Albany Politics At Their Best

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Jeff Green

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Jun 18, 2007, 11:22:31 AM6/18/07
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Maybe the GBall was right? Here's a story of Albany politics at its best!

When Elliot Spitzer was running for governor he promised to right a long-term wrong by allowing same-sex couples to enjoy the same benefits that opposite-sex couples do under the law in NY State. Every state in New England has come of age on this matter but NY lags behind. Why?

"Why" is a good question!

The Governor introduced the bill via Assemblyman O'Donnell who submitted it to the floor of the Assembly on the 17th of May where it was sent to the Judiciary Committee run by Helene Weinstein and there it sat...

At the same time, the bill was sent from the Assembly to the Senate Rules Committee (Chaired by Senator Joseph Bruno) who passed it onto the (S.5884) Senate Judiciary committee where it sat since May 17th and sat and sat and sat...

So, now we're at the end of the session and what's happening?

For those of you who read my emails you know I've been busting my rump to get this thing moving and I can tell you that my Assembly rep Sandy Galef has not been helpful nor forthcoming. Emails to her office are returned with "over quota" errors and a phone call last week to her Ossining office was not returned. In fact, few in the Assembly have been helpful on this. Repeated emails to members of the Assembly Judiciary Committee have gone unanswered until I mentioned political action... That got two of the sponsors of the bill to respond with form letters showing their favor for the bill. But what of the rest? Nada. Silence.

Today:

The Assembly and Senate sessions end this week and the bill still sits in committee. But I was promised this morning by the Assembly Judiciary Chair's office that the bill will be voted on today and likely passed to the floor of the Assembly for a vote. When it gets there, how will Sandy vote? Your guess is as good as mine. But she seems to like to legislate civil rights via the polling process. Following that manner, blacks would still be slaves, free blacks would still be sitting in the back of the bus and women would be home, barefoot, preggers and not able to vote nor own property. As someone who has benefited from civil rights legislation because it was the Right Thing To Do I expect more from Ms. Galef.

Okay, so that's the Assembly side... what of the Senate side?

The Senate Rules Committee sent the bill to the Judiciary Committee where it sat and sat and now, at the end of the session, they have no intention of voting on any more bills. The only way to save the bill on the Senate side is to have it pulled back from the Judiciary Committee to the Rules Committee where they can vote to move the bill to the floor. Does Joe Bruno have the Right Thing in mind?

Who the heck knows.

But it's clear that the Governor, though he promised this bill, had no intention of seeing it through. Simply introducing legislation is not enough. Working to see it pass - is.

What you can do:

Call: Senator Bruno's office at 518.455.3191 and ask that the Rules Committee pull the bill back from Judiciary and vote to move it to the floor for a full vote of the Senate before the session ends.

Call Vinnie Leibell's office at 518.455.3111 and ask him to call Senator Bruno and support the bill.

Call Sandy Galef's office at 455.5348 and tell her you support civil rights and that she should, too. Now. Not next year, not next generation, but this session.

And lastly, call the Governor's office at 518.474.8039 and tell him to use his muscle to see this thing get done. It's his promise and he should back it up with action.

If the State fails at its obligations to its citizens you can be sure I'll have a summer full of activism on my hands... Do you really want to subject yourselves to that?

Let's pass this bill this week and bring NY into line with all our neighboring states..

JmG

"Your hard work and dedication to the county is impressive. Thank you for taking on this leadership role in our community." Jeremy Giordano

Two generations of decentralized growth have drastically increased the Region’s urban land—by 60% in 30 years despite only a 13% increase in population while draining people and jobs out of the Region’s cities. This development pattern threatens both large areas of open land and critical environmental resources at the Region’s outer edge as well as the vitality of our cities and mature suburbs. - Regional Plan Association

"...the number one fiscal tool a municipality could implement to keep taxes down was to protect open space." - Robert McKeon, chair of the Red Hook Agriculture and Open Space Advisory Committee 



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Don't it always seem to go that you don't know what you've got 'till it's gone?
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