this article
operative pursuant to paragraph (a) of this subdivision, upon his
determination that an organization is able, in whole or in part, to
carry on its business in compliance with its charter and the laws other
than this article, the superintendent shall have power to declare that
any provision of this article which he may specify shall be inoperative
with respect to any domestic organization or to the New York business of
any other organization which he may designate. Upon such declaration,
such organization shall be governed by its charter and the provisions of
law other than this article, except insofar as other provisions of this
article remain operative.
4. Upon his determination that, as a result of an acute emergency, the
business and affairs of an organization cannot otherwise be conducted in
a safe and sound manner, the superintendent may forthwith take
possession of the business and property of the organization within this
state or, if a domestic organization its business and property wherever
situated. The provisions of sections five hundred seventeen through five
hundred twenty-four, inclusive, of the insurance law shall be applicable
in any case in which the superintendent takes possession of an

organization pursuant to this subdivision as though the organization
were an insurer which the superintendent had taken possession pursuant
to sections five hundred twelve and five hundred sixteen of such law,
except that no such provision shall be applicable which the
superintendent shall have declared inapplicable pursuant to this
subdivision. The superintendent shall have power to declare inapplicable
any such provision upon his determination that the same is inappropriate
or unnecessary to protect the interests of the public or the
stockholders or creditors of the organization, in view of the acute
emergency and the nature of the organization.
5. The powers given the superintendent by subdivisions two and four of
this section shall be exercised by him only in the event that there is
no court of competent jurisdiction available to which an application can
be made for an order permitting him to exercise such powers with respect
to a particular organization; provided, further, that the powers
conferred by subdivision four shall not be exercised in the case of an
organization which is not insolvent within the meaning of section
ninety-three of the insurance law, unless the superintendent finds that
such organization lacks personnel able to manage its business in the
interests of the public, its stockholders and policyholders.
6. The superintendent shall have power to issue general and specific
regulations, directives and orders consistent with and in furtherance of
the purposes of this article.
§ 99-a. General provisions. 1. In any action or proceeding it shall
be presumed that an acute emergency existing within any city or county
within the state constitutes an acute emergency affecting every
organization doing business within such city or county.
2. During an acute emergency (a) the board of a domestic organization
which has adopted emergency by-laws approved by the superintendent shall
have the powers conferred by such by-laws and, except as provided in
section ninety-nine, subdivision three (a), shall, to the extent that
such by-laws relate to the subject matter contained in subdivisions two
through seven of section ninety-eight have no other or different powers
with respect to such subject matter, and (b) the board of a domestic
organization which has not adopted emergency by-laws approved by the
superintendent shall have all of the powers of an emergency board of
directors pursuant to section ninety-eight of this article.
ARTICLE 8
Violations and Penalties; Peace Officers

Section 100. Definitions.
101. Violations and penalties.
102. Jurisdiction of courts concerning violations.
103. Punishment for infractions.
104. Peace officers.
105. Powers of auxiliary police.
106. Powers of members of municipal and volunteer agencies to
detain for misdemeanors or infractions.
§ 100. Definitions. As used in this article the following terms shall
mean and include:
1. "Exempt person." A member of a municipal or volunteer agency or a
member of the armed forces and military services acting within the scope
and in the proper performance of his duties as such; a clergyman or a
member of a religious order while engaged in duties for a recognized
church or religious organization; and such other class of persons as may
be exempted by regulation of the commission or the council.

2. "Person duly authorized." A member of a municipal or volunteer
agency wearing or displaying a distinguishing brassard or other insignia
indicative of authority.
3. "Peace officer." An officer mentioned in subdivision thirty-three
of section 1.20 of the criminal procedure law and such other officers
duly authorized pursuant to this act to act as peace officers during
attack or drill.
4. "Infraction." A violation of any law or duly promulgated regulation
or order (a) which is expressly declared to be an infraction by this
act, or (b) which is not expressly declared by this act to be either a
misdemeanor or an infraction but where a penalty or other punishment is
prescribed by this act. An infraction is not a crime and the penalty or
punishment imposed therefor shall not be deemed for any purpose a penal
or criminal penalty or punishment, and shall not impose any disability
upon or affect or impair the credibility as a witness, or otherwise, of
any person convicted thereof.
§ 101. Violations and penalties. 1. Any person who shall wilfully
violate or disobey any regulation or order concerning the guarding and
protection of water supplies, railroads, public utility property,
bridges, docks, highways, landing fields, airports, public buildings,
factories, plants, stockpiles, vital and strategic materials, and other
focal points of possible attack, the loss or destruction of which might
menace or endanger the security and safety of the civilian population,
impede the military forces or impede the defense effort, shall be guilty
of a misdemeanor.
2. Any person who shall violate or disobey any duly promulgated
regulation or order, or who shall wilfully violate or disobey any
official order by a person duly authorized, concerning (a) the effective
screening or extinguishment of all lights, lighting devices and
appliances, or (b) the conduct of civilians and the movement and
cessation of pedestrian and vehicular traffic shall be guilty of a
misdemeanor.
3. Any person who shall without authority wear or display any official
brassard or insignia indicative of membership in a municipal or
volunteer agency shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.
4. Except for the purpose of any authorized test or drill, any person
who shall wilfully utter any false air raid alarm, signal or warning or
who shall wilfully simulate any official air raid signal or warning or
who shall wilfully break, injure or remove any mechanical warning or
signal devices used therefor, shall be guilty of a felony.
5. Any person who shall wilfully violate or disobey any regulation or
order duly promulgated pursuant to this act, for which a person is not
declared to be guilty of either a misdemeanor or an infraction by this
act shall be guilty of an infraction.
6. The provisions of this section shall not apply to exempt persons to
the extent prescribed by regulation or order of the council or
commission.
§ 102. Jurisdiction of courts concerning violations. Courts of special
sessions outside of the city of New York and the criminal court in the
city of New York, in the first instance, shall have exclusive
jurisdiction to hear and determine charges of violations constituting
misdemeanors or infractions under this act or under any rule, regulation
or order duly promulgated pursuant to this act, committed within the
territorial jurisdiction of such courts. Such exclusive jurisdiction in
the case of misdemeanors shall be subject to removal to another court or
to divestment on account of indictment or otherwise in the same manner
and to the same extent as is now or may hereafter be provided by law

with respect to charges of misdemeanors generally in such respective
courts.
§ 103. Punishment for infractions. Any person convicted of an
infraction as defined by this act shall be punished by a fine of not
more than twenty-five dollars or five days in jail or both. All such
fines for infractions committed in a city shall be the property of such
city and shall be credited to the general fund thereof; all such fines
for infractions committed in a town or village shall be the property of
such town or village in accordance with section twenty hundred
twenty-one of the uniform justice court act.
§ 104. Peace officers. A peace officer shall have the powers set forth
in section 2.20 of the criminal procedure law.
§ 105. Powers of auxiliary police. The local legislative body of any
county, town, city or village may by resolution confer or authorize the
conferring upon members of the auxiliary police the powers of peace
officers, subject to such restrictions as such body shall impose, and
subject to the provisions of subdivision twenty-six of section 2.10 and
section 2.20 of the criminal procedure law.
§ 106. Powers of members of municipal and volunteer agencies to detain
for misdemeanors or infractions. Any person who is a member of a
municipal or volunteer agency, in the course of his duty as such and
while wearing or displaying a distinguishing brassard or other insignia
indicative of authority, may stop and detain any person on account of a
misdemeanor or infraction committed by such person in the presence of
such member, and may forthwith turn him over to a peace officer who may
arrest him without a warrant on the charge of committing the violation
constituting the misdemeanor or infraction.
ARTICLE 9
Miscellaneous Provisions; Construction and Duration of Act

Section 110. Additional powers and duties.
111. Powers of the governor and the military forces of the
state.
112. Eligibility for appointment.
113. Immunity from liability.
114. Judicial notice of plans, regulations and orders.
115. Acceptance of gifts, grants and loans.
116. Renewal of licenses of members of armed forces.
117. Authorization to act as issuing agents for United States
obligations.
118. Unlawful possession and use of identification cards and
badges.
119. Repealer; continuity of commission and local offices.
120. Separability clause.
122. When to take effect.
§ 110. Additional powers and duties. Powers and duties granted or
imposed by this act shall be deemed to be in addition to powers and
duties granted or imposed by any other law.
§ 111. Powers of the governor and the military forces of the state.
No provision of this act shall be construed or interpreted as expressing
a limitation directly or indirectly of the power of the governor or of
the military forces of the state to effectuate any or all of the
purposes of this act or to execute the powers and duties otherwise
vested in either of them. To the extent necessary for the implementation
or coordination of any such powers or duties, the governor may execute
or require or provide for the execution of any of the powers, granted by
this act to any agency or officer, in such manner as he deems necessary
or proper.

§ 112. Eligibility for appointment. No person shall be ineligible for
any appointment made under or pursuant to this act because he holds any
other public office, employment, or trust, nor shall any person be made
ineligible to or forfeit his right to any public office, employment or
trust by reason of such an appointment under this act, notwithstanding
any inconsistent provision of law.
§ 113. Immunity from liability. 1. The state, any political
subdivision, municipal or volunteer agency, or another state or a civil
defense force thereof or of the federal government or of another country
or province or subdivision thereof, performing civil defense services in
this state pursuant to an arrangement, agreement or compact for mutual
aid and assistance, or any agency, member, agent or representative of
any of them, or any individual, partnership, corporation, association,
trustee, receiver or any of the agents thereof, in good faith carrying
out, complying with or attempting to comply with any law, any rule,
regulation or order duly promulgated or issued pursuant to this act, any
federal law, or any arrangement, agreement or compact for mutual aid and
assistance or any order issued by federal or state military authorities,
relating to civil defense, including but not limited to activities
pursuant thereto, in preparation for anticipated attack, during attack,
or following attack or false warning thereof, or in connection with an
authorized drill or test, shall not be liable for any injury or death to
persons or damage to property as the result thereof.
1-a. The state, any political subdivision, or any individual,
partnership, corporation, association, trustee, receiver, or any agent,
agency, representative, officer or employee of any of them, who or which
owns, maintains, occupies, operates or controls all or part of any
building, structure or premises shall not be liable for any injury or
death sustained by any person or damage caused to any property (a) while
such person or property is in such building, structure or premises, or
part thereof, for shelter purposes during an attack, drill, test or
false warning thereof or is entering therein or thereon for such
purposes or departing therefrom thereafter, and (b) as the result of any
condition in or on such building, structure or premises, or part
thereof, or of any act or omission with respect thereto, except a wilful
act intended to cause injury or damage.
2. The provisions of this section shall not affect the right of any
person to receive benefits to which he may be entitled under the
workers' compensation law, volunteer firefighters' benefit law,
volunteer ambulance workers' benefit law, any pension law or the general
municipal law, nor the right of any person to receive any benefits or
compensation under any act of congress or under any law of this state.
3. The provisions of section seventy-one of the general municipal law
shall be inoperative and shall not apply with respect to property
destroyed or injured by mobs or riots.
§ 114. Judicial notice of plans, regulations and orders. 1. All courts
shall take judicial notice of all plans, regulations and orders adopted
pursuant to this act and promulgated pursuant to law.
2. Such a plan, regulation or order may be read in evidence, at any
time, from a copy thereof, if there is contained on the same page or in
the same publication in which such copy is contained, a printed
certificate of the secretary of state or of the clerk of the political
subdivision that such copy is a correct transcript of the text of the
original thereof.
§ 115. Acceptance of gifts, grants and loans. 1. Whenever the United
States, or any agency or officer thereof, or any person, firm or
corporation, shall offer to the state or to any political subdivision
thereof, services, materials, facilities or funds for civil defense or

to aid the defense effort, the state, acting through the director of the
budget, or such political subdivision, acting through its chief
executive officer or governing body, may accept such offer and upon such
acceptance the director of the budget of the state or the chief
executive of such political subdivision may authorize any officer of the
state or political subdivision, as the case may be, to receive such
services, materials, facilities or funds on behalf of the state or such
political subdivision, subject to the terms of the offer and to the
rules and regulations, if any, of the offeror. In the event that any
federal law provides that any such services, materials, facilities or
funds shall be made available to political subdivisions subject to some
action by a state officer or agency, the director of the budget shall
have the power to take such action or to designate an appropriate
officer or agency of the state to do so.
2. Where an offer of services, materials, facilities or funds for
civil defense or to aid the defense effort, is made to the state and
where a political subdivision of the state, acting through its chief
executive officer or governing body, agrees to assume the obligations of
and comply with the terms of the offer and the rules and regulations, if
any, of the offeror, the director of the budget may accept such offer
and, if consistent therewith, (a) make or agree to make the services
available to such political subdivision, (b) authorize or agree to
authorize the acquisition of the materials or facilities pursuant to
section twenty-three-c of this act, on behalf of and for conveyance to
such political subdivision, or (c) approve or agree to approve the
transfer or payment of the funds to or on behalf of such political
subdivision.
§ 116. Renewal of licenses of members of armed forces. 1. As used in
this section the following terms shall mean and include:
a. "Military service." Service as a member of the armed forces of the
United States.
b. "Licensee." The holder of a license.
c. "License." An original certificate or other document first issued
to a licensee entitling him to practice the profession or engage in the
business, work or activity specified therein.
d. "Renewal license." Any renewal or reissuance of a license or any
certificate of annual or periodic registration or re-registration of a
licensee required by or pursuant to law to permit him lawfully to
continue to practice the profession or engage in the business, work or
activity specified in the license.
e. "Expired." Normal expiration, or annulment, suspension or
revocation solely because of failure of a licensee to apply for a
renewal license within the time prescribed therefor.
2. Any person who was in military service on or after June
twenty-fifth, nineteen hundred fifty, or who thereafter shall have
entered military service, and who at the time of entry into such service
is a licensee, may, within three months after the termination of such
military service by honorable discharge or by release from such service
under honorable circumstances, apply for and be entitled to a renewal
license without any examination, re-examination, fine or penalty which
would not have been required or imposed if timely application for such
renewal license had been made. The officer, board or department
empowered by law to issue such renewal license is hereby authorized to
issue the same without examination, re-examination or the exaction of
any fine or penalty. The issuance of such renewal license shall in all
other respects be subject to the provisions of law relating thereto.
3. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a license to drive,
issued pursuant to the provisions of article nineteen of the vehicle and

traffic law, which would expire prior to either of the dates set forth
in this subdivision, of any person who was in military service on or
after June twenty-fifth, nineteen hundred fifty, or who thereafter shall
have entered military service, shall expire six months from either the
expiration date of this act or the holder's separation from service,
whichever occurs first. Notwithstanding the provisions of this
subdivision, the commissioner of motor vehicles may refuse to renew the
expired driver's license of any person who has failed to notify the
commissioner of his entry into military service.
§ 117. Authorization to act as issuing agents for United States
obligations. Notwithstanding the provisions of any law, all individuals,
partnerships, associations or corporations organized, operating, or
doing business under the laws of this state are hereby authorized, upon
designation by and qualification with the secretary of the treasury of
the United States or under his authority, to act as issuing agents for
the sale and issue of obligations of the United States.
§ 118. Unlawful possession and use of identification cards and badges
1. As used in this section the following terms shall mean and include:
(a) "Identification card." Any card or pass issued for the purpose of
establishing the identity of any person and the right of such person to
be in or on any premises described in this section.
(b) "Identification badge." Any badge of metal or other composition,
to be worn by any person for the purpose of establishing his identity or
right to be in or on any premises described in this section.
2. Any person to whom there has been issued an identification card or
identification badge by any agency of the state or of any political
subdivision thereof or by any corporation, firm or individual operating
any factory, warehouse, storage house, manufacturing, printing or
publishing establishment, mechanical or mercantile establishment, or any
plant of any kind, or any mine, colliery or quarry, or any electric
railway, steam railway, water, sewage, gas, electric light, power,
transmission, heating, refrigerating, telephone, telegraph or other
public service property in this state, in which or upon which any person
is required to have a special identification card or identification
badge before entering therein or thereon as an employee or visitor,
shall, upon the termination of his or her employment or the expiration
of the time limits of an authorized visit, immediately surrender the
same to the issuer thereof, and it shall be unlawful for any person to
possess or use any such identification card or identification badge
after the termination of such employment or the expiration of the time
limits of an authorized visit.
3. Any person finding or coming into possession of an identification
card or identification badge, except through authorized issuance, shall
immediately surrender the same to any peace officer or the officer in
charge of the nearest police station.
4. Any person who wilfully violates any of the provisions of this
section shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction thereof be
punished by imprisonment of not more than ten days or a fine of not more
than fifty dollars, or both.
§ 119. Repealer; continuity of commission and local offices. Article
sixteen of the executive law, as added by chapter six hundred ninety of
the laws of nineteen hundred fifty, is hereby repealed. The commission
and all local offices established pursuant to this act and all local
offices in existence on the date this act shall take effect shall,
subject to the provisions of this act, be deemed continuations of the
state civil defense commission and local offices established pursuant to
such former article sixteen of the executive law and such commission and
local offices are hereby continued. All appropriations and allocations

heretofore made available to the state civil defense commission and all
appropriations heretofore made by any political subdivision pursuant to
such article sixteen are hereby made available hereunder. All plans,
regulations, orders, and other actions taken and obligations incurred
pursuant to such article shall continue with full force and effect as
plans, regulations, orders, actions and obligations hereunder.
§ 120. Separability clause. If any clause, sentence, paragraph,
section or part of this act shall be adjudged by any court of competent
jurisdiction to be invalid, such judgment shall not affect, impair or
invalidate the remainder thereof, but shall be confined in its operation
to the clause, sentence, paragraph, section or part thereof directly
involved in the controversy in which such judgment shall have been
rendered.
§ 122. When to take effect. This act shall take effect immediately.

Structure New York Laws

New York Laws

ABP - Abandoned Property

AGM - Agriculture and Markets

ABC - Alcoholic Beverage Control

ACG - Alternative County Government

ACA - Arts and Cultural Affairs

BNK - Banking

BVO - Benevolent Orders

BSC - Business Corporation

CAL - Canal

CAN - Cannabis

CVP - Civil Practice Law and Rules

CVR - Civil Rights

CVS - Civil Service

CCO - Cooperative Corporations

COR - Correction

CNT - County

CPL - Criminal Procedure

DCD - Debtor and Creditor

DOM - Domestic Relations

COM - Economic Development Law

EDN - Education

ELD - Elder

ELN - Election

EDP - Eminent Domain Procedure

EML - Employers' Liability

ENG - Energy

ENV - Environmental Conservation

EPT - Estates, Powers and Trusts

EXC - Executive

FIS - Financial Services Law

GAS - General Associations

GBS - General Business

GCT - General City

GCN - General Construction

GMU - General Municipal

GOB - General Obligations

HAY - Highway

IND - Indian

ISC - Insurance

JUD - Judiciary

LAB - Labor

LEG - Legislative

LIE - Lien

LLC - Limited Liability Company Law

LFN - Local Finance

MHY - Mental Hygiene

MIL - Military

MDW - Multiple Dwelling

MRE - Multiple Residence

MHR - Municipal Home Rule

NAV - Navigation

PPD - New York State Printing and Public Documents

NPC - Not-For-Profit Corporation

PAR - Parks, recreation and historic preservation

PTR - Partnership

PEN - Penal

PEP - Personal Property

PVH - Private Housing Finance

PBA - Public Authorities

PBB - Public Buildings

PBH - Public Health

PBG - Public Housing

MHA - Municipal Housing Authority (Article 5 of the former State Housing Law)

PBL - Public Lands

PBO - Public Officers

PBS - Public Service

PML - Racing, Pari-Mutuel Wagering and Breeding Law

RRD - Railroad

RAT - Rapid Transit

RPP - Real Property

RPA - Real Property Actions and Proceedings

RPT - Real Property Tax

RCO - Religious Corporations

RSS - Retirement and Social Security

REL - Rural Electric Cooperative

SCC - Second Class Cities

SOS - Social Services

SWC - Soil and Water Conservation Districts

STL - State

SAP - State Administrative Procedure Act

STF - State Finance

STT - State Technology

SLG - Statute of Local Governments

TAX - Tax

TWN - Town

TRA - Transportation

TCP - Transportation Corporations

UCC - Uniform Commercial Code

VAT - Vehicle and Traffic

VET - Veterans' Services Law

VIL - Village

VAW - Volunteer Ambulance Workers' Benefit

VOL - Volunteer Firefighters' Benefit

WKC - Workers' Compensation

BAT - Bridges and Tunnels New York/New Jersey 47/31

BSW - Boxing, Sparring and Wrestling Ch. 912/20

CCT - Cigarettes, Cigars, Tobacco 235/52

DEA - Defense Emergency Act 1951 784/51

DPN - Development of Port of New York 43/22

EHC - Expanded Health Care Coverage Act 703/88

ERL - Emergency Housing Rent Control Law 274/46 337/61

ETP - Emergency Tenant Protection Act 576/74

FDC - Facilities Development Corporation Act 359/68

FEA - NYS Financial Emergency Act for the city of NY 868/75

GCM - General City Model 772/66

HHC - New York City health and hospitals corporation act 1016/69

LEH - Local Emergency Housing Rent Control Act 21/62

LSA - Lost and Strayed Animals 115/1894

MCF - Medical Care Facilities Finance Agency 392/73

NNY - New, New York Bond Act 649/92

NYP - NYS Project Finance Agency Act7/75

NYW - N. Y. wine/grape 80/85

PAB - Private Activity Bond 47/90

PCM - Police Certain Municipalities 360/11

PNY - Port of New York Authority 154/21

POA - Port of Albany 192/25

RLA - Regulation of Lobbying Act 1040/81

SCT - Suffolk County Tax Act

SNH - Special Needs Housing Act 261/88

TRY - City of Troy Issuance of Serial Bonds

TSF - Tobacco Settlement Financing Corporation Act

UDA - Urban Development Corporation Act 174/68

UDG - Urban development guarantee fund of New York 175/68

UDR - Urban development research corporation act 173/68

YFA - Yonkers financial emergency act 103/84

YTS - Yonkers income tax surcharge