Control

So Are We Just Wasting Our Time?

At the Observer, Azi Paybarah brings us a depressing example of how Albany's anti-democratic culture has taken hostage the hearts and minds of so many in our state government. Paybarah interviews 72-year-old Assemblyman Anthony Seminerio (D-Queens), whose review of the budget battle is so cynical you can feel your soul melting as you read it:

“Eliot may wish he had another way, but there’s only one way the budget is ever going to get done, son,” said Mr. Seminerio, sitting by himself in the Assembly chambers Saturday night, hours before the budget deadline. “It’s three people, each getting a piece of the pie, and that’s it.”

[...]

“I don’t know if he learned anything,” Mr. Seminerio said. “I can’t speak for the Governor. I think maybe he understands the process a little better. I think, like everything else, he’ll learn. You know what I’m saying. He’ll learn. And it’s not that he did anything wrong. He thought the process should be done one way, and he thought, you know, he could accomplish it. And now I think he must understand—I can’t speak for him, certainly; you know he’s a brilliant man. I can’t speak for him—but I think he understands now that, hey, you have to sit down, and it’s a give-and-take.”

Waving his left arm in the air toward the empty room, Mr. Seminerio added: “The only thing that ever changes in Albany are the faces. The system stays intact.”

Don't fight it, son. Just take the pills like everyone else and soon you'll see it's all for the best.

Paul Curtis's picture

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City wants RNC spy scandal documents sealed

From the New York Times:

Lawyers for the city, responding to a request to unseal records of police surveillance leading up to the 2004 Republican convention in New York, say that the documents should remain secret because the news media will “fixate upon and sensationalize them,” hurting the city’s ability to defend itself in lawsuits over mass arrests.

Yeah, well; the City could have considered that before spying on a Martin Luther King Rally endorsed by sitting members of the City Council. One would think this would have been obvious at the time.

It gets better.

Bouldin's picture

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Happy Sunshine Week

Cross-posted at The Albany Project

I want to put in a word for the Albany Times-Union's outstanding special section in honor of "Sunshine Week," the annual effort, first launched by the Florida Society of Newspaper Editors, to foster a national dialogue on open government and freedom of information issues (check out the Sunshine Week blog, too). The issue is particularly relevant to New York, as a survey of members of Investigative Reporters and Editors slapped our state's freedom of information laws with a 'D' grade (pdf).

Times-Union Senior Editor Bob Port compares New York to Florida, and finds we've got a lot to learn:

In New York, a citizen who marches into town hall and asks to see the town supervisor's appointment calendar can be greeted by a laugh or a snarl from the staff.

"Make a FOIL request" is frequently the response, a reference to New York's often-cited Freedom of Information Law. A particular document might not be available, depending on the government's mood, for, oh, a couple of months.

In Florida, that same request wouldn't cause laughter. An immediate photocopy is anyone's right -- and all government officials know it.

(More after the flip...)

Paul Curtis's picture

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The Legislature Blew It, but Smith Passed a Test

One thing I'd like to note, lest it get lost in the ruckus surrounding Shelly Silver and Joe Bruno's Comptroller stupidity: new Senate Minority Leader Malcolm Smith stood up on the right side here. As described in the Albany Times-Union editorial:

But then there was the Democratic minority leader of the Senate, Malcolm Smith of Queens. He attempted, albeit in vain, to have Martha Stark, the New York City finance commissioner, chosen as comptroller. The Assembly minority leader, James Tedisco of Schenectady, also supported Ms. Stark, who was one of the three entirely qualified candidates shunned by the Legislature.

"We want the people of the state to know that we are not only prepared to govern the way they want us to, but when we make agreements, we are prepared to keep those agreements," said Mr. Smith.

Let his words serve as a battle cry in the war to change the legislative culture.

I've mentioned before that Senator Smith, as Majority Leader-in-Waiting, will be under great scrutiny from progressives.

So credit where credit is due: in the Comptroller battle, at least, Senator Smith sided with reform and with the voters of New York State. Kudos.

Paul Curtis's picture

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Dead SOX? New York and the Future of Corporate Transparency

Mayor Bloomberg and Senator Schumer have teamed up to release a report urging changes in the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which set stringent new standards for corporate governance and transparency in the wake of the Enron scandal.

The study suggests exempting some non-U.S. companies from the Sarbanes-Oxley corporate-governance regulations. [...]

``Unless we take corrective steps, and soon, we're going to see America's leadership in global financial transactions dwindle, putting a chill on the nation's economy,'' Bloomberg said today during a press conference held at City Hall in New York. The report calls for ``greater clarity and balance to what is now a burdensome and inflexible system of government regulation and enforcement,'' he said. [...]

Bloomberg, a Republican, and Schumer, a Democrat from New York, said efforts to make Sarbanes-Oxley less onerous should go beyond recent changes recommended by the SEC. The New York politicians suggested small companies be permitted to ``opt out'' of provisions of the law as long as they disclose it to shareholders and foreign firms be exempt from certain Sarbanes- Oxley requirements.

The report comes as part of broad wave of attacks on SOX, from corporations, conservative think-tanks, and some politicians (see, for instance, this article by Stephen Bainbridge, a prominent SOX critic). A particularly New York angle is that, supposedly, New York will suffer economically as more and more companies either go private or flee to less-regulated foreign capital markets.

The attempt to blame SOX for companies going private, though, may be completely misguided. And, as this Times editorial points out, companies seek out foreign capital markets for all kinds of reasons - not least of them the fact that underwriting fees in London, for instance, are roughly half the size they are in New York. Moreover, SOX may help American markets maintain a reputation for transparency and investor confidence that will serve them well when Enron-type scandals start to pop up in dodgy foreign markets. [More: Spitzer on SOX]

Paul Curtis's picture

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Still the Decider

So you do have to wonder: The Decider says, on Iraq, it's his way or the highway. Congress, Shmongress, the People, the Shmeeple.

Simple question: when do Congress and the nation grow a pair, impeach and remove the son of a bitch and throw his pompous, entitled ass in jail, where it belongs? Let's be really clear here: if Bush goes through with this escalation in the face of a Congressional refusal to fund it, that's a constitutional crisis of the first order; that's what Iran-Contra was all about.

In an interview broadcast last night on CBS's "60 Minutes," Bush said he has the authority as commander in chief to move ahead with the deployment, regardless of what the Democratic-controlled Congress does in opposition.

"In this situation, I do, yeah," Bush said. "I fully understand they could try to stop me from doing it. But I've made my decision. And we're going forward."

National security adviser Stephen J. Hadley said yesterday that the money is already in place to begin moving additional troops to Iraq.


Bouldin's picture

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Looking into the not so distant future of the fate of the New York City Council

2009?

Ok I know what your thinking "Spitzer just got in to office,we have three special elections coming up in the next month, and 2008 is a Presidential year. What about 2009?"

2009 represents the year when truly a cast of thousands well seek the numerous City Council seats that will become vacant. My count has 41 City Council seats that will be open due to those pesky term limits that Speaker Quinn may want to remove. That leaves only 10 seats that may not see a new face after the primaries in 2009.

Now how about those 41 who may be job hunting soon?

Will one of the remaining ten that survive re-election will become speaker of the House? (i.e. Letisha James)

Well is my "unfinished painting" for 2009. Be mindful its early but then again we are picking Presidential winners and losers(Guilani) already.

City Council List (Who is Staying, Going, and Not Knowing)

1. Christine Quinn – Term limited in 2009- Expected to run for Mayor or Public Advocate
2. Council Member- District: 32
Joseph P. Addabbo, Jr.- Democrat 1/1/02-12/31/09 (Term Limited)
3. Council Member- District: 17
Maria del Carmen Arroyo- Democrat 3/21/05-12/31/2009 (Not Term Limited-Up for Reelection 2009)

The Masterpiece's picture

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Got bias?

From The New York Times comes this op-ed purporting to be news coverage of the Atlantic Yards dispute:

Sheldon Silver could always just say no.

That is the nightmare facing Forest City Ratner, the real estate developer whose $4 billion Atlantic Yards project must now be approved by an obscure state oversight board on which Mr. Silver, the state Assembly speaker, controls one of three votes.

Over three years, Forest City has assembled an astonishingly wide and deep political coalition behind the Brooklyn project, ranging from outgoing Gov. George E. Pataki to Acorn, the liberal advocacy group for low-income people. The developer has endured thousands of pages of studies and reviews, staged hundreds of meetings and hearings, beat back lawsuits and persisted in the face of a growing and energetic coalition of opponents and critics.

There's more, after the jump.

Bouldin's picture

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Gatemouthiana

Ben Smith calls it cryptic, I just think it's deplorable and infuriating: Gatemouth goes into early retirement under pressure.

Effective immediately, Gatemouth has indefinitely suspended operations. This is a direct result of the efforts of persons who made complaints manifesting a desire to see this organization cease and desist. Because I am not without my obligations to others, they have successfully attained their goals.[...]

My heart is heavy. Outside of my non-traditional family life and my collection of vinyl LPs, there is nothing which affords me more fulfillment than writing this column; in fact given the vices age has forced me to forgo, I’m hard pressed to think of anything else, beyond those things already enumerated, which even brings more than a passing smile to my gloomy countenance. In a long work-life spent joylessly laboring at jobs for which I could offer nothing more than flashes of inspiration within seas of journeyman-like competence (when I could manage even that), while receiving in exchange insufficient paychecks and but fleeting moments of joy, I had finally found something for which my skills seemed matched. I shall miss it, and I shall miss most of you.

Bouldin's picture

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The morning papers, November 29

The New York Times: Alcee Hastings, a lawmaker who in a previous life had been one of only a handful of judges to be impeached and removed by the Congress, will not chair the House Intelligence Committee. Nor, it seems, will AIPAC tool Jane Harman. We shall see.

Also in the Times, a strange story about a leaked White House memo expressing doubts about the Iraqi premier; the chimp, of course, is meeting the Prime Minister in Jordan today. One wonders why and by whom that memo was leaked today; not very artful.

Get ready for hospital closings. Larry Littlefield on Room Eight discusses possible consequences.

The civil war in Iraq is not a civil war, says the White House. Just put your fingers in your ears, close your eyes, and sing La La La loudly; you'll be fine.

Speaking of which, Saudi Arabia may be preparing to intervene in Iraq, says DailyKos.

The Albany Times-Union goes into the details of Bruno and Silver's obfuscation on member item disclosure. The records were provided as a 3,000 page image PDF, rendering them largely unusable; the Assembly has now provided the earmark data in searchable format, which the Senate continues to refuse to do. See what a difference a republican Senate majority makes? Huh?

Lastly, The Washington Monthly has a portrait of incoming Majority Leader Steny Hoyer.

Bouldin's picture

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