Albany Bill Would Open Lewis County Forests to Solar Developers Without Local Approval

Lewis County contains portions of 26 New York State reforestation areas totaling 82,472 acres. Those are public forests owned by all New Yorkers and managed by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC). These lands are currently used primarily for forestry, recreation, and watershed protection.

Senate Bill S4408, sponsored by Rachel May (D-Syracuse), would allow the state to enter into leases and easements on these lands for renewable energy infrastructure, including transmission lines and potentially renewable energy installations.

The bill does not require approval from county or town governments before these agreements are made.

During the Senate debate on February 26, 2026, Senator May explained the policy rationale behind the bill:

“Local people often organize to make sure [energy projects] are not in their view shed or on their prime farmland… so there is a push to put these kinds of facilities in places that are out of the way. And that means figuring out a way to get transmission lines through… often through state reforestation lands.”

The bill passed the New York State Senate on February 26, 2026 by a vote of 42–15.

It is now in the Assembly Environmental Conservation Committee, where similar versions of the bill have stalled without a vote in previous legislative sessions.

Contact Your Representatives

State Senators

Mark Walczyk (SD-49)
no
walczyk@nysenate.gov

Assembly Members

Ken Blankenbush (AD-117)
blankenbushk@nyassembly.gov

State forests that would be affected

These are the reforestation parcels in Lewis County that could potentially be subject to renewable energy agreements under S4408.

Frank E. Jadwin Memorial State Forest — 20,550 acres
Lesser Wilderness State Forest — 13,873 acres
Grant Powell State Forest — 8,337 acres
Beartown State Forest — 7,209 acres
Sears Pond State Forest — 5,723 acres
Lookout State Forest — 3,983 acres
Sand Flats State Forest — 2,530 acres
Cobb Creek State Forest — 2,203 acres
Pinckney State Forest — 2,101 acres
East Osceola State Forest — 1,964 acres
Onjebonge State Forest — 1,830 acres
Bonaparte’s Cave State Forest — 1,438 acres
Otter Creek State Forest — 1,411 acres
East Branch Fish Creek State Forest — 1,399 acres
Mohawk Springs State Forest — 1,218 acres
Line Brook State Forest — 1,128 acres
Swancott Mill State Forest — 741 acres
Granger State Forest — 737 acres
High Towers State Forest — 730 acres
Independence River State Forest — 694 acres
Hogsback State Forest — 629 acres
Indian Pipe State Forest — 595 acres
Balsam Creek State Forest — 561 acres
Cottrell State Forest — 482 acres
Sand Bay State Forest — 325 acres
Lowville Demonstration Area — 80 acres

Total: 82,472 acres

What the bill requires

S4408 authorizes the DEC to enter into agreements “such as leases or easements” for renewable energy siting and transmission across reforestation lands.

The bill does not:

• Require approval from county or town governments
• Establish a minimum royalty or compensation formula in statute
• Prohibit the use of herbicides on these lands
• Ban battery storage facilities
• Specify environmental review standards within the bill itself

Existing law contains older provisions governing activities like mining that include very small fees (such as a $1-per-tree provision), but S4408 does not establish a specific payment structure for renewable energy agreements.

The bill states that any project must not:

“interfere with the operation of such reforestation areas for the purposes for which they were acquired.”

Determining whether a project meets that standard would be left to the DEC.

Why the Assembly vote may never happen

Under normal circumstances, S4408 would need to pass the Assembly Environmental Conservation Committee before reaching the Assembly floor.

That committee has blocked the bill without a vote in every session since 2019.

Budget agreements in Albany are typically negotiated by legislative leaders and the Governor and finalized in late March or early April, often without individual committee votes.

If provisions similar to S4408 are included in the final budget, Assembly members may never cast a direct vote on the policy.