© 2024 WSKG

601 Gates Road
Vestal, NY 13850

217 N Aurora St
Ithaca, NY 14850

FCC LICENSE RENEWAL
FCC Public Files:
WSKG-FM · WSQX-FM · WSQG-FM · WSQE · WSQA · WSQC-FM · WSQN · WSKG-TV · WSKA
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

WSKG thanks our sponsors...

Hochul signs bills to educate hate crime convicts and ‘de-radicalize’ people

November 22, 2022 - New York City - Governor Kathy Hochul, joined by Acting New York State Police Superintendent Steven A. Nigrelli, DHSES Commissioner Jackie Bray and state leaders, signs two Hate Crime Prevention Bills into law Tuesday November 22, 2022. The two bills she signed will require people convicted of hate crimes to undergo mandatory training in hate crime prevention and establish a statewide educational awareness campaign "around inclusion, tolerance, understanding and diversity.”. They also include security grants for locations that have been targets of hate crimes in the past. (Kevin P. Coughlin / Office of the Governor)
November 22, 2022 - New York City - Governor Kathy Hochul, joined by Acting New York State Police Superintendent Steven A. Nigrelli, DHSES Commissioner Jackie Bray and state leaders, signs two Hate Crime Prevention Bills into law Tuesday November 22, 2022. The two bills she signed will require people convicted of hate crimes to undergo mandatory training in hate crime prevention and establish a statewide educational awareness campaign "around inclusion, tolerance, understanding and diversity.”. They also include security grants for locations that have been targets of hate crimes in the past. (Kevin P. Coughlin / Office of the Governor)

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul decried the rise in violent domestic terrorism in New York and the nation Tuesday, and signed two bills into law that she says will takes steps toward trying to prevent it.

NewYorkS_000_EXCH_144286942_144311700

Hochul listed some recent disturbing events, including two armed men in New York’s Penn station who threatened a Jewish synagogue before their arrest, and the mass shooting at a Buffalo supermarket by a man targeting African American shoppers who killed 10 people.

“Domestic violent extremism is the greatest threat to homeland security,” the governor said, which threatens the rights of New Yorkers to feel a sense of security as they go about their daily lives, no matter who they are.

“No Asian woman of any age coming home from work should ever worry about where she stands on a subway platform,” Hochul said, referring to the killing of Michelle Go in January. “No young Jewish boy should have to look over his shoulder as he’s walking to a Yeshiva.”

Hochul says no Trans man or woman should ever have to fear for their safety walking down the street, and no Black New Yorkers should ever fear becoming a “target” in a grocery story.

Hochul signed two bills. One requires people who are convicted of a hate crime to undergo mandatory training in prevention and education. Another establishes a statewide education campaign, carried out by the state’s Division of Human Rights, to promote acceptance, inclusion and tolerance of diversity in New York, that Hochul says is aimed to “de-radicalize” people.

State Sen. Anna Kaplan, an Iranian woman of Jewish descent who came to the US fleeing anti-Semitic violence during that country’s Islamic Revolution, is the sponsor of that bill. She says the issue is “personal.”

“I saw firsthand how extremism took over our communities, and then over our country,” Kaplan said. “And we can never let that happen here in our state.”

In addition, Hochul says $50 million in funding is available to nonprofits who want to launch anti-hate programs. She estimates as many as 1,000 new programs could be created.

The New York State Police have already stepped up protection for communities at risk of hate crimes.

Lastly, Hochul says she's planning a “unity summit” in the near future with community leaders, to try to find ways to combat hate and discrimination.

"New York belongs to the good, not those with hate in their hearts,” Hochul said.