BILL NUMBER: S3246A
SPONSOR: COONEY
 
TITLE OF BILL:
An act to amend the general business law, in relation to certain rental
vehicle protections; and to amend chapter 109 of the laws of 2018 amend-
ing the general business law relating to certain rental vehicle
protections, in relation to the effectiveness thereof
 
PURPOSE:
Increases penalties for assaulting motor vehicle license examiners,
motor vehicle representatives, highway workers, motor carrier investi-
gators, and motor carrier inspectors.
 
SUMMARY OF PROVISIONS:
Section 1 amends the definitional provisions of GBL § 396-z to distin-
guish rental cars from TNC vehicles and to ensure that all rental vehi-
cle companies operate with an airport concession agreement regardless of
delivery model.
Section 2 amends the price caps on optional vehicle protection (a/k/a/
"collision damage waiver" or "damage waiver") to allow annual adjust-
ments per the consumer price index.
Section 3 amends the effective date of Chapter 163 of the Laws of 2023
to make permanent the provisions of Chapter 656 of the Laws of 2002 as
amended by Chapter 109 of the Laws of 2018.
 
JUSTIFICATION:
Chapter 656 of the Laws of 2002 revised § 396-z of the GBL to bring New
York into conformance with the rest of the 49 states by restoring vehi-
cle renters' responsibility for certain damage to the vehicles while in
their possession. Chapter 656 essentially "undid" an ill-conceived 1988
law that made New York the only jurisdiction that outright prohibited
the sale of the damage waiver option and instead held rental car compa-
nies responsible for all but the first $100 damage to a rental vehicle.
The implications of that law were far-reaching. The 1988 statute was the
direct cause of extraordinary economic harm to the rental industry as
well as higher consumer prices and fewer choices beyond the base model
for rental cars. In fact, the law spawned a robust cottage industry in
stolen and stripped rental vehicles that, over a 13-year period, brought
about the demise of virtually every independent and franchised rental
business in New York and caused the major rental companies to shutter
locations in most urban areas. By the time Chapter 656 was enacted there
was one remaining rental location in the entire Bronx. Today Enterprise
alone has six physical locations in that Borough.
In retrospect, Chapter 656 dramatically altered the rental car landscape
to the benefit of both consumers and industry. New branches opened all
over the State, hundreds of new employees were hired, millions of new
dollars were invested in providing consumers with a broader range of
choices in rental vehicles, and consumers enjoyed a stabilization of
rates derived predominantly from renewed and robust competition among
the rental companies.
Notwithstanding the success of Chapter 656 and its extenders, in just 15
years, the car rental industry, like many other retail businesses,
changed dramatically. I.e. consumers renting cars directly from their
cell phones and picking up the car up without ever visiting a rental
counter, rental cars being available on an hourly basis through car
share programs and those cars could be accessed and unlocked via cell
phone.
Chapter 109 of the Laws of 2018 not only extended C.656 of 2002 by 5
years, but also addressed the many changes designed to reflect the
evolving nature of the rental car business, providing an expansive menu
of tangible new benefits to the consumer, while providing the rental
industry with the tools to offer products and services in a more effi-
cient manner; all while retaining and reemphasizing the integrity of the
consumer disclosures that were at the heart of Chapter 656 of 2002.
When Chapter 656 was adopted in 2002 it represented a sea change in the
relationship between vehicle rental companies and consumers. At the
time, the 5-year sunset made sense. Now - more than two decades later,
after unanimously enacting four 5-year extensions, it's clear the sunset
is no longer necessary. Currently, about half of GBL § 396-z is subject
to sunset and the other half is not.
Second, the bill subjects the existing price caps on CDW to annual cost
of living adjustments. The price caps have now been in place for 23
years with only a minor reconfiguration of the tiers in 2018. While the
price caps set in 2002 may have been relatively reflective of the
market, 23 years later, they are nothing short of economically punish-
ing; particularly in relation to the rest of the nation which allows
these prices to be set by the market. This legislation maintains the
integrity of the price caps established in 2002 but restores a sense of
economic sanity by allowing the prices to be increased annually in
accordance with the Consumer Price Index.
 
LEGISLATIVE HISTORY:
2023-24: 5.8883
 
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS:
None.
 
EFFECTIVE DATE:
This act shall take effect immediately.

Statutes affected:
S3246A: 396-z general business law, 396-z(2) general business law