UUP DEEMS DOWNSTATE FOCUS GROUPS A ‘COMPLETE SHAM’: Plans to construct five focus groups and a community outreach campaign for the future of Downstate Medical Cente r have drawn criticism from advocates and lawmakers. And the United University Professionals union is adding more disapproval to the idea. The union’s president Fred Kowal said the plans for the Brooklyn teaching hospital are a “shoddy public relations stunt staged to answer the Brooklyn outrage over the closure plan.” During a budget hearing on Thursday, Chancellor John King pushed back against critics, saying the plans for Downstate are in early stages, and his administration is looking to “save Downstate” and prevent an inevitable closure. But Kowal claims the public outreach campaign was crafted after criticism grew amongst Brooklyn lawmakers and the community. He said he is skeptical their voices will be reflected in the final plans put together next month. “If SUNY really cared about what the community thinks, they would have engaged with stakeholders six months ago when the plan to close Downstate was being developed,” Kowal said in a statement. “Scheduling a handful of focus groups now smacks of desperation and pushes the limits of insincerity. It displays arrogance and total disrespect to the people of Brooklyn.” — Katelyn Cordero WORKERS SAFETY: Attorney General Tish James is part of a coalition of 10 attorneys general that aims to protect the state workers from heat exposure. The coalition petitioned the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) to implement a nationwide heat standard to help workers limit heat exposure. If adopted, the measure would take effect this summer. “With each passing summer, workers across the country continue to suffer the potentially deadly results of extreme heat exposure. Before the summer heat once again sets in, we must protect our most vulnerable workers against the dangers of extreme heat…” James said in a statement. Extreme heat is designated as periods with above average temperatures and high humidity. It can lead to heat stroke and exhaustion, prolonged exposure can even cause chronic kidney disease, and in extreme cases can result in death. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, there were at least 436 deaths from prolonged exposure from 2011 to 2021. Summer 2024 is expected to be the hottest year on record, eclipsing 2023 which was the hottest year on record in the Northern Hemisphere. — Shawn Ness RETIREMENT FOR POLICE OFFICERS: Assemblymember Stacey Pheffer-Amato and state Sen. Shelley Mayer are advancing a bill to simplify the retirement system for police officers. The bill (S. 5289/A. 5231) would allow the transfer of past service credits between the state and local employees’ retirement system to the police and fire retirement system. As it currently stands, state law limits the transfer of past credits. “Our law enforcement officers should not be forced to work past their retirement age simply because they wanted to get better pay or have a shorter commute. I’ve heard stories from police and firefighters across Central New York and this proposal will help simplify this process and give them the support they deserve,” Assemblymember John Lemondes, a central New York Republican, said in a statement. — Shawn Ness BAIL CONTROVERSIES: A Republican state senator from the Albany area is making a renewed commitment to overhauling New York’s bail laws. A commission to work with state criminal justice officials would be created to develop an “evidence-based, data-driven” plan to strengthen discretion for judges under a bill proposed today by state Sen. Jake Ashby. The Commission on Public Safety would work with the Division of Criminal Justice Services to develop a risk assessment plan for judges. The proposal comes as the bail law, which has restricted when cash bail be required for many criminal charges, has once again come under scrutiny. Republicans have blasted Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg after his office decided to release two suspects in the assault case of NYPD officers in Times Square near a migrant shelter. Bragg’s office has said there was not enough evidence to charge the suspects with bail-eligible offenses. Ashby contends a clearer metric is needed to determine whether a defendant should be released. “It’s about clarity,” he said. “A data-driven risk assessment tool developed by professionals and implemented by DCJS is going to protect the public from rogue prosecutors like Alvin Bragg in some cases, and it’s going to protect defendants from bias in others. We want judges and prosecutors to have discretion.” — Nick Reisman
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