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'Another Sad Day In Albany' Says Ethics Watchdog

Gov. Andrew Cuomo.
https://wskgnews.org/sites/wskg/files/201706/0626_karen_web.mp3

When the state legislative session ended on June 21, lawmakers left behind a lot of unfinished business, including ethics reform proposals made in light of the economic development scandal in the Cuomo administration.  

A bill to add greater oversight to the state’s economic development contracts has majority party sponsors in each house of the legislature. But the measure failed to come to the floor for a vote. 

That’s despite the fact that nine former associates of Gov. Andrew Cuomo have been charged with bribery and bid rigging, among other crimes, and are scheduled to go on trial as early as the fall.

Ron Deutsch, with the union-backed think tank Fiscal Policy Institute, said it’s a missed opportunity.

"It’s another sad day in Albany,” said Deutsch. “We have the largest bid rigging scandal in state history, and we virtually ignored it.”

Deutsch said the bill currently in the legislature is what he calls a “common sense” measure. It would reinstate oversight of the procurement of economic development contracts to the state Comptroller. It has support from numerous government reform groups on the left and the right, as well as majority party sponsors in both houses of the legislature.

“If the comptroller had that power, he would have caught some of the bid rigging issues that were being dealt with in these contracts,” Deutsch said.

Cuomo, who has had a rocky relationship with the state Comptroller Tom DiNapoli, is against the bill. Cuomo said it does not go far enough.

“I think it was the easy way to look like you’re doing something about procurement, but not really doing anything,” said Cuomo. 

The governor said the comptroller is meant to audit contracts, not investigate them for potential corruption.

Cuomo, who said it’s a disappointment that ethics reform did not occur, is proposing a new inspector general who would work under the governor to root out corruption. Deutsch said an inspector under the authority of the governor would just not work.

“The governor’s proposal was preposterous,” said Deutsch. “It was a fox guarding the hen house kind of approach.”

Cuomo also wants to make some changes in the legislature, where the two former legislative leaders now face jail time for corruption. The governor wants to strictly limit outside income that lawmakers can earn. New York’s legislature is technically part time, so senators and assembly members are permitted to have other jobs. Both cases against the two former leaders hinged on misuse of their outside income for political and personal gain. 

“I said the greatest incentive: if you do ethics reform, I’ll support a pay raise,” Cuomo said.

Two years ago, Cuomo and the legislature established what was to be a non-partisan panel to consider granting pay raises. Senators and assembly members have not had a salary increase in 18 years. But there was feuding between the governor’s appointees and the legislature’s appointees. In the end, no decision about a pay raise was reached. 

Barbara Bartoletti, of the League of Women Voters, said there’s a reason why the governor and lawmakers never seem to make reform a priority. She said the public doesn’t always make the connection between corrupt behavior and dysfunction in Albany, and are more focused on items like health care and school aid.

“And legislators know that, and they figure, ‘doesn’t matter I’m still going to get re-elected,’” Bartoletti said. “And they like the status quo.” 

While lawmakers did not agree on ethics reforms and some other items, including extending mayoral control of the New York City schools, or even extending long established sales tax authorization for the state’s counties, they apparently did have time to party. The New York Public Interest Research Group totaled up the number of fundraisers held near the Capitol during the 2017 session: 183.