The New Erie County Legislature

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Erie County Democratic Committee Chairman Len Lenihan issued the following statement today:

“Today brings the election of the new chair of the County Legislature Betty Jean Grant and the new Majority Leader Tom Mazur. Betty Jean Grant is a solid team player who loves Buffalo and is willing to stand up and fight for her constituents. In her new role in leading the new 11-member Legislature, Betty Jean Grant will be a consensus builder and work with the other side of the aisle and the administration of new County Executive Mark Poloncarz to move Erie County forward. Tom Mazur is also a big picture leader who will work to build consensus in this new era of downsizing and fiscal austerity. Erie County can be proud of Betty Jean Grant and Tom Mazur who will put the people’s business first.”

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Concern over commencements

With help from Shawn Ness

New from New York

Happening now:

  • Gov. Kathy Hochul is already talking with college leaders about safety concerns at graduation ceremonies.
  • Assemblymember Andrew Hevesi accused Hochul of lying about her commitments to child care.
  • Catholic Charities is displeased with the additional money for abortions in the budget, first reported by Playbook.
Gov. Kathy Hochul is already taking steps to ensure New York universities' commencement ceremonies are secure amid campus unrest.

CANCELING GRADUATION? The pro-Palestinian encampment at Columbia University has entered Day 10, and Gov. Kathy Hochul is starting to brace for the possibility that the unrest will wreak havoc on graduation ceremonies across the state.

“I need to know that these commencements are going to be safe environments as well, all across the state,” Hochul said earlier today. “That's what we're focused on right now.”

On Thursday, the University of Southern California canceled its main graduation ceremony, saying the event now requires additional security measures that aren’t feasible for the annual 65,000-person event.

Now, New York students are wondering if Columbia’s graduation, and that of other schools in the state, will also be jettisoned.

“We cannot have one group dictate terms and attempt to disrupt important milestones like graduation to advance their point of view,” Columbia University President Minouche Shafik said Monday, already foreshadowing that the protests may interfere with graduation. “Let’s sit down and talk and argue and find ways to compromise on solutions.”

Columbia’s May 15 commencement ceremonies are set to take place on the university’s main campus, including the area where the protesters have set up camp.

Shafik’s goal is to finish negotiations with protesters and have the encampment disbanded before graduation. But she already extended the deadline for negotiations with protesters by 48 hours early Wednesday. That theoretical deadline blew by earlier today, and the tents still stand.

Hochul is preparing to make sure university commencements across the state are secure. She said she’s talked to the SUNY and CUNY chancellors this morning, and she’s already spoken with the presidents of other city universities.

“I asked for information on all their commencement plans,” the Democratic governor said. “I want to know that this is well thought out. What protections do you have? Security measures in place? Additional resources you're bringing to the table?”

A canceled graduation would hit this year’s graduating class particularly hard, as most of them were forced to graduate online from high school — or from the front seat of their cars — during the height of Covid four years ago.

Spokespeople for SUNY and CUNY told Playbook that the colleges are reviewing their graduation ceremonies at the governor’s behest.

“Student safety on our campuses is paramount, and SUNY is committed to ensuring that our campuses are safe, inclusive and enable students to express themselves responsibly,” said Holly Liapis, a SUNY spokesperson. “The governor asked Chancellor King to review the procedures that are in place for this year's SUNY commencements and that review is ongoing.” Jason Beeferman

Assemblymember Andrew Hevesi wrote a pointed letter to Gov. Kathy Hochul that accused her of

‘IT IS THE LYING I CANNOT STOMACH’: Assemblymember Andrew Hevesi is knocking Hochul for enacting a budget that’s “atrocious for child care in New York State.”

In a letter sent to the governor this week and shared with Playbook, the Queens Democrat spoke in no uncertain terms about his frustration with the governor.

“It is your attempt to claim the mantle of a child care champion to whom this issue is personal, while quietly obstructing or outright rejecting the budget proposals to assist children, families, and child care providers that I cannot tolerate,” wrote Hevesi, the chair of the Committee on Children and Families.

Hevesi said the the state's first female governor has projected a message of taking action on child care when in fact she’s obstructed efforts to expand it in the state.

Specifically, he wrote how, during this budget cycle, Hochul’s administration:

  • Rejected a proposal to decouple a parent’s work schedule from their child's ability to access full-time child care.
  • Nixed proposed funding for a study on the “true” cost of providing child care.
  • Hadn’t released the final report of the Child Care Availability Task Force, even though it’s required by law. (It’s expected out today.)
  • Shot down a proposal from both chambers to create a $220 million permanent workforce fund for child care providers and educators

“Again, it is the lying that I cannot and will not stomach,” Hevesi wrote.
The governor’s office responded to Hevesi with strong words of its own.

“Governor Hochul has provided more support to the child care sector than any governor in state history, and anyone who denies that clear fact is disingenuous, misinformed, or both,” Avi Small, Hochul’s spokesperson, wrote in a statement to Playbook.

According to Small, the state has invested $7 billion over four years to expand access to child care.

He also noted how the governor has “raised the income eligibility threshold for the Child Care Assistance Program, capped co-pays for families who need child care assistance ... and allocated $350 million in supplemental aid to families through the Child Tax Credit as part of the FY25 Budget.”

Small continued: “Debate, opposition and disagreement are normal parts of the policymaking process, but attacking a fellow New Yorker on their parenting is disgusting and beneath the dignity of anyone who holds elected office.” Jason Beeferman

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg and Comptroller Tom DiNapoli teamed up to take down an NYU administration official accused of fraud.

CAUGHT IN THE ACT: Comptroller Tom DiNapoli and Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg teamed up to announce that Cindy Tappe, a former finance and administration director at New York University, will have to pay over $663,00 after pleading guilty to grand larceny.

Tappe was accused of orchestrating a six-year fraud scheme totaling $3.5 million related to two different university programs. DiNapoli and Bragg claimed that she used the money for personal expenses like home renovations and constructing a swimming pool.

“Cindy Tappe executed a scheme to support her lavish lifestyle at the expense of children with special needs and young English Language learners. She is now a convicted felon and has paid back the money she stole,” DiNapoli said. “I thank District Attorney Bragg for his partnership in the investigation and in bringing her to justice.”

Tappe will now have to serve five years probation. — Shawn Ness

CONGESTION PRICING TO START: The Metropolitan Transportation Authority today said that congestion pricing in parts of Manhattan will start Sunday, June 30.

The so-called Central Business District Tolling, the country’s first congestion pricing program, will charge a $15 toll to travel below 60th Street in Manhattan, and trucks could pay as much as $36.

The program has been years in the making and faced stiff opposition from New Jersey and truckers. But the MTA said the measure is important to address gridlock and help the environment.

“Five years after the Legislature made congestion pricing New York State law, and with 4,000 pages of analysis, hundreds of hearings and outreach meetings behind us, New Yorkers are ready for the benefits — less traffic, cleaner air, safer streets and better transit,” MTA chair and CEO Janno Lieber said in a statement. — Joseph Spector

MASTRO AND COMMANDER: Another caucus in the City Council has come out with a statement bashing the likely nomination of Randy Mastro to lead the city’s Law Department — a top administration job that would entail weighing in on all manner of legislation and defending the city in court.

“Corporation Counsel is the people’s lawyer, not the mayor’s, and the people are staunchly against returning to the Giuliani era,” the statement read, referring to Mastro’s previous role as a deputy mayor in Rudy Giuliani’s City Hall. “The City Council’s LGBTQIA+ Caucus opposes Randy Mastro’s nomination to this vital position.”

The statement from the six-member collective follows similar sentiments from the Black, Latino and Asian Caucus, which expressed its distaste for Mastro in a statement Tuesday.

The body’s Progressive Caucus has already vowed to oppose the potential nomination. And multiple people told POLITICO the 30-member Women’s Caucus is likely to soon meet to discuss the appointment. The Council will ultimately have to vote on the mayor’s pick for the job.

City Hall pushed back against the caucus’ criticisms, noting that Mastro was behind a landmark 1998 law establishing rights for domestic partnerships in New York City and that he defended a prominent homeless services organization facing neighborhood opposition to a shelter being built. — Joe Anuta

Pro-Palestinian activists protest outside Columbia University in New York City on April 20, 2024.

HILLEL REACTS TO CAMPUS PROTESTS: Jewish organizations and leaders have a message for Columbia University and other institutions across the country amid ongoing pro-Palestinian encampments: Do your job and enforce code of conduct policies to mitigate antisemitism on campus.

Prominent leaders from organizations like the American Jewish Committee and UJA-Federation New York — along with Jewish students on campus — sounded the alarm on the ongoing protests at Columbia, citing Jewish students’ fears around navigating campus. The encampment is now entering its 10th day.

Adam Lehman, president and CEO of Hillel International — the largest Jewish student organization in the world — pointed to an uptick in antisemitic incidents like a Jewish student at Yale University who said she was assaulted during pro-Palestinian protests.

“Universities, if anything, have been more accommodating than they probably should be in terms of providing spaces for what is hateful, divisive rhetoric and rhetoric that marginalizes and erases the identities of Jewish and Israeli students,” Lehman said during a press conference at Columbia/Barnard Hillel’s The Kraft Center for Jewish Student Life.

He urged university leaders to enforce their policies and in “evenhanded ways,” but said that may require suspensions, expulsions or bringing in law enforcement.

“One way or another, we have to be able to depend on institutions of higher education to take back control of your campuses, counter what has truly become cultish behavior,” he added.

Brian Cohen — the Lavine Family executive director at Columbia/Barnard Hillel — as well as Linda Mirels, president of UJA-Federation of New York, were also among speakers.

Encampments have since popped out throughout the city and country, including at City College, Yale University and Princeton University. Reps. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez and Jamaal Bowman visited the encampment at Columbia on Friday.

Representatives for students in the encampment held another briefing for reporters outside of the encampment Friday afternoon. — Madina Touré

WEINSTEIN RULING: Hochul’s office is assessing the top state court ruling Thursday that overturned the New York sex crimes conviction of former Hollywood power broker Harvey Weinstein, the governor said this morning.

“We are analyzing the scale of that decision and the impact — what it means and how we can make sure that all women can feel safe coming forward,” Hochul told reporters during an unrelated event in Albany touting education policy in the state budget.

“I don't want this to be a moment of stifling the environment that was created.”

The 4-3 decision on Thursday determined Weinstein did not receive a fair trial in 2020 after a judge in the lower court allowed the testimony of multiple women who accused the former producer of sexual misconduct, but were not part of the criminal charges he faced.

The decision was not a surprise to legal experts, and Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg could still reconvict Weinstein.

The court ordered that Weinstein receive a new trial; he was also convicted in 2022 of raping a woman at a hotel in Beverly Hills.

Hochul did not say if the court’s decision should lead to new legislation for how criminal cases are conducted, saying it would be reviewed.

“This decision is very recent in the Court of Appeals and is still being analyzed, and we'll see what effect it has on other courtrooms across the state,” she said. Nick Reisman

MASKS OFF: As protests at college campuses across the country continue over the Israel-Hamas war, one GOP state lawmaker wants to unmask demonstrators.

Assemblymember Mike Reilly of Staten Island today signaled he will introduce a ban on mask wearing at public assemblies and demonstrations.

“While the right to peaceful assembly and free speech are core to our national values, the deceptive use of masks pose a significant risk to public safety,” Reilly said.

The measure would create a misdemeanor charge punishable up to 90 days in jail.

If approved, it would reverse a 2020 law that allowed mask wearing in public, a change made amid the height of the Covid-19 pandemic.

At the time, lawmakers and then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo turned back what had been a century-old statute banning mask wearing in public gatherings that was meant to better address criminal activity, like the Ku Klux Klan. Nick Reisman

ABORTION FUNDING FALLOUT: The New York State Catholic Conference thinks that Hochul went overboard with the $25 million for abortion services in the state budget that Playbook this morning found.

“While families struggle to put food on the table, the Legislature and Governor are handing a windfall to Planned Parenthood. This newly enacted abortion slush fund provides $25 million to abortionists, as if the Governor’s recent unilateral allocation of $35 million wasn’t enough,” the conference’s director Kristen Curran said in a statement.

The group thinks the money would be better spent on struggling families, women in crisis and hungry children, instead of “encouraging abortion.” — Shawn Ness

FAIR HOUSING: A new assessment of fair housing issues across New York finds racial and ethnic divisions persist in living patterns, access to community resources and homeownership.

The report was part of the state’s latest Fair Housing Matters NY initiative and identifies a series of goals and action items to expand access to housing and address racial disparities.

“Today, despite the progress that has been made since the passage of the Fair Housing Act in 1968, we continue to confront the reality of inequalities in our society,” Hochul said in a statement.

“My administration is taking a multi-pronged approach to ensure New Yorkers can live where they choose, can build wealth through homeownership and can access economic opportunity for themselves and their families.” — Janaki Chadha

— A Utica University professor ended his bid for Congress. (State of Politics)

— Rep. Jamaal Bowman wanted to ban legacy admissions to universities, but two of his children might have benefited from the practice. (Daily News)

Tenants and landlords are all concerned over enforcement of good cause tenant protections. (POLITICO Pro)

Titan likely imploded due to shape, carbon fiber: Scientists

(NewsNation) — Researchers at the University of Houston believe...

Trump Comes Down Hard on Netanyahu: October 7 ‘Happened on His Watch’

Donald Trump came down hard on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in a new interview with Time, observing that October 7 "happened on his watch."

The post Trump Comes Down Hard on Netanyahu: October 7 ‘Happened on His Watch’ first appeared on Mediaite.

Adams talks protest busting

With help from Shawn Ness

New from New York

Happening now:

  • Mayor Eric Adams talked about the reasons why it was time to break up the protests on college campuses.
  • New York has a new secretary of state that will need state Senate approval.
  • New York City's budget is getting bigger and bigger.
  • Why Attorney General Tish James and her colleagues are suing the NCAA.
Mayor Eric Adams this morning showed reporters a chain that was used to barricade a door during college protests in New York City.

DEMS DEFEND CAMPUS CRACKDOWN: The police were not just arresting pro-Palestinian protesters at Manhattan colleges Tuesday night, but protecting “children” from “outside agitators,” Mayor Eric Adams said, defending the NYPD in a round of media appearances this morning.

“This is a global problem, that young people are being influenced by those who are professionals at radicalizing our children,” Adams said at a press conference with police Wednesday morning. “And I’m not going to let that happen as the mayor of the city of New York.”

Adams declined to elaborate on who the agitators were. And while it’s not in question that some of the people protesting at campuses were not students, the NYPD’s main evidence today — that protesters who seized a building used thick bike locks favored by students — was roundly mocked online.

The police actions were the largest mobilizations yet of New York City police in response to recent pro-Palestinian protests on college campuses. Adams emphasized that Columbia University and City College both formally requested the NYPD’s help responding. Protesters at Columbia had seized and barricaded an academic building on campus, and City College, they set up tents and occupied a main lawn on campus.

The NYPD said 173 people were arrested at City College, and 109 were arrested at Columbia on Tuesday night.

Leading Democrats, including Gov. Kathy Hochul and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, backed up the high profile police responses.

"As far as I can tell, the efforts by the NYPD were thorough, professional, and they exercised the degree of calm in a very tense situation that should be commended,” Jeffries said at a press conference today, POLITICO’s Nicholas Wu reported.

“The rest of the campus, they should not be living in fear because you're claiming an exercise of your rights,” Hochul said at a separate media availability. “But that's what was starting to happen on our campuses over the last couple of weeks.”

But New York Civil Liberties Union Executive Director Donna Lieberman said reports of police closing blocks of the city, pepper spraying protesters and throwing them to the ground showed the response was “counterproductive and downright dangerous.”

“While other campuses across the country have engaged demonstrators in productive dialogue, at Columbia and City College last night the NYPD responded instead with intimidation and violence. — Jeff Coltin

Former Assemblymember Walter Mosley was picked by Gov. Kathy Hochul to be the next secretary of state. He now awaits Senate confirmation.

SENDING OUT AN SOS: Former Assemblymember Walter Mosley is Hochul’s choice to become the next secretary of state for New York, her office announced today.

“The Department of State plays a critical role implementing a broad array of government services, from the Downtown Revitalization Initiative to the Office for New Americans,” Hochul said in a statement.

“Walter Mosley’s public service in the New York State Assembly and his years of leadership in his community have given him the skills and experience necessary to lead this Department into the future.”

The Democratic assemblymember represented Brooklyn in the Assembly from 2013 to 2021 and lost a primary to Phara Souffrant Forrest.

If confirmed by the state Senate, Mosley would replace Robert Rodriguez in the post. Rodriguez was nominated last month to become the president and CEO of the state Dormitory Authority.

I am deeply honored to be chosen by Governor Hochul to serve as Secretary of State,” Mosley said. “My career has been focused on finding ways to make government work for the people, and I am thrilled to take on this pivotal role in state government.” Nick Reisman

The Citizens Budget Commission released a new report showing how much New York City's spending has increased since 2020.

BUDGET WATCHERS: The Citizens Budget Commission wants to remind New York City residents just how much the Adams administration has been spending.

The budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1 is on track to increase city spending by more than 6 percent compared to the current year, according to a report from the business-backed fiscal watchdog.

The increase would be even more pronounced if around $2.2 billion for programs the city is likely to spend money on — but have not been included in the plan — is factored into the equation.

The growth is part of a broader trend. Between 2020 and this summer, the city’s spending is projected to balloon 26 percent, outpacing inflation by more than 43 percent.

And even if migrant spending were excluded, spending growth would still be up 21 percent over the same time period, roughly $15 billion, the report found. — Shawn Ness

A new report found that only 12 percent of registered voters in New York City voted in the last primary and general elections.

ELECTION TURNOUT TROUBLES: Less than 13 percent of registered voters in New York City participated in the elections, according to a new report from the New York City Campaign Finance Board.

To increase turnout, the report recommends two policies: one that would host local elections in even numbered years, and another that would create a civic engagement fellowship program to expand voter outreach programs.

New York has a law on the books that will move most local elections to even numbers years to correlate with state and federal races, but it doesn't apply to New York City and is facing legal challenges.

The goal, Democrats say, is to increase voter turnout, but Republicans contend it's a way for Democrats in party to further hurt the GOP in a state with twice as many Democrats than Republicans.

“New York City’s democracy is only as strong as the share of the city that participates. Even with 82 percent of eligible New Yorkers registered to vote, we have a long way to go until voting and full civic participation are accessible to every single New Yorker,” Paul Ryan, the executive director of the board, said in a statement.

In the two most recent elections in the city, only seven percent of voters participated in the primary and 12.8 percent in the general election, despite 81 percent of eligible voters being registered, the group said. — Shawn Ness 

JAMES SUES NCAA: The state Attorney General's Office is joining efforts with a multistate coalition to sue the NCAA for policies that prevent student athletes from earning money and benefits from their “name, image and likeliness.”

Attorney General Tish James said the policy prevents student athletes from looking at compensation offers before enrolling at a school, which keeps them from fully understanding their options before deciding where to go for college. Other states listed on the lawsuit include Tennessee, Florida, District of Columbia and Virginia.

“New York student athletes are some of the best in the country, and they should be able to make decisions about their athletic career without restrictions,” Attorney General Letitia James said in a statement.

“The NCAA’s NIL rule limits college athletes’ potential and restricts competition among universities — that’s not fair game. Student athletes should be able to call the shots on their career fairly and evenly.” — Katelyn Cordero 

On the campaign trail

Micah Lasher is running for Assembly in the 69th district.

HOCHUL FUNDRAISING FOR LASHER: Hochul will attend a swanky fundraiser for Upper West Side Assembly candidate Micah Lasher tonight. The affair is being hosted by Dan Doctoroff, a former deputy mayor under Michael Bloomberg and former CEO of Bloomberg L.P.

Lasher was previously Hochul’s top policy adviser and worked for Bloomberg earlier in his career. He faces a four-way primary, with public defender Eli Northrup, a Working Families Party candidate, likely to be his most formidable challenger.

The 69th District seat, which includes the embattled Columbia University, is currently held by Assemblymember Danny O’Donnell. He is retiring after representing the area for 20 years. While other big names like Rep. Jerry Nadler, Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine and former NYC Comptroller Scott Stringer have endorsed Lasher, O’Donnell still hasn’t announced support for a candidate in the race.

While O’Donnell has shied away from commenting on Columbia’s protests, Lasher commented on the unrest in a statement to Playbook.

“The situation has been heart-breaking in so many ways,” he said. “At this point I only hope that the Columbia community can find a way forward.”

Earlier today, Northrup called the deploying of the NYPD Tuesday evening a “wholly disproportionate response.”

The tickets to attend the 6:30 pm fundraiser range from $1,000 to $3,000.

“I couldn’t be more honored to have two of my former bosses, Dan Doctoroff and Governor Hochul, along with Alisa Doctoroff, teaming up to give our campaign a boost as we enter the home stretch,” Lasher said in a separate statement.

Northrup blasted Lasher for the fundraiser.

“My opponent is clearly ideologically aligned with our governor and will continue to be influenced by big money and special interests, rather than being accountable to our community,” Northrup said. “We need elected officials that work with and for the people — not career politicians who are disconnected from the issues we're facing." Jason Beeferman

— Protesters gathered outside NYPD headquarters after they arrested nearly 300 protesters at Columbia University and CUNY College Tuesday evening. (State of Politics)

The Department of Investigations probe of an Adams adviser is now expanding to include his role with NYPD personnel and promotional matters. (Daily News)

— Students at SUNY Stony Brook’s encampment were warned they might have to move to another location. (Newsday)