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Deep Roots Market & Bistro opens in Lewis County
LYONS FALLS, N.Y. —The Deep Roots Market & Bistro, a new business specializing in offering North Country food and products, recently opened in Lewis County. Deep Roots held a grand opening on July 28 at its location in the Edge Plaza on Route 12 in Lyons Falls. Owners James and Bethany Munn said the event […]
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LYONS FALLS, N.Y. —The Deep Roots Market & Bistro, a new business specializing in offering North Country food and products, recently opened in Lewis County.
Deep Roots held a grand opening on July 28 at its location in the Edge Plaza on Route 12 in Lyons Falls. Owners James and Bethany Munn said the event was “an introduction to a new and exciting food experience in Lewis County.”
The new market and bistro specializes in “authentic North Country” prepared dishes, fresh produce, and gift baskets. The market will also be the flagship location for Black River Valley Natural products, such as its cream line milk, flavored butter, cheeses, hummus, granola, and other foods.
The bistro menu will offer a wide range of North County comfort food, regional fare, sandwiches, wraps, soups, and daily specials, as well as scratch-baked, artisan-quality bread, and pastries. “Each item has ingredient tie-ins to food and products made right here in Lewis County,” the owners said in a news release.
James Munn, now a seventh-generation resident of Lewis County, said the Black River Valley is well known for its rich agricultural heritage. Both of these facts inspired the name.
“When my wife and I decided to relocate our family back to my hometown a few years ago, we did it because of our deep roots here and our desire to try and give something back to this wonderful community of down-to-earth genuine people,” he said, “This is the community that made me who I am today and I couldn’t be prouder of that claim.”
Deep Roots Market & Bistro is located at 3950 State Route 12 in Lyons Falls. It is open Wednesday through Sunday, from 6 a.m.-3 p.m., according to its Facebook page.

St. Lawrence Power & Equipment Museum uses grant for restoration of historic church
MADRID, N.Y. — The St. Lawrence Power and Equipment Museum in Madrid is working to stabilize and restore the historic Nevin Memorial Church that once stood in Lisbon in St. Lawrence County. The Northern New York Community Foundation provided a grant of $10,000 for the project. The structure, which was built in 1855, was donated
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MADRID, N.Y. — The St. Lawrence Power and Equipment Museum in Madrid is working to stabilize and restore the historic Nevin Memorial Church that once stood in Lisbon in St. Lawrence County.
The Northern New York Community Foundation provided a grant of $10,000 for the project.
The structure, which was built in 1855, was donated to the museum in November 2020. In February, museum officials commissioned its deconstruction and successfully moved the structure to the Power and Equipment Museum’s main campus at 1755 State Highway 345. It joins more than a dozen other historic buildings on the museum’s village green.
Nevin Memorial Church permanently closed its doors in December 2019 after 164 years of worship. Anticipating its closure, church trustees approached the Power and Equipment Museum’s board and offered the building and its contents to the museum.
The museum plans to feature historic exhibits in the church and add it to campus tours. The structure features 12 stained- glass windows created by the Horwood family of stained-glass artists from Ogdensburg.
In addition to its role as an addition to the village green and depiction of early North Country life, museum officials plan to offer the church as a venue for weddings, memorial services, and other community gatherings.
“The museum is one of our region’s gems. Our holistic partnership has helped enhance the museum’s work and mission now, and will sustain it for future generations,” Rande Richardson, executive director of the Northern New York Community Foundation, said in a statement. “We are pleased to be part of this project, which will be a meaningful complement to its current offerings for those who visit.”
Ronald Sheppard, president of the St. Lawrence Power and Equipment Museum board of trustees, said Community Foundation support “is an invaluable addition to our efforts as we build out this significant and impressive contribution to our campus.”
“This will enhance a strong sense of community involvement and pride, foster historical preservation, and promote economic development in our rural corner of the county,” Sheppard said. “Thanks to generous supporters like the Community Foundation, the museum continues to grow its endowment and develop exciting plans for the future.”
The museum has a near decade-long history of working with the Community Foundation.
In 2012, not long after the Community Foundation expanded its service area to include St. Lawrence County, the Power and Equipment Museum was one of the first nonprofits in the county to establish a Foundation partnership with a permanent endowment fund.
In 2017, the museum successfully fulfilled a matching grant challenge for its endowment that is stewarded at the Community Foundation.
Since 1983, the St. Lawrence Power and Equipment Museum has aimed to preserve and teach the history of how early North Country residents lived and the many ways technology and equipment helped shape their lives. It says its collection includes hundreds of artifacts and features approximately 30 historical buildings, exhibits and collections. Featured buildings and artifacts include a schoolhouse, a blacksmith shop, a two-story granary, a gas station, steam engines, and log cabin.

Clarkson prof. uses NSF grant to study children’s statistical thinking
POTSDAM, N.Y. — A Clarkson University professor is using a $250,000 grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to study statistical thinking in children. The NSF grant will support Andreas Wilke’s investigation of the cognitive mechanisms underlying children’s perception of randomness, and their susceptibility to erroneous judgments. Wilke is an associate professor and chair of
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POTSDAM, N.Y. — A Clarkson University professor is using a $250,000 grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to study statistical thinking in children.
The NSF grant will support Andreas Wilke’s investigation of the cognitive mechanisms underlying children’s perception of randomness, and their susceptibility to erroneous judgments.
Wilke is an associate professor and chair of the Clarkson University psychology department.
“We developed three novel statistical decision-making paradigms — based on our work with adults — that will assess how three- to 10-year-old children decide whether sequential events will continue in a streak, how they understand randomness, and how they reason about sequential patterns in space and time,” Wilke said in a release. “Our results will contribute to developing better methods of science education for helping children and students to more accurately recognize what are likely patterns and what is random. The world is statistical in nature. A sound understanding of randomness is central to teaching statistics, informs our decision-making processes, and provides guidance when facing judgments under risk and uncertainty.”
Wilke and his co-investigator Annie Wertz — a developmental psychologist at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development in Germany — will team up to test children at daycare facilities such as the Childcare Center at SUNY Potsdam.
The research team also includes Peter Todd (Cognitive Science Program, Indiana University-Bloomington); Clark Barrett (UCLA Anthropology); Bang-Geul Han (Design and Digital Media, CUNY College of Staten Island); and Steven Pedersen (Communication, Media, and Design, Clarkson University).
For their project, they’ll give the children involved “fun and engaging” short iPad tasks and study the development of their statistical thinking. Wilke’s study will begin later this fall “under strict and safe” COVID-19 testing protocols. His team is seeking to enroll more children for the study, ages three to 10.
To learn more about these studies and/or help by enrolling your child in it, those interested can email the Evolution and Cognition Lab at ecl@clarkson.edu.
Part of the funding from this grant will go directly into training Clarkson undergraduate students in conducting multidisciplinary international research, supporting their attendance at scientific conferences, as well as accompanying Wilke on research visits to Germany, the school said.

VETCON event for transitioning veterans returns this year
ALBANY, N.Y. — The Veterans in Economic Transition Conference (VETCON) is returning in 2021, set for the Crowne Plaza Desmond Hotel in Albany on Nov. 30 and Dec. 1. The conference seeks to assist veterans in their transition from service to everyday life. It focuses on providing financial tools, resources, and support, according to the
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ALBANY, N.Y. — The Veterans in Economic Transition Conference (VETCON) is returning in 2021, set for the Crowne Plaza Desmond Hotel in Albany on Nov. 30 and Dec. 1.
The conference seeks to assist veterans in their transition from service to everyday life. It focuses on providing financial tools, resources, and support, according to the Tully Rinckey Foundation.
A press conference, held May 27, brought together members of the 2021 VETCON Alliance to announce the plans for this year’s conference.
Anthony Kuhn — founding partner of the Albany–based law firm of Tully Rinckey Kuhn PLLC and chair of the 2021 VETCON Alliance — spoke about the plans and expectations about this year’s conference.
“In this, our first VETCON since the pandemic, our goal is to continue to enable veteran business owners to grow their businesses, build their networks with other veterans and market their products and services to New York State agencies,” Kuhn said.
In the past, this event has brought together public and private businesses, nonprofit and for-profit organizations, and New York State agencies for two days of hands-on workshops and networking opportunities.
More than 100 service-disabled, veteran-owned businesses (SDVOBs) and more than 130 state agency and authority personnel participated in the inaugural VETCON in 2016. The in-person conference and job fair was held again in 2017, 2018, and 2019, but didn’t take place last year due to the pandemic.
Attendees at this year’s event will have the opportunity to participate in hands-on workshops and in numerous informational and networking sessions with businesses, organizations, and state-agency purchasing personnel.
Practical workshops will include information about certifying a veteran-owned business and obtaining federal and state contract set asides, proposal and business plan writing, business fundamentals, and matchmaking between entrepreneurial business and government agencies.
All proceeds from VETCON will be donated toward the advancement of veterans’ services.
Registration and more event information is available at the website: www.VetConNY.com.
About the Tully Rinckey Foundation
The Tully Rinckey Foundation is the charitable arm of Tully Rinckey PLLC, which in addition to its Albany headquarters has an office in Syracuse and other offices throughout New York state, along with Washington, D.C. and San Diego, California.
The Tully Rinckey Foundation sponsors VETCON events in Albany and Buffalo.

DeWitt firm wins more than $27M Army contract for Fort Drum work
FORT DRUM, N.Y. — Structural Associates Inc., of DeWitt, was recently awarded a more than $27.3 million contract from the U.S. Army for design and construction of a new operational campus for a new railhead-loading area and facilities at Fort Drum. Bids were solicited via the internet with three companies submitting them. The estimated completion date
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FORT DRUM, N.Y. — Structural Associates Inc., of DeWitt, was recently awarded a more than $27.3 million contract from the U.S. Army for design and construction of a new operational campus for a new railhead-loading area and facilities at Fort Drum.
Bids were solicited via the internet with three companies submitting them. The estimated completion date of the project is Sept. 30, 2023, according to a Sept. 15 contract announcement from the U.S. Department of Defense.
Fiscal 2021 military construction, Army funds totaling $27,330,750 were obligated at the time of the award. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in New York City is the contracting authority.
Structural Associates, headquartered at 5903 Fisher Road in DeWitt, says it specializes in general construction, construction management, program management, and design-build project delivery. It has extensive experience in the military/Department of Defense and federal market, per its website. That includes numerous past projects at Fort Drum, such as operational facilities for troops, a soldier- family care clinic, vehicle-maintenance facilities, a readiness center, and more.

Carthage Area Hospital adds three to therapy-services team
CARTHAGE, N.Y. — Three new providers have joined the Carthage Therapy Services Team at Carthage Area Hospital. The hospital said Cale Siver, occupational therapist; Fran Garner, physical therapist; and Vania Falen, speech-language pathologist, have come aboard. Siver received his associate degree in health studies in 2013 from Jefferson Community College in Watertown. He went on
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CARTHAGE, N.Y. — Three new providers have joined the Carthage Therapy Services Team at Carthage Area Hospital.
The hospital said Cale Siver, occupational therapist; Fran Garner, physical therapist; and Vania Falen, speech-language pathologist, have come aboard.
Siver received his associate degree in health studies in 2013 from Jefferson Community College in Watertown. He went on to Utica College for his bachelor’s degree in health studies and master’s in occupational therapy where he graduated in 2017. Siver moved to Maryland, where he worked for Caroline Nursing and Rehab in Denton, Anchorage Healthcare Center in Salisbury, and The Pines Nursing and Rehab in Easton. His career then took him to California and Arizona, before finally landing in Texas in 2020 at Keller Oaks Healthcare Center.
Garner was born and raised in Miami, Florida. She attended Broward College in Pembroke Pines, where she received her associate degree with a pre-med emphasis in 2010. Following Broward College, Garner completed her bachelor’s in athletic training with a minor in exercise science at Nova Southeastern University in Fort Lauderdale in 2014. She finished her doctorate degree in physical therapy with a manual-therapy emphasis at University of Saint Augustine for Health Sciences in Florida in 2020. Garner is also a certified strength and conditioning coach. Prior to arriving at Carthage Hospital, she worked as a school-based physical therapist for the Board of Cooperative Education Services in Watertown, as well as a skilled-nursing physical therapist at Center Care Rehabilitation in Carthage. She also has five years of experience working as a licensed athletic trainer in Orlando, providing injury-prevention services to high-level athletes and industrial workers.
Originally from West Virginia, Falen is a speech-language pathologist with more than 25 years of clinical and administrative experience in a variety of therapy settings including hospitals, rehabilitation centers/clinics, private practice, and schools. She received her bachelor’s degree in speech pathology and master’s in speech-language pathology from the University of Tennessee. Falen comes to Carthage from Claxton- Hepburn Medical Center in Ogdensburg, where she’s provided care since 2013 and continues to provide per-diem coverage as well as providing per-diem services to Canton-Potsdam Hospital and Saranac Lake Hospital. She also previously worked at Memorial Hospital for Children in Colorado Springs, Colorado and Thomas Jefferson University Hospital in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
“We are very excited that these highly-skilled professionals have joined our team at therapy services. They each bring their individualized skills and talents, which support our mission of committing to health-care excellence and value-based personal care to all who seek comfort and healing. While we have had occupational and physical-therapy services available, it has been many years since we have been able to offer speech-language pathology services. We are now able to offer adult and pediatric services focused on feeding & swallowing, language and cognitive rehabilitation,” Cheryl Tousant, Carthage Area Hospital’s therapy department manager, said in a news release.
Carthage Area Hospital provides physical, occupational, and speech-language therapy at two outlying clinics located on-site at the hospital and at Philadelphia Physical Therapy in the town of Philadelphia in Jefferson County, as well as acute & sub-acute therapy services. Its providers can help patients with pain, stiffness, muscle weakness, balancing concerns, issues with limited mobility, and more.
New York milk production edges up in August
New York dairy farms produced 1.3 billion pounds of milk in August, up 0.3 percent from 1.296 billion pounds in the year-ago month, the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) recently reported. Milk production per cow in the state averaged 2,070 pounds in August, the same amount as a year prior. The number of milk cows on
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New York dairy farms produced 1.3 billion pounds of milk in August, up 0.3 percent from 1.296 billion pounds in the year-ago month, the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) recently reported.
Milk production per cow in the state averaged 2,070 pounds in August, the same amount as a year prior.
The number of milk cows on farms in New York state totaled 628,000 head in August, up 0.3 percent from 626,000 head in August 2020, NASS reported.
Milk prices were slightly lower in the latest report. New York dairy farmers in July were paid an average of $18.10 per hundredweight, down 20 cents from June, and off 40 cents from July 2020.
VIEWPOINT: Ask Rusty: Will Retiring Early from Work Affect my Social Security?
Dear Rusty: I stopped working at age 55, well before my full retirement age of 66 years and 10 months. I had more than 35 years working prior to retiring from work. I don’t intend to start collecting Social Security until my full retirement age. Will I be penalized for all those years between when
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Dear Rusty: I stopped working at age 55, well before my full retirement age of 66 years and 10 months. I had more than 35 years working prior to retiring from work. I don’t intend to start collecting Social Security until my full retirement age. Will I be penalized for all those years between when I stopped working and my full retirement age?
Signed: Planning Ahead
Dear Planning Ahead: Will you be “penalized?” No, because whenever you claim your Social Security benefit, it will be based upon the highest-earning 35 years over your entire lifetime (with the early years adjusted for inflation). Would your benefit be higher if you had continued to work and have high earnings longer? Probably, because earnings in the latter part of one’s career are usually considerably higher than those in the early years. But everyone’s situation is different.
Higher earnings today don’t necessarily replace those in earlier years because of the inflation adjustment. For example, someone with $50,000 in 1990 earnings would need to earn more than about $115,000 in today’s dollars to replace the earlier year. And keep in mind that your benefit computation uses only the dollars on which you paid Social Security taxes. So, someone earning $500,000 this year would, for benefit-computation purposes, only get credit for $142,800 in earnings because the latter amount is what Social Security FICA (or self-employment) taxes were paid on.
It is from your highest-earning 35-year history that your average indexed monthly earnings or (AIME) is determined, followed by yet another formula to convert your AIME to your primary insurance amount (PIA).
Your PIA is what you are entitled to in the month in which you attain your full retirement age. If you claim before your full retirement age (FRA) you’ll receive less than your PIA, and if you claim after your FRA, you’ll get more than your PIA. If you delay claiming past your full retirement age, you’ll earn delayed retirement credits (DRCs) up to age 70, at which time your benefit could be as much as 29 percent more than your PIA. Of course, you can also claim at any time between your FRA and age 70 to get all DRCs you’ve earned to the point you claim.
So, as you can see, the Social Security benefit you get will be determined by two main things — your 35-year lifetime-earnings history, and the age at which you claim. You can’t do much now to change your 35-year earnings history (short of returning to work and having very high current earnings), but you can control when you claim. And that decision, of course, should consider your health and your life expectancy, how badly you need the money, and your marital status. Your marital status is important if your spouse can collect a spousal benefit from your record, or if you are concerned about the amount your survivor(s) will receive if you die first.
Russell Gloor is a national Social Security advisor at the AMAC Foundation, the nonprofit arm of the Association of Mature American Citizens (AMAC). The 2.4 million member AMAC says it is a senior advocacy organization. Send your questions to: SSadvisor@amacfoundation.org.
Author note: This article is intended for information purposes only and does not represent legal or financial guidance. It presents the opinions and interpretations of the AMAC Foundation’s staff, trained and accredited by the National Social Security Association (NSSA). The NSSA and the AMAC Foundation and its staff are not affiliated with or endorsed by the Social Security Administration or any other governmental entity.
VIEWPOINT: What the NYS Eviction Moratorium Extension Means For Landlords
Since former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed the initial New York eviction moratorium on March 20, 2021, landlords in New York state have received little to no assistance from the state government. Landlords, many of whom rely on their income-producing properties to pay their own mortgage, have been saddled with tenants who are more than 18
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Since former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed the initial New York eviction moratorium on March 20, 2021, landlords in New York state have received little to no assistance from the state government. Landlords, many of whom rely on their income-producing properties to pay their own mortgage, have been saddled with tenants who are more than 18 months behind on rent, presumably most of whom have little to no intention to pay.
While New York State has gone above and beyond to extend already very generous protections afforded to tenants across the state, landlords have been mostly left out in the cold.
During the initial eviction moratorium enacted by Cuomo, one of the most controversial changes was the COVID-19 tenant-hardship declaration form. The form gave people facing eviction an automatic stay on their case until Aug. 31, 2021. This has now been extended to Jan. 15, 2022, so long as they alleged that they experienced some level of financial hardship because of the pandemic. These protections have largely been interpreted by judges to extend to all tenants, occupants, and licensees, much to the chagrin of the landlord community in New York state.
The inherent flaw with the hardship-declaration form is the lack of enforcement or accountability on the part of the person facing eviction or removal. In theory, a squatter, unlawful occupant, or someone who simply did not want to pay his rent even though he continued to work full-time during the pandemic would be extended these same generous protections and be entitled to the same stay on his case.
Under the new extension of the moratorium, landlords now have the right to request a hearing to determine the veracity of each individual claim of financial hardship experienced during the pandemic. Additionally, the extension of the moratorium provides more-generous protections and avenues of removal for landlords who are experiencing disruptive or destructive tenants.
This is presumed to be short-term fix while the New York Legislature attempts to begin rolling about $2.7 billion in emergency relief for both tenants and landlords under the Emergency Rental Relief Program (ERAP). These funds could potentially be a compromise, giving landlords some financial assistance for their income production, something which has been absent over the past year and a half.
Additionally, eviction moratoriums across the country have been heavily scrutinized and overturned by the United States Supreme Court for violating a landlord’s right to due process. The New York Legislature is presuming that these new carve-out protections, such as the right to request a hearing to determine whether someone experienced hardship during the pandemic, may be enough to withstand a challenge by the U.S. Supreme Court. It’s something that is almost guaranteed to be on the U.S. Supreme Court calendar by the end of the year.
Ryan J. McCall is an associate attorney at the law firm of Tully Rinckey PLLC. He focuses his practice on family law, real estate, business formation, and cryptocurrency matters. McCall specializes in representing landlords who have to reclaim their property as well as defending landlords against code violations. Contact McCall at (518) 218-7100 or email: info@tullylegal.com
OPINION: New York’s Governors: Changing Hands and Challenges
Since February 2020, New York’s leaders have been consumed with addressing the COVID-19 pandemic. Leadership worked to address the immediate public-health emergency and subsequent economic fallout. New York now enters the recovery and rebuilding phase in which it must evaluate its response to the public-health emergency, learn from the lessons revealed about inequality, and invest in infrastructure
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Since February 2020, New York’s leaders have been consumed with addressing the COVID-19 pandemic. Leadership worked to address the immediate public-health emergency and subsequent economic fallout. New York now enters the recovery and rebuilding phase in which it must evaluate its response to the public-health emergency, learn from the lessons revealed about inequality, and invest in infrastructure that will enable resilience in future crises.
As New York enters this rebuilding phase, it welcomes a new executive in Gov. Kathy Hochul. The governor and her team face significant challenges in navigating New York’s COVID-19 recovery.
Transitions in modern New York history
Since the 1980s, New York has seen five gubernatorial transitions that fall into two types. Three of these transitions — Hugh Carey to Mario Cuomo, Mario Cuomo to George Pataki, and George Pataki to Eliot Spitzer — represented the end of long tenures. The other two transitions (Eliot Spitzer to David Paterson, and David Paterson to Andrew Cuomo) were unconventional transfers of power that happened in a relatively short timeframe after brief tenures. The transition that occurred in Albany on Aug. 24, from Andrew Cuomo to Kathy Hochul, was a unique hybrid of these two circumstances.
Non-traditional transitions of gubernatorial power in New York have become a more common occurrence in recent years. Gov. David Paterson came to office suddenly in the wake of the scandal prompting the resignation of Gov. Eliot Spitzer. After less than a full term, Paterson declined to be a candidate and Andrew Cuomo was elected governor in the next general election. These transitions of power over a short interval, while different, both featured the replacement of a governor facing potential legal problems and the evaporation of political support from his own party. In each case, the succeeding governors faced the immediate task of restoring public confidence in state government and distinguishing themselves from their predecessors, in terms of both policy substance and political style.
In contrast to these abrupt changes in power, most of the recent gubernatorial transitions in New York have followed long tenures by the departing governor. These more traditional transfers of power have their own idiosyncrasies. Republican Gov. Pataki took office after a close election in 1994, replacing the three-term Democratic Gov. Mario Cuomo. In turn, Democratic Gov. Spitzer replaced the three-term Gov. Pataki. In both cases, these long-term incumbent governors had built the state bureaucracy around their political and philosophical beliefs over multiple terms. Incoming administrations had to figure out what needed to change, what staff to keep, how to evaluate state-agency performance and develop a reform agenda, all while ensuring government continued to function.
The current transition
In addition to the challenges presented by assuming the governorship following scandal by a long-tenured executive, new Gov. Hochul faces the daunting task of steering the state through the remainder of the COVID-19 crisis and rebuilding the state economy. Given that lieutenant governors in New York historically have not been close to the day-to-day government operations and have few staff to keep them up to speed on critical issues, Hochul will need to rely in many cases on the executive and agency staff in place under her predecessor. However, as a result of the circumstances surrounding the governor’s departure, many of the senior leaders that could have facilitated the transition have already departed and cannot be engaged.
These issues are further exacerbated by former Gov. Cuomo’s management style. By relying on a relatively small set of advisors in the conduct of his major initiatives and day-to-day operations, he was able to tightly control messaging and management of key policy issues. This approach also had the effect of distancing state agencies that were not on the cutting edge of the governor’s priorities.
As a result of these dynamics, Gov. Hochul’s team is essentially starting from scratch in evaluating and engaging agency personnel and operations that were not the immediate focus of the previous administration. While she simultaneously leans on and assesses her inherited personnel, the governor will also need to bring in new staff and offer a “seat at the table” to outside voices. Such an approach will allow the governor to make her own imprint on policy and differentiate herself from her predecessor. Choices to bring in experienced political aides Karen Persichilli Keogh and Elizabeth Fine as secretary and counsel to the governor, respectively, reflect an early focus on balancing the Albany–New York City–Washington dynamic, which will be instrumental to achieving her objectives.
Transition priorities
Perhaps most importantly, Gov. Hochul will have to confront the power dynamics in Albany. Cuomo was a master at using the strong executive powers constitutionally granted to the governor in New York to keep tight control of the budget process in the state. With the scandals he faced in 2020-21, the dynamic shifted and the legislature exerted much more influence over the adopted budget. After a string of court cases enshrining the strong executive powers (most recently, Silver v. Pataki) and years of Gov. Cuomo flexing them, the legislature will likely be reluctant to return to a more passive role in budget making. Further, much of what was done in the fiscal year (FY) 2022 budget has put the state on a budget course that will be difficult to substantially alter — at least, before Gov. Hochul faces the voters for reelection in 2022. The new governor may benefit from seeking other areas of the policy map to create positive changes in the lives of New Yorkers.
Three potential avenues for thoughtful leadership and engagement are the state’s workforce, local-government affairs, and revitalization of the upstate economy. Bringing a renewed sense of purpose to the state workforce is an area that seems particularly ripe for positive change. The governor has already said she will not oversee a toxic work environment. This will entail more than a professional workplace in the governor’s office. It requires getting the state bureaucracy back to a respected place in the state where worker contributions are valued and visible, making the crucial role of public service clear to the people of the state. Hochul’s remarks during her swearing-in ceremony reflect this:
“I also want to thank the hundreds of thousands of state workers who I have such respect for and I look forward to letting them know that I will represent them with my heart and soul as well. They are the face of government in many, many communities, and I have my utmost respect for all of them,” she said.
Improving relationships with local governments would also be a prime area to advance and yield better policymaking. The new governor, perhaps more than any recent executive, knows the power of local governments — how they work, the problems they face, and how the federal system moves money to them, an issue of critical importance given the tremendous flow of pandemic-related assistance to local governments occurring right now. She can become a vital voice for improving the services and performance of local government. Being a former Congressperson, Hochul is also in a position to advocate directly to Washington, D.C. in ways that will benefit the state and its localities.
Finally, given her Buffalo roots, the new governor may be well-positioned to address chronic issues facing upstate New York. Years of large demographic and economic changes in the upstate population contrast with years of relative prosperity downstate. Rather than burying these problems and pretending they are less severe than they are, Gov. Hochul has a chance to find expanded ways to help the upstate economy. As lieutenant governor, Hochul co-chaired the Regional Economic Development Councils (REDCs) and was involved in the downtown-revitalization initiatives. Will those programs be continued, rebranded, or otherwise altered? Bringing the state as a whole more in alignment, both politically and economically, would be a significant achievement for a new governor.
Robert Megna is president of the Rockefeller Institute of Government, a public-policy think tank founded in 1981 that says it conducts “cutting-edge research and analysis to inform lasting solutions to the problems facing New York State and the nation.” Megna has had the opportunity to observe and/or participate in every New York gubernatorial transition since Mario Cuomo took office in 1982.
Editor’s note: This commentary was reprinted with some modifications. The commentary in its original form can be found on the Rockefeller Institute website.
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