Assemblymember Linda B. Rosenthal
from
Assemblymember
LINDA B.
ROSENTHAL

Fall 2008

DISTRICT OFFICE: 230 West 72nd Street, Suite 2F, New York, NY 10023
212-873-6368 •

Dear Neighbor,

The legislative session has ended, and it has been a very busy summer. I am thrilled to be back in my district full-time again and working with so many of you.

In spite of a tumultuous year in Albany, I passed five bills in both houses (two of which have already been signed into law by Governor Paterson) as well as many bills in the Assembly of tremendous value to New Yorkers. Details of that legislation appear throughout this newsletter. I believe you will share my excitement about what I was able to accomplish.

These are tough economic times for our country and our state. Sky-rocketing fuel prices are driving home heating costs scarily upwards, more New Yorkers are foreclosing on their homes, the Rent Guidelines Board approved unconscionable rent hikes on rent-stabilized apartments, and the city is threatening to cut our schools’ budgets. Health care costs have never been higher, and there are still far too many people who have no health insurance at all. Property taxes are also spiraling upwards.

The economic crisis will require us to tighten our belts, and will require some sacrifice, but I will work hard to ensure that the budgets for essential programs and services are adequately funded. I recently submitted testimony to the Rent Guidelines Board outlining my strenuous opposition to this year’s massive rent increases. I also testified before the NYC DOE to protest the city’s proposed school budget cuts. I am deeply dismayed by the MTA’s recently proposed fare hikes. Tenants in rent-stabilized housing and New Yorkers who rely on mass transit to get to work ought to be free from arbitrary, steep rent and fare hikes, and school children deserve to have their educations fully and fairly funded.

The Assembly is hard at work finding ways to save money that do not penalize hardworking taxpayers. One piece of good news for owners is that, thanks to New York State’s 2008 Middle Class STAR Rebate Program, homeowners, condo owners, and co-op owners who apply for and are enrolled in the Program will receive sizeable rebate checks this fall, specifically to offset increases in school taxes. Seniors who qualify for and are enrolled in the Enhanced STAR program will receive among the highest amounts.

I hope you find this newsletter useful and informative. Please do not hesitate to contact my office at 212-873-6368 with any questions or concerns, stop by my district office at 230 West 72nd St, Suite 2F, or send me an e-mail at rosenthall@assembly.state.ny.us. My staff and I are very interested in your thoughts on legislation and community issues. I wish you and yours a beautiful and exhilarating autumn in New York.

Sincerely,
signature
Linda B. Rosenthal
Member of Assembly




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Assemblywoman Rosenthal presents a New York State Assembly Proclamation to the Alvin Ailey Dance Theater’s renowned Artistic Director Judith Jamison on the occasion of the Ailey’s 50th Anniversary. Located at 405 W. 55th Street at 9th Avenue, the Ailey is dedicated to promoting the uniqueness of the African-American cultural experience and the preservation and enrichment of American modern dance to people across the globe. It annually provides the opportunity for more than 100,000 young people from diverse cultural, social, and economic backgrounds to explore their creative potential through its Arts In Education and Community Programs.



Rosenthal Bill Would Repeal Vacancy Decontrol, Protect Affordable Housing

Vacancy decontrol, enacted in 1993, permits landlords to charge market rate rent for a rent-regulated apartment when it becomes vacant and the rent has hit $2,000. New York City and the suburban counties of Westchester, Nassau, and Rockland already face an alarming shortage of affordable housing, and vacancy decontrol has helped pave the way for much of the city’s stock of rent-stabilized and rent-controlled apartments to be deregulated.

To address this problem, I sponsored bill A7416, which would bar the removal from rent regulation of vacant apartments renting for $2,000. It passed the Assembly by a large margin. I am tremendously proud of having fought for this crucial piece of legislation. My bill represents a major victory in the fight to retain affordable housing throughout New York State. It also removes a primary incentive for owners to withhold basic services from tenants, as well as to harass them until they give up their apartments. I’ve received many complaints from tenants whose landlords have harassed them in an effort to drive them from their homes so that the landlords can rent the apartments for astronomic rates. This is completely unacceptable. As an elected official, it’s my duty to protect the rights of tenants to live free of harassment and to preserve New York’s supply of affordable housing.

In some instances, owners have inflated or even falsified costs of renovation in order to drive apartment rents to the $2,000 threshold for vacancy decontrol. In other cases, no renovations at all are done to vacant apartments and such apartments are treated as deregulated regardless of the legal rent. Vacancy decontrol makes such abuses possible. Repealing it will restore the integrity of the rent regulation systems and protect the state’s increasingly endangered supply of affordable housing.

Because my district contains one of the highest numbers of rent-regulated units in the city, some studies suggest that vacancy decontrol is more problematic on the Upper West Side than anywhere else in Manhattan. Available data and several studies indicate that because of vacancy decontrol, more than 300,000 rent-stabilized apartments have already been removed from regulation in New York City and the counties of Westchester, Nassau, and Rockland. The pace at which vacancy decontrol removes affordable housing units from regulation is accelerating with each passing year. The Assembly is working to ensure that the middle class doesn’t find itself locked out of the city because of the dearth of affordable apartments.

The vacancy decontrol bill is part of a nine-bill package passed by the Assembly to address the affordable housing crisis plaguing New York City and its surrounding suburbs. This legislative package protects tenants from being priced out of their homes through insufficient rent regulation laws and an unstable housing market. It also addresses issues of owner occupancy, preferential rents, major capital improvements, and protections for Mitchell-Lama residents.




Rosenthal Passes Bill to Protect People’s Private Medical Records

My bill A10765, which passed the Legislature and is awaiting the Governor’s signature, makes it a felony to unlawfully copy or intentionally alter or destroy computer material containing a person’s medical records...
Advances in technology are quickly outpacing the legal protections conferred by our current laws. One such area is computerized medical records, which are increasingly becoming the norm. My bill A10765, which passed the Legislature and is awaiting the Governor’s signature, makes it a felony to unlawfully copy or intentionally alter or destroy computer material containing a person’s medical records, if as a result that person suffers serious physical injury. Any incomplete or incorrect information contained in medical records can have potentially devastating effects on a patient. As medical professionals and others encourage the storage and transmission of electronic medical records, privacy and security risks increase as well. This law provides people with a higher level of medical record protection needed in today’s technologically advanced world.

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Assemblymember Rosenthal celebrates Volunteer Recognition Day with the West Side Campaign Against Hunger’s dedicated staff and volunteers. Rising food prices have led to a sharp increase in the number of hungry people WSCAH serves. From left: WSCAH Chair Steve Rogers, Assemblymember Rosenthal, Church of St. Paul and St. Andrew President Jon Mikel Ziegler, and WSCAH Executive Director Doreen Wohl.

Rosenthal Passes Nation’s Third Law Banning Cruel Animal Testing Methods Where Valid Alternatives Exist

I am pleased to report that I passed into law a bill banning unnecessary product testing on animals where a valid alternative method exists. It is only the third law of its kind in the country. Every year, millions of animals are used in the United States and Europe to assess the potential health hazards of cosmetics, soaps, household cleaners, and other chemicals and products to which people might be exposed. As part of these tests, chemicals are applied to animals or injected into their bodies, or the animals are forced to ingest or inhale them. My legislation will protect animals from needless cruelty, while in no way jeopardizing human health or safety. It’s an important step toward a more ethical and humane society. There is no reason for manufacturers to rely on the cruel animal testing methods of old when so many viable, scientifically approved alternatives that would safeguard human health and safety and spare animal subjects unnecessary pain and suffering exist today.

Safeguarding Seniors’ Rights

My Assembly Majority colleagues and I worked hard this session to pass two new laws and several crucial bills protecting the rights of seniors. One of the laws we passed will increase the penalties for assaulting a person 65 or older; the other directs the superintendent of state police to develop policies and educational materials relating to the abuse of adults. These laws will punish more harshly criminals who prey on the elderly and will raise awareness of the problem of elder abuse.

We also passed bills in the Assembly that would increase the penalties for scam artists who victimize more than one elderly person and add an attorney experienced in elder law to the state Crime Victims Board.

I also helped pass legislation assisting some of New York’s most vulnerable citizens by preventing debt collectors from seizing all Social Security, Social Security Disability, Supplemental Security and veterans’ benefits (they must leave at least $2,500 in the bank account), requiring landlords to repay tenants’ rent security deposits within 30 days of the move-out date, and rewriting New York’s power of attorney statute so that agents for the elderly and/or incapacitated cannot cheat or defraud the very people whose interests they are supposed to be protecting. Another bill that passed in the Assembly requires the state Office for the Aging to report annually to the Governor on the delivery of services to and needs of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender older adults.

One bill currently under consideration in the Assembly would raise the eligibility of income level for the Senior Citizens Rent Increase Exemption Program to $30,000, while tying future income increases to the rate of inflation. Another bill would raise the income limit of the Disability Rent Increase Exemption program.

Eliminating New York’s Light Pollution

My light pollution bill, which passed in the Assembly, mandates healthy, safe and energy-efficient outdoor lighting. This bill is intended to limit excessive outdoor illumination, which wastes energy and creates harmful and unnecessary glare. Another one of my bills that passed the Assembly again this session mandates that state lighting efficiency standards for public buildings be promulgated to protect the public’s health, safety and security while conserving energy, by eliminating wasteful artificial night lighting. It is becoming daily more evident that we must decrease our use of unnecessary energy in all areas of our lives. The state is not exempt from this imperative, and these bills mandate that New York proceed down an energy-efficient path.




Assemblymember Rosenthal Delivers for Parents and Students at Public School 199
Convinces NYC DOE to Clean Up Toxic PCBs

photo Assemblymember Rosenthal stands with the parents and students of P.S. 199 at a press conference on PCB contamination. In response to pressure from Assemblymember Rosenthal’s office and other elected officials, the NYC DOE ultimately agreed to protect the health of students and staff at P.S. 199 by engaging in a comprehensive program to remediate and test for PCBs at the school.
I have been troubled by recent news reports of the presence of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) in window and door caulking in New York City public schools, including P.S.199, located at 270 West 70th Street. PCBs were banned by the EPA in the late 1970s, yet they remain in caulking in many school buildings. PCBs have been linked to brain damage and cancer and can pose a significant risk to public health and the environment.

In February of this year, the New York City School Construction Authority (SCA) conducted a window replacement project at P.S. 199, which involved the removal of window caulk containing PCBs. The SCA contractor did not follow state protocols for work involving PCBs, raising concerns about safety. Subsequent testing of the school revealed airborne PCB contamination in the school cafeteria, in classroom rugs, and in soil on the school grounds.

Together with parents at P.S. 199, who used their considerable muscle, and with the support of the UFT, we were able to force the NYC DOE to take appropriate action to remediate conditions at the school. At a news conference in May with parents and students, I urged the NYC DOE to undertake a comprehensive survey of the school system to assess the presence of PCBs in our schools, and to responsibly address this threat to our children’s health by removing these materials while students are out of session. In response to pressure brought by my office and other local elected officials, the NYC DOE agreed to protect the health of students and staff at P.S. 199 by engaging in a comprehensive program to remediate and test for PCBs at the school. I will continue to work on this issue to ensure that our children, teachers, and school employees remain safe.

In order to protect children from the dangers of PCBs, I have introduced bill A11367 in the State Assembly that would require the New York City Department of Education (NYC DOE) to test for the presence of PCBs in school districts and to submit a report to the State Commissioner of Education on the status of PCBs in schools constructed or renovated prior to 1980. If PCBs are found, remediation would have to be performed according to existing state protocols. My bill makes use of the state’s protocols mandatory and requires the NYC DOE’s inspections to be completed by 2010. In addition, the New York State Education Department is required to make the findings readily accessible to the public by publishing them on its website in a timely manner.


Assemblymember Rosenthal Brings New York Maple Syrup Education to City School Children

This spring, more than four hundred students from Upper West Side public schools participated in the first ever Maple in Manhattan Day, an environmental education event I sponsored with the New York State Maple Producers Association. Students at P.S. 9, P.S. 87 and P.S. 199 welcomed a 28-foot trailer mobile maple exhibit from the Vernon-Verona-Sherrill Central School, which is located between Utica and Syracuse.

We are privileged in New York State to have diverse urban and rural landscapes. I believe there is great value in teaching city school children, whose exposure to food usually comes from restaurants and supermarkets, about the origins and sources of their food. On Maple Day, they learned that in 2008, New York and Maine were tied for the second-most maple syrup production in the country, behind Vermont. Sharing this and other knowledge with our kids imparts to them lessons about agriculture and the diversity of New York State crops and products and inspires curiosity about agrarian pursuits in other parts of the state.

Throughout the day, the Upper West Side students learned how maple syrup was discovered and how the sugar maple trees are tapped. They also got a tour inside the trailer to see how the sap is then processed into syrup, and sampled some maple syrup products.


Promoting Sound, Environmentally Friendly Energy Policy

Net metering is an electricity policy for consumers who own small, reliable renewable energy facilities, such as wind or solar power, or vehicle-to-grid systems. In this context, “net” means “what remains after deductions”—the deduction of any energy outflows from metered energy inflows. Under net metering, a system owner receives retail credit for at least a portion of the electricity he or she generates. As a staunch proponent of environmentally sustainable city planning, I co-sponsored a bill on net metering which I believe is especially crucial at this time. This bill would remove restrictions on net metering, giving credit to electric ratepayers who generate renewable energy and passing along the unused energy to others in the system. I believe that allowing net metering will benefit both the environment and the economy, while at the same time providing incentive for energy consumers to be more environmentally friendly. New York should be leading the nation in common sense, environmentally friendly public policy, and net metering is a huge step in the right direction. This bill passed both houses of the Legislature and I expect the Governor will soon sign it into law.


Protecting Sexually Exploited Youth

I co-sponsored the Safe Harbor for Exploited Children Act, which was passed in both the Senate and the Assembly. This legislation will provide critical services to the growing number of youth who have been coerced into a life of prostitution. It has been reported that the number of youth victimized by the sex trade is on the rise and that victims are often as young as eleven and twelve years old.

Under current law, New York State prosecutes sexually exploited youth, most of whom are young women and girls, as if they were hardened criminals. Arresting, prosecuting and incarcerating children and young teenagers as if they were common criminals traumatizes survivors of sexual exploitation, the overwhelming majority of whom have histories of psychological, physical or sexual abuse as younger children and/or have been raised in poverty. Sexually exploited children are defined as persons under the age of 18 who may be subject to sexual exploitation because they engaged or agreed or offered to engage in sexual conduct in return for a fee, food, clothing or a place to stay. The youth would also be defined as sexually exploited if he or she has stripped, been filmed performing sexual acts, traded sex for drugs, or was found guilty of loitering for the purpose of engaging in prostitution. This Act mandates treatment, counseling, rehabilitation, and emergency and long-term housing services instead of incarceration and provides the promise of a better life in the future.


Protecting the Environment by Updating The Bottle Bill

This bill is crucial to reducing litter andsolid waste disposal.
The Bigger Better Bottle Bill, which would update the state’s five-cent bottle deposit law, passed the Assembly in June. I am proud to have been a co-sponsor and a strong and outspoken supporter of this important measure.

The Bigger Better Bottle bill would attach a five-cent rebate to bottled water, juice, and teas, which are not covered in the original 1982 bottle bill, the state’s most successful recycling program. Additionally, any unclaimed deposits would be redirected from the bottling industry, where unclaimed deposits currently go, to the State Environmental Protection Fund. The Environmental Protection Fund is a critical resource in New York; it provides funds to local governments and nonprofits to purchase park lands or historic resources and develop and preserve these resources, as well as for other open space conservation and land acquisition initiatives.

This bill is crucial to reducing litter and solid waste disposal. Each year, three billion non-carbonated beverages end up in landfills and incinerators, contributing to greenhouse gas emissions and choking our planet with non-biodegradable garbage. Thanks to the success of the original bottle bill, more than six million tons of bottles and containers have been recycled. Improving the bottle bill would be a tremendous step toward environmental responsibility.

This legislation would provide an estimated $120 million in revenue in unclaimed deposits every year. Currently, according to New York State Department of Energy estimates, the bottling industry generates $85 million in revenue in unclaimed deposits. I believe the taxpayers’ money should benefit our communities, not the bottling industry.

Acting as a good steward of the environment is one of my top priorities in Albany. This vital bill has been blocked every year by the Senate Majority and the powerful lobbying interests who oppose it. Given its passage in the Assembly, it is now up to the Senate to turn this crucial bill into law.


photo Assemblymember Rosenthal participates in the 20th Precinct’s National Night Out event in Verdi Square Park with Deputy Inspector Keith M. Spadaro and President of the Precinct’s Community Council Sam Katz.

Assemblymember Rosenthal and Tenants at 200 West 93rd and 201 West 92nd Streets Defeat Dangerous Condo Plan

For more than two years, I have been working with tenants at 200 West 93rd and 201 West 92nd Streets to oppose a plan by the buildings’ owner to add a 9-story condominium addition atop their 6-story tenement building. I agreed with tenants that the condo addition would create unsafe conditions for the residents, and would also violate the city’s multiple dwelling law. Working with tenants and other elected officials, I convinced the Department of Buildings to rescind the permits it had granted and put the breaks on the condo project. In June of this year, the building was sold to a new owner. I have already met with this owner and continue to meet with other landlords in the district to ensure that tenants are not put at risk by overly ambitious development projects that put profit ahead of public safety.

Assemblymember Rosenthal Fights to Protect Shalom Tenants

The Shalom family, owner-landlords of more than 130 buildings, have consistently evoked the outrage of many, many tenants and the adverse attention of many public officials -including me. It has been widely and repeatedly asserted that these landlords have improperly forced out rent-regulated tenants, failed to make critical repairs to premises, and harassed tenants who have complained.

This year, I worked with tenants at a Shalom building in my district, 244 West 72nd Street, who faced many hardships. Problems started in January, when tenants lost cooking gas and basement laundry service. Around this time, a tenant was summarily evicted, just days before his lease was set to expire. Building management threw out all of this tenant’s personal possessions, and more unbelievably, sent his four elderly cats to the pound to be euthanized or put up for adoption. In response to this outrage, I organized a news conference of elected officials, tenants, and advocates to protest this brazen and potentially illegal behavior, and to ask District Attorney Robert Morgenthau to step up his investigation of the Shalom family. We sent a clear message that this type of behavior by the Shaloms will not be tolerated.

I was able to work with city agencies and the Shaloms to have gas and laundry service restored to the building. I will continue to investigate, expose, challenge and initiate appropriate government action against landlords in the City who do not respect the rights of the tenants who live in their buildings. If you are experiencing landlord harassment, do not hesitate to call my office so we can help ameliorate the situation.


Assemblymember Rosenthal Named to Three Important Assembly Subcommittees

Renewable Energy
Tuition Assistance
Women’s Health

Such appointments are a special honor for a second-term Assemblymember. Rosenthal already serves on the Agriculture, Alcoholism and Drug Abuse, Corporations, Authorities, and Commissions, Energy, Health, Higher Education, and Housing Committees.


The Fourth Annual
West Side Tenants’ Conference

The Fourth Annual West Side Tenants' Conference will be held on Saturday, September 27th, 2008 from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. at Fordham University Law School at 140 West 62nd Street. Please RSVP to 212-541-5996 ex. 24. I will be conducting a workshop on Seniors’ Housing Issues from 11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. This year’s conference will also feature workshops on Finding Affordable Housing, How to Get Help Paying Arrears, and New Laws to Protect Your Rights and How to Use Them. The conference is a wonderful opportunity to learn about your rights, meet your neighbors and elected officials, and to collaborate on protecting your rights and your neighborhood. Please note that most workshops will have Spanish translation. The conference is free for all participants, and complimentary breakfast and lunch will be served.


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