Find Laws Find Lawyers Free Legal Forms USA State Laws

NEW YORK STATUTES AND CODES

PNY - Port of New York Authority 154/21

                        Chapter 154 of the laws of 1921                         Port of New York authority    Section  1.  William  R.  Willcox,  Eugenius H. Outerbridge and Murray  Hulbert, or any two of them, commissioners  heretofore  appointed  under  chapter  four hundred and twenty-six of the laws of nineteen hundred and  seventeen of the state of New York, together with  the  attorney-general  of  the  state  of New York, are hereby authorized as commissioners upon  the part of the state of New York to enter into, with the state  of  New  Jersey,  by  and  through  the  commissioners  appointed  or  who may be  appointed under or by virtue of a law of the legislature of the state of  New Jersey, an agreement or compact in the form following,  that  is  to  say:    Whereas,  In  the  year eighteen hundred and thirty-four the states of  New York  and  New  Jersey  did  enter  into  an  agreement  fixing  and  determining  the  rights  and obligations of the two states in and about  the waters between the two states, especially in and about  the  bay  of  New York and the Hudson river; and    Whereas,  Since  that  time  the  commerce of the port of New York has  greatly developed and increased and the territory in and around the port  has become commercially one center or district; and    Whereas, It is confidently believed that a better co-ordination of the  terminal, transportation and other facilities of commerce in, about  and  through the port of New York, will result in great economies, benefiting  the nation, as well as the states of New York and New Jersey; and    Whereas,  The  future development of such terminal, transportation and  other facilities of commerce will require the expenditure of large  sums  of  money and the cordial co-operation of the states of New York and New  Jersey in the encouragement of the investment of  capital,  and  in  the  formulation and execution of the necessary physical plans; and    Whereas, Such result can best be accomplished through the co-operation  of the two states by and through a joint or common agency.    Now,  therefore,  The  said  states  of  New  Jersey  and  New York do  supplement and amend the existing  agreement  of  eighteen  hundred  and  thirty-four in the following respects:                                 ARTICLE I.    They  agree to and pledge, each to the other, faithful co-operation in  the future planning and development of the port of New York, holding  in  high  trust  for  the  benefit  of  the nation the special blessings and  natural advantages thereof.                                 ARTICLE II.    To that end the two states do agree that there shall  be  created  and  they  do  hereby  create a district to be known as the "Port of New York  District" (for brevity hereinafter referred to as "The District")  which  shall embrace the territory bounded and described as follows:    The  district  is  included  within  the  boundary  lines  located  by  connecting points of  known  latitude  and  longitude.  The  approximate  courses and distances of the lines enclosing the district are recited in  the description, but the district is determined by drawing lines through  the  points  of  known latitude and longitude. Beginning at a point A of  latitude  forty-one  degrees  and  four  minutes  north  and   longitude  seventy-three degrees and fifty-six minutes west, said point being about  sixty-five-hundredths  of a mile west of the westerly bank of the Hudson  river and about two  and  one-tenth  miles  northwest  of  the  pier  at  Piermont, in the county of Rockland, state of New York; thence due south  one  and  fifteen-hundredths miles more or less to a point B of latitude  forty-one degrees and three minutes north  and  longitude  seventy-three  degrees  and  fifty-six  minutes  west;  said  point being about one and  three-tenths miles northwest of the pier at Piermont, in the  county  of

  Rockland,  state  of  New  York;  thence  south  fifty-six  degrees  and  thirty-four minutes west six and  twenty-six-hundredths  miles  more  or  less to a point C of latitude forty-one degrees and no minutes north and  longitude  seventy-four  degrees  and two minutes west, said point being  about seven-tenths of a mile north of the railroad station at  Westwood,  in  the  county of Bergen, state of New Jersey; thence south sixty-eight  degrees and twenty-four minutes west  nine  and  thirty-seven-hundredths  miles  more  or  less  to  a  point  D  of  latitude  forty  degrees and  fifty-seven minutes north and longitude seventy-four degrees and  twelve  minutes  west,  said  point  being  about  three  miles northwest of the  business center of the city of Paterson, in the county of Passaic, state  of New Jersey; thence south forty-seven degrees  and  seventeen  minutes  west  eleven and eighty-seven-hundredths miles more or less to a point E  of  latitude  forty  degrees  and  fifty  minutes  north  and  longitude  seventy-four degrees and twenty-two minutes west, said point being about  four  and  five-tenths  miles  west  of  the borough of Caldwell, in the  county of Morris, state  of  New  Jersey;  thence  due  south  nine  and  twenty-hundredths  miles  more  or  less  to a point F of latitude forty  degrees and forty-two minutes north and longitude  seventy-four  degrees  and  twenty-two  minutes west, said point being about one and two-tenths  miles southwest of the passenger station of the Delaware, Lackawanna and  Western railroad in the city of Summit, in the county of Union, state of  New Jersey; thence south forty-two degrees and twenty-four minutes west,  seven and seventy-eight-hundredths miles more or less to a  point  G  of  latitude  forty  degrees  and  thirty-seven  minutes north and longitude  seventy-four degrees and twenty-eight minutes  west,  said  point  being  about  two  and two-tenths miles west of the business center of the city  of Plainfield, in the county of Somerset, state of  New  Jersey;  thence  due  south twelve and sixty-five-hundredths miles more or less on a line  passing about one mile west of the business center of the  city  of  New  Brunswick  to a point H of latitude forty degrees and twenty-six minutes  north and longitude seventy-four degrees and twenty-eight minutes  west,  said  point being about four and five-tenths miles southwest of the city  of New Brunswick, in the county  of  Middlesex,  state  of  New  Jersey;  thence  south  seventy-seven  degrees and forty-two minutes east ten and  seventy-nine-hundredths miles more or less to  a  point  I  of  latitude  forty  degrees  and twenty-four minutes north and longitude seventy-four  degrees and sixteen minutes west,  said  point  being  about  two  miles  southwest  of  the borough of Matawan, in the county of Middlesex, state  of New Jersey; thence due east  twenty-five  and  forty-eight-hundredths  miles  more  or  less,  crossing  the  county  of Monmouth, state of New  Jersey, and passing about one and four-tenths miles south of the pier of  the Central Railroad of New Jersey at Atlantic Highlands to a point J of  latitude forty degrees  and  twenty-four  minutes  north  and  longitude  seventy-three  degrees and forty-seven minutes west, said point being in  the Atlantic ocean; thence north eleven degrees fifty-eight minutes east  twenty-one and sixteen-hundredths miles more or less to a point K,  said  point  being  about five miles east of the passenger station of the Long  Island railroad at Jamaica and about one and three-tenths miles east  of  the  boundary  line  of  the  city of New York, in the county of Nassau,  state of New York; thence in a  northeasterly  direction  passing  about  one-half  mile  west  of New Hyde Park and about one and one-tenth miles  east of the shore of Manhasset bay at  Port  Washington,  crossing  Long  Island sound to a point L, said point being the point of intersection of  the boundary line between the states of New York and Connecticut and the  meridian  of  seventy-three  degrees,  thirty-nine  minutes  and  thirty  seconds west longitude, said point being also about a mile northeast  of  the  village  of  Port  Chester; thence northwesterly along the boundary

  line between the states of New York and Connecticut to a point  M,  said  point being the point of intersection between said boundary line between  the  states  of  New  York and Connecticut and the parallel of forty-one  degrees  and  four  minutes  north latitude, said point also being about  four and five-tenths miles northeast of the business center of the  city  of  White  Plains;  thence  due  west  along said parallel, of forty-one  degrees and four minutes north latitude, the line passing about two  and  one-half  miles north of the business center of the city of White Plains  and crossing the Hudson river to the point A, the place of beginning.    The boundaries of said district may be changed from time  to  time  by  the  action  of  the  legislature  of  either  state concurred in by the  legislature of the other.                                 ARTICLE III    There is hereby created "The Port of New York Authority" (for  brevity  hereinafter  referred to as the "Port Authority"), which shall be a body  corporate and politic, having the powers  and  jurisdiction  hereinafter  enumerated,  and  such other and additional powers as shall be conferred  upon it  by  the  legislature  of  either  state  concurred  in  by  the  legislature  of the other, or by act or acts of congress, as hereinafter  provided. On and after July first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-two,  the  port  authority  shall be known and designated as "The Port Authority of  New York and New Jersey."                                 ARTICLE IV    The port authority shall consist of twelve commissioners, six resident  voters from the state of New York,  at  least  four  of  whom  shall  be  resident  voters  of  the city of New York, and six resident voters from  the state of New Jersey, at least four of whom shall be resident  voters  within  the  New Jersey portion of the district, the New York members to  be chosen by the state of New York and the New  Jersey  members  by  the  state of New Jersey in the manner and for the terms fixed and determined  from  time to time by the legislature of each state respectively, except  as herein provided. Each commissioner may be removed or  suspended  from  office  as  provided  by  the  law  of  the state from which he shall be  appointed.                                  ARTICLE V.    The commissioners shall, for the purpose of doing business, constitute  a board and may adopt suitable by-laws for its management.                                  ARTICLE VI.    The port  authority  shall  constitute  a  body,  both  corporate  and  politic,  with  full  power  and authority to purchase, construct, lease  and/or operate any  terminal  or  transportation  facility  within  said  district;  and  to make charges for the use thereof: and for any of such  purposes to own, hold, lease and/or operate real or  personal  property,  to  borrow  money  and secure the same by bonds or by mortgages upon any  property held or to be held by it. No property now or  hereafter  vested  in  or  held  by either state, or by any county, city, borough, village,  township or other municipality, shall be taken by  the  port  authority,  without  the  authority or consent of such state, county, city, borough,  village, township or  other  municipality,  nor  shall  anything  herein  impair  or  invalidate in any way any bonded indebtedness of such state,  county, city, borough, village,  township  or  other  municipality,  nor  impair  the  provisions of law regulating the payment into sinking funds  of revenues derived from municipal property, or dedicating the  revenues  derived from any municipal property to a specific purpose.    The  powers granted in this article shall not be exercised by the port  authority until the legislatures of both states shall have approved of a

  comprehensive plan for  the  development  of  the  port  as  hereinafter  provided.                                 ARTICLE VII.    The port authority shall have such additional powers and duties as may  hereafter  be  delegated  to or imposed upon it from time to time by the  action  of  the  legislature  of  either  state  concurred  in  by   the  legislature  of the other. Unless and until otherwise provided, it shall  make an annual report to the legislature of both states,  setting  forth  in  detail  the  operations and transactions conducted by it pursuant to  this agreement and any legislation thereunder. The port authority  shall  not  pledge  the credit of either state except by and with the authority  of the legislature thereof.                                * ARTICLE VII-A    The port  authority  shall  file  with  the  temporary  president  and  minority leader of the senate and the speaker and minority leader of the  assembly,  the chairman of the assembly ways and means committee and the  chairman of the senate finance committee of the state of  New  York  and  the  president,  minority  leader  and  secretary  of the senate and the  speaker, minority leader and clerk of the general assembly of the  state  of  New  Jersey  a copy of the minutes of any action taken at any public  meeting of the port authority. Such filing shall be made on the same day  such minutes are transmitted to the governor of each state  for  review;  and  notice  of  such  filing  shall be provided to the governor of each  state at the same time. Failure to effectuate any such filing shall  not  impair  the  ability of the authority to act pursuant to a resolution of  its board. Such filing shall not apply to any  minutes  required  to  be  filed pursuant to section twenty of chapter six hundred fifty-one of the  laws of nineteen hundred seventy-eight.    The temporary president and minority leader of the senate, the speaker  and  minority  leader of the assembly, the chairman of the assembly ways  and means committee and the chairman of the senate finance committee  of  the state of New York and the speaker and minority leader of the general  assembly  and the president and the minority leader of the senate of the  state of New Jersey, or representatives designated by  them  in  writing  for  this  purpose,  may  by certificate filed with the secretary of the  port authority waive the foregoing filing requirement  with  respect  to  any specific minutes.    *  NB  Effective pending passage of identical legislation by the state  of New Jersey                                 ARTICLE VIII.    Unless and until otherwise provided, all laws now or hereafter vesting  jurisdiction or control in the public service commission, or the  public  utilities  commission,  or  like  body,  within each state respectively,  shall apply to railroads and to any transportation,  terminal  or  other  facility  owned,  operated, leased or constructed by the port authority,  with the same force and effect as if such railroad,  or  transportation,  terminal  or  other facility were owned, leased, operated or constructed  by a private corporation.                                  ARTICLE IX.    Nothing contained in this agreement shall impair  the  powers  of  any  municipality to develop or improve port and terminal facilities.                                  ARTICLE X.

    The  legislatures  of  the  two  states,  prior to the signing of this  agreement, or thereafter as soon as may be  practicable,  will  adopt  a  plan or plans for the comprehensive development of the port of New York.                                  ARTICLE XI.    The  port  authority  shall  from  time  to  time  make  plans for the  development of said district, supplementary to or amendatory of any plan  theretofore adopted, and when  such  plans  are  duly  approved  by  the  legislatures  of  the two states, they shall be binding upon both states  with the same force and effect as if incorporated in this agreement.                                 ARTICLE XII.    The port authority may from time to time make recommendations  to  the  legislatures  of the two states or to the congress of the United States,  based upon study and analysis, for the better conduct  of  the  commerce  passing  in  and  through  the  port  of  New  York,  the  increase  and  improvement of transportation and terminal facilities therein,  and  the  more economical and expeditious handling of such commerce.                                 ARTICLE XIII    The port authority may petition any interstate commerce commission (or  like  body), commissioner of transportation, public utilities commission  (or like  body),  or  any  other  federal,  municipal,  state  or  local  authority,  administrative, judicial or legislative, having jurisdiction  in the premises,  after  the  adoption  of  the  comprehensive  plan  as  provided  for  in  article  ten,  for  the adoption and execution of any  physical improvement, change in method, rate of  transportation,  system  of  handling  freight,  warehousing,  docking, lightering or transfer of  freight, which, in the opinion of the port authority, may be designed to  improve or better the handling of commerce in and through said district,  or improve  terminal  and  transportation  facilities  therein.  It  may  intervene in any proceeding affecting the commerce of the port.                                 ARTICLE XIV.    The   port   authority   shall  elect  from  its  number  a  chairman,  vice-chairman, and may appoint such officers and  employees  as  it  may  require  for  the performance of its duties, and shall fix and determine  their qualifications and duties.                                  ARTICLE XV.    Unless and until the revenues from operations conducted  by  the  port  authority are adequate to meet all expenditures, the legislatures of the  two  states  shall  appropriate,  in  equal  amounts,  annually, for the  salaries, office and other administrative expenses, such sum or sums  as  shall be recommended by the port authority and approved by the governors  of the two states, but each state obligates itself hereunder only to the  extent of one hundred thousand dollars in any one year.                                 ARTICLE XV-A    1.  The legislature finds and declares that the right of the public to  be present at meetings of the port authority of New York and New Jersey,  and to witness in full detail all phases  of  the  deliberation,  policy  formulation,  and  decision  making  of  the  authority, is vital to the  enhancement and proper functioning of the democratic process,  and  that  secrecy  in  public  affairs  undermines  the  faith  of  the  public in  government and the public's effectiveness in fulfilling its  role  in  a  democratic  society;  and  declares  it  to be the public policy of this  state to insure the right of  its  citizens  to  have  adequate  advance

  notice of and the right to attend all meetings of the authority at which  any  business affecting the public is discussed or acted upon in any way  except only in those circumstances where otherwise the  public  interest  would be clearly endangered or the personal privacy of guaranteed rights  of individuals would be clearly in danger of unwarranted invasion.    2. As used in this act:    a.  "Board"  means the board of commissioners of the Port Authority of  New York and New Jersey.    b. "Meeting" means any gathering, whether corporeal  or  by  means  of  communication  equipment,  which  is attended by, or open to, the board,  held with the intent, on the part  of  the  board  members  present,  to  discuss  or  act  as  a  unit  upon  the specific public business of the  authority. "Meeting" does not mean a gathering (1) attended by less than  an effective majority of the board, or (2) attended by or  open  to  all  the  members  of  three or more similar public bodies at a convention or  similar gathering.    c. "Public business" mean matters which relate in any way, directly or  indirectly, to the performance of the functions of the port authority of  New York and New Jersey or the conduct of its business.    3.  The  board  shall  adopt  and  promulgate  appropriate  rules  and  regulations concerning the right of the public to be present at meetings  of the authority. The board may incorporate in its rules and regulations  conditions  under  which  it  may exclude the public from a meeting or a  portion thereof.    Any rules or regulations adopted hereunder shall become a part of  the  minutes  of  the  port authority of New York and New Jersey and shall be  subject to the approval of the governor of New Jersey and  the  governor  of New York.                                  ARTICLE XVI    Unless   and   until   otherwise  determined  by  the  action  of  the  legislatures of the two states, no action of the port authority shall be  binding unless taken at a meeting at which at least three of the members  from each state are present, and unless a majority of the  members  from  each  state  present  at such meeting but in any event at least three of  the members from each state, shall vote in  favor  thereof.  Each  state  reserves the right to provide by law for the exercise of a veto power by  the  governor  thereof  over  any  action  of any commissioner appointed  therefrom.                                 ARTICLE XVII.    Unless  and  until  otherwise  determined  by  the   action   of   the  legislatures  of  the two states, the port authority shall not incur any  obligations for  salaries,  office  or  other  administrative  expenses,  within  the  provisions  of  article  fifteen,  prior  to  the making of  appropriations adequate to meet the same.                                ARTICLE XVIII.    The port authority is hereby authorized to  make  suitable  rules  and  regulations  not inconsistent with the constitution of the United States  or of either state,  and  subject  to  the  exercise  of  the  power  of  congress, for the improvement of the conduct of navigation and commerce,  which,  when  concurred  in  or  authorized  by the legislatures of both  states, shall be binding and effective upon all persons and corporations  affected thereby.                                 ARTICLE XIX.

    The two states shall provide penalties for violations  of  any  order,  rule  or  regulation  of  the  port  authority,  and  for  the manner of  enforcing the same.                                  ARTICLE XX.    The  territorial  or  boundary  lines  established by the agreement of  eighteen hundred and thirty-four, or the jurisdiction of the two  states  established  thereby, shall not be changed except as herein specifically  modified.                                 ARTICLE XXI.    Either state may by its legislature withdraw from  this  agreement  in  the  event  that  a  plan  for the comprehensive development of the port  shall not have been adopted by both states on or prior  to  July  first,  nineteen  hundred  and twenty-three; and when such withdrawal shall have  been communicated to the governor of the other state  by  the  state  so  withdrawing, this agreement shall be thereby abrogated.                                 ARTICLE XXII.    Definitions.  The  following  words  as  herein  used  shall  have the  following meaning: "Transportation facility"  shall  include  railroads,  steam  or  electric,  motor  truck  or other street or highway vehicles,  tunnels, bridges, boats, ferries, car-floats, lighters,  tugs,  floating  elevators, barges, scows or harbor craft of any kind, air craft suitable  for harbor service, and every kind of transportation facility now in use  or  hereafter  designed  for  use  for the transportation or carriage of  persons or property. "Terminal facility" shall include  wharves,  piers,  slips,   ferries,  docks,  dry  docks,  bulkheads,  dock-walls,  basins,  car-floats, float-bridges, grain or other storage elevators, warehouses,  cold storage, tracks,  yards,  sheds,  switches,  connections,  overhead  appliances, and every kind of terminal or storage facility now in use or  hereafter  designed  for  use  for  the  handling,  storage,  loading or  unloading of  freight  at  steamship,  railroad  or  freight  terminals.  "Railroads"   shall   include  railways,  extensions  thereof,  tunnels,  subways, bridges, elevated structures, tracks, poles,  wires,  conduits,  power   houses,  substations,  lines  for  the  transmission  of  power,  car-barns, shops, yards,  sidings,  turn-outs,  switches,  stations  and  approaches  thereto, cars and motive equipment. "Facility" shall include  all works, buildings, structures, appliances and appurtenances necessary  and convenient for the proper construction, equipment,  maintenance  and  operation  of  such  facility  or facilities or any one or more of them.  "Real property" shall include land under water, as well as uplands,  and  all  property either now commonly or legally defined as real property or  which may hereafter be so defined.  "Personal  property"  shall  include  choses  in action and all other property now commonly or legally defined  as personal property or which may hereafter be so  defined.  "To  lease"  shall include to rent or to hire. "Rule or regulation," until and unless  otherwise  determined by the legislatures of both states, shall mean any  rule or regulation not inconsistent with the constitution of the  United  States  or of either state, and, subject to the exercise of the power of  congress, for the improvement of the conduct of navigation and  commerce  within  the district, and shall include charges, rates, rentals or tolls  fixed  or  established  by  the  port  authority;  and  until  otherwise  determined as aforesaid, shall not include matters relating to harbor or  river  pollution.  Wherever action by the legislature of either state is  herein referred to, it shall mean an act of the legislature duly adopted  in accordance with the provisions of the constitution of the state.

    Plural or singular. The singular wherever used  herein  shall  include  the plural.    Consent,  approval  or  recommendation  of  municipality;  how  given.  Wherever  herein  the  consent,  approval   or   recommendation   of   a  "municipality"  is  required,  the word "municipality" shall be taken to  include any city or incorporated village within the port  district,  and  in  addition  in  the state of New Jersey any borough, town, township or  any municipality  governed  by  an  improvement  commission  within  the  district.  Such consent, approval or recommendation whenever required in  the case of the city of New York shall be deemed to have been  given  or  made  whenever  the  board of estimate and apportionment of said city or  any body hereafter succeeding to its duties shall  by  a  majority  vote  pass  a  resolution expressing such consent, approval or recommendation;  and in the case of any municipality  now  or  hereafter  governed  by  a  commission,  whenever the commission thereof shall by majority vote pass  such a resolution; and in all other cases whenever the  body  authorized  to  grant  consent  to  the  use  of  the  streets  or  highways of such  municipality shall by a majority vote pass such a resolution.    § 2. The said agreement or compact, when  signed  and  sealed  by  the  commissioners   of   each   state  as  hereinbefore  provided,  and  the  attorney-general of the state of New York, and the  attorney-general  of  the  state  of  New Jersey if he be designated so to act by the state of  New Jersey, shall become binding upon the state of New York,  and  shall  be  filed  in  the  office of the secretary of state of the state of New  York.    § 3. If by death, resignation or otherwise,  a  vacancy  occurs  among  those  appointed  hereunder  by  the  state of New York, the governor is  hereby authorized to fill the same.    § 4. The said commissioners, together with the commissioners appointed  from the state of New Jersey, shall have power to apply to the  congress  of  the  United  States for its consent and approval of the agreement or  compact signed by them; but in the absence of such consent  of  congress  and  until  the  same  shall  have  been  secured, the said agreement or  compact shall be binding upon the state of  New  York  in  all  respects  permitted  by  law for the two states of New York and New Jersey without  the consent of congress to co-operate, for the  purposes  enumerated  in  said agreement or compact, and in the manner provided herein.               	 	

New York Forms by Issue

New York Court Forms
> Probate
New York Divorce Forms

New York Law

New York State Laws
    > New York Child Support
    > New York Gun Laws
    > New York Statutes
New York State
    > New York City Zip Code
New York Court
    > Gitlow v. New York
    > Lochner v. New York
    > New York Courts
New York State Tax
    > New York State Tax
    > New York State Tax Forms
    > New York State Tax Refund Status
New York Agencies
    > New York City Department of Education
    > New York Department of Labor
    > New York Department of Taxation and Finance
    > New York DMV
    > New York Real Estate
    > New York Secretary of State
    > New York State Department of Education
    > New York State Department of Health
    > New York State Unemployment

New York Court Map

Tips