person:andrew cuomo

  • Amazon pullout from NYC shows the perils of partnerships between higher education and business
    https://theconversation.com/amazon-pullout-from-nyc-shows-the-perils-of-partnerships-between-hi

    Amazon’s recent decision to pull out of plans to establish a new headquarters in New York City received a lot of attention. Much of it focused on whether the big tax breaks the company would have gotten as part of the deal were fair and reasonable. Noting that the company would have brought 25,000 new jobs and major revenue to the region, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo called the pullout the “the greatest tragedy I have seen since I’ve been in politics.” I study the nexus of business, science and (...)

    #Amazon #urbanisme #lobbying

  • ’Outrageous abuse of privacy’ : New York orders inquiry into Facebook data use
    https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2019/feb/22/new-york-facebook-privacy-data-app-wall-street-journal-report

    Order follows report that Facebook may access highly personal information including weight, blood pressure and ovulation status New York’s governor, Andrew Cuomo, has ordered two state agencies to investigate a media report that Facebook may be accessing far more personal information than previously known from smartphone users, including health and other sensitive data. The directive to New York’s department of state and department of financial services (DFS) came after the Wall Street (...)

    #Facebook #algorithme #smartphone #données #santé #BigData #marketing #profiling

    ##santé
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/1066aa457239f6dd9ba0aaf3046d6f583fe0d49a/0_278_4500_2701/master/4500.jpg

  • Opinion | New York’s Amazon Deal Is a Bad Bargain - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/14/opinion/new-yorks-amazon-deal.html

    The city has what the company wants, talent. Why pay them $1.5 billion to come?

    Amazon wants to develop a four-million-square-foot campus by the East River because of the talent that resides in New York. Lots of it. According to the Metropolitan Policy Program at the Brookings Institution, New York has more than 320,000 tech workers in the labor pool, the most in the nation. (Washington is second.) That talent commands high salaries, great benefits and won’t move to Pittsburgh or Austin or any other of the perfectly nice cities that tried to woo the online giant.

    Which raises the question: If New York has what Amazon wants, why is it paying the company so much to make the move? Mayor Bill de Blasio and Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who offered to replace his given name with the company’s to land the deal, are doing a victory dance.

    But the plan calls for the state to dispense $1.525 billion to the company, including $1.2 billion from its Excelsior program, which will reimburse Amazon $48,000 for every job. Another state agency, Empire State Development, will offer $325 million to the Amazonians tied to real estate projects. As for the city, Amazon can apply for tax credits that could be worth north of $1 billion from programs known as ICAP and REAP that reward companies for job creation generally, and outside Manhattan specifically. (And the campus is in a federal redevelopment area that qualifies for corporate tax breaks, letting the company’s major stockholder, the world’s richest man, keep more of his wealth.)

    Oh, and Amazon wants a helipad for its chief executive, Jeff Bezos. No problem.

    The prospect of handing Long Island City over to a company recently valued at $1 trillion seems distorted to some Queens politicians. They sense gentrification by fiat — another neighborhood sacrificed to the tech elite.

    “I welcome the jobs if it means Amazon investment in L.I.C. infrastructure, without us having to pay a ransom for them to be here,” said the neighborhood’s state senator, Michael Gianaris.

    That is, rather than the state and the city paying off Amazon, Amazon should be required to invest in the subways, schools and affordable housing. It could also be required to include job guarantees for lower-income residents of Long Island City, not just flimsy promises of job training.

    #Amazon #New_York #Strategie_economique

  • Cuomo Promises a Dunkirk-Style Citizens’ Fleet to Block Drilling - Bloomberg
    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-05-04/cuomo-promises-a-dunkirk-style-citizens-fleet-to-block-drilling

    New York Governor Andrew Cuomo vowed to enlist a “citizens fleet” of leisure boats and fishing vessels to block any attempt to construct oil-drilling facilities off the state’s shores, as part of a broad attack on President Donald Trump’s environmental and energy policies.

    I’m going to commission a citizen fleet to stop it just as Winston Churchill did at Dunkirk,” Cuomo said, invoking the former British prime minister’s call for a seaborne operation of fishing boats and leisure vessels to rescue evacuating soldiers from the French shore line. He called Trump’s decision to permit offshore drilling “an unacceptable risk.

    The only way you stop a bully is by standing up and putting your finger in his or her chest,” Cuomo, 60, said during a campaign-style speech in Lower Manhattan’s Battery Park.

    The governor, who’s seeking a third term and faces a Democratic primary challenge from self-described progressive and actress Cynthia Nixon, has also been mentioned as a potential 2020 White House candidate. He used the speech to deliver a broader attack against Trump and the Republican Party’s economic, environmental and social policies.

    They’ve attacked a woman’s right to choose; they’ve attacked immigration policy; they’re against diversity; they’re against the LGBT community; they’re against individual rights,” Cuomo said. “They’re against everything we hold dear.

    Cuomo touted a state-subsidized solar-panel manufacturing plant in Buffalo, which he said would be the largest in the U.S., as an example of economic-development measures to support renewable energy. He mocked Trump’s promises to return to the country’s dependence on coal and fossil fuels.

    We’re going to go back to fossil fuels, we’re going back to coal, we’re going to set up big manufacturing plants again,” Cuomo said. “You don’t politically assuage people’s anxiety by saying ‘don’t worry, I’m bringing back the old days, when you worked in the steel plant and you worked in the aluminum plant.’ The old days are gone; that’s why they’re the old days.

    The Trump administration policy, which would open 90 percent of U.S. offshore oil reserves to private development, has attracted bipartisan opposition from most of the governors of the 22 coastal states it would affect.

  • Douglas Schifter blamed politicians for ruining life | Daily Mail Online
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5359349/NYC-cab-driver-shot-railing-politicians.html

    Livery cab driver who shot himself dead in front of New York’s City Hall blamed politicians and ride-sharing services like Uber for ’financially ruining’ his life

    A livery driver shot himself dead in his car in front of New York’s City Hall on Monday morning after venting on Facebook about the transportation industry
    Douglas Schifter, 61, wrote a lengthy post about two hours before his death blaming ride-sharing services as well as politicians for financially ruining his life
    Schifter, a driver since the ’80s, also ranted about issues in the transportation industry in columns he wrote for the for-hire publication Black Car News
    Neil Weiss, owner of Black Car News, said his friend had been struggling to pay his bills recently and had to move in with extended family in Pennsylvania

    By Minyvonne Burke For Dailymail.com and Associated Press

    Published: 18:47 GMT, 6 February 2018 | Updated: 00:06 GMT, 7 February 2018

    A livery cab driver in New York vented on Facebook that politicians and ride-sharing services like Uber had ’financially ruined’ his life hours before he shot himself dead on Monday in front of New York’s City Hall.

    Douglas Schifter drove up to the east gate of City Hall around 7.10am and shot himself in the head while sitting in his car, the New York Police Department said. The 61-year-old driver was pronounced dead at the scene. No one else was injured.

    Around 5:30am, less than two hours before his suicide, Schifter posted an ominous message on Facebook blaming Uber as well as Mayor Bill de Blasio, Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Michael Bloomberg for destroying his livelihood.

    ’I have been financially ruined because three politicians destroyed my industry and livelihood and Corporate NY stole my services at rates far below fair levels,’ Schifter wrote in a lengthy post.
    Douglas Schifter, a livery can driver in New York, killed himself on Monday morning
    +4

    Douglas Schifter, a livery can driver in New York, killed himself on Monday morning
    Police said Schifter drove to the east gate of New York’s City Hall and shot himself in the head

    Police said Schifter drove to the east gate of New York’s City Hall and shot himself in the head
    About two hours before his death, Schifter vented on Facebook that ride-sharing services like Uber as well as politicians had ’financially ruined’ his life
    +4

    About two hours before his death, Schifter vented on Facebook that ride-sharing services like Uber as well as politicians had ’financially ruined’ his life

    ’I worked 100-120 consecutive hours almost every week for the past fourteen years. When the industry started in 1981, I averaged 40-50 hours. I cannot survive any longer with working 120 hours! I am not a Slave and I refuse to be one.’

    Schifter accused companies of not paying their drivers ’fair rates’ which in turn caused drivers desperate to make ends meet to ’squeeze rates to below operating costs and force professionals like me out of the business’.

    ’They count their money and we are driven down into the streets we drive becoming homeless and hungry. I will not be a slave working for chump change. I would rather be dead,’ he fumed.

    Later in the post, Schifter slammed Uber as a company ’that is a known liar, cheat and thief’.

    Schifter expressed similar frustrations in columns he wrote for Black Car News, a publication for the for-hire vehicle industry.

    While venting about congestion pricing, Schifter wrote: ’The government is continuing its strong drive to enslave us with low wages and extreme fines. It’s a nightmare.’

    Neil Weiss, a friend of Schifter’s and the owner of Black Car News, said Schifter had been struggling to pay bills and moved in with extended family in Pennsylvania. He said his pal had texted him about 90 minutes before he killed himself that he was ’making it count’.

    ’I worked 100-120 consecutive hours almost every week for the past fourteen years. I am not a Slave and I refuse to be one’, the 61-year-old driver wrote on his Facebook page

    According to taxi and limousine records, Schifter had driver livery cabs, black cars and limousines since the early 1980s

    Weiss told the New York Post that he assumed Schifter’s cryptic message was in reference to the Facebook post his friend shared earlier on Monday.

    ’Obviously, that’s not what he meant,’ he said.

    ’He was a really sweet guy. His life had just gotten destroyed by the way the transportation industry had been going in New York City. There’s been some very significant adjustments in the past few years.’

    According to Weiss, Schifter complained for years that the change in their industry - which saw an increase in drivers and the introduction of ride-sharing services like Lyft and Uber - was ’hurting a lot of people’.

    ’There’s been a lot of changes in the transportation industry in New York City over the past bunch of years and not for the better,’ Weiss said. ’I was hoping he was getting things together.’

    Taxi and limousine records show that Schifter had driven livery cabs, black cars and limousines since the early 1980s.

    #USA #travail #disruption #suicide #Uber #taxi

  • About-Face Tweet on Florida Drilling May Backfire on U.S. Agency - Bloomberg
    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-01-10/about-face-tweet-on-florida-drilling-may-backfire-on-u-s-agency

    Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke just handed offshore drilling foes ammunition for lawsuits by declaring the Florida coast off limits.

    Zinke declared he would dial back a proposal to auction drilling rights in as much as 90 percent of U.S. coastal waters less than a week after the plan was unveiled. The decision, announced Tuesday in a tweet, appeared to circumvent a detailed process laid out in federal law and came without any detailed explanation to justify the changes.

    It’s politically unwise and legally unwise,” said Michael Livermore, an administrative law professor at the University of Virginia. "They have a draft out there, and there is a formal process for making changes to the draft. And they’re circumventing that."

    Zinke’s declaration followed a meeting with one of the plan’s top Republican opponents, Florida Governor Rick Scott.
    […]
    At least 11 governors have asked the Interior Department to leave their states out of any new leasing plan. Some of them responded to Zinke’s pronouncement by demanding meetings with the Interior secretary to argue against new offshore drilling near their shores.

    New York doesn’t want drilling off our coast either,” the state’s governor, Andrew Cuomo, said on Twitter. “Where do we sign up for a waiver?

    Representative Ted Lieu, a Democrat from California, said Zinke did “not justify discriminatory agency action in favor of Florida over other states” and offered “no evidence other governors can’t be trusted.

    Il y a 23 états côtiers aux É.-U. (dont 4 (hors Floride) sur le Golfe du Mexique pour lequel l’appel d’offres pour les permis d’exploration à déjà été publié.

    • Waters Near Florida Still Being Considered for Oil Drilling - Bloomberg
      https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-01-19/waters-near-florida-still-being-considered-for-oil-drilling

      Despite Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke’s Jan. 9 declaration that Florida is “off the table” for offshore oil drilling, that activity is actually still on the table.

      The acting director of the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management made clear Friday that Zinke’s decision, announced on Twitter and described to reporters in the Tallahassee airport, doesn’t stop a formal process of considering whether to sell drilling rights in waters near the Florida coast.

      It is not a formal action,” Walter Cruickshank told a House subcommittee. That means waters around Florida, including the south Atlantic and eastern Gulf of Mexico, remain under consideration. “They are still part of the analysis until the secretary gives us an official decision otherwise.

      Une chose est sure, la bataille de lobbies bat son plein.

      Et cette déclaration ressemble bien à une tentative de désamorçage des recours auxquels la déclaration de R. Zinke a ouvert un boulevard.

  • BDS Law Faces Challenge From Kansas Christian Pacifist – The Forward
    http://forward.com/news/385065/this-math-teacher-from-kansas-has-sparked-a-huge-legal-feud-over-bds

    Certains Etats étasuniens ont introduit une clause interdisant le #BDS contre #Israël dans leurs contrats d’embauche. L’affaire est en #justice.

    Koontz’s case will hinge on whether the court sees the boycott of Israel in similar terms. But it’s not just Kansas’ law that will be on the line. With support from pro-Israel activists, numerous other states have passed similar anti-boycott laws to protect Israel from the movement to boycott, divest from and sanction the Jewish state, a protest known as BDS. Hauss cited Arizona, Michigan and Texas in particular as states whose laws were “very similar” to the Kansas statute. In New York State, Governor Andrew Cuomo issued an executive order last year that also prohibits state contracts with companies or entities supporting BDS.

  • New York eyes ’textalyzer’ to bust drivers
    http://www.kolotv.com/content/news/New-York-eyes-textalyzer-to-bust-drivers-436658803.html

    New York state is set to study the use of a device known as the “#textalyzer” that would allow police to determine whether a motorist involved in a crash was texting while driving.

    Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced Wednesday that he’s directing the Governor’s Traffic Safety Committee to examine the technology, as well as the privacy and constitutional questions it could raise.

    In a statement provided exclusively to The Associated Press, Cuomo says that despite the state’s ban on using hand-held cellphones while driving, some motorists insist on putting themselves and others at risk.

    The device is called the “textalyzer” because of its similarity to the Breathalyzer, which is used to identify drunk drivers.

    Privacy advocates have questioned whether the technology’s use would violate personal privacy.

  • NY To Test Facial Recognition Cameras At ‘Crossing Points’
    http://www.vocativ.com/365430/ny-facial-recognition-cameras-bridges-tunnels

    Facial recognition cameras are coming to New York’s bridges and tunnels New York will soon test facial recognition technology around Manhattan. In a 35-minute speech detailing a landmark $100 billion investment into state infrastructure, largely focused on New York City and Long Island, Governor Andrew Cuomo made a number of promises that would thrill New Yorkers, like the promise of a renovated Penn Station, called Penn-Farley, a direct train from there to LaGuardia Airport, and the (...)

    #immatriculation #CCTV #biométrie #facial #surveillance #vidéo-surveillance

  • BDS Isn’t the Criminal Here
    Even those who don’t believe in the boycott, or think there are better ways to fight the occupation (such as?) cannot go along with this crushing move to criminalize it.

    Gideon Levy Jun 09, 2016 5:58 AM

    http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.723947

    The struggle against the movement to boycott Israel has sunk to a new low – criminalization. From now on it’s not just a propaganda campaign against BDS (which only made it stronger), not the usual victim-like behavior, not the colonialist fibs about the boycott’s harming Palestinian laborers. It’s not even the demonization, which includes accusing anyone who dares support the boycott of anti-Semitism, the mother of all accusations.
    No, from now on the boycott is a crime. It’s a crime to boycott the criminal. A crime to avoid buying goods produced on territories of crime. A crime to avoid supporting a crime factory. A crime to fight violation of international law.
    The powerful Jewish-Israeli lobbying is scoring more achievements. The go-ahead was given by none other than France’s Supreme Court, which ruled last year that boycotting Israel is, incredible as it may sound, a “hate crime.” Not the settlements or the executions at checkpoints, not the settlers’ violence and not the mass arrests – no, it’s the boycott against them that’s a crime.
    America wasn’t far behind, of course. It will never miss an opportunity to cultivate, finance and encourage the occupation. Twenty states have enacted, or are about to enact, amendments against the boycott on Israel. New York Governor Andrew Cuomo even went as far as announcing this week that he signed an administrative order under which his state will boycott any organization or company that dares to take part in the boycott. “We want Israel to know we’re on its side,” said this pseudo Israel lover at a Jewish conference in Manhattan. “If you boycott Israel, New York will boycott you,” he tweeted.
    Thank you, New York. Thank you governor. Your move has proved that New York stands on the occupiers’ side, on the side of crime. Again you’ve proved how unworthy the United States is of the title “leader of the free world.” Again you’ve proved that when it comes to Israel all your declared values are abruptly distorted. Could anyone have imagined issuing a similar order against the international movement against apartheid in South Africa? Can anyone imagine criminalizing the sanctions against Russia following its invasion of Crimea?
    It’s not obligatory to support the boycott. It’s OK not to believe in its effectiveness. But it must be admitted that it’s impossible to be a person of conscience and buy the settlements’ products. Just as a law-abiding person won’t buy stolen property, we must not buy goods manufactured on stolen land. It’s obligatory to exhort people against this. It’s permitted to urge people to boycott such products. And it’s very difficult, in fact impossible, to separate between the settlements and Israel, which has erased the Green Line.
    Israel is invested in the occupation project in its entirety and there is no longer any distinguishing between them. Is there a bank without accounts from the West Bank? Is there a health maintenance organization without a branch in Ariel? Is there a supermarket chain without a supermarket for settlers?
    But even those who don’t believe in the boycott, or think there are better ways to fight the occupation (such as?) cannot go along with this crushing criminalization. The boycott is a legitimate, non-violent means that has and is being used by numerous states, including Israel.
    What are the international sanctions on Hamas, with Israel’s encouragement, if not a boycott? What about those on Iran? Hasn’t Israel violated international law as well?
    Israeli propagandists are delighting in the achievements against BDS. The struggle’s commander, Ambassador to the U.S. Danny Danon, last week held a propagandists’ conference in the UN building, where his forces briefed some 1,500 gullible Jewish students to recite: “Every other word that comes out of your mouths must be ‘peace.’”
    That is moving, of course, to the point of tears. But the hour of truth will come, and then all those who acted to criminalize the boycott will have to answer honestly: Who is the criminal here, what is the real crime and what have you done against it?

    #BDS

  • Hausse (progressive...) des salaires de 70 % dans la restauration rapide à New York à compter de ... 2018
    http://www.lemonde.fr/ameriques/article/2015/07/23/hausse-de-70-des-salaires-dans-la-restauration-rapide-a-new-york_4695214_322

    Après près de quatre ans de lutte, les employés des chaînes de #restauration_rapide de l’Etat de New York sont sur le point d’obtenir une revalorisation de leur rémunération. Une commission mandatée par le gouverneur de l’Etat, Andrew Cuomo, a recommandé, mercredi 22 juillet, d’augmenter le #salaire minimal à 15 dollars (13,70 euros) de l’heure, contre 8,75 dollars actuellement, soit une hausse de 70 %.

    La hausse devrait être progressive pour entrer dans les faits en 2018 à New York et dès 2021 dans le reste de l’Etat. Elle concernera 180 000 salariés, travaillant dans des chaînes qui disposent d’au moins 30 établissements dans l’ensemble du pays. Si d’autres villes, comme Seattle, San Francisco et Los Angeles, ont déjà adopté des dispositions similaires, New York sera le premier Etat à instaurer un salaire minimal de 15 dollars. « En se mettant tous ensemble et en se faisant entendre, les New-Yorkais ont ouvert la voie à une nouvelle référence pour les employés des fast-foods et leur famille à travers tout le pays », se félicite Ashona Osborne, membre du comité national d’organisation Fight for 15 Dollars (« Combat pour 15 dollars »). « C’est une victoire que vous avez construite », a déclaré le ministre de la justice de l’Etat, Eric Schneiderman, devant les représentants des militants, lors d’une conférence de presse.

    Soutenu par une dizaine d’associations comme The Working Families, Credo Action ou Democracy for America, ce mouvement de protestation avait démarré en 2012 avant de faire tache d’huile à travers tout le pays. Une pétition regroupant plus de 160 000 signataires avait été remise le mois dernier à M. Cuomo. Le gouverneur démocrate de l’Etat s’est montré sensible aux arguments des protestataires, qui pointaient les #profits gigantesques des chaînes de restauration rapide, comme McDonald’s, Burger King ou Wendy’s, alors que les salaires des employés faisaient du surplace.

    Par ailleurs, de plus en plus d’élus estiment que ce n’est pas à la puissance publique de subvenir aux besoins de salariés sous-payés en leur fournissant des #bons_d’alimentation, qui pèsent sur les #budgets_publics. Dans un rapport récent, le contrôleur des finances de la ville de New York avait estimé que le fait de porter le salaire minimal à 15 dollars pourrait faire économiser au contribuable entre 200 millions et 500 millions de dollars d’aides sociales au travers des bons d’alimentation et de Medicaid, l’#assurance-santé pour les plus démunis.

    avant et après le #rdb, le salaire.

  • #Gaz_de_schiste : #New_York dit non au #fracking

    Le #fractionnement_hydraulique ne passera pas par l’Etat de New York : le gouverneur Andrew Cuomo a statué, le 17 décembre, et décidé qu’il n’y aurait pas d’exploitation de gaz de schiste par cette méthode aux alentours de la Grosse Pomme. Une bonne nouvelle pour les écologistes.

    http://www.courrierinternational.com/article/2014/12/18/gaz-de-schiste-new-york-dit-non-au-fracking
    #énergie

  • Poll : New York Gov. Cuomo Is Part of Culture Of Corruption, Voters Say
    http://www.ibtimes.com/poll-new-york-gov-cuomo-part-culture-corruption-voters-say-1664252

    Encore un effort (annuler toute poursuite judiciaire) et les #Etats-Unis égaleront le #Liban,

    In recent months, three Republican governors positioning themselves for presidential runs, Texas’s #Rick_Perry, Wisconsin’s #Scott_Walker and New Jersey’s #Chris_Christie, have faced high-profile investigations into allegations that they abused their power. #Andrew_Cuomo now makes a fourth governor facing the same kind of scrutiny. The accusations against the men may not be of equal gravity, but if all four of the governors run, the probes could create an overarching corruption narrative that might dominate the 2016 presidential campaign.

  • GayCityNews « MasterAdrian’s Weblog
    http://masteradrian.com/2012/11/17/gaycitynews

    GayCityNews
    November 17, 2012
    NYS Senate Democratic Defections Could Imperil GENDA
    11-16-2012 15:57:05 PM

    BY ANDY HUMM | Democrats in the New York State Senate looked to have won a surprise majority on Election Day, overcoming a huge financial disadvantage, Republican gerrymandering, and no help from Democratic Governor Andrew Cuomo. But that prospective majority has been put in jeopardy — and, along with it, the fate of much progressive legislation, [...]…»

    When a Lesbian Marriage Trivializes a Political Career
    11-14-2012 11:50:57 AM

    BY PAUL SCHINDLER | Christine Quinn, just named to Out magazine’s annual Out100, began her career as a tenant activist, then got on board on the ground floor of State Senator Tom Duane’s political career, becoming his chief of staff while he served on the City Council. After several years as executive director of the New [...]…»

    Supreme Court Delays Consideration of Marriage Cases for Ten Days
    11-14-2012 13:26:44 PM

    BY PAUL SCHINDLER | Several cases involving the right of same-sex couples to marry — in the context of both the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) and California’s Proposition 8 — could go before the US Supreme Court in the current term. The Washington Post reports that the high court has delayed a conference on [...]…»

    Arizona Elects First Out Bisexual US House Member
    11-13-2012 18:43:51 PM

    BY PAUL SCHINDLER | In one of less than a dozen US House races that had not yet been called, Democrat Kyrsten Sinema, on November 12, was declared the winner in a new Arizona district created as a result of the 2010 Census. Sinema, a former state senator, will be the first openly bisexual member [...]…»

    Keep Reaching, Keep Fighting
    11-08-2012 14:29:26 PM

    BY PAUL SCHINDLER | Four years ago, Barack Obama, a first-term US senator from Illinois, was the candidate of “hope and change.” In his young administration, handed an economy that was bleeding hundreds of thousands of jobs each month, change came haltingly and on some issues not at all. The word hope became a cudgel [...]…»

    Not Exactly Kissing Cousins
    11-12-2012 15:25:39 PM

    BY PAUL SCHINDLER | In 2010, Josh Mandel, then a member of the Ohio House of Representatives, rode the Republican wave to win election as state treasurer by 14 percentage points. In last week’s election, however, he fell short in his US Senate challenge to incumbent Democrat Sherrod Brown by more than five points. Mandel not [...]…»

  • Natural Gas Industry Pumps $1.34 Million To New York Politicians To Push Fracking | ThinkProgress

    The New York State legislature is debating whether to allow hydrofracking in the state. The natural gas industry is hoping to have its say, contributing $1.34 million to state politicians and parties over the last four years, including Governor Andrew Cuomo.

    The industry is pushing for the drilling process, also known as fracking, to take place not far from the Syracuse and New York City watersheds. This has caused some concern since fracking can harm the surrounding environment, poison nearby water sources, and even cause earthquakes. But the New York Daily News reports that drillers and utilities really want this to get started:

    ...

    The top ten recipients combined took in $231,557 in industry cash from January 2007 to October 2011, including $38,532 to the George Maziarz (R-Buffalo-Rochester), chair of the Senate’s Energy Committee, and $26,800 to Kevin Cahill (D-Ulster County), the chair of the Assembly’s Energy Committee.

    The industry says it is only making these contributions to combat a well-funded effort on the other side. But as the donations show, they are also having to deal with a hesitant legislature which is discussing the extension of a fracking moratorium, not to mention some public pressure against the procedure.

    http://thinkprogress.org/green/2012/01/12/402535/natural-gas-industry-pumps-134-million-to-new-york-politicians-to-push-fracking/?mobile=nc

  • Daily Kos: BREAKING: Cuomo Tries to Shut Down Occupy Albany (But Cops Push Back)
    http://www.dailykos.com/story/2011/10/24/1029509/-BREAKING:-Cuomo-Tries-to-Shut-Down-Occupy-Albany-(But-Cops-Push-Back)?det

    In a tense battle of wills, state troopers and Albany police held off making arrests of dozens of protesters near the Capitol over the weekend even as Albany’s mayor, under pressure from Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s administration, had urged his police chief to enforce a city curfew.
    ....
    “We were ready to make arrests if needed, but these people complied with our orders,” a State Police official said. However, he added that State Police supported the defiant posture of Albany police leaders to hold off making arrests for the low-level offense of trespassing, in part because of concern it could incite a riot or draw thousands of protesters in a backlash that could endanger police and the public.

    “We don’t have those resources, and these people were not causing trouble,” the official said. “The bottom line is the police know policing, not the governor and not the mayor.”

    A city police source said his department also was reluctant to damage what he considers to be good community relations that have taken years to rebuild. In addition, the crowd included elderly people and many others who brought their children with them.

    “There was a lot of discussion about how it would look if we started pulling people away from their kids and arresting them ... and then what do we do with the children?” one officer said.
    ...
    Joshua Vlasto, a spokesman for Cuomo, did not respond directly to questions about contact between Cuomo’s secretary, Larry Schwartz, and Jennings. “The state is working collaboratively with the city to enforce the curfew,” Vlasto said in a statement Friday evening.