Taking Action for Suffolk County: TASC

From Bryan Erwin
Founder, Taking Action for Suffolk County

I started Taking Action for Suffolk County to rebuild what we once had, the ability to elect progressives up and down the ballot in Suffolk County.

In truth, given the outcome of the 2016 national election, I would have founded TASC even if we had calm, common sense elected representatives who were in the community engaging us.

We have no such luck.

Instead, we have two Congressmen who, in my opinion, have embraced the worst of the Trump agenda and rhetoric.  Not only with a voting record in lockstep with President Trump, but with reprehensible words and actions that are further dividing us.  But with your support we can make a change!

For Peter King:

  • Voted for the Republican healthcare repeal bill when it was in the House, and then railed against it in the Senate. The bill he voted for would have cut $14 million from 3 hospitals in his district, and left 2.7 million NY residents without healthcare.
  • Urged President Trump to put Muslims and community and student groups with Muslim members under strict surveillance based on a failed NYPD program. The NYPD dismantled that practice due to its encroachment on civil liberties, potential unconstitutionality and its utter ineffectiveness.
  • In Peter King’s district, the opioid crisis has impacted families and communities of all backgrounds.  Peter King has done nothing to help solve this crisis, and has ignored it.  He has done nothing to lobby Trump to do more to address this.  Indeed, Trump’s recent declaration of an “emergency” did nothing to provide support for communities facing this epidemic.

For Lee Zeldin:

  • Said Trump was right to call out liberals for being as violent as those on the “alt right” protesting in Charlotesville and in 2016 called President Obama “racist”.
  • Took $10,000 of NRA money.  His only response or legislative action to the tragedy in Las Vegas was a tweet mourning the “senseless loss;” and voted to allow the severely mentally ill to purchase firearms.
  • Appears with President Trump to claim leadership in the fight on MS-13, yet voted against funding for our police to buy cameras to collect license plate data, a proven tool to fight terrorists and gangs.
  • Has consistently voted for draconian GOP budgets that cut federally subsidized student loans, a necessary component to afford college from high cost Long Island.
  • Not only voted for, but co-sponsored the so-called First Amendment Defense Act which allows for businesses to discriminate based on perceived sexual orientation.

Forget sharing our progressive values, the above actions, votes and statements demonstrate that Representatives Zeldin and King are not even mainstream Republicans, but are part and parcel of the ethno-nationalist radicalization of the Republican party.

The truth is they only vote and act this way, because they can.  They are counting on your being too busy to notice and to fed up to do anything about it.  Zeldin and King are serving their extremist masters in the White House and the right-wing donor base.

But TASC knows.  And TASC is keeping score.  And we are motivating our neighbors to register to vote, to engage our neighbors on issues they care about now and not waiting until election season.  But we need your help to keep it up!

They have gone too far.  Fight back now with TASC.

Bryan

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EXCLUSIVE: Brookhaven Town Clerk Violates Ethics Code? (Part 3)

Background CheckFiles 4

By J.Gavron and A.Turner
This Exclusive Report investigates Brookhaven Town Clerk, Donna Lent, who’s running for reelection on Nov. 7th. Get the facts on Lent before you vote. 
Missed a Background Check? Part 1, Part 2

Did you know….

  • Donna Lent violated the clear language of Brookhaven’s Code of Ethics
  • Donna Lent used Brookhaven email for work on behalf of her other job

READ THE FULL REPORT

When Donna Lent says the Brookhaven Town Clerk is “frequently considered the center of town government,” she’s absolutely right. The Clerk is Public Relations Officer, Recording Secretary, Custodian of all Town records, Registrar of Vital Statistics, and FOIL Appeals Officer. Her office supports the Town Supervisor and Town Council. As Filing Officer, Lent maintains records of town ordinances, local laws, annual budgets, fiscal reports, subpoenas and court actions, zoning ordinances and maps. And she manages a staff of 35 employees, according to Newsday.

Although you won’t see it on her LinkedIn page, Lent has another job. Since 2011 she has been an officer of the National Women’s Political Caucus (NWPC) and, since 2015, its President. Lent’s position carries significant responsibilities that include overseeing an eight-member board, local chapters in more than 25 states, and the NWPC Foundation.

Given Lent’s extensive responsibilities as National NWPC president, Background Check took a closer look at whether she was conducting NWPC business on the taxpayer’s dime (and time). Here’s what we found.

Donna Lent used Brookhaven Town computers and email servers to conduct NWPC business and in doing so appears to have violated the plain language of the Brookhaven’s Town Code of Ethics and Disclosure, section 28-8, which states the following:

“Town officers are prohibited from using “Town property, including . . . computers, internet, email, telephones, materials and any other town property, for personal convenience or profit.”

Here’s the evidence

Email #1: Lent instructed NWPC members to contact her at her Brookhaven Town Clerk email address.

BC3_email 1

Email #2: Lent sent an official NWPC tax document from her Brookhaven Town Clerk email address.

 BC3 email2

Email #3: Lent sent an email concerning a NWPC agreement from her Brookhaven Town Clerk email address.

BC3 email3.png

Email #4: Donna Lent, as Chief Deputy Clerk, sent an email containing comments on a NWPC press release from her official Brookhaven email address.

BC3 email4

Stay tuned. Background Check has filed a FOIL request seeking any other emails concerning NWPC business sent from Donna Lent’s official Brookhaven email address.

Here are our sources:

https://www.brookhavenny.gov/Departments/Town-Clerk

https://projects.newsday.com/payrolls/long-island/data/towns-city-payroll/

https://ecode360.com/8591561

 

 

 

In case you missed it, read Background Check: Donna Lent (Part 1)

 

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Let’s Vote

Letter to the Editor in the East Hampton Star  Oct. 26, 2017

“Self-Defeating”

With two weeks to go, anecdotal evidence suggests that many potential voters in our region: 1. don’t know much, if anything, about individual candidates; 2. are unaware of arguments pro and con about the ballot question on a proposed state constitutional convention, and 3. are indifferent to local elections, citing them as a Sisyphus-like expense of energy and a waste of time. In Springs, where I serve as an elections inspector, the turnout at the last (primary) election was pitiable.

While it has been argued that increased numbers of voters in many areas on the East End would likely benefit Democrats over Republicans, especially if more newly enfranchised people turned out to vote, that view has not translated into action. For Democrats, some of whom are still fighting the Sanders-Clinton rift, the results have been self-defeating.

Cynicism is not only a cliché, it is impractical. Numbers count, psychologically as well as demographically, and attract money. Off-year elections presage larger contests, and none is more important for Democrats than capturing the congressional seat for Congressional District 1 held by Trump mini-me Lee Zeldin. Surely every registered Democrat in our region knows someone who is eligible to vote. Sending a so-called message by not voting discourages candidates who have civil and constructive contributions to make to the growth of our region and the fate of our country.

Let it be noted that, as mandated by the board of elections, inspectors with Democratic affiliation serve alongside Republican colleagues and respect the nonpartisan rules of service at the polls.

JOAN BAUM

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Giardina Comes Clean

Published in The East Hampton Star, October 16, 2017

Dear David:

Sixty dollars ($60) a month for thirty years: that adds up to $21,600!

That’s what it will cost those of us who have houses with traditional septic systems (such as septic tanks or cesspools) if the East Hampton GOP candidates for Town Board get to enact their septic upgrade plan! Mr. Giardina, one of the GOP candidates and the architect of the GOP plan, finally fessed up to the cost homeowners would bear on Thursday night.

You would think this would be optional, right? Wrong; using a provision of the Town code that calls for septic inspections every three years, Mr. Giardina proposes to establish a “Septic Squad” responsible for identifying every offending septic system, which would then be enrolled in a mandatory upgrade program. If a homeowner can’t pony up the money, too bad: the Town can do the upgrade at your expense or your Certificate of Occupancy would be invalidated – which means you couldn’t sell your home unless the upgrade is done.

Heavy handed? You bet!

What’s even worse is that his plan demonstrates his lack of experience. In his Thursday remarks, Mr. Giardina promised that the money for your upgrade would come from the State’s $2.5 billion Clean Water Infrastructure Act, and he chided the Town Board for looking a gift horse in the mouth. But it is Mr. Giardina who has not done his homework. The CWIA allocates only $75 million statewide for residential septic upgrades (and any one loan is capped at $10,000). It’s a pipedream to think East Hampton would get more than a tiny fraction of that.

Similarly wrongheaded, his original plan (on the EH GOP website) proposes that homeowners would be eligible for low cost loans from either the New York State Environmental Facilities’ Corporation or the US EPA Clean Water Act State Revolving Fund. However, it appears that private residential septic projects are not eligible for funding under either of these programs: funding is reserved for municipal programs.   So, either Mr. Giardina doesn’t know what he is talking about or he is just trying to deceive us voters. He proudly touts that he was with the EPA for 30 years, so you make the call. Even if he were right, the full cost of an upgrade would be foisted on homeowners. Either way, the GOP’s naïveté or its disregard for homeowners’ finances is a disqualifier.

Our Town Board has already instituted a revolutionary septic upgrade program using the portion of CPF funds approved last November for improving water quality to fund homeowners’ upgrades. Their approach promises much more money for the project than the GOP’s plan.

Now for the best news — unlike the GOP plan, the anticipated cost to eligible residential homeowners for the upgrade will be: Nothing, subject to a $16,000 cap.

Peter Van Scoyoc and Kathee Burke-Gonzalez have thus demonstrated a true concern for both the environment and the economics of Town homeowners. Mr. Bragman also has voiced his support for the Town’s plan. Not only does this mean they deserve your vote, but it will not cost you $21,600.

Sincerely,

Bruce Colbath

 

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No Beach for Montauk!

Published in The East Hampton Star

Dear David:

No beach for Montauk!

That would be the eventual result if Paul Giardina is elected to the Town Board and gets to implement his plan to “save” Montauk and its beaches.

Ignoring the almost universal opinion of ocean geologists and Mr. Giardina accused the Town Board making a mistake in trying to solve the Montauk erosion problem. According to Mr. Giardina, a nuclear engineer, the right plan to save Montauk’s beaches would be to erect a hard barrier covered with sand – a seawall. The virtually unanimous opinion of ocean geologists is the exact opposite. Their conclusion is that armoring a beach to fix the shoreline as Mr. Giardina suggests will result in the narrowing and eventual loss of the adjoining beach. This means that if Mr. Giardina gets to build his wall, Montauk will lose its beach.

On the other hand the Democratic candidates were in sync with the prevailing science. During the October 2 debate, where Mr. Giardina related his plan, Mr. Bragman gave a more enlightened view. Consistent with the existing science, he rejected the idea of armoring the beach, noting that it would likely result in eventual beach loss.   Instead, he recommended sand replenishment and land conservation.

His running mate, incumbent candidate Kathee Burke-Gonzalez also favored protective measures consistent with the experts’ conclusions to protect Montauk’s beaches and its businesses. She has supported the temporary permeable reinforcement of the beaches, which does not have the destructive potential inherent in the GOP’s plan.   Her long-term plan to protect Montauk’s beaches and the downtown area favors sand replenishment and the possible acquisition of land with the potential goal of rebuilding the protective dune structure lost in coastal construction done decades ago.

So, while “Save Our Beaches” might be a campaign slogan of the GOP slate, its ideas would accomplish the opposite. As Mr. Bragman said during the debate, the Town Democrats have long been recognized as more concerned with preserving our environment, and the October 2 debate underscored the point. They deserve your vote this November.

Sincerely,

Bruce Colbath

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Election Eve

Published in The East Hampton Star, October 23, 2017

Dear David:

 

So, after months of campaigning, we are at the eve of the election. The important question is: What have we learned?

Let’s start with the GOP Town Board candidates. For Supervisor, Manny Vilar is the candidate. Other than the mantra of thirty years in law enforcement, he has offered little to justify electing him to the lead governance position in our Town. Despite professing to have “plans” to deal with every issue he has been asked about, he offers nothing to commend his candidacy.

Mr. Giardina is an equally suspicious enigma. He repeatedly touts his thirty or more years at the EPA, but it is unclear if he learned anything there. He has offered a proposal to preserve Montauk’s beaches – build a seawall – that would achieve the exact opposite result: those beaches would be forever lost. A real boon to tourism, right?   His only other proposal of note – an alternative to the Town Board’s septic system upgrade — is not only as wrong-headed, but it belies his self-proclaimed experience in the regulatory process. His plan would impose significant costs on homeowners, but he deceptively promises that monetary relief (in the form of homeowner loans) would come from state funds, not CPF monies voters have dedicated to improving water quality. The problem is that one statewide source (the $2.5 billion state fund) would offer miniscule benefits to East Hampton; his other source (the State revolving fund) is a non-starter – under it, private remediation efforts are ineligible for funding. If I can figure this out, it’s hard to believe a 30-year veteran of the EPA is so clueless.

Mr. Larsen strikes me as nothing more than an empty suit. His candidacy hits the skids with the lawsuit involving an alleged conflict of interest involving his security company.   Substantively, he offers nothing to justify support.

Now, the Democratic slate. Peter Van Scoyoc rightfully received the endorsement from the East Hampton Star. Mr. Van Scoyoc can trace his ties to East Hampton back to the 1600’s. While not in and of itself a qualifier, he has studiously fought for every interest we in the Town hold dear. Peter has supported efforts to rein in the abuses our beaches and Montauk saw during the Wilkinson years. He is an outspoken protector of our natural environment, including the Town’s revolutionary septic upgrade plan, which provides grants to eligible homeowners to cover the bulk of the cost. The Town budget is in the best shape it has been in years. He supports reasonable restrictions on East Hampton airport traffic. He deserves your vote.

Kathee Burke-Gonzalez is the social conscience of our Town Government. As a mother, she has worked to raise awareness on a variety of social issues affecting our community, and especially our kids. She has increased mental health services and spearheaded efforts to educate our students on sexual abuse as they prepare to leave for college. She has worked to aid the less fortunate by, for example, helping to provide a grant to Meals on Wheels to help feed the poor and elderly. And, importantly, she has led the fight for reasonable airport restrictions that would enhance the quality of life here. She deserves your vote.

Jeff Bragman is the newcomer on the Democratic slate. As a lawyer myself, I have followed Mr. Bragman’s career on and off as his cases and issues have hit the press. He has fought for environmental protections his entire career, most recently derailing the ill-conceived shopping center that threatened Kellis Pond. To his credit, he has pursued causes, often controversial, but always on behalf of community interests, something that make us in the legal profession proud. Unlike Mr. Giardina – a pretender, Mr. Bragman has earned the mantle of an environmental leader in our community. I look forward to having his perspective and environmental leadership on the Town Board.

The choice for Town Board, in my view, is between neophytes offering nothing but ill-founded ideas and proven leaders who have worked to better the future of our Town, and their running mate who has fought, and will continue to fight, for interests that would enhance our Town.

Peter Van Scoyoc, Kathee Burke-Gonzalez and Jeff Bragman have earned your trust and deserve your vote.

Sincerely,

 

Bruce Colbath

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Special Report: Brookhaven Town Clerk (Part 2)

Background CheckFiles 4

By J. Gavron and A.Turner

This Special Report investigates Brookhaven Town Clerk, Donna Lent, who’s running for re-election on Nov. 7th. Get the facts on Lent before you vote.

Missed a Background Check? Part 1

Did you know….

  • Rather than follow the rules, Donna Lent violated a court order (twice!)
  • Donna Lent narrowly escaped being held in contempt by NYS Supreme Court

READ THE FULL REPORT

As Brookhaven Town Clerk, one of Donna Lent’s current projects is to “recodify” the Town Code, the set of rules by which the town’s 486,040 residents[1] must abide, according to The South Shore Press.[2] This project will ensure that the Town Code is up-to-date and accurate, and clearly explains what Brookhaven residents can and cannot do.

For some people, however, understanding the rules—and even being admonished for breaking them— is no guarantee they’ll follow them in the future. A good case in point is Brookhaven Town Clerk Donna Lent.

Here’s what Background Check uncovered:

As Secretary of the Suffolk County Working Families Party, Donna Lent directly violated a court order and narrowly escaped being held in contempt by a NYS Supreme Court Justice.

Self-interest v. public interest . . . . .    In 2003, Donna Lent and Charles Pohonka III—Secretary and President of the Suffolk County Working Families Party, respectively—were nominating candidates from other parties whose positions were not aligned with those of the WFP. According to the state party’s Executive Director, they were more interested in “making patronage deals” than in promoting the party’s mission to increase the minimum wage and improve healthcare.[3]

As a result, the state party adopted a new rule designed to prevent Lent and Pohonka from adding candidates to its line. This rule gave the state—not the county—the exclusive power to allow candidates from other parties to run on the Working Families Party line (a practice known as issuing a Wilson-Pakula certificate).

Lent won’t take ‘no’ for an answer . . . . . In 2006 Lent and Pohanka challenged the validity of this new rule, but the Appellate Division sided with the state party and upheld it.[4] Despite that ruling, in 2007 Lent and Pohanka again issued a Wilson-Pakula certificate and placed Republican Daniel P. Losquadro on the WFP line. The state party sought to enforce its rule and prevailed in court: NYS Supreme Court Justice McKenzie nullified the certificate, holding that it violated the state party rule and ordered the Executive Committee of the county party—of which Lent was a member—to cease issuing certificates of authorization. That decision was described as follows:

“The order of Judge McKenzie clearly states the County Committee is not       empowered to issue the Certificates… for candidates [who are not  members of the WFP], and that the State rules control….The order further enjoins the County Committee and the Executive Committee of the [SCWFP] from filing any further Certificates …so long as the State Rules remain in effect….”[5]

Repeat offender . . . . . Less than a month after the court’s ruling against them, Lent and Pohonka again disobeyed the rule prohibiting them from issuing certificates of authorization. They nominated two Republican candidates to the WFP line: Daniel LoSquadro for the Suffolk County Legislature and Edward D. Burke, Sr. for Southampton Town Justice. The state party was forced to defend itself yet again.

According to the court, there was no doubt that Lent and Pohanka had once again violated the state party’s rules. But, more significantly, this time they had defied a court order that specifically directed the county party and its Executive Committee—of which Lent was a member—not to issue any further certificates.

Here’s what the court said:

“Clearly respondents Pohanka and Lent . . . . . have issued certificates of substitution and authorization in violation of the Rules of the Working Families Party of [NYS] . . . and, more importantly, in direct violation of the order dated September 5, 2007 issued by the Hon. Carol McKenzie, Justice of the Supreme Court of Suffolk County which specifically enjoined the County Committee and the Executive Committee of the Suffolk County Working Families Party from issuing any further certificates of authorizations.[6]

The New York State Working Families Party sought to have Lent and others held in contempt for issuing the certificates, an offense that could have led to penalties such as fines or imprisonment. Lent narrowly escaped the charge only because the court had not named her individually in its injunction—it had only named the Executive Committee of which she was a member.[7]

Endgame. . . . . Soon after Lent’s close encounter with a contempt charge, she left the Working Families Party and joined the Independence Party. Why? Perhaps leaving the party suited her better than following its rules.

These are our sources:

[1] U.S. Census Bureau

[2] Race for the Brookhaven Town Clerk Heats Up, by Barbara LaMonica, The South Shore Press, May 17, 2017

[3] Politics and Power, 2003 Endorsement Haunts Lent, by Rick Brand, Newsday, Oct. 18, 2004

[4] Matter of Pohanka v. Working Families Party of N.Y. State, 30 A.D.3d 625 (2nd Dept. 2006), lv denied, 7 N.Y.3d 706 (2006)

[5] Matter of Pohanka v. Working Families Party of N.Y. State, 17 Misc. 3d 1119(A) (Sup. Ct. Nassau Co.) (Oct. 23, 2007), explaining Matter of Pohanka v. Working Families Party of N.Y. State, Order dated Sept. 5, 2007 (Sup. Ct. Suff. Co.) (Hon. Carol McKenzie), aff’d, 43 A.D3d 835 (2d Dept (Sept. 10, 2007), aff’d 10 N.Y.3d 620 (2008)

[6] Matter of Pohanka v. Working Families Party of NYS, 17 Misc. 3d 1119(A) (Sup. Ct. Nassau Co.) (Oct. 23, 2007), modified, 44 A.D.3d 1050 (2007)

[7] Ibid.

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Nassau-Suffolk continues to Lag Well Behind New York City in Job Growth.

Economic-outlookSubmitted by John Tepper-Marlin
New York State Department of Labor
Contact Us: 518-457-5519
October 19, 2017
NYS Economy Added 84,400 Private Sector Jobs over the Past Year
From September 2016 to September 2017, New York State’s private sector job count rose by 84,400, or 1.1%, according to preliminary figures released today by the New York State Department of Labor. In September 2017, the state’s private sector job count fell by 36,500. Since the beginning of Governor Andrew M. Cuomo’s administration, New York State’s economy has added 967,500 private sector jobs and experienced employment growth in 68 of the past 81 months. In September 2017, New York’s statewide unemployment rate increased from 4.8% to 4.9%.
The State’s private sector job count is based on a payroll survey of 18,000 New York employers conducted by the U.S. Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics. Monthly payroll employment estimates are preliminary and subject to revision as more data become available the following month. The federal government calculates New York State’s unemployment rate based partly upon the results of the Current Population Survey, which contacts approximately 3,100 households in New York State each month.
“Despite today’s preliminary job report, when looking over the past year, New York State’s economy has added more than 84,000 private sector jobs and experienced historically low statewide unemployment rates,” said Bohdan M. Wynnyk, Director of the New York State Department of Labor’s Division of Research and Statistics.
Note: Seasonally adjusted data are used to provide the most valid month-to-month comparison. Non-seasonally adjusted data are valuable in year-to-year comparisons of the same month – for example, September 2016 versus September 2017.
United States and New York State: August – September 2017
1) Jobs data (seasonally adjusted):
The table below compares the over-the-month change in the total nonfarm and private sector job counts in the United States and New York State in August-September 2017.
Change in Total Nonfarm and Private Sector Jobs
August – September 2017
Change in
Total Nonfarm Jobs:
(private sector + government)
Change in
Private Sector Jobs:
Net
%
Net
%
United States -33,000 0.0% -40,000 0.0%
New York State -34,100 -0.4% -36,500 -0.5%
2) Unemployment rates (seasonally adjusted):
The State’s unemployment rate is calculated by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, using a statistical regression model that primarily uses the results of the Current Population Survey (CPS). The CPS contacts approximately 3,100 households in New York State each month. In September 2017, the statewide unemployment rate increased from 4.8% to 4.9%. In addition, the number of unemployed New Yorkers increased over the month, from 466,100 to 472,700.
Unemployment Rates (%)*
*Data are preliminary and subject to change, based on standard procedures outlined by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
September 2017* August 2017 September 2016
United States 4.2 4.4 4.9
New York State 4.9 4.8 4.9
New York City 5.1 4.9 5.3
NYS, outside NYC 4.7 4.8 4.7
U.S., New York State and Metro Areas: September 2016 – September 2017
1) Jobs data (not seasonally adjusted):
The following table compares the over-the-year changes in the total nonfarm and private sector job counts occurring in the United States, New York State and metro areas within the State between September 2016 and September 2017.
Change in Total Nonfarm and Private Sector Jobs
September 2016 – September 2017
Change in
Total Nonfarm Jobs:
(private sector + government)
Change in
Private Sector Jobs:
Net
%
Net
%
United States +1,796,000 +1.2% +1,757,000 +1.4%
New York State +89,100 +0.9% +84,400 +1.1%
    Albany-Schenectady-Troy +900 +0.2% 0 0.0%
    Binghamton +400 +0.4% +300 +0.4%
    Buffalo-Niagara Falls -3,500 -0.6% -3,900 -0.8%
    Dutchess-Putnam +500 +0.3% +400 +0.3%
    Elmira -600 -1.6% -500 -1.6%
    Glens Falls +900 +1.6% +800 +1.7%
    Ithaca +2,600 +4.1% +2,500 +4.5%
    Kingston +400 +0.6% +600 +1.2%
    Nassau-Suffolk +8,800 +0.7% +8,500 +0.7%
    New York City +48,900 +1.1% +48,100 +1.3%
    Orange-Rockland-Westchester +6,200 +0.9% +5,800 +1.0%
    Rochester -3,300 -0.6% -3,100 -0.7%
    Syracuse +1,400 +0.4% +1,100 +0.4%
    Utica-Rome +800 +0.6% +1,000 +1.0%
    Watertown-Fort Drum +600 +1.4% +500 +1.6%
    Non-metro Counties +2,700 +0.5% +2,600 +0.7%
Job highlights since September 2016:
  • Eleven metro areas in New York State added private sector jobs over the past year, with the most rapid employment growth in these areas:
    • Ithaca (+4.5%)
    • Glens Falls (+1.7%)
    • Watertown-Fort Drum (+1.6%)
    • New York City (+1.3%)
    • Kingston (+1.2%)
  • Over the past year, three metropolitan areas in the state – Elmira (-1.6%), Buffalo-Niagara Falls (-0.8%) and Rochester (-0.7%) – lost private sector jobs.
Change in jobs by major industry sector: September 2016 – September 2017
1) Jobs data (not seasonally adjusted):
The table below compares the over-the-year change in jobs by major industry sector in New York State occurring between September 2016 and September 2017.
Change in Jobs by Major Industry Sector
September 2016 – September 2017
*Educational and health services is in the private sector.
Government includes public education and public health services.
Sectors With Job Gains:
Educational & Health Services* +54,400
Professional & Business Services +34,000
Leisure & Hospitality +16,800
Other Services +5,800
Government* +4,700
Construction +2,400
Natural Resources & Mining +100
Sectors With Job Losses:
Manufacturing -15,700
Information -6,900
Trade, Transportation & Utilities -5,900
Financial Activities -600
Highlights among New York State sectors with job gains since September 2016:
  • Private educational and health services added the most jobs (+54,400) of any major industry sector over the past year. Sector job gains were mostly in health care and social assistance (+46,400), especially ambulatory health care (+23,100).
  • From September 2016 to September 2017, the second largest employment increase occurred in professional and business services (+34,000). Most over-the-year job gains in this sector were found in professional, scientific and technical services (+18,600) and administrative and support services (+13,900).
  • The third largest increase in jobs over the past year occurred in leisure and hospitality, which grew by 16,800. Sector gains were centered in accommodation and food services (+14,300), especially food services and drinking places (+11,100).
  • Other services had the fourth largest increase in jobs (+5,800) between September 2016 and September 2017. Over-the-year sector gains were concentrated in personal and laundry services (+2,300) and religious, grant-making and civic organizations (+2,100).
Highlights among New York State sectors with job losses since September 2016:
  • Over the past 12 months, manufacturing lost the most jobs (-15,700) of any major industry sector in New York State. Over-the-year sector losses were concentrated in durable goods (-13,000), especially computers and electronic products (-3,100) and fabricated metal products (-2,200).
  • Between September 2016 and September 2017, the second largest employment decrease in New York State occurred in information, which lost 6,900 jobs. Sector job losses over the past year were greatest in telecommunications (-2,900) and motion picture and sound recording (-1,500).
Unemployment Insurance Benefits: September 2017
1) Regular Unemployment Insurance:
For New York State, during the week that included September 12, 2017, there were 99,716 people (including 90,363 who live in the State) who received benefits under the regular Unemployment Insurance program.
In September 2017, New York State residents who received Unemployment Insurance benefits made up 19% of the total unemployed.
Note: The responsibility for the production of monthly estimates of state and metro area nonfarm employment by industry moved from the Division of Research and Statistics to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), starting with the March 2011 estimates. More detailed information on the change is available on the BLS web site.
Many economic data series have a seasonal pattern, which means they tend to occur at the same time each year (e.g., retail jobs usually increase in December). Seasonal adjustment is the process of removing seasonal effects from a data series. This is done to simplify the data so that they may be more easily interpreted and help to reveal true underlying trends. Seasonal adjustment permits comparisons of data from one month to data from any other month.
Labor force statistics, including the unemployment rate, for New York and every other state are based on statistical regression models specified by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. In New York State, payroll jobs data by industry come from a monthly survey of 18,000 business establishments. Jobs data by industry do not include agricultural workers, the self-employed, unpaid family workers or domestic workers in private households.

See State and Area Job Data (opens in new window)
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See Jobs and Unemployment Fact Sheet (opens in new window)

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Holocaust Seen Through the Eyes of a Child

SendlerWarsawGhetto

Letter published in the Newburyport News, Massachusetts, by Steve Ludsin of R&R

Very moving’ article about local author’s book, Oct 12, 2017

To the editor:

The article “Local author writes about Holocaust through her father’s eyes” by Dyke Hendrickson, [Daily News, Oct. 10] was very moving. It is true that for many Jews with a European background, the past is never the past.

Margaret A. McQuillan’s recent book, “An Orange in Winter: The Beginning of the Holocaust as Seen Through the Eyes of a Child“, written about a child who was her father was an emotional challenge. I am also a child of a Holocaust survivor and I know the additional stress that can create. I have begun to explore the studies about the possible inheritance of post-traumatic stress syndrome through the DNA from the traumatized parent.

The need to remember the evil of the Holocaust is self-evident, particularly when there is a tendency to forget and in the face of the heated rhetoric from the alt-right movement. I think the author’s goal to portray oppression eight decades ago to young people today will help to rebut the threatening words of people who exclaim you will not replace us with chants of “Blood and soil”. The flame of remembrance should not be extinguished.

Steven A. Ludsin, East Hampton, N.Y.  The writer was a member of the President’s Commission on the Holocaust and the first U.S. Holocaust Memorial Council that built the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C. 

Comment from D. Posnett MD:

The medical and psychology literature is replete with studies on the epigenetic effects of post-traumatic stress syndrome, which can be inherited.  In lay language:  DNA (inheritance of specific genes) is the Christmas tree,  while “epigenetics” is the decorations we put on the tree. Curiously, there is mounting evidence that sometimes these decorations become part of the tree itself and subsequent generations of the trees grow with the decorations!!!

A PubMed search for “epigenetics post-traumatic stress syndrome” came up with 48 articles, 27 of them were reviews.

Examples:

  • The epigenetic impacts of social stress: how does social adversity become biologically embedded?  Cunliffe VT.  Epigenomics. 2016 Dec;8(12):1653-1669. Epub 2016 Nov 21.
  • Epigenetic Alterations Associated with War Trauma and Childhood Maltreatment.  Ramo-Fernández L, Schneider A, Wilker S, Kolassa IT.  Behav Sci Law. 2015 Oct;33(5):701-21.

 

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Hatemongers without the Robes and Hoods

Letter from Richard Cohen, President, Southern Poverty Law Center

donald-trump

(Photo: Yuri Gripas/Reuters)Donald Trump addresses the 2017 Values Voter Summit in Washington, October 13, 2017.

 

As expected, the annual “Values Voter Summit” in Washington this past weekend featured a rogue’s gallery of far-right extremists.

But something extraordinary happened this year.

For the first time ever, a sitting president spoke at the gathering – shamefully lending the legitimacy of the White House to hate groups like the Summit’s host, the Family Research Council, and its president, Tony Perkins.

What’s more, President Trump’s former chief strategist, Stephen Bannon, also addressed the audience and took the opportunity to attack us.

I’m not surprised that Bannon singled us out for his vitriol. We’ve been a thorn in the FRC’s side for years – calling out the group because it relentlessly vilifies the LGBT community with demonizing rhetoric and falsehoods.

We’ve always believed it’s important to take on groups like the FRC that have a foothold in the mainstream. In many ways, they’re more dangerous to our country than hatemongers who wear robes and hoods.

Now, it’s even more important. Trump has brought the FRC closer into the mainstream and has given it a voice in his administration – just as he did with Bannon, a champion of the reemerging white nationalist movement that calls itself the “alt-right.”

No one should be fooled. These are people and groups who harbor extreme beliefs that are antithetical to the very foundations of our democracy.

One of the headliners at the Summit, for example, was Roy Moore – the former Alabama chief justice who suggested in a 2002 judicial opinion that the state would be justified in executing gay men and women to protect children. Moore alsowrote in 2006 that Keith Ellison, the first Muslim elected to Congress, shouldn’t be allowed to serve because of his faith. As any judge should know, the U.S. Constitution explicitly bars any sort of religious test as a prerequisite to holding federal office.

We’ve twice had Moore removed from the Alabama Supreme Court for thumbing his nose at the Constitution. The first time, in 2003, was after he defied a federal court order to remove a monument to the Ten Commandments that he had installed in the state judicial building. The second time was after he ordered state officials to deny marriage licenses to same-sex couples even after the U.S. Supreme Court settled the issue with its landmark ruling in 2015.

Bannon, however, called Moore a “good and righteous man” during his Summit appearance. It tells you that Bannon has no more respect for the rule of law than does our president.

If the FRC and its allies had their way, our country would return to the days when gay people were in the closet and faced the risk of being jailed for being who they are.

Because we’ve been calling out the FRC and groups like it for their vilification of the LGBT community, they’ve been attacking us in right-wing media outlets like Fox News, The Wall Street Journal and Breitbart News, which is led by Bannon.

Now that Trump has given the FRC unprecedented access to the White House, it will be more powerful than ever and the LGBT community will be at even greater risk.

It’s the reason why our work is more important than ever.

Richard Cohen, President, Southern Poverty Law Center

 

And Lee Zeldin still supports the bigot in chief, Donald Trump?

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