Addabbo: "We Need to Change the Process of Allocating Member Items, When Governor Wields Veto Pen"
Queens, NY – New York State Senator
Joseph Addabbo, Jr. (D-Howard Beach), reacted strongly to the governor’s
recent use of his veto power to eliminate funding for local community groups
and programs.
Cuomo vetoed 126 items in total, costing
$640,000. Thirteen items were sponsored by the Assembly Democratic
Majority, worth a little more than $50,000. He vetoed 12 items sponsored by the
Senate Republican Majority and 99 sponsored by the Minority Senate Democrats,
worth about $412,000.
Governor Cuomo had accused state legislators of
sneaking new member item allocations or “pork” into the new state budget — and
used his scalpel to cut it out. But lawmakers said none of the projects were
new and that the money was for old projects that never got all their previously
promised cash and that the local funding allocations were a fraction of the
total $132.6 billion state budget.
Noted Senator Addabbo, “The governor’s vetoed
member items range from $10,000 for the Police Athletic League (PAL) citywide
to benefit local youth programs, to more general grants aiding school districts
with academic programs, libraries, not-for-profits and educational
institutions. This was the funding that was supposed to help local people and
community groups, but the governor didn’t want to allocate it. I believe that
was wrong.”
Some of the other painful cuts to worthwhile
projects in Addabbo’s district were community groups helping youth,
working families, seniors or veterans: $5,000 to the Greater
Woodhaven Development Corp. (Economic Development/Aid to Localities); $3,000 to
the Forest Hills Volunteer Ambulance Corps (State/Aid to Localities); $2,000
for the American Italian Cancer Foundation (State/Aid to Localities); $1,000 for
Elmhurst’s New Life Food Pantry (State/Aid to Localities); $3,000 for the
Ridgewood Local Development Corp. (Parks/Aid to Localities); $2,000 for Maspeth
Town Hall (Parks/Aid to Localities); $3,000 for Howard Beach’s Columbus Day
Foundation (State/Aid to Localities); $1,000 for Ozone Park’s Zion Tabernacle
Food Pantry (State/Aid to Localities); $3,500 for Ozone Park’s South Queens
Boys and Girls Club (Criminal Justice Services/Aid to Localities); $3,500 for
Middle Village’s Juniper Park Civic Association (Parks/Aid to Localities);
$3,000 for the Greater Ridgewood Youth Council (Parks/Aid to Localities);
$2,400 for the Ridgewood Seniors Community Corporation (State/Aid to
Localities); and $2,000 for the Vietnam Veterans Chapter #32 (Division of
Veterans’ Affairs/Aid to Localities).
“While we appreciate the governor’s attempt to
cut the fat and streamline government, we are not pork. We provide vital
services to the community's working-class homeowners,” said Paul Kerzner of the
Ridgewood Property Owners.
Bob Holden, President of the Juniper Park Civic
Association stated, “The president, governor, mayor and most elected officials
encourage volunteerism. We have dozens of groups in the 15th Senate
District willing and able to organize volunteers to work on hundreds of
projects and programs. A small amount of money is needed to keep these
groups afloat. It is vital that funds to support not-for-profit groups be
released immediately.”
“With major cuts to the City Budgets over the
past few years, small not-for-profits are desperate for State monies to
survive. The Greater Ridgewood Youth Council has been waiting 3 years for
State capital dollars to build its state-of-the art Community Center in Ridgewood
without success. It is our hope that the governor will work with the
Senate and Assembly to move old, allocated monies along, and allow agencies
like the GRYC to complete projects that will benefit a whole lot of families,”
added Bob Monahan of the Greater Ridgewood Youth Council.
Eileen Reilly from the Maspeth Town Hall
explained, “The Maspeth Town Hall would have used these much-needed dollars
towards our Tutorial Program, Regents Review classes and After School Program
for children in the area who need our services. We would also use these
dollars to help pay for our Senior Programs which include Tai Chi Instruction,
Chair Yoga Classes and Fine Art Instruction. Maspeth Town Hall would be very
grateful if the governor would let these dollars be used by our center to offer
the programs that enhance the lives of the families of our community.”
“A new
process is needed to get monies to our local groups after the
governor uses line-item vetoes for funding of legislators’ projects back
home,” said Addabbo.
Addabbo proposes a structure where groups can
apply directly to the various state agencies for money, which would cut the
elected official out of the process altogether.
For example, veterans could apply to the
Division of Veterans’ Affairs; seniors to the Department for the Aging; and
community or youth groups to the Department of Economic Development, Department
of Parks, State, or Criminal Justice Services. Addabbo was optimistic that a
process can set up with very little effort from Governor Cuomo’s office.
The senator believes that the state already has
a credible vetting process that can determine if an applying group is credible
and would use the funding in a proper manner.
Addabbo believes a process can be established
where applications can be submitted directly to state agencies where the
funding has already been allocated to their individual budgets.
He also believes that by eliminating the elected
officials from the process, any concern or issue of misuse, scandal or
impropriety would be addressed.
“It’s not about the photo op or press release to
be issued by the elected official, it’s about getting funding to local
residents, schools and community groups who provide services, but are now being
ignored by our state budget,” Addabbo stated.
Addabbo Speaks Out on Proposed Closing of John Adams High School
Senator Joseph P. Addabbo, Jr. released the
following statement today, which is taken from remarks he made during
a public forum at John Adams High School in Ozone Park last Thursday
evening.
Addabbo is a member of both the Joint Senate
Conference Committee on Education and the Senate Committee on Education:
In September of 2011,
John Adams High School was one of a number of schools throughout the City of
New York that was tapped to undergo a “transformation” – to take steps over
three years to improve its operations, raise test scores, increase graduation
rates, and ultimately provide our local children with the best possible
education.
Only a few months
later, in January of this year, the rug was pulled out from under John Adams
High School. Instead of continuing on its three-year path to improvement
under the “transformation” model, John Adams became one of eight Queens schools
slated for closure at the end of this academic year in June under a different
“turnaround” plan.
In other words, with
virtually no warning and no acknowledgement of the improvements already in
place and those yet to come, John Adams is supposed to close its doors, change
its name, and do away with half of its faculty.
As a lifelong
resident of Ozone Park and past supporter of John Adams HS, I disagree with
that approach, because it doesn’t give John Adams the chance it deserves – and
was told it had – to assess its strengths and weaknesses and to go
forward with improvements.
Since its initial
designation as a “transformation” school, John Adams High School has been
working hard and successfully to make improvements. Closing this school
would be a slap in the face to our entire John Adams High School community –
our students, families, teachers, school administrators and everyone else who
cares about this historic educational institution and who wants it to
succeed.
On its website, John
Adams High School notes that it is “Celebrating 89 Years of Academic
Excellence.” Clearly, sacrificing this school to a “turnaround”
scheme doesn’t leave John Adams with very much to celebrate.
Instead of shuttering
John Adams High School, why don’t we honor the original restart improvement
agreement?
There is a tremendous
amount at stake here. The academic success of our children is at
stake. Job stability for talented teachers and administration is at
stake. Funding to help John Adams and other schools that are struggling
to improve is at stake. Any decision to close John Adams High School
should not be made lightly, and in my mind, should not be made at all.
One week from today,
only seven days from right now, the Panel for Educational Policy will vote on
whether to close John Adams High School and 25 other schools throughout the
City. I hope they will see the wisdom of letting this school stay open.
To take a few more
words from John Adams himself, he once said that “children should be educated
and instructed in the principles of freedom.” I think it would be a great
lesson for our children, and it would pay respect to President John Adams,
if we were to apply the principles of freedom to this high school and give it
the chance – the freedom, if you will – to finish the job of
improvement it has already begun.
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