N.Y. General Municipal Law Section 6-J
Workmen’s compensation reserve fund


1.

The governing board of any municipal corporation, school district or fire district, which is, or shall hereafter become a self-insurer under the provisions of subdivision four of section fifty of the workers’ compensation law or section thirty of the volunteer firefighters’ benefit law may establish a reserve fund to be known as the workers’ compensation reserve fund of such municipal corporation, school district or fire district.

2.

There may be paid into any such fund (a) such amounts as may be provided therefor by budgetary appropriations and (b) such other sums as may be legally appropriated.

3.

The moneys in such fund shall be deposited and secured in the manner provided by § 10 (Deposits of public money)section ten of this article. The money in such fund so deposited shall be accounted for separate and apart from all other funds of the municipality, school district or fire district, in the same manner as provided in subdivision ten of § 6-C (Capital reserve funds for counties, cities, villages, towns and sewer and water improvement districts)section six-c of this article. The governing board, or the chief fiscal officer of such municipality, school district or fire district, if the governing board shall delegate such duty to him, may invest the moneys in such fund in the manner provided in § 11 (Temporary investments)section eleven of this article. Any interest earned or capital gain realized on the money so deposited or invested shall accrue to and become part of such fund. The separate identity of such fund shall be maintained whether its assets consist of cash or investments or both.

4.

An expenditure shall be made from such fund only for the payment of compensation and benefits, medical, hospital or other expense authorized by article two of the workers’ compensation law and by the volunteer firefighters’ benefit law and expenses of administering the self-insurance program for such municipal corporation, school district or fire district.

5.

If at the end of any fiscal year the moneys in such fund shall exceed the amounts required to be paid pursuant to subdivision four of this section plus any additional amount required to pay all pending claims, the governing board of the municipal corporation, school district, board of cooperative educational services or fire district may, within sixty days of the close of such fiscal year, elect to:

(a)

transfer said excess, or any part thereof, to any fund authorized by this article or Education Law § 3651 (Reserve fund)section thirty-six hundred fifty-one of the education law; and/or (b) apply said excess, or any part thereof to the budget appropriation of the next succeeding fiscal year.

6.

If the municipal corporation, school district or fire district shall, after the establishment of such fund, cease to be a self-insurer, the moneys remaining in such fund may be transferred to any other fund authorized by this chapter or Education Law § 3651 (Reserve fund)section thirty-six hundred fifty-one of the education law only to the extent that the moneys in such fund shall exceed in amount the sum sufficient to pay all expenditures authorized in paragraph numbered four, both accrued and contingent.

Source: Section 6-J — Workmen's compensation reserve fund, https://www.­nysenate.­gov/legislation/laws/GMU/6-J (updated Jan. 11, 2019; accessed Dec. 21, 2024).

3
Compensation for property of a municipal corporation, school district or district corporation taken by eminent domain
3‑A
Rate of interest on judgments and accrued claims against municipal corporations
3‑B
Limitation on real estate tax in New York city
3‑C
Limit upon real property tax levies by local governments
4
Investigation of expenditures of towns and villages
5
Payment of fines, civil penalties, rent, rates, taxes, fees, charges and other amounts by credit card
5‑A
Electronic or wire transfers
5‑B
Collection of fines, civil penalties, rent, rates, taxes, fees, charges and other amounts via the internet
6‑C
Capital reserve funds for counties, cities, villages, towns and sewer and water improvement districts
6‑D
Repair reserve funds for municipal corporations, school districts, district corporations and improvement districts
6‑E
Contingency and tax stabilization reserve fund for municipal corporations
6‑F
Snow and ice removal and road repair reserve funds for municipal corporations
6‑G
Capital reserve funds for fire districts
6‑H
Reserve fund for payment of bonded indebtedness in counties, cities, villages, towns and fire districts
6‑I
Airport development and amortization funds
6‑J
Workmen’s compensation reserve fund
6‑K
Electric utility depreciation reserve funds
6‑L
Mandatory reserve fund for municipal corporations, fire districts and school districts
6‑M
Unemployment insurance payment reserve fund
6‑N
Insurance reserve fund
6‑O
Solid waste management facility reserve funds
6‑P
Employee benefit accrued liability reserve fund
6‑Q
Intermunicipal agreement for a joint capital reserve fund in the county of Tompkins
6‑R
Retirement contribution reserve funds 1
6‑S
Community preservation funds
6‑T
Charitable gifts reserve fund
6‑U
Charitable gifts reserve fund
6‑V
Asset forfeiture escrow fund
7
Payment of municipal bonds
8
Application of revenues of a public improvement or part thereof, or service
9
Use of tax moneys raised outside constitutional tax limit
9‑A
Inter-fund advances
10
Deposits of public money
11
Temporary investments
12
Deposits of public authorities, public benefit corporations and other corporations
20
Special population census: population data
21
Cancellation of unpaid checks or drafts
22
Claims against fire insurance proceeds
23
Flexible benefits program
24
Corporation for the benefit of the city of New York
25
Treatment of capital costs and certain fund balances of the city of New York

Accessed:
Dec. 21, 2024

Last modified:
Jan. 11, 2019

§ 6-J’s source at nysenate​.gov

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