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SUNY to launch apprenticeship program in advanced manufacturing
The State University of New York (SUNY) will use nearly $8 million in federal funding to create the SUNY New York College Apprenticeship Network (NYCAN). NYCAN is a pre-apprenticeship and on-the-job training program in advanced manufacturing. U.S. Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D–N.Y.) and U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D–N.Y.) on June 26 announced the federal […]
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The State University of New York (SUNY) will use nearly $8 million in federal funding to create the SUNY New York College Apprenticeship Network (NYCAN).
NYCAN is a pre-apprenticeship and on-the-job training program in advanced manufacturing.
U.S. Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D–N.Y.) and U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D–N.Y.) on June 26 announced the federal funding for the Research Foundation of SUNY.
NYCAN will prioritize services for unemployed and underemployed New Yorkers, with a focus on veterans, women, communities of color, and “historically underrepresented” populations in advanced manufacturing.
The funding is administered through the U.S. Department of Labor’s program that’s focused on scaling apprenticeship through sector-based strategies. Gillibrand previously wrote to the Department of Labor in March to support SUNY’s application for this funding.
NYCAN will help unemployed New Yorkers develop the basic technical and math skills needed to succeed in advanced manufacturing.
NYCAN’s development of registered apprenticeship and pre-apprenticeship positions will create 3,200 job opportunities, according to a news release from Gillibrand’s office.
It will incorporate “cutting-edge training that merges online instruction with hands-on experience and targets key sub-sectors that are growing the fastest across New York.”
The initiative’s “emphasis” on connecting unemployed and underrepresented populations with pre-apprenticeship and work-based learning support will provide more New Yorkers with “pathways” to good-paying jobs, “meeting the needs” of advanced-manufacturing companies, and “strengthening” the state’s economy, Gillibrand’s office said.
“An educated and highly skilled workforce is among the best investments in growing New York’s economy and SUNY is proud to be leading by example to train the next generation of apprentices,” SUNY Chancellor Kristina Johnson said in the release. “We are grateful to [Senate Minority] Leader Charles Schumer and Senator Kirsten Gillibrand for their leadership in securing the funding needed to provide real-life work experiences for students to achieve meaningful careers.”

Rome Lab awards SUNY Poly researchers $900,000 grant
“I am excited to congratulate Dr. Papa Rao and Dr. Nate Cady on this significant Air Force Research Laboratory award, which highlights their collaborative effort, the incredible potential of SUNY Poly’s innovative high-tech research, and the power of our globally recognized fabrication capabilities, which drive advances in computing to improve existing and future technologies,” said
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“I am excited to congratulate Dr. Papa Rao and Dr. Nate Cady on this significant Air Force Research Laboratory award, which highlights their collaborative effort, the incredible potential of SUNY Poly’s innovative high-tech research, and the power of our globally recognized fabrication capabilities, which drive advances in computing to improve existing and future technologies,” said SUNY Poly Interim President Dr. Grace Wang. “This award is the latest testament to SUNY Poly and AFRL’s collaboration to accelerate technology development towards commercial and defense applications in quantum technologies and AI.”
About the research
The research team led by Papa Rao will work to address current “bottlenecks” in all-electronic implementations of neuromorphic computing by research and development of the “critical elements” of superconducting optoelectronics at the 300mm scale.
The brain-inspired infrastructure will use “ultra-fast, extremely energy efficient” Josephson junctions, which consist of two superconducting materials and a thin non-superconducting material in between. The Josephson junctions will need to be combined with silicon-based infrared photon (light) emitters, which generate light pulses that allow a given neuron to communicate with many downstream neurons.
This arrangement mimics how the human brain works by sending and receiving ultra-short electrical pulses that it uses to store and process information simultaneously, per the release.
Broome County hotel occupancy rate slips nearly 2 percent in May
BINGHAMTON — Hotels in Broome County welcomed fewer guests in May than in the year-ago month, according to a new report. The hotel occupancy rate (rooms sold as a percentage of rooms available) in the county fell 1.8 percent to 62.9 percent in May from 64 percent a year earlier, according to STR, a Tennessee–based
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BINGHAMTON — Hotels in Broome County welcomed fewer guests in May than in the year-ago month, according to a new report.
The hotel occupancy rate (rooms sold as a percentage of rooms available) in the county fell 1.8 percent to 62.9 percent in May from 64 percent a year earlier, according to STR, a Tennessee–based hotel market data and analytics company. Year to date, the county’s occupancy rate was up 2.5 percent to 53.6 percent.
Broome County’s revenue per available room (RevPar), a key industry gauge that measures how much money hotels are bringing in per available room, rose 2.6 percent to $66.86 in May from $65.16 in May 2018. Through the first five months of the year, the county’s RevPar was up 4.2 percent to $48.48.
Average daily rate (or ADR), which represents the average rental rate for a sold room, increased by 4.5 percent to $106.32 in May from $101.79 a year before.

Partnership seeks to create more sustainable warehouses
BINGHAMTON — Binghamton University recently announced that some of its faculty are working to develop and demonstrate a new energy storage process for warehouse energy management. The project will use solar panels, a stationary energy storage system, and lithium-ion batteries on forklifts that will reduce energy costs for warehouse owners, according to a Binghamton University
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BINGHAMTON — Binghamton University recently announced that some of its faculty are working to develop and demonstrate a new energy storage process for warehouse energy management.
The project will use solar panels, a stationary energy storage system, and lithium-ion batteries on forklifts that will reduce energy costs for warehouse owners, according to a Binghamton University news release.
Funded by the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA), the project will allow researchers to work with The Raymond Corporation, a Greene–based manufacturer of electric forklift trucks and intralogistics solutions, to develop an “economically viable storage demonstration project.” The initiative seeks to demonstrate why a “behind-the-meter storage system and controllable forklift charging” can benefit warehouse owners and the utility grid.
Ziang (John) Zhang, principal investigator, and Pritam Das, co-principal investigator, both assistant professors of electrical and computer engineering at Binghamton University’s Thomas J. Watson School of Engineering and Applied Science, will work with Raymond engineers to manage the energy generation, storage, and consumption of lithium-ion batteries in their forklift trucks.
“We are honored to be selected by NYSERDA to support its clean energy initiative with research that includes a solar power system (photovoltaic), a stationary energy storage system, and several forklift battery chargers,” Zhang said in the release. “We believe this partnership with Raymond can give the industry an example of what future warehouse energy systems look like and how it can benefit all parties involved.”
Electric forklift trucks are usually powered by lead-acid batteries, which can have an extended recharge time of up to eight hours. In many high-use warehouses, several of these shifts may overlap where each forklift truck may have two or three batteries used per truck — one in use, another on recharge, and one cooling down in storage, the release noted. Lithium-ion batteries “provide great benefits to Raymond’s customers, but the fast-charging feature may cause significant energy demands to warehouse owners during peak times, which is why this project was developed.”
Michael Field, CEO of Raymond, explained how the partnership came about. “Our partnership stemmed from the manufacturing industry’s growing need for more sustainable, more controllable resources,” he said. “By implementing lithium-ion batteries into more forklifts, our customers will see the same high-quality products but with overall energy consumption reduction due to the ability to charge at nearly 100 percent efficiency and reduced costs, on account of the batteries having a longer lifespan.”
The proposed solution can turn warehouses into a “controllable energy hub” that can be enhanced to support the power grid during normal and peak grid conditions. Binghamton University says it will work with New York State Electric & Gas (NYSEG) to estimate the “grid benefit/impact of the proposed system.” Preliminary analysis includes an estimation of how the system affects the efficiency of the local circuit.
“Controllable distributed energy resources, such as battery storage, will play a significant role in managing the electricity grid in the future. We are excited to be working with Binghamton University and The Raymond Corporation on this exciting project,” Carl Taylor, president and CEO of NYSEG and RG&E, said.
NYSERDA says that by partnering with Raymond, this project is focused on “driving down costs and creating a self-sustaining energy market for both wholesale and commercial businesses in the state.” Ultimately, Binghamton University and Raymond will work together to make changes in warehouses to encourage sustainability, while informing and educating the local community on their efforts.
This initiative builds on a prior NYSERDA-funded project completed by Raymond in 2017 which showed the advantages to using lithium-ion batteries for energy storage on forklifts, per the release. The earlier project developed methods for the battery, truck, and charger to communicate temperatures, state of charge, and other status information, as well as demonstrate improved performance while the forklifts were in operation.

NUAIR testing validates drone parachute for package- delivery firm Flytrex
ROME — The parachute on the package-delivery drones for Flytrex — an Israel-based drone company — are now considered “validated as compliant with industry standards.” It follows testing that NUAIR completed at the drone test site at Griffiss International Airport in Rome. NUAIR is short for Northeast UAS Airspace Integration Research (NUAIR), a Syracuse–based nonprofit
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ROME — The parachute on the package-delivery drones for Flytrex — an Israel-based drone company — are now considered “validated as compliant with industry standards.”
It follows testing that NUAIR completed at the drone test site at Griffiss International Airport in Rome. NUAIR is short for Northeast UAS Airspace Integration Research (NUAIR), a Syracuse–based nonprofit organization.
This announcement builds on a $30 million investment announced by Gov. Andrew Cuomo to develop the 50-mile UAS traffic management corridor between Syracuse and Griffiss Airport in Rome to advance the growing UAS (unmanned aircraft system) industry as part of the CNY Rising initiative, per a July 2 NUAIR news release.
Through these tests, NUAIR is providing the UAS industry with the data and standards testing “needed to unlock commercial operations.”
This is the second parachute standard validation that NUAIR has performed, “advancing the potential for commercial drone package delivery and routine flights over people,” NUAIR said. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) currently prohibits pilots from flying most drones directly over people. Professional drone operators can apply for a waiver from that restriction if they can demonstrate they have “robust safety mitigations in place,” including having a validated parachute.
“NUAIR’s testing at the New York UAS test site to validate the parachute on Flytrex’s package delivery drones is helping move this company and others toward commercial UAS activity that will build the drone industry and other industries in Central New York and the Mohawk Valley,” Howard Zemsky, president, CEO and commissioner of Empire State Development, said in the NUAIR release.
Safety “main priority”
NUAIR says Flytrex has already made “impactful strides” in safe drone integration as part of the FAA’s integration pilot program. The validation of the Flytrex parachute “makes even more advanced flights possible — ushering in a new era of on-demand delivery that breaks down industry limits and sets higher safety standards.”
Flytrex’s testing of the DRS-M600 parachute under NUAIR supports Cuomo’s recent announcement of a New York–Israel partnership, including the creation of a UAS Center of Excellence in the Mohawk Valley that NUAIR will lead.
“When it comes to commercial drone operations, safety has to be a main priority,” Yariv Bash, CEO and co-founder of Flytrex, said in the NUAIR release. “We chose to work with Drone Rescue Systems [DRS] not only because they are the experts when it comes to keeping drones safely above our heads, but also because we share the same vision of making commercial drones a viable option by upholding the highest safety standards. Our confidence in these tests is bolstered by NUAIR’s strong track record, having managed the testing of the world’s first certified parachute recovery system. NUAIR is at the forefront of safety regulation, and we’re pleased to be testing with an experienced and capable partner.”
DRS-M600 is a DRS product, per its website.
About the parachute, testing
Drone Rescue Systems’ M600 parachute is designed to reduce the risk of harming people on the ground, by bringing down equipment safely, in the event of a drone malfunction. Its “patented mechanism deploys a parachute within milliseconds” and only takes a few minutes to re-pack the system and relaunch the drone.
The DRS-M600 is equipped with a traceable “black box” which stores flight data. In the event of a malfunction, investigators can recover and analyze the data to determine why the parachute was deployed.
NUAIR put Flytrex’s DRS-M600 equipped DJI Matrice 600 Pro through 45 functionality tests across five different failure scenarios. The tests were successful, meaning that the DRS-M600 complies with the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) international standard specification for small UAS parachutes, opening the door for Flytrex to get a waiver to operate its drone over people.
The FAA and other industry stakeholders developed the ASTM consensus standard in late 2018 after more than a year of work, NUAIR said.
“NUAIR is proud to provide companies with this level of standards testing at the New York UAS test site,” Tony Basile, COO at NUAIR, said. “Such tests and partnerships support our mission to safely integrate unmanned aircraft into the national airspace. We look forward to continuing to validate industry leading technology, supporting the ever-growing commercial UAS industry.”

Binghamton University to get $8.8M in state money for FlexMed
Poliks also serves as director of the CAMM, which is the official New York node of the national NextFlex manufacturing institute, based in San Jose, California. The Flex Med CAT designation will help Binghamton build on the CAMM, which Poliks called a “well established organization.” “The FlexMed CAT provides and infrastructure and an umbrella over
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Poliks also serves as director of the CAMM, which is the official New York node of the national NextFlex manufacturing institute, based in San Jose, California.
The Flex Med CAT designation will help Binghamton build on the CAMM, which Poliks called a “well established organization.”
“The FlexMed CAT provides and infrastructure and an umbrella over this successful organization to help us to seed new projects with perhaps smaller companies that will allow us then to work with them on this larger scale … meaning hopefully to help them find federal funding and to work with them in partnership as they develop devices that could be tested in the field or eventually tested in clinical settings,” says Poliks, who spoke with CNYBJ on July 1.
Flexible medical devices could include lightweight sensors for use in monitoring hospital patients, athletes, and members of the armed forces.
FlexMed CAT will use about half of its funding award for matching dollars if a New York company wants to work with the CAT on testing or developing a given technology, says Poliks. It will use the other half for infrastructure and support of the center, he adds.
Vision for FlexMed
Poliks, the author of more than 100 technical papers, holds 47 U.S. patents, according to Binghamton University. He envisions the center working with startup companies around the state to develop prototype devices in a cost-efficient and timely fashion so that they can be brought to market as quickly as possible. Initial projects may include wearable biosensors embedded in textiles and roll-to-roll manufacturing of electronic glass and ceramic surfaces.
The center, an “interdisciplinary effort” with collaborators at SUNY Polytechnic Institute, which has campuses in Albany and the Mohawk Valley, will offer training, workshops and academic classes, Binghamton University said.
As an educator, Poliks also likes the workforce-development aspect of this center. Students at Binghamton and at SUNY Poly will have the chance to learn techniques and prepare for careers in this sector when they graduate, he notes.
FlexMed will serve as the nucleus of a manufacturing-industry cluster in the quickly emerging field of medical- and pharmaceutical-device manufacturing, according to Howard Zemsky, president, CEO, and commissioner of Empire State Development.
“It will enable industry partners to scale up flexible-hybrid electronics technologies and present them to the marketplace more quickly, while harnessing various academic capabilities for product development and commercialization, workforce development and job creation efforts for New York state,” Zemsky said in the release.
The Importance of Teams and Trust
As the leader of a fast-growing company that assists clients with their technology requirements, I operate in an environment that continually changes. Today’s questions very quickly become yesterday’s decisions. How does one keep pace? What is the effect on leadership? Having spent most of my career in technology, I think I have a pretty good
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As the leader of a fast-growing company that assists clients with their technology requirements, I operate in an environment that continually changes. Today’s questions very quickly become yesterday’s decisions. How does one keep pace? What is the effect on leadership?
Having spent most of my career in technology, I think I have a pretty good grasp on the subject of dealing with the pace of change. Yes, it seems to have accelerated, but for me the primary constant is dedicating myself to lifelong learning. Without a keen interest in learning what’s new, it would be an almost impossible task to stay current.
Since keeping current is critical in any competitive business, a common challenge organizations face is motivating employees to stay current, even across a mix of generations working together.
From a leadership perspective, the way we help make that happen is by creating a working environment built on teams. When people work and learn together, they get comfortable enough to provide their educated opinions, which in turn oftentimes yields great results.
We started with the creation of our leadership team at iV4, comprising key stakeholders. Our meetings have become increasingly productive, but can sometimes be raucous. That’s OK because we share common goals and just sometimes disagree on how best to go about meeting them.
From there, we built both formal business teams — for example, our cybersecurity and data center teams — and informal teams, one being our recognition squad.
Teams are a great collaborative vehicle, but what happens as the company grows and teams get larger? Do you add more teams and/or more managers? Or do teams just get bulkier so they become less intimate and managers have to spread their time more?
While some people would claim this is a great problem to have, it doesn’t absolve the leader of needing solutions to address this type of situation.
As teams within an organization grow, people-centric skills in leaders become more valuable to eliminate the distance between individual team members and leadership. A 2019 Harvard Business Review article by Julie Zhuo defines those skills as “hiring exceptional leaders, building self-reliant teams, establishing a clear vision, and communicating well.” At the same time, leaders must be nimble to know when to step in and when to get out.
Interestingly, some studies have shown that success in working in teams is more important than company culture when it comes to employee satisfaction. Clearly both are important, but it demonstrates the importance people place on working with their co-workers. Enter trust.
When you work with someone you learn you can rely on, trust starts to build. When team members are able to trust their teammates to do their parts and not undermine the team structure, teams can become very efficient, becoming cost-effective machines within the organization.
While teams are essential in growing organizations, their dynamics will likely change. At one point, I tried to participate in as many teams as possible. That just doesn’t work anymore. Also, as the CEO of the company, I’ve seen people be intimidated by my presence, even after reassuring everyone that I’m just another employee.
So, what is the right path? At iV4, we stress learning as a constant and teamwork for enhancing productivity and idea stimulation. But most importantly, we do everything we can to instill trust in everything we do. Trust with colleagues, teams based on trust and trust to question decisions that are made. And, trust with our older and younger counterparts.
Technology and companies are ever-changing, and we need to keep up. Leadership that enables a culture of trusting teamwork is what works for us.
Mike Spoont is CEO of iV4 (www.iv4.com), an IT consulting, support, and professional services firm with offices in Fairport, Syracuse, and Amherst.

SUNY Poly undergraduate research program continues through early August
MARCY — The undergraduate research program at SUNY Polytechnic Institute (SUNY Poly) will continue through early August at the school’s Utica and Albany campuses. More than 40 students are working with professors on research topics this summer as part of the SUNY Poly undergraduate research program (SURP). SURP provides “advanced” opportunities for students to participate
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MARCY — The undergraduate research program at SUNY Polytechnic Institute (SUNY Poly) will continue through early August at the school’s Utica and Albany campuses.
More than 40 students are working with professors on research topics this summer as part of the SUNY Poly undergraduate research program (SURP).
SURP provides “advanced” opportunities for students to participate in “wide-ranging” areas of research, the school said in a news release.
The program began May 28, as 30 faculty paired with undergraduate students to focus on topics ranging from green-building certification documentation to mathematical modeling of the blood flow of the eye’s retina.
“I think the students who are taking part in this inspiring program certainly develop an independence they wouldn’t necessarily have if they hadn’t gone through this experience,” Carolyn Rodak, assistant professor of civil engineering at SUNY Poly, said. “They also acquire expertise in the area that they’re working [in], which is really great for preparing them for in-demand careers that will serve them well.”
SURP was limited to SUNY Poly students in 2018 but has expanded to include external students this summer. The school said 10 external students are participating in the program at SUNY Poly’s Albany campus and five external students were accepted to SURP at the Utica campus.
“The idea to advertise externally this year was to spread the good news about who we are, allowing these students to engage in cutting-edge research that can provide a strong foundation for a lifetime of learning,” Robert Brainard, professor of nanoscience at SUNY Poly, said. Brainard serves on the SURP committee with Rodak.
The 10-week program will conclude Aug. 2, with a poster session on Aug. 1 in Utica and Aug. 2 in Albany. Both poster sessions are open to the public and will be held from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m., the school said.
Research categories
All students are paid a stipend, either through SUNY Poly or grants obtained through faculty. The students’ research falls into three different categories.
The categories include scholarship research, which is open only to SUNY Poly students who are participating in SURP for the first time.
The students could also be involved in inter-campus research, an option available for students who participated in one SURP program and are interested in another. If the students have demonstrated excellent research capabilities, they may be accepted to participate in another SURP program at a different campus than the one where they completed their first internship. This program is selective as students are typically only allowed to participate in one SURP program.
The third category is visiting undergraduate research, which is open to non-SUNY Poly students, the school said.
Politicians promising to forgive college debt want you to pay up
The latest fad from politicians is to promise to wipe out all student debt — with your money. They wave their magic wand and you pay. That is what they propose. Let’s say you did not get a college degree. Instead, you went to work. Or maybe you did graduate from college, but you avoided
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The latest fad from politicians is to promise to wipe out all student debt — with your money. They wave their magic wand and you pay. That is what they propose.
Let’s say you did not get a college degree. Instead, you went to work.
Or maybe you did graduate from college, but you avoided big debts by paying your own way and working in college and afterward. Perhaps you went to a low-cost school. Or maybe you did rack up college debt, but you worked hard to pay it off.
Congratulations, because you have qualified to pay off the loans of all the doofuses who ran up big student debt that they cannot pay.
Oh, Tom, you are too cruel, you may say. These are innocent babes. They were conned by colleges to take on these loans. We must weep for them and salve their wounds.
Sorry, but they are doofuses. Nothing was hidden from them. They read the loan documents and saw the numbers. If they did not read them, they are stupid. If they reckoned they could pay off $100,000 in loans with a degree in gender studies or poetry, they are doofuses.
Yes, I am exaggerating — to make a point. The point is that just because a student shows zero judgement does not mean the rest of us should pick up the tab.
Oh, but we should. So, say candidates like Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders. These two, and others, want taxpayers to pay off the doofuses’ bills.
Makes sense, doesn’t it? Those who did not go to college must pay. Those who used their heads to avoid such debt must pay up anyway. And, those who worked hard to pay off their college debt must pay yet again. That is, they must cover the indebtedness of the doofuses.
Those who were smart, practical, and sensible must now pay the bills of those who were not. Or so these politicians insist — in their attempts to buy votes. Campaigning is simple: vote for me and I will get taxpayers to pay off your stupid loans.
But Tom, these young people cannot get ahead, you might say They can’t get out from under these massive debts to go on with their precious lives.
Yes, they can. They can get two or three jobs. They can cut expenses to the bone. They can go bankrupt and start over. Maybe such hardships will teach them a few lessons that will guide them into better financial decisions in their futures.
Suppose we did pay off all this debt that students racked up. Every student in the future would expect the same. The lines for degrees in worthless fields of study would extend around every campus corner. Who would care how much these degrees cost?
And consider what lessons the doofus debtors will have learned. I can think of one: Stupidly borrow lots of money, don’t pay it back and you win a big prize. What’s next? We taxpayers will have pay off everybody’s debts, from car loans to personal loans to mortgages.
From Tom…as in Morgan.
Tom Morgan writes about political, financial, and other subjects from his home in upstate New York. Contact him at tomasinmorgan@yahoo.com, read more of his writing at tomasinmorgan.com, or find him on Facebook.
Session Ends with Onslaught of Progressive, NYC Legislation
The 2019 New York State legislative session thankfully came to a merciful close in the early morning hours of June 21. After last November’s election, when downstate Democrats seized control of the state senate, most understood that the legislative agenda would be tilted towards downstate’s progressive priorities. However, even socialists such as Bernie Sanders and Alexandria
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The 2019 New York State legislative session thankfully came to a merciful close in the early morning hours of June 21. After last November’s election, when downstate Democrats seized control of the state senate, most understood that the legislative agenda would be tilted towards downstate’s progressive priorities. However, even socialists such as Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez probably couldn’t have predicted just how hard-left New York was going to turn — although I imagine they would be happy with it. Bills expanding abortion rights and allowing late-term abortion in certain circumstances, giving illegal immigrants the right to take part in New York’s tuition-assistance program, and eliminating cash bail except for the most violent felons are just a few of the many pieces of left-wing legislation that were passed during session.
The session ended in a flurry — 578 bills out of total of 1,099 bills passed this year were approved in the final five days of the session and the liberal hits just kept coming. In the final days of the session, the legislature passed bills that would allow illegal aliens to obtain New York driver’s licenses, a farm labor bill that will drive up costs for our already hard-pressed New York farmers, and a so-called Climate Leadership Act that will cost billions of dollars, affect how each of us live and work, yet have a very limited impact on global greenhouse-gas emissions.
The Democratic majority’s haste to get legislation passed did create some interesting snafus. One bill, that would have provided automatic voter registration for persons dealing with state agencies, was poorly drafted and could have been interpreted to automatically register non-citizens to vote. Thankfully, the bill was pulled when the drafting error was pointed out. The fact that this drafting error was caught is somewhat miraculous given that we were passing legislation in rapid succession in the middle of the night.
Sadly, little to nothing was done this session to address the outward migration of the Empire State’s population, to improve our business climate, or to assist our already overtaxed citizens. Indeed, other than making the property tax cap permanent, it is hard to point to any pro-taxpayer legislation that was passed. What is even more troublesome is that some on the other side of the aisle claim they are just getting started. Next year, expect pushes for legislation that will have state tax payers pay for everyone’s health care, the legalization of prostitution, legalization of marijuana, and legislation that will require the release of all incarcerated criminals at the age of 55 provided they have served 15 years of their sentence — including murderers and rapists.
One axiom that is often repeated and is fitting at this time is “elections have consequences.” Last November’s election results had major consequences for our state and unfortunately the aftereffects have not been positive for the citizens of upstate New York.
William (Will) A. Barclay is the Republican representative of the 120th New York Assembly District, which encompasses most of Oswego County, including the cities of Oswego and Fulton, as well as the town of Lysander in Onondaga County and town of Ellisburg in Jefferson County. Contact him at barclaw@assembly.state.ny.us or (315) 598-5185.
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