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OPINION: Protect Those Who Protect Us
Two [Central New York] police officers were senselessly gunned down [on April 14] by a deranged individual following what should have been a routine traffic stop. The two heroes, Syracuse cop Michael Jensen and Onondaga County Sheriff’s Deputy Michael Hoosock, died defending the communities they swore to protect. We all mourn these shining pillars of […]
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Two [Central New York] police officers were senselessly gunned down [on April 14] by a deranged individual following what should have been a routine traffic stop. The two heroes, Syracuse cop Michael Jensen and Onondaga County Sheriff’s Deputy Michael Hoosock, died defending the communities they swore to protect. We all mourn these shining pillars of service, and we owe them and their families an unpayable debt.
Attacks on law enforcement in recent weeks have sent shockwaves through New York. From the horrific murder of Officer Jonathan Diller in New York City to the recent shooting in Albany, police officers are facing an unprecedented assault from violent criminals. As these attacks mount, I am continually disgusted by how little they have moved the state’s Democrat leadership to take any action. The response from the other side has amounted to little more than business as usual. Violent criminals have become emboldened, and the badge of law enforcement has become a bullseye. If these individuals don’t even second-guess shooting a police officer how are New Yorkers going to walk the streets safely?
The Assembly Minority Conference has offered a series of common-sense proposals to help protect law enforcement and the public. Each remains stalled by misguided Democrat leadership. Among some of our proposals are:
• Mandatory Life Without Parole — Makes life imprisonment without parole (LWOP) mandatory for defendants convicted of murder in the first degree or second degree if the victim is a police officer, specified peace officer, first responder, or correctional officer (A.7472, Angelino/S. 408, Gallivan).
• Hate Crimes Against First Responders — Designates offenses against law enforcement, emergency medical services personnel, and/or firefighters as hate crimes, thereby increasing the penalty for the offense (A.3417, DeStefano/S.6091, Murray).
• Imposing the Dangerousness Standard — Allows a judge to consider the safety of any person or the community when selecting a securing order on a criminal suspect. Requires the court to make an individualized determination as to whether suspects pose a risk or threat of physical danger to the safety of any person or the community and a determination as to whether they pose a risk of flight to avoid prosecution (Reilly).
• Reinstating the death penalty in New York state and make it an available sentence for those convicted for the intentional killing of police officers, specified peace officers, and first responders, among others. Further, mandate LWOP for cop killers not sentenced to death (A.3906, Barclay).
National Crime Victims’ Rights Week [is April 21-27]. This year, we remember several law-enforcement officers as we reflect on the lives of the many victims of crime here in New York. Every single one of these crimes is a tragedy, especially the ones that took the lives of those who died in the line of duty. In the name of officers Jensen, Hoosock, Diller, and anyone else victimized by senseless violence, Albany needs to stand with those who protect us and take action to support our police.
William (Will) A. Barclay, 55, Republican, is the New York Assembly minority leader and represents the 120th New York Assembly District, which encompasses all of Oswego County, as well as parts of Jefferson and Cayuga counties.
OPINION: You’re Used to How Congress Does Budgets. You Shouldn’t Be
There was lots of drama back at the end of March, when Congress — six months behind schedule — finally funded the federal government for the rest of the fiscal year. You may remember some of the highlights: The $1.2 trillion package funded defense, homeland security, and other key agencies (others had gotten their funding
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There was lots of drama back at the end of March, when Congress — six months behind schedule — finally funded the federal government for the rest of the fiscal year. You may remember some of the highlights: The
$1.2 trillion package funded defense, homeland security, and other key agencies (others had gotten their funding a few weeks earlier), and Congress passed it mere hours before a government shutdown.
This, of course, was characterized as a great success, though Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, a Democrat, was straightforward about what it took. “It’s been a long day, a long week and a very long few months,” he told the press. “It’s no small feat to get a package like this done in divided government.” Over in the House, the fact that Republican Speaker Mike Johnson played ball with Democrats to get the package through led to the first stage of a move by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Green to seek his ouster as speaker.
I take some comfort from the fact that the government is now funded through September and Congress can move on to a full agenda of pressing business. But I take no comfort at all from the fact — indeed, I’m genuinely outraged —that we’re just going to go through all this again at some point down the road. The congressional budget process is deeply and fundamentally broken.
What I find most distressing is that there’s now an entire generation of Americans and members of Congress who know only this: that the budget consists of a gargantuan bill hammered out by congressional leaders and the White House and some key staff, then is rushed through with little debate and even less insight into what it contains, other than some key topline figures. The fact that in the world’s greatest democracy this is how we handle the fundamental blueprint of our government, and its priorities should not be a point of pride. As veteran budget analyst Alice Rivlin put it, it is “frightening and embarrassing that the world’s most experienced democracy is currently unable to carry out even the basic responsibility of funding the services that Americans are expecting from their government.” That was in 2018, the year before her death.
That’s especially true because we know how to do better. Though I’ve done this before, let me remind you of what you’re missing. Up until the mid-1990s, Congress followed a process that had been honed over decades. It divided the budget into a dozen different areas, and then handled their appropriations through separate committee hearings. These allowed committees — and the rank-and-file members who sat on them — to gather expert opinions, propose changes, and thoroughly vet federal spending decisions in both chambers before sending each bill on to the president. It was not a perfect process, but it was transparent, far more democratic, orderly, and a politically rational way to decide on our priorities and how to fund them.
These days, we just take it for granted that we have to live with high-stakes fiscal brinksmanship. And that the myriad crucial decisions that undergird our government’s operations will be contained in omnibus spending bills or continuing resolutions that basically put the government on automatic pilot and get no real scrutiny. Congress’s historical role as a nurturer of innovation and creative approaches to problem-solving? Nowhere in sight.
I don’t know what it’s going to take to improve matters. There are plenty of members of the GOP majority in the House who ran two years ago on restoring the “regular order” of the appropriations process. And in all my conversations with public officials in recent years, I’ve never heard a single one defend what goes on now. So, in theory, there should be plenty of motivation to restore a saner approach to budgeting.
But there’s also reality. After returning from their recess, members of Congress are settling in to work on the next appropriations round, facing an Oct. 1 deadline to keep the government funded. It’s an election year. Any bets that they’ll get the job done in orderly fashion and without resorting to a stopgap spending measure in September? I didn’t think so.
Lee Hamilton, 92, is a senior advisor for the Indiana University (IU) Center on Representative Government, distinguished scholar at the IU Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies, and professor of practice at the IU O’Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs. Hamilton, a Democrat, was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives for 34 years (1965-1999), representing a district in south-central Indiana.

BRIANA FOX has been appointed as the new assistant VP, branch manager for Solvay Bank’s North Syracuse branch. She joined Solvay Bank in 2016 as

New York home sales resumed their decline in March
Inventory hits another record low ALBANY — New York homes sales resumed their decline in March after a one-month reprieve in February. New York realtors sold 6,685 previously owned homes this March, down 14.2 percent from the 7,790 homes they sold in the year-ago month, according to the monthly housing report that the New York
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ALBANY — New York homes sales resumed their decline in March after a one-month reprieve in February.
New York realtors sold 6,685 previously owned homes this March, down 14.2 percent from the 7,790 homes they sold in the year-ago month, according to the monthly housing report that the New York State Association of Realtors (NYSAR) issued on April 18. This came after New York home sales rose in February for the first time in 30 months, through it was a less than 1 percent increase.
The number of homes for sale in New York totaled 23,924 in March, down nearly 15 percent from the 28,060 homes available for sale in March 2023. It’s the lowest number of homes for sale since statistics have been kept in New York state, NYSAR said. It also marks the 13th straight month that inventory has dropped in year-over-year comparisons, it added.
Mortgage rates in March continued to rise closer to 7 percent again. NYSAR cited Freddie Mac as indicating interest rates averaged 6.82 percent on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage. That was up from the 6.78 percent rate in March. A year ago, at this time, the interest rate stood at 6.54 percent. Freddie Mac is the more common way of referring to the Virginia–based Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation.
Pending sales totaled 9,576 in March, a decrease of 2 percent from the 9,776 pending sales in the same month in 2023, according to the NYSAR data. This foreshadows further declines in closed sales in the next couple of months.
The March 2024 statewide median sales price was $380,000, up 5.6 percent from the March 2023 median sales price of $360,000.
The months’ supply of homes for sale at the end of this March stood at 2.6 months, down more than 7 percent from the 2.8 months’ supply at the end of March 2023, per NYSAR. A 6-month to 6.5-month supply is considered a balanced market, the association said.
New listings fell 7.5 percent to 11,790 this March from 12,749 in March 2023.
All home-sales data is compiled from multiple-listing services in New York, and it includes townhomes and condominiums in addition to existing single-family homes, according to NYSAR.

Brooks-Rolling to depart executive-director position at UMEA in late June
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Me’Shae Brooks-Rolling, who has served as executive director of the Upstate Minority Economic Alliance (UMEA) since 2019, will leave the role at

Biden formally announces $6.1 billion Micron funding in visit to the MOST in Syracuse
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — U.S. President Joseph Biden on Thursday afternoon formally announced a $6.1 billion funding award for Micron Technology, Inc. (NASDAQ: MU) during a visit to the Milton J. Rubenstein Museum of Science & Technology (the MOST) in downtown Syracuse. The billions in funding will come through the federal CHIPS and Science Act for
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — U.S. President Joseph Biden on Thursday afternoon formally announced a $6.1 billion funding award for Micron Technology, Inc. (NASDAQ: MU) during a visit to the Milton J. Rubenstein Museum of Science & Technology (the MOST) in downtown Syracuse.
The billions in funding will come through the federal CHIPS and Science Act for Micron projects in both the Town of Clay and in Boise, Idaho, where the chip manufacturer is headquartered.
The U.S. Department of Commerce has reached a preliminary agreement with Micron to provide the funding.
This money will support the construction of two fabs in Clay and one fab in Boise, Idaho. The funding is part of $50 billion in private investment by 2030 as the first step towards Micron’s investment of up to $125 billion across both states over the next two decades to build a “leading-edge memory manufacturing ecosystem,” per a White House fact sheet about Biden’s visit.
“In all, it’s going to create over 70,000 jobs across both states, at least 9,000 of which are construction jobs; [and] 11,000 manufacturing jobs,” Biden said in his remarks before a packed crowd at the MOST.
Biden also recalled the shortage of semiconductors during the coronavirus pandemicand noted that semiconductors are smaller than the tip of a human finger.
“[They] help power everything in our lives from smartphones to cars to dishwashers, satellites,” Biden said. “We invented those chips here in America … We made them move. We modernized them.”
The U.S. at one time produced 40 percent of the global semiconductor market’s chips, Biden added. “But over time, we stopped making them.”
When the pandemic shut down chip makers overseas, prices on a lot of products shot up, the president explained. In the U.S., a semiconductor shortage helped drive the surge in inflation in 2021 and contributed to long waits for several products.
“Folks, I determined that I’m never going to let us be vulnerable to wait lines again,”Biden contended. “We’re going to make [them] here.”
The funding will support the construction of the first two fabs of a planned four–fab “megafab” focused on leading-edge DRAM chip production at the White Pine Commerce Park in the town of Clay. Each fab will have 600,000 square feet of cleanrooms, totaling 2.4 million square feet of cleanroom space across the four facilities — “the largest amount of cleanroom space ever announced in the United States and the size of nearly 40 football fields,” per the White House fact sheet.
Sanjay Mehrotra, president and CEO of Micron Technology, called it an “historic moment for semiconductor manufacturing in the U.S.”
“Micron’s leading-edge memory is foundational to meeting the growing demands of artificial intelligence, and we are proud to be making significant memory manufacturing investments in the U.S., which will create many high-tech jobs,” Mehrotra said in a statement forwarded to the media ahead of the event. “We appreciate the foresight of U.S. President Joe Biden, U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo, U.S. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and the bipartisan delegation in Congress that supported the CHIPS and Science Act. Their steadfast focus championing these strategic investments will ensure U.S. semiconductor competitiveness for generations to come.”
Micron established two project-labor agreements (PLAs) at both the New York and Idaho sites for construction of new fabrication facilities. Both PLAs are the “largest in each state’s history,” per the White House fact sheet.
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul; Onondaga County Executive Ryan McMahon; U.S. Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D–N.Y.); and Micron’s Mehrotra spoke to the gathering ahead of Biden.
Biden, Hochul, McMahon, and Schumer also remembered the deaths of Syracuse Police Officer Michael Jensen and Onondaga County Sheriff’s Lieutenant Michael Hoosock who were killed in the line of duty on April 14 while investigating the report of a stolen vehicle in the town of Salina.
Shannon Thomas, a second-year electrician apprentice and a member of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 43 union, introduced President Biden to the assembled crowd.
In contrast to the crowd of supporters inside the MOST, protesters gathered on the sidewalk along West Jefferson and South Franklin Streets behind fences as law-enforcement stood guard. One protester carried a sign that read, “Stop Funding Israeli War Crimes in Palestine.”

Real Life Rosies pre-apprenticeship program celebrates graduates
UTICA, N.Y. — On Tuesday, April 23, Mohawk Valley Community College (MVCC) and the Manufacturers Association of Central New York (MACNY) celebrated the third and

Walsh releases Syracuse housing strategy that calls for “difficult and disruptive choices”
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Syracuse Mayor Ben Walsh on Wednesday released the Syracuse Housing Strategy, which his office describes as a “multi-year framework for improving housing conditions in the City of Syracuse.” The strategy calls for “additive new work that builds on major initiatives” currently underway. They include the Resurgent Neighborhoods Initiative, the East Adams neighborhood
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Syracuse Mayor Ben Walsh on Wednesday released the Syracuse Housing Strategy, which his office describes as a “multi-year framework for improving housing conditions in the City of Syracuse.”
The strategy calls for “additive new work that builds on major initiatives” currently underway. They include the Resurgent Neighborhoods Initiative, the East Adams neighborhood redevelopment, and the community grid vision plan, Walsh’s office said. It also includes programs like the Syracuse Land Bank and downtown–revitalization efforts.
Walsh’s office cites the strategy as indicating “almost 100% of the old way of doing community development will have to be shelved. Resistance to such change is to be expected. Without such change, Syracuse’s housing markets will not begin to truly recover nor get to a point where they are able to withstand the new and different demographic and other challenges headed Syracuse’s way.”
The 70-page plan recommends focusing the city’s housing resources on both stabilizing “distressed” neighborhoods to prevent further decline and investing in “middle”neighborhoods to leverage current and potential market demand for quality housing.
The Syracuse Housing Strategy proposes using a “cluster approach” to implement strategies in groupings of 30-50 contiguous city blocks with similar market conditions and neighborhood identities.
“The Syracuse Housing Strategy is a smart framework to accomplish the massive challenge of revitalizing the city’s housing stock. It presents interventions that will breathe new life into city neighborhoods,” Walsh contended in the announcement. “The strategy also recognizes we are doing a lot of things right already and encourages continued commitment to those neighborhood initiatives. It challenges us, though, to make difficult and disruptive choices to use the limited resources we have available in ways that will make more Syracuse neighborhoods attractive for new residents and private investment.”
The Syracuse Housing Strategy was developed based on significant community and stakeholder input in conjunction with the czb, a planning firm based in Bath, Maine.
Iti is available online at syracusehousingstudy.com.
The City’s department of neighborhood and business development will hold a community open house regarding the strategy on April 30 from 5:30–7 p.m. at the Northeast Community Center at 716 Hawley Ave. in Syracuse.

Studio Central Post, a post-production facility, opens in downtown Syracuse
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Studio Central Post, a post-production facility, has opened a 30,000-square-foot facility at 219 S. West St. in Syracuse. Its location is equipped

Comptroller audit addresses lax accounting in Chenango County town
LINCOLN, N.Y. — Recent audits by New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli’s office found some accounting shortcomings in the town of Lincoln in Madison County, where a former town clerk was arrested for stealing from the town, according to the audit reports. The first audit, which covered Dec. 1, 2017, through June 1, 2022, found
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LINCOLN, N.Y. — Recent audits by New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli’s office found some accounting shortcomings in the town of Lincoln in Madison County, where a former town clerk was arrested for stealing from the town, according to the audit reports.
The first audit, which covered Dec. 1, 2017, through June 1, 2022, found that the former town clerk failed to properly account for, deposit, report, or remit collections.
“When receipts are not accurately and promptly recorded or deposited, officials do not have assurance that all collections are accounted for, and money could be lost or misappropriated,” the comptroller’s report read. “For example, as of April 13, 2022, the former clerk could not account for cash totaling $3,869.
The audit found the clerk also failed to deposit $4,038 in cash collections recorded from Jan. 1, 2018, through April 13, 2022. The clerk also did not maintain complete records for cash collected, resulting in town officials finding $622 in cash in her office with no supporting records.
The clerk also failed to record 44 checks totaling $4,320 in the accounting system and improperly voided other receipts totaling $769.
“These unrecorded receipts and voids enabled the former clerk to conceal cash collections that were recorded but not deposited,” the report read. “The town board did not perform an annual audit of the former clerk’s records, as required.”
In July 2023, the former clerk, Amy Becker, was arrested on charges of petit larceny for stealing nearly $4,000 from the town. She subsequently pled guilty, paid restitution of $3,869, and received a one-year conditional discharge.
DiNapoli’s office recommended that going forward, the Town of Lincoln perform an annual audit of the clerk’s records and that the clerk promptly deposit and record collections.
“To ensure the town’s continued financial integrity and accountability, it is imperative that we uphold best practices moving forward (since 2022),” Town of Lincoln Supervisor Melissa During said in a written response to DiNapoli’s office. “By adhering to established guidelines and implementing more robust internal controls, we can safeguard taxpayer funds, mitigate risks, and maintain transparency in our operations.”
The second audit by DiNapoli’s office focused on making sure the Town of Lincoln board and supervisor ensured that disbursements were supported and approved.
The audit, which covered Jan. 1, 2020, through Dec. 31, 2021, found that the board and former supervisor did not ensure disbursements were adequately supported and properly improved. Three payments totaling $2,605 were not audited and approved by the board. Claims totaling $109,158 were improperly paid prior to the board audit, and claims totaling $533,518 were improperly audited and approved by the former supervisor rather than the board.
Additionally, 13 claims totaling $23,116 did not contain sufficient supporting documentation. Former bookkeepers did not maintain time records to support the hours for which they were paid, and one bookkeeper received $1.751 in additional pay with no evidence of approval.
DiNapoli’s office recommended the Town of Lincoln consult with legal counsel about the unsupported claim payments to the former supervisor and bookkeeper and seek recovery of those funds. Going forward, the town board should audit and approve claims prior to payment when required and ensure all claims include adequate support before approving them.
The Town of Lincoln has contracted with an outside vendor for bookkeeping and payroll services since February 2022.
In a letter to DiNapoli’s office, During, who took office as supervisor in 2022, noted she only pays claims that have been audited and approved by the board and all hourly employees are maintaining detailed time records.
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