Albany Advocacy Update: December 2022

Following the election of NYS’s first elected female Governor, things has been moving at a quick pace in the Capitol as advocates prep their agendas for 2023 and eye the forthcoming budget.

Progress Made on Class C Streams Bill

Clean water advocates gathered in Albany earlier this month to Encourage Governor Hochul to sign a bill which adds protections to Class C streams:  

Hochul urged to sign bill meant to protect streams (nystateofpolitics.com)

Clean Water Organizations Rally around 2023 Agenda

Clean Water Priority Letter – Reviewed and signed onto the NY Clean Water Coalition’s 2023 Citizens Campaign for Environment and other environmental organizations finalized their Shared Agenda for priorities, funding, and actions needed to protect clean water in NYS.

Advocates Urge Appropriate Funding for Oceans and Great Lakes Funding Line

Buffalo Niagara Waterkeeper signed on to a funding support letter in collaboration with the New York State Ocean and Great Lakes Coalition which urge Governor Hochul to continue to provide $400 million for the Environmental Protection Fund in the State Fiscal Year 2023-2024 Executive Budget proposal, including at least $25 million for the Ocean and Great Lakes Program. Funding from the EPF Ocean and Great Lakes Program provides New York State with the tools and data it needs to make strategic decisions that conserve our environment, encourage responsible growth, and support families and businesses. Ocean and Great Lakes industries, such as fishing, tourism, and recreation, contribute billions of dollars to the state annually. In 2019 these industries generated over $35 billion for the state’s gross domestic product and supported more than 398,000 jobs,1 yet this pales in comparison to the resources’ full value. Our Great Lakes, estuaries, and ocean are natural assets that are significant drivers of economic activity and quality of life for New Yorkers. The Ocean and Great Lakes Program is the State’s primary source of funding for scientific research, habitat management, and ecosystem restoration projects that improve the health of our coastal waters. Without this funding, we cannot advance the ambitious agendas set by the state: the Great Lakes Action Agenda and the New York Ocean Action Plan.

NYS Great Lakes Action Agenda 2030 released for Public Comment

The next iteration of the Great Lakes Action Agenda 2030 was recently released by DEC. The plan builds on the progress made under the 2014 GLAA. Over 83% of the actions listed in the original GLAA have made significant progress and our strong partnerships with DEC contribute to this success. The GLAA 2030 serves as the workplan for DEC, organizations like ours and NYS Great Lakes municipalities to continue to advance the important work happening throughout the Lake Erie and Lake Ontario watersheds.

Read the Plan here:

https://www.dec.ny.gov/lands/91881.html

Read BNW’s comments on the plan here:

READ HERE

Voters Pass $4.2 Billion Environmental Bond

With the passing of the NYS Clean Water, Clean Air and Green Jobs Environmental Bond Act on November 9, 2022 by voters across New York State, we now have a great opportunity to move forward many of the environmental priorities Buffalo Niagara Waterkeeper has been working on over the decades. As laid out in the legislation, some of the funds will be distributed through the State funding process specifically $400 million Environmental Protection Fund, $650 million in water infrastructure funding and $650 million in open space conservation and recreation. 

 Water Advocates Continue to Monitor State and Federal PFAS Testing Requirements

BNW recently submitted comments to the Dept. of Health (DOH) highlighting the importance of setting meaningful Minimum Contaminant Levels (MCL) for PFAS substance which poses a number of a environmental and health concerns. Read our letter and follow along with the continuing PFAS work here:

PFAS, PFOA, PFOS. Have you seen these acronyms lately?  – Buffalo Niagara Waterkeeper (bnwaterkeeper.org)

The post Albany Advocacy Update: December 2022 appeared first on Buffalo Niagara Waterkeeper.

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‘Trump was not a rubber stamp’: Experts claim Trump Org witness just destroyed key defense



A witness in Donald Trump's criminal trial Monday revealed that all personal checks from the ex-president's account were personally signed by him, reporters said.

This includes the "reimbursement" that he sent his former lawyer, Michael Cohen, after he allegedly paid adult film star Stormy Daniels $130,000 to keep quiet about a sexual relationship with Trump.

This is according to the testimony from Deborah Tarasoff, the Trump Organization employee who processed the invoices submitted by Cohen for reimbursement. She then cut the checks and stapled them to the top of the invoices.

READ ALSO: Michael Cohen claims Trump took Stormy Daniels hush-money payment as a tax deduction

Tarasoff explained that any check that Trump didn't want to pay would have VOID written over the top in Sharpie. He did it often, and it wasn't unusual. However, the checks for Cohen were signed, she said.

Checks were sent to Trump in Washington via FedEx, Tarasoff continued. An email on Feb. 14, 2017, told her to pay and post the expenses that Cohen had submitted.

This testimony weakens Trump's lawyers' possible argument that he would sign anything that came across his desk.

Speaking to MSNBC, legal analysts Charles Coleman, Tristan Snell and Joyce Vance all agreed that the information the witness provided was harmful to Trump's defense.

"That's critical because what you can't do now if you're Donald Trump's defense attorneys is say that, look, his signature had to go on everything, so he became a rubber stamp for anything and everything in front of him," Coleman explained. "It's important to understand that now we're getting closer and closer to the actual legal legality."

Thus far, he said, the case has been about salacious things — the affair and Trump's comments on the "Access Hollywood" tape, for example.

Now, the trial is turning toward the documents that prove the case.

"Donald Trump can no longer say I was paying Michael Cohen for legal services," Coleman said. "You're paying out of your own personal account. That was a big part of it. It's going to come out as more documents are presented, as well as the why, to conceal another crime. That's also what the prosecution has been doing during the testimony of other witnesses and what it's been putting out."

Vance agreed.

"That's right, she can do that, and she does even more because the real issue in this case is proving what Donald Trump knew, and she has testified that the checks are stapled to invoices, and that's how it goes to Donald Trump for approval," Vance said. "And, you know, as Tristan and Charles were saying, Trump was not a rubber stamp; he was carefully scrutinizing these things."

See the comments from the legal analysts below:


'Not a rubber stamp': Prosecutors proved Trump knowingly signed Cohen's check personally www.youtube.com