Posted by NYPIRG on August 12, 2019 at 11:03 am
Over the last two years, top aides to Governor Cuomo, a
political ally, and big campaign contributors were convicted of bid-rigging and
other offenses stemming from state contracts tied to New York State’s economic
development projects. While the governor
was never accused of wrongdoing, it was clear that better oversight was needed
in the way state contracts are awarded.
Thus, reformers cheered when in this year’s State of the State
address, the governor surprisingly announced that he had an agreement with
State Comptroller DiNapoli to implement a new process to strengthen oversight
of the government’s contact award process.
The governor stated back in January, “Comptroller DiNapoli and I
have agreed on a new process to implement procurement reforms. I want to publicly thank, the Comptroller for
his good work and his cooperation.”
The agreement hinged on legislation. With the legislative session having come and
gone by late June, that legislation was never approved.
When the governor was asked last week about the lack of action,
he stated that an agreement was, in fact, reached – not legislatively, but
administratively. The Comptroller’s
office had a different view, “The details of our agreement were included
in the budget proposals of the Senate and the Assembly but did not make it into
the final budget and was not resolved before the end of session.”
Why does this matter?
Under the state Constitution, New Yorkers elect a state
Comptroller. While many states do not
have Comptrollers to oversee governmental finances, of those that do, voters in
only nine directly elect them. In other
states they are either appointed by the governor or the Legislature. The rationale for this unusual arrangement is
that New Yorkers decided that they needed to have an independent watchdog
monitoring the state’s finances.
In 2011, the governor argued that he needed fewer restrictions
on his economic development efforts and lawmakers backed his plan to rein in
the Comptroller’s oversight – limitations that included diluting oversight of
economic development efforts.
Of course, there is no way to know for sure if that decision led
to the corruption scandals that hit the Administration, but it’s fair to say
that it might have made the now-disgraced former aides to the governor a bit
more cautious had they known that the Comptroller was watching.
At
the heart of the scandals were two non-profit entities set up by state
government to act on its behalf and that were central to advancing programs
around the governor’s so-called “Buffalo Billion” economic development
plan.
The
corruption cases brought by the U.S. Attorney that led to the convictions of
the governor’s top aides as well as the leader of New York’s hi-tech economic
development efforts highlighted that the secrecy surrounding their deal making
contributed mightily to a culture in which the risk of corruption grew.
And that risk led to the misuse of taxpayers’ dollars through
sweetheart deal-making between government officials and lobbyists,
“pay-to-play” campaign practices that hinged on big campaign contributions from
those receiving lucrative government contracts, and a web of shadowy corporate
entities created by the government through which billions of taxpayer dollars
were spent outside of the normal transparency measures required of traditional
government entities.
Waste, fraud and abuse not only waste tax dollars, they erode the
public’s confidence in its government. The
state Constitution established a Comptroller’s office to be an independent bean
counter and help bolster public confidence in governmental finances.
It’s clear that those powers should now be restored and
strengthened.
The
governor was correct in his State of the State address that steps should be
taken to enhance the powers of the Comptroller.
But actions speak louder than words.
The governor must make good on his pledge.
Posted by NYPIRG on August 5, 2019 at 3:31 pm
We all know the terrible statistics about smoking. Hundreds of thousands of Americans die each year due to tobacco use. It is the leading cause of cancer deaths among men and women. Tobacco use is also addicting. It’s an unusual product, that when used as directed, addicts and kills.
The problem for the tobacco industry is getting people hooked. Starting to smoke or chew tobacco is not fun; it tastes awful, it hurts your throat and makes you cough. The industry knows this and glamorized tobacco use through such images as the Marlboro Man to lure people into the habit.
We know that the vast majority of tobacco users start before the age of 18. Nearly 90 percent of all tobacco users start before the age of 18 with the average age of initiation being 14.
How does the industry get children to not only try tobacco products, but to actually be able to tolerate those initial experiences? They do it by offering tobacco products with candy and other sweet flavors. The evidence of the tobacco industry’s strategies was so compelling that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration banned the sale of candy-flavored cigarettes, although continues to allow it for small cigars, known as cigarillos, and pipe tobacco.
Yet, smart public health strategies like raising the price of tobacco products through higher levels of taxation, restricting the use of tobacco products in public and work places, as well as funding aggressive public health marketing, particularly to kids, has drastically reduced the rate of tobacco use in the United States. The rate of tobacco use among teens has dropped dramatically as well.
And without teens taking up this deadly addiction, the tobacco industry has seen the writing on the wall. Without youthful “replacement smokers,” the tobacco industry will eventually die off.
So they have embraced a new product, while employing the same tactics.
The new products are electronic cigarettes, or “e-cigarettes.” E-cigs are a new technology in which the user does not inhale smoke, but the vapor from an electronic device. E-cigarettes are sleek, high tech and easy to hide. They look like USB flash drives and can be charged in the USB port of a computer. They don’t look anything like a traditional tobacco product. And they’re small enough to fit in a closed hand.
E-cigarettes deliver nicotine in the same way as cigarettes do, but without all of the smoke. They also pack quite a punch; e-cigarettes deliver a much higher dose of nicotine than traditional burned cigarettes.
The tobacco industry has seen the potential; they have invested billions of dollars in the e-cigarette industry.
E-cigarette companies are using a tactic used for decades by the tobacco industry: heavy advertising and offering “starter” products with sweet tastes.
As a result, e-cigarettes have flooded the market in recent years, contributing to skyrocketing rates of youth tobacco product use. Vaping among high school students increased nationally nearly 80 percent from 2017 to 2018, with 1 in 5 high schoolers using these products.
How did a generation become hooked on e-cigarettes so quickly? A major factor has been flavored products. With flavors like mango, vanilla, and mint, e-cigarette makers have created a line of products with massive appeal to teens. A Surgeon General’s report cited a study that found 81.5 percent of current youth e-cigarette users said they use the products because “they come in flavors that I like.”
Because these candy-like flavors mask the nasty taste, kids often don’t realize that they’re using nicotine, or understand how dangerous it is. The Surgeon General’s office recently found that over 60 percent of high schoolers believe occasional use of e-cigarettes causes little harm – a claim that the medical community has refuted time and again – and another survey found that more than 60 percent of young adult users didn’t know the product always contains nicotine. In fact, one e-cig pod can contain as much nicotine as an entire pack of twenty cigarettes.
For years, tobacco use among young people saw a steady decline. However, that progress is now at risk due to the rapid rise of e-cigarettes. As the U.S. Surgeon General has commented, “The recent surge in e-cigarette use among youth, which has been fueled by new types of e-cigarettes that have recently entered the market, is a cause for great concern. We must take action now to protect the health of our nation’s young people.”
New York lawmakers can show the nation how to take action by starting to ban the use of candy-flavored tobacco and e-cigarettes products. We must do what we can to prevent children from getting hooked on this lethal nicotine addiction.
Posted by NYPIRG on July 29, 2019 at 11:47 am
Plastic pollution is a major problem for the world. Not only does plastic pollution choke
waterways, devastate sea life, and pose a health threat, but plastic
manufacturing also plays a significant role in the fight over curbing greenhouse
gas emissions.
The crisis over the mass production and disposal of
plastic products hit home when the Chinese government made a decision in 2017
not to accept any more of our plastic waste.
China had been one of the nation’s chief dumping grounds for plastic
trash since the mid-1990s. Its refusal
to continue has forced American national, state and local governments to
grapple with the excessive amount of plastic pollution we generate.
In addition, plastic pollution has had a devastating
impact on the world’s oceans. Pictures
of sea life killed or injured by plastic products highlighted, in a way no
policy paper could, that plastic trash in the oceans poses a threat to the
animals and fish that live there.
Estimates are that by the middle of this century, there will be more
plastic than fish – by weight – in the oceans.
Plastic products can leach contaminants that pose a
public health threat. Black plastic,
used in everything from kitchen utensils to children’s toys, cellphone cases,
and thermoses, appears to be particularly dangerous. The plastic is often sourced from recycled
electronics that contain phthalates and heavy metals. Even at very low levels, these chemicals can
cause serious health problems.
The spread of single-use plastics often sold to consumers
as protection from contamination, has allowed the underlying chemicals that
make up plastics to show up in our food and water. Bottled water, sales of which are increasing in
part because people are seeking alternatives to contaminated local water
supplies, now contain plastic as well. A 2018 study found that 93 percent of
bottled water samples contained microplastics, the tiny bits of plastic that
result as plastic breaks down into smaller pieces.
Due to the rising environmental and public health threats
posed by plastics, a growing number of communities are enacting new
restrictions. In March, the European
Union voted to ban single-use plastics by 2021. In June, Canada followed suit, with its Prime
Minister pledging to not just ban single-use plastics such as bags,
straws, and cutlery, but also to hold plastics manufacturers responsible for
their waste. One hundred and forty-one
countries, including China, Bangladesh, India, and thirty-four African
nations, have implemented taxes or partial bans on plastics.
Here in the United States, eight states have enacted
plastic restrictions and more than 330 local plastic bag ordinances have passed
in 24 states. Thanks to passage of
legislation this year, New York State will ban the distribution of single-use
plastic bags in March of 2020.
The industry is now organizing itself to combat this
rising tide of new restrictions on plastics.
And here is the global warming tie in.
Plastic is almost entirely the product of fossil fuels. Plastics are derived from materials such as
cellulose, coal, natural gas, salt and crude oil.
As a result, oil and gas companies are deeply engaged in the
current plastics market now worth hundreds of billions of dollars annually. Historically low oil and gas prices have meant
that the cost of making new plastic is very low. The low prices have led to the expansions of
old plastic-producing plants and the construction of new ones by Chevron,
Shell, Dow, and Exxon, among other companies.
Given the sources of plastic, the fossil fuel industry
has a stake in its success and is deeply involved in fighting efforts to reduce
the world’s use of plastics. The various
plastics trade associations include big oil companies.
Two tactics that they are employing include state laws
that prohibit localities from enacting municipal restrictions. This tactic is based on the reasonable belief
that the industry’s wealth and political connections make it far more likely to
succeed in blocking legislation at the state level than in the hundreds of
localities, which are much more sensitive to an energized public.
They also tout the “recyclability” of plastic. Recycling plastic sounds good, but
essentially doesn’t exist in practice.
For example, in 2015, the U.S. recycled about 9 percent of its plastic
waste, and since then the number has dropped even lower.
Plastics just end up being dumped in landfills or burned
in incinerators (which creates its own environmental and public health
problems). Given the threat of plastics,
what should be done?
Here in New York, the state has enacted a strong ban on
the retail use of plastic bags; now it must implement it with strong
regulations that do not create loopholes for certain plastic bags and which do
not undermine existing local bans. Then
the state should follow the lead of some localities that have banned other
plastic products. And lastly, New York
should expand its bottle deposit law to include new products.
The fight over plastics is a fight about the enormous
waste our society generates, but it is also a battle with an industry that has
done more than anyone to pollute the planet and has threatened life on this
planet – through the burning of oil, coal and gas which has triggered global
warming.
These are existential fights; ones we have to win.
Posted by NYPIRG on July 22, 2019 at 10:57 am
The big state news last week
was Governor Cuomo’s approval of the Climate Leadership and Community
Protection Act. The governor signed the
legislation with considerable fanfare.
His team organized an event and invited a large crowd of activists,
lobbyists, labor groups, businesses and elected officials.
The governor shared the
stage with former Vice President Gore, whose movie “An Inconvenient Truth”
brought the science of global warming to the general public.
The new law sets ambitious
environmental goals for New York State:
- The state promises to slash greenhouse gas
emissions from all sectors. Under the
bill, greenhouse gas emissions, released by the burning of oil, gas and coal, will
be capped in the year 2050 to no more than 15 percent of the total emitted in
the year 1990—an 85% reduction in heat-trapping gases.
- The state pledges to boost its reliance on renewable
energy. The law mandates that 70% of the
electricity consumed in New York State will come from renewable sources by 2030
and 100% by 2040. Last year, about 26% of electricity on the state’s grid
was generated by renewable sources, with most coming from hydroelectric
plants. Only about 5 percent of the
state’s energy is generated by solar, wind and geothermal.
- The law is vague on how it will achieve these ambitious
goals, but empowers a commission to figure it out. Overseeing the emissions reductions
will be a newly established 22-member New York State Climate Action Council,
consisting of state agency leaders, business leaders, community and
environmental advocates. The governor
will appoint the members of the council.
However, the law is supposed to create a process to ensure
at least 35% of investments from clean energy funds are invested in lower
income and communities of color, which have been disproportionately borne
environmental harms . One criticism of
the law was that the final agreement was weaker than supporters wanted with
regard to environmental justice requirements and spending.
In his speech at the bill signing event, the governor
described four principles that guided his approach to the climate crisis. He said the legislation needed to set
ambitious goals, then develop a realistic plan of action, encourage the
participation of businesses that will benefit from the movement away from
fossil fuel power, and train the necessary workforce to make the plan a
reality.
He commented, that his “Green New Deal” is the “Real Deal.”
But what was missing from the governor’s plan was how to
measure its performance. After all, if
the goals are great, but the implementation falls behind, it increases the
difficulties in achieving those goals.
Saying that the state will not rely on fossil fuels for its electricity
by the year 2040 is laudable, but if meaningful annual steps are not taken each
year, that goal will be increasingly out-of-reach. This concern will be brought in to sharp
focus if and when the economy slows down and lawmakers feel pressure to
shortchange climate efforts.
And failing to achieve laudable goals has happened
before. In his 2009 State of the State
address, then-Governor Paterson, called for an aggressive clean energy plan
that set a ’45 by 15′ goal in which 45% of New York state’s electricity needs
would be met through improved energy efficiency and a greater use of clean
renewable energy by 2015.
Did New York achieve that goal? Doesn’t look like it.
Does that mean that the state shouldn’t advance aggressive
environmental goals to combat global warming?
Of course not, but an independent and transparent way to monitor
progress toward those goals is needed.
The governor should mandate robust annual reporting that includes
detailed data on key climate metrics and verifies that the state is moving to reduce its carbon footprint (e.g., changes to its building construction
code to maximize energy efficiencies) in order to meet its climate change
goals.
Independent
monitoring will not only ensure that the state is making progress toward its
climate change goals, but also bolster public support for successful programs. New Yorkers will be asked to participate in a
paradigm shift as part of the state’s “Green New Deal.” We should get annual report cards to see how
well we’re doing.
Posted by NYPIRG on July 15, 2019 at 9:15 am
Too
often the debate over the looming environmental catastrophe called “climate
change” is couched in the future tense.
For example, the world’s experts have said that unless the earth’s
temperature increase is kept to no more than 2 to 3 degrees Fahrenheit by the
year 2030, the changes may be irreversible.
Recent New York legislation has pledged to eliminate the use of fossil
fuels to power electricity by the year 2040 and pledged to nearly eliminate
greenhouse gas emissions by the year 2050.
Of
course, those future goals are important.
Yet, too little is discussed about the impact that global warming is having
right now.
Ice
sheets are melting, the oceans are more acidic, sea levels are rising, and
storms are more powerful. And those are
happening right now. In addition, the
ongoing and growing climate catastrophe impacts our daily lives in ways that
are not as obvious.
For
example, the increasing threat posed by algal blooms.
According
to the State Department of Environmental Conservation, while most algal blooms
are harmless, some species can pose a public health threat. In those cases, algae can produce toxins that
can be harmful to people and animals. These blooms usually occur in nutrient-rich
waters, meaning waters that receive large amounts of runoffs from residential
and agricultural sources. When combined
with hot weather, dangerous blooms can occur.
The
incidents of algal blooms have risen with the increasing temperature of the planet. Algal blooms can be toxic and when present
waterbodies cannot be used for recreation or even drinking. The threat has gotten worse each year.
Harmful
algal blooms aren’t your typical green surface ooze that you may see on the top
of lake waters. While ugly to look at when
at the surface, a bloom can also be dangerous, so much so that the state has a
blanket policy to stay out of the water should there be evidence of one.
While
every algal bloom isn’t toxic – some algal species can produce both toxic and
nontoxic blooms – toxic blooms can cause problems for swimmers and other
recreational users in the form of rashes or allergic reactions. People who swim in a bloom may experience
different side effects including nausea, vomiting, headaches, respiratory
problems, skin rash and other reactions. There have also been reports nationwide of
dogs and livestock dying shortly after swimming or wading in a bloom.
And
more ominously, these algal blooms impact the oceans too. Last week, all the of the beaches along the
Gulf Coast in the state of Mississippi were closed due to algal blooms there.
These
blooms have a blue-green slimy substance.
They often crop up in late summer and early fall, although scores have
been reported already in New York’s surface waters. Algal blooms need nutrients to bloom, so
often they’ll be observed after heavy storms when residential and agricultural
runoffs occur.
The
nutrients they primarily rely on are phosphorus and nitrogen and the algal
blooms have increased due to a rise in nutrient runoff from sources such as soil
erosion from fertilized agricultural areas and lawns, erosion from river banks,
river beds, land clearing (deforestation), and sewage effluent. All of these are the major sources of
phosphorus and nitrogen entering water ways. These nutrients coupled with warm, calm water
is the recipe for an algal bloom.
To check
out the lakes in which algal blooms are a concern, you can go to the DEC website,
which has a harmful algal bloom notifications webpage that it updates weekly. (Go to www.dec.ny.gov to see information on algal
blooms.)
Areas
that tend be more protected are those in which development is strictly
regulated and waterbodies closely monitored.
Of course, the long term solution is to wean the planet off its
addiction to fossil fuels and develop alternative forms of energy.
Climate
catastrophe is not something that we are waiting for, it’s here now and it’s
going to get a lot worse. As we cope, aggressive
measures need to be taken to protect vital water supplies; measures that
protect wetlands, limit development, manage farm wastes, and monitor algal
blooms.
Of
course, the world needs to kick the fossil fuel habit altogether and instead invest
its resources in the development of renewable power – solar, wind, geothermal –
and better energy efficiencies.
Failing
to do so will only accelerate to the point of no return the catastrophe global
warming.