Joint Legislative Public Hearing on 2016-2017 Executive Budget Proposal: Topic "Public Protection" - Testimonies

budget

Hearing Notice Event:
http://www.nysenate.gov/calendar/public-hearings/february-04-2016/joint-legislative-public-hearing-2016-2017-executive

Archived Video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=Cll9Do9eBW8

Hearing Event Transcipt:

                                                                   1

 1  BEFORE THE NEW YORK STATE SENATE FINANCE
    AND ASSEMBLY WAYS AND MEANS COMMITTEES
 2  -----------------------------------------------------

 3          JOINT LEGISLATIVE HEARING

 4             In the Matter of the
          2016-2017 EXECUTIVE BUDGET ON
 5              PUBLIC PROTECTION 
    
 6  -----------------------------------------------------

 7                           Hearing Room B
                             Legislative Office Building
 8                           Albany, New York
    
 9                           February 4, 2016
                             9:40 a.m.
10  
    
11  PRESIDING:

12           Senator Catharine M. Young
             Chair, Senate Finance Committee
13  
             Assemblyman Herman D. Farrell, Jr.
14           Chair, Assembly Ways & Means Committee
    
15  PRESENT:

16           Senator Liz Krueger 
             Senate Finance Committee (RM)
17  
             Assemblyman Robert Oaks
18           Assembly Ways & Means Committee (RM)
    
19           Senator John J. Bonacic
             Chair, Senate Committee on Judiciary
20  
             Assemblywoman Helene Weinstein
21           Chair, Assembly Committee on Judiciary
    
22           Senator Patrick M. Gallivan
             Chair, Senate Committee on Crime Victims,
23            Crime and Correction
    
24  

                                                                  2

 1  2016-2017 Executive Budget
    Public Protection
 2  2-4-16
    
 3  PRESENT:  (Continued)
    
 4  
    
 5           Senator Michael F. Nozzolio
             Chair, Senate Committee on Codes
 6  
             Assemblyman Joseph Lentol
 7           Chair, Assembly Committee on Codes
    
 8           Senator Thomas D. Croci
             Chair, Senate Committee on Veterans, 
 9            Homeland Security and Military Affairs
    
10           Assemblyman Daniel O'Donnell
             Chair, Assembly Committee on Correction
11  
             Senator Frederick J. Akshar II
12  
             Assemblyman Michael Montesano
13  
             Senator Diane Savino
14  
             Assemblyman Al Graf
15  
             Assemblywoman Janet L. Duprey
16  
             Senator Rich Funke
17  
             Assemblyman J. Gary Pretlow
18  
             Senator Velmanette Montgomery
19  
             Senator Ruth Hassell-Thompson
20  
             Assemblyman Joseph M. Giglio
21  
             Senator Martin Golden
22  
             Senator Joseph P. Addabbo, Jr.
23  
             Assemblywoman Crystal Peoples-Stokes
24  

                                                                  3

 1  2016-2017 Executive Budget
    Public Protection
 2  2-4-16
    
 3  PRESENT:  (Continued)
    
 4  
    
 5           Senator Daniel Squadron
    
 6           Assemblyman John T. McDonald III
    
 7           Assemblyman Joseph S. Saladino
    
 8           Senator Gustavo Rivera 
    
 9           Assemblywoman Diana C. Richardson
    
10           Senator Leroy Comrie
    
11           Assemblywoman Nicole Malliotakis
    
12           Senator Phil M. Boyle
    
13           Assemblywoman Patricia Fahy
    
14           Assemblyman John T. McDonald III
    
15  
    
16  
    
17  
    
18  
    
19  
    
20  
    
21

22

23

24


                                                                  4

 1  2016-2017 Executive Budget
    Public Protection
 2  2-4-16
    
 3                   LIST OF SPEAKERS
    
 4                                     STATEMENT  QUESTIONS
    
 5  Honorable Lawrence K. Marks
    Chief Administrative Judge 
 6  NYS Office of Court
     Administration                         9          20                  
 7  
    John P. Melville
 8  Commissioner 
    NYS Division of Homeland Security
 9   and Emergency Services               106        113
    
10  Michael C. Green
    Executive Deputy Commissioner
11  NYS Division of Criminal 
     Justice Services                     180        186
12  
    Anthony J. Annucci 
13  Acting Commissioner 
    NYS Department of Corrections
14   and Community Supervision            257        264
    
15  Joseph D'Amico 
    Superintendent
16  NYS Division of State Police          361        370
    
17  Margaret Miller
    NYS Chief Information Officer
18  Director, NYS Office of 
     Information Technology Services      422        430
19  
    William J. Leahy
20  Director
    NYS Office of Indigent 
21   Legal Services                       465         474
    
22  Robert H. Tembeckjian
    Administrator and Counsel
23  New York State Commission on 
     Judicial Conduct                     483         488
24  
    

                                                                  5

 1  2016-2017 Executive Budget
    Public Protection
 2  2-4-16
    
 3                   LIST OF SPEAKERS, Cont. 
    
 4                                     STATEMENT  QUESTIONS
    
 5  Thomas H. Mungeer
    President
 6  New York State Troopers PBA            492      495
    
 7  Christopher M. Quick
    President
 8  New York State Police 
     Investigators Association             497      502
 9  
    Michael B. Powers 
10  President 
    NYS Correctional Officers &
11   Police Benevolent Assn.               504      511
    
12  Patrick J. Lynch
    New York City Patrolmen's
13   Benevolent Association                524      530 
    
14  Steve Drake
    NYSDOCCS
15  Paul Rigby
    NYSDOCCS
16  Nikki Brate
    Vice President
17  NYS Public Employees 
     Federation (PEF)                      561      579
18  
    
19  Jonathan E. Gradess
    Executive Director
20  Art Cody
    Legal Director, Veterans
21   Defense Programs
    NYS Defenders Association              611      
22  
    Mark Williams
23  President-Elect
    Chief Defenders Association
24   of New York State                     620      625
    

                                                                  6

 1  2016-2017 Executive Budget
    Public Protection
 2  2-4-16
    
 3                   LIST OF SPEAKERS, Cont. 
    
 4                                     STATEMENT  QUESTIONS
    
 5  Patrick Cullen
    President
 6  New York State Supreme Court 
     Officers Association                  634
 7  
    Pamela Browne
 8  President
    New York State County 
 9   Clerks Association                    643
    
10  Billy Imandt
    President
11  Court Officers Benevolent
     Assn. of Nassau County                651
12  
    William Dobbins
13  President
    Suffolk County Court
14   Employees Association                 664
    
15  Colonel Jack Ozer
    New York Wing of the 
16   Civil Air Patrol                      672
    
17  Charlotte Carter
    Executive Director
18  NYS Dispute Resolution Assn.
         -and-
19  Julie Loesch
    Director 
20  Center for Resolution and
     Justice
21  Child & Family Services                676
    
22  Connie Neal
    Executive Director
23  NYS Coalition Against
     Domestic Violence                     681      688
24  
    

                                                                  7

 1  2016-2017 Executive Budget
    Public Protection
 2  2-4-16
    
 3                   LIST OF SPEAKERS, Cont. 
    
 4                                     STATEMENT  QUESTIONS
    
 5  Soffiyah Elijah
    Executive Director 
 6  Correctional Association 
     of New York                           690      696
 7  
    Karen L. Murtagh
 8  Executive Director
    Thomas Curran
 9  Board Member
    Prisoners' Legal Services
10   of New York                           700      
    
11  Page Pierce
    Executive Director
12  Families Together in NYS               707
    
13  Terry O'Neill
    Director
14  The Constantine Institute              714
    
15  Anne Erickson
    President and CEO
16  Empire Justice Center                  720
    
17  
    
18  
    
19

20

21

22

23

24


                                                                  8

 1                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Good morning.

 2                 CHAIRMAN FARRELL:  Good morning.

 3                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Could we have some 

 4          order, please.

 5                 Welcome to the Joint Legislative 

 6          Budget Hearing on Public Protection.  I'm 

 7          Senator Catharine Young, chair of the Senate 

 8          Finance Committee.  

 9                 Pursuant to the State Constitution and 

10          Legislative Law, the fiscal committees of the 

11          State Legislature are authorized to hold 

12          hearings on the Executive Budget proposal.  

13          Today's hearing will be limited to a 

14          discussion on the Governor's proposed budget 

15          for public protection.

16                 Following each presentation, there 

17          will be some time allowed for questions from 

18          the chairs of the fiscal committees and other 

19          legislators.  

20                 I would like to welcome Judge Lawrence 

21          K. Marks, chief administrative judge of the 

22          Office of Court Administration; John P. 

23          Melville, executive deputy commissioner of 

24          the Division of Homeland Security and 


                                                                  9

 1          Emergency Services; Michael C. Green, 

 2          executive deputy commissioner of the Division 

 3          of Criminal Justice Services; Anthony J. 

 4          Annucci, acting commissioner of the 

 5          Department of Corrections and Community 

 6          Supervision; Joseph A. D'Amico, 

 7          Superintendent of the Division of State 

 8          Police; and Margaret Miller, director and 

 9          chief information officer of the Office of 

10          Information Technology Services.

11                 At this time I would like to begin 

12          with testimony of Judge Lawrence K. Marks, 

13          chief administrative judge of the Office of 

14          Court Administration.

15                 Welcome, and good morning.

16                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

17          Good morning.  Good morning.  Thank you.  

18                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Before we begin, 

19          though, Assemblyman Farrell, who keeps me in 

20          line, reminded me that we need to introduce 

21          our members.  So if you'd hold on one second.  

22                 I'd like to introduce Senator Liz 

23          Krueger, who is ranking member of the Senate 

24          Finance Committee; Senator Michael Nozzolio, 


                                                                  10

 1          who is chair of the Senate Codes Committee; 

 2          Senator Patrick Gallivan, who is chair of the 

 3          Crime and Corrections Committee; Senator Fred 

 4          Akshar; Senator Rich Funke; Senator Joe 

 5          Addabbo; Senator John Bonacic; Senator Diane 

 6          Savino; and Senator Marty Golden.  

 7                 Assemblyman?  

 8                 CHAIRMAN FARRELL:   We've been joined 

 9          by Assemblywoman -- and chair -- Weinstein, 

10          Assemblyman Lentol, Assemblyman O'Donnell, 

11          and Assemblywoman Peoples-Stokes.  

12                 We also have Mr. Oaks, who will give 

13          us his names.

14                 ASSEMBLYMAN OAKS:  Thank you, 

15          Chairman.  

16                 We've been joined also by Assemblyman 

17          Giglio, Assemblyman Montesano, Assemblyman 

18          Graf, and Assemblywoman Malliotakis.

19                 CHAIRMAN FARRELL:  Good morning.

20                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Good morning.

21                 So, Judge, we do welcome you once 

22          again, and we're ready for your testimony.

23                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

24          Okay, thank you very much.  I'm Lawrence 


                                                                  11

 1          Marks.  I'm the chief administrative judge of 

 2          the courts.  And thank you so much for the 

 3          opportunity to speak to you today about the 

 4          Unified Court System's budget request.  And 

 5          I'd just like to take 10 minutes, if I may, 

 6          to lay out the key issues in our budget 

 7          request.  And then of course I'd be happy to 

 8          answer any questions that you may have.  

 9                 But just before I do that, I'd like to 

10          make note of our new chief judge, Janet 

11          DiFiore, just confirmed by the Senate two 

12          weeks ago.  Everyone in the court system is 

13          excited about Judge DiFiore assuming the 

14          leadership of the Judiciary.  The Governor 

15          certainly made a terrific decision in 

16          nominating her.  And on behalf of her and the 

17          entire court system, I want to say that we 

18          very much look forward to continuing to work 

19          closely and cooperatively with the 

20          Legislature in the coming years.

21                 So turning to our budget request, I 

22          would start by providing some brief context.  

23          In fiscal year 2009-2010, the General Fund 

24          state operations portion of the court 


                                                                  12

 1          system's budget was approximately 

 2          $1.78 billion. Today, six years later, that 

 3          amount is approximately $1.85 billion, an 

 4          increase of only $64 million, or 3.5 percent, 

 5          which averages out to about six-tenths of 

 6          1 percent of an increase each year over that 

 7          six-year period.  

 8                 Yet during that same period of time, 

 9          the Judiciary has absorbed nearly 

10          $400 million in higher costs.  These higher 

11          costs include mandated employee salary 

12          increases, increased contractual expenses, 

13          funding for indigent criminal defense to meet 

14          statutory caseload standards, and funding for 

15          civil legal services.  

16                 And because our budget is 

17          overwhelmingly -- roughly 90 percent -- 

18          salaries and fringe benefits, we've managed 

19          to do this -- that is, absorb increased costs 

20          that have been far higher than the very 

21          minimal increases in our budget 

22          allocations -- we've been able to do this 

23          primarily by decreasing our employment 

24          levels.  Indeed, the number of nonjudicial 


                                                                  13

 1          employees in the court system has decreased 

 2          by about 2,000 since 2009, which is a 12 

 3           percent reduction in our workforce.  That 

 4          means we have fewer court officers, fewer 

 5          court clerks, court reporters, court 

 6          interpreters, court attorneys, back-office 

 7          staff, and so on.  

 8                 And although we've worked tirelessly 

 9          to try to minimize the impact of this through 

10          innovation and streamlining -- and in our 

11          budget submission we highlight steps we've 

12          taken in that regard -- those efforts have 

13          been only partially successful.  Without 

14          question, we, and more importantly the 

15          public, are still suffering consequences from 

16          our reduced staffing levels.  These 

17          consequences include delays on some days in 

18          opening courtroom parts, delays in entering 

19          judgments in the clerk's offices, lines to 

20          get into courthouses, lines in the clerk's 

21          offices, just to name a few of these 

22          consequences.  

23                 So given that context, this year we 

24          are asking for an increase in our budget.  


                                                                  14

 1          And while you've helped us with additional 

 2          budgetary support in the last two years, this 

 3          year our situation is a little more 

 4          complicated.  And I want to take a moment to 

 5          explain that to you.

 6                 As I think you know, under the State 

 7          Constitution the Judiciary is required to 

 8          submit its proposed budget to the Governor on 

 9          the December 1st preceding the upcoming 

10          fiscal year.  But this year, as we were 

11          preparing our budget request, and when we 

12          submitted it to the Governor on December 1, 

13          the commission on Legislative, Judicial and 

14          Executive Compensation had not yet issued its 

15          findings and determinations with regard to 

16          judicial salary increases.

17                 Under the statute creating the Salary 

18          Commission, the commission's findings and 

19          determinations as to judicial salaries were 

20          not due until the end of December.  So by the 

21          time we were required by law to submit our 

22          proposed budget to the Governor, we had no 

23          idea what the Salary Commission would be 

24          doing with regard to judicial salaries.  We 


                                                                  15

 1          were certainly hopeful that the commission 

 2          would be voting for a judicial salary 

 3          increase, but we had no idea what the salary 

 4          levels would be, and therefore we had no idea 

 5          how much they would cost.  

 6                 Consequently, what we did was note in 

 7          our budget request that we were awaiting the 

 8          Salary Commission's determinations and that 

 9          we might well be seeking additional funding 

10          to pay for judicial salary increases, 

11          depending on what the Salary Commission ended 

12          up doing.  

13                 As it happened, later that month in 

14          December, the Salary Commission issued its 

15          report, which called for phased-in salary 

16          increases for New York judges, using the 

17          Federal District Court judge salary as a 

18          benchmark, and providing for the largest 

19          portion of the phase-in to take effect this 

20          April 1st.  

21                 Now, I'm not planning on going into 

22          the details of the Salary Commission's 

23          findings now in my prepared remarks, but I'll 

24          certainly answer any questions that you may 


                                                                  16

 1          have about that this morning.  What I will, 

 2          say, however, is that we are extremely 

 3          pleased with what the commission did, and I 

 4          would note that its findings and 

 5          determinations were fully supported by the 

 6          Legislature's two representatives on the 

 7          commission.

 8                 By using the federal salary as the 

 9          benchmark, the Commission followed the 

10          precedent that was set by the last commission 

11          in 2011, which in turn was the precedent the 

12          Legislature itself had used throughout much 

13          of the history of judicial salaries before 

14          the commission process was enacted.  Indeed, 

15          this commission has finally and essentially 

16          resolved what has been a decades-long, 

17          haphazard, inadequate and frankly unfair 

18          process for setting judicial salaries.  

19                 So we're extremely grateful for the 

20          commission's findings, and for the support of 

21          the Legislature's representatives on the 

22          commission, and through them, we are 

23          extremely grateful to you for those findings.  

24                 The problem, though -- and this is the 


                                                                  17

 1          main issue I want to talk to you about and 

 2          highlight for you this morning -- is that the 

 3          cost of the first year of the phase-in of the 

 4          judicial salary increase, beginning on 

 5          April 1st of this year, is $27 million.  

 6          That's a cost we were not able to budget for 

 7          when we submitted our proposed budget to the 

 8          Governor on December 1st, for the reasons 

 9          that I've explained.  Our budget request 

10          submitted on December 1st sought a 2.4 

11          percent increase in our General Funds 

12          operating budget, which is an increase of 

13          $44.4 million.  An increase is necessary 

14          because we are again facing significant cost 

15          increases, which include mandatory salary 

16          increases for court employees, increases in 

17          contractual obligations, such as our 

18          contracts with local governments to provide 

19          courthouse security in certain portions of 

20          the state, annualization of the cost of the 

21          five Family Court judgeships that the 

22          Legislature created effective January 1, 

23          2016, and additional funding for civil legal 

24          services.  


                                                                  18

 1                 But because of the additional cost of 

 2          judicial salary increases, a cost we could 

 3          not estimate when we submitted our budget 

 4          request on December 1st, we now must seek 

 5          additional funding to meet that cost.  What 

 6          we are proposing to you, and what we are 

 7          respectfully urging you to support, is an 

 8          additional $19.6 million to help pay for this 

 9          increased cost.  We are proposing that we 

10          apply the four-tenths of 1 percent part of 

11          the 2.4 percent increase we requested in our 

12          December 1 submission -- and the four-tenths 

13          of 1 percent part of that is about $7.4 

14          million.  We're proposing applying that 

15          toward the cost of the judicial salary 

16          increase, and then we also proposing that the 

17          Legislature add to our budget the remaining 

18          $19.6 million of the full cost.  That would 

19          pay for the cost of judicial salary increases 

20          in the upcoming fiscal year, and it would 

21          leave the courts with an increase of 

22          2 percent -- which is the Governor's target, 

23          as we know -- or $37 million in our operating 

24          budget to cover our increased expenses, 


                                                                  19

 1          including the mandated court employee salary 

 2          increases, increased contractual expenses, 

 3          and additional funding for civil legal 

 4          services.  

 5                 We firmly believe that what we are 

 6          seeking is fair and reasonable.  The newly 

 7          arising cost of the judicial salary increase 

 8          has resulted from a statutory process that 

 9          was designed to inject fairness, objectivity, 

10          and transparency into the method for 

11          determining judicial salaries.  That 

12          statutory process worked, and the Salary 

13          Commission's determinations were fully 

14          supported by the Legislature's two 

15          representatives on the commission.  

16                 We respectfully submit that the fair 

17          thing to do now is to provide the funding to 

18          implement those results.  Without that 

19          funding, it will be increasingly difficult to 

20          replace employees when they leave the court 

21          system, further decreasing our employment 

22          level and resulting in the consequences that 

23          will entail.  With that funding, the 

24          Judiciary will be able to furnish the quality 


                                                                  20

 1          of service that we need to provide to the 

 2          people of this state, a quality of service 

 3          that we all agree the public fully deserves.  

 4                 Thank you very much, and I'd be happy 

 5          to answer any questions.

 6                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, Chief 

 7          Administrative Judge Marks.

 8                 We have been joined by Senator Gustavo 

 9          Rivera.  

10                 And our first speaker will be Senator 

11          John Bonacic, who is chair of the Senate 

12          Judiciary Committee.

13                 SENATOR BONACIC:  Good morning, 

14          Your Honor.

15                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

16          Good morning.

17                 SENATOR BONACIC:  It's good to see 

18          you.

19                 Before I ask you some questions, I 

20          just would like to say that I always enjoy 

21          working with my counterpart, Helene 

22          Weinstein, who chairs the Judiciary in the 

23          Assembly.  We've been having discussions how 

24          to work through this Judiciary Budget to try 


                                                                  21

 1          to be fair to all concerned.

 2                 Your budget, I think, for court 

 3          administration is between 2.8 and 2.9 

 4          billion; would I be correct?  

 5                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

 6          That's correct.

 7                 SENATOR BONACIC:  Okay.  Now, we have 

 8          a concern, what we see happening in the court 

 9          system.  As you pointed out, a lack of 

10          staffing, shorter hours.  

11                 We now see the Hurrell-Harring case, 

12          which basically stated that there's not 

13          enough district attorneys for first 

14          appearance for defendants in criminal 

15          actions.  So for five counties that brought a 

16          lawsuit, monies were given to those five 

17          counties.  So there's a need for more monies 

18          for criminal representation for mainly 

19          upstate.  That's another developing future 

20          cost on the court system.

21                 As, you know, you explained, it 

22          appears to me that the priorities are to take 

23          care of the judicial salaries, which we're 

24          all supportive of.  We think the judges are 


                                                                  22

 1          deserving of raises.  You're struggling with 

 2          the 2 percent cap, how to live with all of 

 3          this, with a judicial court system with 

 4          access to justice that is deteriorating 

 5          rather than getting stronger.

 6                 So when I look at your budget, one of 

 7          the priorities, in addition to the raises, is 

 8          civil services.  Now, that item has jumped 

 9          from $70 million to $85 million this year.  

10          So that's free legal services for civilian 

11          actions.  Civil service; right?  As opposed 

12          to criminal.

13                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

14          Civil cases.

15                 SENATOR BONACIC:  Right.  So 

16          middle-class families have to pay for legal 

17          fees, but there's a movement to have the poor 

18          have free legal services.  I just point that 

19          out.

20                 I think for this year, that's a wrong 

21          priority.  I think that part of the budget 

22          should be no gain, because last year they got 

23          a $15 million bump, they're up to $70 million 

24          now for free legal services for civil 


                                                                  23

 1          actions.  And you now want to take it to 85.  

 2          There's $15 million.  If you kept that level, 

 3          you would help reach your other priorities of 

 4          making the court system stronger and/or 

 5          helping to support the raises.  So I throw 

 6          that out to you.

 7                 I haven't asked you a question yet.  I 

 8          have not asked you a question.

 9                 (Laughter.)

10                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  I'm 

11          waiting for the question.

12                 SENATOR BONACIC:  Right.  But things 

13          like CASA and the dispute resolution, I think 

14          these are very worthwhile services.  A lot of 

15          them are on a volunteer basis.  They help 

16          children and families in preventive action 

17          before it even gets to the courts.  They help 

18          relieve court congestion.  

19                 We did the divorce law amendments this 

20          past year; that's supposed to clean up 

21          94 percent of matrimonial actions with court 

22          congestion.  So we're trying.

23                 So I would say to you that those two 

24          volunteer programs are very helpful.  You 


                                                                  24

 1          should look to see what you can do there.

 2                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  And 

 3          we are continuing, proposing to continue the 

 4          funding for those programs in this budget.

 5                 SENATOR BONACIC:  So now I'm going to 

 6          come to the $64,000 -- more than the $64,000 

 7          question.

 8                 If the Governor is insisting on the 

 9          2 percent cap, have you given any thought to 

10          how you're going to reconcile making the 

11          court stronger, doing the judicial raises, 

12          and what has to be saved and what has to be 

13          cut?  

14                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

15          Well, so you're asking if we don't get 

16          additional money and we had to stay within 

17          the 2 percent, how would we cope with that?  

18                 SENATOR BONACIC:  Which the Governor's 

19          kind of indicating that's where he wants to 

20          go.  I'm not speaking for the Governor, but I 

21          just --

22                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  No, 

23          if you read his commentary on our budget 

24          submission, that is what he said, that's 


                                                                  25

 1          right.

 2                 SENATOR BONACIC:  Yes.

 3                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  So 

 4          I'll answer that.  But let me -- if I could, 

 5          let me just respond to your comments about 

 6          civil legal services.

 7                 SENATOR BONACIC:  Could you speak into 

 8          the mic a little?

 9                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

10          Sure.  I was saying if -- and I'll answer 

11          your question, but if I may just initially, 

12          if I could respond to your question about --

13                 SENATOR BONACIC:  Sure.

14                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  -- 

15          your comments about civil legal services.  

16                 Look, this is a critically important 

17          program.  I mean, everyone here on this 

18          panel, every member of the Legislature should 

19          really support money for civil legal 

20          services.

21                 Our program, money goes to every 

22          single county in the state, all 62 counties.  

23          This is not a New York City program, it's not 

24          an upstate program, it's a statewide program.  


                                                                  26

 1          And every legislative district in this state 

 2          has -- every one of you has constituents that 

 3          benefit from this money.  You know, as you 

 4          all know, there's a legal right in a criminal 

 5          case, if you can't afford an attorney, one 

 6          will be provided for you free of charge.  

 7          There's no such right, generally speaking, in 

 8          civil cases.  

 9                 And this is money that goes to provide 

10          lawyers, again, in every county in this 

11          state -- people who are facing potential 

12          eviction, people who are facing potential 

13          foreclosure, victims of domestic violence in 

14          Family Court proceedings, veterans seeking 

15          disability payments.  This is money that is 

16          very well spent.  There have been studies 

17          done by economists that have concluded that 

18          for every dollar spent on civil legal 

19          services, government can save as much as $6.  

20          And that's because if someone is evicted or 

21          their house is foreclosed on or they don't 

22          receive federal benefits, that leads to 

23          further problems and further costs imposed on 

24          government.  This is a critically important 


                                                                  27

 1          program that I really can't emphasize enough 

 2          that everyone here should really be 

 3          supporting.  

 4                 And this last $15 million that we're 

 5          seeking in this budget is the last 

 6          installment in a plan that was announced five 

 7          years ago, five, six years ago, where each 

 8          year -- and by the way, each year in years 

 9          that were fiscally much weaker than this 

10          particular year, where the state economy is 

11          relatively strong now -- the Legislature 

12          provided money for each of the last four or 

13          five years.  And this would be the last 

14          installment that would get us to 

15          $100 million, which will meet the goal that 

16          we set for funding civil legal services.

17                 So again, I really can't emphasize 

18          enough how this is a program that benefits 

19          people throughout the state in all 

20          62 counties.  And I would urge that you 

21          support the additional funding that we're 

22          seeking for civil legal services.  

23                 Having said that, in the doomsday 

24          scenario where we don't get any additional 


                                                                  28

 1          money -- and this is to answer your question, 

 2          Senator Bonacic, what would we do.  Well, you 

 3          know, we don't have a lot of choices in the 

 4          Judiciary budget, since we're roughly 

 5          90 percent salaries and fringe benefits.  We 

 6          don't have a capital budget, we don't have -- 

 7          other than civil legal services, we don't 

 8          have a whole lot of programs that we could 

 9          cut.  We're primarily people, and that's what 

10          makes up the vast percentage of our budget.

11                 So if we had to absorb the full cost 

12          of this judicial salary increase, the 

13          $27 million, you know, we would have to look 

14          at attrition, not replacing people when they 

15          leave the court system.  Which is how we 

16          managed far more difficult budgets going back 

17          to 2011, where we sustained a massive budget 

18          cut that year which resulted in layoffs that 

19          year because the budget cut was so extreme.  

20          And that was followed by two years of flat 

21          budgets.  And the way we managed that -- 

22          because every year our costs go up, they 

23          don't go down.  Costs go up.  

24                 So the way we managed that those years 


                                                                  29

 1          was through attrition.  When people left, we 

 2          didn't replace them.  We had a strict hiring 

 3          freeze.  So if we were not successful in 

 4          getting this additional money, we would 

 5          inevitably have to look at attrition, not 

 6          replacing people when they leave, and we 

 7          would have to look at the civil legal 

 8          services money as well, as you've suggested.

 9                 SENATOR BONACIC:  Thank you.

10                 My only point is the Legislature has 

11          been supportive of monies for civil legal 

12          services.  But times change.  And it's a 

13          question of priorities this year.  And we're 

14          suggesting to you that maybe judicial 

15          salaries are more important than that area.  

16          But I would certainly never like to hear you 

17          say that you're going to cut more personnel 

18          from the Judiciary Budget for the 

19          administration of the courts, which are now 

20          not up to par where they should be, in terms 

21          of the hours, the staffing.  That would be 

22          really not a good thing to do.

23                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  I 

24          agree with you.  We would be loath to do 


                                                                  30

 1          that.  We're 2,000 employees fewer, as I 

 2          mentioned in my remarks, than we were in 

 3          2009.  And that absolutely has consequences 

 4          on the operation of the courts.  And the last 

 5          few years we have finally been able to kind 

 6          of get our heads above water and replace 

 7          people when they leave and maybe even 

 8          slightly increase our employment level.  

 9                 But again, it's the last thing we 

10          would want to do, is to go back to the 

11          scenario of a few years ago where we were 

12          bleeding people and, you know, when they left 

13          that we couldn't replace them.

14                 Please don't misunderstand me.  I'm 

15          not suggesting that we would favor further 

16          reducing our employment level.  It's the last 

17          thing we would want to do.  But in the end, 

18          because our budget is overwhelmingly, you 

19          know, 90 percent salaries and fringe 

20          benefits, when we don't have sufficient 

21          money, that's really where we look.  And we 

22          have no choice.

23                 SENATOR BONACIC:  My only last comment 

24          is I believe that there's $15 million there 


                                                                  31

 1          in civil services that you should not give 

 2          this year to make sure that the judges get 

 3          their raises, which we all think they're 

 4          entitled to.  

 5                 And I thank you very much, Your Honor, 

 6          for coming today.

 7                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

 8          Thank you.

 9                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, Senator 

10          Bonacic.  

11                 We've been joined by senator Thomas 

12          Croci, chair of the Veterans, Homeland 

13          Security, and Military Affairs Committee, and 

14          also Senator Leroy Comrie.

15                 Chairman Farrell.

16                 CHAIRMAN FARRELL:  Yes.  Mr. Oaks.

17                 ASSEMBLYMAN OAKS:  Yes, we've been 

18          also been joined by Assemblyman Saladino.

19                 CHAIRMAN FARRELL:  Next to question, 

20          Chairperson Weinstein.

21                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you, 

22          Mr. Chairman.  

23                 Judge Marks, it's a pleasure to see 

24          you here today.  And as Senator Bonacic said, 


                                                                  32

 1          we work closely together.  But in relation to 

 2          the civil legal services, it's a point where 

 3          we diverge in terms of this increase.

 4                 And I just wanted to continue that 

 5          discussion a little bit more.  I looked at 

 6          the task force, permanent commission's last 

 7          report, and I just want to make sure that I 

 8          read correctly that, based on the 

 9          commission's finding, that New York State 

10          realized $260 million in taxpayer savings in 

11          the form of reduced emergency shelter costs 

12          alone as a result of legal services.  

13                 So that was one of their findings?  

14                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

15          That's correct.

16                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  And that the 

17          overall -- the finding that the overall 

18          investment in civil legal services has 

19          resulted in an overall economic benefit to 

20          New York State of $2.4 billion through 2014?  

21                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

22          Yeah, that's -- I think that's correct.  And 

23          that goes to the point that I made a moment 

24          ago that investing in civil legal services in 


                                                                  33

 1          the end can save state and local government, 

 2          you know, significant amounts of money.

 3                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  So if we 

 4          were to cut out of the Judiciary Budget the 

 5          $15 million for civil legal services and 

 6          dedicate it to a different purpose, as my 

 7          colleague suggests, it would actually cost 

 8          New York State money in this next year going 

 9          forward?  

10                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

11          Yes.  There have been studies by economists 

12          that have suggested that, that if -- that 

13          expenditures on civil legal services is 

14          cost-effective.

15                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  And could 

16          you just maybe go into a tiny bit more detail 

17          as to how the funding that's in the Judiciary 

18          Budget for civil legal services is allocated 

19          around the state, and perhaps restate some of 

20          the services, the kinds of populations that 

21          benefit from civil legal services?

22                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

23          Yeah, the money is divided up based on a 

24          formula, 200 percent -- each county's 


                                                                  34

 1          population that's less than 200 percent of 

 2          the federal poverty level -- the formula is 

 3          based on that.  So it's equally divided to 

 4          the state's 62 counties based on that 

 5          formula.  

 6                 And the money goes to really kind of 

 7          the essentials of life.  People who find 

 8          themselves in court without a lawyer, or who 

 9          would otherwise find themselves in court 

10          without a lawyer -- in landlord-tenant 

11          proceedings, so facing eviction; in 

12          foreclosure proceedings, where people are 

13          facing the potential loss of their home.  

14          Victims of domestic violence in family 

15          offense proceedings in the Family Court 

16          receive lawyers under this program.

17                 I mentioned veterans are a significant 

18          component of the people who benefit from 

19          these services.  Veterans who may be facing 

20          eviction, facing foreclosure, seeking 

21          disability benefits.  

22                 And so those are some of the examples 

23          of the types of people who benefit from this 

24          program in every county in the state.


                                                                  35

 1                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  And I was 

 2          just wondering, from the court's perspective, 

 3          how do unrepresented litigants impact the 

 4          functioning of the courts, people who come in 

 5          without an attorney?  

 6                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

 7          It's -- actually, I can speak personally for 

 8          this, because I sit -- in addition to my 

 9          administrative responsibilities, I sit in 

10          Supreme Court.  And I can tell you, from the 

11          court's perspective and the judge's 

12          perspective, when someone comes in without a 

13          lawyer, it's just a -- it's a night-and-day 

14          situation.  

15                 You know, it's very difficult for the 

16          judge because judges ethically can't advise 

17          litigants on the law.  The court staff can't 

18          do that.  You know, people are basically on 

19          their own.  It's not an equal playing field, 

20          obviously, when that happens.  It's not -- I 

21          mean, my own view, which I know is shared by 

22          the new chief judge, is that a justice system 

23          just doesn't make sense when you have 

24          hundreds of thousands of people coming into 


                                                                  36

 1          court without a lawyer, their opponents often 

 2          represented by lawyers.  It's just -- it's 

 3          not a justice system, you know, that we could 

 4          all be proud of, you know, when that's as 

 5          serious a problem as it has been in New York.

 6                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  And beyond 

 7          just the impact on the individual litigant 

 8          who's unrepresented, does it also impact the 

 9          courts?  Are there additional delays?  You 

10          mentioned the court staff that are asked 

11          questions.  Does it actually increase costs 

12          to the court system and use up resources that 

13          would not be needed if those litigants were 

14          represented?

15                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

16          Yeah.  I mean, I would say that cases in 

17          which litigants are self-represented become 

18          more labor-intensive for the court -- for the 

19          judge, for the judge's staff, for the clerk's 

20          office, for the court personnel.  

21                 So yes, I would agree with that very 

22          much.

23                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  And to go to 

24          the defense side, I know and I agree with my 


                                                                  37

 1          colleague that there is a need for increased 

 2          services for indigent defendants, 

 3          particularly in first appearances that go 

 4          beyond the Hurrell decision.  And I 

 5          understand that the Indigent Legal Services 

 6          Board has asked for increased resources to be 

 7          able to address those needs.  And I think 

 8          that that is something obviously that 

 9          personally I would support, and I think other 

10          members also.

11                 Can I just -- I just want to ask you a 

12          question about the staffing.  You mentioned 

13          that there's been a reduction of 2,000 

14          nonjudicial employees, and I think you 

15          mentioned it was 12 percent; is that correct?  

16                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

17          Since 2009, that was the high level mark for 

18          us, we have 2,000 fewer employees since that 

19          year.

20                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  And I 

21          probably should know the answer, but perhaps 

22          do you know how that compares to state 

23          agencies?  

24                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  The 


                                                                  38

 1          executive branch?  

 2                 For us, it's a 12 percent decrease in 

 3          the court system, the roughly 2,000 fewer 

 4          employees.  In the executive branch, 

 5          depending on how you define the executive 

 6          branch -- but if you include CUNY and SUNY, 

 7          the executive branch employment level since 

 8          2009 has dropped between 8 and 8.5 percent.

 9                 So our employment level has declined 

10          more than the executive branch.

11                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

12          Thank you on that.  And I think for the 

13          moment that's all the questions, 

14          Mr. Chairman.

15                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you very 

16          much.

17                 Our next speaker is Senator Michael 

18          Nozzolio, who is chair of the Codes 

19          Committee.

20                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Thank you, 

21          Chairwoman Young.  

22                 Good morning, Judge Marks.

23                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

24          Good morning.


                                                                  39

 1                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  We're used to 

 2          seeing Judge Prudenti in that chair.  I don't 

 3          see much of a resemblance --

 4                 (Laughter.)

 5                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  -- at least in 

 6          outward appearances.  But she certainly -- 

 7          there's big shoes to fill, and I wish you all 

 8          the luck in this endeavor.

 9                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS: 

10          Thank you.  

11                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  I want to follow up 

12          on the questioning that's already occurred.  

13          Senator Bonacic and I have discussed this 

14          issue a number of times over the last few 

15          weeks.  

16                 One of the things about Judge Prudenti 

17          is that she always looked for creative ways 

18          to solve problems, that in large part because 

19          of the creativity she exhibited, the CASA 

20          program was revived when budgetary axes had 

21          to fall.  And Senator Bonacic, myself and 

22          others worked very closely with her to 

23          restore that program.  

24                 I share your admiration for civil 


                                                                  40

 1          legal services.  I think it's a great 

 2          program.  I probably, in the course of my 

 3          service, have had many more requests for 

 4          legal assistance through the Assembly and 

 5          Senate offices that I served in than you as a 

 6          judge would have ever had.  Literally 

 7          hundreds of people have asked.

 8                 We supported, I have supported, 

 9          through special grants, civil legal services 

10          in the Finger Lakes region.  I understand its 

11          importance.  However, Senator Bonacic, I 

12          think, stated it very clearly.  We believe 

13          we're your partner in the Legislature as we 

14          try to tackle these budget challenges.  The 

15          Judicial Pay Commission was a commission 

16          established by the Legislature because we 

17          believed there was a need to have judicial 

18          salaries increased.  And we look to be a 

19          partner with you in the court system in 

20          meeting the obligations established by the 

21          commission.  That's public policy.  We need 

22          to do that.

23                 At the same token, a major increase in 

24          the budget from one year to the next, 


                                                                  41

 1          21 percent, for albeit a very noble program, 

 2          just is not appropriate for this period of 

 3          time.  And that we look to see you develop 

 4          the creativity that we know you are likely to 

 5          have in solving this problem.  

 6                 And certainly we understand the time 

 7          frame, we understand the budgetary 

 8          restrictions.  I think logically, though, to 

 9          say it saves money for the state -- yes, it 

10          does, but if that was the case, then we 

11          should raise civil legal services to 

12          $100 million, we should increase the budget 

13          by 75 percent, 100 percent.  Because if we're 

14          going to have such a great savings, obviously 

15          more would be helpful.

16                 But that's not the reality.  And it's 

17          not a dollar-for-dollar savings.

18                 I want to hear from you, in your 

19          capacity as leader of the court system, what 

20          types of creative solutions are here.  Judge 

21          Lippman spent a lot of time discussing pro 

22          bono work, established requirements for pro 

23          bono services for attorneys to be admitted, 

24          for attorneys to continue in other services.  


                                                                  42

 1                 To achieve the objectives that this 

 2          body shares in supporting legal services, 

 3          yes, an increase could be appropriate.  Yes, 

 4          we need to be partners with you on the salary 

 5          increases that judges are receiving.  But 

 6          what are you doing to make civil legal 

 7          services more effective, efficient and 

 8          cost-effective for the taxpayer?

 9                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

10          Well, I think your points are well taken, 

11          particularly about Judge Prudenti, who was 

12          very creative, and had to be, when she served 

13          as chief administrative judge through some 

14          very difficult years.  

15                 And hopefully things have gotten 

16          better.  But, you know, I understand 

17          necessity can be the mother of invention.  

18          And when you're really pressed, you're forced 

19          to be creative.  And I can promise you that 

20          I'll do that as well.  I mean, I'll continue 

21          that trend.

22                 But, you know, in the end we -- our 

23          budget situation has been so challenging, you 

24          know, for so many years at this point.  I 


                                                                  43

 1          mean, we started back in 2011 with a 

 2          $170 million budget cut.  That was followed 

 3          by a flat budget the following year.  And of 

 4          course a flat budget is really a negative 

 5          budget because costs go up, they don't go 

 6          down.

 7                 The year after that was another flat 

 8          budget.  And the last two years we've 

 9          received, you know, very modest increases in 

10          the range of 2 percent -- which we greatly 

11          appreciate, and I'm not being ungrateful 

12          about that in the least, don't misunderstand 

13          me.  But at some point where costs have been 

14          going up and up and up, which is what they 

15          do, you can be creative only so much.  And, 

16          you know, you run out of ideas at some point.  

17                 So I can't sit here today and tell you 

18          about all the creative ideas that are in my 

19          head as to how we'll deal with this if we 

20          don't get additional money, because I'm very 

21          much hoping that we get additional money.  

22          I'm hoping that we can get your support about 

23          that.  

24                 But in the end, frankly, if we don't, 


                                                                  44

 1          we'll have to prepare for that eventuality 

 2          because that's certainly a possibility.  And, 

 3          you know, we will find a way to manage this 

 4          in one way or the other.  The courts will 

 5          remain open.  I'm not suggesting in any way 

 6          at all that we won't continue to keep 

 7          courthouses open and we won't be providing 

 8          justice to the people of this state.  But 

 9          we're going to have to be very, very 

10          creative, I agree with you.

11                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  And again, we are 

12          not trying to shirk the responsibilities of 

13          the Legislature one bit.  We believe strongly 

14          that the issues of judicial salary increases 

15          have to be met, can't totally be absorbed 

16          within the traditional court budget, judicial 

17          budget.

18                 But we look to these other 

19          expenditures as -- so expect you'll have 

20          advocates to help in that endeavor, but we 

21          want you to also find ways to help the 

22          taxpayers who are paying for these bills, to 

23          find creative ways to stretch, to cut, and to 

24          provide the services in less costly ways.


                                                                  45

 1                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  And 

 2          I appreciate that.  And I agree with you.

 3                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Thank you.  

 4                 And thank you, Madam Chairman.

 5                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, Senator.

 6                 But we've been joined by Senator Phil 

 7          Boyle and Senator Daniel Squadron.

 8                 CHAIRMAN FARRELL:  Mr. Montesano.

 9                 ASSEMBLYMAN MONTESANO:  Thank you, 

10          Mr. Chairman.  

11                 Good morning, Judge.

12                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

13          Good morning.

14                 ASSEMBLYMAN MONTESANO:  Judge, in your 

15          response to the different questions, and in 

16          comments you made, you know, what I'm 

17          concerned about is -- and I'll address the 

18          indigent legal services in a moment, for the 

19          civil part.  

20                 But, you know, as a practicing 

21          attorney, I get into the courts quite a bit 

22          in Nassau County, and I can't begin to tell 

23          you the decimation of our court system in 

24          Nassau County over the last several years.  


                                                                  46

 1          In our surrogate's court alone, we lost 

 2          approximately 35 operational staff, which 

 3          resulted in limited cashier hours, limited 

 4          record room access.  And some of those things 

 5          have cured a little bit down the line.  

 6                 In our Supreme Court, many parts are 

 7          down on a daily basis because there's no 

 8          court officers or clerks to staff them.  So 

 9          while we give this free indigent legal 

10          services in the civil parts, it's all well 

11          and good when the litigant comes in with the 

12          free attorney, but there's no courtroom to 

13          appear in.

14                 We have one clerk covering three 

15          parts.  So they run from one courtroom to the 

16          next, or they're handling three calendars at 

17          the same time.

18                 So when you indicated that a lot of 

19          these costs that OCA is incurring over the 

20          last several years has to do with personnel 

21          and salaries, when many of the -- and I'm not 

22          going to put myself in the middle of the 

23          contract negotiations.  But many of those 

24          unions that you're talking about, the court 


                                                                  47

 1          officers and clerks specifically, they've 

 2          gotten zero contracts over the last several 

 3          years.  So I don't understand where there's 

 4          an increase in salaries, because they haven't 

 5          gotten anything.

 6                 So -- yet there's a $15 million bump 

 7          in the free civil legal services.  So I'd 

 8          like to get an idea from you what's driven 

 9          that uptick --

10                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  I'm 

11          sorry, which what?

12                 ASSEMBLYMAN MONTESANO:  What is 

13          driving the uptick in the civil legal 

14          services to warrant another $15 million?

15                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

16          Well, just -- we don't have a contract with 

17          the Nassau court employees union, that's 

18          correct.  Unfortunately, we don't.  We would 

19          like to have a contract with them.  We have 

20          12 labor unions in the court system, and at 

21          the moment we have contracts with eight of 

22          the 12.  

23                 So with respect to the employees in 

24          those unions, they've received salary 


                                                                  48

 1          increases, modest salary increases over the 

 2          last couple of years.  And that's the reason 

 3          for our increasing salary costs.  It's the -- 

 4          we have contracts with two-thirds of our 

 5          unions, but not in Nassau, unfortunately.  

 6          And hopefully we will reach agreement with 

 7          them shortly.

 8                 But the -- yes, you know, what you're 

 9          describing in the courts in Nassau, there 

10          have been consequences of our reduced 

11          staffing levels.  And I'm sure you've 

12          accurately described some of those, you know, 

13          based on your firsthand experience.  

14                 And, you know, that's my concern, is 

15          that we -- and I think there have been 

16          improvements over the last year or two.  And 

17          I very much want to be able to continue that 

18          trend and be able to improve from year to 

19          year.  Which is why I'm very much arguing 

20          for, asking you and pleading with you to 

21          provide this additional money that I firmly 

22          believe we need to continue improvement and 

23          to mitigate some of the problems that you're 

24          describing in the courts in Nassau County, 


                                                                  49

 1          for example.

 2                 ASSEMBLYMAN MONTESANO:  And, Judge, 

 3          just to go in a different direction for a 

 4          second.  

 5                 The bail system, I know that a process 

 6          has been instituted -- I think it started in 

 7          the city -- that when bail is set on a 

 8          defendant, it can go to another judge of the 

 9          same court who's going to review the judge's 

10          bail.  Now, it just seems odd to me that a 

11          judge of the same jurisdiction and the same 

12          court is acting as an appellate review of a 

13          judge's bail.

14                 Legally, how did that come about?  

15                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  Let 

16          me explain it to you.  It's just in New York 

17          City, by the way, not in your district.

18                 There's a review -- if it's requested 

19          by the defendant or the defense counsel, 

20          there's a review, not to a judge of the same 

21          jurisdiction, but to a judge in the Supreme 

22          Court.  And this is for misdemeanor cases 

23          only, only the low-level offense.  And it's 

24          perfectly authorized under the law.  It's -- 


                                                                  50

 1          Section 530.30 of the Criminal Procedure Law, 

 2          if you take a look at it, gives the Supreme 

 3          Court the authority, upon an application by 

 4          the defendant, to review bail that was set by 

 5          the lower court judge.  So it was based on 

 6          that statutory authority.

 7                 ASSEMBLYMAN MONTESANO:  Thank you, 

 8          Judge.  

 9                 And just a last follow-up on my 

10          question before, can you give us just a quick 

11          overview of the justification for the 

12          $15 million increase on the indigent legal 

13          fund?  What's driven that uptick and that 

14          cost over the last year?  

15                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  The 

16          justification for it is it's the last 

17          installment of a five-, six-year plan to 

18          reach $100 million for civil legal services 

19          in this state.  Which, by the way, doesn't 

20          solve the problem of the justice gap.  There 

21          will still be multitudes of people who do not 

22          have lawyers and won't have lawyers.  But 

23          because of this money, for example, in this 

24          fiscal year there will be over 450,000 people 


                                                                  51

 1          who have lawyers because of the money that 

 2          we're providing.  

 3                 And this would be the very last 

 4          installment that will fulfill the goal that 

 5          was set five, six years ago to reach 

 6          $100 million for civil legal services.

 7                 And we were able to add money to it in 

 8          more difficult budget years, more difficult 

 9          fiscal years than this year.  So we feel that 

10          it's very important, it benefits hundreds of 

11          thousands of people who need help throughout 

12          the state.  It levels the playing field in 

13          the courts, and we feel it's very important.  

14          And that's why we're urging the Legislature 

15          to provide that funding.

16                 ASSEMBLYMAN MONTESANO:  Thank you, 

17          Judge.  Thank you, Chairman.

18                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, 

19          Assemblyman.

20                 Our next speaker is Senator Diane 

21          Savino.

22                 SENATOR SAVINO:  Thank you, Senator 

23          Young.

24                 Good morning, Judge Marks.


                                                                  52

 1                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

 2          Good morning.

 3                 SENATOR SAVINO:  I'm happy to see in 

 4          your testimony that you guys are actually 

 5          asking for more money.  If you recall, at 

 6          Judge DiFiore's nomination and her 

 7          confirmation on the Senate floor, I mentioned 

 8          the fact that she's inheriting a court system 

 9          that is overburdened in many ways and has 

10          suffered from a shortage of resources.  In 

11          fact, Sunday's New York Times detailed the 

12          long slog through the court system that it 

13          took one particular young man who was 

14          injured, and it took several months for cases 

15          to move that should have taken much less 

16          time.  So we know that our courts are 

17          overburdened.  

18                 But I have a question.  I know you've 

19          had several collective bargaining units in 

20          the court system.  Are all of them now 

21          settled?  Have you settled all their 

22          contracts?  

23                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  No.  

24          I was saying before we have 12 unions in the 


                                                                  53

 1          court system.  We have contracts with eight 

 2          of the 12, and we're eager to reach agreement 

 3          with the remaining four.

 4                 SENATOR SAVINO:  Do you feel that the 

 5          proposed budget by the Governor is sufficient 

 6          to meet the financial settlements of those 

 7          contracts?  

 8                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  It 

 9          would be very difficult.

10                 SENATOR SAVINO:  It would be very 

11          difficult.

12                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

13          Yes.  Yes.

14                 SENATOR SAVINO:  And in addition, 

15          there was a lawsuit brought against the 

16          courts by the Court Officers Association that 

17          triggered a hiring mandate.  From what I 

18          understand, there was supposed to be 350 

19          court officers hired; 150 have been actually 

20          accomplished, and there's another 200 

21          outstanding.  Is there sufficient money in 

22          your budget to meet that additional hiring?

23                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

24          Well, court officers -- you know, we're down, 


                                                                  54

 1          as I was saying before, 12 percent in our 

 2          workforce since 2009.  We have -- court 

 3          officers have been hit less hard.  At least 

 4          when you look at it today, statewide we're 

 5          about 6.2 percent fewer court officers than 

 6          we were in 2009, which is proportionally less 

 7          than some of the other titles.  And in 

 8          fact -- because, look, public safety, you 

 9          know, in the courts, there's really nothing 

10          more important than that.

11                 SENATOR SAVINO:  No doubt.

12                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

13          People who work in the courts, people who 

14          come into the courts have to be secure and 

15          safe.  And we would never compromise that.

16                 In fact, we're starting a court 

17          officer class in our academy, which when we 

18          hire court officers, they have to go through 

19          the academy, obviously.  There's a class of I 

20          think it's 150 recruits starting later this 

21          month.  Once they are deployed in the courts 

22          when they graduates from the academy, you 

23          know, later this year, we'll be down to maybe 

24          only 3 percent or so less -- 3 percent fewer 


                                                                  55

 1          court officers than we had in 2009.

 2                 So frankly, I'm less concerned about 

 3          the number of court officers.  Although it's 

 4          not perfect, and we do need more court 

 5          officers, particularly in some parts of the 

 6          state.  But I think we're in better shape 

 7          with regard to court officers than we are 

 8          with some of the other titles.

 9                 SENATOR SAVINO:  I'm glad to see you 

10          feel that way.  But again, there's certainly 

11          a shortage of court officers, court clerks, 

12          court stenographers, and basically 

13          courtrooms.  

14                 I spoke previously about the problem 

15          we have in Richmond County.  You know, the 

16          state created a separate judicial district 

17          for Staten Island, Richmond County, in 2007.  

18          To date, we have yet to receive the seven 

19          judges that we're entitled to.  We owe three 

20          to Brooklyn.  You know, we're entitled to 10 

21          judges for the County of Richmond.  We don't 

22          have them.  We have a brand-new courthouse 

23          that we outgrew already.  

24                 And this is not your problem.  I'm 


                                                                  56

 1          just saying this to make the point that while 

 2          the discussion today seems to be between 

 3          civil legal services and judges' salaries, I 

 4          think it goes beyond that.  We still have a 

 5          court system that is overburdened, 

 6          under-resourced, regardless of how we decide 

 7          whether you should get civil legal services 

 8          or whether judges should get a raise.

 9                 By the way, I think we should do both.  

10          But I think we also need to increase funding 

11          to the court system because we're not able 

12          to, in my opinion, deliver what Judge DeFiore 

13          says is most important to her, the speedy and 

14          efficient administration of justice. 

15                 So I would just hope that while we 

16          continue to listen to you today, people take 

17          into consideration it shouldn't be just civil 

18          legal services versus judges' salaries, it's 

19          how do we appropriately fund a court system 

20          so that we can meet that mandate of speedy 

21          and efficient administration of justice.  

22                 Thank you, Judge Marks.

23                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

24          Thank you.


                                                                  57

 1                 CHAIRMAN FARRELL:  Assemblyman Lentol, 

 2          Chairman Lentol.

 3                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  Thank you, 

 4          Mr. Chairman.  

 5                 And congratulations, Mr. Marks, for 

 6          your ascendency to this very good position --

 7                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

 8          Thank you.

 9                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  -- chief 

10          administrative judge.

11                 I guess I'm a little bit torn, because 

12          I know that having appeared in court and 

13          knowing judges like I do -- and even 

14          legislators like I do -- that none of us 

15          would like to see a wounded warrior not have 

16          a lawyer in court at the expense of my not 

17          getting a raise or a judge not getting a 

18          raise.  I would not like to see a homeless 

19          person who lost his home because of a bank 

20          who foreclosed on him illegally.

21                 And so I guess that I believe that, as 

22          Diane Savino said, that we surely have to do 

23          both.  But I certainly wouldn't advocate for 

24          taking money away from legal services and 


                                                                  58

 1          putting additional people out on the 

 2          streets -- and, since we're going to be in 

 3          Afghanistan for a while, not having legal 

 4          representation for the veterans of the United 

 5          States of America.

 6                 Actually, I wanted to ask you about 

 7          raising the age of criminal responsibility, 

 8          because the chief judge, as you know, has 

 9          created an adolescent diversion court part in 

10          the adult criminal court in nine counties 

11          dedicated exclusively to handling cases of 

12          16-and-17-year-olds.  And since the Governor 

13          has again talked about this in his State of 

14          the State, and it's in his budget, might you 

15          provide us with an update on the status and 

16          operation of these new adolescent diversion 

17          court parts?  

18                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

19          Well, they're continuing.  This was a program 

20          that was started by the prior chief judge, 

21          Judge Lippman, at the same time that he 

22          called for statutory reform, the Legislature 

23          raising the age of criminal responsibility.  

24          Which I think, as we all know, we're one of 


                                                                  59

 1          only two states in the country that sets the 

 2          age of criminal responsibility at 16.  

 3                 And so the adolescent diversion court 

 4          parts were a complement to the legislative 

 5          proposal.  The legislation is the ultimate 

 6          solution.  

 7                 But in the meantime, these are court 

 8          parts that were set up -- I think we have 11 

 9          of them now throughout the state.  They have 

10          been successful.  They're set up in 

11          cooperation with the district attorneys in 

12          those jurisdictions, who have been 

13          supportive.  They're a limited solution to 

14          the problem, I think it's fair to describe it 

15          that way.  They're mostly dealing with 

16          misdemeanors.  I think a few may deal with 

17          some -- a modest number of nonviolent 

18          felonies.  But they've been certainly 

19          successful.  We're continuing them.  There's 

20          been evaluations done, scholarly evaluations 

21          of the results of the adolescent diversion 

22          parts, and they've been shown to reduce 

23          recidivism for the 16-and-17-year-olds 

24          participating in the program.


                                                                  60

 1                 So it's been a successful program, but 

 2          it's somewhat of a limited program.  And we 

 3          feel and certainly the new chief judge feels 

 4          that way, that the ultimate solution is to 

 5          statutorily raise the age of criminal 

 6          responsibility in New York.

 7                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  Now, both the 

 8          Assembly and the Executive proposals talk 

 9          about a large amount of cases being shifted 

10          from the criminal part to the Family Court.  

11          And since we're talking about the lack of 

12          resources for all the court system, I'm 

13          wondering if you believe the necessary 

14          resources are available to implement that.

15                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

16          Yeah, the -- we've taken the position we 

17          could accommodate the -- there would be more 

18          cases in Family Court.  So there wouldn't be 

19          more cases overall in the court system, there 

20          would be a shift of some cases that are now 

21          in the criminal courts to the Family Court.  

22          And Family Court certainly has challenges -- 

23          I'm not going to suggest otherwise -- but 

24          Family Court does have 25 new judges.  Thanks 


                                                                  61

 1          to the support of the Legislature, we have 25 

 2          additional judges in Family Court around the 

 3          state.  

 4                 So the other thing is when Judge 

 5          Lippman --

 6                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  Has that helped, 

 7          the 25 additional Family Court judges?

 8                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

 9          Absolutely.  Yeah, it absolutely helps.  We 

10          are very happy that the Legislature approved 

11          that two years ago.  

12                 But the number of 16-and-17-year-olds 

13          who have been arrested, that number has 

14          plummeted over the last half dozen years or 

15          so.  It's a fraction of what it once was.  

16                 So there might be a need for some 

17          additional resources in Family Court, but my 

18          sense is that it would not be draconian.  So 

19          it would be a problem that we would cope 

20          with.  And if the legislation passed, I think 

21          under all the proposals -- I know this about 

22          the Governor's proposal -- the effective date 

23          would not be for, you know, a year and a half 

24          down the road, so there would be time to 


                                                                  62

 1          prepare for it.  There might be some modest 

 2          additional expense in costs for the court, 

 3          but we feel -- and, you know, we've thought 

 4          about this a great deal over recent years -- 

 5          that we would be able to handle that.  And -- 

 6          it would be a good problem to have, in other 

 7          words.  You know, we view it that way.

 8                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  Thank you very 

 9          much.

10                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Next is Senator Ruth 

11          Hassell-Thompson, ranker on Judiciary.  We're 

12          going to make a chair trade.

13                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Thank you, 

14          Madam Chair.  

15                 Good morning, Judge.

16                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

17          Good morning.

18                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  I just have 

19          a couple of questions.  I understand that 

20          most of the questions that I had wanted to 

21          pose have already been asked of you, so I 

22          won't be redundant.  

23                 But I would like to just ask, are you 

24          committed to the bail reform process that was 


                                                                  63

 1          begun by Chief Judge Lippman last year?  And 

 2          how soon do you think, if you're committed, 

 3          that that would roll out?

 4                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

 5          Well, the bail reform process has mostly been 

 6          put in place.  The new Chief Judge supports 

 7          it.  We're going to continue that.  We feel 

 8          that there are a number of people who are not 

 9          a threat to anyone -- you know, people who 

10          don't have a history of violence, who are 

11          detained pending the outcome of the 

12          disposition of their case simply because they 

13          can't afford to make bail.  

14                 There are a lot of alternatives that 

15          we feel that judges could be using to avoid 

16          that situation.  We're trying to encourage 

17          judges -- in the end, it's a judge's 

18          decision, an individual judge's discretion on 

19          whether to set bail or not and how much.  But 

20          we are trying to be supportive of judges and 

21          to provide them with sufficient resources and 

22          alternative resources so that people -- look, 

23          some people, you know, should be detained who 

24          clearly are a threat to society, a threat of 


                                                                  64

 1          committing further violence, but many people 

 2          are not.  And they're sitting in jail 

 3          awaiting the disposition of their case simply 

 4          because they don't have the means to make 

 5          bail, and that's a problem that we're trying 

 6          address.

 7                 There's also a statutory solution 

 8          which has been proposed, and I think we'll 

 9          pursue that as well.  And I think that the 

10          new Chief Judge will want to pursue that as 

11          well.

12                 But this is a problem that we're 

13          committed to addressing and committed to 

14          trying to resolve it as best we can.

15                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  What have 

16          been some of the barriers to getting it 

17          resolved?

18                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

19          Statutorily?  The proposal that we sent to 

20          the Legislature a couple of years ago would 

21          address, number one, the fact that in 

22          New York -- and it's almost kind of 

23          completely upside down, if you think about 

24          it.  In New York, judges are not permitted to 


                                                                  65

 1          take risk to public safety into account when 

 2          they make a bail determination, which doesn't 

 3          seem to make any sense.  We're one of only a 

 4          few states that prohibits judges from taking 

 5          that into account.  

 6                 Judges should be able to take that 

 7          into account, so that if there is someone 

 8          with a real propensity for violence before 

 9          them, that that should be a factor that the 

10          judge should consider in setting bail.

11                 But on the other hand, we feel that 

12          where someone does not present a risk of 

13          violence and does not present a risk of 

14          failing to return to court if they're 

15          released, that there should be a presumption 

16          of release without bail.

17                 So it sort of addresses two kind of 

18          different but in some ways related problems 

19          that we feel, you know, the Legislature 

20          should take a careful look at.  And both of 

21          those problems could be resolved, we feel, in 

22          the bill that we presented to the 

23          Legislature.  

24                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  I'm 


                                                                  66

 1          confused.  I'm confused because if you're 

 2          saying the bail happens before the case goes 

 3          to trial, there still is a presumption of 

 4          innocence.  So where -- the argument that 

 5          you're raising confuses me tremendously.

 6                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

 7          Well, look, there are people who have a 

 8          history of interaction with the criminal 

 9          justice system, have had prior cases and have 

10          a history of having been released pending the 

11          disposition of their case and not returning 

12          to court.  And bench warrants get issued.  

13          And, you know, that's a real problem for the 

14          courts, it's a real problem for society when 

15          people have a criminal charge against them -- 

16          presumed innocent, you're absolutely 

17          correct -- but have a history of not 

18          returning to court when they've had a 

19          criminal case.

20                 So bail, we feel, in those instances 

21          is entirely appropriate, when there's a 

22          history of not returning to court when they 

23          should be doing that.

24                 We also feel -- and this is the law in 


                                                                  67

 1          the vast majority of states in the country -- 

 2          that in making a bail determination a judge 

 3          should be able to take into account whether 

 4          the person before them is a violent person 

 5          and may, if released, commit a further act of 

 6          violence.  To us, that seems like a very 

 7          commonsense approach and an approach that 

 8          should be reflected in the bail statutes in 

 9          New York.

10                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Thank you.  

11                 Just to go back for a minute to the 

12          explanation that you were giving on the 

13          implementation of Raise the Age.  Answer for 

14          me again, how many new parts and attorneys 

15          will OCA need in order to fully implement -- 

16          I know you have -- you know, the 

17          implementation is not going to occur in '16.  

18          But we're also looking at you absorbing a 

19          tremendous deficit this year in terms of the 

20          new judges that have come on, and judge 

21          raises and a lot of other issues.  I would 

22          not like to see any of these issues become a 

23          barrier to us implementing this program as we 

24          move out.  


                                                                  68

 1                 So what would the numbers mean given 

 2          the financial straits that you find OCA in at 

 3          this moment?  

 4                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

 5          Frankly, I don't think we would need 

 6          additional resources to accommodate a 

 7          statutory raise of the age of criminal 

 8          responsibility.  I think we could accommodate 

 9          the -- again, it wouldn't create more cases 

10          in the court system, it would move certain 

11          cases from one court to another court.

12                 So, you know, we have flexibility in 

13          reassigning judges from one court to another 

14          court.  We have flexibility in reassigning 

15          court staff -- the court officers, court 

16          clerks and the like -- from one court to 

17          another court.

18                 If you combine that with the 25 

19          additional Family Court judgeships that we 

20          have now and the fact that the rest of 

21          16-and-17-year-olds, you know, are much lower 

22          than they were a few years ago, we feel that 

23          we could accommodate this change -- which, 

24          again, would not be more cases, it would be 


                                                                  69

 1          moving cases from one court to another.  We 

 2          feel we can accommodate that with what we 

 3          have.

 4                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Is it not 

 5          true that when you took the last budget cut 

 6          that you lost close to 2,000 employees across 

 7          the spectrum?  So I'm --

 8                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

 9          Yes.  But we're dealing with -- it's the same 

10          number of cases.  Raise the Age doesn't 

11          necessarily reduce the number of cases, 

12          although it can.  It could lead to more 

13          diversion of cases out of the courts and 16- 

14          and 17-year-olds going into programs.  You 

15          know, rather than having their cases go 

16          through the court system.  

17                 But we're not expanding the number of 

18          cases, we're merely moving them from one 

19          court to another.  We feel a court that -- 

20          cases can be better served and can be better 

21          handled in the Family Court than in the 

22          criminal courts.  So given that and given our 

23          flexibility to move judges around and our 

24          flexibility to move court employees around, 


                                                                  70

 1          since this wouldn't be more cases for the 

 2          court system, it would be the same number of 

 3          cases or maybe even fewer cases, that we 

 4          could accommodate them.

 5                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Okay, my 

 6          time is going to run out.  But I guess the 

 7          crux of the question for me is we've given 

 8          you 20 new judges, but do you have the court 

 9          support staff for those 20 judges in the 

10          numbers given the cuts that you've taken?

11                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

12          Yes.

13                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  And I think 

14          that's the basis of my question, because 

15          these are Family Court judges.

16                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  We 

17          have sufficient staff for the new Family 

18          Court judges, yes, we do.

19                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Thank you, 

20          Judge.

21                 Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

22                 CHAIRMAN FARRELL:  Thank you.

23                 Next, Assemblyman Graf.

24                 ASSEMBLYMAN GRAF:  Hi, Judge, how are 


                                                                  71

 1          you?

 2                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

 3          Good morning.

 4                 ASSEMBLYMAN GRAF:  Now, you have one 

 5          program where at arraignments everyone gets 

 6          assigned an attorney.  Right?  And even if 

 7          the person is making $200,000, $300,000 -- or 

 8          no matter what he makes, right, they get 

 9          assigned an attorney at arraignment.  How 

10          much is that costing us?

11                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

12          People making $200,000, $300,000 a year are 

13          getting attorneys at arraignments?  I can't 

14          tell you that that's never happened, but I 

15          can honestly say I don't believe that's a 

16          major problem in the court system.  

17                 ASSEMBLYMAN GRAF:  Well, that's what 

18          happening.  In Suffolk County they have 

19          assigned attorneys, okay, that sit in the 

20          courtroom.  And if somebody doesn't have an 

21          attorney, and it doesn't matter what they 

22          make, for arraignment they're getting an 

23          attorney.  

24                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  :  


                                                                  72

 1          Yeah, I think that attorneys staff the 

 2          arraignment parts in places like Suffolk 

 3          County.  And, you know, the courts are under 

 4          a very strict mandate from the Court of 

 5          Appeals that people have to be arraigned 

 6          within 24 hours of their arrest.  So if 

 7          someone is arrested, is brought by the police 

 8          to the courthouse, is brought to the 

 9          courtroom to be arraigned and there's a 

10          lawyer assigned to that arraignment part, 

11          yes, that could happen, that somebody who 

12          otherwise could afford a lawyer would have 

13          the services of that lawyer for the very 

14          brief arraignment proceeding.

15                 ASSEMBLYMAN GRAF:  Well, they have --

16                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  But 

17          they would not receive a free lawyer for the 

18          pendency of the case.

19                 ASSEMBLYMAN GRAF:  If I can, Judge.  

20          You have Legal Aid assigned to the courtroom, 

21          but there are income requirements.  All 

22          right?  So anyone that doesn't meet the 

23          income requirement in Suffolk County, right, 

24          who cannot be assigned Legal Aid is being 


                                                                  73

 1          assigned almost like an 18-B attorney.  All 

 2          right?  Even if they're making $200,000 a 

 3          year, if they're being arraigned.  

 4                 That money -- and I'm looking -- could 

 5          be better used, all right, to staff court 

 6          personnel.  Because let me explain what's 

 7          happening.  It takes me, in Suffolk County in 

 8          district court, up to three and a half years 

 9          to get a hearing.  I just did a trial on a 

10          misdemeanor.  It took me five years, five 

11          years, to get a jury trial.

12                 And what's happening is we've come to 

13          a point where we've cut the court staff so 

14          much in an attempt to save money that it's 

15          actually costing us money.

16                 So what's happening in Suffolk 

17          County -- and I don't know about the rest of 

18          the state, because that's mainly where I 

19          practice -- is if somebody has to be taken 

20          into custody, the entire courtroom shuts 

21          down.  That slows down the entire process, 

22          right, and leads to court congestion.

23                 There are times where they have to 

24          bring a person from custody up to the 


                                                                  74

 1          courtroom.  That takes forever, because they 

 2          have limited personnel to bring that person 

 3          to the courtroom.  There have been times in 

 4          Suffolk County where you have an individual 

 5          who's in custody and it's so hard to get that 

 6          person into the courtroom that where there 

 7          would have been disposition in the case and 

 8          that person would have been released that 

 9          day, they wind up getting adjourned for two 

10          weeks, so they spend more time in custody.

11                 So what I'm saying to you -- you know, 

12          and I'm just looking at all the things that 

13          you've been forced to do because of budget 

14          constraints.  And I'm not picking -- I'm 

15          saying we need more money for court officers, 

16          we need more money for court clerks, because 

17          we're at a crisis point where the safety of 

18          the personnel in the courtroom are in 

19          jeopardy.  The safety of the people appearing 

20          in the court is now in jeopardy because of 

21          the lack of court officers.  The 

22          courtrooms are not functioning properly 

23          because of the lack of personnel.

24                 And I mean you have gotten creative, 


                                                                  75

 1          and I'm not blaming the judges and I'm not 

 2          blaming the administration, I'm blaming us 

 3          for not looking at the problems here and 

 4          identifying these problems and making sure 

 5          that we're not stepping over a dollar to pick 

 6          up a dime, which is what I think we're doing 

 7          here.

 8                 You've seen the slowdowns in the 

 9          courtroom.  You know, you watch the 

10          calendars.  So, I mean, do you agree with the 

11          fact that we've gotten to the point where 

12          it's actually costing us money because it's 

13          slowing down the process?  

14                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

15          Yeah.  No, I think there are delays in cases 

16          throughout the court system.

17                 But I have to tell you, if it's taking 

18          five years to get a misdemeanor trial in 

19          Suffolk County, that is absolutely 

20          unconscionable.  And I will -- I can promise 

21          you I will look into that today, this 

22          afternoon, because that's -- that's 

23          unconscionable in a --

24                 ASSEMBLYMAN GRAF:  Judge, half the 


                                                                  76

 1          other problem, if you want to relieve the 

 2          congestion, is the 30.30 statute doesn't 

 3          exist in New York State.  Okay?  Because all 

 4          we get is it's always court time, it's always 

 5          court time.  That's nonsense.  They're 

 6          denying clients' rights to a speedy trial.

 7                 And I look at the appellate decisions, 

 8          and never, never is there a decision on 

 9          30.30, for the most part.  So it's like --

10                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  The 

11          30.30 is -- I agree with you, it's a 

12          misnomer.  It's never been an effective 

13          speedy trial statute.  It is not effective in 

14          moving cases to trial.  I agree with you 

15          completely on that.

16                 ASSEMBLYMAN GRAF:  Well, year after 

17          year I keep saying that we have to do 

18          something with this.  You know, it's 

19          nonsense, when I sit there -- and I've been 

20          in front of judges and I'm ready for trial, 

21          I'm ready for a hearing, and the judge goes, 

22          "Well, we can't do a trial today."  I say, 

23          "Well, send me to another courtroom."  Okay?  

24          And I get court time.  And then if I do an 


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 1          appeal, it's never decided on 30.30.  

 2                 So basically we're ignoring the 

 3          Constitution in the State of New York, and 

 4          that's causing court congestion.

 5                 So, I mean, I have a lot of problems 

 6          with what's going on in our courtrooms, 

 7          especially with the staffing requirements.  

 8          All right?  And I do think that we're 

 9          stepping over a dollar to pick up a dime 

10          here, and by not funding especially 

11          correction officers and clerks and everything 

12          else, right, it's actually costing us money.

13                 The last thing is the recording 

14          devices that we have for transcripts, it's 

15          not the same as a person that is actually 

16          taking it down, a court reporter.  Because 

17          when we get that back, there's nothing but 

18          errors and everything else in the time 

19          period.

20                 So I would say, you know, we need to 

21          fund court personnel.  If you really want to 

22          save money, we need to hire more court 

23          personnel.

24                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  I 


                                                                  78

 1          agree with you.

 2                 CHAIRMAN FARRELL:  Thank you.

 3                 Senator.

 4                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  Our 

 5          next speaker is Senator Dan Squadron.

 6                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Thank you very 

 7          much, Madam Chair, and the committee.  It's 

 8          good timing, and I want to pick up right 

 9          where Assemblymember Graf left off, with I 

10          think you referred to it as the nonexistent 

11          30.30 statute.  In fact, we might be better 

12          off with none than with this.  

13                 The current 30.30 statute was written 

14          in order to keep the federal government from 

15          coming into New York State in the early '70s, 

16          signed by Governor Rockefeller, in 

17          contradiction to a report from the court on 

18          how to actually fix our speedy trial statute, 

19          at a time when court congestion wasn't as bad 

20          as it is today.

21                 I appreciate your testimony.  I 

22          understand that the Commission on Judicial 

23          Pay ties your hands a little bit.  But I do 

24          want to say when we have the kind of delay 


                                                                  79

 1          and backup that we see, when we have the kind 

 2          of violation of the accused's constitutional 

 3          rights, the kind of cost and pain suffered by 

 4          victims from the sort of court delay that we 

 5          have, I really urge -- and I've done the same 

 6          thing to the incoming chief judge -- an 

 7          aggressive look at a crisis of court delay, a 

 8          crisis of constitutional rights to a speedy 

 9          trial being absolutely ignored in New York 

10          State.  In fact, the statute to protect them 

11          is used to damage them.  

12                 In my home borough of Brooklyn, we're 

13          up 26 percent on court delays in 2015.  In 

14          2013 in New York City, 594 days citywide mean 

15          age at disposition.  Five hundred ninety-four 

16          is almost two years.  It's 732 days in the 

17          Bronx.  In 2012, 55 percent of felony cases 

18          in New York City were pending for more than 

19          six months.  That is a crisis.

20                 In fact, the Advisory Committee on 

21          Criminal Law and procedure gave a report to 

22          you last year that said most would agree -- 

23          as you have already, which I really 

24          appreciate -- that 30.30 has been largely 


                                                                  80

 1          unsuccessful in moving criminal trials in an 

 2          expeditious fashion.

 3                 It also says the problem is more than 

 4          just a lack of sufficient judicial resources.  

 5          It also involves a willingness to go to 

 6          trial.

 7                 You said, in response to Senator 

 8          Hassell-Thompson, that people are sitting in 

 9          jail because they can't make bail.  I would 

10          amend that.  They're sitting in jail because 

11          they can't make bail and because of the kind 

12          of court delays we have.

13                 I carry a bill to fix this named for 

14          Kalief Browder, who spent more than a 

15          thousand days in jail before having his case 

16          dismissed.  Tragically, he committed suicide 

17          last year.  

18                 What's the solution?  How are we going 

19          to do it together this year?

20                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

21          Well, I think the -- these are all real 

22          problems that you've discussed, and the 

23          solution is -- and I think the new chief 

24          judge is very interested in this problem, and 


                                                                  81

 1          I think you'll be hearing more from her 

 2          shortly about this.  But I think she wants to 

 3          address and focus her attention on this.  

 4                 And this has to be a priority.  It 

 5          will be a priority.  But I think the ultimate 

 6          solution -- you know, the criminal justice 

 7          system has many components and obviously the 

 8          court system is a central component within 

 9          the criminal justice system.  But to 

10          eliminate some of these problems, address 

11          these delays, streamline the process, we have 

12          to work together with the other components of 

13          the criminal justice system.  There's a lot 

14          that we can do ourselves, that the judiciary 

15          can do, but we can't do it all.  And we need 

16          to work with law enforcement, with the 

17          defense bar, with the institutional criminal 

18          defense providers, with probation 

19          departments.  I mean, we need to work 

20          together with all the components of the 

21          criminal justice system to solve these 

22          problems.  That's the only way to do it.

23                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  And just explain to 

24          me the role of the court system and then the 


                                                                  82

 1          role of the other partners you just 

 2          described.

 3                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

 4          It's -- we have a major role, maybe the 

 5          critical role in --

 6                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  And what is that 

 7          role?  Just sort of more specifically.

 8                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

 9          Well, in the end, it's the judge that can 

10          move the case to trial.  I mean, the parties 

11          have to be ready, but if there's delay or 

12          lack of readiness, if there are excuses, in 

13          the end it's the judge that has to ensure 

14          that there's a quick resolution and an 

15          expeditious resolution of the case.

16                 So first and foremost and ultimately, 

17          the responsibility is with the court system 

18          and with judges.

19                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Let me just ask 

20          this question directly.  If court congestion 

21          didn't stop the clock, wouldn't that move 

22          trials a lot more quickly?

23                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  If 

24          court congestion --


                                                                  83

 1                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  If court congestion 

 2          wasn't a reason to stop the speedy trial 

 3          clock, wouldn't that move trials much more 

 4          quickly?

 5                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

 6          Absolutely.

 7                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Is that something 

 8          you support?

 9                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  Is 

10          that what?

11                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Something you 

12          support --

13                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  Oh, 

14          sure.

15                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  -- allowing the 

16          clock to run for the entire time between 

17          trial or hearing dates even if it's court 

18          congestion that's leading to the delay?

19                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  You 

20          mean if court congestion is the reason for 

21          the delay --

22                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  The prosecutor asks 

23          for a week and gets a date three weeks hence.  

24          Is that seven days or is that 21 days?  


                                                                  84

 1                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

 2          Under the speedy trial statute?

 3                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Currently it's 

 4          seven.  If it were 21, I think that would be 

 5          the beginning of solving this problem.  I'm 

 6          asking, is that something that the courts --

 7                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

 8          Look, a more effective speedy trial statute 

 9          could make a great contribution to 

10          eliminating delays in criminal cases, no 

11          question.

12                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  So it sounds like 

13          you also agree that we don't need more money 

14          before we talk about fixing speedy trial -- 

15          we should fix 30.30 and then next year we'll 

16          talk about the money that we need to make 

17          that work.  Is that the right order of 

18          operations?

19                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  I 

20          think there are a lot of things we can do 

21          without more money.  

22                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Thank you very 

23          much.  I really appreciate it.

24                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  


                                                                  85

 1          Thank you.  

 2                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  We have been joined 

 3          by Senator Velmanette Montgomery.

 4                 Assembly?  

 5                 ASSEMBLYMAN OAKS:  We've also been 

 6          joined by Assemblywoman Duprey.

 7                 CHAIRMAN FARRELL:  Any questions on 

 8          this side?  Oh.  Danny O'Donnell.

 9                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Well, it's 

10          been a rough morning for me, Judge.

11                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

12          It's part of the job.

13                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Senator 

14          Nozzolio suggested $100 million for legal 

15          services; I almost passed out.  And I agree 

16          with Al Graf, so that's really quite a 

17          morning for me.

18                 (Laughter.)

19                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  I had chosen 

20          not to speak, because I would like to go home 

21          sometime in my lifetime today, so -- but 

22          there's a couple of things I want to raise.  

23                 One is I want to say that I 

24          100 percent agree with Senator Squadron.  And 


                                                                  86

 1          just so you know, I was a full-time public 

 2          defender from 1987 to 1995.  And at the 

 3          beginning of that time, if a DA came into the 

 4          courtroom and said, "Your Honor, my key 

 5          witness is in Florida, and I'll be ready 

 6          tomorrow," and the case was adjourned for a 

 7          month, the judge charged that whole month to 

 8          the people on the running of the clock.  

 9                 So now there's an absolute 

10          manipulation of that, where they say "But 

11          I'll be ready tomorrow," and then they 

12          adjourn the case for two months and only 

13          charge one day to the people.  With all due 

14          respect, sir, that's the judge's fault.  The 

15          judge doesn't have to do that.  The judge 

16          could say "Well, you're not ready today, 

17          you're not ready."  

18                 And in the time that I worked there, 

19          it went from when you could expect some 

20          attempt to try a case within the speedy trial 

21          limits to a point where it could never ever 

22          happen.  Which leads me to my statement about 

23          bail.

24                 We have too many people in jail 


                                                                  87

 1          awaiting trial on bail.  So isn't it true a 

 2          judge is allowed to take into consideration, 

 3          in setting the bail, the nature of the crime?

 4                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

 5          Yes.

 6                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Aren't they 

 7          allowed to take into consideration the facts 

 8          that they're aware of about the crime?  

 9                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

10          Yes.

11                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Aren't they 

12          allowed to take into effect any history of 

13          coming or not coming to court?  

14                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

15          Absolutely.

16                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Aren't they 

17          allowed to take into effect family ties, 

18          community ties and other things determined by 

19          the criminal justice system?  

20                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

21          You've read the statute recently, I guess.

22                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  No, I haven't, 

23          I'm just pretty smart about this.  

24                 So my question for you is, how many 


                                                                  88

 1          people are you aware of that have been 

 2          accused of murder who have never been accused 

 3          before who get released on bail?

 4                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  I 

 5          couldn't say on that --

 6                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  I would like 

 7          someone -- one of the minions that work for 

 8          you -- to tell me what the answer to that 

 9          question is.  Because the answer, in my 

10          opinion, is almost nobody -- except if you're 

11          white and rich, but that's not your fault.  

12          Almost no one.  

13                 So if in fact almost no one is 

14          released when they're charged with murder, 

15          then what that means is in effect the system 

16          is taking into account what the risk might be 

17          to society to let them out, and we don't need 

18          to change the bail statute to give more 

19          people reasons to keep more people in jail.

20                 We need to change the bail statute so 

21          that we're not having people sit in places 

22          like Rikers island for years -- years -- 

23          before they can assert their constitutional 

24          right to the presumption of innocence.


                                                                  89

 1                 And I think the judiciary needs to 

 2          take a better role and look at this and not 

 3          advocate for changing it to make the bail 

 4          statute even harder on people who don't have 

 5          resources.

 6                 Thank you, sir.

 7                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

 8          Thank you.

 9                 CHAIRMAN FARRELL:  Thank you.  

10                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.

11                 Senator Liz Krueger.

12                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Thank you.  I also 

13          wasn't planning to ask too many questions 

14          because so many of us are here today.  

15                 But just going back to civil legal 

16          services, even though there has been the 

17          growth in money available, can you tell me 

18          how many people have to go to a court 

19          situation without an attorney in the civil 

20          system?

21                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

22          It's still about -- although there's been 

23          great improvement with that problem, there's 

24          still a great majority of the people in civil 


                                                                  90

 1          cases who can't afford a lawyer, still don't 

 2          have a lawyer.  It's as much as 70 percent.

 3                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  And someone gave me 

 4          the number that we were at 2.3 million cases 

 5          without attorneys, and we're down to 

 6          1.8 million.  Does that seem a realistic 

 7          number to you of the number of people who 

 8          don't have attorneys for civil cases?  

 9                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  I 

10          know -- it's very difficult to kind of 

11          document this.  But I think that sounds 

12          correct, if I recall.  I know that the 

13          estimates are that over the last five, six 

14          years, the percentage of people in civil 

15          cases who can't afford an attorney who have 

16          an attorney has gone from 20 percent to 

17          30 percent, which is actually a 50 percent 

18          increase, if my math is correct.  

19                 But obviously that still leaves the 

20          great majority of people without a lawyer.  

21          So it's -- it's an ongoing problem.  This 

22          additional money has made, you know, an 

23          enormous difference in the lives of the 

24          people who do have lawyers because of it, and 


                                                                  91

 1          it's hundreds of thousands of cases a year 

 2          where people now have lawyers because of this 

 3          money.  But it's a gargantuan problem, no 

 4          question.

 5                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  I certainly -- I 

 6          represent a part of Manhattan Island, and I 

 7          certainly can verify that the difficulty in 

 8          finding somebody -- representation in endless 

 9          numbers of civil cases for disproportionately 

10          the elderly, the disabled, tenants -- and 

11          again, the biggest issue I see in the 

12          problems here are that in a civil case where 

13          it's not you versus the government, it's you 

14          against someone, the someone else always has 

15          an attorney.  And so the unfairness of going 

16          through the court process to me seems fairly 

17          extreme.

18                 So, you know, for the record, we can't 

19          support reducing funding for civil legal 

20          services.  We have to continue our commitment 

21          that was a multiyear commitment to expanding 

22          funds for civil legal services.

23                 Thank you.

24                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  


                                                                  92

 1          Thank you.

 2                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, Senator.

 3                 CHAIRMAN FARRELL:  Assemblywoman 

 4          Peoples-Stokes.

 5                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  Thank 

 6          you.  Thank you, Mr. Chairman.  

 7                 Judge, I appreciated hearing all your 

 8          comments today, and I actually appreciated 

 9          hearing the questions and responses from my 

10          colleagues.  But I just have one really quick 

11          point I want to raise, and hopefully you're 

12          able to give me that number today.  And, if 

13          not, I can look forward to receiving it soon.

14                 What is the total number of staff on 

15          the Office of Court Administration?  And what 

16          is the total number of counsel on civil legal 

17          services?  And what are the diversity numbers 

18          there?

19                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  I'm 

20          sorry, I don't have that with me.  But I'll 

21          absolutely get you those numbers.  We have 

22          them.  And we'll get them to you.

23                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  The 

24          numbers and the diversity.


                                                                  93

 1                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

 2          Yes.

 3                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  Thank 

 4          you, sir.

 5                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.

 6                 Senator Marty Golden.

 7                 SENATOR GOLDEN:  Thank you very much, 

 8          Madam Chair.  

 9                 I have to believe judges should have 

10          the discretion to set bail and the ability of 

11          the defendant to return to court and also set 

12          the risk assessment of the violence.  And I 

13          think you're doing an outstanding job.  And I 

14          do believe that we have to help you correct 

15          the imbalance in the system in putting more 

16          dollars made available so we can have more 

17          judges and more employees to be able to move 

18          these cases through the system.

19                 Real quick question.  I'm also the 

20          chair of the Public Employees, and I had them 

21          up in my office about a month ago.  And I 

22          thought I heard 14 percent they're down, and 

23          that's different from the number that you've 

24          given.


                                                                  94

 1                 The court officers across the State of 

 2          New York are 14 percent off from where they 

 3          were in 2009?

 4                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

 5          That -- could you repeat that?  I'm sorry.

 6                 SENATOR GOLDEN:  The number of court 

 7          officers presently are down 14 percent from 

 8          the number in 2009 that I have.

 9                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

10          It's 6 percent.  But depending on who came to 

11          you, they might have been talking about a 

12          particular court or type of court.

13                 SENATOR GOLDEN:  That was statewide.

14                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

15          Statewide it's 6 percent.  I'll show you the 

16          numbers.

17                 SENATOR GOLDEN:  If you could get 

18          those numbers for me, I'd appreciate it.

19                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  I 

20          will.

21                 SENATOR GOLDEN:  Thank you, 

22          Your Honor.

23                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS: 

24          Thank you.  


                                                                  95

 1                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, Senator.

 2                 CHAIRMAN FARRELL:  That's it.

 3                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Okay.  Senator 

 4          Velmanette Montgomery.

 5                 SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Thank you, Madam 

 6          Chair.  

 7                 Judge, good morning.

 8                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

 9          Good morning.

10                 SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  I just have one 

11          question that I would like to ask.  You are 

12          familiar with the Center for Court 

13          Innovation?

14                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

15          Yes.

16                 SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  And one of the 

17          issues or one of the sort of experimental, if 

18          you will, I guess we can say, courts that 

19          they have come up with and have been actually 

20          put into action by -- under the auspices of 

21          Chief Justices Kaye and Lippman, and I hope 

22          that we're looking to make that a permanent 

23          and central part of our court system, and 

24          that is the youth courts.


                                                                  96

 1                 So I'm not -- I'm not -- I don't 

 2          understand and I don't know how you view 

 3          that.  It has worked so beautifully in one of 

 4          the community courts in my district.  And all 

 5          of the information that I have in those areas 

 6          other than the Red Hook Youth Court, which is 

 7          in my district, have really benefited young 

 8          people extremely well.  

 9                 It's also an opportunity to teach 

10          young people how the system works, to give 

11          them an opportunity to develop some skill and 

12          some understanding of the system because they 

13          play the roles of all of the different 

14          components of the court.  And so it keeps 

15          young people out of the system, but it also 

16          acts as an extremely important leadership 

17          development program.  

18                 So I'm wondering what you think about 

19          it and if we can look forward to continuing 

20          to support that court and make it more 

21          central to what we do as it relates to young 

22          people in our state.

23                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

24          Yeah, the youth courts are terrific.  And, 


                                                                  97

 1          you know, we have them in Brooklyn, we have 

 2          them in places all over the state.  They're 

 3          supported by defense attorneys offices where 

 4          we have them.  And, you know, they're a 

 5          terrific idea.  You find them in other states 

 6          around the country, not just New York.  And 

 7          we're totally committed to continuing to 

 8          support them.

 9                 SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Thank you.

10                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, Senator.

11                 Senator Michael Nozzolio.

12                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Thank you again, 

13          Madam Chair.  

14                 Judge, coming to the issue of bail, 

15          that Judge Lippman drafted a bill but because 

16          Judge Lippman is not a member of the 

17          Legislature, I as chair of the Codes 

18          Committee, as a professional courtesy, 

19          introduced his legislation.  It's been 

20          pending before the Codes Committee for a 

21          number of months.  

22                 And I'd like to have your reaction to 

23          a comment made that says the reform of the 

24          so-called broken jail system, Judge Lippman's 


                                                                  98

 1          bill, insults judges, overlooks that bail 

 2          review is available presently, fails to 

 3          provide a complete record of bail release 

 4          decisions, and intrudes on the judiciary's 

 5          independence.

 6                 Now, that's not by a member of the 

 7          Legislature, that's by a co-Supreme Court 

 8          judge, Judge McLaughlin in the City of 

 9          New York, who indicated that these provisions 

10          would establish what he called a two-tier 

11          system of justice where you'd see an 

12          automatic judicial review triggered when a 

13          defendant is unable to make bail.  

14                 Now, that means, to me, that we'd have 

15          50,000 appeals automatically.  And you were 

16          talking about clogging the system earlier, 

17          the demands on the budget.  Certainly I know 

18          those have to be weighed.  We're seeking 

19          justice here.  But from a logistical 

20          standpoint -- and I think it would be very 

21          fair for you to be able to comment publicly 

22          on Judge McLaughlin's public opposition to 

23          the legislation.

24                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  


                                                                  99

 1          Well, I have to say I strongly disagree with 

 2          that assessment of that program.  Fifty 

 3          thousand cases, it's just -- that's just not 

 4          true.

 5                 It's a misdemeanor program.  It takes 

 6          advantage of an existing statutory provision 

 7          in the law which gives a Supreme Court judge 

 8          de novo review -- authority, on the 

 9          application of a defendant, to conduct a de 

10          novo review, a full review of a lower court's 

11          bail ruling.

12                 We've simply set up a part in Supreme 

13          Court to allow for that, if the defendant 

14          makes an application, to have the case 

15          calendared in the Supreme Court part.  It's 

16          not a lot of cases.  It's limited to 

17          low-level cases.  It's not insulting to 

18          judges at all.  Judges -- you know, judges -- 

19          bail is set in the arraignment parts where 

20          the volume is enormous.  There's strict 

21          constitutional and statutory time limits on 

22          how quickly cases have to be arraigned.

23                 In the arraignment part, it quickly 

24          follows the arrest.  The defense lawyer 


                                                                  100

 1          doesn't really know much about the defendant 

 2          at that point.  The prosecutor doesn't know 

 3          much about the defendant.  The judge 

 4          certainly doesn't know much about the 

 5          defendant.  And the process that was put in 

 6          place is merely to give an option to the 

 7          defendant to make an application later on to 

 8          a Supreme Court judge where there will be 

 9          more time to evaluate the case, there will be 

10          more information at that point.  

11                 And there's nothing insulting to 

12          judges about this at all.  It's a fairer 

13          process that's been put in place that's 

14          entirely consistent with what the law now 

15          authorizes.

16                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Nonetheless, Judge 

17          McLaughlin felt pretty insulted by this.  And 

18          I -- certainly opinion differs.  And that 

19          we'll look to you for further explanation of 

20          this from your vantage as a judge 

21          experienced.

22                 It seems as though, just on its 

23          surface, that any defense counsel would be 

24          tiptoeing around malpractice if they didn't 


                                                                  101

 1          seek an automatic appeal under this 

 2          provision.  And to me, that begs the question 

 3          in the real world, wouldn't they be doubly 

 4          encouraged to pursue extrajudicial review?

 5                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

 6          Well, that's an interesting point.  

 7                 But, you know, this is in place now.  

 8          It's not -- it's been implemented.  And the 

 9          experience of the last couple of months since 

10          it was implemented is completely to the 

11          contrary.  There have been very few 

12          applications made to the Supreme Court judge.  

13          Actually, surprisingly few.  

14                 So it hasn't opened the floodgates.  

15          Any suggestion that it would, that hasn't 

16          turned out to be the case at all.

17                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Thank you for your 

18          insights.

19                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

20          Sure.

21                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Thank you, Madam 

22          Chair.

23                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, Senator.

24                 Senator Tom Croci.


                                                                  102

 1                 SENATOR CROCI:  Thank you, Madam 

 2          Chair.  

 3                 Thank you, Judge, for your appearance 

 4          here today.  

 5                 I represent the Third Senate District, 

 6          which includes the Central Islip Court 

 7          Complex on Long Island, which as you know is 

 8          collocated with a federal courthouse as well.

 9                 Some of my concerns come out of a 

10          recent visit there where there is long lines 

11          outside of the courthouse.  In light of 

12          what's happened in San Bernardino and other 

13          places, it comes to our attention that having 

14          long lines of civilians standing outside of 

15          federal buildings, state, county, town 

16          government buildings, is probably not a good 

17          idea.

18                 Recognizing that some of the staffing 

19          levels the court officers are contending with 

20          lead to some of these long lines, and also 

21          recognizing that on Long Island our law 

22          enforcement has stepped up their approaches 

23          to combating the heroin and opioid epidemic 

24          on Long Island, we're seeing more individuals 


                                                                  103

 1          who are incarcerated for those crimes and who 

 2          are going through the court system.  

 3                 So I have two concerns.  One is the 

 4          lines and the security situation that it 

 5          presents.  And then two is inside the 

 6          courthouse, we've had instances where rival 

 7          drug gangs are actually having altercations, 

 8          and the staffing levels, it seems to me, 

 9          we're spreading them pretty thin.  

10                 So I was wondering if you could 

11          address that in your remarks.  Thank you.  

12                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

13          Well, I mean it's a good point that you 

14          raise.  You know, lines outside the 

15          courthouse aren't good because, as you say, 

16          they can create public safety concerns.

17                 But it's also unfair to the people who 

18          have to wait on line.  Weather can be 

19          inclement, and we don't want people waiting 

20          in lines to get into courthouses.  It can be 

21          a problem.  You know, I recognize that.  

22                 And it again goes back to staffing 

23          shortages and, you know, not enough court 

24          officers in the lobbies at the magnetometers, 


                                                                  104

 1          you know, moving people through the screening 

 2          and, you know, getting them through that so 

 3          they can go up to attend to their court 

 4          business.  So, I mean, it's a problem.  We 

 5          have to do a better job to avoid lines, I 

 6          agree with that.

 7                 The -- what was the second issue?

 8                 SENATOR CROCI:  Talking about actually 

 9          responding within the courthouse when you 

10          have individuals who are involved in 

11          drug-related offenses.

12                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  We 

13          do have a process in place that we are -- our 

14          court officers in our public safety 

15          department try to be aware of when a case 

16          comes in, if there's some gang connection.  

17          And when we know about that -- and, you know, 

18          often we do know that, if not always, but 

19          usually we will know that -- that there's 

20          some gang connection to a particular case, we 

21          will deploy more officers where they need to 

22          be deployed when that case is called in the 

23          courthouse.

24                 So it's something we are aware of and 


                                                                  105

 1          have tried to address.

 2                 SENATOR CROCI:  And one follow-up.  

 3          Are court officers instructed in the use and 

 4          administration of Narcan?

 5                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  I'm 

 6          sorry?

 7                 SENATOR CROCI:  I said, are court 

 8          officers instructed in the administration of 

 9          Narcan, the anti-heroin overdose drug?

10                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  I 

11          believe so, but I'll to check that for you.  

12          I'm not sure.

13                 SENATOR CROCI:  Thank you.

14                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  

15          Thank you.

16                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.

17                 Thank you very much for your testimony 

18          today.

19                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS: 

20          Thank you.

21                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  We truly appreciate 

22          it.  Look forward to continuing to work with 

23          you.  So thank you.

24                 CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MARKS:  


                                                                  106

 1          Thanks so much.

 2                 CHAIRMAN FARRELL:  Thank you.

 3                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Our next speaker is 

 4          Commissioner John P. Melville, commissioner, 

 5          New York State Division of Homeland Security.

 6                 (Pause.)

 7                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  If we could have 

 8          some order, please.  We need to get underway.  

 9          We have a long, long list of speakers.

10                 Welcome, Commissioner.  

11                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Thank you, 

12          Senator.

13                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Proceed.

14                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Thank you.

15                 Good morning.  Thank you, Chairwoman 

16          Young, Chairman Farrell, and distinguished 

17          members of the Joint Committee.  I am John 

18          Melville, commissioner of the Division of 

19          Homeland Security and Emergency Services.

20                 I appreciate the opportunity to 

21          discuss with you today some of the good work 

22          of the agency over the past year as well as a 

23          few of the highlights of Governor Cuomo's 

24          public safety budget.  


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 1                 The division is charged with an 

 2          enormous responsibility, which includes an 

 3          all-hazards prevention, preparedness, 

 4          response and recovery mission.  The 

 5          Governor's budget provides the resources 

 6          needed to accomplish our mission and protect 

 7          public safety.  Total appropriations are 

 8          $1.5 billion, up $583 million over last year. 

 9          Six hundred million dollars is added in the 

10          event of future disaster.  A reduction of 

11          $3.2 million in one-time appropriations for 

12          citizen preparedness, reduced need for 

13          capital financing in the amount of 

14          $15 million, and the addition of $1.3 million 

15          for an expanded counterterrorism program, all 

16          contribute to the change.  

17                 Unfortunately, this past year our 

18          nation witnessed an increase in the number of 

19          terrorist attacks and plots -- three here in 

20          New York alone.  The most recent example was 

21          the New Year's Eve Rochester arrest, which 

22          ultimately proved to be an intelligence and 

23          operational success.  

24                 In December, Governor Cuomo stated 


                                                                  108

 1          that the threat of terrorism is a "new 

 2          normal" for Americans.  Unfortunately, I have 

 3          to agree.  

 4                 Let me discuss some of the efforts we 

 5          are undertaking to ensure the safety of 

 6          New Yorkers from Montauk to Buffalo.  This 

 7          past year, the Governor launched the "See 

 8          Something, Send Something" mobile application 

 9          so that people can report suspicious 

10          activities.  To date, it has been downloaded 

11          over 40,000 times.  

12                 In addition to community-level 

13          awareness, we have to arm our first 

14          responders with the intelligence information 

15          they need to keep pace with emerging 

16          terrorism trends.  The Governor outlined a 

17          plan to consolidate the division's 

18          intelligence and analysis function into the 

19          New York State Police to continue their work 

20          at the New York State Intelligence Center, 

21          which serves all law enforcement and public 

22          safety agencies throughout the state.  This 

23          will allow the division, as a primary 

24          consumer of the intelligence, to focus on key 


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 1          preparedness activities, and will be used to 

 2          inform our decision-making in the areas of 

 3          grant funding, the homeland security strategy 

 4          and target hardening.  

 5                 Ultimately, the collective goal is to 

 6          provide quick and actionable intelligence to 

 7          our local law enforcement and public safety 

 8          partners who, along with vigilant private 

 9          citizens, truly are the first line of 

10          defense.  

11                 The Governor also proposes 

12          $1.3 million in funding to drastically 

13          increase the number of vulnerability 

14          assessments -- or, as we term them, "Red Team 

15          exercises" -- the division will execute 

16          across the state.  

17                 In conjunction with Operation 

18          Safeguard activities and our "See Something" 

19          campaigns, we want to increase the state's 

20          collective detection capacity of tactics that 

21          may be used by terrorists in preoperational 

22          planning.  

23                 The division's Red Team will then 

24          test, through a series of adversary-based 


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 1          assessments, to determine the success of the 

 2          preparedness strategy.  As a target-rich 

 3          state, New York continues to rely on federal 

 4          homeland security funding.  

 5                 In 2015, New York State received over 

 6          $262 million from the Homeland Security Grant 

 7          Program, which has been used in communities 

 8          throughout the state to prevent, protect and 

 9          prepare for terrorism and other catastrophic 

10          events.  

11                 The division continues to advance the 

12          state's preparedness posture for all hazards, 

13          including natural disasters.  Last August, 

14          the Governor announced a new incident 

15          management system called "NY Responds" to 

16          establish a uniform electronic system to be 

17          used throughout the state and by all 

18          counties.  We completed the first phase of 

19          the transition in December, with a full 

20          implementation expected to be completed this 

21          year.  

22                 We also continue our recovery work, 

23          which includes the reimbursement of over 

24          $5 billion to New York communities for Sandy, 


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 1          Irene and Lee rebuilding and resiliency 

 2          projects.  

 3                 Last year the Governor announced the 

 4          first-in-the-nation College of Emergency 

 5          Preparedness, Homeland Security and 

 6          Cybersecurity at the University at Albany.  

 7          To date, 159 students have enrolled in the 

 8          college's minor program and, by fall of this 

 9          year, the major program should be available 

10          as an official offering.  

11                 The college also leverages the network 

12          of resources of the State Preparedness 

13          Training Center in Oriskany for 

14          out-of-classroom, hands-on training.  The 

15          SPTC is quickly being recognized as a 

16          world-class facility.  

17                 The U.S. Departments of Defense and 

18          Justice chose the SPTC to host the annual 

19          Raven's Challenge, which is an 

20          interoperability exercise to test the 

21          capabilities of bomb squads and military 

22          explosive ordnance disposal units.  It was 

23          such a success that, this May, New York will 

24          once again host the Raven's Challenge at the 


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 1          SPTC.  

 2                 Moving to citizen preparedness 

 3          training, in conjunction with the National 

 4          Guard, the Red Cross and together with our 

 5          partners in the Legislature, we have been 

 6          able to train over 95,000 new people.  

 7                 Last year the Governor announced that 

 8          the Office of Fire Prevention and Control 

 9          would be deploying 19 trailers equipped with 

10          firefighting foam to local fire departments 

11          and county hazmat teams.  Prepositioning this 

12          equipment ensures the state is well-prepared 

13          to confront fires caused by crude oil and 

14          other highly flammable substances.  

15                 Finally, the division's Office of 

16          Interoperable and Emergency Communications is 

17          modifying its approach to the state's 

18          interoperable communications grant 

19          distribution strategy.  This year there will 

20          be two separate programs:  One will include a 

21          formula-based distribution, and the second 

22          includes a targeted distribution of 

23          $20 million towards statewide 

24          interoperability.  


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 1                 While not possible to cover all the 

 2          great work of the division during my 

 3          testimony today, I hope that I have provided 

 4          you with an idea of the priorities for the 

 5          Division of Homeland Security and Emergency 

 6          Services into the next fiscal year.  These 

 7          include strengthening response integration 

 8          and coordination, intelligence-driven target 

 9          hardening, training, and thoughtful 

10          investments of state grants to bolster the 

11          state's preparedness and response posture.  

12                 I appreciate the opportunity to be 

13          here and appear before you today, and I am 

14          pleased to answer any questions you may have.

15                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, 

16          Commissioner, for that testimony.  Protecting 

17          our communities and our citizens is job one 

18          for New York State government, and there's an 

19          intense interest in what you have to say 

20          today by the Senate.

21                 At this time I would like to introduce 

22          our chair of the Homeland Security, Veterans 

23          and Military Affairs Committee, and that's 

24          Senator Tom Croci.


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 1                 SENATOR CROCI:  Thank you, Madam 

 2          Chair.  

 3                 And thank you, Commissioner, for your 

 4          appearance today.  It's been a great 

 5          privilege to have the opportunity to work 

 6          with you and the staff over the past year.

 7                 One of the things I'd like to 

 8          compliment you on is your investment in the 

 9          prevention and preparedness for the State of 

10          New York.  I think that was best seen in he 

11          recent blizzard that we had downstate.  

12          Pre-staging of assets certainly saved a lot 

13          of time in responding when the storm finally 

14          stopped, and I think that it's partly due or 

15          in large part the amount of snow that was 

16          able to be moved was because of that 

17          investment in prevention and preparedness.

18                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Thank you, 

19          sir.

20                 SENATOR CROCI:  I listened with 

21          interest to your testimony, and of course 

22          we've had conversations about some of the 

23          proposals in the budget.  In talking about 

24          the Article VII language in Part D of the 


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 1          ELFA budget bill, you mentioned in your 

 2          testimony that the transfer of certain 

 3          assets, human assets in this case, would 

 4          focus on key preparedness activities, will be 

 5          used to inform our decision-making in certain 

 6          areas. 

 7                 So I'm wondering, with respect to that 

 8          transfer of personnel to State Police, what 

 9          if any counterterrorism functions does the 

10          Division of Homeland Security retain in that 

11          transfer?

12                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Thank you, 

13          Senator.  We propose to transfer 10 people, 

14          or 10 positions, from our intel and analysis 

15          section in the Division of Homeland Security 

16          and Emergency Services to the State Police.  

17                 That transfer sounds a little more 

18          ominous than it really is.  In actuality, 

19          those people will probably be sitting in the 

20          same seats they sit in now.  They work at the 

21          New York State Intelligence Center with the 

22          State Police.  They are supervised not only 

23          by us, but by the State Police.  And what we 

24          plan to do is just streamline the chain of 


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 1          command with the analysts so the information 

 2          can get right to the people that it needs to 

 3          right away.  

 4                 I need it; I still will get it.  But I 

 5          am not operational as the State Police are.  

 6          They get that information right out to the 

 7          people on the ground that need it first.  I 

 8          will still get it.

 9                 As far as maintaining duties with 

10          respect to the Office of Counterterrorism, we 

11          have a critical infrastructure team that 

12          we're very proud of.  They do inspections all 

13          around the state, some legislated, some not.  

14          We are proposing a significant increase in 

15          our Red Team exercises that we will be 

16          conducting throughout all the 

17          counterterrorism zones in New York State, 

18          which there are 16 of them.  

19                 We have our training center at 

20          Oriskany, which we run.  It's first responder 

21          training for not only police but fire, EMS, 

22          emergency managers, and it's very 

23          counterterrorism-based. 

24                 So in actuality, our core mission will 


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 1          remain the same, Senator.  We will still be 

 2          receiving that intelligence information.  I 

 3          still will remain the homeland security 

 4          advisor to the Governor.  I will report to 

 5          the legislature.  And I am still the point of 

 6          contact for the Department of Homeland 

 7          Security of the federal government.

 8                 SENATOR CROCI:  So you mentioned that 

 9          you'll still receive the information 

10          regardless of where these analysts are 

11          positioned and where they're sitting.  That's 

12          not clear statutorily in the budget.  I guess 

13          we would have to statutorily amend the 

14          article in order so that you receive that 

15          information?  Because otherwise how would 

16          that information flow from the State Police 

17          now up to you?

18                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Well, the 

19          analysts will actually physically be 

20          supervised by the State Police in this 

21          proposal.  

22                 I will still be a consumer of that 

23          intelligence information.  As a matter of 

24          fact, we recently took on a director in the 


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 1          Office of Counterterrorism in the Division of 

 2          Homeland Security and Emergency Services.  

 3          His name is Mike Cerretto.  He's very 

 4          qualified, well respected, a 30-year member 

 5          of law enforcement.  And he is actually still 

 6          a member of the New York State Police even 

 7          though he has been detailed to the Division 

 8          of Homeland Security and Emergency Services 

 9          and in actuality works for us now.  So Mike's 

10          still being -- Director Cerretto's still 

11          being a member of the New York State Police 

12          will ensure that we receive that information, 

13          as I have no doubt.

14                 SENATOR CROCI:  So hypothetically we 

15          have a new -- someday we have a new 

16          commissioner, we have a new director and 

17          another governor, maybe a Republican 

18          governor, so the relationships will change.  

19          How do we ensure that that information flow 

20          remains the same regardless of those 

21          relationships?

22                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Well, the 

23          analysts will be at the NYSIC, working for 

24          the New York State Police.  The NYSIC is the 


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 1          fusion center for all of New York, all of our 

 2          law enforcement partners.  It's federally 

 3          funded, and the mandate to the New York State 

 4          Police, who runs the NYSIC, is to share that 

 5          information with everybody.

 6                 I fortunately have the unique 

 7          distinction of having worked in the New York 

 8          State Police for 32 years before I became the 

 9          commissioner in the Division of Homeland 

10          Security.  I have the utmost respect and 

11          confidence, I know how the organization 

12          works, and its main goal, main mission, main 

13          function is to push that intel out to the 

14          people that need it.  It will not be 

15          stovepiped.

16                 SENATOR CROCI:  But there's nothing 

17          that's going to be in statute to ensure that.  

18          It's because we have great relationships, 

19          very qualified individuals in yourself and 

20          your new director, no doubt about that.  But 

21          there's no formal pipeline that's laid out in 

22          statute.  Is that your understanding?  

23                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  I believe, 

24          Senator, that the fact that it is New York 


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 1          State's fusion center, funded by the 

 2          Department of Homeland Security, they are 

 3          mandated to share that information with 

 4          everyone.

 5                 SENATOR CROCI:  Okay.  Obviously 

 6          you've had a very distinguished career.  And 

 7          again, it's been a great privilege to work 

 8          with you and get to know you personally.

 9                 In your professional opinion -- and 

10          you better than anyone personally dealt with 

11          the attacks of September 11th, as did so many 

12          in this room and so many in our state -- do 

13          you believe that we're doing everything we 

14          can as New Yorkers, as the State of New York, 

15          to protect us, to protect our residents?

16                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  I do, Senator.  

17          Unfortunately, the threat remains to New York 

18          State.  New York State is certainly a target.  

19          I believe we certainly put our resources into 

20          every effort that we can to keep New Yorkers 

21          safe.  That is our main function, is 

22          emergency preparedness, training, response 

23          coordination, recovery.  I think that we have 

24          what we need to do that, and we do do it.  


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 1          And we do it very well.

 2                 SENATOR CROCI:  So one concern, in 

 3          looking at the proposal, is that information 

 4          flow, and to ensure that not only the 

 5          individuals charged with the counterterrorism 

 6          mission in the state in the executive branch, 

 7          at the higher levels, who are advising the 

 8          Governor on these matters, are receiving the 

 9          latest and the best intelligence and the most 

10          timely intelligence that they possibly can.

11                 The National Security Act and the way 

12          the National Security Councils have been set 

13          up is there just for that reason, so that the 

14          decisionmakers, the policymakers are 

15          receiving that information on which to make 

16          good legislative decisions and good executive 

17          actions.  So I'm looking forward to working 

18          with staff and finding a way that we can 

19          accomplish this and ensure that regardless of 

20          who sits in our chairs -- my chair, your 

21          chair, or your very experienced and diligent 

22          staff -- we want to make sure that that 

23          information flow happens regardless of 

24          personality, regardless of relationship.  The 


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 1          process piece I think is something we need to 

 2          continue to work on.  

 3                 And with regard to your training 

 4          center, I think I've mentioned that one of 

 5          the key lessons from the 9/11 Commission 

 6          report, and certainly something we've learned 

 7          locally in the wake of Superstorm Sandy and 

 8          recent weather events, is that we should 

 9          train the way we fight.  So on the ground in 

10          response and recovery operations, 

11          preparedness as well, we should train at the 

12          local level the first responders who actually 

13          will be responding to those disasters, 

14          whether it's New York City or Buffalo or 

15          Suffolk and Nassau counties.

16                 While it's great that we have these 

17          statewide investments in the training 

18          centers, I hope we can work with the 

19          Executive and with your department to make 

20          sure that we're pushing some of that training 

21          and those training dollars down to the local 

22          level -- to the cities, to the counties -- 

23          who are asking us for that, to bring fire, 

24          law enforcement, police, your first 


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 1          responders, your ambulance companies, bring 

 2          them together for realistic training at the 

 3          local level, because in the event of a 

 4          catastrophic attack or weather event, they're 

 5          going to be responding together.  

 6                 And going back to that personality 

 7          issue, it's great that those personalities 

 8          know each other before they're responding, as 

 9          I'm sure you could attest to in your 

10          distinguished career.  I think it's very 

11          important, and I hope to work with the staff 

12          and your division to ensure that that occurs.

13                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  I look forward 

14          to that, Senator.

15                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Assembly, thank you.

16                 CHAIRMAN FARRELL:  Thank you.

17                 Assemblywoman Peoples-Stokes.

18                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  Thank 

19          you, Mr. Chairman.

20                 And thank you, Mr. Melville, for your 

21          testimony this morning.  I would join my 

22          other colleagues who have already expressed 

23          how the number-one issue for everyone who 

24          lives and represents this government is that 


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 1          our citizens must be safe.  And we do realize 

 2          that we live in a difficult time.  And so 

 3          your due diligence to make sure that we are 

 4          safe is very much appreciated.

 5                 I did want to just really comment on 

 6          the citizen preparedness.  I have had a few 

 7          of them in the district, and they've been 

 8          located in different places and different 

 9          citizens have attended it, and they have very 

10          much appreciated that.  So while, you know, 

11          our first responders are highly skilled and 

12          trained, I think it's also important to -- 

13          for the average citizen to understand what 

14          should you do in case of some disaster.  So 

15          thank you for that. 

16                 I understand from looking at the 

17          budget that there's $14 million in additional 

18          dollars for counterterrorism in New York City 

19          by the State Police, and an additional 

20          $23 million by the National Guard for 

21          New York City.  And so I guess my question is 

22          clearly New York City, having been targeted 

23          before, and the seat of finance is in our 

24          state -- and quite frankly, the seats of 


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 1          finance in the world should be protected.  

 2          But I'm just wondering how far will, you 

 3          know, these dollars be able to go to protect 

 4          other parts of the state?  I did hear your 

 5          comments about Rochester.  And as you know, 

 6          I'm located very close to that, so we were 

 7          paying attention to that issue.  But we are a 

 8          state that borders Canada, 15 minutes if 

 9          you're in Buffalo, and closer in some other 

10          places.

11                 And so I wondered could you speak a 

12          little bit about why all those dollars are 

13          being designated -- excess dollars are being 

14          designated to New York City?

15                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Sure, 

16          Assemblywoman.  Thank you for your comments 

17          about the citizen preparedness; we're very 

18          proud of that training effort.

19                 We fund -- we, being the Division of 

20          Homeland Security and Emergency Services, 

21          fund every county in the state through our 

22          State Homeland Security Grant program.  We 

23          also fund different areas across the state 

24          through our targeted grant programs and other 


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 1          grants that we administer.  There's also a 

 2          UASI federal grant that a lot of money goes 

 3          to New York City, Long Island, Westchester.  

 4          That is a decision that is made by the 

 5          federal government with respect to where 

 6          UASI -- it stands for Urban Area Security 

 7          Initiative -- where they are.  We don't 

 8          decide that, the federal government does.

 9                 I believe -- and I really can't speak 

10          to the National Guard budget items or the 

11          State Police.  But I would suspect that that 

12          money is probably going to be used to 

13          continue the Governor's initiative of putting 

14          troopers and National Guard soldiers in the 

15          very important transportation hubs in and 

16          around New York City, whether it be Grand 

17          Central, Penn Station or those types of -- 

18          but that's -- probably that can be better 

19          answered by either the superintendent or 

20          General Murphy.

21                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  Okay.  

22          Well, I was very excited about the 

23          announcement of the cybersecurity curriculum 

24          at UAlbany.  And I note from your comments 


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 1          that there are some 159 students that have 

 2          availed themselves of that opportunity.  That 

 3          might seem like a large number now, but it's 

 4          really not, particularly with the increasing 

 5          rates of people being hurt, average citizens 

 6          being hurt by people abusing the internet.  

 7          Not to withstand what could happen from a 

 8          violent perspective, but from a consumer 

 9          perspective, it's a huge issue.

10                 And so is there any thought by your 

11          agency -- or I guess I can also ask this 

12          question of Nancy Zimpher from SUNY as well, 

13          and CUNY -- if there's any thought about 

14          expanding this curriculum to other colleges 

15          and universities throughout the state.

16                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  I can't answer 

17          that, Assemblywoman.  I don't know.  I can 

18          tell you that the college originally was 

19          hoping for 50 students to sign up for the 

20          minor; they got 159.  The major will 

21          hopefully be available this fall.  

22                 We're excited at the Division of 

23          Homeland Security and Emergency Services 

24          about the college because it will prepare 


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 1          professionals that we can utilize in our 

 2          field.  We're looking forward to that.

 3                 We're also excited about it because 

 4          the SPTC, the training center in Oriskany, 

 5          will be the out-of-classroom training spot 

 6          for the students who attend the State 

 7          University of New York at Albany College of 

 8          Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness 

 9          and Cybersecurity.  So we're happy to 

10          showcase that, and we hope the students find 

11          that that is a world-class facility.

12                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  Thank 

13          you.

14                 I recently had the opportunity to 

15          speak to some veterans in the state of 

16          Florida who -- where they've established a 

17          program specifically to train veterans in 

18          cybersecurity.  So I'd like to connect with 

19          you real soon, perhaps late next week, and 

20          have an additional conversation about that 

21          end of it.  Thank you.  

22                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Perfect.  

23          Thank you, Assemblywoman.

24                 CHAIRMAN FARRELL:  Thank you.


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 1                 Senator?

 2                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 3                 Next, Senator Joe Addabbo, ranker on 

 4          the committee.

 5                 SENATOR ADDABBO:  Thank you, Madam 

 6          Chair, and thank you, Commissioner, for being 

 7          here today.

 8                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Thank you.

 9                 SENATOR ADDABBO:  And let me echo the 

10          sentiments of my colleagues:  The daunting 

11          task of protecting the roughly 20 million 

12          people in New York State, I want to again 

13          thank you very much for your efforts on that 

14          of the division.  

15                 I think the critical movement of the 

16          services to New York State Police is a major 

17          move, certainly for, again, protection of our 

18          people.  I'd like to know the further 

19          details, if I may.  I need to convince, as we 

20          all do, our constituency that this is a more 

21          efficient move for the protection of our 

22          people.  

23                 Briefly, how do we convince our 

24          residents that this is a more efficient move 


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 1          as we look to secure, again, the people of 

 2          our state?

 3                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Sure, Senator. 

 4          And, you know, I've been in this position for 

 5          a little over a year and have had the 

 6          opportunity to look at the agency as a whole 

 7          and all the different missions that we were 

 8          charged with.  And the counterterrorism 

 9          mission is certainly at the forefront of all 

10          of those.

11                 So we constantly evaluate how we do 

12          things and why we do things and, you know, 

13          can we do them better.  And during the course 

14          of this past year I've had several 

15          conversations with members of my staff as 

16          well as the State Police, and eventually Ray 

17          Kelly, the former commissioner in New York 

18          City, who was asked by the Governor to review 

19          the counterterrorism efforts of all the state 

20          agencies.  After that year of review, my 

21          discussions with the superintendent and other 

22          public safety partners, and Commissioner 

23          Kelly, we all agreed that we thought that 

24          this was a smart move.  


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 1                 What it really does is just defines 

 2          the line of communication and the chain of 

 3          command a little bit clearer.  As I said, 

 4          those people work in the NYSIC.  They're very 

 5          talented, I'm very proud of them.  They're 

 6          literally probably not going to change their 

 7          seat at their desk, it's just that the line 

 8          of authority will be right to the 

 9          State Police, it will get to the people that 

10          need that information instantaneously.

11                 I use that information to pass out to 

12          constituents across the state, but I don't 

13          need that actionable intelligence as fast as 

14          they do.  I can set the state homeland 

15          security strategy the next day, depending on 

16          the intel; they need it right then and there 

17          to push out.  And that's really the reason, 

18          it's just to try and streamline the chain of 

19          command and make things work better, faster, 

20          safer for the public.

21                 SENATOR ADDABBO:  We've seen obviously 

22          the importance of information-gathering.  

23          Rochester you mentioned earlier as well in 

24          your testimony.  So getting that information 


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 1          quicker certainly makes it more efficient.  

 2          And I look forward to working with you and 

 3          furthering obviously this critical change.

 4                 But that being said, with the change 

 5          going, with services to the New York State 

 6          Police, the terror alert system, the New York 

 7          State Police will then have the authority to 

 8          use the terror alert system?  It would be 

 9          under their jurisdiction at that point?

10                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Well, we're 

11          not giving up any authority in the Division 

12          of Homeland Security and Emergency Services.  

13          As I said, Senator, I remain the state 

14          homeland security advisor, the point of 

15          contact from the federal government and to 

16          the Governor and to the Legislature.  So that 

17          will -- inasmuch as it does now, it will 

18          remain with us.

19                 SENATOR ADDABBO:  So basically there 

20          is some sense of shared responsibilities 

21          here.

22                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Yes.  We still 

23          are maintaining our core mission, which is -- 

24          much of that is counterterrorism.  This is 


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 1          just a small piece, albeit a very important 

 2          piece of it.

 3                 SENATOR ADDABBO:  The restoration of 

 4          $600 million to now get the total to 

 5          $1.2 billion for disaster assistance locally, 

 6          can we talk about possibly how the plan is to 

 7          spend that money?

 8                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  That money, 

 9          Senator, the $600 million, is just an 

10          appropriation.  It gives us the authority to 

11          spend that if we have to.  That's really to 

12          be used for future disasters.  Hopefully we 

13          don't have to spend it, but it's there in 

14          case we need to.

15                 SENATOR ADDABBO:  I would be remiss if 

16          I didn't say thank you.  A third of my 

17          district was affected by Sandy.  You know, 

18          the areas of Howard Beach, Broad Channel, 

19          Rockaway.  I still have roughly over 4,000 

20          people still on the road to recovery three 

21          years after the storm.  So again, I want to 

22          say thank you.

23                 There has been, again, monies for 

24          Sandy.  Can you detail or explain those 


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 1          additional monies for Sandy recovery?

 2                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Sure.  We have 

 3          funneled more than $5 billion in recovery 

 4          money to the victims of Superstorm Sandy, 

 5          Irene and Lee.  We've also funneled 

 6          approximately $1.4 billion through these what 

 7          we call HMGP grants, which are Hazard 

 8          Mitigation Grant Programs.  

 9                 The Hazard Mitigation Grant program 

10          money that has been used in your district, 

11          Senator, has basically been used for big 

12          projects that would benefit whole 

13          communities.  The individual homeowner would 

14          not really be covered through us under that.  

15          That would be under a different funding 

16          stream, a HUD funding stream, CDBG money that 

17          comes under a different -- the Office of 

18          Storm Recovery.  So if those people in your 

19          district are struggling, we'd be happy to 

20          talk about that and to help them in any way 

21          we can, but we don't really control that 

22          funding.

23                 SENATOR ADDABBO:  No, and again, I 

24          understand.  I just want to thank the efforts 


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 1          of all those associated with New York Rising, 

 2          and working with HUD and their requirements.  

 3          But -- and certainly helping not only my 

 4          constituents, but those throughout the state 

 5          who are still, again, recovering from 

 6          Superstorm Sandy.

 7                 And lastly, you had mentioned in your 

 8          testimony the "See Something" app, 40,000 

 9          downloads.  Can you just walk us through the 

10          process of somebody downloading that app and 

11          the information that you may receive and how 

12          it goes forward after that?

13                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Sure.  Happy 

14          to.  It's a free app.  Any cellphone, you 

15          Google it, you'll find it, you can download 

16          it.

17                 And what it allows you to do is take a 

18          picture of whatever you might term 

19          suspicious.  You can add a text to it and 

20          send it along, or you can just send the 

21          picture.  And what it does is it goes to the 

22          New York State Intelligence Center, where it 

23          is then reviewed and evaluated by members at 

24          the center, and it is pushed out to -- the 


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 1          way we handle -- or the way the State Police 

 2          in the NYSIC now, it's pushed out to the 

 3          Joint Terrorism Task Force in the particular 

 4          area that it might have been sent from.  They 

 5          have the right of first refusal per se.  And 

 6          if they don't feel it's appropriate for them 

 7          to adopt the case, it will go to a local 

 8          police department.

 9                 It can be geotagged so even if you 

10          don't include a text, we can tell, normally, 

11          where it comes from.

12                 SENATOR ADDABBO:  I was going to say, 

13          those who give the information, is it 

14          confidential information on their end?

15                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  It is.

16                 SENATOR ADDABBO:  It is, okay.

17                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  I believe that 

18          the State Police and the people at the NYSIC 

19          reserve the right to try and contact them if 

20          they need to, but they don't have to.

21                 SENATOR ADDABBO:  Commissioner, once 

22          again, thank you very much for your efforts.  

23          And of course through our good chair, Senator 

24          Croci, I look forward to working with you as 


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 1          well.

 2                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Thank you, 

 3          Senator.

 4                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Assembly?

 5                 CHAIRMAN FARRELL:  Thank you very 

 6          much.  

 7                 Assemblyman Lentol.

 8                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  Good morning, 

 9          Commissioner.

10                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Good morning, 

11          sir.

12                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  And thank you for 

13          your service.  

14                 I just was wondering, while you were 

15          testifying -- maybe I'm behind the times, but 

16          I remember after 9/11 how much we were 

17          shortchanged by the federal government in the 

18          resources that New York City as well as New 

19          York State deserved because we were the 

20          primary target of terrorism.  

21                 So I have two questions leading from 

22          that.  Is that still true?  And does your 

23          agency have an advocacy function in 

24          Washington to make sure that we get the 


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 1          resources from them that we deserve for this 

 2          problem?

 3                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Well, I can 

 4          tell you that we are always advocating for 

 5          more money from the federal government.  And 

 6          I believe that the Governor's office has that 

 7          issue handled for the most part.  We do not 

 8          really lobby Washington for that.  But we 

 9          deal with FEMA and the Department of Homeland 

10          Security all the time.

11                 We receive, in New York State, 

12          probably 30 percent or in the area of 

13          30 percent of the UASI money that's 

14          distributed throughout the country, and I 

15          would say 18 percent or so of the State 

16          Homeland Security Grant Program.  Is that 

17          enough?  I don't know if we could ever have 

18          enough.  But we certainly do great things 

19          with that amount of money that we do get from 

20          the federal government.

21                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  As far as 

22          disaster preparedness goes, I remember, even 

23          though it wasn't my district, but in some 

24          places upstate during Irene and Lee, there 


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 1          were people who were flooded out and who died 

 2          as a result of not being able to be rescued.  

 3          And I wonder, since then, if we've developed 

 4          a better, for lack of a better word, roadmap 

 5          to be able to go by boat, by helicopter or 

 6          any other means in order to rescue people who 

 7          may in the future need to be rescued from a 

 8          storm like Sandy, Lee or Irene.

 9                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Unfortunately, 

10          Assemblyman, we do learn from the tragedies, 

11          and we react to them.  We change our training 

12          structure and our tactics all the time based 

13          on the intelligence that we've received and 

14          the events that have occurred in New York 

15          State and around the world.  We have targeted 

16          tech rescue grants, we call them now, that go 

17          to fire departments.  We have swift water 

18          rescue programs that we train on.

19                 So we're well aware of that.  Our 

20          first responders and our Office of Fire 

21          Prevention and Control teach many, many, many 

22          courses around the state in just that type of 

23          circumstance.

24                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  Thank you, sir.


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 1                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Thank you.

 2                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.

 3                 Our next speaker is Senator Michael 

 4          Nozzolio.

 5                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Thank you, 

 6          Chairwoman.  

 7                 Good afternoon, I guess it is now.  

 8          Good afternoon, Commissioner Melville.

 9                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Good 

10          afternoon,  Senator.

11                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Kudos to you and 

12          the division for taking charge, working with 

13          the Governor, under his direction, in 

14          managing the emergency preparedness of our 

15          state.  The reaction in storm management, 

16          communication, ensuring safety is improving 

17          with every instance of those kinds of 

18          challenges, and I thank you and your division 

19          for that effort.

20                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Thank you, 

21          Senator.

22                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  I would like to 

23          focus, however, on some issues that are not 

24          so seen, they're unseen, but personally could 


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 1          be extremely devastating to individuals, 

 2          taxpayers, constituents of this state -- and 

 3          that's the issue of security, and 

 4          specifically cybersecurity.  

 5                 That your division's experiences with 

 6          cybersecurity -- and with all admiration for 

 7          encouraging student participation in 

 8          education, tell us beyond that, what is the 

 9          division doing to beef up our cybersecurity 

10          efforts?

11                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Well, the 

12          analysts that we have now, Senator, are 

13          collocated at the NYSIC with the Multistate 

14          Information Sharing and Analysis Center, 

15          which is the federal government's 

16          cybersecurity watchdog, if you will.  They 

17          also work with the state --

18                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Is that in 

19          Rensselaer?  Where is that located?

20                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Yes, it is.

21                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Rensselaer?

22                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Yeah.  That's 

23          collocated with our New York State 

24          Intelligence Center.  And the State Police 


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 1          also are collocated there with their 

 2          cybersecurity investigative teams.

 3                 Probably in 2013, the Division of 

 4          Homeland Security and Emergency Services -- 

 5          cybersecurity was taken away as one of our 

 6          core functions, and removed to the ITS, along 

 7          with our funding and personnel.  

 8                 We don't have a main role in 

 9          cybersecurity.  We're well aware of it, we 

10          use it in terms of intel passing all the 

11          time.  We have a critical infrastructure unit 

12          that goes all around the state and is 

13          legislated in some respects to do certain 

14          types of critical infrastructure, in others 

15          not.  But they take a cybersecurity component 

16          with them from ITS to do the cybersecurity 

17          inspections of, say, pipelines or energy 

18          transmission facilities, things of that 

19          nature.

20                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  This expands on 

21          Senator Croci's comments, that you were 

22          finding the Division of Homeland Security not 

23          having direct reportable information by law 

24          and channel, that is strengthened by law, 


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 1          that provides that security function.  And 

 2          I'll be probing this with those 

 3          representatives of Office of Information 

 4          Technology later today and others.  

 5                 That you'd have to be totally immune 

 6          from what's going on if we didn't recognize 

 7          this.  Last year alone, we've seen cyber 

 8          attacks on the Internal Revenue Service, the 

 9          Office of Personnel Management, even the 

10          Joint Chiefs of Staff.  And if that's the 

11          case, isn't the New York State Department of 

12          Taxation and Finance going to be next?  We've 

13          seen a major security breach in the largest 

14          repository of health and financial data 

15          probably in this state, in the data breach 

16          that occurred with Excellus last year.

17                 So I am wondering what type of 

18          commitment do we have to help, first, guard 

19          our public sector-held information and, 

20          secondly, encourage and assist those private 

21          companies in doing business in New York to 

22          protect the data of its citizens.

23                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Senator, we're 

24          well aware of the cybersecurity threat.  We 


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 1          at the Division of Homeland Security and 

 2          Emergency Services view our role in 

 3          cybersecurity as an intelligence-driven role, 

 4          passing information along about schemes, 

 5          attacks, issues.

 6                 We also have the role of responding to 

 7          an emergency that would occur as a result of 

 8          a cyber attack.  So it would not necessarily 

 9          be the attack itself, but the issues that 

10          follow after that attack.  And that's really 

11          what we would be functioning or at least 

12          focusing on with our Office of Emergency 

13          Management.

14                 I think that the state is 

15          well-prepared with their Multistate ISAC, the 

16          NYSIC, and the State Police and the other 

17          efforts across the state from ITS, to deal 

18          with those types of investigations.  It's 

19          just not what we do per se.

20                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  And I understand 

21          that, Commissioner.  I'm not suggesting that 

22          you be an investigatory or law enforcement 

23          operation.  That's not your role, it's not 

24          something I would even suggest.


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 1                 However, just as you are involved in 

 2          storm preparedness, just as you are involved 

 3          in other disaster preparedness, why are we 

 4          not having you involved -- and I ask that 

 5          question because I think it's something the 

 6          Legislature ultimately has to deal with, 

 7          along with the Governor -- why aren't we 

 8          involved, Homeland Security involved in 

 9          issues of cybersecurity protection?  Ensuring 

10          that someone is overseeing, with security in 

11          mind, the vast data systems that are being 

12          held by state government?  That's what I 

13          believe we need to address.  

14                 And certainly your -- after the fact 

15          is too late.  The horse is out of the barn, 

16          it's too late a question for you to be 

17          involved.  Then it's a question for law 

18          enforcement.

19                 But what should be done proactively by 

20          the Division of Homeland Security to protect 

21          the data of New Yorkers?

22                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  I believe we 

23          are doing what we need to do now, Senator.  

24          We react to issues that may or may not be 


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 1          created by a cyber breach.  We have analysts 

 2          that work with the State Police in close 

 3          coordination with the Multistate ISAC Center.  

 4          So we are there to push information out that 

 5          we receive about cybersecurity issues to our 

 6          partners, to the public, to the private 

 7          sector.  So I believe our role is being 

 8          fulfilled at this point.

 9                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Yes, from a 

10          statutory standpoint that is, I'm sure, 

11          accurate.  But shouldn't the role be to 

12          protect in the first place?  Shouldn't the 

13          role be -- not as a law enforcement 

14          enterprise and a, again, closing the barn 

15          door after the horse ran away -- shouldn't it 

16          be more to make sure the barn door is locked 

17          and not tampered with and having the 

18          appropriate security to ensure that 

19          particularly the data is protected?

20                 And that I think is -- let me ask you 

21          this.  Who is in charge of the state to 

22          protect the data of its citizens, that's 

23          entrusted with the state?

24                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  I would say 


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 1          the ITS, the State ITS, as well as the State 

 2          Police and their partners at the NYSIC.

 3                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Commissioner, thank 

 4          you.  We'll certainly be probing that issue.  

 5          And it may be something that our chair of the 

 6          homeland security, Commander Croci, is going 

 7          to be dealing with in the months ahead.  So I 

 8          appreciate your candor and your forthcoming 

 9          comments.  Thank you.  

10                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Thank you, 

11          Senator.

12                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, Senator.

13                 CHAIRMAN FARRELL:  Assemblyman Ortiz.  

14                 ASSEMBLYMAN ORTIZ:  Good morning, 

15          Commissioner.

16                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  How are you, 

17          sir?  

18                 ASSEMBLYMAN ORTIZ:  I am doing well.  

19                 I have a few questions, very quick, if 

20          I can put on my glasses.

21                 My first question is, what is the 

22          working relationship that you have with the 

23          ICE and Homeland Security at the federal 

24          government?


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 1                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  The federal 

 2          Homeland Security?

 3                 ASSEMBLYMAN ORTIZ:  No, yours.  What 

 4          is the relationship between your Homeland 

 5          Security and the federal Homeland Security?  

 6          Do you guys talk to each other often?  And 

 7          how often?  

 8                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  We do talk to 

 9          each other often.  I would say more through 

10          email communication, but I do have 

11          conversations with people in Washington.  I 

12          am the homeland security advisor for the 

13          Governor, so I am the point for contact for 

14          certain things with the Department of 

15          Homeland Security.

16                 ASSEMBLYMAN ORTIZ:  Okay.  So right to 

17          my second question, so you are familiarized 

18          with the Obama deportations approach 

19          throughout the country; correct?

20                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  The what?  I'm 

21          sorry.  

22                 ASSEMBLYMAN ORTIZ:  The Obama 

23          deportation, the President of the United 

24          States has said we -- you know, he has given 


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 1          ICE the green light to go through state by 

 2          state to deport folks after January 2014.

 3                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Okay.

 4                 ASSEMBLYMAN ORTIZ:  Are you 

 5          familiarized with that?  

 6                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Somewhat.

 7                 ASSEMBLYMAN ORTIZ:  Okay.  So my third 

 8          question goes along the lines of if you are 

 9          somewhat familiarized with it, I represent 

10          the areas of Sunset Park in Brooklyn.  I have 

11          a lot of undocumented immigrants who live in 

12          my district.  And what we've been getting in 

13          my office is that there has been some folks 

14          from ICE, some local enforcements, who has 

15          been knocking on their doors and going 

16          through the churches and looking for folks 

17          who are not legally in this country.

18                 Are you familiarized with this?  

19                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  No, I'm not, 

20          Assemblyman.  And really that has -- that 

21          issue, albeit a very important issue, has 

22          really no place in the Division of Homeland 

23          Security and Emergency Services at a state 

24          level.  That's a federal program and a 


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 1          federal issue.  We don't have anything to do 

 2          with that.

 3                 ASSEMBLYMAN ORTIZ:  So you have not 

 4          anything to do -- despite the fact that you 

 5          have a relationship with the Homeland 

 6          Security/ICE agency at the federal 

 7          government?

 8                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  My 

 9          relationship with the Homeland Security 

10          people at the federal level really has to do 

11          with our grant funding, what we get from 

12          them, what we spent it on, how we spend it, 

13          what we target.  It really has nothing to do 

14          with immigration issues.

15                 ASSEMBLYMAN ORTIZ:  Okay.  And you 

16          just stated that you serve as an advisor to 

17          the Governor to ICE, to Homeland Security; 

18          correct?

19                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  I am the 

20          advisor to the Governor for homeland security 

21          issues here in New York State.

22                 ASSEMBLYMAN ORTIZ:  Well, let me just 

23          recommend a couple of things.  I think that 

24          we do have a lot of serious issues regarding 


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 1          law enforcement.  And I know the -- I 

 2          addressed this issue to the superintendent 

 3          last year about folks in the law enforcement 

 4          stopping individuals, Hispanic individuals in 

 5          Buffalo, in the Western Hemisphere {sic} and 

 6          then that came to Long Island as well.  

 7                 I think that if you are the advisor to 

 8          ICE and you work for our Governor, my advice 

 9          will be probably to try to have a more 

10          preactive action plan, that these families 

11          will not have fear, these families will not 

12          have fear as they have bring their children 

13          to the hospital, their children to the 

14          schools.  Right now in my district we have 

15          seen a decrease of kids going to school as a 

16          result of this initiative.

17                 So if you are the advisor, I would 

18          recommend that you take that message back to 

19          those folks that you're speaking to, either 

20          via email -- on behalf of the people that we 

21          represent in our own community.  

22                 And thank you for the job that you 

23          continue to do in serving us in the state.  

24          Thank you.


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 1                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Thank you, 

 2          Assemblyman, and I would love to have a 

 3          dialogue with you about that at some point.

 4                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.

 5                 Senator Marty Golden.

 6                 SENATOR GOLDEN:  Thank you, Madam 

 7          Chair.  

 8                 And thank you for your service.  

 9          You're doing an outstanding job.

10                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Thank you, 

11          Senator.

12                 SENATOR GOLDEN:  I don't want to beat 

13          a dead horse, but -- I know we went over 

14          this, seven -- two downstate, five upstate, 

15          and we probably beat it to death.  But just 

16          in my family, my son went down with the viral 

17          last weekend, I went down with the viral on 

18          Wednesday and Thursday, my wife went down 

19          with the viral on Friday, Saturday, and 

20          Sunday.  When the wife goes down, the whole 

21          house gets shut down.  All right?  So we went 

22          down, it was different.

23                 You got seven people, two downstate 

24          and five upstate.  How do we -- if there's 


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 1          any type of sickness, vacations, how is that 

 2          manned?  How does that work?

 3                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  You're 

 4          referring to the intelligence analysts, 

 5          Senator?

 6                 SENATOR GOLDEN:  Yes.

 7                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Yeah, we have 

 8          seven presently.  There's 10 actually being 

 9          proposed to be transferred.  We have three 

10          openings that we haven't been filled yet, and 

11          we probably -- we're waiting till this 

12          transfer occurs and they go to the State 

13          Police.  

14                 But each one of those analysts is 

15          cross-trained in different types of 

16          counterterrorism, and they have different 

17          expertises, although some are experts more so 

18          in one field than the other.  So if one is 

19          out, another covers.  But for the most part, 

20          that's never been an issue for us.

21                 SENATOR GOLDEN:  What was a little 

22          shock for me last week is when the Port 

23          Authority -- not the Port Authority, but the 

24          ILA went out on strike and ports were shut 


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 1          down in Jersey and in New York.  Anybody 

 2          having some idea that that was going to 

 3          happen obviously would have had some 

 4          advantage.  

 5                 How did -- were we informed of that?  

 6          Did we know about that?  And how do we stay 

 7          in touch with our ports, and how are we 

 8          dealing with our maritime.

 9                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  The 

10          longshoremen issue that was last week?  Yeah, 

11          I was made aware of it after it happened, 

12          actually, and was made aware of it when it 

13          ended.  But it wasn't really a -- I would say 

14          a counterterrorism issue per se.  So even 

15          though our analysts track all open-source 

16          intel about all different things, the ports 

17          being one of those areas, I don't think we 

18          received any previous Intel that this was 

19          coming.

20                 SENATOR GOLDEN:  But we are in touch 

21          with maritime?  If there's a ship coming in, 

22          we have problems with the ship, or a cruise 

23          ship or a tanker?  

24                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  We have 


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 1          analysts that brief monthly at the ports who 

 2          are very familiar with shipping industries 

 3          and the Coast Guard and all the partners that 

 4          certainly are involved in various ports 

 5          around the state.

 6                 SENATOR GOLDEN:  Thank you.  

 7                 The Superstorm Sandy -- which again, 

 8          you did an outstanding job -- but again, 

 9          we're in our fourth year and there are still 

10          thousands of people that are still not in 

11          their homes and still waiting to get their 

12          homes razed, and there's still a whole lot 

13          that has to be done and hardening of our 

14          arteries.  And you've explained to us and 

15          expressed to us how to fund it and gotten 

16          money out from the federal government and 

17          from the state government into the city and 

18          state and Long Island.  Is there anything 

19          that's not -- are there any obstacles in your 

20          way of not getting that money out?  Is there 

21          anything that's not giving you the 

22          opportunity to let that money flow more 

23          freely?  

24                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  I would have 


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 1          to say no, Senator.  We had over 12,000 

 2          contracts for public assistance -- repairing 

 3          bridges and tunnels and roadways and things 

 4          like that -- and we're current on all 12,000.  

 5                 The issue with some of those funding 

 6          problems is the work has to be done first.  

 7          The municipality has to pay for the work.  

 8          Once that municipality pays, we reimburse 

 9          through the federal government.  So it's 

10          not -- we just can't give the money up-front 

11          and say okay, go do your project.  It has to 

12          be done, the work has to be completed, it has 

13          to be inspected, it has to be paid, and then 

14          we reimburse.

15                 And we are current on all those 

16          contracts.  We don't have any outstanding 

17          bills as far as I know.

18                 SENATOR GOLDEN:  So you're working 

19          closely with the Army Corps of Engineers and 

20          in certain areas where we need dredging to be 

21          able to get our police boats, our fire boats 

22          in and out of -- and get them operable when 

23          needed, you're on top of all of that?  

24                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  I believe so, 


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 1          Senator.  That's probably those HMGP grants 

 2          that aren't really targeted at individuals or 

 3          communities.  They're large-scale projects.  

 4          For example, they're -- one of the projects 

 5          is bridge scour projects for 106 bridges 

 6          across the state.  There's projects like that 

 7          that HMGP money goes for that just take a 

 8          long time to complete.  And we pay as the 

 9          bills come in.  So, you know, those 12,000 

10          contracts that we have open, we are current 

11          on, but they just take a long time to get to 

12          the end.

13                 SENATOR GOLDEN:  I have a town hall 

14          coming up in Garrison Beach, Manhattan Beach 

15          and Sheepshead Bay in the Brooklyn area in 

16          the City of New York.  I may ask somebody 

17          from your office to attend.  It's coming up 

18          on March 1st, March 2nd.  So if I can get 

19          somebody to attend, I would appreciate it.  

20          Because I'm going to have both -- not only 

21          the homes and the people that are affected by 

22          Build It Back and by other streams of funds 

23          that are being made available for the 

24          building and rebuilding of these homes, but 


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 1          also they're going to have people there from 

 2          the hardening of the arteries in and around 

 3          those areas, to make sure that that water 

 4          doesn't come in and hit them again.  

 5                 So if you can, I'd appreciate somebody 

 6          from your office at that, if I can.  I'll 

 7          send a memo to your office.

 8                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  We'll 

 9          certainly look forward to that, Senator.

10                 SENATOR GOLDEN:  The settlement funds, 

11          are you guys getting any of the settlement 

12          funds that the -- coming in from the Attorney 

13          General and other areas?  Is Homeland 

14          Security getting any of that at all?

15                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Settlement 

16          funds?  I'm not familiar with that.

17                 SENATOR GOLDEN:  Settlement funds from 

18          the different settlements that the Attorney 

19          General has made or others have made with 

20          financial institutions of wrongdoing, where 

21          we see billions of dollars coming into the 

22          State of New York.  Are you getting any of 

23          those funds coming into your organization?  

24                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Those funds 


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 1          don't get channeled through us.

 2                 SENATOR GOLDEN:  They don't get 

 3          channeled at all.  Last question, or last 

 4          series of questions.  

 5                 The interoperability, how long is this 

 6          going to take?  I know that it's a tough 

 7          question, but I've still got the Port 

 8          Authority in one area and I still got NYPD in 

 9          another area.  And we know the 9/11 was 

10          Port Authority.  So we want to make sure 

11          we're on top of that in the city, and for the 

12          state.  If you can -- I know it's a leap 

13          here, but if you can give us some timeline as 

14          to when this interoperability is going to be 

15          in effect across the State of New York or, 

16          more so, when it's going to be effective with 

17          Port Authority and NYPD, I would greatly 

18          appreciate it.

19                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Hey, I 

20          understand the issue, Senator.  And I'm no 

21          radio geek, so that's a hard thing for me to 

22          say.  I asked the same question when I came 

23          to the agency:  How long is this going to 

24          take?  We keep throwing money, money, money 


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 1          at this.  You know, $228 million, I think, to 

 2          the counties to get this done.

 3                 It's a hard problem.  You'll probably 

 4          hear from the superintendent later this 

 5          afternoon about the issues maybe they had in 

 6          Dannemora with radio interoperability.  And 

 7          we sent people up there to assist with that.  

 8                 We're close.  We're throwing another 

 9          $75 million at this problem this year to the 

10          counties to take care of this.

11                 We're trying to fill gaps now.  We're 

12          almost there.  I would say our goal is to be 

13          interoperable statewide by the end of 2017.  

14          But New York's a big state, it's got a lot of 

15          topography issues, a lot of -- it's just a 

16          hard issue to finish.  But we're almost 

17          there.

18                 SENATOR GOLDEN:  My time is up.  If 

19          you could let me know when Port Authority --

20                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Yes, it is.

21                 SENATOR GOLDEN:  -- NYPD is going to.  

22          If you can get a memo to my office on Port 

23          Authority and NYPD.  I would appreciate it.

24                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  We will do 


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 1          that, Senator.

 2                 SENATOR GOLDEN:  Thank you very much.  

 3                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, Senator 

 4          Golden.

 5                 SENATOR GOLDEN:  You're quite welcome, 

 6          Madam Chair.

 7                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Assembly?  

 8                 ASSEMBLYMAN OAKS:  I think we're done.

 9                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Senator Bonacic.

10                 SENATOR BONACIC:  Thank you, 

11          Commissioner.  I think you're doing a 

12          terrific job since you've taken on this 

13          responsibility.

14                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Thank you, 

15          Senator.

16                 SENATOR BONACIC:  Especially 

17          outstanding when it comes to natural 

18          disasters -- floods, fire, Sandy.  And 

19          dealing with us, as Senator Golden said.  

20                 But I want to talk about terrorism.  

21          Terrorism has now moved up to maybe the top 

22          two things that are on Americans' minds, that 

23          we want to be safe in America.  And I myself, 

24          a little upset when I hear the Governor say 


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 1          that terrorist attacks on America is the new 

 2          normal.  If we're the greatest country in the 

 3          world, we should never have the mindset of 

 4          terrorist attacks on the homeland being 

 5          normal.  It's a crisis.  Okay?  

 6                 And I know you don't walk on water, 

 7          and I know many of these things that are 

 8          happening are beyond your control.  But my 

 9          view of this -- and I'm not a dramatist -- I 

10          think there is a clear and present danger to 

11          New York and America.  New York especially 

12          has the biggest bull's-eye of all the states 

13          in America.  And how we handle the Syrian 

14          crisis, with refugees, how we handle 

15          deportation for visas that have expired, how 

16          we handle our borders, how we handle 

17          immigration issues -- when are we going to 

18          stop gutting the military? -- all of these 

19          factors are happening, challenges, because of 

20          a failure of leadership in Washington.

21                 So I wanted just to say that.  And I 

22          know that may not be within your province.  

23          But Senator Croci, Senator Nozzolio and I 

24          have talked about -- at length about this 


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 1          cybersecurity.  Now, we've seen a pattern 

 2          over the last few years.  We see the Chinese 

 3          hacking our military secrets.  We see them 

 4          hacking the IRS.  We see them hacking Hillary 

 5          Clinton's personal server that has national 

 6          security issues.  

 7                 So I just think -- and this has gone 

 8          on for a while.  I think they're sleeping at 

 9          the switch, some of these people in 

10          Washington.  There's a loss of confidence, in 

11          my mind.  This is only me speaking.

12                 So I would suggest to you, if it's 

13          within your power in working with the 

14          Governor, to come up with a budget on how we 

15          can do more cybersecurity in the State of 

16          New York, to give you more resources so you 

17          don't have to depend on what other 

18          bureaucracies and what other people are 

19          doing, because I see us as having the biggest 

20          bull's-eye in New York.

21                 So if it's within your power, I would 

22          certainly be supportive of more money for 

23          homeland security -- on cybersecurity, 

24          in-house, under your leadership and whatever 


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 1          agencies you need to make us the best that we 

 2          can be.

 3                 And for the law enforcement that we 

 4          have in New York and in this country, I think 

 5          they have the most challenges in the world 

 6          and they're doing the best job that they can 

 7          with all that's facing them.  And we're so 

 8          grateful for the work that they do.

 9                 Thank you, Commissioner.

10                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  I agree.  

11          Thank you, Senator.

12                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you very 

13          much, Senator Bonacic.

14                 Our next speaker is Senator Squadron.

15                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Thank you very 

16          much, Madam Chair.  

17                 Thank you, Commissioner, for the work 

18          you do and the testimony you're providing.

19                 So as we look at a growing mandate, 

20          for the reasons we've heard and so many 

21          others, speak just briefly to something I've 

22          worked with the department on going back many 

23          years, to the coordination especially with 

24          New York City -- which as we know is a 


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 1          central target, has been centrally impacted 

 2          by Sandy and other severe emergencies, and 

 3          has in its NYPD one of the great 

 4          counterterrorism programs in the nation, and 

 5          in its own Office of Emergency Management a 

 6          very, very sophisticated emergency response 

 7          system.  How is that coordination with the 

 8          City of New York going?

 9                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Excellent.

10                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Great.  So that's 

11          true vis-a-vis NYPD?  

12                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Yes, it is.  I 

13          meet with Chief Waters regularly, the chief 

14          of counterterrorism.  Superintendent D'Amico 

15          of the State Police and I are good friends, 

16          we converse often about those types of 

17          issues.  And the cooperation between the 

18          Office of Emergency Management in New York 

19          City, the Police Department, and us is 

20          outstanding.

21                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Great.  And the 

22          office of Fire Protection and the FDNY?  

23                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Perfect.

24                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Excellent.  I 


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 1          passed a bill a number of years ago that 

 2          produced a report about some of the real 

 3          dangers to residents in New York City and 

 4          FDNY due to the fact that state buildings, 

 5          buildings under the state code in New York 

 6          City are not covered by the city building 

 7          code, historically did not have shared 

 8          building plans, which meant that tragically, 

 9          in my district, when FDNY went to respond to 

10          a fire at 130 Liberty Street at the World 

11          Trade Center site, they didn't have the same 

12          plans on file they would for another 

13          high-rise fire, and in that case leading to 

14          truly tragic circumstances.  

15                 There had been a plan to embed State 

16          Office of Fire Protection personnel with FDNY 

17          in their emergency response so that it was 

18          much easier to coordinate that information 

19          up-front and make sure that we weren't 

20          putting FDNY personnel at risk and were 

21          ensuring the kind of safety we have in state 

22          buildings in city buildings.  

23                 Is that program still continuing?  And 

24          what confidence can we have that FDNY is 


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 1          going to have the same information going into 

 2          a building under state jurisdiction as it 

 3          does every other building in the city?  

 4                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Can you just 

 5          provide some context as far as a date for 

 6          that, Senator?  Because I've only been here a 

 7          year, and I don't know if that goes way back 

 8          or --

 9                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Sure, of course.  

10          Yeah, that report I believe came out in 2012.  

11          And then through 2012 and '13 and into the 

12          beginning of 2014, we worked with 

13          then-Commissioner Cassano and Hauer on this 

14          quite extensively.

15                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Okay.  I'm 

16          going to have to get back to you, if that's 

17          okay, Senator.  I know there was some issue 

18          about state buildings in the city and it was 

19          a legal issue that our legal team was looking 

20          at.  I don't know if it's the same issue that 

21          you're referring to -- it may be.  But I 

22          don't have an answer for you.

23                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Okay.  Well, this 

24          is a critically important issue.  We need a 


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 1          path to a solution here.  And we can't, you 

 2          know, rely on sort of the status quo or on, 

 3          you know, bureaucratic attempts to hold on to 

 4          one role or the other.  

 5                 The fact is building plans are 

 6          available to FDNY when they get an emergency 

 7          in every building in the city unless it's not 

 8          under city jurisdiction, which means all the 

 9          state buildings, the Port Authority 

10          buildings, the buildings at the World Trade 

11          Center site are not automatically shared in 

12          that way.

13                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Okay.

14                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Further, some of 

15          the roles and the consistency between the 

16          roles and the processes for how you create 

17          safe buildings or fire-safe buildings are not 

18          the same.  And therefore, it can create 

19          concerns and risks both for the users of 

20          those buildings and for emergency personnel 

21          who are responding.  

22                 This is something that has to be 

23          better coordinated than it has been in the 

24          past.  We started that process, and it sounds 


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 1          like -- and thank you for your sort of 

 2          straightforwardness in this answer -- it's 

 3          not clear that process has been completed in 

 4          a way that's sufficient.  So I would love a 

 5          report on where that is and why it is that we 

 6          can have more comfort now than a half-decade 

 7          ago when tragic consequences ensued and 

 8          firefighters lost their lives at 130 Liberty 

 9          Street related to this issue.

10                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Yeah, don't 

11          misunderstand me, Senator; I don't know if 

12          that issue has been resolved.  I do know that 

13          we have a wonderful working relationship 

14          between our Office of Fire Prevention and 

15          Control and the FDNY.  I would assume that if 

16          it was some critical issue, as you described, 

17          I would be aware of it.  I really haven't 

18          heard -- I know there was an issue about 

19          building inspections or something --

20                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Exactly.

21                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  -- but it 

22          hadn't risen to the level of really a 

23          critical problem that I certainly would hope 

24          that I would be aware of.  


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 1                 So it may be solved, it may be done, 

 2          but I guarantee I'll get back to you.

 3                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  I mean, one of the 

 4          issues is this long-standing problem folks 

 5          have gotten used to -- which doesn't mean 

 6          it's not a problem but sometimes it doesn't 

 7          rise to the level of an alarm bell being 

 8          rung.  It's smoldering as opposed to sort of, 

 9          you know, really burning out of control right 

10          now.  But let's stop it while it's 

11          smoldering.  

12                 So I'll look forward to some feedback 

13          and follow-up on where we are with that issue 

14          over the next couple of weeks.  Thank you so 

15          much.  

16                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  As do I.  

17          Thank you.  

18                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you very 

19          much.  Senator Krueger.

20                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Thank you very much.  

21                 And thank you for your excellent work.

22                 A number of my colleagues were 

23          discussing their support for even more money 

24          for your agency.  My question actually is, 


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 1          your agency is receiving $600 million 

 2          additional in federal revenue this year 

 3          compared to last year.  So last year you had 

 4          $653,774,000 in federal special revenue; this 

 5          year it increases by $600 million.  

 6                 Where is all this money going in the 

 7          current budget?

 8                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  That 

 9          $600 million increase in Aid to Localities, 

10          Senator, is really just an appropriation, in 

11          case we need to pass federal funds through 

12          for a future disaster, that we have the 

13          ability and the appropriation to do that.

14                 We don't have any plans to use that 

15          money.  I hope we don't.

16                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  So it's a cash 

17          infusion from the feds or a line of credit, 

18          that if something happens, we can make 

19          requests for certain categories of things?  

20                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  The latter, is 

21          my understanding.

22                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Okay.  Can you talk 

23          a little bit about how you used last year's 

24          $653 million, or is that also still just a 


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 1          line of credit that we drew down some of but 

 2          not all of?  

 3                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  That is 

 4          correct.  And this is just increasing that 

 5          $600 million in case we need to use it.

 6                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Did we use any of 

 7          that $653 million from the fiscal year that's 

 8          closing?

 9                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  We did not 

10          have a federally declared disaster in all of 

11          2015.  I'm taking credit for that.  But --

12                 (Laughter.)

13                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  So I'm going 

14          to say no, Senator.  But as much as I'm not a 

15          radio geek, I'm really not a budget person 

16          either.  But I -- that's my understanding.

17                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  And do you know, is 

18          there a specific set of language somewhere, 

19          and perhaps that you could get us, that 

20          explains under what circumstances we can draw 

21          that money down?  

22                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Certainly.

23                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  I would appreciate 

24          that.


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 1                 And do you have any understanding of 

 2          whether, if we don't spend it by some date, 

 3          do we not have access to it?  

 4                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  I think it 

 5          just gets -- my understanding -- and again, 

 6          take it from where it's coming from -- is 

 7          that it would have to be reappropriated next 

 8          year.  But I'm not sure.

 9                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Thank you very much.

10                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, 

11          Commissioner.  By the way, good work on not 

12          tapping that fund, so keep it up.

13                 I want to just quickly ask, to follow 

14          up on Senator Krueger's question, so 

15          generally that fund would be used, for 

16          example, for FEMA disasters or some kind of 

17          terrorism attack, is that basically it?

18                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  If we had a 

19          flood, if we had a hurricane, if we had a 

20          tornado, that type of disaster, we would be 

21          able to appropriate those funds.  Because the 

22          Legislature had said it was okay to do that.

23                 And that money would come to us 

24          through FEMA or DHS.


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 1                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Correct.  Thank 

 2          you.

 3                 Our final speaker, to wrap up, is 

 4          Senator Croci.

 5                 SENATOR CROCI:  Well, thank you, Madam 

 6          Chair, for the opportunity to ask a couple of 

 7          follow-up questions, Commissioner.  And I 

 8          appreciate your patience here today with us.

 9                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  My pleasure.

10                 SENATOR CROCI:  We touched on a little 

11          about the Governor's statement about a "new 

12          normal."  My colleague brought that out.  And 

13          I think Commissioner Kelly, Ray Kelly, is one 

14          of those individuals who helped redefine what 

15          our actions needed to be, particularly in 

16          New York City, in the wake of the attacks in 

17          the early '90s on Lower Manhattan, but also 

18          specifically after September 11th and the 

19          kind of counterterrorism unit and capability 

20          that the NYPD built.

21                 So I'm very interested in having the 

22          opportunity, perhaps the Legislature to see 

23          that report.  Given his expertise and his 

24          national recognition, it would be very 


                                                                  175

 1          interesting to see that.

 2                 But I am curious -- you have a direct 

 3          one-on-one relationship with the head of 

 4          counterterrorism at the NYPD.  And I'm just 

 5          curious, why we would take away statutory 

 6          language that puts you in charge of 

 7          counterterrorism in the State of New York by 

 8          taking that title away, along with bodies, if 

 9          you are the individual who has relationships 

10          in counterterrorism.  That's a question that 

11          I had, if you had any follow-up answer.

12                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Sure.  I don't 

13          view this transfer of the analysts from my 

14          division to the Division of State Police as 

15          anything more than getting them in line to 

16          streamline their intel to the people who need 

17          it first, and then we'll get it.  

18                 I don't think that I will not be 

19          considered a counterterrorism person anymore.  

20          I mean, I'll still have those relationships, 

21          I'll still have different functions with 

22          respect to counterterrorism in the Division 

23          of Homeland Security and Emergency Services, 

24          just not the intel and analysis report.


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 1                 SENATOR CROCI:  So why take that 

 2          statutory responsibility away from you, then, 

 3          counterterrorism, by changing that language 

 4          in the statute as proposed here?

 5                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  Are you 

 6          referring to the analysts?

 7                 SENATOR CROCI:  Well, but it also -- 

 8          there's a deletion of the term 

 9          "counterterrorism."  So I was just wondering 

10          if that's something that you had a thought 

11          on.

12                 COMMISSIONER MELVILLE:  My impression, 

13          Senator, is that it's just the analysts 

14          moving over and that all other 

15          counterterrorism responsibilities lie with 

16          the Division of Homeland Security and 

17          Emergency Services, the ones that we have 

18          now.  

19                 I remain, again, the homeland security 

20          advisor to the Governor and the contact for 

21          the Department of Homeland Security in 

22          Washington.  And I really don't think it's 

23          going to change anything other than make it a 

24          little clearer for the analysts to get their 


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 1          information to the people that need it first, 

 2          and then we'll get it.  And so will everybody 

 3          else.

 4                 SENATOR CROCI:  Touching on what 

 5          Senator Nozzolio mentioned about the transfer 

 6          of cybersecurity responsibilities to ITS and 

 7          then, two years later now, a proposal to take 

 8          counterterrorism and certain bodies out of 

 9          that pool, I think it's a conversation that 

10          we'll have to continue to have.  I'm 

11          concerned at the deemphasis of it because I 

12          believe at the executive level, the lessons 

13          of 9/11 and the "new normal" have suggested 

14          that we need to continually augment that and 

15          we need to continually highlight that from 

16          the executive level.  And that I would want 

17          any executive, but particularly the Governor 

18          of this state and his staff, to be getting 

19          the most timely and accurate intelligence 

20          possible so that good decisions could be made 

21          and good policies could be passed to protect 

22          New Yorkers.

23                 My last statement was just that I 

24          really -- I do believe that you have, in the 


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 1          year, been able to work well with the 

 2          Legislature.  These are very complicated 

 3          issues.  I share my colleagues' concerns that 

 4          we're out of time with regard to attacks.  

 5          And if Paris and San Bernardino and going 

 6          back to the attacks in the Boston Marathon 

 7          and others, if that isn't indicative of 

 8          what's coming -- it's an inevitability that I 

 9          hate to concede, and I'm sure every New 

10          Yorker hates to concede.  But I believe that 

11          there are things we can do, there are 

12          prevention preparedness moves that we can 

13          make in the State of New York, legislative 

14          and others.  

15                 It does take us out of our normal 

16          comfort zone, and that's the new normal, that 

17          we have to take actions we ordinarily 

18          wouldn't as a Legislature, and look at laws 

19          and administrative controls for the Governor 

20          and authorities that we wouldn't ordinarily.  

21                 So I'm concerned about what's coming 

22          for us, certainly.  I heed the message of the 

23          director of the FBI, who has since last year 

24          asked state and local governments to look at 


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 1          this in a new light and to come up with 

 2          innovative ways to assist our federal 

 3          partners.  And I just don't want to 

 4          deemphasize that in statute, I don't want to 

 5          deemphasize that in our administrative rules, 

 6          and I would hope that we could continue to 

 7          work together with the Governor's office to 

 8          make sure that we're doing everything we can 

 9          to protect New Yorkers.  We have no higher 

10          priority.  We have no more solemn duties than 

11          the security of our state and the residents 

12          of New York.

13                 So thank you, and I look forward to 

14          working with you in the future.

15                 Thank you, Madam Chair.

16                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, Chairman 

17          Croci.

18                 Commissioner, we truly appreciate your 

19          participation today and for being so patient 

20          and sticking with us as we had our questions 

21          asked and answered.  So thank you for that.  

22                 And our next speaker is Executive 

23          Deputy Commissioner Michael C. Green --

24                 CHAIRMAN FARRELL:  Thank you.


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 1                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.

 2                 -- New York State Division of Criminal 

 3          Justice Services.

 4                 (Pause.)

 5                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Could I have your 

 6          attention, please.  Thank you.  

 7                 Executive Deputy Commissioner Green, 

 8          welcome.  We're glad to have you here.  We 

 9          look forward to your testimony.

10                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Thank 

11          you.  

12                 Good afternoon, Chairwoman Young, 

13          Chairman Farrell, and distinguished members 

14          of the Legislature.  I'm Mike Green, head of 

15          the Division of Criminal Justice Services, 

16          and I appreciate you having me here today.

17                 Governor Cuomo's proposed budget for 

18          fiscal year 2016-2017 will allow DCJS to 

19          support the criminal justice system in 

20          communities across our state, expand the use 

21          of evidence-based programs proven to be 

22          effective and cost-efficient, and continue 

23          the development of innovative programs that 

24          position New York as a national leader in 


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 1          effective public safety policy.  

 2                 New York continues to experience 

 3          reductions in crime and prison population. 

 4          Reported crime reached an all-time low in 

 5          2014, and that year we maintained our 

 6          standing as the safest large state in the 

 7          nation.  New York also has the lowest 

 8          imprisonment rate of any large state. 

 9                 Statewide crime data is not yet 

10          available for 2015, but preliminary trends 

11          indicate that crime continued to decline last 

12          year.  And we will have better numbers by 

13          mid-spring.  

14                 In addition to reintroducing 

15          legislation to raise the age of criminal 

16          responsibility, the Governor has proposed a 

17          range of other reforms to enhance the 

18          fairness and effectiveness of our criminal 

19          justice system and build trust between law 

20          enforcement agencies and communities.  

21                 In his Built to Lead agenda, Governor 

22          Cuomo advocates for legislation requiring 

23          recording of interrogations in serious cases, 

24          and reforming identification procedures, to 


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 1          bring New York in line with 49 other states 

 2          that allow photo-array identifications into 

 3          evidence at trial.  

 4                 Law enforcement agencies have embraced 

 5          recording, and we have already provided 

 6          approximately $3 million for them to purchase 

 7          and install the technology.  DCJS plans to 

 8          announce additional funding this year.  

 9                 The Innocence Project and the District 

10          Attorneys' Association support these 

11          concepts; it's time they became law.  

12                 The Governor also is committed to 

13          reforming New York's bail statute.  New York 

14          is one of only four states that prohibit 

15          judges from considering risk to public safety 

16          as a factor when setting bail.  A commonsense 

17          amendment will allow judges to consider that 

18          risk when setting bail or allowing release 

19          and permit them to use proven risk 

20          assessments to aid in pre-trial release 

21          decisions.  Other jurisdictions have 

22          successfully implemented the use of risk 

23          assessments, which has resulted in fewer 

24          individuals being detained pre-trial as well 


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 1          as increased public safety.  

 2                 Through the Pew-MacArthur Results 

 3          First Initiative, DCJS has strengthened the 

 4          state's community-based alternative to 

 5          incarceration network, funding programs that 

 6          are effective in reducing recidivism and 

 7          cost-efficient.  We are training ATI 

 8          providers, in addition to implementing a 

 9          fidelity and evaluation system to ensure the 

10          programs we fund are delivered as designed.  

11                 New York's ATI realignment work has 

12          been touted by Pew-MacArthur in a recently 

13          published case study as a best practice for 

14          other states to follow to reduce recidivism 

15          and maximize taxpayer dollars.  

16                 The Governor's budget invests nearly 

17          $26.2 million through DCJS in programming 

18          that reduces incarceration and recidivism.  

19          That figure includes new funding:  $1 million 

20          to expand the state's County Re-Entry Task 

21          Forces to include new task forces in Queens 

22          and increase the capacity of existing county 

23          task forces; and $1 million to create new 

24          defendant screening and assessment programs 


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 1          in jurisdictions outside New York City.  

 2                 In its second year, New York's Gun 

 3          Involved Violence Elimination initiative, or 

 4          GIVE, supports the use of proven strategies 

 5          to reduce shootings and save lives.  GIVE 

 6          targets the 17 counties that collectively 

 7          report 87 percent of the violent crime 

 8          outside of New York City.  GIVE provides 

 9          police departments and their county law 

10          enforcement partners $13.3 million in 

11          funding, in addition to training and 

12          technical assistance from national experts to 

13          help implement programs proven to be 

14          effective.  

15                 New York is unique among states in its 

16          commitment to funding only evidence-based 

17          work through GIVE.  The initiative's emphasis 

18          on procedural justice -- which focuses on 

19          ensuring that interactions between law 

20          enforcement and individuals are fair, and 

21          that individuals who come in contact with 

22          police believe they are being treated fairly 

23          and respectfully -- also sets GIVE apart. 

24                 More than 200 law enforcement 


                                                                  185

 1          professionals recently attended a two-day 

 2          symposium to help them put procedural justice 

 3          into action.  Research shows that positive 

 4          police-community relations contribute to 

 5          safer communities.  

 6                 To help stem the tide of gun violence 

 7          that continues to claim too many lives,  

 8          particularly those of young men of color,  

 9          DCJS encourages GIVE jurisdictions to 

10          implement street outreach work into their 

11          strategies.  We've provided additional 

12          funding to support street outreach in 10 GIVE 

13          jurisdictions and in the Bronx.  The 

14          Governor's budget proposal funds GIVE and 

15          street outreach work at the same level as the 

16          current budget.  

17                 This 2016-2017 budget proposal will 

18          allow DCJS to continue supporting our local 

19          partners, expanding our evidence-based work, 

20          and implementing initiatives designed to 

21          foster fairness, respect and transparency in 

22          the state's criminal justice system.  

23                 I thank you for the opportunity to 

24          speak with you today, and I'd be happy to 


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 1          take any questions you have.

 2                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, 

 3          Executive Deputy Commissioner Green.  

 4                 Our first speaker is Senator Gallivan, 

 5          who is chair of the Senate Crime and 

 6          Corrections Committee.

 7                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Thank you, Madam 

 8          Chair.  

 9                 Good afternoon, Commissioner.

10                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Good 

11          afternoon, Senator.

12                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  I have questions in 

13          three different areas that is outside of the 

14          testimony that you just gave us.  And you may 

15          not or may not be aware -- and if this is not 

16          your area of responsibility, if you can point 

17          me in the right direction so I can follow 

18          through.

19                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  

20          Certainly.

21                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Two years ago, in 

22          the 2014-2015 budget, there was language in 

23          that budget to provide for a statewide law 

24          enforcement records management system.  And 


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 1          the goal, of course, was to do a number of 

 2          things -- to increase the ability of law 

 3          enforcement agencies statewide to interact 

 4          with each other, streamline reporting, help 

 5          them provide better service in the area of 

 6          case management, things like that.

 7                 What is the status of that?

 8                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  I am 

 9          aware of the issue you're speaking about, and 

10          it's an issue that involves both DCJS and the 

11          New York State Police.  The State Police side 

12          of it -- and I'm sure the superintendent can 

13          address this better than I do -- is that 

14          their records management system needs to be 

15          updated.  The technology that it's built 

16          upon, as I understand it, is on the verge of 

17          becoming unsupported.

18                 Basically the same records management 

19          system through DCJS is offered to local law 

20          enforcement agencies.  At one time there were 

21          well over 200 local law enforcement agencies 

22          that took advantage of that offer and used 

23          that as their records management system.  

24          Again, that same system has the same problems 


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 1          as the State Police one, in that the 

 2          technology was becoming unsupported two years 

 3          ago when that proposal was put forward.  

 4                 That proposal was subject to the 

 5          approval by the Legislature of a plan 

 6          submitted to the Legislature by the 

 7          Executive.  The State Police and DCJS put 

 8          together that plan, submitted it to the 

 9          Legislature, we met with legislative staff 

10          repeatedly.  And it's my understanding that 

11          to this date there is still not legislative 

12          approval for that plan.

13                 What's happening on the ground, in the 

14          meantime, is I have local law enforcement 

15          agencies calling me literally every week 

16          saying, I need a new records management 

17          system, do I need to go out and buy my own 

18          records management system or is this ever 

19          going to happen?  Just last week I received 

20          an outreach from the Sheriffs Association 

21          asking me the same thing.  So I really 

22          appreciate you raising the issue.  I think it 

23          is an issue that needs to be addressed 

24          urgently.  And we're still waiting for 


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 1          approval.

 2                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  I was aware, I 

 3          think it was late last session and into the 

 4          summer, perhaps into the fall, I was aware 

 5          that there was discussions that were ongoing.  

 6          Has there been recent discussions over the 

 7          past several months, to your knowledge?  

 8                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  I have 

 9          not personally heard anything from the 

10          Legislature.  I've met, I'd say, at least 

11          three or four times with staff, we've 

12          answered questions in person, we've responded 

13          to all the written questions that we've 

14          received.  So I'm not aware of any 

15          unaddressed inquiries from the Legislature to 

16          DCJS.

17                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  How can I find out 

18          where this is, the status of it?  

19                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Again, 

20          to the best of my understanding -- and I have 

21          been following this on a weekly basis because 

22          of the inquiries and the concerns I get from 

23          local law enforcement -- is that we're just 

24          waiting for approval from the Legislature, 


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 1          that the RFP is drafted and ready to go, the 

 2          RFP was provided to the Legislature.  The 

 3          plan was drafted, it was amended a number of 

 4          times in response to concerns that the 

 5          Legislature raised.  The plan was provided to 

 6          the Legislature.

 7                 So, you know, everything is done, 

 8          ready to go, and the RFP is waiting to go out 

 9          the door.  And the only thing we're waiting 

10          on is the legislative approval.

11                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  All right, thank 

12          you.

13                 The next question has to do -- it does 

14          have to do with the Governor's budget 

15          proposal this year, but more so pointing to 

16          last year.  So in the last fiscal year there 

17          was $60 million allocated, the category was 

18          for law enforcement safety equipment.  But it 

19          was to include vehicles for State Police and 

20          then some other equipment, bulletproof vests, 

21          things of that nature.

22                 There was a recent news article within 

23          the past three or four weeks where a 

24          spokesperson for the Governor said that that 


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 1          money was contingent on the Legislature 

 2          reaching an agreement with the Governor on 

 3          last year's various criminal justice 

 4          proposals.  I was in on many of those 

 5          meetings; I don't recall any time that that 

 6          funding was contingent when we put that 

 7          budget forward.

 8                 So this year's budget essentially 

 9          takes that $60 million for badly needed State 

10          Police cars, for badly needed equipment and 

11          the other things, and reallocates it for 

12          different things.  I do know that there was a 

13          much smaller amount allocated for equipment, 

14          I think it was $4 million or something of 

15          that nature.  Are you able to comment on that 

16          and maybe allay our concerns that the State 

17          Police does not need vehicles, does not need 

18          additional equipment?

19                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  First of 

20          all, you would certainly have better 

21          information than I in terms of what was said 

22          in the negotiating sessions.  I wasn't there.  

23                 I am well aware of the $60 million you 

24          talk about.  What I can tell you is that that 


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 1          money was never provided to DCJS.  Originally 

 2          there was conversation about DCJS doing an 

 3          RFP or solicitation for local law 

 4          enforcement.  I know one issue related to the 

 5          appropriation language.  The way the language 

 6          was drafted, it did not give DCJS the 

 7          authority to pass that money through on the 

 8          local assistance grants.  I know that the 

 9          Executive and DCJS provided input as to 

10          language that would fix that problem, and 

11          it's my understanding that language never 

12          made it into the bill.  

13                 You know, I do know that the state 

14          does invest through other sources in -- you 

15          know, for example, bulletproof vests and 

16          other funding sources that law enforcement 

17          can use.  But that $60 million has never come 

18          to us for distribution.

19                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Fair enough.  Where 

20          can you point me to get answers?

21                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Again, 

22          you know, I think there were negotiations 

23          between the Executive and the Legislature.  

24          And I -- you know, I know one of the things 


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 1          that would need to be fixed is that 

 2          appropriation language.

 3                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  All right.  Thank 

 4          you.

 5                 The last question has to do with an 

 6          overall small item in the State Budget, but 

 7          very significant for some of the local law 

 8          enforcement agencies that enforce the 

 9          navigation law.  The Governor's budget calls 

10          for a reduction in reimbursements to those 

11          specific local agencies that provide those 

12          services -- some of the Finger Lakes, Lake 

13          Erie, Lake Ontario, agencies like that.  

14                 The budget -- the reduction was from 

15          50 percent to 25 percent.  In the overall 

16          scheme of the State Budget, $1 million is not 

17          significant.  But to these local agencies, 

18          it's huge.  Some of them have expressed to me 

19          they won't have the ability to provide the 

20          enforcement of the navigation on these 

21          various bodies of water.  

22                 How can you suggest we deal with that?  

23                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Again, I 

24          do not believe that that is through the DCJS 


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 1          budget, because I'm not familiar with that 

 2          and I believe I know our budget fairly well.  

 3          But I can certainly look into it and get you 

 4          information on what budget stream that is in.

 5                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  All right.  Thank 

 6          you.

 7                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Assembly?

 8                 CHAIRMAN FARRELL:  Yes.  Assemblyman  

 9          Joe Lentol -- Chairman Joe Lentol.

10                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  Thank you, 

11          Chairman, Chairman Dennis Farrell.  

12                 (Laughter.)

13                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  And thank you, 

14          Commissioner Green, for the work that you've 

15          been doing.  I've been watching you, and I 

16          admire all the work that you've done in this 

17          job.

18                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Thank 

19          you.

20                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  I just wanted to 

21          digress from some of the questions that I 

22          wanted to ask you because of some of your 

23          testimony, and following up on what 

24          Mr. Gallivan asked.  And I guess the first 


                                                                  195

 1          thing I'm going to ask is about the cloud 

 2          that he discussed.  And we have had and we 

 3          have sent letters over to you regarding some 

 4          issues that we'd like to resolve in order for 

 5          us to get on board with some legislation 

 6          that's needed either independently or in the 

 7          budget.  So I'm just hoping that you'll be 

 8          able to meet with our staff, that your staff 

 9          will be able to meet with our staff to clear 

10          up some of those issues.

11                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  I'm 

12          sorry, I missed -- you said with regard to 

13          what issue?  

14                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  With the cloud.

15                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  I guess 

16          I -- when you say cloud, I really don't know 

17          what you're talking about.  The issue is a 

18          records management system --

19                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  Yes.

20                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  -- it's 

21          not a cloud.  

22                 So, you know, we have met every single 

23          time we've been asked to meet; we've reached 

24          out and asked for meetings.  To my knowledge, 


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 1          we've answered every single inquiry.

 2                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  Okay.

 3                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  And I 

 4          will make myself available at any time going 

 5          forward to meet with you, your staff, or 

 6          anyone else from the Legislature with regard 

 7          to the records management system.

 8                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  Thank you.  

 9          That's all I can ask.

10                 And secondly, I'm very perplexed by 

11          the Governor's commitment to reforming the 

12          bail statute.  Because the mayor of the City 

13          of New York as well -- it's not only the 

14          Governor -- have proposed issues like the 

15          Governor is proposing with respect to public 

16          safety being required and having a statutory 

17          change in order to include public safety in 

18          bail reform.

19                 At the same time, trying to implement 

20          a program to allow people to get out, rather 

21          than -- on bail, as opposed to having them 

22          languish for two or three years and then 

23          committing suicide like what happened in the 

24          case in the Bronx.


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 1                 And so I don't want to ask a long 

 2          question, but I know historically that -- and 

 3          I don't know if you were here to hear 

 4          Mr. O'Donnell's questions earlier --

 5                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Yes, I 

 6          heard the questions. 

 7                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  -- about bail 

 8          reform and how we know that judges take into 

 9          account all of the things involving public 

10          safety when they set bail.

11                 So my most important concern is that 

12          this will prevent the judges from letting 

13          anybody out if they have a new component 

14          that's added to the statute regarding risk 

15          assessment or public safety.  Because I don't 

16          know, some of the judges that I've seen 

17          aren't brave, and they might take the 

18          position, well, the Legislature just passed a 

19          statute that we have to take public safety in 

20          mind, so why should I let anybody out who 

21          comes before me?  That's my question.

22                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  I think 

23          that's a very good question.  You know, and I 

24          know you've spent a great deal of time both 


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 1          in and dealing with the criminal justice 

 2          system, as has Assemblyman O'Donnell.  

 3                 And I think that sometimes your first 

 4          instinct is to say, well, if you let judges 

 5          consider that type of risk, we're going to 

 6          hold more people.  You know, and certainly I 

 7          can admit that when I first heard the issue, 

 8          that was one of the things that crossed my 

 9          mind.  

10                 But I'm a firm believer in 

11          evidence-based work.  I think that we 

12          constantly need to look at our system and see 

13          how can we make it better.  I think we need 

14          to look at what's happening in other parts of 

15          the country in terms of new practices that 

16          have been studied and shown results, and see 

17          what we can learn from them.  And this is one 

18          of the areas where I think we can learn.  

19                 If you look at, for example, some of 

20          the work the Arnold Foundation has done where 

21          you allow judges to consider that risk and at 

22          the same time you provide a framework -- so 

23          right now, assuming what Assemblyman 

24          O'Donnell said is true -- and I certainly 


                                                                  199

 1          can't tell what's going on in the mind of 

 2          judges, but, you know, I have to say that I 

 3          think the inference that he asked people to 

 4          draw is reasonable -- then you have judges 

 5          right now with no guidance, no legislative 

 6          authority, considering that risk.

 7                 I would argue that it's much better to 

 8          put it in legislation, establish guidelines, 

 9          and then allow judges to use evidence-based, 

10          validated risk assessment instruments as a 

11          tool -- not to replace their judgment, but as 

12          a tool in addition to their judgment -- and 

13          train judges and prosecutors and defense 

14          lawyers on how to use those instruments.  And 

15          what the evidence has shown in the 

16          jurisdictions that have done that is that you 

17          actually end up holding fewer people, not 

18          more people, and at the same time you have 

19          fewer crimes committed by people who are 

20          released because you're making better 

21          decisions as a system as to who to release.

22                 And, you know, to your point about 

23          judges being concerned or not wanting to take 

24          a risk, if you have valid risk assessment 


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 1          instruments, in some cases that may give the 

 2          judge the cover that the judge feels he or 

 3          she needs to make that decision and release 

 4          somebody who doesn't pose a public safety 

 5          risk and could safely be released.

 6                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  Just to let you 

 7          know that I'm kind of a student of history, 

 8          because my father had been here before I was, 

 9          and he was here during the 1965 revision of 

10          the State Penal Law, when the Republican 

11          Party controlled both houses of the 

12          Legislature and the Governor was a 

13          Republican.  

14                 And at that time, the Penal Law was 

15          amended by a sentencing commission, I guess, 

16          or a -- I'm sorry, a law revision commission 

17          that was basically headed by Mr. Bartlett, 

18          Assemblyman Bartlett, who was a Republican 

19          member -- I guess from Ms. Duprey's district, 

20          I'm not sure, upstate New York.  

21                 And that commission recommended, after 

22          a long arduous discussion about the issue of 

23          preventative detention, that we should leave 

24          it out of the Penal Law, we should put in 


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 1          provisions to allow judges to make the 

 2          assessment based on the risk factors that 

 3          Mr. O'Donnell mentioned earlier about it, so 

 4          that a judge's hands wouldn't be tied by a 

 5          preventative detention statute that would 

 6          require them to set high bail in most every 

 7          case.  

 8                 I just wanted to point that out to 

 9          you, because that was done in 1965 when the 

10          Penal Law was revised.  So ...

11                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  From the 

12          question, it sounds like you have an 

13          advantage and may be a little bit older than 

14          I am --

15                 (Laughter.)

16                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  Just a little 

17          bit.

18                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  But, you 

19          know, I think that that's a good point, that 

20          we should learn from history.  But I think we 

21          also have to learn from the experiences.  And 

22          I'm not sure that the science behind risk 

23          assessment that exists today existed back 

24          then when they were making that decision.


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 1                 And again, if you look to 

 2          jurisdictions that have implemented this and 

 3          implemented it properly, the result is fewer 

 4          people being held.

 5                 And back to your initial statement, 

 6          this proposal is being put forth by the 

 7          Governor because of his belief that if we 

 8          make better decisions and we use the science 

 9          that's available, we can hold fewer people 

10          and make the state safer.

11                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  I want to move 

12          on, but I should also point out, which I 

13          forgot to mention, that at the time in 1965 

14          we had a crime rate that was much worse than 

15          today, when that decision was made.

16                 But let me move on to the independent 

17          monitor.  Because we talked about this last 

18          year when you were here, and I don't want to 

19          ask a whole host of questions.  But it's hard 

20          for me to understand whether this was a 

21          mistake to be put back in the budget or not.  

22          Because since the Governor issued an 

23          executive order to allow the Attorney General 

24          to act as a special prosecutor -- and an 


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 1          independent monitor would have no resources 

 2          at all within which to work, and the Attorney 

 3          General would have a multitude of resources 

 4          to handle these cases -- why are we asking 

 5          again for an independent monitor and why not 

 6          let the Attorney General handle these cases 

 7          as a special prosecutor?  

 8                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  To 

 9          address your first point, it is not a mistake 

10          that it was put back in.  I think -- at least 

11          from my position, I think the Governor made 

12          clear last year that he believed that the 

13          best option was the legislative option that 

14          he put forward.

15                 As I know you're well aware, there are 

16          many very important considerations to be 

17          balanced here.  One of those is that every 

18          county has an elected district attorney that 

19          the people of that county elected to handle 

20          cases like this and make decisions like this 

21          in their county.

22                 And a countervailing consideration is 

23          public confidence in the criminal justice 

24          system, which we know is critical, you know, 


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 1          for a number of different reasons.  One of 

 2          which is studies show that when public 

 3          confidence in the criminal justice system 

 4          erodes, one of the things that can follow is 

 5          lawlessness and higher crime rates.

 6                 So in balancing those things, the 

 7          Governor put forth a proposal that would not 

 8          automatically take away the district 

 9          attorney's ability to handle cases but would 

10          put a provision in place when the district 

11          attorney either did not go to the grand jury 

12          within a reasonable time on the case or the 

13          grand jury issued no bill, to have an 

14          independent monitor come in, review the facts 

15          of the case, review the grand jury 

16          proceedings and make a report to the 

17          Governor, so when the Governor exercised his 

18          or her powers in terms of whether or not to 

19          appoint a special prosecutor, it would be 

20          made based on solid information about the 

21          facts and circumstances of that particular 

22          case.  And if the Governor felt that there 

23          was an injustice or that there was new 

24          evidence, the Governor could appoint a 


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 1          special prosecutor.  

 2                 And I don't agree with your assessment 

 3          that there would be no resources, because I 

 4          think that it is envisioned under their 

 5          proposal that both the independent monitor 

 6          and, if necessary, the special prosecutor 

 7          would have the resources necessary.

 8                 Now, last year the Governor made clear 

 9          that that was his preference, but that if it 

10          didn't pass, he felt something had to be 

11          done.  And when nothing was passed, he felt 

12          something needed to be done, he signed the 

13          executive order.

14                 We're obviously in a different 

15          position this year.  You know, now there's an 

16          executive order in place.  But that doesn't 

17          change the fact that the Executive feels that 

18          the best path forward is a path that creates 

19          that balance between those two very important 

20          considerations.  And I believe that that is 

21          the reason why this legislation is put back 

22          in again in the Governor's Article VII 

23          budget.

24                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  I listened very 


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 1          carefully to the Governor at his State of the 

 2          State message, and I thought I heard him 

 3          say -- and maybe I'm mistaken, because you 

 4          said I'm getting older; my hearing may be 

 5          getting bad.  But I thought the Governor said 

 6          that he was asking for not an independent 

 7          monitor but passage of the Keith Wright bill 

 8          to make permanent a grand jury -- I'm sorry, 

 9          a special prosecutor in the Attorney 

10          General's office to prosecute these cases and 

11          investigate whether or not an additional 

12          prosecution is necessary.

13                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  I was 

14          sitting much farther back than you were, so I 

15          might not have heard right either.  But my 

16          comments are based on the language of the 

17          Article VII bill that was submitted.  And I 

18          believe what I have just indicated in my 

19          comments is consistent with the language 

20          that's in that Article VII bill.

21                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  Okay.

22                 CHAIRMAN FARRELL:  You're at zero now.

23                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  I'm at zero, so 

24          I'll turn my time over to the next speaker.


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 1                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 2                 CHAIRMAN FARRELL:  Thank you very 

 3          much.

 4                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Our next speaker is 

 5          Senator Mike Nozzolio.

 6                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Thank you very 

 7          much.

 8                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Good 

 9          afternoon.

10                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Mr. DCJS 

11          Commissioner, former district attorney and 

12          good friend.  How are you, Mike?

13                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Good, 

14          thank you.

15                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Senator Funke and 

16          Senator Akshar may be talking about other 

17          issues regarding parole, and I want to put 

18          you on notice in this forum that we are very 

19          concerned with -- by we, those of us in the 

20          Senate -- as we review the budget, in terms 

21          of the allocation of resources for parole.  I 

22          know that's not directly within your purview, 

23          but certainly we will be probing that with 

24          Acting Commissioner Annucci and others.  


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 1                 But I wanted you to know that that's a 

 2          big concern of ours, and particularly in 

 3          Western New York.  The supervision and the 

 4          problems we've had with the caseload of 

 5          parole officers as well as the results of 

 6          very tragic incidents occurring in your 

 7          hometown over the last few years regarding 

 8          those who are out on parole and committing 

 9          very violent crimes soon after their 

10          discharge.  So putting you on notice of that, 

11          Mike.

12                 Again in your region, but this is -- 

13          we're finding this happening throughout the 

14          state, is the scourge of heroin.  It's a 

15          scourge, it's a deeply rooted problem that is 

16          no longer isolated in the inner cities but 

17          expanding well into the suburbs and rural 

18          areas.

19                 Just as an aside, the sheriff of 

20          Seneca County had a forum late last fall, and 

21          it was discussed how those traveling from the 

22          Central Finger Lakes, going to Rochester and 

23          Syracuse to buy their supplies, and then 

24          coming home, a round trip of 80 to 100 miles 


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 1          and actually distributing, as dealers of 

 2          heroin, and having a market in the Central 

 3          Finger Lakes, which never existed before.  

 4                 But you travel the Thruway, we travel 

 5          the Thruway.  Just think of those who are 

 6          high on heroin going back and forth to their 

 7          places of obtaining supplies and being high 

 8          on the road -- in fact, inebriated, under the 

 9          influence.  And that just is nonetheless a 

10          very disturbing situation.

11                 What is DCJS doing, your agency, to 

12          stem the heroin epidemic and to address the 

13          heroin epidemic in our state? 

14                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  That's a 

15          very good question.  You know, and I 

16          certainly agree with you that heroin is a 

17          very serious problem.  One thing I'd say to 

18          preface my remarks, as you noted, I was a 

19          prosecutor, I spent 25 years in the DA's 

20          office, the last eight years as the DA.  And 

21          I can't tell you how many wiretap 

22          applications I signed on drug cases, how many 

23          search warrants, you know, how many thousands  

24          of drug dealers were prosecuted and, you 


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 1          know, God knows how many pounds of heroin and 

 2          coke and whatever else.  And none of it made 

 3          the drug problem go away.

 4                 So, you know, when we think about this 

 5          problem, I think we need to think about it 

 6          from more than just a law enforcement 

 7          perspective.  You know, if all we do is 

 8          figure out how to arrest people and how to 

 9          confiscate drugs, we're on a never-ending 

10          treadmill and we'll just keep doing that with 

11          no change.  

12                 So, you know, a huge part of the 

13          equation has to be on the treatment side.  

14          And I, in my remarks, briefly talked about 

15          how we are bringing evidence-based practices 

16          to the support of the funding that we do, to 

17          make sure that the money that we provide to 

18          Alternative to Incarceration programs -- so 

19          when people come into the criminal justice 

20          system, need help and get referred to help, 

21          the help that they're getting is effective 

22          help that's done by agencies that are running 

23          in a way that is designed to make sure that 

24          they get effective treatment and don't keep 


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 1          cycling through the system.  So that's one 

 2          area that we're working in.

 3                 We've also been very active in terms 

 4          of Naloxone, working with a number of other 

 5          state agencies.  We've been engaged in a 

 6          program for about two years now to train and 

 7          provide law enforcement officers across the 

 8          state with Naloxone.  So far, over 8,000 

 9          officers have been trained as part of that 

10          program, including about 2,500 trainers under 

11          the Train the Trainer model.  They've 

12          administered Naloxone about a thousand times.  

13          Over 900 of those 1,000 administrations have 

14          resulted in saves.  

15                 In addition, we've provided funding 

16          and do provide funding to the special 

17          narcotics prosecutor, to district attorney's 

18          offices across the state, some of which is 

19          used for the prosecution of drug cases.  And 

20          then through our work with crime analysis 

21          centers, we provide resources to local law 

22          enforcement on the crime analysis side to 

23          help fight this.  So those are some of our 

24          efforts.  I'd be happy if you want to follow 


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 1          up.

 2                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Is there any area 

 3          of the state that is doing better than -- is 

 4          establishing better successes than maybe 

 5          other areas of the state?

 6                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  I travel 

 7          the entire state from, you know, the North 

 8          Country to Buffalo to Long Island and 

 9          everywhere in between.  And I -- you know, I 

10          consistently hear that this is an issue.  I 

11          couldn't point to one area and say they've 

12          got it figured out.

13                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Well, please -- 

14          there are many -- in our conference and all 

15          across the Legislature, they're deeply 

16          concerned about this issue.  And your 

17          suggestions and guidance in the future will 

18          be very helpful as we try to appropriately 

19          provide legislative solutions.  

20                 And I must say the task force that a 

21          number of members have served on, the Heroin 

22          Task Force, has not just relied on the 

23          traditional law enforcement measures.  We 

24          agree with you that treatment is paramount to 


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 1          ever finalizing and reducing the demand.

 2                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  I 

 3          certainly share your concern, appreciate it, 

 4          and would look forward to working with you on 

 5          this very important issue.  And I also wanted 

 6          to thank you for your service as a Senator, 

 7          too.

 8                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Thank you, Madam 

 9          Chair.

10                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, Senator.

11                 Assembly?

12                 CHAIRMAN FARRELL:  Assemblyman Graft 

13          {sic}.

14                 ASSEMBLYMAN GRAF:  Thank you, Denny.  

15          You can leave off the T, though.  

16                 (Laughter.)

17                 CHAIRMAN FARRELL:  I'll take it off if 

18          I find it.

19                 ASSEMBLYMAN GRAF:  Okay, a few 

20          questions.  Going back to the police vests.  

21          Now, the report that I read was that, you 

22          know, we had money allocated to upgrade vests 

23          for police officers.  And the Governor didn't 

24          get his whole package, and he basically took 


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 1          his ball and went home.  And he gave the 

 2          money to the DOT.  That's the report that I 

 3          had.  Right?  

 4                 So I don't know if the plows need 

 5          Kevlar, that the snowmen are shooting at 

 6          them, but I don't appreciate the Governor 

 7          sitting there and playing politics with the 

 8          lives of hardworking police officers.  And 

 9          now I look at this reform package that the 

10          Governor has, and he's just jumping on the 

11          anti-cop bandwagon again.  

12                 As far as special counsel, now, you 

13          know the grand jury proceedings have been 

14          secret, and there's a reason that they're 

15          secret, for -- you know, from the inception.  

16          And I'm reading through this stuff.  And if 

17          I'm not mistaken -- and you can correct me if 

18          I'm wrong -- most of this stuff here says 

19          they're allowing the DA to turn over a report 

20          if they don't indict.  Is that correct?  It 

21          allows them to.

22                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  

23          Basically the provision would allow the 

24          district attorney to either do a report or 


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 1          write a letter to make information available 

 2          to the public explaining why the case 

 3          resulted the way it did.

 4                 And I can tell you, you know, I first 

 5          of all spent my entire career trying to 

 6          support law enforcement, and I strongly 

 7          disagree with your characterization.  But 

 8          secondly, I personally have been in a 

 9          position where I have presented high-profile 

10          cases to the grand jury where police shot 

11          somebody -- and shot and killed somebody, in 

12          circumstances -- and I felt like my hands 

13          were unduly tied in those circumstances, 

14          where I had to go out and tell the public, 

15          this is what happened, and by law I'm not 

16          allowed to tell you one additional word.  

17                 You know, I don't think anyone wants 

18          to disclose names of witnesses that testified 

19          or other information that would compromise 

20          anybody.  But to give the public just a basic 

21          level of information so that there can be 

22          some understanding.  If the case gets 

23          no-billed and the determination was that a 

24          police officer was justified in doing what he 


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 1          or she did, then I think it's only fair not 

 2          only to the public but to the police officer 

 3          that the community have some understanding of 

 4          why that happened so that they don't have 

 5          this notion in their head that there was some 

 6          kind of fix that happened and it was a bad 

 7          result.

 8                 ASSEMBLYMAN GRAF:  You know, we have 

 9          duly elected DAs, and that's their job to 

10          make this decision whether they're going to 

11          indict or not.  And this just looks to me, 

12          for political purposes, all right, to be able 

13          to get another bite at the apple when it 

14          comes to police officers.  That's --

15                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  

16          Actually, it does not.  This does not give 

17          anybody another bite at the apple.  This does 

18          not in any way, shape or form change the law.  

19                 Right now, under existing law if a 

20          case goes to a grand jury and the grand jury 

21          no-bills, there's a provision in the law that 

22          allows the district attorney or any other 

23          prosecutor who's duly appointed to go to a 

24          judge in that jurisdiction and seek 


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 1          permission to get that case re-presented to a 

 2          grand jury based on either new evidence or 

 3          some flaw with the posterior proceeding.

 4                 ASSEMBLYMAN GRAF:  But you're removing 

 5          that.

 6                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  That 

 7          same rule would continue to apply.  There is 

 8          no new bite at the apple.  This simply goes 

 9          to who it is that will be carrying out that 

10          function.  Will it be the district attorney, 

11          or will it be a special prosecutor?  But it 

12          does not create --

13                 ASSEMBLYMAN GRAF:  But wait a minute, 

14          wait a minute, wait a minute --

15                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  -- a 

16          second bite.

17                 ASSEMBLYMAN GRAF:  Wait a minute.  

18          Now, if the special prosecutor does not like 

19          the way that the DA presented the case to the 

20          grand jury, right, the special prosecutor can 

21          bring the case again; correct?  

22                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  No.

23                 ASSEMBLYMAN GRAF:  That's the way I 

24          read it.


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 1                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  First of 

 2          all, "does not like" is not the standard in 

 3          the bill.  There has to be a substantial flaw 

 4          with what happened, or there has to be new 

 5          evidence.  

 6                 And secondly, the law right now 

 7          requires anybody who wants to go back into a 

 8          grand jury after there's been a no-bill to 

 9          get permission from a judge.  And under this 

10          proposal, it simply says that there would be 

11          a special prosecutor, not the DA.  But it 

12          does nothing to change that existing section 

13          of law.  

14                 And that special prosecutor would 

15          still have to go back in front of a judge and 

16          show the judge that there was cause under the 

17          existing standard to go back into grand jury 

18          before he or she could do so.

19                 ASSEMBLYMAN GRAF:  Okay.  And -- so 

20          the way I'm reading this, a lot of this 

21          allows the DA, the DA may -- correct?  He 

22          doesn't have to give a statement.  He doesn't 

23          have to write a letter.

24                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Correct.


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 1                 ASSEMBLYMAN GRAF:  He doesn't have to 

 2          go out there.

 3                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  But if 

 4          the DA, like me in that situation I was in, 

 5          felt that it's important that the public 

 6          understand at a basic level what happened, it 

 7          gives them the ability to do that.

 8                 ASSEMBLYMAN GRAF:  Okay.  

 9                 Now, is part of this the video cameras 

10          for the police officers too?  Is that what 

11          he's looking at, with the ones that they 

12          wear?  

13                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Yes, 

14          that is one of the items that the Governor 

15          has put forward -- not as a budget bill, but 

16          in his State of the State, the Build to Lead 

17          agenda book.

18                 And frankly, my recollection is that 

19          two years ago in his State of State, it was 

20          something he talked about.  I know there was  

21          legislation last year that both the District 

22          Attorneys Association and the Innocence 

23          Project had signed off on that I believe 

24          passed the Senate.  And that same framework 


                                                                  220

 1          is the framework that the Governor is 

 2          proposing.

 3                 You know, A, we're the only state in 

 4          the country that doesn't allow photo-array 

 5          identifications into evidence at trial.  And 

 6          all of the research on this issue suggests 

 7          that if it's done properly, your best 

 8          identification is the one that's done first 

 9          and soonest in time to the crime, which 

10          almost always is a photo-array 

11          identification.  And yet we keep that best 

12          identification from the jury.

13                 So that was half of the package.  The 

14          other half of the package is video recording 

15          of interrogations in serious cases.  And 

16          again, you know, the MPTC has adopted 

17          policies regarding it.  Almost every major 

18          police department in the state is recording.  

19                 You know, I can tell you, as someone 

20          who tried cases, the last case I tried was a 

21          case where two police officers were shot and 

22          one of my best pieces of evidence was 

23          3Ω hours of a recorded interview with the 

24          person who was convicted of attempting to 


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 1          murder those police officers.

 2                 You know, it's something that I think 

 3          almost everyone who's up on these issues in 

 4          law enforcement agrees we should be doing.

 5                 ASSEMBLYMAN GRAF:  Yeah, I'm talking 

 6          about the body cams.  Is that part of these 

 7          proposals?  

 8                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  No, I 

 9          don't believe there's legislation with regard 

10          to body cameras.

11                 ASSEMBLYMAN GRAF:  Okay.  Thank you.

12                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.

13                 Senator Squadron.

14                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Thank you very 

15          much.  

16                 I've got a lot to cover here.  I don't 

17          know if you were here earlier when we had 

18          that extensive conversation about speedy 

19          trial or the absolute lack of speedy trials 

20          in New York State.

21                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  I was 

22          listening to all of it.

23                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  I appreciate it.  

24          What if any data does DCJS keep on the period 


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 1          from arraignment to disposition or trial 

 2          delays in general?  

 3                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  I don't 

 4          have it with me, but I do believe we have 

 5          county-by-county data on time from 

 6          arraignment to disposition.

 7                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  County by county.  

 8          Also related to charge levels -- felony, A 

 9          and B misdemeanors -- to sort of track the 

10          ready for trial statute?  

11                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  I'd have 

12          to check and see how far it's broken down.  

13          But I can certainly find out and get back to 

14          you on that.

15                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Great.  And then 

16          sort of taking off the data hat and putting 

17          on the policy hat, what do you think DCJS can 

18          do to help solve this crisis?

19                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  I think 

20          that it's mainly an issue within OCA.  You 

21          know, our role -- you know, we provide 

22          support, provide funding to prosecutors.  We 

23          provide a very small amount of aid to 

24          defense.  It's mainly the Office of Indigent 


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 1          Legal Services that does that.  

 2                 So I think our role is minor.  I do 

 3          agree with you that it's a very important 

 4          issue.  You know, when we talk about things 

 5          like the number of people being held in 

 6          jails, you know, one part of it is who's 

 7          going to jail, but another part of it is how 

 8          long are they in jail.  And certainly on the 

 9          pretrial side it's a huge issue.

10                 So, you know, I'd be happy to follow 

11          up on the data piece and certainly be willing 

12          to work with you, OCA, and anyone else on 

13          what I think is a very important issue.

14                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Great.  Thank you 

15          very much.  We'd really like to see trends 

16          especially.  I mean, you know, it's something 

17          that the five boroughs of New York City know 

18          a lot about.  We heard about it from the 

19          Long Island perspective as well.

20                 Speaking of reporting, the Governor 

21          proposes the sort of expanded reporting for 

22          summonses, et cetera, similar to last year's 

23          proposal, as I understand it.  Is that fair 

24          to say?


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 1                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Yes.  

 2          Basically right now we get fingerprintable 

 3          offenses and we can do all kinds of reports 

 4          or data with regard to fingerprintable 

 5          offenses.  This would give us information 

 6          with regard to non-fingerprintable offenses.

 7                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Great.  And last 

 8          year we covered that it would be sort of part 

 9          of a unified database with the 

10          fingerprintable offenses so there would be 

11          ways to sort of cut it to include 

12          fingerprintable and non-fingerprintable 

13          offenses in terms of how it was sort of 

14          stored and analyzed.

15                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Yeah, I 

16          don't want to say unified.  I don't know in 

17          terms of the logistics.  I don't think they 

18          would be combined.  

19                 But certainly our intention would be 

20          to be able to provide the same level of data 

21          with regard to those offenses that we provide 

22          you now with regard to the fingerprintable 

23          ones.

24                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Great.  And 


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 1          Assemblymember Lentol and I carry a bill that 

 2          would do this.  

 3                 Let me just kind of speed around here 

 4          for a second.  Which of these factors either 

 5          would be authorized or required to be 

 6          included in the information?  Obviously, 

 7          offenses and violations are included; right?  

 8                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Yes, 

 9          like harassment, disorderly conduct.

10                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Demographics on an 

11          individual's charge, race, ethnicity, 

12          et cetera?  

13                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Yes.

14                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Whether the summons 

15          or appearance ticket contained a custodial 

16          arrest or not?

17                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  I don't 

18          know if the proposal is that specific.  And 

19          I'd have to check.  But there may be language 

20          in there that indicates that it is subject to 

21          regulation by the commissioner of DCJS in 

22          terms of how it gets reported.

23                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Disposition?

24                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  No, I 


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 1          don't believe it's disposition, because it's 

 2          coming -- the requirement is for the police 

 3          department.  So I don't believe they would 

 4          have the disposition information.

 5                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  And therefore not 

 6          sentence, either, right?  Neither disposition 

 7          nor sentence.

 8                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  No, that 

 9          would have to be information that would come 

10          from OCA.

11                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Great.  And then of 

12          course that could be aggregated countywide, 

13          statewide, any -- regionally, et cetera?  

14                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  

15          Absolutely.

16                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Okay.  That's 

17          important.  And hopefully this year we can 

18          get that over the top, since knowing what 

19          we're talking -- you said fact-based a number 

20          of times; I couldn't agree more.

21                 Speaking of which, let's talk about 

22          the Arnold Foundation briefly that you 

23          referenced earlier.  How do you ensure that 

24          sort of algorithm that goes into the 


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 1          predictive score that the Arnold Foundation 

 2          throws out is sufficiently transparent?  

 3          Sure, it's showing preliminarily to do a 

 4          better job of having fewer people held on 

 5          bail and arguably or potentially lowering 

 6          violent crimes or violent actions among those 

 7          who are out in that period.  But for each 

 8          individual case, how do we know that there's 

 9          a relationship between what that individual 

10          has actually done in the past and the 

11          likelihood that they'll be given the capacity 

12          to get out on bail?  

13                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  I guess 

14          two points I'd make.  

15                 First, I indicated that we believe 

16          that this should be given to judges as a 

17          tool.  I don't think you can ever replace the 

18          judgment of a judge with a tool.  But I think 

19          the more tools you can give a judge to help 

20          them exercise that discretion so -- you know, 

21          there may be a case where the risk instrument 

22          says one thing but a judge, you know, given 

23          his or her experience, says I can safely 

24          release this person regardless of what -- 


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 1          because there's some factor that didn't get 

 2          put in here.

 3                 Secondly, as to the algorithm, we in 

 4          other settings have taken algorithms that 

 5          have been developed, used our research staff 

 6          and our DCJS data and improved on them to 

 7          make them New York-specific, to be as 

 8          tailored as they can to, you know, our 

 9          particular circumstances here in New York.  

10                 And I certainly would anticipate that 

11          we do that.  And I think it's got to be a 

12          very transparent process.  I think that in 

13          creating that, you know, we need to make sure 

14          everyone understands what we're doing.  

15                 And then the last thing I would say is 

16          I mentioned training.  You can't just put an 

17          instrument out, throw it out there and say, 

18          use it.  I think it's important, if you're 

19          going to do this and do it right and expect 

20          to get the results that we truly do lower 

21          jail populations and increase public safety, 

22          everyone needs to be trained.  So the judges, 

23          the lawyers on both sides using this know 

24          what the algorithm is, know how we came up 


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 1          with it, know what it means, you know, know 

 2          how to use it.  

 3                 And I think if you do all those 

 4          things, the evidence shows that you do get to 

 5          a point where you can drive down the jail 

 6          population and at the same time make the 

 7          state safer.

 8                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  I would strongly 

 9          urge that anytime we're talking about these, 

10          whether as part of a change in the 

11          methodology as proposed by the Governor or 

12          not, that we are a lot more careful about 

13          telling the judges and requiring the judges 

14          consider what it really means, what the 

15          underlying factors are that go into that risk 

16          assessment, not just -- you know, it's very 

17          appealing to simplify everything and every 

18          human being to a score.  That actually is not 

19          how the criminal justice system works.  It's 

20          the reason we have the criminal justice 

21          system we have.  

22                 And to implement a score absent a 

23          whole lot of requirements for due diligence 

24          and understanding by the judge is likely to 


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 1          cause constitutional among other problems.

 2                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  I 

 3          couldn't agree with you more.

 4                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Briefly, I believe  

 5          just a final issue on transparency.  We did 

 6          talk about body cams before briefly.  Does 

 7          DCJS have an opinion or a willingness to be 

 8          part of the solution on how we make body cam 

 9          footage available to the public while still 

10          protecting individual privacy rights?  

11                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  We 

12          certainly have spent time with the issue of 

13          body cameras.  Specifically the issue was 

14          considered by the Municipal Police Training 

15          Council.  We're the staff arm for that 

16          council.  We did a lot of research over the 

17          period of about a year.  The council recently 

18          adopted a model policy with regard to the use 

19          of body cameras which does touch on some of 

20          those issues but certainly I don't think is 

21          the end of the discussion.  

22                 But yes, you know, I think body 

23          cameras clearly have a place.  And I think 

24          that there are a lot of issues that go along 


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 1          with them that are very important issues that 

 2          need to be hashed out.  So we'd be happy to 

 3          be involved.

 4                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  They have the 

 5          potential to really help both law enforcement 

 6          and civilians who are in contact with law 

 7          enforcement.  Frankly, I would like to see 

 8          some funding in here to help us devise a 

 9          system and a storage capacity for how that 

10          becomes public and when it becomes public.  

11          Because absent that, the truth is that's 

12          going to hold up any kind of expansion of 

13          body cameras, which I think there's 

14          increasingly a consensus is something we need 

15          to do.  We're not going to be able to do it 

16          without funding sort of the back end data 

17          question.  That's not an additional question 

18          when it comes to this new technology, it's a 

19          core question about whether the technology 

20          can move forward.

21                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  No, 

22          that's the cost.  The cost of the cameras 

23          up-front is almost nonexistent compared to 

24          the data shortage and management cost.


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 1                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  And "management" 

 2          being the key word there, even more than 

 3          storage, probably, if the curve continues on 

 4          storage.

 5                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Yeah, if 

 6          you never need it, it's easy to store it.

 7                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Finally, the 

 8          special counsel was proposed.  I asked a 

 9          question last year, there was a little 

10          ambiguity on it.  It's been a year, the 

11          special counsel proposal seems similar to 

12          last year's, so maybe there's more clarity 

13          this year.  

14                 The Governor appoints a special 

15          counsel to consider whether to recommend an 

16          independent prosecutor is appointed.  That 

17          special counsel has the capacity to access 

18          the grand jury findings and transcripts, all 

19          of the information related to the grand jury 

20          proceeding.  

21                 Is the special counsel able to share 

22          that information with the Executive or not?  

23          And if not, is the special counsel able to 

24          make a recommendation other than yea or nay 


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 1          to justify or explain why the recommendation 

 2          is what it is?  

 3                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  The way 

 4          I read and understand the proposal, the 

 5          special counsel would have the ability to 

 6          share as much information as necessary in the 

 7          context of making a recommendation to the 

 8          Governor.  

 9                 I don't believe that a reasonable 

10          reading of this bill or a reasonable 

11          interpretation would say that the special 

12          counsel is limited to walking into the 

13          Governor's office and saying yes or no and I 

14          can't answer any other questions.

15                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  And would the 

16          Governor be allowed to share that information 

17          in announcing to the public his or her 

18          decision, or would the Governor be under the 

19          same limitations on sharing information that 

20          emanates from a grand jury proceeding as 

21          everyone else is?

22                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  I don't 

23          read the bill in a way that would allow for 

24          additional disclosure of that information 


                                                                  234

 1          beyond from the special counsel to the 

 2          Governor.

 3                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Doesn't that take 

 4          the black box of the grand jury room, extend 

 5          it into the Executive, and then stop it right 

 6          there, so that from the perspective of the 

 7          public and policymakers and law enforcement 

 8          in general, they're left with the same black 

 9          box, just one where a different branch of 

10          government has also the ability to come out 

11          and tell us no more than we've heard before, 

12          which is just yes or no?

13                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  If that 

14          were the end of the day, you know, you could 

15          make that argument, I think.  But first of 

16          all, you're balancing or trying to balance 

17          some very important policy considerations 

18          here, and grand jury secrecy is one.  

19                 And secondly, if the Governor, 

20          following a recommendation from the special 

21          counsel, appoints a special prosecutor, you 

22          know, I would argue that it's not the 

23          Governor's position at that point to be 

24          making public statements about the case 


                                                                  235

 1          before the special prosecutor has a chance to 

 2          do his or her work.  I think that the 

 3          appropriate course of action at that time 

 4          would be not to disclose anything further 

 5          until the special prosecutor has had an 

 6          opportunity to do their job.

 7                 SENATOR SQUADRON:  Look, it's both -- 

 8          it's those two competing conclusions that 

 9          lead to such concerns about this.  You're 

10          probably right about that, but what does that 

11          say about the overall proposal?  I think 

12          that's something that we still need to really 

13          consider.  

14                 Thank you.

15                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Thank 

16          you.  

17                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

18          Assembly.

19                 CHAIRMAN FARRELL:  Thank you.  

20                 Assemblyman O'Donnell.

21                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Thank you very 

22          much.

23                 Once again, I agree with Mr. Graf.  

24          Okay?  So I will take some medication when I 


                                                                  236

 1          get home --

 2                 (Laughter.)

 3                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  -- to make 

 4          sure I arrive tomorrow in the same state I 

 5          arrived yesterday.

 6                 But I believe in the secrecy of the 

 7          grand jury.  And I believe that it serves a 

 8          very important function.  And mostly what I 

 9          believe, that it's outrageous to suggest that 

10          because a defendant happens to be a member of 

11          law enforcement that her or his rights are 

12          less than all the other people who are 

13          defendants in a grand jury.

14                 So having said that, I don't believe 

15          we should be opening them up.  I don't 

16          believe we should be giving the names of 

17          witnesses.  And I don't believe we should be 

18          giving out what the nature of the testimony 

19          is.

20                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  I guess 

21          that's --

22                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  However -- 

23          there's a however -- what a DA charges to the 

24          grand jury is different.  You and your 


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 1          cohorts who are DAs are elected, they owe an 

 2          obligation to their citizenry.  

 3                 So to that end, I have a bill that 

 4          would allow any citizen to request from a DA 

 5          what did you charge that grand jury in this 

 6          case.  Because in the cases where we've had 

 7          these problems where there's been great 

 8          public outcry, I fear that the DA is not 

 9          charging the grand jury in a way that many of 

10          their constituents would have wanted them to 

11          do.

12                 And so just like my votes are public, 

13          just like my speech here will probably be put 

14          up by one of the people in this room a little 

15          while from now, the actions of DAs should be 

16          subject to the same scrutiny.

17                 So do you think it would be 

18          appropriate to require that DAs be required 

19          to release what charges they gave to a grand 

20          jury in cases where the public wants to know?

21                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  First of 

22          all, I think I differ with you in terms of 

23          your characterization of the proposal.  I 

24          don't think it subjects police to a different 


                                                                  238

 1          standard.  Right now the Governor --

 2                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  No, sir, I 

 3          wasn't saying that was in the proposal, I was 

 4          saying that was my opinion.

 5                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  I'd 

 6          appreciate the opportunity to respond.

 7                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Okay.

 8                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Right 

 9          now the Governor has the power to appoint a 

10          special prosecutor.  I remember the death 

11          penalty case in the Bronx where Governor 

12          Pataki exercised that power, and frankly the 

13          ability to review that power is very limited.  

14          And right now the information that the 

15          Governor has at his or her disposal when 

16          making that very important decision is very 

17          limited.  

18                 What this proposal does is not give 

19          the Governor any additional powers in terms 

20          of appointing a special prosecutor in cases 

21          involving police, because frankly he can do 

22          that already.  What it does is give the 

23          Governor a mechanism to get information other 

24          than what's reported in the press, but real, 


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 1          accurate information about the case so the 

 2          Governor can make an informed decision about 

 3          whether or not it furthers good public policy 

 4          to appoint a special prosecutor in that 

 5          particular case.  

 6                 In terms of your point about release 

 7          of the instructions to the grand jury, I 

 8          certainly think that that's an important 

 9          issue that should be discussed in the context 

10          of any legislation in this area.

11                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Well, I wrote 

12          the bill, so I'd like to get, you know, my 

13          name on that.  That would be good.  Okay?  

14                 I'd like to now talk a little bit 

15          about photo arrays.  You had mentioned it in 

16          your testimony that most places use photo 

17          arrays.

18                 In my experience, one of the problems 

19          with photo arrays is the pictures that are in 

20          them.  So how does someone get to have their 

21          picture in a photo array?  Well, chances are 

22          that's because they've been arrested before, 

23          and that's the picture that's there.  

24                 Then you have the problem with what 


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 1          the picture looks like.  Now what we know 

 2          from just reading the paper, when famous 

 3          celebrities who are really drop-dead 

 4          gorgeous, they get paid millions of dollars 

 5          because of how good-looking they are, when 

 6          they get arrested, they look like they went 

 7          to hell in a handbasket.  Right?  So even 

 8          among the most gorgeous creatures in America, 

 9          their arrest photos, they look guilty as can 

10          be.

11                 So isn't there some inherent risk in 

12          putting in front of a jury a picture of a 

13          criminal defendant in their worst possible 

14          moment, looking the worst they could possibly 

15          look, and creating a -- and trampling on the 

16          presumption of innocence by putting such an 

17          image in front of them?  

18                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  I guess 

19          the first thing I'd say is that the Innocence 

20          Project has been strenuously advocating for 

21          this, to me and publicly, for some period of 

22          time.  And I can't believe that the Innocence 

23          Project would advocate for this if they felt 

24          that it was trampling on people's rights.


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 1                 And secondly, you know, in this day 

 2          and age -- you know, there was a time where I 

 3          think it would be reasonable to say if you 

 4          have a photo, it must be an arrest photo.  If 

 5          I want a photo of someone in this day and 

 6          age, I go on the internet -- you know, and I 

 7          don't know how to do it as well as, you know, 

 8          so many -- 

 9                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Your 

10          grandkids.  Yes, I understand.

11                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  -- other 

12          people could, but you pull up a Facebook 

13          photo, you pull up any other photo.  You 

14          know, so I think that the idea that the 

15          public perception that you have a photo, it 

16          must be an arrest photo may have been true 40 

17          years ago.  If I asked my kids today, I don't 

18          think their first instinct would be you got 

19          it from an arrest, I think their first 

20          instinct would be you got it off the 

21          internet.

22                 So, you know, I think things are 

23          changing.  And I think that all of those 

24          things are important considerations, but at 


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 1          the end of the day, when the Innocence 

 2          Project is advocating for me saying this is 

 3          the best way to ensure against wrongful 

 4          identifications that lead to wrongful 

 5          convictions, and this is what you should 

 6          do -- and I think the last thing I'll say is 

 7          they do that with a caveat, that the photo 

 8          arrays have to be assembled and put together 

 9          properly and the procedure has to be 

10          conducted properly before it's a good idea to 

11          let a jury see it.  So it's not just that any 

12          photo array should go in and a jury should 

13          see it; we should have guidelines and 

14          standards about how the arrays have to be put 

15          together and about how the procedures have to 

16          be done.  And if and only if you meet those 

17          standards, then we should allow a jury to 

18          hear them.

19                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  I wouldn't 

20          dream of questioning Mr. Scheck or 

21          Mr. Neufeld and their commitment to 

22          innocence.  And in fact, Mr. Scheck once 

23          tracked me down and congratulated me on my 

24          skills at cross-examination during one of 


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 1          these hearings, so I consider that a high 

 2          mark.  

 3                 But most of the defender organizations 

 4          in the state do oppose this idea.  And I 

 5          guess this is one of those cases where the 

 6          devil will always be in the details.  

 7                 The third point I'd like to raise has 

 8          to do with these verified instruments that 

 9          you want to talk about.  You know, we have 

10          some experience in putting verified 

11          instruments out there.  Where do we do that 

12          legislatively?  We did that before the Parole 

13          Board.  The Parole Board is currently 

14          required to use a verified instrument in 

15          determining release rates.  And you know what 

16          happens?  They ignore it.  They ignore it, 

17          sir.  We made them use them, they've used 

18          them, they look at them and say despite the 

19          fact that this instrument says X, I'm going 

20          to keep you in prison for two more years 

21          because I think that's the right thing to do.  

22                 So in the end, any instrument, no 

23          matter how good it is, is only as useful as 

24          the person who's using its ability to use it 


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 1          correctly.  And so from my own personal -- 

 2          I'm not speaking for the panel -- from my own 

 3          personal perspective, I would be unwilling to 

 4          do that anywhere else in the state until you 

 5          can talk to the people who work in the Parole 

 6          Board to get them to do the job that we 

 7          mandated that they do, which is take into 

 8          account the information on that very 

 9          instrument.  

10                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  I 

11          certainly can't speak for the Parole Board, 

12          but I agree with your point that the 

13          instruments are only as good as the use that 

14          the people who need to use them make of them.

15                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Thank you very 

16          much.

17                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Thank 

18          you.

19                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, 

20          Assemblyman.  

21                 Our next speaker is Senator Ruth 

22          Hassell-Thompson.

23                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Thank you, 

24          Madam Chair.


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 1                 Good afternoon, Mr. Green.

 2                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Good 

 3          afternoon.

 4                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  I'd like to 

 5          explore some of the stuff we've been talking 

 6          about, but my time is going to be very 

 7          limited.  So let's flip the switch a little 

 8          and go to the GIVE initiative that you talk 

 9          about and certainly that's in the budget.  

10                 We understand that the GIVE initiative 

11          is a replacement for Operation Impact, for 

12          the most part.  But you don't discuss the 

13          specificity of what these outreach programs 

14          are.  Would you identify SNUG as perhaps 

15          being one of those, or that type of model?

16                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN: 

17          Absolutely.  

18                 GIVE did replace Impact, you're right.  

19          Whereas Impact allowed a wider focus, GIVE 

20          focuses on shootings and homicides, and GIVE 

21          identifies four strategies that law 

22          enforcement can receive training and 

23          technical assistance on and that we'll fund.  

24          That's focused deterrence, hotspot policing, 


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 1          crime prevention through environmental 

 2          design, and street outreach work.

 3                 So street outreach work is 

 4          specifically one of those four strategies 

 5          that we will support, that we do support and 

 6          we provide training on.

 7                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Okay, then 

 8          I may be confused, then.  You're saying that 

 9          the street outreach that's a part of GIVE is 

10          not SNUG.

11                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  No.  As 

12          part of GIVE, one of the requirements of GIVE 

13          is that all of the efforts that are funded by 

14          the state to get at shootings and homicides 

15          be aligned, so that we shouldn't have a GIVE 

16          initiative over here designed to reduce 

17          shootings and homicides and a SNUG initiative 

18          over here designed to do the same thing, but 

19          no coordination between the two.

20                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Okay.  

21          Okay, good.

22                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  You 

23          know, and that's not to say we don't 

24          recognize that in a good street outreach 


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 1          program, you know, there are pieces of it 

 2          that can't be aligned with the police. 

 3                 For example, when your outreach 

 4          workers are out on the street, it's very 

 5          important that people do not view them as an 

 6          arm of the police.  But by the same token, 

 7          they both have the exact same goals.  There's 

 8          information they both have at a higher level 

 9          that's very useful to both of them.  So there 

10          has to be at least some level of coordination 

11          between those efforts.

12                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  How 

13          successful do you believe that the 

14          outreach -- it's been a year.  And how 

15          successful do you think, number one, the 

16          outreach overall has been?  And number two, 

17          its coordination with SNUG in terms of 

18          reducing crime in your hotspots?

19                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  We're 

20          actually heading into our third year, I 

21          believe, with the street outreach work.  And 

22          I think that it is a huge asset.  I think 

23          it's something we all should be very proud 

24          of.  You know, certainly the Legislature for 


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 1          providing the funding.  

 2                 We've provided a structure, we have a 

 3          statewide coordinator for the street outreach 

 4          programs across the state.  He visits every 

 5          program at least once a month.  He 

 6          communicates with them regularly.  In 

 7          addition, we have a training director now, so 

 8          we train every program manager, every 

 9          supervisor, every outreach worker.

10                 If you look at the jurisdictions 

11          across the state, you know, some are more 

12          advanced than others, they have different 

13          strengths.  But, you know, there are 

14          instances in one jurisdiction where the 

15          police were having a spike in homicides and 

16          they reached out to the street outreach 

17          program, who on at least two separate 

18          occasions helped them get a handle on what 

19          was going on and really quashed the violence.

20                 You know, there are stories from 

21          around the state where in different ways 

22          those street outreach programs have really 

23          helped control shootings, so -- and the other 

24          thing I'd say is I'm not aware of any other 


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 1          state that has a statewide street outreach 

 2          network that's organized and coordinated the 

 3          way ours is.  

 4                 So, you know, I think it's a huge tool 

 5          in the toolbox and would certainly advocate 

 6          that at a bare minimum we continue it.

 7                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  We've used 

 8          the Chicago Ceasefire model and some other 

 9          models.  Do you see us moving toward creating 

10          a New York model?

11                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Yes.

12                 You know, as with everything that I 

13          do, I like to look at everything that's out 

14          there, try and understand what the strong 

15          points are of all of the different 

16          approaches, and then take the strong points 

17          of all of them and put them into what I think 

18          is the best approach.

19                 And, you know, certainly there are a 

20          lot of really good ideas in the Ceasefire 

21          Chicago Cure Violence model.  But, for 

22          example, Teny Gross, out of the Institute for 

23          Nonviolence, has been doing this work since 

24          the mid-nineties and has a lot of good ideas 


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 1          as well, and has done a lot of good work.  

 2          And his ideas aren't necessarily the same as 

 3          all of the Cure Violence ones out of Chicago.

 4                 So what we've tried to do is really 

 5          work with Teny and understand his program and 

 6          his thoughts, work with Cure Violence and 

 7          understand theirs.  And yes, at the end of 

 8          the day I do envision us taking all of those 

 9          ideas and putting them into what we think is 

10          the best model.

11                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Thank you.

12                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, Senator.  

13          Our next speaker -- well, I'm sorry.  Do we 

14          have anyone from the Assembly?

15                 Okay, our next speaker is Senator 

16          Velmanette Montgomery.

17                 SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Thank you, Madam 

18          Chairwoman.

19                 Good afternoon.  It's finally 

20          afternoon.

21                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Good 

22          afternoon.

23                 SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  I just wanted to 

24          ask you about the -- I guess two areas.  One 


                                                                  251

 1          is the reentry issue, and the other one is 

 2          juvenile justice.

 3                 On reentry, I'm looking at the 

 4          proposed budget for this time which reflects 

 5          the Governor's -- some of the Governor's 

 6          primary concerns, one of them being the whole 

 7          question of reentry.  And I know that the 

 8          Governor has been working on that for some 

 9          time, and I really appreciate the fact that 

10          this has become a primary concern.

11                 I am, however -- I don't understand 

12          why it is that at the same time that we are 

13          concerned about reentry, there's 

14          $12.8 million in reductions or eliminations, 

15          proposed eliminations of programs that are 

16          basically community-based, many of them 

17          specifically related to providing support 

18          services to people reentering the community.

19                 And so I have a big question as to -- 

20          obviously, many of these are legislative 

21          adds.  However, I would like to hear from you 

22          how you, from your perspective, will be 

23          ensuring that we continue some of those very 

24          critical services.  Because when people 


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 1          return to community, when they return home, 

 2          they look for people like me to find out 

 3          where they can get some help immediately.  

 4          They need housing, they are looking for 

 5          employment, they need services that help them 

 6          repair or access necessary papers that they 

 7          -- or other information that they would need.

 8                 So where will those services fit into 

 9          your budget as proposed?

10                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  And I 

11          can't speak to the legislative adds.  It's my 

12          understanding that those are things that will 

13          be discussed as you go forward with the 

14          budget negotiations.  

15                 But in terms of the Governor's budget, 

16          there is no reduction in the DCJS budget with 

17          regard to any of our reentry or Alternative 

18          to Incarceration funding streams.  And in 

19          fact, there's a $2 million increase.  

20                 There's a $1 million increase -- the 

21          prior budget was just over $3 million for 

22          19 reentry task forces around the state.  

23          This year in the Governor's proposed budget 

24          it gives us another million dollars.  That 


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 1          will allow us to, assuming -- or if it is 

 2          approved, start a 20th reentry task force in 

 3          Queens, which obviously, given the volume of 

 4          cases, is in need of a task force, but also 

 5          strengthen all of the task forces across the 

 6          state.

 7                 And then, secondly, there's an 

 8          additional million-dollar add with regard to 

 9          the Alternative to Incarceration programs 

10          that would allow us to help develop screening 

11          and assessment programs to make sure that the 

12          people coming into the criminal justice 

13          system at a very early point in time are 

14          screened and assessed so that their needs are 

15          understood by those making decisions -- 

16          defense attorneys, judges, prosecutors -- and 

17          at the same time they understand what the 

18          needs are, they understand the inventory of 

19          programs available in that area so that 

20          people can get matched to the right programs 

21          and we have the best chance of breaking that 

22          cycle of recidivism.

23                 So as to the programs or as to the 

24          funding streams for DCJS in the Governor's 


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 1          proposed budget, none of them were cut and in 

 2          fact they were increased by $2 million.

 3                 SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  All right.  I 

 4          just -- when I look at this list and I see 

 5          programs like Exodus Transitional Community 

 6          Center and Fortune Society and Community 

 7          Service Society and those programs -- so 

 8          obviously they will be coming to the 

 9          Legislature to say we need funding.  And 

10          these are, relatively speaking, small 

11          amounts -- $100,000, $200,000, and so forth.

12                 However, the fact of the matter is 

13          each of those programs -- and if you put all 

14          of that together, we then begin to have a 

15          real network of reentry organizations, and 

16          each one is important and related to our 

17          success.  The task forces, all due respect, I 

18          appreciate the work that they do, but they're 

19          not on the ground providing actual services.  

20          And so that's what I feel is missing, and I 

21          certainly hope that together we're going to 

22          ensure that the programs that need support 

23          will receive it.

24                 And I would like to, in order for me 


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 1          to see where the programs -- some of them 

 2          certainly in my district, but in the city in 

 3          particular -- where they fit into your 

 4          framework, I would really appreciate having a 

 5          list of those, because I don't know exactly 

 6          where they all are at this point.

 7                 The second question -- and I'm out of 

 8          time, unfortunately -- but I have a real 

 9          interest in the juvenile justice work that 

10          you're doing and where you are with that, 

11          especially as it relates to Alternative to 

12          Incarceration programs.

13                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  I 

14          just -- I know you're out of time.  I'll 

15          briefly say the Governor's budget does put 

16          $26.2 million through DCJS into those 

17          on-the-ground programs you're talking about.  

18          I don't have the list with me.  We'll 

19          certainly get it to you.

20                 SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Thank you.

21                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  But just 

22          for example, Fortune gets a sizable amount of 

23          money --

24                 SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Fortune Society?


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 1                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Fortune 

 2          Society, for their employment-based work, 

 3          working with people who are reentering, on 

 4          employment services.

 5                 SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  And there are 

 6          several others that you will let me know 

 7          where they stand as well?

 8                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Yes.  

 9          We'll provide you a list of our funded 

10          programs.

11                 SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Thank you very 

12          much.

13                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Thank 

14          you.

15                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, Senator.

16                 That closes our discussion.  So I want 

17          to thank you very much, Executive Deputy 

18          Commissioner Green.  It's good to see you 

19          again.  And thank you for your testimony 

20          today.

21                 EX. DEP. COMMISSIONER GREEN:  Thank 

22          you, Senator.  Appreciate the time.

23                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Great.  Our next 

24          speaker is Acting Commissioner Anthony 


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 1          Annucci, New York State Department of 

 2          Corrections and Community Supervision.

 3                 Thank you very much.  Could I have 

 4          some order, please.

 5                 Welcome, Acting Commissioner Annucci.  

 6          We're very glad to have you here today.  I'm 

 7          sure that the members, between the Senate and 

 8          the Assembly, will have a lot of questions, 

 9          and we look forward to your testimony.  And 

10          at this time, you may begin.  

11                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Thank 

12          you.  

13                 Good afternoon, Chairwoman Young, 

14          Chairman Farrell, and other distinguished 

15          chairs and members of the Legislature.  I am 

16          Anthony J. Annucci, acting commissioner of 

17          the Department of Corrections and Community 

18          Supervision.  It is my honor to discuss some 

19          of the highlights of Governor Cuomo's 

20          Executive Budget plan.  

21                 The Governor's policies are moving 

22          corrections in the right direction.  Last 

23          year New York State's inmate population 

24          continued to decline, and there are now over 


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 1          20,000 fewer inmates than there were in 1999. 

 2          Still, New York State continues to be the 

 3          safest large state with the lowest 

 4          incarceration rate.  

 5                 To continue this trend of reduced 

 6          incarcerations coupled with increased public 

 7          safety, the department's proposed Executive 

 8          Budget contains a number of important new 

 9          initiatives.  These include groundbreaking 

10          special housing unit reforms; the increased 

11          use of technology and updated policies to 

12          better supervise and secure our facilities; 

13          and several reentry initiatives designed to 

14          further reduce recidivism by upgrading 

15          educational opportunities and vocational 

16          training. 

17                 Within our $310 million capital 

18          budget, we are also moving forward with plans 

19          to transform Hudson into a hybrid youth 

20          facility for 16-and-17-year-olds.  Despite 

21          the reduction in inmate population, the 

22          Executive Budget does not recommend any 

23          prison closures this year.  

24                 Prison discipline is vital to the 


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 1          safety of correction officers and inmates 

 2          alike.  We will undertake historical reforms 

 3          in our approach to solitary confinement which 

 4          will modernize prison discipline.  These 

 5          reforms will improve conditions within our 

 6          segregation units and revise our disciplinary 

 7          guidelines, while preserving safety and 

 8          security.  As we did for the seriously 

 9          mentally ill, we will develop specialized 

10          programs to safely provide out-of-cell 

11          programming and treatment to inmates.  

12                 Inmate reentry programming, including 

13          education and vocational training, is a vital 

14          part of the reform process.  DOCCS will 

15          continue its expansion of college programming 

16          through $7.5 million in funding from the 

17          Manhattan district attorney's office.  This 

18          expansion will not cost taxpayer dollars. 

19                 College programming has been shown to 

20          significantly lower recidivism and increase 

21          the likelihood of a successful transition 

22          back into society.  It also creates positive 

23          role models for other inmates to follow, 

24          ultimately leading to safer prisons.  


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 1                 Further, in an effort to increase the 

 2          issuance of high school diplomas, we will 

 3          hire psychologists to diagnose adult inmates 

 4          with learning disabilities, and update our 

 5          Thinking for a Change program with a new 

 6          version issued by the National Institute of 

 7          Corrections, or NIC.  In an effort to 

 8          modernize vocational training, we will also 

 9          upgrade several vocational print shops and 

10          expand our computer vocational shops to 

11          include computer coding.  

12                 The department is focused on creating 

13          the safest environment possible. In 

14          partnership with the unions, we will continue 

15          to develop strategies to reduce violence 

16          within prisons and to conduct security 

17          staffing reviews as outlined in the fiscal 

18          year 2014-2015 budget.  Last year we hired 

19          103 correction officers.  

20                 Also, we have either begun or will 

21          pursue technological enhancements, training 

22          improvements, and policy changes that will 

23          enhance overall safety and security within 

24          DOCCS facilities. These initiatives include 


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 1          installation of fixed cameras, the deployment 

 2          of thermal imaging and heartbeat detection 

 3          devices, the installation of the rounds 

 4          tracker system, the procurement of portable 

 5          metal detectors, and the piloted use of body 

 6          cameras to be worn by staff.  The department 

 7          will also be refining training in the areas 

 8          of use of force and interpersonal 

 9          communications to provide our staff with 

10          additional avenues to deescalate situations, 

11          before force becomes necessary.  

12                 In the upcoming year, we will also be 

13          pursuing many policy changes such as a new 

14          rule designation for synthetic marijuana, the 

15          expanded use of K-9 units, the elimination of 

16          metal containers from our commissaries, the 

17          use of secure vendors for packages, the 

18          piloting of pepper spray, and enhancement of 

19          tool control practices.  

20                 Our internal investigations unit has 

21          been completely overhauled and is now called 

22          the Office of Special Investigations, or OSI. 

23          A new chief and a new director of operations 

24          have been appointed.  The chief now reports 


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 1          directly to me, and we meet regularly.  The 

 2          new leaders are both attorneys with 

 3          significant law enforcement backgrounds. 

 4          Under their leadership, a number of new 

 5          initiatives have been implemented to foster 

 6          an atmosphere of ethical behavior and 

 7          thorough investigations.  

 8                 OSI has also bolstered its ranks with 

 9          highly qualified investigators and analysts 

10          with decades of experience from outside law 

11          enforcement agencies.  

12                 Most importantly, DOCCS will be 

13          working with our federal partners to 

14          establish best practices.  In 2015, the NIC 

15          conducted comprehensive security audits at 

16          several facilities, and in 2016 they will 

17          audit several more.  The NIC will also review 

18          our training academy, and train selected 

19          staff members on how to conduct security 

20          audits.  

21                 To build upon these best practices, 

22          DOCCS will be instituting a process for 

23          unannounced security audits and risk 

24          assessments in line with NIC's suggestions.  


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 1                 DOCCS is also responsible for 

 2          approximately 36,000 parolees.  In 2014, we 

 3          issued a recidivism report showing that just 

 4          nine percent of ex-offenders released in 2010 

 5          were sent back to prison within three years, 

 6          based upon a new felony conviction.  This 

 7          figure was the lowest since 1985.  And for 

 8          those released in 2011, the figure has been 

 9          lowered further to 8.6 percent.  We are 

10          making an impact.  

11                 Despite this positive trend, we know 

12          there is still work to do. we have undertaken 

13          an enhanced supervision project in 

14          Monroe County that focuses on our 

15          highest-risk parolees with GPS monitors and a 

16          lower caseload ratio.  We also launched 

17          combined operations, involving Community 

18          Supervision and our Office of Special 

19          Investigations, to apprehend parole violators 

20          in careful coordination with our federal, 

21          state and local Law enforcement partners.  

22                 We also implemented last year's law 

23          ensuring next-day reporting, and we arranged 

24          for inmates to be released from facilities in 


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 1          closer proximity to their home communities.  

 2                 Opioid abuse is a serious concern when 

 3          it comes to recently released inmates.  To 

 4          address this, DOCCS has started an opioid 

 5          overdose prevention program, in collaboration 

 6          with DOH and the Harm Reduction Coalition.  

 7          We now issue Naloxone kits -- the opioid 

 8          antidote -- to inmates scheduled for release, 

 9          and provide training on how to use it.  To 

10          help prevent relapse, DOCCS will also be 

11          using Vivitrol paired with traditional drug 

12          treatment counseling.  

13                 In conclusion, there again will be 

14          many challenges and expectations for DOCCS 

15          and the thousands of hardworking employees 

16          who perform their responsibilities in an 

17          exemplary manner, often under dangerous and 

18          difficult circumstances.  The Governor's 

19          proposed budget will place DOCCS in an 

20          advantageous position to fulfill these 

21          expectations.  

22                 Thank you, and I will be happy to 

23          answer any questions.

24                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you very 


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 1          much.  

 2                 Our first speaker is Senator Mike 

 3          Nozzolio.

 4                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Thank you, Madam 

 5          Chair.

 6                 Good afternoon, Acting Commissioner.  

 7                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Good 

 8          afternoon, Senator.

 9                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Another year of 

10          acting, Anthony.

11                 But you've had a hard year.  All 

12          kidding aside, it's been a very, very 

13          difficult year for the department, for the 

14          people who work in the department.  And I 

15          want to probe just a couple of things 

16          regarding what was so costly an effort last 

17          year.

18                 The cost of the prison break from 

19          Clinton, what does the department estimate 

20          those costs to be?

21                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  $12.7 

22          million for the escape.

23                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Now, are these 

24          exclusively personnel costs, or how do you 


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 1          estimate those elements?

 2                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Mostly 

 3          those expenses were related to overtime for 

 4          staff involved in the pursuit.  Some 

 5          ancillary services like food and things of 

 6          that nature, lodging.  But mostly the 

 7          overtime.

 8                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  That those costs 

 9          are exclusively for the department --

10                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Yes.

11                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  -- not inclusive of 

12          costs that coordinating agencies, 

13          particularly the New York State Police, had 

14          to engage in; is that correct?

15                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Those 

16          were just DOCCS's expenses.

17                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Our estimates have 

18          the total cost on or about $23 million to 

19          $25 million.  Does that sound about right to 

20          you?

21                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  I really 

22          can't speculate on those other costs, 

23          Senator.

24                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Tell us what kinds 


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 1          of things has the department had to 

 2          reevaluate since that prison break?

 3                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  There 

 4          are many steps that we have taken to bolster 

 5          security.  I've had conversations with 

 6          every one of my superintendents, in 

 7          particular my maximum security 

 8          superintendents.  We've issued a number of 

 9          memoranda to reinforce basic security 

10          protocols, basic frisk practices, ensuring 

11          that superintendents understand their 

12          responsibility to oversee all three shifts, 

13          to be there at unannounced times, to ensure 

14          that security supervisors are making rounds.

15                 We are also investing in a lot of new 

16          equipment to better enable our security staff 

17          to perform their responsibilities.  We have 

18          the thermal imaging devices, we have portable 

19          metal detectors.  We are enforcing a lot more 

20          frisking of staff periodically.  Going 

21          forward with our training, we have the Games 

22          Inmates Play video so that that will be shown 

23          to every employee, and they can understand 

24          the dangers involved with becoming too 


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 1          familiar with inmates.

 2                 There are many, many things that we've 

 3          done, Senator.  I can provide you a full 

 4          list.  I don't want to take up too much time.

 5                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  I think that broad 

 6          outline is important, it's important that you 

 7          provide it to our members of the Public 

 8          Protection Budget Subcommittee, especially 

 9          Senator Gallivan, as chair of the Crime and 

10          Corrections Committee.

11                 And I'm not going to ask you any more 

12          questions about those issues; that's, I 

13          think, certainly a topic Senator Gallivan 

14          wants to pursue.  

15                 There is one area that I'd like to ask 

16          you about, and that's the employee Joyce 

17          Mitchell.  Obviously you're familiar with who 

18          that is, one of the linchpins in the ability 

19          for the prisoners to escape.  Do you know 

20          what her title was?

21                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  I think 

22          it was industrial training specialist, 

23          something along those lines.

24                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  It's my 


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 1          understanding that it's something to that 

 2          effect, industrial training, in the prison 

 3          tailor shop, as a prison tailor shop 

 4          instructor.  Her salary, we looked it up, is 

 5          $57,697 a year.

 6                 Did Joyce Mitchell have any advisory 

 7          capacity to the Department of Corrections in 

 8          any way, any management or reporting beyond 

 9          management within the correctional facility?

10                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Senator, 

11          before I go further, I cannot comment on 

12          anything that is the subject of a pending 

13          investigation.

14                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  The inspector 

15          general -- I know Senator Gallivan has asked 

16          a number of these questions, and we've gotten 

17          the same answer so far, Commissioner.  Do you 

18          have any idea how long that investigation 

19          will take and when a report will be issued?

20                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  I cannot 

21          answer that.

22                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Here's my -- let me 

23          just ask you, then, not about Joyce Mitchell 

24          but about your other industrial training 


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 1          supervisors across the correctional system.  

 2          Do any of your industrial training 

 3          supervisors have policymaking 

 4          responsibilities within the Department of 

 5          Corrections?

 6                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  I have 

 7          met with my industrial training 

 8          superintendents.  The Corcraft industry 

 9          aspect of our operations is very important.  

10          Inmates are meaningfully employed, they learn 

11          a skill, they provide an important service 

12          for our customers throughout the state.  And 

13          I am hopeful of continuing that and upgrading 

14          it in many ways.

15                 They can occasionally sit in on 

16          executive staff meetings at the facility 

17          level, because everybody is important.  And 

18          they certainly should listen to all the 

19          security concerns and other 

20          cross-disciplinary issues.  But I don't think 

21          they have formal policy roles as you define 

22          it, if I understand your question correctly.

23                 But they certainly -- every one of my 

24          staff -- and I hammer this to the 


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 1          superintendents:  Your primary 

 2          responsibility, among other things, is you 

 3          have to know your jail.  You have to walk and 

 4          talk with everybody.  Every employee is 

 5          important in this agency.  Everyone might 

 6          have possible suggestions for you as to how 

 7          to better improve operations for everybody's 

 8          safety and security.  So that is fundamental 

 9          to me, that they have to make those kinds of 

10          rounds regularly.

11                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  And that's 

12          exemplary.  I know you've always listened to 

13          us.  We're hopeful that you continue to 

14          listen to all the correctional employees with 

15          their suggestions and their input.  

16                 But I guess in the hypothetical, it's 

17          safe to say that normally the industrial 

18          training supervisor doesn't have policymaking 

19          responsibilities within the correctional 

20          system.  Is that safe to say?

21                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  I 

22          believe that's safe to say, if I understand 

23          your question.

24                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  And yet 


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 1          potentially, if an industrial training 

 2          supervisor was involved -- again, in the 

 3          hypothetical -- directly involved with 

 4          criminality regarding a prison escape which 

 5          cost the taxpayers of this state at least 

 6          $12 million from the Department of 

 7          Corrections, and our estimates are another 

 8          $11 million to $13 million for the Department 

 9          of State Police, as well as other federal 

10          costs to the FBI -- that one industrial 

11          training supervisor could have cost the 

12          taxpayers of this state at least $25 million.

13                 And that employee of the State of 

14          New York and the taxpayers of this state has 

15          had absolutely no policy implications, or 

16          extremely limited policy implications within 

17          her -- within their position of 

18          responsibility.  I think that's the point 

19          that glares to me, Commissioner, that the 

20          impact of wrongdoing within state employment, 

21          entrusted to the taxpayers through state 

22          employment, can have enormous financial 

23          implications.  Not to mention the havoc that 

24          it created within your department in trying 


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 1          to deal with these issues, and that you're 

 2          going to continue to deal with these issues.  

 3                 I know Senator Gallivan is awaiting 

 4          the inspector general's report, certainly 

 5          other members of the Corrections Committee as 

 6          well as the Codes Committee are waiting for 

 7          that report, and we hope that we'll have the 

 8          opportunity to sit down with you as you 

 9          continue to make improvements in the 

10          correctional system on a day-to-day basis.

11                 So thank you for your dialogue, and I 

12          appreciate the important responsibilities 

13          that you have.

14                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Thank 

15          you, Senator, especially for all your years 

16          of service to our agency.  We will miss you.

17                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Thank you, 

18          Commissioner.

19                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Assembly?  

20                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  Thank you.  Our 

21          next speaker is Assemblymember O'Donnell.

22                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Good 

23          afternoon.  It's very nice to see you again.

24                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Good 


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 1          afternoon.

 2                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  I was watching 

 3          TV last night; I got to watch Mr. Sweat's 

 4          sentencing time, and he was sentenced to 

 5          $80,000 of restitution.  Which I thought was 

 6          an odd number, given the number you just gave 

 7          us, $12 million.  And of course when you pay 

 8          your inmates $1.25 an hour, I don't think 

 9          you're going to get back that $80,000 anytime 

10          soon.

11                 But I also assume you don't have a 

12          budget line for escapes, right?  So where did 

13          the $12 million come from?

14                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  The 

15          Division of the Budget provided the money for 

16          us.

17                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  So did you 

18          call somebody up and say "We need $12 million 

19          for overtime?"  Is that what -- like that?

20                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  They 

21          found a funding source for us.

22                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  They're very 

23          good like that.  Funny how that is.

24                 Let me talk about this new Office of 


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 1          Special Investigations, which used to be the 

 2          inspector general's office, is that correct?

 3                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Yes.

 4                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  You know, the 

 5          other day I went out and bought some new 

 6          jeans and they were called skinny jeans.  But 

 7          that doesn't mean I'm skinny.  You know what 

 8          I mean?

 9                 So I wonder if by changing the name 

10          from one entity to another is enough to 

11          effectuate real change.  I just heard you 

12          answering some of the Senator's questions.  I 

13          don't want you to divulge anything you know 

14          about the inspector general and when and if 

15          her report will be coming out, nor about what 

16          it says.  But internally, your own inspector 

17          general's office had a report against 

18          Ms. Mitchell that they found lacking in 

19          veracity or whatever you want to say, and 

20          dismissed that.

21                 Isn't that of great concern to you, 

22          that the entity that is in charge, 

23          investigating internally, ignored the fact 

24          that this inappropriate relationship was 


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 1          going on?  I mean, I'm not suggesting that 

 2          you would have guessed that would have led to 

 3          a $12 million overtime charge for an escape.  

 4          But doesn't that give you concern?

 5                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  I cannot 

 6          comment on something that's the subject of a 

 7          pending investigation.

 8                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Well, then 

 9          let's talk about the budget.  You have 125 

10          investigators.  Can you tell me what is the 

11          budget of the Office of Special 

12          Investigation?

13                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  I can 

14          get that information for you.  I don't know 

15          the exact amount.

16                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  We did a 

17          hearing last year, the end of last year, 

18          where you unfortunately couldn't come -- we 

19          missed you, Tony -- to look at the question 

20          of how do other places in the country and in 

21          the world deal with this problem.  Right?  So 

22          we have this very high-profile escape that 

23          cost us possibly up to $25 million, people's 

24          lives were upended.  And seemingly, the 


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 1          mechanisms that you had to provide oversight 

 2          within your system failed.

 3                 And what we learned was that in 

 4          something like 42 other states, they have a 

 5          separate office of an ombudsman.  In Canada, 

 6          in England and in Wales, they all have their 

 7          own outside agency specifically for the 

 8          purpose of conducting investigations inside 

 9          the prison system.  What do you think of 

10          that?

11                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Well, 

12          Assemblyman, we have a lot of outside 

13          entities that have access to our prisons 

14          right now.  The State Commission of 

15          Correction can visit at will, any member of 

16          the Legislature can visit at will, together 

17          with any number of their aides.  We've 

18          entertained requests where aides can come by 

19          themselves.  Any district attorney can visit.  

20          We have outside entities like PAMI that come 

21          and do investigations with respect to their 

22          clients.  We have the Justice Center that 

23          comes in.  The Justice Department can come 

24          in, and U.S. Attorneys in connection with any 


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 1          pending investigation.  

 2                 We know the Correctional Association 

 3          comes in, they do their site visits, they 

 4          come in with as many as eight to 12 people.  

 5          We accord them privileged correspondence 

 6          rights so that any inmate that writes to 

 7          them, it goes out sealed, it comes in sealed, 

 8          it's not read by staff.

 9                 So there are a lot of entities now 

10          that presently have access.

11                 I'd like to for a moment talk briefly 

12          about how we have reformulated significantly 

13          our OSI office.  First, there's an attorney 

14          at the top now.  That wasn't the case.  He 

15          has an extensive law enforcement background.  

16          He brought in another attorney with an 

17          extensive law enforcement background.  They 

18          have since made significant efforts to link 

19          with the U.S. Attorneys, with the FBI, with 

20          all local district attorneys.  They bring 

21          cases to them.  They've also brought in many 

22          other outside investigators.  

23                 So we have new energy from the outside 

24          mixing in with experienced people.  You have 


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 1          to understand how jails operate in order to 

 2          conduct a proper investigation.  They have 

 3          changed how they process cases, they have a 

 4          new initiative where they're going to do an 

 5          analysis of an entire facility and they're 

 6          going to speak to every employee and get 

 7          feedback from inmates so that we can get 

 8          better results on our investigations.

 9                 There's a lot of things that they are 

10          doing that I am very hopeful about, including 

11          now they directly report to me, and I meet 

12          with them regularly to go over where they've 

13          gone.  So I think we are moving in the right 

14          direction in this area.

15                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Well, I 

16          appreciate your point of view.  I just want 

17          to share with you that we are the outlier 

18          here in New York in how we do this.  Those 

19          left-wing places like Indiana do it 

20          differently, and we had great information and 

21          testimony that was provided all day, both 

22          from those ombudspersons and what they do.

23                 And then we also had family members 

24          who were not here -- family members of 


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 1          inmates do not complain about the treatment 

 2          by the corrections officers.  In fact, most 

 3          of them were complaining about their 

 4          treatment by other inmates -- but by their 

 5          inability to get information from somebody 

 6          until they found me.

 7                 And so I think the time has come for 

 8          New York to say is this the right way to do 

 9          this, is there another way to run this 

10          railroad, and we'll be taking that up under 

11          consideration.

12                 In this year's budget you have 

13          requested $3.1 billion, which was up from 

14          last year's $2.9 billion, an increase of 

15          8.02 percent -- despite the fact that the 

16          prison population went from 53,000 to 51,000.

17                 Can you address that?

18                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Well, 

19          there are increased costs related to health 

20          services, $120 million alone just for 

21          medications.  We are spending more money to 

22          implement the new SHU settlement, which is 

23          groundbreaking.  There's a lot of rehab that 

24          has to be done, there will be new staff added 


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 1          for that.

 2                 There are other initiatives related to 

 3          reentry that are important for the Governor, 

 4          and they make a lot of sense, related to 

 5          upgrading our vocational programming, our 

 6          Thinking for a Change.  So there's a lot of 

 7          initiatives there, as well as for the youth 

 8          initiative with respect to the Hudson 

 9          Correctional Facility.  There are additional 

10          staff added there.  And a lot for the capital 

11          projects that we have to undertake to make 

12          that happen.

13                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Thank you for 

14          bringing that up.  I'd like to address that 

15          issue.  I, as you well know, have been to 27 

16          prison visits in my capacity as chair of the 

17          Corrections Committee, and I have been to 

18          Hudson and Coxsackie twice.

19                 And so my first question for you is 

20          given the small number of prisoners that you 

21          have who are 16 and 17, why are you not 

22          putting them all together?  So why are you 

23          keeping a small cadre of them at Coxsackie 

24          and still yet also building a second -- not 


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 1          building, renovating, whatever you call that, 

 2          the Hudson?  So are you removing all the 

 3          adults from the Hudson?

 4                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  

 5          Eventually, yes.  Right now what we 

 6          implemented was a housing arrangement where 

 7          16- and 17-year-olds are either placed at 

 8          Woodbourne, at Greene, or at Coxsackie if 

 9          they require maximum security placement.

10                 Going forward, the plan is for all 16- 

11          and 17-year-olds to be removed to Hudson, 

12          with the exception of those that still 

13          require maximum security placement.

14                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  I was at 

15          Greene when they began the process of the 

16          renovation of Greene to allow for 16- and 

17          17-year-olds.  That was to be in PREA 

18          compliance.  So why the change?  Like why did 

19          you originally come up with the idea we're 

20          going to put the medium security 

21          PREA-compliant units in different places?  

22          And then why did you decide now, no, they all 

23          have to be in the same place?

24                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  This is 


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 1          the next logical step.  The Governor is 

 2          really committed to removing 16- and 

 3          17-year-olds from adult prisons globally, the 

 4          Raise the Age initiative.  We're tied with 

 5          North Carolina in last place, so to speak.  

 6          It would be a lot easier for us as a system 

 7          if every person walking through our door was 

 8          at least 18 or over.  

 9                 The PREA requirements require us to 

10          separate, by sight and sound, all 16- or 

11          17-year-olds.  And to do that effectively, we 

12          looked at the existing services at the time.  

13          And it made sense to use Woodbourne because 

14          it had some cells, it made sense to use 

15          Greene, and it made sense to use Coxsackie 

16          for those that would require maximum security 

17          placement.

18                 Now this initiative is the next step, 

19          because it's going to completely remove them 

20          from the adult prisons.  But Hudson will 

21          still remain as a correctional facility.  

22                 So it is our hope that you do raise 

23          the age, because the other thing is this.  

24          With any 17-year-old right now on our system, 


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 1          if they come in just two months shy of their 

 2          birthday, they have to go into one of these 

 3          facilities where we currently cohort them, 

 4          either Woodbourne, Coxsackie, and, in future, 

 5          Hudson.  But once they turn 18, we have to 

 6          immediately uplift them and move them to a 

 7          general confinement facility.  

 8                 So the Raise the Age initiative will 

 9          allow the Office of Children and Family 

10          Services to hold on to them, to continue in 

11          their program, to decide when the appropriate 

12          time is to transfer them to us as adults, 

13          either at 21 or possibly later.  That, I 

14          think, is the best possible solution going 

15          forward for everyone.

16                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  But back to 

17          the problem at hand with segregating out the 

18          maximum security prisoners into Coxsackie.  

19          As I spoke to you beforehand, when I went 

20          there relatively recently, they were one 

21          unhappy group of people who -- not because 

22          they were in prison, but they felt that they 

23          were almost in solitary, that they were being 

24          punished.  And they kept on saying to me and 


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 1          the other people there, Why did you do this 

 2          to us?

 3                 So what do you intend to do at Hudson 

 4          to prevent that from being repeated for the 

 5          medium-security 16- and 17-year-olds that 

 6          you're putting into that facility?

 7                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Well, 

 8          the numbers will be much more significant.  

 9          And they'll be out and they'll be 

10          participating in the general-confinement 

11          program, they'll have free rein of the 

12          facility because we don't have to worry about 

13          any separation by sight or sound.  There will 

14          be no one 18 or over at that facility.

15                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Well, one last 

16          question, thank you.

17                 When I originally toured Hudson you 

18          were a little upset with me because I went to 

19          the crappy dorm, or I went to the one place 

20          that was really like crumbling down.  It was 

21          really decrepit.  

22                 Are you intending to put those 16- and 

23          17-year-olds into that crappy dorm?  I don't 

24          know what the word would be.  But you know 


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 1          what I'm talking about, right?  So like 

 2          literally there were rooms that eight inmates 

 3          slept, you know, in beds next to one another 

 4          in a room that was probably built for four.

 5                 Is that where you're putting these 

 6          kids?

 7                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  We are 

 8          upgrading.  We're spending a lot of money to 

 9          upgrade the place to make it suitable for 

10          children.

11                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  And there will 

12          still be adults on the work release side of 

13          the prison?

14                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Yes.  

15          That is outside the secure perimeter.  So the 

16          temporary release, industrial training 

17          program, will still continue to operate in 

18          that building.

19                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Okay.  I just 

20          want to take an opportunity to thank you for 

21          how responsive you have been to me and my 

22          staff and for answering all the letters that 

23          I take the time to write.  Thank you very 

24          much.


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 1                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Thank 

 2          you, Assemblyman.

 3                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  Thank you.

 4                 Senate?

 5                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you very 

 6          much.  Our next speaker is Senator Patrick 

 7          Gallivan, chair of Crime and Corrections.

 8                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Thank you, Madam 

 9          Chair.

10                 Commissioner, good afternoon.  

11                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Good 

12          afternoon, Senator.

13                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  I can't help but 

14          add to the comments of Senator Nozzolio.  You 

15          have had a very challenging year, and we 

16          understand that.  

17                 I also understand that the inspector 

18          general report is still pending, there's 

19          pending investigations related to the escape 

20          and looking into it.  And I think -- I'd like 

21          you to understand how frustrating it is for 

22          us.  We've got a responsibility, an oversight 

23          responsibility, starting with the 

24          Constitution, the various laws, the rules of 


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 1          the Senate.  And I'll get into some of the 

 2          safety and security issues.  

 3                 But when we see overdoses, when we see 

 4          assaults on staff, when we see assaults on 

 5          inmates, when we see drugs in facilities and 

 6          so on -- I mean, there's a very real 

 7          frustration when, as chair of the Crime and 

 8          Corrections Committee, people say:  What are 

 9          you doing about it?  And how are you trying 

10          to address it?  

11                 And I've tried to be very respectful 

12          of the investigations that are going on, to 

13          not impede on any of them.  But there will 

14          have to come a time when they're out that 

15          we'll have to have a more extensive public 

16          airing of the events leading up to that.  

17                 But nonetheless, I hope you understand 

18          that handicaps us right at this point, 

19          especially when we're considering a package 

20          that's spending $3 billion, 3 billion 

21          taxpayer dollars.

22                 So safety and security.  That is -- 

23          it's evident throughout your testimony, very 

24          appropriately so.  And since my time in this 


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 1          chair and yours in that chair, I know that 

 2          that is something that you've talked about 

 3          each time that you're before us, and pretty 

 4          much every time you and I have a 

 5          conversation.

 6                 And I want to point to just a couple 

 7          of different things.  I have a letter that 

 8          you wrote to all the inmates back in April of 

 9          2015 -- which I commend you for taking a very 

10          responsible action while at the same time 

11          admitting failures of the system and warning 

12          them about the dangers of synthetic 

13          marijuana.  And we really should rightly be 

14          concerned about that.

15                 I've got some data regarding 

16          contraband in facilities that has continued 

17          to increase each of the last four years, last 

18          year being the highest total ever.  

19          Inmate-on-staff assaults, same thing, have 

20          continued to increase each of the last three 

21          or four years, highest total ever.  

22          Inmate-on-inmate assaults, same thing.  

23                 So no matter how we look at it, we've 

24          got problems and concerns.  And it doesn't 


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 1          matter if you are there defending the 

 2          correction officer or some family member very 

 3          concerned about their brother, sister, 

 4          whomever it might be in a correctional 

 5          facility.  Your foremost obligation is to 

 6          provide for the safety, security, humane 

 7          constitutional treatment inside those 

 8          facilities.  

 9                 So of course it begs the question, 

10          what are we doing about all this?  We're 

11          going in the wrong direction each of the last 

12          three or four years.  

13                 But having said that, I know your 

14          testimony started to address that.  So the 

15          security staffing reviews that we took on two 

16          years ago, can you tell me where they -- and 

17          I know you briefly mentioned them.  But can 

18          you tell me where you are along that process?  

19                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  We've 

20          completed the next -- I think it's 18 audits.  

21          We've shared that information with the two 

22          unions -- NYSCOPBA, Council 82.  We're 

23          awaiting their feedback.  And then we'll send 

24          the final set of recommendations to the 


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 1          Division of the Budget.

 2                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  When did you 

 3          anticipate the review of the entire system 

 4          will be completed, of all the facilities?

 5                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  The 

 6          third year will be next year.

 7                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  And partly in 

 8          response, I'm assuming, to some of the things 

 9          that have taken place as you're doing your 

10          internal review of the escape at Clinton, as 

11          well as the security staffing reviews, your 

12          testimony talked about the technological 

13          enhancements, training improvements, policy 

14          changes -- begun some things, are going to 

15          begin some others.

16                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Mm-hmm.

17                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  It can't come soon 

18          enough.  I think you agree with that.  But 

19          how far along are we with these things, and 

20          how can we accelerate it so these -- which 

21          you can't see, but obviously the chart that 

22          goes up --

23                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Yes.

24                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  -- starts going in 


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 1          the other direction?  

 2                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Right.  

 3                 The first thing is that we have made 

 4          arrangements to change our rules, our 

 5          disciplinary rules, so that K2, or synthetic 

 6          marijuana, is defined as a drug for purposes 

 7          of our disciplinary system.  

 8                 That required a formal change in a 

 9          rule and then serving it on every inmate.  So 

10          I think the date where it officially will 

11          take effect is the next couple of weeks or 

12          few weeks.  So that will enhance our ability 

13          to discipline appropriately the individuals 

14          that engage in that.

15                 The next thing that we've done is 

16          we've sent out notices to advise the vendors 

17          that supply products to our commissaries that 

18          we will no longer be able to accept canned 

19          goods.  There are too many instances where 

20          can lids are being used for weaponry.  And 

21          we've talked to other systems, we're one of 

22          the few states that's in this area that still 

23          does that sort of thing.  

24                 So we're confident that we can supply 


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 1          other products that are packaged in ways so 

 2          that ultimately we will be removing can lids 

 3          from our commissaries.  

 4                 And we will make similar steps, you 

 5          know, when you buy from secure vendors.  So 

 6          that's the next change.  We're going to allow 

 7          inmates to buy only from secure vendors that 

 8          we've identified.  Because this would 

 9          prevent -- assuming no one is compromised by 

10          the secure vendors we select, and they will 

11          have to prove to us their track record -- 

12          that purchasing goods from the outside and 

13          coming into the facilities, A, will not have 

14          can lids and, B, hopefully will no longer 

15          have drugs secreted --

16                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  If I can just stay 

17          right along the commissaries, I had -- I know 

18          this has been talked about for years.  I had 

19          a meeting with the deputy secretary for 

20          public safety several months ago, and he 

21          talked about an RFP either being prepared or 

22          going out for -- for a central commissary, I 

23          think?

24                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Yes.


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 1                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Is that still a 

 2          plan?  

 3                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  The 

 4          commissary RFP is still out there.  But 

 5          meanwhile, for the existing vendors, we want 

 6          to implement this now.  That will also be 

 7          part of the long-range RFP for the winning 

 8          bidder there, but right now we want to make 

 9          this change.

10                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  All right, let's -- 

11          there will be much more to follow, I mean, 

12          with all the specific items, about trying to 

13          prevent contraband from coming into 

14          facilities, trying to stop the various 

15          assaults on staff or inmates.  So I know 

16          we'll have many more discussions.

17                 If I may just talk very briefly -- you 

18          talked briefly about it as well in your 

19          testimony -- inmate discipline, the whole 

20          process.  I know you had the settlement, you 

21          had the SHU lawsuit.  Some things were 

22          prompted by that.  And you've talked about 

23          the revamping of an inmate discipline system 

24          in your testimony.  


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 1                 Some of the concerns that people have 

 2          come to me with from various facilities 

 3          across the state is that inmate discipline 

 4          has gone in the wrong direction and there's a 

 5          feeling that that has contributed to the 

 6          increase in assaults, be it on inmates or 

 7          staff.  Can you comment on that? 

 8                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  We 

 9          continue to study and meet with our unions to 

10          get feedback.  

11                 Certainly, as we know -- we spoke 

12          about this maybe a year ago or two years 

13          ago -- the demographics of our population 

14          have changed.  Many years ago we had 24,000 

15          drug offenders, mostly low-level drug 

16          offenders.  And now, disproportionately, we 

17          have more violent felony offenders in our 

18          system, I think maybe 64 percent.  We have 

19          9,500, 9,600 inmates that are serving 

20          sentences with maximums of life terms.

21                 So those are changing demographics.  

22          That may be one of the reasons that we're 

23          seeing the uptick in assaults.

24                 No assault is good.  The majority of 


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 1          assaults that do happen -- and as I 

 2          explained, our definition of what constitutes 

 3          an assault is much lower than what's in the 

 4          Penal Law.  It does not require physical 

 5          injury.  I throw this cup of water, I don't 

 6          cause you injury, but it's an assault, it's 

 7          a --

 8                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  No, I understand 

 9          that.  And just if I may -- sorry to 

10          interrupt -- we can call it anything, but 

11          there should never be a time that an inmate 

12          puts his hands on another inmate or an inmate 

13          puts his hands on a correction officer.

14                 So I appreciate the semantics of it, 

15          but I think we're on the same page with that.  

16          I mean it's the order within a facility 

17          that's of concern.

18                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Mm-hmm.  

19          And I think, moving to the reforms that we've 

20          implemented or are planning to implement with 

21          the changes, we see that as very analogous to 

22          what we've done with the seriously mentally 

23          ill.  And we planned that out, we spent the 

24          right amount of money, we developed programs 


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 1          like the RMHU at Marcy, the one at Five 

 2          Points, where we can safely bring inmates who 

 3          were otherwise very problematic out of their 

 4          cells to receive programming and treatment 

 5          using secure "Re-Start" chairs.  

 6                 So we envision that this will help 

 7          safety, because we're going to do the 

 8          step-down program at one of our facilities, a 

 9          couple of other step-down to the communities.  

10          We're going to change -- we have this 

11          elaborate CCP program that we're planning.  

12          We have a whole array of options, similar to 

13          what we did with the seriously mentally ill.

14                 And I think staff for the most part, 

15          unless I'm wrong, will tell you that they see 

16          what we've done with the seriously mentally 

17          ill in those programs at Marcy as working.  

18          And we're effectively changing behavior, 

19          which is our ultimate goal.  We want to 

20          change behavior by difficult inmates.  

21                 We see that going the same way 

22          ultimately -- it will take some time, we have 

23          to be patient.  When we bring everything 

24          online, we think we'll have a safer system 


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 1          for everybody.

 2                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Commissioner, thank 

 3          you.  I would love to go on, but the chair is 

 4          going to turn my microphone off because my 

 5          time's up.  Thank you very much.  

 6                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, Senator.

 7                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  Thank you.  

 8                 Our next speaker is Assemblymember 

 9          Duprey.

10                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN DUPREY:  Good afternoon, 

11          Commissioner.

12                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Good 

13          afternoon, Assemblywoman.

14                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN DUPREY:  Before I start, 

15          I would really be remiss -- several people 

16          have already spoken about the event that 

17          happened in my district in June, and I want 

18          to extend my thanks to you personally, 

19          Commissioner, to your administrative staff 

20          for your tremendous cooperation during the 

21          most difficult 23 days that I think probably 

22          the Department of Corrections, certainly 

23          anyone in my district, has ever had to 

24          endure.


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 1                 We're glad it didn't go on any longer.  

 2          I might have asked all of you to register to 

 3          vote, so -- but I know you were all there, 

 4          and you were there a lot and for a long time, 

 5          and your support was greatly appreciated.

 6                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Thank 

 7          you, Assemblywoman.

 8                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN DUPREY:  And continues 

 9          to be.

10                 A couple of the Senators mentioned the 

11          IG report, and I can tell you that there's no 

12          one waiting for it more than I am in the 

13          State Legislature, as well as several hundred 

14          of my constituents.  And I know, 

15          Commissioner, that we share our concern on 

16          safety issues.  Certainly there are -- and 

17          again, there's been some talk about the 

18          assaults.  The media seems to want to 

19          certainly talk a lot about the inmates, the 

20          assaults on inmates.  And none of us condone 

21          those.  I've also seen way too many assaults 

22          on our correction officers.  

23                 And could you just again -- and I hate 

24          to ask you to repeat, but so that I'm clear 


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 1          on what your recent initiatives are to 

 2          enhance the safety of our correction officers 

 3          in these facilities.

 4                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Well, 

 5          among the other things that we're spending 

 6          some money on for new equipment are these 

 7          portable medical detectors that we are 

 8          issuing in maximum security facilities to 

 9          start with.  They are much better than the 

10          fixed areas, because the inmates know where 

11          the metal detector equipment is now.  These 

12          we can put and move about and therefore 

13          effectively conduct metal detection searches 

14          on inmates, which is one of the things that 

15          we think will help significantly.  

16                 I mentioned the intention to get rid 

17          of the cans, the intention to get secure 

18          vendors.  Because being the only way that 

19          goods can come in, this will mean changes in 

20          our package rooms, because we're one of the 

21          few states that continues to allow packages 

22          from anyone.  And with new technology, people 

23          can disguise, in seemingly a can of 

24          vegetables from the store, anything.  


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 1                 We have great security staff that 

 2          review these, and they're terrific sometimes 

 3          at finding them.  But no matter how diligent 

 4          they are, things get in.  Scalpel blades get 

 5          in.  All those things present a safety threat 

 6          to our staff and to other inmates.  

 7                 And we continue to regularly meet with 

 8          our partners in the unions to hear what their 

 9          suggestions are.  And we're looking at things 

10          also to deescalate situations.  We want to 

11          introduce pepper spray into the department to 

12          see how that works.  That may be a way of 

13          safely defusing a situation.  A lot of other 

14          jurisdictions use that.  

15                 We have deescalation training.  We're 

16          sharing that with the unions now, we're 

17          rewriting our policies, we're going to get 

18          their feedback before putting anything out.  

19          But we recognize that everybody's in this 

20          together.  Nobody has the single answer to 

21          every problem.  The only answer is that 

22          everything requires either hard work or a lot 

23          of hard work.  But we're willing to do it 

24          together and get the job done.


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 1                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN DUPREY:  Thank you.  

 2                 And I also want to address something 

 3          that is, I think, difficult.  I'm sure it's 

 4          difficult for the department, difficult for 

 5          me.  But we recently had a very well 

 6          respected sergeant in one of my correctional 

 7          facilities who committed suicide.  He left 

 8          behind a loving family and certainly 

 9          coworkers in shock.  It's one more example of 

10          the incredible stress that our correctional 

11          officers face every day.  

12                 About six years ago a retired 

13          corrections lieutenant who's a personal 

14          friend of mine came to my office in 

15          Plattsburgh, and he actually broke down, 

16          talking about the flashbacks, the depression 

17          that he went through soon after his 

18          retirement.  Coincidentally, that same day I 

19          was having lunch with a couple of 

20          psychologists who started talking to me about 

21          their wanting to work more with veterans.  

22          And I asked them to start working with our 

23          correction officers.  

24                 They've done that.  I introduced the 


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 1          two of them.  They've had great success with 

 2          PTSD programs.  I think we need to be very 

 3          open that our correction officers -- 

 4          certainly some who are currently working, but 

 5          those who retire -- are facing PTSD the same 

 6          as our veterans are.  We have now in the 

 7          North Country, in the Plattsburgh area, 

 8          trained local licensed mental health 

 9          counselors.  They recently held a seminar.  

10                 Commissioner, I know you're trying to 

11          reach out to those in need in my district, 

12          but I'm also concerned -- and I believe we've 

13          done that pretty well -- I'm concerned about 

14          correction officers across the state.  And 

15          can you just tell us about what the 

16          department is doing to address the stress 

17          that these officers are facing?  And I worry 

18          about their stress, the stress of their 

19          families.

20                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Sure.  

21          And I commend the gentleman that started that 

22          program.  I read the article on it, I think 

23          it was very impressive.  I think people don't 

24          realize the nature of the job -- mostly for 


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 1          correction officers with stress, but for all 

 2          staff working inside correctional facility, 

 3          what they face every day.  And they 

 4          internalize it a lot, and that can build up 

 5          over time.

 6                 Two years ago I was concerned about 

 7          the uptick in suicides among our staff, so I 

 8          put out a notice to all staff.  We had worked 

 9          to give out some materials to our EAP 

10          coordinators, resources to refer people to.  

11          The notice I created was with help from my 

12          assistant commissioner in charge of mental 

13          health services, where we basically explained 

14          depression is something that can affect 

15          anybody.  And when you reach that state where 

16          you think the only solution to your problem, 

17          you're so depressed you think the only 

18          solution to your problem is to take your 

19          life, it's a very unfortunate circumstance.

20                 There are countless individuals alive 

21          today who were at that stage but got help in 

22          time, and now they're leading healthy and 

23          productive lives.  

24                 So in my notice two years ago I urged 


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 1          that, you know, if you see a fellow worker 

 2          that's at risk, take advantage of these 

 3          materials.  They have resources in the 

 4          community.

 5                 Now, more recently, we are working 

 6          with our partners in NYSCOPBA and the 

 7          Governor's Office of Employee Relations.  We 

 8          are using joint labor-management funding.  

 9          They've selected a vendor who's going to roll 

10          out a training program to our union stewards 

11          and EAP coordinators on how to prevent 

12          suicide.

13                 Suicide is a terrible tragedy, and we 

14          owe it to the hardworking men and women, both 

15          inside our institutions and in the 

16          communities, to do everything possible to get 

17          them help before these tragedies reach 

18          fruition.

19                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN DUPREY:  Thank you.  I 

20          know my time is up, but thank you for that 

21          answer.  It's certainly something that none 

22          of us want to continue to deal with.

23                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Thank 

24          you.


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 1                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN DUPREY:  Thank you, sir.

 2                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you very 

 3          much.  Our next speaker is Senator Funke.

 4                 SENATOR FUNKE:  Thank you, Madam 

 5          Chairwoman.  

 6                 Commissioner, thank you for the 

 7          challenging work that you do.

 8                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Thank 

 9          you.  Good afternoon.

10                 SENATOR FUNKE:  I'd like to talk to 

11          you about parole today and what's going on in 

12          my particular district, Monroe and Ontario 

13          counties.  Thomas Johnson, III, was a parolee 

14          who murdered Rochester police officer Daryl 

15          Pierson.  Johnny Blackshell Jr., another 

16          parolee accused of killing three people 

17          outside the Boys & Girls Club in Rochester.  

18          David Alligood, another parolee accused of 

19          shooting up a bar in Gates and killing one, 

20          injuring six others.  Michael Carruthers, 

21          released on parole and only hours later raped 

22          a 14-year-old girl.  The list goes on.  

23                 People in my community believe that if 

24          the parole system is not broken, it is 


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 1          severely cracked.  We have 30 program 

 2          officers in Rochester responsible for 1200 

 3          parolees in Rochester metro, with three cars.  

 4          They tell me the cars have about 150,000 

 5          miles on them, too.  

 6                 Have parole issues become lost in 

 7          DOCCS since the two have been merged 

 8          together?  Because it sure seems like it to 

 9          me.  How can we better ensure the public 

10          safety, the safety of our community, the 

11          safety of these parole officers as well?  How 

12          can we better have parolees reporting when 

13          they're supposed to report?  And what's being 

14          done to address those issues, please?  

15                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Senator, 

16          your points are very well taken.  And the 

17          community supervision aspect of this agency 

18          is extremely important.  

19                 When the Governor merged these two 

20          agencies, his vision was that there should be 

21          a seamless transition between when a person 

22          enters the front door of a correctional 

23          facility, throughout their incarceration, and 

24          then released into the community to continue 


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 1          with the services.  And at that time, even 

 2          though I had many, many years of experience 

 3          and work with the Division of Parole, I 

 4          really learned firsthand the tough job that 

 5          parole officers do.

 6                 It's tough enough dealing with some of 

 7          the convicted felons behind the walls, where 

 8          you know they don't have access to guns.  But 

 9          in the community when you're doing a home 

10          visit and you don't know if he's on drugs, 

11          you don't know if there's a gun in the room.  

12          And our parole officers are very 

13          professional, very well trained.

14                 What is going on in Rochester has 

15          caused us great concern.  And we've rolled 

16          out several important initiatives that we 

17          think are making difference.

18                 First and foremost, before someone is 

19          released to the Rochester area, we have a 

20          screening process so that if they are 

21          identified as what we call a high-risk 

22          parolee, through our risk and needs 

23          assessment, we first arrange for that person 

24          to get closer to a facility so that they're 


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 1          not traveling a long distance.  We then put 

 2          GPS bracelets on them at the correctional 

 3          facility.  We then transport them to the 

 4          field office for their official report, so 

 5          that there's no break in the release, so that 

 6          they're not in the community before they 

 7          officially understand, yes, I'm a parolee, 

 8          I'm still serving the sentence, I'm subject 

 9          to jurisdiction.

10                 We make sure that we have the right 

11          individuals on the right supervision level.  

12          And we work with our local law enforcement 

13          partners.  Recently we joined forces with our 

14          BSS unit, our OSI unit, to conduct an 

15          initiative whereby we would round up 

16          absconders in the Rochester area.  I forget 

17          the raw number that we ended up with, but by 

18          all accounts it was successful.  Local law 

19          enforcement welcomed the cooperative 

20          initiative.  

21                 We just recently did one in New York 

22          City that went over very, very well, and the 

23          police commissioner acknowledged us in that 

24          effort.  So we envision continuing to do 


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 1          things along those lines.

 2                 The vehicle issue you mentioned has me 

 3          greatly concerned.  We've been working on a 

 4          business plan, which I was informed today has 

 5          been approved by OGS.  So instead of the 

 6          existing ratio -- and I can get the exact 

 7          ratio.  I have it in my notes somewhere that 

 8          we'll be moving to.  But over a three-year 

 9          period we are going to acquire a lot more 

10          vehicles that are going to be going to 

11          community supervision.  The first year has 

12          been approved, so we will be, I think, 

13          spending about $800,000.  I think the number 

14          is like 37 or 38 more vehicles for use by 

15          parole officers so they can do their 

16          responsibilities.

17                 SENATOR FUNKE:  One quick question.  

18          Assemblyman Peter Lawrence and the police 

19          chiefs in Monroe County have suggested 

20          expanding the database within police agencies 

21          on parolees, so that if it should happen that 

22          a parolee is stopped, a police officer could 

23          make an arrest right then and there.  Is that 

24          something that you would support?


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 1                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Well, 

 2          right now if we have already lodged an 

 3          absconding warrant, that's on a system that 

 4          anybody can acknowledge and any police 

 5          officer in the state can take someone into 

 6          custody based upon the fact that they're a 

 7          parole absconder.

 8                 SENATOR FUNKE:  Thank you, sir.

 9                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.

10                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  Our next 

11          speaker is Assemblymember Lentol.

12                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  Hello, 

13          Commissioner.

14                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Hi, 

15          Assemblyman.

16                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  First of all, I 

17          don't want to give you too much praise, but I 

18          have a great deal of affection as well as 

19          respect for your knowledge, not only of 

20          corrections but also of the sentencing law 

21          which we studied together -- which I studied 

22          and you knew.  And I learned a great deal 

23          from you when we served on the Sentencing 

24          Commission together.


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 1                 But I too want to talk about parole, 

 2          but a different aspect of parole, which is 

 3          the Parole Board.  And I looked at some of 

 4          the proposals that the Governor has 

 5          propounded in order to open up parole to the 

 6          public regarding having people come into 

 7          watch parole or video of the live interview, 

 8          of the interaction between the Parole Board 

 9          and the inmates.  

10                 And my question is when I looked at 

11          this proposal, it looks like a Sunshine Law.  

12          But then after reading it or understanding 

13          it, it sounds likes it's designed to keep 

14          people in prison.  Because I don't know how 

15          an inmate in the prison would be forthcoming 

16          or the Parole Board folks would be able to 

17          ask appropriate questions given the fact that 

18          they know they're on tape.

19                 And furthermore, if the public heard 

20          the details of the crime, the Parole Board 

21          may be unwilling to release anybody, because 

22          they'd be afraid to.

23                 So I'm just wondering how and why we 

24          have this proposal in the budget.


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 1                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Well, I 

 2          think what the Governor was responding to was 

 3          the concern by a lot of individuals in the 

 4          community who get frustrated at repeated 

 5          denials of parole.  And they want to make 

 6          sure that the Parole Board is weighing all of 

 7          the appropriate factors that they're 

 8          obligated to weigh under the law.  

 9                 She's not here today, but I have the 

10          utmost respect for Chairwoman Stanford.  

11          She's a terrific individual, she's provided 

12          great leadership to the board.  In my 

13          conversations with all the individual parole 

14          commissioners, they want to do the right 

15          thing.  They really do.  They want to weigh 

16          the entire record that an inmate has done.  

17          No inmate can go back in time and change the 

18          original crime.  That's fixed as is.  But 

19          they want to be judged on what they've done 

20          over the course of their incarceration.  

21                 So we certainly -- my job, and this 

22          was part of the merger, is to make sure they 

23          have all the resources they need to do their 

24          job.  But their decision making still has to 


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 1          be independent from me.  The decisions of the 

 2          ALJs have to be independent.  

 3                 One of the things that we're exploring 

 4          is potentially using outside lawyers in some 

 5          role to assist the inmate with the 

 6          preparation of his packet.  The Governor 

 7          reached out, and there are a number of 

 8          lawyers who are willing to come forward as 

 9          the Pardon Initiative and the Clemency 

10          Initiative.  And I had several staff members 

11          participate in a webinar to train them so 

12          that they could understand all of the 

13          different documents that are part of our 

14          documentation -- what the commitment means, 

15          what program participation means, what a 

16          disciplinary record means.  

17                 Some of these lawyers who might be 

18          taking on inmates for clemency applications 

19          might also be tapped for responsibilities 

20          along this line, to potentially help an 

21          inmate prepare his package and appear before 

22          the Parole Board.  

23                 So there's a lot to be discussed, 

24          there's a lot to be considered.  It's not a 


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 1          black-and-white issue, it's not easy to get 

 2          people into our correctional facilities.  A 

 3          lot of the Parole Board hearings are done by 

 4          televideo, so it could be possible that 

 5          somebody could be at a remote site and listen 

 6          to what's going on.  

 7                 We certainly support transparency, but 

 8          we also want to be fair to everybody.

 9                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  And isn't it also 

10          true that in parole hearings there are 

11          certain facts that never come to light, 

12          either in video or at the Parole Board, 

13          because there are confidential communications 

14          between the district attorney and the judge, 

15          as well as others who may have their thoughts 

16          not ever brought up at any of these hearings?  

17          So the public would be denied knowledge of 

18          why somebody was denied because of those 

19          confidential communications.  

20                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  I am 

21          reluctant to give you a hard and fast answer.  

22          I know the crime victim's statement is 

23          absolutely confidential.  The inmate never 

24          gets it.  And we take extraordinary means to 


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 1          make sure that that gets delivered to the 

 2          parole commissioners at the time of the 

 3          hearing; they take that into consideration.  

 4                 I'm not sure what the practice is if a 

 5          district attorney writes a letter.  I'm 

 6          tending to think that it's part of the record 

 7          that should be made available --

 8                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  I don't think it 

 9          is.

10                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  -- but I 

11          don't want to give you a definite answer.  

12          I'd have to check with the Board of Parole.

13                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  Thank you, sir.

14                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Senator Ruth 

15          Hassell-Thompson.

16                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Thank you, 

17          Madam Chair.  

18                 Good afternoon, Commissioner.

19                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Good 

20          afternoon, Senator.

21                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  I know 

22          there was mention made of both Hudson and 

23          Coxsackie's correctional facilities, but just 

24          a couple of quick follow-up questions, 


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 1          really.  

 2                 What would be the impact -- you talked 

 3          in your presentation about $300 million in 

 4          the capital budget.  And some of that is 

 5          going to be for the renovation and the 

 6          reengineering of Hudson.  What impact is that 

 7          going to have on services provided to inmates 

 8          that are currently at Hudson?

 9                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Well, 

10          eventually the inmates that are currently at 

11          Hudson are going to be moved to other 

12          facilities.

13                 The first phase of the construction 

14          project is slated to be completed so that we 

15          can start to move 16- and 17-year-olds there 

16          by August.  We want to move as quickly as 

17          possible.

18                 The existing inmates that are there 

19          will continue to get services while we're 

20          still doing the rehabilitation.  Gradually 

21          they will attrit out and eventually, for 

22          those that remain behind, we can transfer 

23          them.  We have enough vacancies throughout 

24          our system.  So we do not envision that as 


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 1          being a challenge to us.

 2                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  And you 

 3          know I want to ask you how is that going to 

 4          impact Close to Home, but I'll leave that for 

 5          another day.

 6                 Tell me about Coxsackie.  You know, 

 7          will those housing units be modified to reach 

 8          the goals that are in our age-appropriate 

 9          behavioral modification protocols?

10                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  We don't 

11          have any further construction changes planned 

12          for Coxsackie.  These changes were already 

13          made as part of the first initial settlement 

14          we made with NYCLU.

15                 So Coxsackie has a general confinement 

16          unit, I forget the number of beds -- it's 

17          either 15 or 30 -- and then a comparable 

18          number if we have to segregate an inmate for 

19          disciplinary reasons at Coxsackie.  Coxsackie 

20          will be used for 16- and 17-year-olds going 

21          forward who require maximum security 

22          placement.

23                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  No, that 

24          I'm aware of.  But how does -- looking at 


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 1          Coxsackie as it current exists, is it part of 

 2          the developmental plan to meets the goals of 

 3          this new population?

 4                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Yes.

 5                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  That's the 

 6          question.

 7                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  It is 

 8          part of the goal.

 9                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Okay.  Tell 

10          me a little bit about the hepatitis C crisis 

11          that's in the prison population and what's 

12          being done to address the rising costs and 

13          the proliferation of this disease within the 

14          populations?

15                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Well, 

16          rising costs are something we really can't 

17          control.  If you need treatment, we have to 

18          provide it.

19                 Several years ago it was triple 

20          therapy, it was pegylated-interferon and 

21          ribavirin and a protease inhibitor that 

22          combined for the treatment.  Now there are 

23          new treatments.  The cost could be $84,000 

24          for a treatment round.  It depends upon the 


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 1          extent of the disease.  And we have to 

 2          provide it.  We have to offer it and we have 

 3          to provide it.  

 4                 I think there's a new law that says 

 5          that you have to offer the test to everybody 

 6          between the ages of 45 and 55.  So we are 

 7          doing that.  And those that want the 

 8          treatment, we have to provide it to them.  

 9                 And we also have arrangements to 

10          continue the treatment in the community as 

11          well, so that we hook that up -- them up as 

12          well.  But it is very expensive.  It could 

13          rise as much as up to $24 million for that 

14          this year.

15                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  That rolls 

16          over into my last question, because my clock 

17          just seems to be ticking faster than anybody 

18          else's.  But the aging and the medical cost 

19          for older patients, what is being done to do 

20          consideration of release for this population?  

21          Looking at the $16 billion additional for 

22          this population, is nobody cognizant of that?

23                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Good 

24          point, Senator.  We're very cognizant of it.


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 1                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  No, no, no.  

 2          I don't mean you, but I mean people outside.  

 3          Because we keep talking about the rising 

 4          costs of everything, but these are people who 

 5          pose absolutely no threat to public safety, 

 6          and yet we are keeping them in a facility 

 7          that exacerbates an already bad condition, 

 8          and it's costing us an extra $16 billion.  

 9          You know, everybody wants to be a cost-saver, 

10          but that's not a consideration that we're 

11          making.  

12                 Plus it's inhumane.  Let's not leave 

13          that out of the equation either.

14                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Senator, 

15          medical parole is an avenue that I personally 

16          would like to use more.  We've changed the 

17          law last year to try and short-circuit the 

18          cases where certain nonviolent inmates who 

19          are terminally ill can avoid the Parole Board 

20          appearance and instead I can make that 

21          decision.  

22                 But the list of crimes that make you 

23          eligible are very narrow.  Typically like a 

24          drug offense.  Drug offense sentences now are 


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 1          very small compared to what they used to be.  

 2          So typically you have to be inside for a 

 3          while for a terminal condition to make itself 

 4          known.

 5                 There have only been two cases so -- 

 6          well, there's actually been three cases so 

 7          far.  And what I have done is turn them 

 8          around very quickly, but unfortunately the 

 9          individuals died before the requisite time 

10          frame within which I had to get feedback, 

11          because the law requires me to do that.  I 

12          have to write to the judge, I write to the 

13          sentencing court, the district attorney and 

14          the defense lawyer, and I have to allow them 

15          a period of time before I can make it 

16          official.

17                 But the list of crimes is very narrow.  

18          I have instructed my chief medical officer -- 

19          because he is the one that forwards the case 

20          on to me.  He sends it to me by an email.  I 

21          try and answer him the same day.  I look up 

22          the case, I look up his description.  If I 

23          have any questions, I will ask him.  But -- 

24          and I get a million emails, but I've told him 


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 1          if he doesn't get an answer from me that day, 

 2          the next day, get back to me.  Because I 

 3          don't want any delays.  

 4                 I'm very sensitive to the humanitarian 

 5          aspects of this.  If we can at all, if at all 

 6          possible, these individuals deserve to die 

 7          with dignity in a setting other than a 

 8          correctional facility.

 9                 But for those that do stay in our 

10          facilities, we do have hospice programs 

11          within our regional medical units.  We've 

12          trained inmates how to be hospice aides, how 

13          to be the companion.  Because we don't want 

14          anybody to ever die alone in our system.  

15                 And we are looking at ways to try and 

16          expedite the process.  I know there's a lot 

17          of frustration.  People want to see a lot 

18          more medical paroles.  We get it.  We're 

19          going to be taking steps to look, how can we 

20          improve things?  My initial inclination is we 

21          probably have to start backing up the 

22          decision a little earlier so that the normal 

23          process that has to be followed -- the 

24          letters that have to go to the district 


                                                                  324

 1          attorneys, et cetera, can go out earlier.

 2                 The challenge is the standard you have 

 3          to apply is that you have to be convinced 

 4          that the person is too sick to present a risk 

 5          of harm.  What does that mean?  If you can 

 6          fire a gun, are you potentially a risk?  

 7                 So we're trying to weigh and balance 

 8          all those factors and accelerate the process.  

 9          It's not easy, but we definitely want to make 

10          a lot more progress in that area.

11                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Thank you, 

12          Commissioner.

13                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  Thank you.  

14          We've been joined by Assemblymember 

15          Richardson, and we will now hear from 

16          Assemblymember Graf.

17                 ASSEMBLYMAN GRAF:  Hi, how you doing, 

18          Commissioner?  I'm going to be kind of short 

19          here because it's been a long day.

20                 Can you tell me the percentage of your 

21          inmates that are coming into this system that 

22          are opiate-addicted or have a heroin 

23          addiction?  Do you have a percentage number?  

24                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  I can't 


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 1          tell you a percentage that are coming in 

 2          opioid-addicted.  I might be able to; I know 

 3          that the inmates coming in with a substance 

 4          abuse need is very high, so at some point we 

 5          have to put them into some type of drug 

 6          treatment program.  

 7                 But heroin is a serious concern.  I 

 8          have had inmates die of overdoses inside the 

 9          institutions.  We've had parolees die of 

10          overdoses.  So the two initiatives I 

11          described we think will be helpful.  

12                 We have a program whereby inmates who 

13          will shortly be released -- it's a program we 

14          developed in partnership with the Harm 

15          Reduction Coalition and the Department of 

16          Health.  We train them on Naloxone kits, and 

17          then we offer it to them as they're leaving, 

18          free of charge.  And we know that there have 

19          been a couple of instances where a parolee 

20          has used his Naloxone kit to bring someone 

21          back to life who is an apparent overdose from 

22          heroin.

23                 We're also the first state agency 

24          that's approved by the Department of Health 


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 1          for our nurses to give the injectable 

 2          Naloxone to any inmate or visitor, volunteer, 

 3          whomever, that apparently is suffering from 

 4          an opioid overdose.  

 5                 So this is part of the Governor's 

 6          initiative.  We're trying to take all 

 7          reasonable steps.  But it is a rising 

 8          concern, there's no question about it, in our 

 9          communities.

10                 ASSEMBLYMAN GRAF:  It's becoming a big 

11          problem.  Would you say in your population, 

12          when you're getting new inmates, this is 

13          becoming a big problem with the heroin or 

14          some type of addiction?

15                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  If I 

16          heard your question correctly, you're asking 

17          if I have a problem --

18                 ASSEMBLYMAN GRAF:  No, has this been 

19          an increasing problem as far as --

20                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Yes, in 

21          general I would say it's been an increasing 

22          problem.

23                 ASSEMBLYMAN GRAF:  All right.  Now, 

24          the Vivitrol that you said you're giving some 


                                                                  327

 1          inmates, Vivitrol, once they're released, are 

 2          they released into a program or are they just 

 3          released?

 4                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Yeah, 

 5          this is a pilot program that we've started at 

 6          Edgecombe in conjunction with Odyssey House 

 7          and of course our partners at OASAS.  And the 

 8          program is for parolees actually who have 

 9          relapsed on heroin.  And we have this parole 

10          diversion program where we can put them in 

11          for 45 days at Edgecombe.  

12                 So while they're there, recognizing 

13          that they have this problem, this addiction, 

14          this drug, if they voluntarily will take it, 

15          coupled with all of the counseling that we're 

16          going to give them in the community, will 

17          block the effects of opioid as well as the 

18          euphoria from drinking alcohol.

19                 So we've just started this, we've 

20          mapped it all out, there's a lot of things 

21          that to be lined up -- the physician that's 

22          going to give the injection at Edgecombe, the 

23          follow-up injection in the community if they 

24          follow up accordingly, the identification 


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 1          that they have to wear.  We've just lined 

 2          this all up; we haven't yet had a test case.  

 3          But it is something that we are hoping, if it 

 4          produces positive results there, we also have 

 5          PD programs at Hudson and at Orleans for the 

 6          parole violators who have this opioid 

 7          relapse, come into our system, and then we 

 8          offer that as a means of trying to block the 

 9          effects and deal with their addiction.

10                 ASSEMBLYMAN GRAF:  Now, the Vivitrol, 

11          are you able to buy that in bulk when you 

12          bring it?  Because I know it's like a 

13          thousand dollars a shot.

14                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Yeah, I 

15          think that's being supplied by Odyssey House.  

16          This is not a department expense for that.

17                 ASSEMBLYMAN GRAF:  Okay.  Thank you 

18          very much.

19                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  

20                 Our next speaker is Senator Krueger.

21                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Good afternoon.

22                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Good 

23          afternoon, Senator.

24                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  You talked about the 


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 1          mental health issues in the prisons in your 

 2          testimony.  What's your estimate of what 

 3          percentage of the prisoners in DOCCS are 

 4          suffering from mental illness?

 5                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  That 

 6          number keeps growing.  We've crossed the 

 7          10,000 number.  We have over 10,000 on the 

 8          caseload.  I think it's 19 percent of our 

 9          population now that are on the OMH caseload.

10                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  And as we are 

11          releasing people from DOCCS back into their 

12          communities, how is the system of ensuring 

13          they are processed for Medicaid before they 

14          leave prison going?

15                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Yeah, 

16          that's a big initiative on our part to enroll 

17          as many inmates as possible into the Medicaid 

18          program.  

19                 We've prioritized which inmates we 

20          should put to the front of the list, so to 

21          speak -- the ones that might get an illness, 

22          the elderly inmates, et cetera.  I think 

23          we're averaging something like 500-and-some- 

24          odd registrations per month.  


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 1                 And another big initiative that we 

 2          have that came out of the Reentry Council, 

 3          the Governor's Reentry Council, their 

 4          suggestion -- and we were able to coordinate 

 5          this with our Department of Health 

 6          partners -- is that we will be able, some 

 7          time this year, in the not too distant 

 8          future, to activate the Medicaid card prior 

 9          to release.  I think it's 30 days prior to 

10          release.  

11                 That will help us greatly with 

12          placements.  It will help us with the elderly 

13          inmates that we're trying to place into 

14          nursing homes, where some of them want the 

15          inmate on Medicaid with his card prior to 

16          leaving.  It will help us hook up with 

17          certain services in the community.  So we're 

18          very hopeful about that as well.

19                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  I represent the East 

20          Side of Manhattan, where the intake for the 

21          New York City homeless shelter system for men 

22          is located.  And we were provided an estimate 

23          recently that there are 2,000 people who come 

24          out of DOCCS and their discharge plan sends 


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 1          them to the Bellevue Men's Shelter entry 

 2          system.  

 3                 Do you believe that's an appropriate 

 4          discharge plan from the New York State 

 5          prisons?

 6                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Well, we 

 7          can't legally hold someone past their release 

 8          date if they are homeless.  The law requires 

 9          us to notify the local DSS if someone is 

10          coming out of prison and requires homeless 

11          shelter services.  So we do that throughout 

12          the 62 counties of the state.

13                 We try very hard to work with the 

14          parolee to know in advance his release date, 

15          to ascertain if he has any relative, any 

16          friend, anyone who might be willing to offer 

17          them a place to stay.  The reality is there 

18          are significant numbers of individuals who 

19          leave the prison system without a home to go 

20          to.

21                 We have contract beds that we use, we 

22          have various programs for employment that 

23          hopefully get them the money that they can 

24          then secure private residences.  The numbers 


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 1          in New York City I think were significantly 

 2          affected by the loss of three-quarter 

 3          housing.  So that amplified the numbers.  

 4                 But the number of undomiciled 

 5          individuals is significant, and the 

 6          subpopulation of that is the number of sex 

 7          offenders who are covered by the Sexual 

 8          Assault Reform Act, which requires that any 

 9          residence that they get can't be within a 

10          thousand feet of a school.  So we will not 

11          release someone to a homeless shelter who's 

12          covered by that law unless the city or the 

13          county tells us:  We have a bed for that 

14          person that's SARA-compliant.

15                 What we've been doing instead is 

16          relying on our authority to put these people 

17          into what are called residential treatment 

18          facilities.  They're usually located near the 

19          community.  We have one, I believe it's 

20          Lincoln, and we give them transitional 

21          services, we pay them $10 a day to work on an 

22          outside crew, and they come back and they 

23          sleep at the facility until such time as we 

24          do find a SARA-compliant residence.  But it 


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 1          is a huge, complicating problem.

 2                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  I am familiar with 

 3          the sex offender issue, and in fact I think 

 4          the City of New York is working very hard to 

 5          make sure that released sex offenders are 

 6          going into appropriate locations.  That has 

 7          also been an issue in my community.  

 8                 But I will say that there seems to be 

 9          a pattern of release of mentally ill people 

10          from prison without Medicaid kicking in 

11          before they get to the city, ending up at the 

12          front door of the shelter system.  And I 

13          propose to you that's a guarantee that those 

14          people will end up right back in the prison 

15          system or having some terrible trauma happen 

16          in the community.

17                 So I'm hoping that DOCCS can take a 

18          more active review of whether a discharge 

19          plan ought to be "there's no other option, so 

20          we'll just drop them off at the Bellevue 

21          Men's Shelter."

22                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  We try 

23          very hard to avoid that.  We work very 

24          closely now with OMH on discharge planning.  


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 1          We have identified seriously mentally ill who 

 2          also might be violent well in advance, when 

 3          they come into the system, as part of our 

 4          reception centers, to put them into special 

 5          programs.  We know that ultimately they're 

 6          going to be released.  We want to make sure 

 7          we give them the best opportunities to 

 8          succeed.  

 9                 We're establishing new special 

10          discharge ICPs for this population.  One is 

11          going to be at Auburn, one is at Sing Sing, 

12          where we already have the core program.  We 

13          release them with medication, I think it's 

14          either two or three weeks' worth of 

15          medication that they have, with scrips to 

16          refill.  

17                 And your point is well taken, to the 

18          extent there may be some that may not have 

19          been registered on Medicaid, if they've 

20          fallen through the cracks, I will make sure 

21          that we prioritize getting them Medicaid 

22          cards as well before release, Senator.  

23                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Thank you.

24                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  Thank you.  


                                                                  335

 1                 Our next speaker will be 

 2          Assemblymember Giglio.

 3                 ASSEMBLYMAN GIGLIO:  Good afternoon.

 4                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Good 

 5          afternoon, Assemblyman.

 6                 ASSEMBLYMAN GIGLIO:  I only have two 

 7          quick questions for you, Commissioner.  And I 

 8          wouldn't wish the last year you've spent on 

 9          my worst enemy.  

10                 But besides that, my first question is 

11          you said there are 103 new correction 

12          officers.  How many retired?

13                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  How many 

14          of those 103 retired?

15                 ASSEMBLYMAN GIGLIO:  No, no.  You 

16          hired a new 103.  How many have you lost in 

17          the same period of time?  

18                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  I should 

19          know that off the top of my head because we 

20          lose a lot every two weeks.  It's something 

21          like 54 retire.  But we keep -- the 103 are 

22          added over our BFL.  So we keep doing 

23          training classes to try and replace the 

24          attrition.


                                                                  336

 1                 ASSEMBLYMAN GIGLIO:  When you lose 

 2          that kind of institutional knowledge, how do 

 3          you make it up?  

 4                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  You 

 5          can't replace experience, there's no question 

 6          about that, Assemblyman.  I wish our staff 

 7          would stay longer.  It's a tough job, they're 

 8          eligible to retire after 25 years, that's the 

 9          retirement law.  But they're very valuable, 

10          especially because a lot of them have learned 

11          how to deal with a violent situation by using 

12          their wits as opposed to the normal uses of 

13          force.  

14                 So we value very much our experienced 

15          correction officers.  I can't prevent anybody 

16          from retiring who wants to retire.  But we 

17          keep replacing them with classes from the 

18          training academy as quickly as we can.

19                 ASSEMBLYMAN GIGLIO:  In our limited 

20          conversations, you've always been concerned 

21          with staffing ratios and those kind of 

22          things, to keep it safe and secure.  And you 

23          talked about that in your testimony.  

24                 The only other question I have now is 


                                                                  337

 1          this Office of Special Investigations.  In 

 2          that, you said that you hired two attorneys 

 3          to run it.  My question is very simple.  

 4          There was no one within the Department of 

 5          Corrections that had moved up to the ranks 

 6          that could have filled those two roles?

 7                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  There 

 8          was nobody within that unit that was an 

 9          attorney.

10                 ASSEMBLYMAN GIGLIO:  But you think 

11          it's necessary to have an attorney then go 

12          talk to the men and women on the line to tell 

13          the attorneys what's wrong with the facility?  

14                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  I lost 

15          the question.

16                 ASSEMBLYMAN GIGLIO:  My point is this.  

17          You said during your testimony that these two 

18          new hires would then, as part of their 

19          duties, go talk to individual correction 

20          officers about what's going on in the 

21          facility.  My question to you is, would we be 

22          better off bringing people up through the 

23          ranks and through your command staff that you 

24          already have to fill these positions, instead 


                                                                  338

 1          of asking outside lawyers to come in and ask 

 2          the very people you're supposed to work with 

 3          what's wrong with the facility?  

 4                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  

 5          Assemblyman, I think the answer is that we 

 6          have the combination, the best of both 

 7          worlds.  There are still people that have 

 8          risen through the ranks, and they're still 

 9          directors, or at least they occupy 

10          supervisory roles.  Those are very 

11          experienced individuals.  They started out as 

12          correction officers.  

13                 But we definitely needed to bring in 

14          an outside perspective, individuals that had 

15          extensive experience dealing with law 

16          enforcement, prior experience with district 

17          attorney's offices, prior experience working 

18          with the Attorney General.  And they can 

19          bring in the linkages they have to work with 

20          the U.S. Attorney's office, to work with the 

21          federal Civil Rights Bureau, with the 

22          Department of Justice, to work with the 

23          marshals and bring all of that to bear so 

24          that we can be a much stronger office.  


                                                                  339

 1                 ASSEMBLYMAN GIGLIO:  Do you think 

 2          that's what's going to help you when you 

 3          charge inmates and/or correction officers 

 4          with any crimes behind the walls?

 5                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  I think 

 6          it will.

 7                 ASSEMBLYMAN GIGLIO:  Thank you very 

 8          much.

 9                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, 

10          Assemblyman.

11                 Acting Commissioner, I had a couple of 

12          questions.  And it's related to an issue that 

13          you just discussed with Senator Krueger.  And 

14          I know you remember the notorious case of 

15          Daniel St. Hubert, who was a paranoid 

16          schizophrenic, violent in prison, was 

17          released and ended up stabbing to death 

18          little 6-year-old P.J. Avitto in Brooklyn; 

19          his 7-year-old playmate Mikayla Capers was 

20          stabbed, did survive.  He was a suspect in 

21          some other murders.  And he had been released 

22          from the state prison system.

23                 As a result of that, Assemblyman 

24          O'Donnell and I did a chapter together to try 


                                                                  340

 1          to address some of the issues.  And last year 

 2          the Legislature included in the final budget, 

 3          along with the Governor, a $20 million 

 4          expenditure I believe that you were 

 5          referencing when you talked about discharge 

 6          planning and that sort of thing.

 7                 And I did discuss the issue with the 

 8          OMH commissioner yesterday.  And just as 

 9          background, there was $20 million in last 

10          year's budget for enhanced services to reduce 

11          recidivism and potential violence in the 

12          community.  This includes additional 

13          supportive housing, assertive community 

14          treatment, team services for at-risk 

15          individuals discharged from prisons and 

16          psychiatric centers, increased mental health 

17          assessments in prison, treatment for 

18          high-risk inmates, enhanced discharge 

19          planning, staff training, and placement of 

20          individuals in OMH facilities.  

21                 So I'm happy to hear you say that you 

22          believe things are going better.  One of the 

23          issues I'd like to raise with you, however, 

24          is that when I questioned the OMH 


                                                                  341

 1          commissioner yesterday about how much of that 

 2          money had been utilized so far, she did say 

 3          $18 million out of the $20 million line item.  

 4          I would assume that you would think that 

 5          these sorts of initiatives have been 

 6          beneficial -- at least that's what I'm 

 7          gathering from your testimony today -- and 

 8          you would recommend that that program 

 9          continues.  Because if there's only 

10          $2 million left,  I don't see anything in the 

11          budget, unless I'm missing something or 

12          you're aware of something, to replenish those 

13          funds.  

14                 Could you comment on that, please?  

15                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  I really 

16          can't comment on these specific 

17          appropriations and how they're being spent 

18          from OMH's side of the ledger.  But I can 

19          reaffirm that we are very excited about the 

20          discharge planning units that are going to be 

21          launched at Auburn and at Sing Sing, the 

22          continued work with the core program, and the 

23          continued collaboration that we do with our 

24          community supervision and OMH staff, 


                                                                  342

 1          including making sure that when someone has 

 2          to get to a program, we arrange many times 

 3          for direct transport.  

 4                 I'm also excited about the early 

 5          identification of inmates when they come into 

 6          the system who are both seriously mentally 

 7          ill and could have these violent 

 8          proclivities.  

 9                 So I think ultimately we will make a 

10          big difference in this area.

11                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  So you would 

12          obviously be supportive of such programming 

13          to continue in the same format?  You're 

14          saying to us as a Legislature that this has 

15          been beneficial in the correctional system?  

16                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  It's 

17          been beneficial, yes.

18                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Very beneficial in 

19          reducing violence, okay.  Thank you.

20                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  Thank you, 

21          Senator.  

22                 Our next speaker will be 

23          Assemblymember Oaks.

24                 ASSEMBLYMAN OAKS:  Hi, Commissioner.  


                                                                  343

 1          Thank you.

 2                 I just wanted to follow up a little 

 3          bit.  Senator Funke had talked about parole 

 4          issues, and he listed off a number of 

 5          different situations of individuals who had 

 6          recommitted while on parole.  And I had, you 

 7          know, myself one of those types of situations 

 8          in my district, a recent parolee who broke 

 9          into a home, the people were away, but he 

10          happened on a mother and her daughter who 

11          were there to feed the cat, and they ended up 

12          losing their lives in that incident and 

13          whatever.

14                 So all of us, I think, have some of 

15          those things.  And the issue of parolees 

16          obviously it's an opportunity for individuals 

17          to find their way back into society, but it 

18          doesn't always work.

19                 And I think back to Assemblyman 

20          Funke's question about Assemblyman Lawrence's 

21          legislation, the one thing of making 

22          information -- right now police officers stop 

23          individuals for whatever, to check.  They can 

24          tell that a person is on parole, but they 


                                                                  344

 1          have no information about the conditions of 

 2          the parole.  And so if the individual by 

 3          their activity at that moment is violating 

 4          the parole, they would have no way of knowing 

 5          that.  And so then it goes through a process 

 6          of letting the parole officer know that 

 7          that's happened, and then through a process 

 8          of trying to figure out what happens.  

 9                 Certainly for those who might offend 

10          quickly after they've been released but may 

11          have violated in some way before, his 

12          proposal would try to make that information 

13          available to police and also give police the 

14          opportunity, empower them to do something 

15          then, as opposed to having to take several 

16          days or time down the down the road of 

17          dealing with this.

18                 And so I think the question -- I know 

19          you said if the person has been an absconder 

20          or had a problem, obviously they can tell, 

21          they can be a help.  This would be a way of 

22          strengthening that.  And I just go back to 

23          that, of saying I welcome a comment on it 

24          and/or just a willingness to work with us in 


                                                                  345

 1          looking at it.  If we can strengthen parole 

 2          in this way, I think it makes communities 

 3          safer, makes parole work better for those who 

 4          are going to follow the conditions of it.

 5                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Well, we 

 6          value all of the working relationships we 

 7          have with local law enforcement, so we're 

 8          always willing to share as much information 

 9          as possible.

10                 With respect to the specific 

11          legislative proposal or concept, we follow a 

12          protocol where we submit any feedback, 

13          thoughts, to our Governor's counsel's office.  

14          But we don't independently provide comments 

15          or suggestions on the substance or 

16          well-thought-outness of a particular 

17          proposal.

18                 ASSEMBLYMAN OAKS:  Understood.  I just 

19          think it could end up making your job better 

20          and easier, and have us working better 

21          together.  Thank you.

22                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, 

23          Assemblyman.

24                 Senator Savino.


                                                                  346

 1                 SENATOR SAVINO:  Thank you, Senator 

 2          Young.  

 3                 I'll be very brief because many of the 

 4          questions that I had have already been 

 5          answered.  

 6                 But you'll recall, Commissioner, that 

 7          in the past we've been somewhat critical of 

 8          your agency's level of overtime.  So backing 

 9          out the extra overtime that was related to 

10          the prison break, can you give me a sense of 

11          the level of overtime in the past year?  

12                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  I can 

13          tell you that if we back out the overtime 

14          related to Clinton -- and there was also a 

15          significant expenditure related to an 

16          individual that was lost in the North Country 

17          for a number of days, and we were 

18          participating in the search -- that our 

19          process shows we were only a little over 

20          where we were last year.  Which is not good.

21                 SENATOR SAVINO:  No.

22                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  But the 

23          good news is that we have started a process 

24          whereby, A, I've communicated to all my 


                                                                  347

 1          superintendents the need to justify every 

 2          expenditure of overtime.  We've broken it 

 3          down by program areas, so that Facility A, 

 4          this is what you spent on program in this 

 5          quarter and this is what you spent on admin, 

 6          this is what you spent on security.  And then 

 7          we have phone calls to discuss and show to 

 8          them whether they made progress or whether 

 9          they went in the wrong direction.  And then 

10          it's incumbent upon them to explain to us the 

11          reasons why.

12                 There are a lot of reasons why we have 

13          overtime --

14                 SENATOR SAVINO:  Not to interrupt, but 

15          I can predict one of them.  And I don't 

16          dispute for a moment that the overtime is 

17          justified.  I understand how hard it is to 

18          run a prison system.  But the problems you 

19          have now are the same problems you had five 

20          years ago, and your predecessors had -- it's 

21          a shortage of staff.  And we know that.  

22          Whether it's in the civilian titles or in the 

23          correction titles.  

24                 I know you've taken steps, though, to 


                                                                  348

 1          increase hiring in the correctional officers 

 2          titles.  But I'm concerned about the other 

 3          professional titles -- the nurses.  You know, 

 4          thank God that one poor nurse finally 

 5          retired, because every year she would wind up 

 6          as the highest overtime earner in the state, 

 7          as if she was doing something wrong.  As if 

 8          she had a choice about whether she was going 

 9          to stay.

10                 So my concern continues to be about 

11          the level of hiring so that we can 

12          sufficiently staff the facilities so you 

13          don't have overworked correction officers or 

14          nurses or psychiatrists or social workers or 

15          anybody else that's there because of the 

16          level of, you know, security that is so 

17          important in maintaining a prison like that.  

18                 So I just want to keep it on your 

19          radar, we're going to continue to watch this.  

20          You know, it's something that is of concern 

21          to us, the level of overtime -- not because 

22          you're spending money, but because you're 

23          spending it because you don't have sufficient 

24          staff to meet the needs of the institution.


                                                                  349

 1                 Thank you.

 2                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Okay, 

 3          Senator.

 4                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  I don't 

 5          believe there are any other Assembly 

 6          speakers.  So Senator Montgomery.

 7                 SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Good afternoon, 

 8          Commissioner.

 9                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Good 

10          afternoon, Senator.

11                 SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  I will start by 

12          offering thanks to you for a couple of 

13          things, and then I'll make my complaints, 

14          I'll register my complaints.

15                 (Laughter.)

16                 SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  So first of all I 

17          want to say my last visit to Sullivan, my 

18          staff and I were up there and we were -- it 

19          was a very, very interesting and -- it was a 

20          good experience.  And I want to thank the 

21          superintendent and her staff because she 

22          really made it what I thought to be a very 

23          worthwhile experience.  So I appreciate that.  

24                 And I also want to thank you for the 


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 1          fact that you agreed to do the advisory 

 2          council for the parole facility that's also 

 3          in my district.  And that has really 

 4          contributed to a lot of reduction in the 

 5          tension that was around that facility when it 

 6          first opened.  So I thank you for that.

 7                 And I will just ask a couple of 

 8          questions, raise a couple of issues with you.  

 9          And in the interests of my time not running 

10          out, I'll do it all together and you can 

11          answer accordingly.

12                 I am very pleased to see how much 

13          emphasis you are placing on the whole issue 

14          of offering college and looking at training 

15          programs and those programs that really 

16          prepare people for a successful reentry back 

17          into the communities.  I appreciate that.  

18                 The question about that -- two things.  

19          One is, have we ever thought about the 

20          possibility of creating sort of an 

21          educational training facility where one of 

22          your buildings, one of your facilities could 

23          become sort of a hub, if you will, for this 

24          kind of activity?  I'm so impressed -- I've 


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 1          been to Sullivan, obviously, there's really 

 2          such a great group up there -- Sing Sing, 

 3          eastern and the others that I have not 

 4          visited but I've heard of them.  And I'm 

 5          always so impressed with the degree of 

 6          excitement of the men in there.  And people 

 7          who have expressed very serious intentions of 

 8          coming back to their communities and giving 

 9          back and becoming productive citizens again.

10                 So you will play a very major role in 

11          that, and I certainly would like to know how 

12          you're moving with that and what can we do to 

13          enhance that.  

14                 And the second part of that is, how do 

15          we align what you do inside, the kind of 

16          training and the experiences that people have 

17          inside, creating some sort of a certification 

18          so that when they do return to the community, 

19          they have something that says I have these 

20          skills, and that that can be acknowledged and 

21          accepted as a legitimate representation of 

22          that person's experience?  

23                 So those are the two things that I'm 

24          asking.  Thank you.  


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 1                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Okay, 

 2          Senator.  First let me thank you for all the 

 3          efforts you expended to help with the opening 

 4          of the new parole office in Brooklyn.  There 

 5          was originally a lot of controversy.  I know 

 6          you helped us out.  I know it's very well 

 7          accepted now.

 8                 SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Yes, it sure is.

 9                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  In fact 

10          I think we've actually proven that the crime 

11          rates in that precinct have gone down --

12                 SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  That's right.

13                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  -- since 

14          we've been there.  But it couldn't have 

15          worked without your assistance, and we're 

16          very grateful for that.

17                 I'll take your second question first.  

18          We've already started to work with the 

19          Department of Labor to create 

20          preapprenticeship programs.  We're going to 

21          have our first meeting, and we're looking at 

22          different voc programs that we have and we're 

23          look at what's available in the community so 

24          that we can start a preapprenticeship program 


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 1          and then continue it in the community, 

 2          wherever it's selected.  So we're going to 

 3          depend upon the DOL to give us some good 

 4          advice in that area.  

 5                 And thank you for acknowledging the 

 6          college programming.  That's another big 

 7          initiative.  Courtesy of the Manhattan 

 8          district attorney's office, $7.5 million of 

 9          asset forfeiture money.  College is very, 

10          very useful, not just in terms of lowering 

11          recidivism, but also as a positive role model 

12          in the institutions.  

13                 I saw the three gentlemen that were 

14          graduates of Bard with the Governor at the 

15          announcement.  I went over, I congratulated 

16          them, and I just said "Make sure you succeed, 

17          because you're carrying the torch for a lot 

18          of other individuals coming after you."

19                 And we know how excited the whole 

20          country was when the three individuals in the 

21          debate team went up and beat Harvard, which 

22          was an amazing story, and they were from 

23          Eastern.

24                 So we're very excited about that.  And 


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 1          I can tell you that you've asked me have I 

 2          given thought to a building possibly being an 

 3          educational institutional.

 4                 SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Fantastic.

 5                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  The 

 6          answer is I've given it thought.

 7                 SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Great.

 8                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  But it's 

 9          too early to talk about, you know, what the 

10          possibilities are.  We have to do some 

11          outreach with various individuals.  

12                 But the whole idea of an educational 

13          institution, so to speak, is something that's 

14          at least worthwhile pursuing and exploring to 

15          see if that can be done.

16                 SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Great.  Thank 

17          you.

18                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  

19                 Senator Nozzolio to close.

20                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Thank you again.  

21                 Senator Montgomery, it's not unusual 

22          that we disagree on subjects and that she and 

23          I have had wonderful debates in the past, and 

24          I'm sure we're going to have a few more this 


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 1          session, that we're going to be scrutinizing 

 2          whether or not taxpayers' dollars are in fact 

 3          utilized for this purpose.  I know that there 

 4          are -- it's the purpose of providing free 

 5          tuition for inmates.  

 6                 However, Senator Montgomery and I do 

 7          agree on issues regarding training for 

 8          skilled opportunities to provide inmates in 

 9          their exit from prison, entry into the 

10          community, to have skill sets that are 

11          marketable for jobs.  And that's something 

12          that I don't need you to get in the middle 

13          of, but it's something that we are going to 

14          be scrutinizing.  

15                 What I do need you to focus on -- 

16          Senator Funke mentioned this -- it's 

17          something that is outside the prison walls, 

18          but relative to parole.  And we talked about 

19          the ratios, we talked about Western New York.  

20          I think your three-point program regarding 

21          analysis of high risk, moving inmates closer 

22          to the facility they exited from, GPS 

23          bracelets, and transferring to official 

24          reporting, makes a lot of sense.  


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 1                 But if our parole officers don't have 

 2          the appropriate tools, don't have the 

 3          vehicles -- you said 38 more vehicles.  Since 

 4          you made that statement, I've been trying to 

 5          find in the State Budget where that is.

 6                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  It's not 

 7          in the budget.  It was just approved today, 

 8          Senator.

 9                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Just approved 

10          today.  

11                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  The plan 

12          by OGS.

13                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Is this a -- Danny 

14          O'Donnell's -- assemblyman O'Donnell's 

15          comment, it's nice that we have these kinds 

16          of appropriations available from time to 

17          time.  It would be nice if the Legislature 

18          knew about it.  But the fact is if you were 

19          able to take those out of last fiscal year, 

20          monies from the current fiscal year as 

21          opposed to next fiscal year, that this was  

22          approved and these are going to be 

23          forthcoming by the end of March?  

24                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  I don't 


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 1          know the schedule.  I just got the news that 

 2          our plan, it's a three-year plan to increase 

 3          the vehicle totals.  I think the total we 

 4          have now is 248.  So it's 30-something -- 

 5          don't hold me to 38, if it's 38 or 35 -- that 

 6          we will be able to get this year.

 7                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  And why we're 

 8          discussing this is because we live in areas 

 9          in upstate New York in particular that are 

10          vast in terms of geography, and that for the 

11          parole officers, as it is they have 

12          significantly higher ratios than ever before.  

13          That we have sheets on the types of offenders 

14          and the types of cases and the caseload, and 

15          the ratios are anywhere from 25 to 1 to 160 

16          to 1, 200 to 1, in terms of the types of 

17          caseloads that individual parole officers are 

18          asked to absorb.  

19                 And I think that in spite of your very 

20          good attention to this criteria, without you 

21          having more staff in the field, I just think 

22          this is not going to work.  You're getting 

23          infrastructure, cars -- that's a good thing.  

24          Thank you for that.  Thank you for addressing 


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 1          the issues.  But the question of more 

 2          officers -- not just taking those with only 

 3          Department of Correctional Services training, 

 4          CO training, and moving them into -- I mean, 

 5          we have many great COs who became parole 

 6          officers.  But the fact is to have them now 

 7          from the prison into parole officer capacity 

 8          without adequate training is very, very 

 9          concerning.  

10                 (Applause from audience.)

11                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Please address, 

12          Commissioner, the issues going beyond the 

13          foundation you set up.  And again, I'm here 

14          to thank you for that.  But let's -- what are 

15          your plans to move forward with the 

16          deployment of additional personnel?

17                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  Well, 

18          right now I know we have at least two 

19          additional classes scheduled for this year 

20          for parole officers, Senator.

21                 We've also gotten other equipment.  

22          We've gotten radios, we've gotten replacement 

23          vests, we're replacing -- I believe we may 

24          have already completed it -- the weaponry, 


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 1          the Glock that they use.  There's no question 

 2          that they need the appropriate equipment.  

 3                 The ratios are driven by the risk 

 4          management plan that tells us whether someone 

 5          is a high risk or a low risk, et cetera.  We 

 6          haven't changed that.  But what I can tell 

 7          you is that there is the ability by the 

 8          parole officer to make changes, to identify 

 9          someone as, Listen, this guy needs to be 

10          supervised at a higher level than what he 

11          currently is.  And so that's been recognized 

12          and adopted.

13                 But I can't speak to you exactly what 

14          the ratios are in various parts of the state.  

15          But I'll certainly go back, we'll look at it 

16          and, you know, make recommendations for 

17          adjustments as warranted.

18                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Your attention to 

19          this is most welcome.  I guess you're taking 

20          an absconder as a low security risk or lower 

21          security risk, because the ratios there -- 

22          our numbers show a 200-to-1 ratio, 200 

23          parolees to one parole officer.  That sex 

24          offenders, 25 to 1.  Now, that's not -- I 


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 1          think most of the parole officers, if they 

 2          only had that to deal with, they would feel 

 3          more comfortable in their job in terms of 

 4          being able to manage the system.

 5                 But what Senator Funke mentioned, 

 6          those disastrous criminality that occurred in 

 7          Rochester by parolees, it's symptomatic of 

 8          the structure.  And I'm not blaming you for 

 9          the structure, you're a career correctional 

10          personnel.  You came up through the ranks.  I 

11          appreciate the fact that you know corrections 

12          and you've gotten a good job with 

13          corrections.  

14                 But I think in terms of parole, 

15          something that was thrust upon you a few 

16          years ago -- we discussed it very briefly at 

17          this table, if you recall, when the proposal 

18          first came through, a proposal that ended up 

19          being accepted.  But it's a proposal that 

20          still needs ironing out some important 

21          wrinkles.  

22                 And if the public knew about these 

23          ratios, I believe they would be extremely 

24          concerned with public safety.  And I think 


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 1          that you -- if you would --  

 2                 (Applause from audience.)

 3                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  -- if you would 

 4          continue the work to address, let us know 

 5          what more resources you need to make this 

 6          happen.  You have partners here, and I know 

 7          you're well-intentioned.  Let's try to 

 8          understand that we've got to solve this 

 9          problem.  

10                 Thank you, Commissioner.  

11                 ACTING COMMISSIONER ANNUCCI:  

12          Certainly, Senator.  Thank you.

13                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you very 

14          much.  I think that concludes our speakers.  

15          So again, we appreciate you being here today 

16          and all of the answers that you gave.  

17                 Our next speaker is Superintendent 

18          Joseph D'Amico, New York State Division of 

19          State Police.  

20                 (Pause.)

21                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Good afternoon, 

22          Superintendent.  

23                 Could I have some order, please.  

24          Could we please have some order.  Thank you 


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 1          very much.

 2                 We welcome you today.  I know it's 

 3          been a lengthy day so far, but it's always 

 4          difficult under Public Protection because we 

 5          have so many commissioners and leaders of the 

 6          different state agencies.  And we certainly 

 7          are very happy to have the State Police and 

 8          you here today.

 9                 So if you'd like, we would love to 

10          hear your testimony.

11                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Good 

12          afternoon.  Thank you.

13                 Thank you, Chairwoman Young, Chairman 

14          Farrell, and distinguished members of the 

15          committees for this opportunity to discuss 

16          with you Governor Cuomo's budget for the 

17          Division of State Police.  

18                 I'd like to take this opportunity to 

19          thank the Legislature for its past support of 

20          the State Police.  Because of your support, 

21          the New York State Police continues to enjoy 

22          its --

23                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Can we have some 

24          order, please, at the top of the room.  Thank 


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 1          you.  

 2                 Sorry, Superintendent.

 3                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  That's okay.  

 4                 Because of your support, the New York 

 5          State Police continues to enjoy its well- 

 6          deserved reputation as one of the leading law 

 7          enforcement agencies in the nation.  

 8                 On April 11, 1917, Governor Whitman 

 9          signed the Wells-Mills Bill into law, 

10          establishing the State Police.  As we 

11          approach the agency's 100th anniversary next 

12          year, our role in New York is essentially 

13          unchanged to this day.  The bill stated:  "It 

14          shall be the duty of the State Police to 

15          prevent and detect crime and apprehend 

16          criminals.  They shall also be subject to the 

17          call of the Governor and empowered to 

18          cooperate with any other department of the 

19          State or with local authorities." 

20                 And the importance of this original 

21          charter is as significant now as it was back 

22          then.  

23                 Since its inception, the State Police 

24          has consistently provided public service 


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 1          through its core missions, adapting mission 

 2          priorities constantly to societal changes, 

 3          and we have continually improved these 

 4          services.  Our current mission priorities 

 5          include reducing the number of deaths, 

 6          injuries and property damage caused by motor 

 7          vehicle accidents through vehicle and traffic 

 8          enforcement and motorist education, providing 

 9          professional police services to communities 

10          and investigative support to departments 

11          around the state, engaging in emergency 

12          preparedness, planning and response 

13          activities and serving a crucial role in the 

14          Stateís counterterrorism efforts through our 

15          collaborative work with federal, local and 

16          other state agencies.  Our mission and goals 

17          all focus on ensuring the continued safety of 

18          the people of New York State.  

19                 The Governor continues to dedicate 

20          funding to Joint Task Force Empire Shield to 

21          enhance efforts to detect and deter terrorism 

22          in a time when such acts are constantly a 

23          threat to the safety of New Yorkers. As a 

24          result, New York remains one of the safest 


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 1          large states in the nation.  Using 

 2          intelligence-based investigative techniques 

 3          and targeted enforcement, state troopers have 

 4          been assigned to potential target locations 

 5          and, with local partners, provide greater 

 6          protection for the public through asset 

 7          integration strategies.  This effort is being 

 8          permanently implemented in New York City with 

 9          the new assignment of 55 State Police 

10          personnel dedicated solely to this mission.  

11                 The State Police is unique as the only 

12          law enforcement agency in New York State with 

13          the ability to deploy large numbers of 

14          professionally trained police officers 

15          anywhere in the state on short notice in 

16          response to an emergency or natural disaster. 

17                 The State Police is also available for 

18          large-scale deployments to meet an immediate 

19          need for law enforcement services in any 

20          community.  This was clearly demonstrated 

21          over 23 days this past summer, during the 

22          Clinton Correctional escape in Dannemora, 

23          where we deployed as many as 532 troopers and 

24          200 investigators from around the state to 


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 1          assist with that investigation.  At its peak, 

 2          State Police directed 1560 personnel from 16 

 3          different agencies in the investigation.  

 4                 In addition, we continue our 

 5          partnerships with the Office of Emergency 

 6          Management and the Division of Homeland 

 7          Security and Emergency Services, with a focus 

 8          on disaster preparedness and response 

 9          readiness.  

10                 Our first and foremost priority 

11          continues to be the safety of the public and 

12          our troopers who protect them.  Toward that 

13          goal, we will continue to provide our 

14          troopers with the necessary equipment and 

15          other resources to ensure safety as they 

16          perform their duties.  The Governor 

17          recognizes this need after observing the 

18          level of sophistication and tactics employed 

19          at criminal events in the United States and 

20          abroad, and has committed to new funding for 

21          additional patrol rifles, rifle-resistant 

22          body armor plates and ballistic helmets for 

23          State Police patrols statewide.  

24                 Illegal drug use and its impact 


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 1          continues to dominate headlines in our 

 2          country.  Heroin availability and abuse 

 3          continues.  State Police will continue to 

 4          aggressively work in partnership with local 

 5          police agencies to investigate drug-related 

 6          crimes and to arrest offenders.  

 7                 Our troopers, as first responders, 

 8          continue to patrol with Naloxone, the opioid 

 9          reversal drug which we have administered 

10          132 times in medical emergencies involving 

11          overdoses.  One hundred fourteen of those 

12          administered Naloxone survived as a result of 

13          troopers' efforts.  

14                 The use of social media to foster the 

15          relationship between the agency and the 

16          citizens we serve has been successful in 

17          improving cooperation with law enforcement 

18          efforts in the communities we serve.  By 

19          posting safety-related and crime alert 

20          information on Twitter and Facebook, the 

21          State Police has generated enhanced 

22          investigative capabilities that have led to 

23          successful case resolutions and shared 

24          important public safety information.  


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 1                 This year will be the first full year 

 2          for the Sexual Assault Victims Unit that 

 3          arose from passage of the "Enough is Enough" 

 4          legislation and the Governorís commitment to 

 5          combating sexual assault on college and 

 6          university campuses.  Fifteen State Police 

 7          personnel will work statewide to ensure 

 8          uniformity in the handling of campus sexual 

 9          assault investigations, provide investigative 

10          assistance and training to campus or local 

11          police investigating these cases, and to 

12          educate individuals and campus communities 

13          regarding victims' rights and their available 

14          resources.  

15                 Agency staffing remains an area of 

16          constant executive-level discussion within 

17          the State Police.  We continue to request and 

18          conduct academy classes so that adequate 

19          staffing levels are maintained to perform our 

20          core mission priorities without sacrificing 

21          the response time or the safety of our 

22          troopers.  We will continue to look for 

23          additional efficiencies through our 

24          partnerships with other law enforcement 


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 1          agencies throughout the state and through 

 2          consolidation of state government services 

 3          where practical and possible.  

 4                 And as you're aware, 85 percent of the 

 5          appropriations made for State Police 

 6          operations are in support of personnel 

 7          service obligations, of which approximately 

 8          93 percent supports the salaries and overtime 

 9          expenses of our sworn members.  The vast 

10          majority of the non-personal service 

11          appropriations are best characterized as 

12          non-discretionary expenditures.  Expenditures 

13          for vehicles, equipment, facilities and 

14          communications are all essential to providing 

15          the tools necessary for the men and women of 

16          the State Police to fulfill their law 

17          enforcement missions.  

18                 New Yorkers have come to expect public 

19          service from a stable, well-deployed and 

20          adequately resourced State Police.  I am 

21          proud to say that New Yorkers can be 

22          confident their expectations are being met. 

23          It is the integrity, knowledge, dedication 

24          and quality of our men and women that 


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 1          distinguishes the New York State Police.  I 

 2          am honored and privileged to be a part of 

 3          such a professional police agency and its 

 4          great traditions and to serve alongside our 

 5          members.  

 6                 I thank you for your support of the 

 7          State Police and for this opportunity today 

 8          to address you.

 9                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, 

10          Superintendent.

11                 Our first speaker is Senator Tom 

12          Croci.

13                 SENATOR CROCI:  Thank you, 

14          Superintendent, for your appearance here 

15          today.  I know it's been a difficult year in 

16          the United States for law enforcement.  And 

17          for me, who grew up in a small town, we grew 

18          up thinking, you know, police were good and 

19          drugs were bad.  There's a lot of mixed 

20          messages out there for young people today.

21                 But at a time when we have incidents 

22          like San Bernardino, California, and the 

23          heroin epidemic that you raised, it's nice to 

24          know that we have the troopers out there 


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 1          watching out for us.  And I commend you on 

 2          your leadership of that organization.

 3                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Thank you.

 4                 SENATOR CROCI:  We have previously 

 5          questioned the commissioner of DHSES, 

 6          Commissioner Melville, who just recently 

 7          appeared today to talk about the Article VII 

 8          language in Part D of the ELFA, which seeks 

 9          to transfer some of the counterterrorism 

10          responsibilities from that organization to 

11          the State Police.

12                 With respect to that specific Article 

13          VII language, who in your knowledge, in your 

14          mind, would be responsible for 

15          counterterrorism in the state should that 

16          occur?

17                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  The 

18          counterterrorism initiatives and 

19          responsibility is really a partnership of the 

20          State Police and the Division of Homeland 

21          Security and Emergency Services.  We've 

22          shared that since that agency was formed 

23          after 9/11.

24                 I heard Commissioner Melville's 


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 1          testimony this morning and if I could just 

 2          build on the answer that he gave.  You know, 

 3          currently the 10 analysts who are assigned 

 4          and employed in the Intelligence and Analysis 

 5          section of OCT in DHSES, the Office of 

 6          Counterterrorism, work at the New York State 

 7          Intelligence Center, in the Terrorism Center 

 8          and the CTC, and basically report up and are 

 9          managed by State Police personnel, as it's 

10          happening right now.

11                 So what happens is information comes, 

12          whether it's by phone, email, phone app or 

13          suspicious activity reporting by law 

14          enforcement.  The information is worked on 

15          and analyzed and built and vetted by those 

16          analysts, and the whole goal here is to 

17          develop actionable intelligence that we could 

18          then hand off to people who could react to 

19          it -- whether it's State Police or Joint 

20          Terrorism Task Force partners, or just alerts 

21          or information that has to go out.

22                 Currently the information travels up 

23          almost simultaneously through DHS management, 

24          DHSES management and State Police management.  


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 1          So by making the change from having people 

 2          employed by DHSES over to the State Police 

 3          side functionally changes nothing.  And all 

 4          it will allow us to do, we'll be more 

 5          efficient in use of those people, backing up 

 6          those people when people are out -- because 

 7          there's a criminal side and a terrorism side, 

 8          and they complement each other.  A lot of the 

 9          people are interchangeable.  

10                 I mean, my goal -- the information 

11          that travels upward for us has to be 

12          operational.  For DHSES it has to be to 

13          develop policy, to react, to brief the 

14          Executive.  Both important.  That's not going 

15          to change.

16                 SENATOR CROCI:  So on initial glance, 

17          that's the appearance of what's occurring 

18          here.  I just want to ask you a series of 

19          questions, because this is what the proposed 

20          language would get rid of and not replace 

21          either with the State Police or DHSES.

22                 So would you agree that the following 

23          in 2016 is an important function for the 

24          State of New York to be engaged in:  To 


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 1          coordinate state resources for the collection 

 2          and analysis of information with relation to 

 3          terrorist threats and terrorist activities?

 4                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Yes.

 5                 SENATOR CROCI:  Okay.  The 

 6          responsibility to coordinate, facilitate 

 7          information-sharing among state, federal 

 8          agencies to ensure appropriate intelligence 

 9          to assist in the early identification and 

10          response to potential terrorist activities?

11                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Yes, of 

12          course.

13                 SENATOR CROCI:  The responsibility of 

14          the Office of Counterterrorism to collect, 

15          analyze and share information relating to 

16          terrorist threats and terrorist activities 

17          throughout the State of New York?

18                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Yes.

19                 SENATOR CROCI:  So part of the reason 

20          that I have some concern, listening to 

21          Commissioner Melville, whose understanding 

22          was we're simply transferring resources, 

23          we're shedding the counterterrorism language 

24          in the statute so DHSES no longer has 


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 1          statutory responsibility.  I can't find 

 2          anywhere in the State Police authority for 

 3          direct counterterrorism responsibilities.  

 4          And those functions that are being 

 5          transferred to you don't include the three 

 6          sections that I just read to you, which I 

 7          think the genesis of these statutes post-9/11 

 8          were to ensure that the kind of information 

 9          sharing, the kind of fusion that should 

10          occur, and the kind of relationships that 

11          need to be built up and down echelon existed.

12                 So to the members of the committee and 

13          to the chairperson, I just want to emphasize 

14          the fact that it appears that in transferring 

15          these bodies, you're also eliminating the 

16          term "counterterrorism" at the statutory 

17          level in the executive branch.  And then to 

18          an agency which is now going to have the 

19          responsibility, presumably, of doing the 

20          work, you don't have the statutory 

21          responsibility in writing, you don't have the 

22          language "counterterrorism," and you also 

23          don't have a reporting requirement up and 

24          down chain.


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 1                 So do you see that you're going to be 

 2          able to perform these functions in a time of 

 3          crisis, understanding that you're not going 

 4          to have the statutory authority to do the 

 5          mission and that DHSES will no longer have 

 6          the statutory authority?  So the question is, 

 7          who has the responsibility if there's no 

 8          authority?

 9                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  So even 

10          though the language may not be there, you 

11          know, in the function of NYSIC, New York 

12          State Intelligence Center, as the state's 

13          recognized fusion center, those are the roles 

14          of NYSIC.  

15                 You know, when DHS put out the 

16          guidelines back in 2008 in a document called 

17          "Baseline Capabilities for State and Major 

18          Urban Area Fusion Centers," they talk about 

19          information sharing, they talk about 

20          briefings.  And three of the things that come 

21          along with intelligence and information 

22          dissemination is to develop a dissemination 

23          plan, to develop a plan for high-level 

24          discussions up and down the chain, be able to 


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 1          brief the state, local, tribal agencies on 

 2          occurring incidents.  It requires sharing of 

 3          information with other fusion centers in 

 4          surrounding states.  It requires reporting of 

 5          information to the federal government, 

 6          whether it's DHS or DOJ or the FBI.

 7                 Now, while that's not required for 

 8          funding, it's the way we operate.  It's the 

 9          way the center operates.  It's the function 

10          of the fusion center.  A number of years ago 

11          we were actually acknowledged by DHS for the 

12          excellent way that we do carry out activities 

13          there.  It's an integral part of the 

14          counterterrorism program for New York State.

15                 So whether the language is there or 

16          the language isn't there, that's the way we 

17          function.  That's the way the guidelines from 

18          DHS are dictated, and we follow them.  And I 

19          think that's what would fill the gap without 

20          the statutory language.

21                 SENATOR CROCI:  So many of the 

22          recommendations that I'm told are being 

23          proposed in the Governor's budget come from a 

24          review that former Commissioner Ray Kelly 


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 1          did, and I think we all acknowledge that he 

 2          was a pioneer in some of the most innovative 

 3          and effective counterterrorism policies for a 

 4          police force that we've ever seen, which is 

 5          being duplicated worldwide.

 6                 Have you had the opportunity to read 

 7          this report?

 8                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  I don't 

 9          believe that Commissioner Kelly or former 

10          Commissioner Kelly has issued a report.  

11                 I had met with him and his staff a 

12          number of months ago when they were going 

13          through just a review of the state's 

14          procedures.  And since that time, you know, 

15          I've heard it verbally, I heard it at the 

16          State of the State, but I don't know that 

17          there's a written report actually presented.

18                 SENATOR CROCI:  Because it would be 

19          very interesting to know if this was fleshed 

20          out in that analysis, to know whether or not 

21          those three areas, which will disappear from 

22          the role of New York State government -- some 

23          sound pretty important.  Collection and 

24          analysis of information related to terrorist 


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 1          threats; sharing among state and appropriate 

 2          intelligence partners.  

 3                 I think that you would agree that in 

 4          law enforcement and the military that there 

 5          are those relationships, those sharing 

 6          relationships.  But in the weeks, months and 

 7          years before September 11, 2001, those 

 8          relationships existed, yet information at the 

 9          FBI was stovepiped to CIA, the military 

10          intelligence community, the Department of 

11          State.  

12                 And the post-9/11 Commission made 

13          recommendations that we have the kind of 

14          executive focus on these issues to ensure 

15          that all departments and agencies within the 

16          state -- to my colleagues and to you, I don't 

17          see, without explicit statutory 

18          responsibility by either the State Police or 

19          by DHSES -- I see seams created again.  And 

20          if those relationships as you currently have 

21          aren't there -- new superintendent, new 

22          commissioner, new governor; law enforcement 

23          personnel, as you know, rotate all the 

24          time -- I'm afraid we're recreating seams 


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 1          that the 9/11 commission said we specifically 

 2          should avoid.

 3                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Well, I mean, 

 4          just to go back to the report by former 

 5          Commissioner Kelly, I'm not aware of a 

 6          report.  I don't believe a report was issued.  

 7          I mean, I don't know if he has intentions on 

 8          addressing those issues in his report.  

 9                 You know, I can only tell you, as kind 

10          of the custodian of NYSIC and a very large 

11          counterterrorism function, not only at the 

12          troop level but with the federal partners, 

13          you know, I'm fairly confident that the 

14          information will flow.  Especially between us 

15          and DHSES.  You know, we've always had that 

16          partnership, the DHSES commissioner still 

17          retains the ownership as chairman of the 

18          state's Executive Committee on 

19          Counterterrorism, still coordinates the 

20          activity of the 16 counterterrorism zones.  

21          That really hasn't changed.  He's still the 

22          arbiter of Homeland Security funding, and a 

23          lot of that funding funds the New York State 

24          Intelligence Center.


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 1                 So I mean, you know, I would think 

 2          that if he wasn't satisfied with the 

 3          information that was flowing, you know, he 

 4          controls the funding purse strings, and there 

 5          would be an issue there.

 6                 I would just like to say, you know, 

 7          the law enforcement committee pre-9/11 and 

 8          post-9/11 are two different worlds.

 9                 SENATOR CROCI:  Absolutely.

10                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  You know, no 

11          doubt about it.  The same with the military 

12          and the intelligence communities.  

13                 You know, we shared before 9/11, but 

14          since 9/11, it's so much more seamless.  

15          We're open, we work together.  You know, it's 

16          about collaboration and cooperation.  It's 

17          just a whole different world in law 

18          enforcement.

19                 SENATOR CROCI:  Well, as I -- and I 

20          know I'm out of time, Madam Chair.  I would 

21          just close with under this construct, as I 

22          read it -- and I've had a lot of very smart 

23          minds look at it as well -- if you were to 

24          have a liaison meeting with the JTTF and they 


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 1          were to provide you information about a 

 2          pending attack on New York, in this construct 

 3          you don't have to share it with the 

 4          commissioner at DHSES.  You would have no 

 5          statutory responsibility to do so.  You may, 

 6          of course, and I know you would.  But that's 

 7          my concern, and I think my colleagues and I 

 8          will have to continue to address it.

 9                 But I appreciate your testimony today, 

10          and I'll turn it over to the chair.  Thank 

11          you.

12                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Thank you, 

13          Senator.

14                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.

15                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  Thank you, 

16          Senator.  Our next speaker is Assemblymember 

17          Duprey.

18                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN DUPREY:  Good afternoon, 

19          Superintendent.

20                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Good 

21          afternoon, ma'am.

22                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN DUPREY:  The last time 

23          that you and I saw each other was at a very 

24          emotional day in my district, just hours 


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 1          after the capture of Sweat.  I guess more 

 2          than questions, I first want to extend my 

 3          heartfelt thanks to you as the 

 4          superintendent; to certainly Major Chuck 

 5          Guess, Troop B commander; our hometown hero, 

 6          Sergeant Jay Cook; and all of law 

 7          enforcement.  Certainly our SORT teams who 

 8          put unbelievable hours tromping through the 

 9          mud and the mess of some of our North Country 

10          territory, to have a successful conclusion to 

11          the escape, which none of us will soon 

12          forget.

13                 And I want to take a moment to extend 

14          personal thanks to you because I -- you know, 

15          I was -- my body was down here, my heart and 

16          my mind were in my district for those 

17          23 days.  But I was surrounded every day by 

18          some of my colleagues and friends who 

19          continued to say to me:  Matt and Sweat are 

20          long gone, we're wasting tax dollars, we 

21          shouldn't have 1500 law enforcement in such a 

22          small area.

23                 And I thank you, on behalf of my 

24          thousands of constituents who were incredibly 


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 1          frightened, that you stood behind Major Guess 

 2          in your belief and his belief that those two 

 3          were still there.  And certainly you were 

 4          proven right.  And for that, I thank you, 

 5          because I can't imagine what my district 

 6          would have gone through had you pulled those 

 7          troops out.  So thank you, sir.

 8                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Thank you.

 9                 And I really need to thank your 

10          constituents, your communities, who were 

11          tremendously supportive of law enforcement, 

12          who were out there 24 hours.  They helped 

13          with shelter and drink, refreshments and food 

14          and everything else.  They were tremendously 

15          supportive, they were helpful in information, 

16          and it was really a good partnership between 

17          law enforcement and community.

18                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN DUPREY:  I've never been 

19          more proud to represent folks than I was 

20          during that time.  So thank you for that too.

21                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Thank you.

22                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN DUPREY:  I do want to 

23          mention the one -- and I don't want to really 

24          call it a glitch, but I think it's something 


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 1          that all of us up there have been advocating 

 2          for so long, for better cell towers.  I think 

 3          that that certainly was an issue during the 

 4          escape, the lack of -- what we lacked in 

 5          communication through cell towers was 

 6          certainly made up for in the communication 

 7          that took place between our federal, state 

 8          and local law enforcement agencies.  

 9                 But in the future, we will be looking 

10          to you and others to reinforce with us, as we 

11          go through the process of Adirondack Park 

12          Agency approval, the need to have sufficient 

13          cell tower coverage throughout that district.  

14          because when they're out there, and I know 

15          the SORT teams were out there all by 

16          themselves with no way to communicate to 

17          anybody.

18                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  That's true, 

19          Assemblywoman.  The lack of infrastructure 

20          was a tremendous detriment -- not being able 

21          to communicate, not being able to track our 

22          people on the ground, whether it's through 

23          cell service or through radio communications.  

24                 And, you know, I would say, without 


                                                                  386

 1          naming any companies, but the cell carriers 

 2          were excellent in coming in with, as best as 

 3          they could support us, with trailered 

 4          equipment.  But there's a tremendous void up 

 5          in that part of New York State.

 6                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN DUPREY:  Yeah, now 

 7          they're gone, so -- we need them all the 

 8          time.

 9                 And my only other question to you, 

10          sir, is -- and I hear it not all the time, 

11          but fairly often, that the need to have newer 

12          vehicles that so many of the troop cars -- 

13          you know, the vastness of that region, of 

14          Troop B, is huge.  That so many of the troop 

15          cars are way over 100,000 miles on their 

16          odometers, that they're breaking down.  And, 

17          you know, certainly a nightmare of mine is 

18          that we will have a trooper out there alone 

19          some night without cell service and with a 

20          car broken down.

21                 And so are you addressing that in this 

22          budget and going forward?

23                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Yes, we are.  

24          I mean, we've been working that for at least 


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 1          a couple of years now.  It is a major 

 2          concern.  It's one of our biggest needs in 

 3          the State Police, are vehicles.  You know, 

 4          followed by people.  And probably half of our 

 5          fleet is at 100,000 miles on the odometer.

 6                 So, you know, we need a tremendous 

 7          infusion in this year's budget to kind of 

 8          make a leap so that at the end of the year we 

 9          could -- our goal is 125,000 miles on the 

10          cars.  You know, I think through our 

11          maintenance program, inspection program, the 

12          vehicles can certainly have that kind of 

13          life.  There may be a year life span also, 

14          like seven years, that might be appropriate 

15          for a fleet.

16                 But in this year's budget we do have 

17          sufficient money that I expect at the end of 

18          the fiscal year all of our patrol vehicles, 

19          all of our investigator vehicles, and all of 

20          our officer vehicles with -- that are 

21          currently at 100,000 miles now will be 

22          replaced.  So I think we'll be in a much 

23          healthier place at the end of the fiscal 

24          year.  We'll come back next year and look to 


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 1          find the right amount to kind of maintain 

 2          that number so we don't fall back into that.

 3                 You know, for us it was a couple of 

 4          years of insufficient vehicle purchases, 

 5          problems with procurement contracts, and 

 6          obviously just not enough funding in the 

 7          budget to do adequate vehicle purchases.

 8                 So I think that this year we should 

 9          get a good place, and then we just have to 

10          figure out what's the right maintenance 

11          number to keep us at a good mileage.

12                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN DUPREY:  Thank you.  

13          Thank you for your service.

14                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Thank you.

15                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, 

16          Assemblywoman.

17                 Senator Gallivan.

18                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Thank you, Madam 

19          Chair.  

20                 Good afternoon, Superintendent.  And 

21          as always, thank you for your service and 

22          that of the thousands of professional men and 

23          women who make the State Police one of the 

24          finest agencies in the country.


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 1                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Thank you.

 2                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  And I'm very proud 

 3          to have come from the State Police, as you 

 4          well know.  And perhaps because of that, I 

 5          have a special interest in the things that 

 6          take place and the maintenance of the 

 7          professionalism, and that the State Police 

 8          maintains that high level of service.

 9                 The Governor's budget, you talked 

10          about it just a little bit.  The Governor's 

11          budget provided $40 million, some of it for 

12          additional State Police personnel for 

13          New York City, some National Guard for 

14          permanent staffing down there as well.  And 

15          the reference I think in the Governor's 

16          presentation had to do with homeland security 

17          issues.  My question has to do with, are you 

18          sufficiently staffed to meet the needs of the 

19          citizens of the rest of the state?

20                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Yeah, I think 

21          right now the staffing levels, we're at -- 

22          we're about 4750 on the sworn side, is a good 

23          number.  You know, a couple of dozen more, 

24          I'd be much happier.  I think that, you know, 


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 1          we'll get back to that.  We had dropped down 

 2          very low a couple of years ago; we've been 

 3          putting in consistent academy classes, and 

 4          we've been able to build back that number.  

 5          And obviously we don't want to lose it.

 6                 As far as the $40 million, I believe 

 7          that's for counterterrorism.  It's to extend 

 8          the counterterrorism surge, if you want to 

 9          call it that, throughout the state -- you 

10          know, beyond New York City.  Last year we put 

11          troopers down supporting MTA and other 

12          agencies in the counterterrorism effort, 

13          especially in the transportation 

14          infrastructure.  And this year's budget is -- 

15          since we now permanently assign troopers to 

16          do that in New York City, it's to take that 

17          money and spend it elsewhere in the state. 

18                 And we've done some of that already 

19          after some of the terrorist attacks we've 

20          seen around the world.  But I would 

21          anticipate you'll see additional troopers at, 

22          you know, high-profile public events, whether 

23          they be sporting events or parades or 

24          concerts or school events, college campuses, 


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 1          things like that.

 2                 And, you know, I think we're all aware 

 3          that whether it's crime, traditional crime, 

 4          or terrorism, increased uniform presence has 

 5          a profound impact on that.

 6                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  What is your 

 7          current plan for future classes?  In this -- 

 8          in the current fiscal year or the year 

 9          beginning April 1st.

10                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Well, in this 

11          fiscal year we plan on putting in a class in 

12          March, which is the end of the fiscal year.  

13          We're anticipating somewhere around 200.  

14          We're anticipating a second academy class in 

15          next fiscal year, which will follow.  

16                 And as far as the numbers, you know, 

17          we'll look at attrition between now and then, 

18          we'll look at the people who don't make it 

19          through the academy.  We'll look at new 

20          needs, such as Enough is Enough and casino 

21          gaming, and we'll work with Budget to come up 

22          with the right number when we're ready to put 

23          the class in.

24                 But two classes in the next 12 months, 


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 1          in 12 months, the first one being probably 

 2          200, somewhere around there.

 3                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  I'd like to 

 4          continue on a couple of the topics the 

 5          Assemblywoman had talked about.  First, 

 6          vehicles.  Last year's budget, we know -- you 

 7          testified about the critical needs for -- the 

 8          critical state of your fleet last year, as 

 9          did the Troopers PBA, State Police 

10          Investigators Association.  And your 

11          testimony convinced us; we provided a 

12          significant amount of money in the budget 

13          for, among other things, State Police 

14          vehicles and various equipment needs.

15                 I am pleased to see that the Governor 

16          has included some of that in this year's 

17          budget that you testified to, a significantly 

18          smaller amount of dollars spent on it than 

19          what we allocated last year.  

20                 Nonetheless, though, the Governor's 

21          spokesman, within the past month or so, said 

22          that that $60 million that was provided last 

23          year is going to be reallocated to different 

24          things in this upcoming fiscal year.  


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 1          Because, they said, it was contingent on 

 2          policy proposal acceptance of the 

 3          Legislature, the Governor's proposals last 

 4          year.

 5                 Many of us were at that table, as we 

 6          talked about that.  It wasn't contingent on 

 7          anything.  We provided the funding for it.  

 8                 So I guess -- my question has to do 

 9          with your fleet, and I just want to make sure 

10          that I'm hearing you okay, that you have 

11          plans to address the fleet, however you came 

12          up with the money in last year's budget that 

13          wasn't part of the $60 million, combined with 

14          monies planned for this fiscal year.  So 

15          you're -- do you need more funding from us 

16          for your fleet?

17                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  No, I --

18                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Other than what was 

19          proposed.

20                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  No, I don't 

21          believe so.  I mean, I've been working with 

22          Budget on this.  

23                 The last couple of years we've spent 

24          about $15 million consistently each year on 


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 1          fleet.  You know, we thought that probably 

 2          this year if we spend $20 million, we'll be 

 3          able to bring our mileage down and get it to 

 4          a healthy place.  And as we get closer to 

 5          budget, we do our analysis and realized 

 6          $20 million is not going to do it.  We're 

 7          currently looking at $30 million from Budget 

 8          to put into fleet purchase, which as I said 

 9          will have a tremendous impact and help us to 

10          get almost completely healthy by the end of 

11          the fiscal year, and then we just need to 

12          kind of figure out the maintenance going 

13          forward on how do we keep it at that level.

14                 You know, as far as what you're 

15          speaking about, the $60 million or what 

16          conditions or terms, I --

17                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Not your area.

18                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  I wasn't part 

19          of any of that discussion, so --

20                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  The point that I 

21          wanted to make is that we had provided money 

22          that was not allocated for that purpose, and 

23          I want to make sure that your fleet is being 

24          taken care of.


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 1                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Yes, it is.

 2                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  All right, thanks.

 3                 The next area is communications.  Very 

 4          interesting, nearly 20 years ago during my 

 5          time with the State Police and then as Erie 

 6          County sheriff, I was involved in a number of 

 7          different committees regarding statewide 

 8          communication system interoperability.  

 9                 Almost 10 years ago, the Bucky 

10          Phillips escape, and the after-action report 

11          identified communications problems as the 

12          biggest problem, the most critical issue 

13          facing us.

14                 While I don't know if you've completed 

15          your own internal after-action on the escape, 

16          the Assemblywoman alluded to the problem.  

17          There was some testimony before, we hear it 

18          time and time again.  Once again, if not the 

19          biggest problem issue up there, one of the 

20          most significant.  I don't expect you 

21          necessarily to have an answer or be able to 

22          write the check to fix it, but my question 

23          is, how do we solve this?  I mean, money has 

24          gotten thrown at it, at least as far as I 


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 1          know, for over 20 years, and we continue to 

 2          have the same problem.  

 3                 And we look at the geography of the 

 4          state, North Country is difficult, Southern 

 5          Tier is difficult, Western New York is 

 6          difficult.  We have these dead spots across 

 7          the state.  We have local agencies that can't 

 8          communicate with others, the interoperability 

 9          issues.  How do we fix it?

10                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  I mean, 

11          communications obviously is a big issue.  You 

12          know, if you were to come back to the State 

13          Police today, Senator, you could pick up a 

14          radio and -- right where you left off, 

15          because the technology and the way we do it 

16          is old.  The equipment is new, you know, and 

17          it works, but it's -- you know, time has 

18          changed and we haven't caught up to it.

19                 Over a year ago I charged our 

20          communications people with looking at the 

21          State Police system, the communications 

22          system, with a view on upgrading.  Now 

23          obviously for a lot of years we sat back 

24          waiting for the SWN to come on board, which 


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 1          didn't happen.  So there were a lot of years 

 2          lost.  And then there was narrowbanding from 

 3          the FCC, which caused us to have to regroup 

 4          to make deadlines.

 5                 But, I mean, at this time we're 

 6          looking probably to go forward with a 

 7          multiyear plan to upgrade our own 

 8          infrastructure to a much more modern system.  

 9          Whether it's digital or repeated or -- still 

10          has yet to be told.  We've met with vendors, 

11          including Motorola, who made proposals to us 

12          just to give us some ideas on where we might 

13          be able to go.  But, you know, at this time 

14          it's still premature to say that their 

15          solution is the one we like or anything like 

16          that.

17                 So we're still looking at it.  It's 

18          one of my goals that I would like to 

19          accomplish in the near future.

20                 As far as the communications and 

21          interoperability issue, you know, I read the 

22          Bucky Phillips after-action as well, and it 

23          struck me that we identified it back then and 

24          we had the same type of issues this time.  


                                                                  398

 1          But the issues weren't exact.  So back in 

 2          Bucky Phillips, we had unencrypted analog 

 3          transmissions that everybody listened to and 

 4          knew where our police were and what they were 

 5          doing.  And in some cases they were helped, 

 6          and in some cases they were hindered.

 7                 So since that time, you know, we've 

 8          moved ahead, we've gone to digital and 

 9          encryption on some of our tactical 

10          frequencies, and we get up to the northern -- 

11          the Adirondack region, where, you know, you 

12          couldn't have been in a more difficult 

13          terrain to try to support communications up 

14          there.  And then add to that, we bring in, 

15          you know, ten partner agencies who all have 

16          different radio systems and everything else.  

17          And even when you were both on VHF and said, 

18          Wow, this should be easy -- well, this 

19          agency's encryption doesn't comport with this 

20          agency's encryption.  

21                 So in the end, you know, we ended up 

22          with unencrypted analog VHF like we did in 

23          the Bucky Phillips days.  And because of 

24          that, less so that the community was 


                                                                  399

 1          monitoring, but the news media was 

 2          monitoring.  And in the case of our escapees, 

 3          they had a radio -- you know, a 

 4          transistorized radio -- and they were 

 5          listening to the news reports of what the 

 6          police were doing.

 7                 So it certainly is in the draft 

 8          after-action that we're working on right now.  

 9          It's something that if we could solve it in 

10          the Adirondack region, we could take that 

11          anywhere and just -- because as I said, you 

12          know, we sent communications trucks up there, 

13          but there's no infrastructure.  There's no 

14          towers to climb and put up an antenna or 

15          anything like that.  So it was as difficult 

16          as it could be.

17                 It's one of our priorities not to come 

18          back and see this in another after-action 

19          report in the future, and to work with our 

20          partners on the encryption issues and the 

21          different, you know, frequencies and things 

22          like that.

23                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  All right.  Thank 

24          you, Superintendent.


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 1                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Sure.

 2                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  Thank you, 

 3          Senator.

 4                 Our next speaker will be 

 5          Assemblymember Lentol.

 6                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  Good afternoon.

 7                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Good 

 8          afternoon.

 9                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  I just wanted to 

10          say that -- in fact, I wanted to thank you, 

11          by the way --

12                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Microphone.

13                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  Sorry.  I don't 

14          know how to use these technological equipment 

15          things.  I think this is encrypted the wrong 

16          way.

17                 (Laughter.)

18                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  But I wanted to 

19          say how pleased I was, since the Bucky 

20          Phillips incident, how well and hard you've 

21          worked on equipping the State Police with the 

22          modern armaments and the necessary tools in 

23          order to do their job.  And I saw in the 

24          budget proposal that there's $4 million to 


                                                                  401

 1          provide uniformed troopers statewide with 

 2          rifles, body armor, and ballistic helmets.  

 3          And I just wanted to ask you, is that enough?

 4                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Yeah.  I 

 5          mean, my goal in the equipment was to get a 

 6          patrol rifle into the hands of every trooper 

 7          who's out there on patrol.  You know, right 

 8          now it's a -- it's going to a major effort to 

 9          train everyone and bring them up to speed, 

10          get the equipment to get them into the cars, 

11          because we have a limited number right now.  

12          We probably have 500 patrol rifles in 

13          addition to shotguns, and this will increase 

14          us by 425 or somewhere around there.  

15                 I think for this fiscal year, yeah, I 

16          think it's what we can handle.  It will get 

17          them into the hands of all the troopers.  We 

18          have some in the -- some of the plainclothes 

19          units have them as well.  And, you know, once 

20          we get this completed, we'll come back and 

21          evaluate needs maybe for next fiscal year.

22                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  That would be 

23          good.  

24                 And I listened with great interest to 


                                                                  402

 1          Senator Croci's questions about the New York 

 2          State Intelligence Center, and I wondered 

 3          whether or not it is important for us to come 

 4          up with statutory language in order to make 

 5          this merger, if you will, of all of the 

 6          services into a statute so that it has the 

 7          requisite authority in order to do its job.

 8                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Yeah, I would 

 9          just say that, you know, I personally can 

10          assure you that during my tenure, while I'm 

11          sitting here, you know, we would never have 

12          an issue with information exchange.  You 

13          know, and as we go forward years from now, I 

14          would hope that the staff that runs the 

15          Intelligence Center, you know, would continue 

16          on to follow the DHS rules, which would keep 

17          us in line.

18                 You know, I can't tell you -- I can't 

19          tell you about statutory language other than 

20          that.

21                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  Thank you, sir.

22                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  

23                 Senator Nozzolio.

24                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Thank you, Madam 


                                                                  403

 1          Chair.  

 2                 Superintendent, welcome again to these 

 3          discussions.

 4                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Thank you, 

 5          Senator.

 6                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  I would feel 

 7          confident to make the case to anyone that 

 8          your efforts have, I believe, qualified you 

 9          to be the best superintendent in the history 

10          of the State Police.  I say that with all 

11          sincerity and directness.  

12                 We were involved from the first day of 

13          your confirmation.  You have done nothing but 

14          impress and continued to work with 

15          distinction throughout your tenure, and I 

16          congratulate you for that.

17                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Thank you, 

18          sir.

19                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  The world has 

20          certainly changed since you became a police 

21          officer many years ago.  That we live in a 

22          much more dangerous place.  And that I'm 

23          concerned certainly with -- I have no concern 

24          with the ability of the State Police and the 


                                                                  404

 1          record of the State Police in general law 

 2          enforcement functions, in dealing with 

 3          disasters, and even taking the additional 

 4          steps that you have taken regarding drug  

 5          addiction and the administration of a very 

 6          difficult antidote to heroin overdoses.

 7                 Time and time again, the department 

 8          has done yeoman work in getting things done.  

 9          Assemblywoman Duprey was talking about the -- 

10          we all watched you work in her district 

11          during those times.  We also looked to a huge 

12          amount of additional costs.  We're glad that 

13          those are being absorbed, although we know it 

14          puts stress on other portions of the budget.

15                 It appears, in your answers to Senator 

16          Gallivan, that we are fine in terms of at 

17          least a runway for solution -- we're on the 

18          runway for solution to the vehicle issue.  

19          That we couldn't find those monies in the 

20          budget, although it appears that you are 

21          going to be using those deployed from 

22          particular settlement funds to be able to put 

23          into additional vehicles.  That's fine.  

24          That's good.  It's extending resources.  And 


                                                                  405

 1          at meetings like this, we've certainly heard 

 2          the need.  So we'll be working with you and 

 3          monitoring that situation to see what 

 4          additional needs there are.

 5                 Senator Croci's comments, echoed by 

 6          Assemblymember Lentol, you can't comment on 

 7          it, but I just need to emphasize so that you 

 8          understand our position.  That we have every 

 9          confidence that right now that communication 

10          is taking place.  Senator Croci has mentioned 

11          this many times to us in conference.  He's 

12          analyzed this.  There's nobody better to do 

13          it than him, through his experience.  

14                 But this isn't about one person, one 

15          superintendent.  We're looking to structure 

16          something in the future.  And we could 

17          support the change if we had assurances that, 

18          moving forward, there was a statutory 

19          template for action.  

20                 That I asked Commissioner Melville 

21          earlier today about cybersecurity and its 

22          relationship to homeland security.  And what 

23          I'm fearful of is that we're falling through 

24          the cracks on a particular area of security 


                                                                  406

 1          protection.  And I'd like you to address this 

 2          issue from the standpoint of you, as you're 

 3          working counterterrorism, you are certainly 

 4          dealing with public protection -- but the 

 5          question of individual protection through the 

 6          cyber networks, through entrusting the state 

 7          government.  What role now does the State 

 8          Police have in this issue of cyber 

 9          protection?

10                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Okay, so the 

11          New York State Police is involved on a number 

12          of different levels.  You know, we start kind 

13          of from the bottom up.  We do retail kind of 

14          cyber crime, whether it's theft of 

15          information or social media hacking, things 

16          like that which are really kind of, you know, 

17          customer-based to our New Yorkers who make 

18          crime complaints.

19                 As it moves up into kind of larger 

20          cyber crime, we have a cyber analysis unit 

21          that we created in partnership with the 

22          MS-ISAC, which is part of the center in 

23          East Greenbush that we spoke about earlier.  

24          And what we do is MS-ISAC is responsible for 


                                                                  407

 1          monitoring most of the state networks and 

 2          state systems.  Information that comes in 

 3          through the MS-ISAC -- we're part of the 

 4          operations center.  Our analysts and our 

 5          investigators, we're at the dailies, we work 

 6          with them hand in hand all day long, and 

 7          we're able to see what kind of threats are 

 8          going on throughout the country to other 

 9          states' infrastructure.  

10                 Anything that comes in that affects a 

11          state agency or a state network goes to ITS.  

12          ITS has their security piece; they're 

13          responsible for that.  

14                 Anything below that, you know, whether 

15          it's local government, whether it's, you 

16          know, utilities, whether it's anything less 

17          that we can address at the state level, we 

18          do.  Whether it's just getting the 

19          information out, whether it's trying to, you 

20          know, make criminal cases on it -- there's 

21          really a tough line there, because so much of 

22          what happens cyber is federal.  We work very 

23          closely with the federal partners in the FBI 

24          and Secret Service because so much of what 


                                                                  408

 1          goes on, even though it seems like it's in 

 2          your backyard here, is coming from, you know, 

 3          Eastern Europe or Asian countries.  And so, 

 4          you know, we just don't have that reach.

 5                 We've been trying to find, since we 

 6          stood up the cyber analysis unit, what really 

 7          is the niche.  And we think the niche is 

 8          local government, local utilities, 

 9          mom-and-pop banks, things like that which 

10          fall below that federal threshold.  

11                 Fortunately, a lot of what comes in 

12          through MS-ISAC that we're sitting at the 

13          table and we know it, gets funneled over to 

14          ITS and they're able to react or patch or do 

15          what they have to do so it doesn't become a 

16          problem in New York State.  I mean, a lot of 

17          what happens is kind of preemptive.  You 

18          know, we've been very fortunate here.  I'm 

19          not saying it's never going to happen, it 

20          happens to some of the best organizations at 

21          some of the highest levels.  But that's the 

22          infrastructure that's in play here.

23                 I personally think the gap is below 

24          that, you know, for these small communities 


                                                                  409

 1          that just don't have the support of a 

 2          cybersecurity team or anything like that.  

 3          And being that it's all part of the New York 

 4          State Intelligence Center, we intentionally 

 5          collocated for this purpose, because we are 

 6          concerned about cyber going into the future.  

 7          We're able to take the information, put it 

 8          out as informational, put it out as 

 9          intelligence, refer it to the federal 

10          partners, work with them.  That's kind of 

11          where we're at on the cybersecurity piece.  

12                 Myself, Division of Homeland Security 

13          and Emergency Services, and many members of 

14          the chamber sit on the Cyber Advisory Board.  

15          We're part of it, either in an advisory 

16          capacity or as actual members, together with 

17          Financial Services, Public Service 

18          Commission.  And we all are constantly 

19          working with the private sector to discuss 

20          what are the emerging threats, how do we 

21          target-harden.  

22                 And when it comes to things like 

23          utilities and finance, it's not just the 

24          cyber piece, it's kind of cyber and physical 


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 1          put together.  You know, you have to be able 

 2          to protect from both sides.

 3                 And, you know, we're still -- I would 

 4          say we're still young at this in New York 

 5          State.  But, you know, as states go I would 

 6          say we're probably -- as to effectiveness, 

 7          we're one of top ones.  I think we're, you 

 8          know, a couple from the top maybe, but I 

 9          think we're doing a good job at it for the 

10          amount of time we've been invested in it.

11                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  And I have no doubt 

12          that upon receipt of questionable information 

13          about potential threats that have occurred, 

14          about trying to isolate who did those, I 

15          would imagine you and your partners are up to 

16          that task.  

17                 What I fear is that the state 

18          government itself does not have someone that 

19          can tap them on the shoulder and say, You 

20          aren't having appropriate protections 

21          within -- protecting the data that you're 

22          entrusted to hold.  Whether it be the 

23          Department of Taxation and Finance, whether 

24          it be one of our health organizations, 


                                                                  411

 1          whether it be even the DMV, are we having -- 

 2          are you able to, or is it too early or are 

 3          you too thin in manpower at this stage to be 

 4          able to act as a coach, if you will, a cyber 

 5          consultant to those state government agencies 

 6          that have to protect this data?

 7                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  I mean, to 

 8          steal a line from Commissioner Melville, I'm 

 9          not a computer geek.  But, you know, I think 

10          that we've had conversations with ITS about 

11          them becoming part of the operations center 

12          at the Intelligence Center with the Center 

13          for Internet Security and the MS-ISAC, so 

14          that we're not just a pass-through on that 

15          type of information -- when we hear about 

16          something that's affecting a network or 

17          affecting other states or that's directly 

18          targeted at something in New York State that 

19          we have people at the table with us who could 

20          react to it and we don't have to be the 

21          pass-through to send it over to ITS.  I think  

22          that's kind of the improvement we could make, 

23          just, you know, better cooperation in that 

24          respect.


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 1                 I don't mind being the coach to get 

 2          this done.  You know, the whole discussion 

 3          about merging New York State Police, Intel 

 4          Center and Center for Internet Security, you 

 5          know, it was done about three years ago and 

 6          we all saw the value of it.  It's just 

 7          something we've been trying to grow.  And, 

 8          you know, in the world of units, it's still 

 9          relatively young.  It's probably a year -- 

10          you know, a year in the making for us.  We 

11          have an investigator and I think three or 

12          four analysts who are actually assigned there 

13          full-time.  

14                 So I don't mind being a coach to drive 

15          it forward, because I do agree with you that 

16          no matter what you're talking about, cyber is 

17          a tremendous threat to us.

18                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Superintendent, 

19          thank you very much.  Thank you for your 

20          answers, and thank you for your service.

21                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Thank you, 

22          senator.

23                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, Senator.

24                 Senator Savino.


                                                                  413

 1                 SENATOR SAVINO:  Thank you, Senator 

 2          Young.  

 3                 Thank you, Superintendent.  I'm not 

 4          going to go over the issues of the aging 

 5          fleet and the number of miles on it, because 

 6          I think you've addressed it.  And also I 

 7          understand you have a class in the academy 

 8          that's expected to graduate -- is it March?  

 9                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  No, we 

10          graduated a class in September.

11                 SENATOR SAVINO:  When is the next one?

12                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  In March.  

13          They're going in in March.

14                 SENATOR SAVINO:  They're going in in 

15          March.

16                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Right.  So 

17          you figure they'll be out by probably 

18          September, and then we're hoping to follow up 

19          with another class in a couple of weeks, 

20          maybe October.

21                 SENATOR SAVINO:  So what do you think 

22          the estimated new hire rate will be by the 

23          time these two classes are over?  

24                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  I mean, my 


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 1          goal always is, you know, keep flat with 

 2          attrition, consider new needs.  

 3                 So, you know, our attrition yearly is 

 4          probably 230, you know, average.  It goes up 

 5          a little, it goes down a little.  You know, 

 6          you add new needs, whether they're casino 

 7          gaming or Enough is Enough or any other kind 

 8          of initiatives, and that's what I need to do.  

 9          You know, I bill 10 percent above that for 

10          people who don't make it through the academy.  

11          And like I said, I think we're at a healthy 

12          place numberwise for the agency, and I don't 

13          want to lose that.

14                 SENATOR SAVINO:  Is there some 

15          concern, though, that you might see some 

16          accelerated rate of retirement because of -- 

17          the collective bargaining agreement does have 

18          a couple of zeros in it, so there's almost no 

19          incentive to stick around for some of the 

20          members who are approaching retirement age.  

21          Have you factored that in to the calculation?  

22                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Yeah, we 

23          anticipate -- PBA settled their contract, and 

24          we anticipated a little rise in retirements, 


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 1          which we did see.  NYSPI is currently in 

 2          negotiations, and I would assume that, you 

 3          know, maybe they're months away from theirs.  

 4          We'll expect to see people going out the door 

 5          at an increased rate right after that.  

 6                 We also last year spent a lot of 

 7          overtime in New York City on counterterrorism 

 8          and other areas, and a lot of those people 

 9          are going to see the opportunity to retire.  

10                 So yeah, I mean, we say 230.  And what 

11          I like about the two academy classes is that 

12          by the time we get to the second one, we can 

13          kind of adjust for actual retirements.  So if 

14          it's up higher, we'll have a bigger class.

15                 SENATOR SAVINO:  Well, hopefully we'll 

16          continue.

17                 I want to turn to an issue that 

18          Senator Klein has been out in front on with 

19          respect to restricting firearm purchases for 

20          people who are on the FBI's, you know, 

21          terrorist screening database or the no-fly 

22          list.  

23                 Has the State Police had discussions 

24          with the FBI?  Do they give you access to 


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 1          that list?  

 2                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Yeah, I mean, 

 3          we do have access to that list for 

 4          counterterrorism purposes.  You know, it's a 

 5          different discussion to be able to use it 

 6          for, you know, denying pistol permits.  

 7                 You know, part of the issue there is 

 8          you can be placed on the terrorist watch list 

 9          or the no-fly list for a number of reasons.  

10          You know, one is you're kind of a bona fide 

11          terrorist, you know, you've been identified 

12          that way.  But there are people who are -- 

13          who have active investigations, you know, 

14          that are not quite, you know, at the bona 

15          fide terrorist level, who are placed there -- 

16          you know, and the standards for being placed 

17          there are kind of loose, you know.  

18                 And it gives us the ability to 

19          restrict people from traveling and the safety 

20          issues related to that, but I don't know that 

21          it's the kind of thing that we want to 

22          publicize where people would be able to know 

23          they're on the no-fly list so they'll -- you 

24          know, why am I on the no-fly list, maybe 


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 1          they're looking at me for this or for that.  

 2                 So I think that's a concern.  Before 

 3          we say, well, let's take the list and make it 

 4          available, you know, for denying pistol 

 5          permits, I think you have to vet out that 

 6          whole situation.  But that's a discussion 

 7          with the feds.  It's their information.  And 

 8          as of now, they haven't given anyone 

 9          permission to use it for denying pistol 

10          applications.

11                 SENATOR SAVINO:  And finally, in the 

12          last minute -- I think I have a minute and 

13          20 -- you were instrumental in helping us 

14          develop the Compassionate Care Act, the 

15          medical marijuana program.  It has been up 

16          and running now, dispensaries are opening, 

17          the grow houses are growing.  Has there been 

18          any security leaks, any concerns that the 

19          State Police have encountered with the 

20          implementation of the program?  

21                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  No, ma'am.  

22          None at all.  I guess we're, what, about 

23          three weeks maybe, now --

24                 SENATOR SAVINO:  A little more.


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 1                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  -- going 

 2          towards four weeks?  We haven't seen any 

 3          criminal acts, we haven't seen any 

 4          improprieties.  Obviously we're charged with 

 5          the public safety aspects of it.  We speak to 

 6          DOH and their Bureau of Narcotics Enforcement 

 7          all the time.  And no, as of now, we haven't 

 8          had any issues.

 9                 SENATOR SAVINO:  That's great.  Thank 

10          you.

11                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, 

12          Superintendent.  

13                 I wanted to ask this question on 

14          behalf of Senator Golden, who had a pressing 

15          district event he had to get to.  And as you 

16          know, we've had lengthy testimony today.  

17                 But the question is, what is the 

18          coordination between the NYPD and the 

19          Executive's proposal to permanently deploy 

20          State Police and National Guard members to 

21          New York City?

22                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  So I kind of 

23          have an unfair advantage, because I am a 

24          graduate of NYPD.  And the people who are in 


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 1          place down there at all levels are people 

 2          that, you know, were peers of mine.  So I do 

 3          have the ability to have the conversations.  

 4                 Early on when we started bringing 

 5          troopers down on overtime, before they were 

 6          permanently assigned there, we had 

 7          discussions with NYPD, with MTA police, to 

 8          make it seamless, to make sure that we're 

 9          complementing each other and not, you know, 

10          doing kind of redundant work.  The safety 

11          issues, the safety issues of having another 

12          law enforcement agency kind of planted in 

13          there, to make sure we had communications and 

14          everything else.

15                 As we went into 55 permanent troopers 

16          assigned there, we continued the discussions.  

17          We've expanded our role where we're doing 

18          some commercial vehicle enforcement at the 

19          bridges and tunnels on the East River.  We 

20          invited NYPD in, we did them hand in hand 

21          with them, it's been joint operations, 

22          standing together.  You know, State Police is 

23          7 percent of the state's law enforcement, but 

24          we do well over 90 percent of the commercial 


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 1          vehicle enforcement in the state.  So we do 

 2          bring something to the table, and I think we 

 3          were great partners with NYPD.

 4                 Same thing with MTA.  We've worked 

 5          hand in hand with them in Grand Central, Penn 

 6          Station, and on train patrols, both through 

 7          Metro North and Long Island railroad.  

 8                 You know, our biggest issue here is to 

 9          make sure our troopers are armed with the 

10          information they need, have access to 

11          communications, and that they're completely 

12          safe while they're operating there.

13                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you for that.

14                 Just one more question.  You 

15          referenced in your testimony that there are 

16          15 troopers assigned to the Sexual Assault 

17          Victims Unit within the State Police.  What 

18          will be the coordination between this unit, 

19          local police departments, and colleges?  If 

20          you could expound on that, please.

21                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Okay, so the 

22          makeup of the Sexual Assault Victims Unit is 

23          15 people.  It's 12 members of the State 

24          Police -- so it's 11 senior investigators, 


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 1          one lieutenant who coordinates the program, 

 2          it's an office aide, it's a press person to 

 3          kind of work on the outreach issues.  

 4                 You know, the way we see our role here 

 5          is to provide outreach and education to 

 6          college campuses, whether it's the student 

 7          population, whether it's the security or 

 8          police force or it's college administration.  

 9          The way we see our role with local police is 

10          to coordinate with them on the investigation 

11          to make sure that none of the victims who 

12          need police response, you know, aren't able 

13          to get what they need.  

14                 Whether it's a State Police response 

15          or a local police response, we're looking to 

16          do training for our own investigators to make 

17          them better at investigating sex crimes.  And 

18          we'll be affording the same training to the 

19          locals.  I've spoken to the Chiefs and the 

20          Sheriffs Associations and offered those 

21          services.  

22                 You know, we don't know that there's a 

23          tremendous void there, but we think that we 

24          could work together so that we're all better 


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 1          at it.  

 2                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you for that.

 3                 Anyone else?

 4                 Well, I think that concludes your part 

 5          of the testimony.  We truly appreciate you 

 6          being with us today and for taking the time 

 7          and for the great work that you do on behalf 

 8          of the citizens of New York State to protect 

 9          them.  Thank you, Superintendent.

10                 SUPERINTENDENT D'AMICO:  Thank you.

11                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Our next speaker is 

12          Margaret Miller, director and chief 

13          information officer from the New York State 

14          Office of Information Technology Services.

15                 Welcome, Director Miller.

16                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Thank you.

17                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Whenever you're 

18          ready, proceed.

19                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Thank you.

20                 Good afternoon, Chairwoman Young, 

21          Chairman Farrell, and distinguished members 

22          of the Legislature.  I'm Margaret Miller, the 

23          state's chief information officer and 

24          director of Information Technology Services.  


                                                                  423

 1          Thank you for the opportunity to speak with 

 2          you today and share our request for budget 

 3          expenditure and our plans for ITS.

 4                 The 2016-2017 Governor's Executive 

 5          Budget includes $567 million in General Fund 

 6          support to enable ITS to provide consolidated 

 7          statewide information technology services. 

 8          The Executive Budget also includes 

 9          $85 million in capital funds for IT 

10          innovation in enterprise-level applications 

11          and programs.  This funding will allow ITS to 

12          continue the progress of the state's 

13          multiphase, multiyear IT transformation to 

14          make government work smarter for citizens, to 

15          spur economic growth, and make the state more 

16          accessible to business.  

17                 We've encountered, and will continue 

18          to encounter, challenges in this multiyear 

19          journey.  But those challenges don't deter 

20          us.  Rather, they inspire us to be even more 

21          creative, innovative, and dedicated to 

22          achieving service excellence and the best 

23          possible experience for our citizens.  

24                 Our transformation progresses in 


                                                                  424

 1          multiple phases.  First there was 

 2          consolidation, then stabilization, and now 

 3          transformation of the citizen experience.  At 

 4          every stage, plans have been created based on 

 5          the best information available at that time, 

 6          and then we've been agile in adapting these 

 7          plans whenever we need to as we learn more 

 8          about the challenges we face.  

 9                 Each phase requires a different focus, 

10          different capabilities, and different 

11          partners, but has built inexorably on the 

12          previous one.  

13                 Having made significant progress with 

14          building a sound technology and 

15          infrastructure foundation, we are beginning 

16          to shift our focus to transforming the whole 

17          life-cycle experience of our citizens to one 

18          that they have the right to expect in the 

19          digital era.  

20                 We're bringing together what was once 

21          a highly decentralized, inefficient IT 

22          structure across more than 50 disparate 

23          agencies into a single agency that is ITS.  

24          We can now work to maximize the tremendous 


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 1          talent in the workforce, standardize the 

 2          myriad systems and applications implemented 

 3          in each agency, and create an environment in 

 4          which ITS can leverage IT investments across 

 5          all state government, adopt industry best 

 6          practices, and enhance service delivery to 

 7          our partner agencies, businesses interacting 

 8          with the state, and the citizens New York 

 9          State serves, providing needed services more 

10          rapidly and cost-effectively, to fuel the 

11          innovation economy.  

12                 In the 2016-2017 fiscal year, in 

13          addition to our continuing program of work to 

14          support the mission of the agencies, our 

15          transformation program will focus on a number 

16          of broad areas.  

17                 We'll continue to drive up the 

18          maturity continuum of operational excellence, 

19          adopting standard best practice processes and 

20          tools to deliver reliable, secure services at 

21          minimum cost to the taxpayer.  

22                 One of the benefits of the Governor's 

23          IT transformation program which created ITS 

24          is that we now have visibility to the risks 


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 1          inherent in our whole infrastructure.  During 

 2          the consolidation and stabilization phases of 

 3          the IT transformation --

 4                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Director, could I 

 5          ask a favor?  Could you get a little bit 

 6          closer to the microphone?

 7                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Oh, I beg your 

 8          pardon.

 9                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  If you 

10          could pull the mike a little closer.

11                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  I'm short.

12                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.

13                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  One of -- is that 

14          better?

15                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Yes.

16                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Okay, thank you.  

17                 One of the benefits of the Governor's 

18          IT transformation program which created ITS 

19          is that we now have visibility to the risks 

20          inherent in our infrastructure.  During the 

21          consolidation and stabilization phases of the 

22          IT transformation, it became clear that a 

23          significant technology debt had accumulated 

24          over many decades of underinvestment, across 


                                                                  427

 1          the state, creating operational, legal and 

 2          financial risks.  During 2016-2017 we'll be 

 3          prioritizing a significant investment of 

 4          funds -- in fact approximately $40 million -- 

 5          and resources to eliminate this debt.  

 6                 ITS continues cybersecurity 

 7          improvements in 2016, with key programs to 

 8          address cyber risk and comply with industry 

 9          best practice standards of the National 

10          Institute of Standards and Technology, or 

11          NIST, which is part of the U.S. Department of 

12          Commerce, and ISO standards and regulatory 

13          rules for all agencies we support.  

14                 ITS carries over a comprehensive NIST 

15          800.53 assessment from 2015 into 2016, and a 

16          comprehensive NIST Top 20 Cyber Controls 

17          Assessment.  These two assessments will be 

18          the primary baseline used to guide risk-based 

19          investment and cybersecurity best practice 

20          improvement through 2016 and beyond.  

21                 ITS is engaging key suppliers and 

22          organizations, and the New York State 

23          Intelligence Center, the NYSIC, to assist in 

24          implementation of our enterprise-wide 


                                                                  428

 1          programs, close high-risk gaps, and guide the 

 2          deployment of cybersecurity best practices.  

 3                 With the cybersecurity function 

 4          centralized under ITS, the state can 

 5          implement the policies consistently, and 

 6          react swiftly across all IT assets when we 

 7          receive intelligence about potential threats.  

 8                 Our current technology landscape has 

 9          been created over decades by more than 

10          50 different agencies, each entirely focused 

11          on their own mission without a unifying 

12          vision of the citizen experience or the 

13          underlying technology or data strategies.  

14          The resulting environment is massively 

15          complex and expensive to support reliably and 

16          securely.  

17                 We also have significant staffing 

18          challenges due to this complexity.  The 

19          skills of our staff are locked into skill 

20          silos, leading to excessive spend on third 

21          parties and an inability to offer the most 

22          exciting career paths to our brightest and 

23          best, too many of whom are stuck supporting 

24          legacy technologies.  


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 1                 Most importantly, this complexity 

 2          leads to a negative citizen experience.  To 

 3          address these issues, we are building a set 

 4          of strategic platforms comprising a portfolio 

 5          of tools and services which not just 

 6          individually, but as an integrated set, will 

 7          deliver an enhanced citizen experience across 

 8          all agencies.  

 9                 Our staff are a vital asset in 

10          delivering the best possible service to our 

11          citizens, businesses, partner agencies and 

12          all other digital visitors to New York State.  

13          We have much to do to ensure that all team 

14          members have the opportunity to reach their 

15          potential and make the greatest contribution 

16          to our transformation program.  

17                 We plan, then, to focus on a number of 

18          initiatives with regard to our staff.  We'll 

19          increase the frequency and quality of our 

20          team communication at all levels to ensure 

21          all team members understand the overall ITS 

22          strategy and how their work contributes to 

23          the mission of ITS and our partner agencies.  

24          We'll ensure our training and development 


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 1          plans are closely aligned with our 

 2          transformation strategy and that team members 

 3          have the skills needed to be effective and to 

 4          progress in their careers.  We'll implement 

 5          an intensive hiring program to ensure we're 

 6          bringing in sufficient new team members to 

 7          allow us to fulfill our objectives and allow 

 8          existing team members to progress in their 

 9          careers.  And we will continue to seek ways 

10          we can reward and promote outstanding talent.  

11                 Thank you for the opportunity to speak 

12          with you today and share our plans.  I 

13          welcome your questions and comments.

14                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, 

15          Director.

16                 Our first speaker is Senator Croci.

17                 SENATOR CROCI:  Thank you, Madam 

18          Chair.  And thank you, Ms. Miller, for 

19          joining us today.

20                 The department that you head, is it 

21          statutorily charged with providing the 

22          protection of the state's -- our entire state 

23          government's cybersecurity infrastructure, 

24          including but not limited to identifying -- 


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 1          identification and mitigation of 

 2          vulnerabilities as well as deterring and 

 3          responding to cyber events and promoting 

 4          cyber awareness?  Is that the statutory 

 5          charge?  

 6                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Well, we took over 

 7          the responsibilities that were formerly with 

 8          the Department of Homeland Security and 

 9          Emergency Services, as you know.  And they -- 

10          under Section 715 of the Executive Law, the 

11          core mission of their Office of Cybersecurity 

12          was to protect the state's executive 

13          agencies' cybersecurity infrastructure and to 

14          provide coordination of policies, standards 

15          and programs related to cybersecurity.  

16                 And they did that in three different 

17          ways.  They had information security 

18          management, managed security services, and a 

19          cyber incident response team.  Those were the 

20          functions that we took over from them.  They 

21          never had enforcement functions.  Those were 

22          always split between multiple agencies, and 

23          hence the creation of the fusion center.

24                 So those are the three functions that 


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 1          we took over, as well as the geographical 

 2          information services that we took.  

 3                 Would it be helpful if I explained how 

 4          the responsibility now splits?

 5                 SENATOR CROCI:  I think you just 

 6          answered the question.  Thank you.

 7                 Could you describe for me a typical -- 

 8          you were talking about some staffing 

 9          challenges.  Can you describe for me a 

10          typical cyber team employee?  Do they have 

11          delegated roles and responsibilities when 

12          they're hired?  How do they work together?  

13          Do they work in teams, do they work 

14          independently?  And do they have other roles 

15          other than their cyber roles?  Are they doing 

16          some other IT-related work that's outside of 

17          the scope of cyber.

18                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Well, first of all, 

19          I'd like to say how delighted I am that we 

20          just managed to hire a new chief information 

21          security officer, Jim Garrett, who's with us 

22          here today.  And he joins us with a very 

23          distinguished career in cybersecurity and was 

24          formerly chief information security officer 


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 1          with 3M and Ingram Micro; he has a great 

 2          pedigree.  And he is currently reorganizing 

 3          his team and has been pleasantly surprised at 

 4          the caliber of staff that we have.  

 5                 In answer to your direct question, 

 6          they are a dedicated team and have no other 

 7          responsibilities for other aspects of ITS.  

 8          Their role is very much focused on 

 9          cybersecurity, which is forefront in all our 

10          minds.

11                 SENATOR CROCI:  Okay.  We actually 

12          have had a hearing on this last May 20th, and 

13          you were invited to testify.  Is there any 

14          reason why you didn't come to testify at the 

15          hearing last May 20th?  I know your office 

16          was invited.  And I believe Dr. Bloniarz is 

17          the individual who was here, but --

18                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  That's right.

19                 SENATOR CROCI:  -- I think he came 

20          from the Governor's staff, not from yours.

21                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  That's right.  In 

22          fact, Professor Bloniarz was at that point 

23          fulfilling multiple roles.  So as you know, 

24          he chairs the Governor's advisory committee, 


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 1          but that was before our new chief information 

 2          security officer was appointed, and he was 

 3          interim in that role also.  So that's why we 

 4          felt that he was probably the best person to 

 5          come and testify.

 6                 SENATOR CROCI:  Okay.  But you were 

 7          aware that you were invited to testify?  

 8                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  I'm sure I was at 

 9          the time.  I don't remember, to be honest.  

10          But we honestly felt, out of respect for your 

11          time, that we should send the person best 

12          capable to answer your questions.

13                 SENATOR CROCI:  Is Dr. Bloniarz here 

14          today?  

15                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  I'm not sure if he's 

16          physically in the room, but I know he's 

17          watching.

18                 SENATOR CROCI:  Okay, very good.  

19                 What if anything has been done in the 

20          past year, since we've seen now, over a 

21          process of about two years, the integration 

22          from DHSES into ITS -- and it's an 

23          interesting case study, since the Executive 

24          Budget proposes a similar consolidation or 


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 1          transfer of individuals from DHSES now to the 

 2          State Police, of course in a different 

 3          function.  So I'm curious as to the 

 4          success -- if anything, what has been done in 

 5          the past year?  Do you have success stories 

 6          in response to any cyber attacks that have 

 7          occurred?  

 8                 And based on what's transpired with 

 9          the attacks on the federal government, OPM, 

10          and then, of course, in the commercial 

11          industry, what have we done as a state to 

12          protect our infrastructure?  Do you have any 

13          success stories that you can discuss about 

14          how this transfer of responsibilities has 

15          been -- I've been cut off.  That means it's 

16          time for me to stop talking.

17                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Keep going.  Keep 

18          going, Senator.  Finish your question.

19                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  So first of all, I'd 

20          like to speak to the role of ITS versus the 

21          Department of Homeland Security and Emergency 

22          Services previously.  It would have been very 

23          difficult previously, because DHSES would 

24          only have sight of a small piece of the life 


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 1          cycle, if you will, of cybersecurity.  

 2                 ITS manages the infrastructure that 

 3          houses the data that we're trying to protect, 

 4          of course.  So we are able to look across the 

 5          whole NIST life cycle of identify, protect, 

 6          detect, respond and recover.  We can see 

 7          across the whole piece.  And so it's far 

 8          easier for us both to make sure that the 

 9          systems that we're building are built to a 

10          high standard of security so we can build 

11          that in from the get-go, for us to be able to 

12          see potential threats, for us to protect our 

13          environment to make sure that it's fully 

14          hardened, that we're up to speed with 

15          patching and that we've implemented the best 

16          possible protections, and then to detect any 

17          attempted intrusions and then to help recover 

18          when they do happen.

19                 What I would say is that I guess the 

20          success is that we haven't had -- touching 

21          wood; I hope I'm not tempting fate -- any 

22          major intrusion events.  We monitor on a 

23          daily basis for attempts, and we do record a 

24          high number of attempts to penetrate our 


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 1          security.  But we have not had any very 

 2          significant intrusion exposures.

 3                 SENATOR CROCI:  One final question.  

 4          Are you aware if your department is fully 

 5          compliant with the statutory set-asides for 

 6          minority-owned, women-owned and service- 

 7          disabled veteran businesses?  

 8                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Yes.  I'm afraid I 

 9          don't have the number at the tip of my 

10          fingers, but actually we exceed the number by 

11          a significant amount.

12                 SENATOR CROCI:  Okay.  Very good.  And 

13          you mentioned staffing silos.  So could you 

14          please explain to me how you're overcoming 

15          those challenges?

16                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Right.  We have a 

17          staffing crisis looming with a huge number of 

18          retirements, which will see a great many very 

19          experienced staff lost from state service.

20                 SENATOR CROCI:  Specifically with 

21          regard to cyber --

22                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  No, with regard to 

23          the overall IT environment.  

24                 And one of the ways we will address 


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 1          this is to focus and standardize on a smaller 

 2          number of technologies, which will make it 

 3          far easier for us to share expertise across 

 4          all agencies.  At the moment we have staff 

 5          who are specialists in a large -- small 

 6          numbers of staff who are specialists in a 

 7          huge number of different technologies.  Which 

 8          isn't good for their career paths, and it 

 9          isn't good for providing the best, most 

10          cost-effective service.  

11                 So by standardizing on a smaller 

12          number of key technologies, we can both 

13          provide a better career path for them and 

14          provide a better service.

15                 SENATOR CROCI:  Very good.  Thank you, 

16          Madam Chair.  And thank you very much.

17                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Thank you.  

18                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  

19                 Assemblyman?

20                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  Director, thank 

21          you for being here.  I too wanted to actually 

22          pick up where Senator Croci had left off in 

23          regards to -- I was struck by your comments 

24          about the skills of our staff are locked into 


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 1          silos.  It sounded as if there was a 

 2          resistance to change, but I don't think 

 3          that's what you meant.  Is that correct? 

 4                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  No.  No.  I 

 5          apologize if that's how it sounded.  No, 

 6          indeed, it's not a resistance to change, 

 7          quite the opposite.  It has to do with the 

 8          fact that we have this huge complexity in our 

 9          environment, which we are addressing through 

10          standardizing.  

11                 But we also have a problem with 

12          experience.  As I said, we will lose -- in 

13          the next few years we'll lose 25 percent of 

14          our staff through retirements.  And that 

15          means that the average experience level will 

16          go -- at the most senior levels will go from 

17          40 years to 11 years.  

18                 Now, expertise, of course, is a 

19          mixture of training plus experience.  Just as 

20          you wouldn't take a doctor straight out of 

21          med school and make him head of brain 

22          surgery, we need a combination of training 

23          plus experience.  And because we see that 

24          huge skills gap, it results in us having to 


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 1          rely very heavily on contract staff.  We 

 2          currently have 1200 contract staff that cost 

 3          the state $245 million a year, because we 

 4          rely on them for that mid-level of expertise 

 5          that includes the required experience.  And 

 6          that means that the more junior folk aren't 

 7          able to progress.

 8                 I would love to find a way of 

 9          increasing the permanent staff in those 

10          middle levels, maybe through insourcing that 

11          we were able to do some years ago, or other 

12          initiatives that we might agree with the 

13          unions and the Civil Service that would allow 

14          us to inject expertise into the middle ranks 

15          and reduce our dependence on very expensive 

16          contractors.  So we would really look to find 

17          a way of doing that.  

18                 And by that means, we would be able to 

19          release those more junior staff from those 

20          silos and be able to give the best 

21          opportunities to our brightest and best 

22          staff, which is something I very passionately 

23          believe in.

24                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  I think that 


                                                                  441

 1          speaks to your final comments about staff 

 2          development.  

 3                 And I will say, particularly being a 

 4          member from the Capital Region, I represent 

 5          many great, fine people who have been part of 

 6          those silos for years that do want to advance 

 7          their skills and want to be given the 

 8          opportunity.  And I also respect the 

 9          complexity of technology, that there are 

10          going to be times when you do need the 

11          specialists.  But we don't want the 

12          specialists the norm at all costs possible.  

13                 I think one of the great things about 

14          experience that you talk about is there are 

15          many people who can say, Oh, yeah, we've done 

16          that before, and here's why it didn't work.  

17          Or here's how it may work.

18                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Right.

19                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  So I am 

20          encouraged by your comments about increasing 

21          development and training.  I would think that 

22          would mean particularly for our current 

23          workforce -- that is in place, that has the 

24          opportunity -- but also recruitment, which 


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 1          indicates to me that we will be hiring more 

 2          staff to help move things along.  Is that a 

 3          correct assessment?  And does this budget 

 4          proposal support that in regards to positions 

 5          and also training and development dollars?  

 6                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  I believe we have 

 7          the appropriate budget to hire the staff that 

 8          we're in a position to hire.  Of course they 

 9          have to be entry level.  The skills gap is in 

10          the middle and at the senior levels.  That's 

11          what's the problem.

12                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  So to address 

13          the skills gap, is the funding for 

14          development and training going to help 

15          address some of that?  

16                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  To address the 

17          training part.  It's the experience that's 

18          the problem.

19                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  Thank you.

20                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  Our 

21          next speaker is Senator Nozzolio.

22                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Thank you, Madam 

23          Chair.  

24                 Good after -- good evening.  I guess 


                                                                  443

 1          we're getting into the evening.

 2                 I must admit I believe you've been 

 3          before the general finance committees in the 

 4          past, I believe you've testified before us.  

 5          Is that not correct?  

 6                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Last year, yes.  

 7          That's shortly after I joined, yes.

 8                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Last year I didn't 

 9          pay much attention to what you said at all.  

10          This year I've listened to every word.  

11                 It is a different day in this nation 

12          and in the world.  Senator Croci began this 

13          discussion; the cyber attacks to agencies of 

14          the federal government that are generally 

15          well protected show that they weren't so well 

16          protected.

17                 I don't -- I don't doubt for a second 

18          that you've had managerial issues.  It sounds 

19          as though you have addressed a number of 

20          those issues during your tenure.  But I want 

21          to probe, in the time I have, on 

22          cybersecurity and what role that is playing 

23          within the information technology that you 

24          manage.  And that you casually indicated that 


                                                                  444

 1          there have been a high-level number of 

 2          attempts to develop security breaches in our 

 3          area.  Any particular aspect of that data?

 4                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  No, I --

 5                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  For instance, the 

 6          Department of Motor Vehicles, the Parks 

 7          system, Taxation and Finance?  What levels of 

 8          attack and what type of data are you 

 9          referring to?

10                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  We experience the 

11          same sort of attacks and the same categories 

12          of attacks as the general business 

13          population.  In fact, we work with the 

14          Multistate ISAC, as do DHSES and State 

15          Police, to garner intelligence about what's 

16          happening in the broader world, and we see 

17          exactly the same level of attack and same 

18          nature of attack as the general business 

19          community.  And --

20                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  And the general 

21          business community has, over the last 

22          12 months, as you know, in New York State 

23          experienced a huge amount of data breaches.

24                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Indeed.  Indeed.  So 


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 1          we adopt a stance at --

 2                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  So you've achieved, 

 3          then, a huge amount of data breaches, is that 

 4          what you're telling us?

 5                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  No, not at all.  No, 

 6          we experience a huge number of attempts.  So 

 7          there are a large number of attempted attacks 

 8          on our environment.

 9                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Thank you for 

10          clarifying that.  Where are the attempts 

11          being made?  Where are they centered?  

12                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  They vary very 

13          widely.  I wouldn't single out any one 

14          source.  In fact, our posture is to be 

15          vigilant whatever the source.  And we remain, 

16          I would say, confidently paranoid --

17                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  That's good.  Do 

18          you have a priority, though?  You've said in 

19          your testimony that you're understaffed and 

20          basically overworked.  What, then, are we 

21          establishing as priorities within your 

22          department?

23                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Right.  The biggest 

24          priority we have is cybersecurity.  And as 


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 1          you will see, we've increased the budget very 

 2          significantly in cybersecurity over the last 

 3          few years.  And the Governor himself and 

 4          members of the Governor's staff have 

 5          repeatedly asked whether we are spending 

 6          enough.  Our judgment is that we have the 

 7          right budget for this year, but it's been 

 8          made very clear to us that should we require 

 9          additional funding, we should ask for it.

10                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Well, you indicate 

11          that 2016, the improvements you've made -- 

12          and your testimony says that you've 

13          established key programs to address cyber 

14          risk and comply with industry best practices.  

15          What steps have been taken to achieve that 

16          objective?  

17                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Let me list out some 

18          of it.  So first of all, we're aggressively 

19          remediating all out-of-date hardware and 

20          software that could pose a risk to our 

21          environment.  

22                 We've engaged third-party experts to 

23          assess our cyber control risk related to 

24          regulated data and third-party-managed data.  


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 1                 And then we focus on the most 

 2          sensitive citizen data and data regulated by 

 3          law, to ensure that these NIST controls are 

 4          in place for that data as a priority.

 5                 We also make sure that the legal 

 6          contractual language for any third parties we 

 7          use reflects the best standards of regulatory 

 8          control and best practice.  

 9                 And we also are implementing a 

10          comprehensive risk-management program to 

11          raise the visibility and track mitigation of 

12          high-risk areas of weakness.

13                 And we're also making significant 

14          process improvements in areas such as the 

15          enterprise cyber command center, enterprise 

16          risk assessments, enterprise identity 

17          management, and so forth, which are the 

18          cornerstones of a best-practice cybersecurity 

19          program.

20                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Are you a 

21          cybersecurity expert yourself?

22                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  I am not, sir.  

23          That's why -- 

24                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Have you had any 


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 1          cybersecurity experience in other positions 

 2          prior to your becoming IT head?  

 3                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  No.  I have 

 4          experience extensively as a chief information 

 5          officer, and that's why I'm very pleased that 

 6          we've hired Jim Garrett, as I mentioned 

 7          earlier, as our chief information security 

 8          officer.  He's a --

 9                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  What experts -- you 

10          said you've deployed experts.  Does that mean 

11          your agency has contracted with experts in 

12          the field --

13                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Yes.

14                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  -- for consultant 

15          services?  

16                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  We're currently 

17          working with Deloitte.

18                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  With -- pardon me.  

19          Stewart?  I couldn't hear.

20                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Repeat the name?

21                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  With Deloitte.

22                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Oh, Deloitte.  

23                 What additional steps have you 

24          suggested to the agencies that hold the most 


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 1          private of information, particularly the Tax 

 2          Department, the Health Department?  What have 

 3          your technology people done with the 

 4          technology people from those departments to 

 5          establish appropriate firewall safeguards?  

 6          Industry best practices, certainly.  But is 

 7          Deloitte -- are they giving your agency 

 8          consulting expertise and suggestions with 

 9          additional infrastructure to establish within 

10          the IT systems?  

11                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Well, we have 

12          information security experts embedded in 

13          every agency.  And they are part of the chief 

14          information security office's team.  And they 

15          are experts in the particular challenges of 

16          that agency, whether it be HIPAA, whether it 

17          be federal law related to tax, and so on and 

18          so forth.  So that we have experts embedded 

19          in each team.

20                 And we are working with every agency 

21          to educate them in the risks of cybersecurity 

22          and to undertake steps such as classification 

23          of their data, to make sure that every 

24          agency, every agency head understands the 


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 1          vulnerabilities of their data and what needs 

 2          to be protected when.

 3                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  I guess what I -- 

 4          I'm doubly concerned about the fact we're 

 5          relying on each agency, which primarily has 

 6          had a workforce that has not been exposed to 

 7          cyber attacks, are not expert in those 

 8          fields, yet you're indicating they're the 

 9          centerpiece of reliance on protecting this 

10          data.  And what type of real-world 

11          experience, particularly from the private 

12          sector, is being brought into the public 

13          sector to provide the real-life experience -- 

14          I mean government, thank God, has not been 

15          the recipient of major attacks yet at the 

16          state level, although you're indicating that 

17          the breaches are pretty uniform and 

18          broad-based -- or the attacks, not breaches.

19                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Right.

20                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  The attacks are 

21          broad-based.  What I -- I'm just trying to 

22          probe -- and this is what the subject of 

23          Senator Croci's hearing was about last year 

24          that you couldn't attend.  But this is the 


                                                                  451

 1          kind of thing that we're trying to probe.  

 2          What type of protections are being provided 

 3          to New Yorkers that their data is being held 

 4          in a secure way with the most appropriate 

 5          cyber protections available?

 6                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Let me clarify.  

 7          Cybersecurity is a centralized function 

 8          within ITS.  It's not devolved to the 

 9          agencies, although we have representatives of 

10          the cyber team embedded with each agency to 

11          make sure that we're mindful of any 

12          particular requirements in each agency.

13                 It's a very highly skilled, very 

14          specialized team.  And we do rely on 

15          third-party experts wherever we deem it 

16          necessary.  So as I said before, we are -- we 

17          remain paranoid rather than complacent, and 

18          at every occasion we ask ourselves do we have 

19          the expertise in-house for a particular 

20          aspect of cybersecurity or do we need to rely 

21          on a third party.

22                 And in fact as part of the arrangement 

23          with the Multistate ISAC and the Center for 

24          Internet Security, we have access to external 


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 1          experts through those relationships.

 2                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  That this is a 

 3          subject that I believe the Senate should 

 4          probe further, and that we definitely will be 

 5          back to you.  We appreciate your discussions 

 6          today in this budgetary context.  You have a 

 7          very important responsibility, and we need to 

 8          make sure that you have the resources 

 9          available to you to conduct that protection 

10          of our data, particularly in light of the 

11          rest of the world and what's happening out 

12          there.  

13                 So thank you very much for your time 

14          and your answering our questions.

15                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Thank you.

16                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, Senator.

17                 Our next speaker is Senator Krueger.

18                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Good afternoon, or 

19          close to evening.

20                 Many of us sat through a double 

21          hearing yesterday, and one of the hearings 

22          was on workforce development for the state.  

23          And there was testimony that in the last two 

24          years your department lost 6 percent of your 


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 1          state workforce but you've increased the 

 2          number of consultants by five times, from 164 

 3          to 849.  

 4                 So you just testified about the 

 5          exacerbation of significant retirement.  So 

 6          I'm just curious, even as you're seeing some 

 7          shrinkage already in the workforce, how can 

 8          you explain such a radical growth in the 

 9          number of consultants in your department?  

10                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  It's -- it's a 

11          challenge.  And as I just said, we can hire 

12          at the entry level very aggressively, which 

13          we are doing.  But we don't just need skill, 

14          we need experience as well as skill.  And of 

15          course what we're losing is experience.  So 

16          that's a huge challenge for us.

17                 And we had hoped in this budget cycle 

18          to repeat the insourcing initiative, whereby 

19          some years ago we were allowed to actually 

20          hire a large number of those contractors as 

21          state staff and bring them into the 

22          workforce, bring them into the union 

23          workforce.  And that would provide an 

24          injection of expertise, experience and skill 


                                                                  454

 1          to plug the gap and reduce the spend on 

 2          contractors.  

 3                 We were very much hoping to do that.  

 4          Unfortunately, our local PEF colleagues 

 5          weren't prepared to work with us on that.  

 6          But we're very optimistic that the senior PEF 

 7          leadership will work with us on that in the 

 8          future.  That seems to be the most obvious 

 9          and most -- the quickest way of plugging that 

10          gap.

11                 Otherwise, you know, I'm open to 

12          suggestions as to how to fill that gap.  

13          Given the restrictions we work within, it's 

14          very difficult.

15                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  So I'm a little 

16          confused.  So what presents you from hiring 

17          new more senior people?  You said you can 

18          only hire junior people.  Is there some rule 

19          that prevents you from hiring --

20                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Under civil service 

21          law, we can only hire at entry level from the 

22          external world.

23                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Only at entry level.  

24          Okay.  And do you agree with PEF's analysis 


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 1          that the cost for consultants is 

 2          significantly higher per person than state 

 3          employees?  

 4                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  I do.  That's why we 

 5          would very much like to turn some of those 

 6          consultants into state employees.  We'd love 

 7          to.

 8                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Certain agencies are 

 9          desperately in need of modernization for 

10          their technology and computerization.  The 

11          Department of Housing and Development, HDS -- 

12          HCR, excuse me.  I'm getting my letters 

13          confused -- Housing and Community 

14          Development, thank you, has literally -- I'm 

15          not even going to say it's computers, maybe 

16          ancient DOS computers, but in a number of its 

17          divisions, just huge piles of paper records.  

18          They were promised to somehow be on a 

19          priority list of computerization, I think 

20          when Governor Cuomo first got in.  

21                 Can you update me at all about where 

22          computerization of that agency is?  

23                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Yes, certainly.  

24          That particular initiative is something I've 


                                                                  456

 1          been personally involved in over the past 

 2          year.  There's been certain delays, but what 

 3          I would say is that the RFP for that work is 

 4          just about ready to issue.  And we look 

 5          forward to implementing a 21st-century system 

 6          for them as soon as we practically can.

 7                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Can you give me an 

 8          estimated time?  

 9                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  I don't want to do 

10          that quite yet until we have the responses 

11          from the RFP.  But we haven't --

12                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  And you've only been 

13          here two years or --

14                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  A year and a bit.  

15          Year and two months, I think.

16                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  So it was my 

17          understanding they were like in the top list 

18          of priority agencies.  Are there other 

19          agencies that are also in queue and haven't 

20          gotten to even the RFP process yet?

21                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Well, we've just 

22          been through a very rigorous process of 

23          prioritizing initiatives in the budget for 

24          the new year.  So we asked every agency to 


                                                                  457

 1          put forward their proposals for the projects 

 2          that they wanted to pursue in the new year, 

 3          and for them to choose what was most 

 4          important.  And we're about to publish, I 

 5          think maybe next week, the final list of 

 6          projects that have been requested by the 

 7          agencies and that DOB have verified there is 

 8          funding for.  So it really is entirely up to 

 9          the agencies what they prioritize.

10                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  We passed a law, 

11          often just nicknamed the SAFE Act, that 

12          required the state to develop a database for 

13          ammunition.  What's the process and what 

14          stage are you at in preparing a request for 

15          software development for this database, or do 

16          we already have that done?  

17                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Well, the budget was 

18          provided, as you know, in 2013-2014, and 

19          there was some $27 million in capital funds, 

20          I think, at that point for the SAFE Act.  

21                 We've spent $9.3 million already, and 

22          we're ready with the pistol permitting 

23          process.  That is pretty much ready to be 

24          rolled out.  Because as you know, we need to 


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 1          begin that process in January 2017.  So we're 

 2          confident that that piece of the program will 

 3          be rolled out in time so that we don't end up 

 4          with a huge workload for the county clerks.

 5                 The ammunition sales database is -- 

 6          that's something that's been a little 

 7          problematic.  We've been doing a great deal 

 8          of research on that, and we've offered 

 9          Superintendent D'Amico three different 

10          solutions.  But unfortunately, to date, we 

11          haven't come up with a solution that is 

12          acceptable to him, either for cost or 

13          usability reasons.  So we're continuing to 

14          research to see if we can find a solution 

15          that's acceptable to State Police.

16                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  So you believe you 

17          came up with three alternatives to model that 

18          database, but the State Police have not 

19          approved any of the three?  

20                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Not to date.  As I 

21          say, either for cost or usability reasons.  

22          So we'll keep working on it until we can find 

23          something that they believe is workable.

24                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Do you know what the 


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 1          current obstacles are that we still cannot 

 2          overcome?

 3                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Not in detail, I'm 

 4          afraid.  Not in detail.

 5                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  And was your office 

 6          involved in the I-STOP technology?  The 

 7          I-STOP -- I, dash, STOP -- that was for 

 8          opioid prescription tracking.  

 9                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Oh.  No, sorry.  No.

10                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  So questions about 

11          that aren't relevant for your office.

12                 Thank you.

13                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Thank you.

14                 (Discussion off the record at 

15          committee table.)

16                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Senator Croci.

17                 SENATOR CROCI:  Thank you, Madam 

18          Chair.  

19                 One additional question, ma'am.

20                 You said 1200 contract staff.  What's 

21          the total cost?  

22                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  It's approximately 

23          $245 million a year.

24                 SENATOR CROCI:  $245 million.  And 


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 1          these are individuals who have to have 

 2          specialized skill sets, I'm assuming some 

 3          sort of a thorough vetting process before 

 4          they're given access to sensitive information 

 5          procedures.

 6                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Oh, indeed.  Yes.

 7                 SENATOR CROCI:  What kind of vetting 

 8          goes on for these individuals?  Does the 

 9          contract agent -- are they required to 

10          provide employees who are properly vetted, or 

11          is there additional vetting done by your 

12          agency?  

13                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  We apply the same 

14          vetting as we do to our permanent staff, 

15          including fingerprinting.

16                 SENATOR CROCI:  And 1200 -- is it one 

17          agency that's providing these individuals, or 

18          is it multiple companies?  

19                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  No.  No, it's a 

20          range.  A great many of them are HBITS staff 

21          and sourced from minority- and women-owned 

22          businesses.

23                 SENATOR CROCI:  Okay.  And with regard 

24          to that, since you raised it, OGS has a 


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 1          conflict with your data on veterans, 

 2          disabled-veteran-owned businesses --

 3                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  I'm sorry, I didn't 

 4          hear.

 5                 SENATOR CROCI:  OGS, who did a report 

 6          on the minority-, women-, and service- 

 7          disabled-owned businesses, differs -- there's 

 8          a disparity in their accounting of your 

 9          agency's compliance with the service-disabled 

10          veteran set-aside.  So I'd ask for -- at some 

11          point for you to get that information back to 

12          us --

13                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Oh, sure.

14                 SENATOR CROCI:  -- just to ensure that 

15          there's not a disparity.

16                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Yeah.

17                 SENATOR CROCI:  And with regard to 

18          your staffing issues, the great expertise 

19          that's been developed over the years started 

20          in the Department of Defense, I believe, 

21          certainly within the services.  And there are 

22          a lot of veterans who have this skill set and 

23          are eager to be employed.  So perhaps that's 

24          a potential answer for us that would satisfy 


                                                                  462

 1          Senator Krueger's desire to bring some of 

 2          this in-house, and certainly our desire to 

 3          hire veterans in New York.

 4                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  I'm glad you raised 

 5          that, sir.  There is a particular initiative 

 6          that I'm associated with out of Columbia 

 7          University, called Workforce Opportunity 

 8          Services that actually looks to specifically 

 9          train veterans in IT skills and place them 

10          with employers.  We are actively looking at 

11          making use of that initiative if we can find 

12          the right procurement vehicle.

13                 SENATOR CROCI:  Well, I'm happy to be 

14          of assistance in any way.  Thank you, ma'am.

15                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Thank you.  Thank 

16          you.

17                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Thank you.

18                 Any other legislator want to ask 

19          questions?  

20                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.

21                 I believe that you made a statement a 

22          little while ago saying that there was over 

23          $27 million allocated in the 2013-2014 budget 

24          specifically for the SAFE Act that was 


                                                                  463

 1          capital.  That is not a true settlement.  

 2          There was no lining out in the state budget 

 3          regarding those funds.  

 4                 So I just want to point that out, 

 5          because that was not a correct statement, 

 6          number one.

 7                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  I apologize.

 8                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Number two, you 

 9          said that you've actually used $9 million 

10          toward the ammunition database.  And when was 

11          that?

12                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Not for the 

13          ammunition database, no.  This is for the 

14          pistol research part of the work.  We 

15          haven't -- we have not yet spent money on the 

16          ammunition database.

17                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  You have not spent 

18          money on the ammunition database.

19                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  That's correct.  

20                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  And you're aware of 

21          the MOU that's in place.

22                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  I'm sorry?

23                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  You're aware of the 

24          memorandum of understanding that's in place 


                                                                  464

 1          right now not to develop the database.

 2                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  I am indeed.  As I 

 3          testified earlier, we have done research, but 

 4          that's all we've done with regard to the 

 5          ammunition database.

 6                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.

 7                 That concludes the testimony, so thank 

 8          you for being here.

 9                 DIRECTOR MILLER:  Thank you.

10                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  So this is where 

11          we're at, just to let the speakers know.  We 

12          have 26 speakers in the queue now.  A few of 

13          those are multiperson panels.  And the time 

14          is late, obviously; it's 5:30.  We had five 

15          state agencies on Public Protection testify 

16          today, the judiciary testified today.  

17                 And so I just want to ask of the 

18          speakers, if you have written testimony 

19          that's lengthy, we would prefer that you did 

20          not read the whole thing.  And if you could 

21          try to come down and hit the most salient 

22          points, maybe do your presentation in five 

23          minutes, just so we can get all the speakers 

24          in before midnight.  And then based from 


                                                                  465

 1          that, I'm sure that our members may have 

 2          questions or may not.  So let's start this 

 3          portion of the hearing.

 4                 And first we have Bill Leahy, director 

 5          of the New York State Office of Indigent 

 6          Legal Services.

 7                 And if speakers would prefer to submit 

 8          their testimony, they may do that also if 

 9          they don't want to stay.

10                 Following Mr. Leahy, Director Leahy, 

11          we will have the administrator of the New 

12          York State Commission on Judicial Conduct.

13                 Welcome, Director.

14                 DIRECTOR LEAHY:  Thank you, Madam 

15          Chairwoman.  

16                 And congratulations on your position, 

17          even though at this hour you might be 

18          regretting it.  And greetings to all the 

19          Senators and Assemblymembers who are here.

20                 Let me begin -- and I will try to 

21          address the salient points.  I'm here to talk 

22          about the current situation with respect to 

23          the provision of counsel in the State of 

24          New York pursuant to County Law 18-B.  


                                                                  466

 1                 And I come here at a time when we are 

 2          just a couple of weeks away from the fifth 

 3          anniversary of the creation of my office, the 

 4          Office of Indigent Legal Services.  And 

 5          before the legislative session is over, we 

 6          will have hit the 10th anniversary of the 

 7          Kaye Commission report.  

 8                 And for those of who you don't 

 9          remember, that Kaye Commission report in 2006 

10          described the state of the provision of 

11          counsel for people who cannot afford to 

12          retain counsel in the State of New York as a 

13          "fragmented system of county-operated and 

14          largely county-financed indigent defense 

15          services that fails to satisfy the state's 

16          constitutional and statutory obligations to 

17          protect the rights of the indigent accused."

18                 Quite a serious indictment of the 

19          State of New York's compliance with one of 

20          its basic governmental responsibilities.

21                 Partly as a result of that Kaye 

22          Commission report, my agency was created and 

23          I came in as director.  As I mentioned 

24          earlier, it's five years that we've been 


                                                                  467

 1          here.  I happen to have a five-year term, 

 2          which is also shortly to expire.  Thanks to 

 3          the unanimous recommendation of my board -- 

 4          one of whose members, Senator John Dunne, is 

 5          here today -- and thanks to the cooperation 

 6          of Governor Cuomo, I am happy to say that I 

 7          am embarking on a new five-year term in about 

 8          three weeks.  And I'm glad I can, because 

 9          there's an awful lot of work yet to be done.

10                 We've made some great strides.  We've 

11          made it with the cooperation of this 

12          Legislature.  We're very grateful to you.

13                 Let me tell you where we are today in 

14          the wake of the Executive Budget.  A year 

15          after the Kaye Commission report was filed, 

16          the New York Civil Liberties Union filed the 

17          Hurrell-Harring lawsuit that has been 

18          referenced a few times by earlier speakers 

19          today, and by members.  That lawsuit came to 

20          a negotiated settlement in October 2014 

21          between the State of New York, five counties 

22          of Ontario, Onondaga, Schuyler, Suffolk and 

23          Washington, and my agency was chosen as the 

24          implementing agency.


                                                                  468

 1                 So that happened in October 2014.  And 

 2          what I said at that time were two things that 

 3          are still very important today.  One, the 

 4          State of New York, the Governor deserved an 

 5          enormous amount of credit for acknowledging 

 6          for the very first time since County Law 18-B 

 7          was enacted in 1965 that it is the state's 

 8          responsibility, not an individual county's 

 9          responsibility, to make sure that the 

10          Constitution and the laws are complied with 

11          and to make sure, to cite one of my favorite 

12          quotes from one of my favorite Attorneys 

13          General of the nation, Janet Reno, "the best 

14          protection against wrongful convictions is 

15          the presence of a good lawyer."

16                 And so at that time the two things I 

17          said were, one, that the Governor was right 

18          to acknowledge that it is the state's 

19          responsibility.  He was right to vest the 

20          implementation in an independent professional 

21          agency that, just as the superintendent of 

22          State Police who testified so impressively, 

23          knows what it's about, knows what it is 

24          doing, knows how to make things right.  


                                                                  469

 1                 And then the second thing, of course, 

 2          was I pointed out there's one big problem.  

 3          And I wasn't the only one who pointed it out.  

 4          Mark Williams, the Cattaraugus County public 

 5          defender and the president-elect of the Chief 

 6          Defenders Association of New York -- you'll 

 7          be hearing from him I hope shortly -- he said 

 8          it at the time as well, that it's just simply 

 9          unfair that five counties receive the 

10          benefits of appropriate representation, 

11          state-funded representation, and all the rest 

12          of the upstate counties do not.  

13                 Of course New York City, 2009, this 

14          Legislature acted to reduce caseloads, with 

15          ample state funding that goes to New York 

16          City now to the tune of about $55 million a 

17          year.

18                 So flash-forward now to the Executive 

19          Budget.  First I want to say the 

20          implementation in those five counties -- 

21          because there were skeptics who said, Well, 

22          yeah, the Governor entered into this 

23          settlement, but are he and his people really 

24          going to support it, are they really going to 


                                                                  470

 1          comply with its provisions, are they really 

 2          going to fund it?  Yes, yes, and yes.  

 3                 The Governor has cooperated at every 

 4          step.  His first assistant legal counsel, 

 5          Sandi Toll, has shepherded and honored our 

 6          independent implementation.  She and his 

 7          office have supported us at every turn.  So 

 8          there are no worries on that score, and I 

 9          want to be clear about that.

10                 The second thing is I want to 

11          congratulate and thank the Governor with 

12          respect to the Hurrell-Harring portion of the 

13          Executive Budget, because we have been given 

14          all the tools, all the staff, all the funding 

15          that we need to implement that settlement 

16          effectively.  That's a big deal.  Because for 

17          once, New York is going to get it right with 

18          respect to indigent defense.  And that's big 

19          news.

20                 Now the other big news is the Tale of 

21          Two Cities or the Tale of Two Counties or the 

22          Tale of Two States, however you want to 

23          characterize it.  I put in my written 

24          testimony, you know, Clinton in the northeast 


                                                                  471

 1          and Chautauqua in the southwest and Niagara 

 2          in the northwest and all of that.  

 3                 But really the best way to graphically 

 4          illustrate it, I think, is just to take the 

 5          two counties on Long Island, the two most 

 6          populous counties in the state outside of New 

 7          York City.  And they both have huge needs, 

 8          they've both made great efforts as counties.  

 9          They have both partnered with us over five 

10          years very effectively, but with minimal 

11          funding.  Now Suffolk will get a big chunk of 

12          the $10.4 million in this Executive Budget, 

13          should you approve it -- and I urge you to 

14          approve it -- to reduce caseloads to 

15          appropriate levels, New York City-type 

16          levels.  Nassau County, under fiscal control, 

17          doing its best, working hard with a terrific 

18          public defender, Kent Moston, one of the 

19          smartest, wisest, best public defenders in 

20          the state -- they're left behind.

21                 And if you want to take another look, 

22          go a little more traditional upstate, you can 

23          go to the two cities of Syracuse and 

24          Rochester.  Very similar cities, they have 


                                                                  472

 1          their struggles, they're trying hard.  

 2          Syracuse is getting very significant 

 3          assistance under this settlement.  We've had 

 4          terrific cooperation from the county 

 5          attorney's office in Syracuse.  I'm going to 

 6          be going out to see Bob Durr, the new county 

 7          attorney, next week to continue the path 

 8          forward.  

 9                 And then you have Rochester.  

10          Rochester has another great public defender, 

11          Tim Donaher.  They've had terrific county 

12          leadership.  What they don't have is state 

13          funding.  And so the city court caseloads are 

14          wildly in excess of any rational maximum in 

15          the City of Rochester.  

16                 And on the appellate side, we have a 

17          great appellate unit -- there's a three-year 

18          delay before someone gets his or her right to 

19          appeal.  And they're sitting in prison or 

20          jail.

21                 So what can be done?  Well, we have 

22          $34 million that we requested in our budget 

23          request, and the final two pages of our 

24          handout tells the whole story as far as the 


                                                                  473

 1          numbers are concerned.  One page is our 

 2          request, $139.26 million.  The second page is 

 3          the Executive Budget.  And yes, there's an 

 4          over $12 million increase.  It's big, we're 

 5          very grateful for it.  It's the biggest 

 6          increase we've ever seen.  It pales in 

 7          comparison to a lot of the numbers that have 

 8          been thrown around here earlier today, but 

 9          it's a big number to us, and we're deeply 

10          grateful to the Governor for it.  

11                 The problem is New York cannot 

12          tolerate -- Senator DeFrancisco said this 

13          recently better than I ever could.  He said:  

14          Who could be against this idea that there 

15          should be one standard of justice in this 

16          state?  There can't be two.  And right now 

17          that's what we have.

18                 So we're coming to you and we're 

19          asking you to do what we tried unsuccessfully 

20          to get the Executive to do, which is to 

21          provide significant funding in the 

22          legislative budget for the 

23          non-Hurrell-Harring counties.  

24                 For what reasons?  Primarily two.  We 


                                                                  474

 1          start to reduce the caseloads, number one.  

 2          And number two, eliminate this intolerable 

 3          lack of compliance with the most fundamental 

 4          legal obligation, to have a lawyer at a 

 5          defendant's side when that magistrate or 

 6          judge is considering whether to leave the 

 7          person at liberty or put them into pretrial 

 8          detention.  That is just intolerable.  

 9                 At the Court of Appeals, it's been six 

10          years since the Court of Appeals has said so.  

11          And the fact that we still have large swaths 

12          of upstate in which there is no counsel at 

13          arraignment is just -- just should not be 

14          tolerated a minute longer.

15                 That's probably a little bit more than 

16          you wanted, but I'm open for questions.

17                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  

18                 The Assembly?  

19                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  We will hear 

20          from Member Lentol.

21                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  Thank you very 

22          much, Mr. Chairman.

23                 Is my mic on?  No.

24                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  How many years 


                                                                  475

 1          have you been here?

 2                 (Laughter.)

 3                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  Too long.

 4                 First of all, Bill, I want to thank 

 5          you for the five wonderful years that you've 

 6          given us.  You've really lifted this office 

 7          to where none of us ever would have thought 

 8          it could have gone.  And you've been just 

 9          tremendous in changing the whole landscape of 

10          providing legal defense services for the 

11          indigent.

12                 DIRECTOR LEAHY:  Thank you.

13                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  And so I couldn't 

14          agree with you more about the Hurrell-Harring 

15          problem, that we need to have all of the 

16          counties on an equal footing.  This is a 

17          disservice to all of the counties.  This is 

18          really what some of my colleagues can call an 

19          unfunded mandate.  And it's an unfunded 

20          mandate for legal services that are required 

21          by the Constitution of the United States of 

22          America.

23                 So I just wanted to talk to you a 

24          little bit about the bill that I introduced 


                                                                  476

 1          last year that OCA -- a program bill to 

 2          transfer authority to approve bar association 

 3          plans for the operation of an assigned 

 4          counsel program of conflict defender, from 

 5          the chief administrator of the courts to your 

 6          office, to the Office of Indigent Defense 

 7          Services, with the statutory mission to make 

 8          sure that we have quality 18-B, as we call 

 9          it, services provided for indigent 

10          defendants.  

11                 And I think I know the answer, but do 

12          you support this legislation?

13                 DIRECTOR LEAHY:  Oh, certainly we do.  

14          And really this has been, you know, kind of 

15          an understanding with OCA since our probably 

16          first year.  The OCA responsibility goes back 

17          to the day when there was no state agency 

18          with the expertise or the resources to 

19          undertake this responsibility.  And I know 

20          there is a big backlog of county conflict 

21          defender plans that have been sitting with 

22          OCA, essentially waiting for the day when we 

23          can take over that responsibility.  We're 

24          ready, willing and able.


                                                                  477

 1                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  Okay.  And I 

 2          guess you would agree that that would enhance 

 3          your ability to provide quality 18-B services 

 4          to indigent defendants.

 5                 DIRECTOR LEAHY:  Yes, absolutely, in 

 6          continuation of our partnership with the 

 7          counties and the providers.

 8                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  That would be 

 9          great.  Thank you, sir.

10                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  

11                 Our next speaker is Senator Ruth 

12          Hassell-Thompson.

13                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Thank you, 

14          Madam Chair.

15                 ASSEMBLYMAN LENTOL:  And by the way, 

16          before I finish, I just want to congratulate 

17          Assemblywoman Fahy and Assemblyman McDonald 

18          for introducing that bill in the Assembly to 

19          actually bring us into the 21st century in 

20          providing legal services for indigents 

21          throughout the State of New York.  

22                 DIRECTOR LEAHY:  I join you in that.  

23          I just had the pleasure of reading 

24          Assemblyman McDonald's -- I think it was the 


                                                                  478

 1          blog in the Times Union.  That was very 

 2          eloquent.

 3                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  

 4                 Senator?

 5                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Thank you.  

 6          I was afraid you'd moved into my time.

 7                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  We know better than 

 8          that.

 9                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  No, I don't 

10          have a lot of questions.  Most of them you 

11          answered.  And as I was trying to read 

12          quickly through your presentation, some of 

13          the answers are there.

14                 You know, I too would like to 

15          congratulate you, Mr. Leahy, for an 

16          extraordinary five years.  It was a struggle, 

17          and we got a lot of pushback.  But I 

18          appreciate your tenacity and certainly the 

19          fact that you were one of the first ones here 

20          today, and still here to give your testimony, 

21          is just a statement of how tenacious you are 

22          about something that you really care about 

23          and believe in.  And so I just want you to 

24          know that I appreciate that.


                                                                  479

 1                 As we began to talk before 

 2          Hurrell-Harring was settled, we had an idea 

 3          of what the five counties' issues were in 

 4          terms of their backlog.  What's your sense of 

 5          the backlog for the 52 counties that we're 

 6          now going to -- that will be Phase 2 of our 

 7          next struggle, I suppose?  

 8                 DIRECTOR LEAHY:  Well, I think in 

 9          general you can say that the average 

10          situation in the 52 counties is slightly 

11          worse than the situation was in New York City 

12          when this Legislature came to the rescue of 

13          New York City in 2009.  In other words, the 

14          average weighted caseload in our most recent 

15          upstate caseload report, 616 cases among 

16          institutional providers.  It was around 582, 

17          I believe, in New York City back in 2009.

18                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Two years 

19          ago we went to Washington, D.C., for the 

20          anniversary of Gideon, and we were deeply 

21          concerned about civil legal services as well.  

22          But just making sure that people who come to 

23          court are represented.  But we came back 

24          really looking at this thing and saying it's 


                                                                  480

 1          wonderful to have all these attorneys and 

 2          have all these laws on the books, but without 

 3          the case caps and some of the other pieces 

 4          that we've added to it, most of the attorneys 

 5          were showing up in court with a folder and 

 6          saying, "Plead out, because I don't have time 

 7          to study it.  You know, I just have a 

 8          caseload that's unbelievable."  

 9                 Are you telling me that that's what's 

10          going on now in the 52 counties?

11                 DIRECTOR LEAHY:  Back when I was 

12          serving in Massachusetts, I was quoted as 

13          saying that control of caseloads is a sine 

14          qua non of good representation.  You can't 

15          have good representation without controlled 

16          caseloads, no matter how good of a lawyer you 

17          are, no matter how much you care.  

18                 So your point is an excellent one.

19                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Right.  

20          Well, again, I just -- I would like to be 

21          sure that the fact that this budget is flat 

22          is going to give you, number one, what you 

23          need to satisfy Hurrell-Harring and, number 

24          two, that this level budget will not have a 


                                                                  481

 1          negative impact on your goals for 2015-2016.

 2                 DIRECTOR LEAHY:  Well, as I say, we 

 3          need help from the Legislature and we will 

 4          need help from the Governor at the table to 

 5          achieve some progress for the upstate 

 6          counties.  I mean, all that we have right 

 7          now -- in fact, we have the threat where some 

 8          counties -- we have 25 counties right now who 

 9          are participating in our Counsel at First 

10          Appearance Grant Program.  The three years of 

11          that program comes due at about the end of 

12          this year.  So we will be putting out a new 

13          RFP.  

14                 Now, there is $800,000 in the 

15          Governor's budget to protect the four out of 

16          the five lawsuit counties, to hold them 

17          harmless so that they don't -- they're 

18          participating in that, among the 25 counties, 

19          in that Counsel at Arraignment Program.  So 

20          if they were to be unsuccessful in their 

21          effort.

22                 But the point is there's only $4 

23          million in that fund.  And without support 

24          from the Legislature, we know that now -- now 


                                                                  482

 1          that all counties do understand -- they 

 2          didn't five years ago -- that there is a 

 3          legal right to representation.  This is not 

 4          just some liberal idea, this is the law, and 

 5          everybody knows it now.  And so we expect the 

 6          other 32 counties will be coming in.  So, you 

 7          know, the $4 million that's being used now, 

 8          not only does it only cover 25 counties, but 

 9          it only covers portions of those counties.  

10                 So the need is great.  I mean, we 

11          requested $8 million additional.  We know 

12          that economies can be made, and we're working 

13          with OCA to come up with a potential 

14          legislative solution that would allow for 

15          centralizing arraignments maybe in one or two 

16          locations in rural counties, rather than 30 

17          or 40, as at present.  Which I think 

18          everybody could get behind, and I think 

19          everybody would be enthusiastic about it.  

20                 It's -- and I think it is underway.  

21          We hope to have it here in this session.  But 

22          still, there's an undeniable cost to 

23          providing a lawyer at arraignment, just as 

24          there is with providing a lawyer anywhere.


                                                                  483

 1                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Thank you.  

 2          Thank you, Madam Chair.  

 3                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, Senator.  

 4                 And thank you, Director, for being 

 5          here today.  We truly appreciate it.

 6                 DIRECTOR LEAHY:  Thank you.

 7                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Our next speaker is 

 8          Robert Tembeckjian, the administrator of the 

 9          New York City office of the New York State 

10          Commission on Judicial Conduct.  

11                 Welcome, Administrator.  And my first 

12          question is, how badly did I butcher your 

13          name?  

14                 ADMINISTRATOR TEMBECKJIAN:  Yes, you 

15          pronounced it correctly.  You got it exactly 

16          right.

17                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Exactly right, wow.  

18          I'm happy to hear that.

19                 ADMINISTRATOR TEMBECKJIAN:  Yes, thank 

20          you.  My mother would be pleased if you'd 

21          come to dinner.

22                 I appreciate the opportunity to speak 

23          to the budget committee here about the 

24          Executive recommendation for the Commission 


                                                                  484

 1          on Judicial Conduct.

 2                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Could you pull your 

 3          mic a little bit closer, please?  Thank you.

 4                 ADMINISTRATOR TEMBECKJIAN:  Yes, happy 

 5          to.

 6                 As you know, the commission is created 

 7          in the State Constitution.  We are the entity 

 8          of government that is responsible for 

 9          enforcing judicial ethics on the 3500 members 

10          of the state judiciary.  We are not an 

11          executive agency, but our budget is submitted 

12          to the Legislature in the Executive Budget 

13          with a recommendation by the Governor so that 

14          the Judiciary would not be in a position to 

15          control the commission's budget.  That 

16          decision was made at the commission's 

17          inception about 40 years ago.

18                 For the sixth year in a row, the 

19          Executive Budget is recommending a flat 

20          budget for the commission, not one penny 

21          more.  Over the last six or seven years, the 

22          economies that we have been required to 

23          initiate in order to live within the 

24          constraints of the budget that has been 


                                                                  485

 1          recommended by the Governor, has resulted in 

 2          a reduction of our staff by about 18 percent, 

 3          from 55 authorized full-time employees to 45 

 4          actual full-time employees.  

 5                 Now, unlike any other Executive Budget 

 6          recommendation -- certainly if we're thinking 

 7          or talking about executive agency heads -- I 

 8          would not be in a position to come before you 

 9          and disagree with the Executive Budget 

10          recommendation.  But because the commission 

11          is an independent entity in the State 

12          Constitution, I can and I have in the past 

13          asked the Legislature for help where the 

14          Executive Budget has tended to treat us with 

15          some benign neglect.

16                 And the Legislature has come through.  

17          Three times since 2007, I have asked for help 

18          from the Legislature, and you have come 

19          through each time.  This will be the fourth 

20          time that I'm doing it.  I'm asking for an 

21          additional $186,000 so that we can maintain 

22          the status quo -- not have to reduce staff 

23          any further, not have to reduce our services 

24          any further in order to stay where we are 


                                                                  486

 1          now.

 2                 That number, it seems to me, pales in 

 3          significance to the overall State Budget, 

 4          certainly.  And it pales in significance 

 5          compared to what we have heard other agencies 

 6          testify as to what the Division of Budget is 

 7          able to do when they determine that agencies 

 8          ought to be helped in the Executive Budget to 

 9          fulfill their mission.

10                 The reduction in staff, the reduction 

11          is services has meant that it takes longer to 

12          discipline judges who are found guilty of 

13          misconduct, which is a disservice to the 

14          public interest, and it means that it takes 

15          longer for us to exonerate those judges who 

16          have been wrongly accused, which is 

17          disrespectful to the independence of the 

18          Judiciary and to the individual judges who 

19          have to endure investigation for longer 

20          periods than is right or fair.

21                 We're not asking for much.  And in an 

22          era when enhanced public interest has been 

23          demonstrated in ethics in government, with a 

24          commission that is arguably the most 


                                                                  487

 1          effective ethics enforcer in the state -- in 

 2          40 years the commission has handled over 

 3          52,000 complaints of misconduct, we have 

 4          initiated 10,000 preliminary inquiries, we 

 5          have conducted 8,000 full-fledged 

 6          investigations, and we have publicly 

 7          disciplined 801 judges, including 224 who 

 8          have been removed from office or publicly 

 9          stipulated to permanent resignation because 

10          of misconduct.  That is an exemplary record 

11          that is being threatened or challenged by 

12          inappropriately low levels of funding.

13                 As I said, I'm not asking for much 

14          help.  $186,000, which would bring our 

15          overall budget up to $5.77 million, is really 

16          a drop in the bucket Compared to the 

17          140-some-odd billion State Budget.  And in a 

18          time when revenue expenditures or revenue 

19          projections are going up, when executive 

20          agencies have been asked to limit their 

21          growth to 2 percent, the fact that we're not 

22          getting one penny more from the Executive 

23          Budget seems to me to be unfair, unnecessary, 

24          and unduly inhibiting our ability to fulfill 


                                                                  488

 1          our mission.

 2                 So again, as I have in the past -- 

 3          with success -- asked for your help, I'm 

 4          asking for it again here.  I don't think it 

 5          is too much or should be too difficult.  But 

 6          I am aware that there is a lot of competition 

 7          for, as high as it is, a relatively finite 

 8          amount of money.  And I'm hoping that the 

 9          Legislature will, as it has before, consider 

10          judicial ethics enforcement to be an 

11          important priority for the state.  And to 

12          augment with relatively little what we need 

13          to just keep the status quo and stop the 

14          growing backlog and the decline of our 

15          services.

16                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, 

17          Administrator Tembeckjian.  I said it right 

18          again, right --

19                 ADMINISTRATOR TEMBECKJIAN:  You're 

20          very welcome, Senator Young.  Thank you.

21                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  -- so two?  

22                 Senator Krueger.

23                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Thank you again for 

24          your testimony this year.  


                                                                  489

 1                 You're right, your ask seems so 

 2          minimal it's actually a little shocking that 

 3          you don't get the same formula percentage 

 4          increase that we're seeing for other 

 5          agencies.  So I empathize with your being 

 6          the, I guess, the orphan child --

 7                 ADMINISTRATOR TEMBECKJIAN:  The orphan 

 8          child, yes.  Exactly right.  

 9                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Exactly.  

10                 I'm just curious that we do keep 

11          increasing the number of judges in New York 

12          State, and many people who participate on 

13          these panels would argue we don't have enough 

14          of them yet.  If you were listening earlier 

15          today, there was much discussion about 

16          backlogs.  So it seems to me, by definition 

17          of having busier courts and more judges, on 

18          some formula there would be more complaints 

19          brought to you -- not necessarily because of 

20          the quality of our judges per se, but just 

21          statistically based on the potential for 

22          problems that need to be investigated and 

23          addressed.

24                 Can you tell me sort of where you are 


                                                                  490

 1          in relationship to a growth in the judiciary 

 2          over the last few years?  

 3                 ADMINISTRATOR TEMBECKJIAN:  Yes.  Last 

 4          year we received 1958 new complaints.  That 

 5          is the second highest in our history.  And at 

 6          the same time, our backlog grew at year end 

 7          by about 25 percent.  We went from 171 at the 

 8          end of 2014 to 204 at the end of last year.  

 9                 We have reduced our staff by one, 

10          again last year, as we had for the previous 

11          four years.  So that the number of judges is 

12          increasing, as you say, the number of 

13          complaints that we're receiving is 

14          increasing, but the resources are staying 

15          static.  

16                 As you know, a flat budget is really a 

17          cut.  If we need $186,000 just to meet our 

18          additional rent expenses and other 

19          contractual obligations, and don't get it, it 

20          means that we have to reduce our current 

21          budget, which is just a little under 

22          $5.6 million, by that $186,000.  Somehow I've 

23          got to find it.  And the only way we've been 

24          able to do that in the last five years has 


                                                                  491

 1          been through the attrition of staff, not 

 2          replacing some people who have left, or -- 

 3          and this is good budgeting -- when someone at 

 4          a senior level leaves, if we can replace them 

 5          with someone more junior and save some money 

 6          that way, we have always done that.  

 7                 But our workload is increasing, and 

 8          the time it's taking us to do that job is 

 9          also increasing because the budget is not 

10          proportionately increasing.

11                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Thank you very much 

12          for your work.

13                 ADMINISTRATOR TEMBECKJIAN:  Thank you, 

14          Senator.

15                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you very 

16          much.  I don't believe the Assembly has any 

17          questions for you.  So you did a very 

18          thorough job, Administrator Tembeckjian.

19                 ADMINISTRATOR TEMBECKJIAN:  Thank you 

20          very much.

21                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Now, I said it 

22          correctly I believe three times.

23                 ADMINISTRATOR TEMBECKJIAN:  Three for 

24          three, Senator, yeah.


                                                                  492

 1                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Does that qualify 

 2          me for a movie with that dinner?  

 3                 ADMINISTRATOR TEMBECKJIAN:  Breakfast, 

 4          lunch, and dinner.  One apiece. 

 5                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Okay, thank you 

 6          very much.

 7                 ADMINISTRATOR TEMBECKJIAN:  Thank you 

 8          very much.

 9                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  And thank you for 

10          being here today.

11                 Our next speaker -- and again, I'd 

12          like to remind people, just for the sake of 

13          time -- and I apologize, it's 6 o'clock 

14          now -- but we would welcome President Tom 

15          Mungeer, of the Police Benevolent Association 

16          of the New York State Troopers.  

17                 So thank you very much, and we look 

18          forward to what you have to say.  And we also 

19          appreciate you sticking with us for so long. 

20                 PRESIDENT MUNGEER:  Thank you, Madam 

21          Chair.  

22                 Distinguished members of the 

23          Legislature, it's an honor; this is my 

24          seventh year in a row addressing you.  I'm 


                                                                  493

 1          just going to hit some very quick points; I'm 

 2          sure you're relieved to hear that.

 3                 Listening to my superintendent, I'm 

 4          not privy to some of the stuff -- recent 

 5          conversations he had with Budget, but I am 

 6          relying on the Governor's Executive Budget in 

 7          regards to rifles and cars.  

 8                 This past year we've been through a 

 9          lot.  We went over it before with the Clinton 

10          County Dannemora prison break, the ratcheting 

11          up of terrorist threats.  There's never any 

12          lack of missions for my troopers to do.  On 

13          top of that, in the last 10 years I've 

14          suffered 18 line-of-duty deaths.  So it is a 

15          dangerous job.  And I appreciate everybody's 

16          support up here in the Legislature, giving us 

17          the necessary tools.

18                 Those tools, number one, are vehicles.  

19          The superintendent indicated that he should 

20          be fine with the replacement of the vehicles.  

21          Currently we have 50 percent of the vehicles 

22          that are over 100,000 miles; I do agree with 

23          him on that.  But in the Governor's Executive 

24          Budget, only $15 million was allocated to 


                                                                  494

 1          replace those vehicles.  

 2                 In my math, anyway, we're going to 

 3          need another $20 million.  I know that's kind 

 4          of shocking compared to the last guy, who 

 5          wanted $186,000.  But, you know, we're 

 6          looking for $20 million to bring it up and 

 7          replace these vehicles.  We're going from 

 8          high speeds of zero to 100, back down to 

 9          zero, all day.  And they do -- it's a lot of 

10          wear and tear.

11                 Other than that, manpower.  The last 

12          seven years I've harped that we need more 

13          manpower.  It's getting a lot better.  In the 

14          Governor's budget, there are allocation for 

15          210 bodies.  There is an academy class 

16          they're planning for next month.  But there 

17          is not enough for two classes.  Again, I'm 

18          not privy to the conversation the 

19          superintendent has had.  

20                 But, you know, it's absolutely 

21          necessary that we have two classes of at 

22          least 150 troopers to take care of the 

23          attrition and also the expanded duties that 

24          we're given every day.


                                                                  495

 1                 So thank you.

 2                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you very 

 3          much.  

 4                 Senator Gallivan.

 5                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Thank you, Madam 

 6          Chair.

 7                 Mr. President, welcome again.  Thanks 

 8          for the work that you and your members do.

 9                 PRESIDENT MUNGEER:  Thank you, 

10          Senator.

11                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  You touched -- the 

12          superintendent -- a number of us spoke with 

13          the superintendent, and his testimony spoke 

14          of the rifles and vehicles.  I would just ask 

15          that if you have follow-up with the 

16          superintendent, there appears to be a little 

17          bit of difference.  He did mention 

18          $30 million.  I don't know if that's from 

19          money that's in this year's budget somewhere 

20          else --

21                 PRESIDENT MUNGEER:  Yeah, I --

22                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  -- which is the 15 

23          you just mentioned.  But just -- if we need 

24          to do work on it, let's just be sure to 


                                                                  496

 1          follow up over the course of the next several 

 2          weeks as we go through the process.  

 3                 PRESIDENT MUNGEER:  I do have many 

 4          conversations with the superintendent in any 

 5          given week.  And again, what's black and 

 6          white is the $15 million.  Whatever 

 7          conversations he's had with budget, it is not 

 8          reflected in the Governor's Executive Budget.  

 9          So we have to, you know --

10                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Understood.  But he 

11          spoke fairly confidently that it was going to 

12          get done.  But we just want to make sure that 

13          it is done before we vote on a budget.

14                 PRESIDENT MUNGEER:  Absolutely.  

15          Absolutely.

16                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Thank you.

17                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  All set?  Well, I 

18          think we're all set.  But on behalf of me, I 

19          just want to say -- and my colleagues, I want 

20          to say how much we appreciate the jobs that 

21          your members do every single day, standing up 

22          and protecting the public.  They have very 

23          difficult circumstances sometimes, but 

24          they're professional, and we truly value what 


                                                                  497

 1          they do.

 2                 So thank you for being here.

 3                 PRESIDENT MUNGEER:  Thank you, Madam 

 4          Chair.

 5                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Our next speaker is 

 6          Christopher Quick, New York State Police 

 7          Investigators Association.

 8                 And behind President Quick is 

 9          President Mike Powers from NYSCOPBA.

10                 So good evening.  Welcome.

11                 PRESIDENT QUICK:  Good evening.  Thank 

12          you.  

13                 Good evening, Senators and 

14          Assemblymembers.  I am Christopher Quick, an 

15          investigator with the New York State Police, 

16          and I also serve as president of the New York 

17          State Police Investigators Association, 

18          otherwise known as NYSPIA.  NYSPIA is the 

19          employee union that represents 1,086 State 

20          Police senior investigators and investigators 

21          throughout the state.

22                 State Police investigators are 

23          assigned to stations or special details that 

24          are referred to as the Bureau of Criminal 


                                                                  498

 1          Investigation or BCI.  Our investigators work 

 2          on everything from larcenies, robberies, 

 3          burglaries, identity theft, sex crimes, and 

 4          homicides.  We also have investigators 

 5          assigned to special details, 

 6          including computer crimes, forensics, 

 7          narcotics, auto theft, dignitary protection, 

 8          special investigations, gaming, and 

 9          counterterrorism.

10                 The most public example of some of the 

11          work we do was our investigation into the 

12          escape of the two inmates from Clinton 

13          Correctional Facility this past June.  Our 

14          investigators worked around the clock for 

15          22 days, gathering and analyzing evidence 

16          that would ultimately lead to an end to the 

17          manhunt without a member of the public being 

18          harmed.

19                 Demand on the resources of the State 

20          Police, particularly investigators, has 

21          increased, whether it's to keep up with the 

22          background checks for casinos being built in 

23          New York State or keeping the public safe in 

24          the face of the changing world we live in, 


                                                                  499

 1          involving terrorism and mass attacks on the 

 2          public.  To ensure the safety of New Yorkers 

 3          and its visitors, we must have the proper 

 4          equipment and manpower.

 5                 One area in particular that is of 

 6          utmost importance is our aging fleet, as 

 7          you've heard earlier today, of our unmarked 

 8          vehicles.  The BCI fleet is currently 

 9          numbered at 1,177 vehicles.  There are 688 

10          vehicles with more 100,000 miles; that's 

11          58 percent of the BCI fleet.  There are 755 

12          vehicles that are seven years or older, and 

13          165 of them are 10 years or older.

14                 Due to the age of our fleet, we have 

15          experienced a number of mechanical, 

16          electrical, and structural damages to the 

17          vehicles, including brake lines rusting 

18          through, causing loss of brakes; loss of 

19          headlights due to electrical wiring that's 

20          become corroded; and rusting of integral 

21          structural components that make up the body 

22          or unibody of the vehicle.  The results could 

23          have been catastrophic to the member or the 

24          public or both.  We are lucky no one was 


                                                                  500

 1          injured, but it is a risk we should not have 

 2          to take.

 3                 Many of our investigators perform 

 4          undercover operations.  In these cases, our 

 5          investigators need to blend in with the 

 6          community, both in disguise and with their 

 7          vehicles.  These undercover operations can 

 8          range from drug surveillance to 

 9          counterterrorism investigations.  The 

10          criminal element does its homework, and many 

11          are aware of the type of undercover vehicles 

12          we typically use.  

13                 For that reason, we propose a pilot 

14          program to allow for the leasing of vehicles 

15          for these special details.  A leased vehicle 

16          will allow our investigators many more 

17          choices of diverse makes and models and, most 

18          importantly, non-police-type vehicles for 

19          undercover work.  

20                 Leasing vehicles will also help reduce 

21          the maintenance costs we currently 

22          experience.

23                 In addition to the desperate need for 

24          more unmarked vehicles, the Division of State 


                                                                  501

 1          Police must be made whole again in terms of 

 2          manpower in order to meet today's security 

 3          threats.  

 4                 Terrorism in the United States is on 

 5          the rise.  The Governor recognizes this and 

 6          has dedicated a significant uniform trooper 

 7          presence in New York City as a result.

 8                 Superintendent D'Amico has repeatedly 

 9          stressed and fought for the need to have 

10          recruit basic school classes at our academy 

11          to bolster the needs of the division.  We 

12          have not been able to keep up with the 

13          attrition.  

14                 We strongly urge this Legislature to 

15          ensure our investigators are safe, as well as 

16          the public, by adequately funding the 

17          Division of State Police to allow for the 

18          purchase of unmarked vehicles and other 

19          necessary safety equipment as well as funding 

20          new and regular academy classes so we can 

21          accomplish our core mission of protecting and 

22          serving the people of this great state.

23                 I appreciate your time in allowing me 

24          to give testimony, and I'm happy to answer 


                                                                  502

 1          any questions you may have.

 2                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.

 3                 Any questions?  Senator Gallivan.

 4                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Thank you, Madam 

 5          Chair.

 6                 Mr. President, thanks for your 

 7          testimony, for the work you do, and your 

 8          members as well. 

 9                 I want to focus on the cars.  We 

10          understand the message on manpower; it's been 

11          a consistent message along with the PBA and 

12          the superintendent.

13                 When the superintendent testified, the 

14          talk was about vehicles in general, without a 

15          breakdown between marked cars and unmarked 

16          vehicles.  Is it your understanding -- if you 

17          know at all -- when the superintendent was 

18          talking about the plan to replace cars, that 

19          that included all vehicles?  Or was he just 

20          talking marked vehicles?

21                 PRESIDENT QUICK:  No, he included 

22          officers' vehicles.  And once the officer 

23          vehicles that are unmarked, that would be the 

24          remedy to push the cars down the line into 


                                                                  503

 1          the back rooms and special details.

 2                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Have you had 

 3          conversations with him as -- the plan that he 

 4          put forward, is it adequate to meet the needs 

 5          of your members?

 6                 PRESIDENT QUICK:  Can you repeat that 

 7          again?

 8                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  When the 

 9          superintendent testified about his plan over 

10          the next year or two to replace those 

11          vehicles, does that satisfy the needs of your 

12          investigators?  The plan that he put forward.

13                 PRESIDENT QUICK:  It does.  And the 

14          consideration of leasing the unmarked cars, 

15          that would give a more diverse choice, would 

16          be an instant remedy to get more cars into 

17          the field right away, versus ordering a fleet 

18          of cars and waiting six months down the road.

19                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Understood.  Thank 

20          you.

21                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.

22                 The Assembly?

23                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  We're good.  

24          Thank you.  


                                                                  504

 1                 PRESIDENT QUICK:  Thank you.

 2                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Well, thank you, 

 3          President, again.  Please extend our 

 4          gratitude to your members.

 5                 PRESIDENT QUICK:  Thank you.

 6                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  And thank you for 

 7          being here today.

 8                 Next up we have President Mike Powers, 

 9          New York State Correctional Officers And 

10          Police Benevolent Association.  

11                 Welcome, President.

12                 PRESIDENT POWERS:  Thank you, Madam 

13          Chair.

14                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Could you introduce 

15          the people joining you today?

16                 PRESIDENT POWERS:  I will.  To my left 

17          is Executive Vice President Tammy Sawchuck.

18                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Welcome.

19                 PRESIDENT POWERS:  To my right is the 

20          Northern Region Vice President Chris Hansen.

21                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Great.  Thank you 

22          for being here.

23                 PRESIDENT POWERS:  And in the interest 

24          of time and your lengthy agenda here, we'll 


                                                                  505

 1          be quick.

 2                 Good afternoon, Assemblyman Farrell, 

 3          Senator Young, and esteemed members of the 

 4          fiscal committees.  Thank you for allowing me 

 5          the opportunity to speak today on behalf of 

 6          my entire membership regarding the Governor's 

 7          proposed budget for the upcoming fiscal year.  

 8                 My name is Michael Powers, and I have 

 9          the privilege of serving as president of the 

10          New York State Correctional Officers & Police 

11          Benevolent Association, known as NYSCOPBA. 

12                 Among other titles, NYSCOPBA 

13          represents approximately 20,000 dedicated 

14          correctional officers and sergeants who are 

15          charged with maintaining the care, custody 

16          and control of our state's prison population, 

17          a thankless job that is becoming more 

18          dangerous each year.  

19                 I'll begin by stating the obvious. 

20          Since we visited with you a year ago, the 

21          correctional system in New York State has 

22          faced the greatest challenge in its recent 

23          history.  Of course I'm talking about the 

24          escape at the Clinton Correctional Facility 


                                                                  506

 1          last June.  We are all waiting for the 

 2          inspector general to complete her 

 3          investigation -- an investigation, we trust, 

 4          that will not only reveal the specific facts 

 5          associated with the escape, but will also 

 6          address the root causes of such a breakdown 

 7          in one of the most critical institutions in 

 8          our society, namely our correctional 

 9          facilities.  

10                 When that investigation is complete 

11          and we have had time to thoroughly digest its 

12          findings and conclusions, I can assure you 

13          that NYSCOPBA will clearly, forcefully and 

14          frequently share its recommendations for how 

15          New York's correctional system can be 

16          improved.  

17                 NYSCOPBA can do this because of the 

18          working knowledge its members have of our 

19          correctional system.  We have shared these 

20          recommendations with this administration and 

21          with prior administrations, and we will 

22          continue to do so until the one goal of every 

23          corrections advocate, regardless of political 

24          or ideological persuasion, has been achieved.  


                                                                  507

 1          That goal is the dramatic reduction in 

 2          violence that afflicts inmates and staff 

 3          alike within the walls of New York's 

 4          correctional facilities.  

 5                 Some of you may remember our testimony 

 6          from last year.  For the first time, we 

 7          presented visual displays of the amount of 

 8          violence that afflicts New York's 

 9          correctional system.  Sadly, I am duty bound 

10          to share an even more troubling display than 

11          we provided last year.  

12                 According to data gathered by the 

13          Department of Corrections and Community 

14          Supervision, inmate-on-inmate assaults grew 

15          by 6 percent in 2015 and are up 47 percent 

16          from their recent low-water-mark of 2009.  

17                 Inmate-on-staff assaults grew by 20 

18          percent last year, and are up more than 70 

19          percent from the recent low in 2012.  

20                 There's also an explosion in the 

21          amount of contraband in the correctional 

22          system, up nearly 24 percent from just the 

23          prior year.  

24                 Unfortunately, we are not aware of any 


                                                                  508

 1          data on the amount of K2 or other drugs 

 2          possessed by inmates.  But anecdotal evidence 

 3          and the contraband data suggest that they are 

 4          rampant in most, if not all, facilities.  

 5                 Let me remind you that this alarming 

 6          rise in assaults and confiscation of 

 7          contraband have been occurring while the 

 8          inmate population has been falling by more 

 9          than 5 percent.  

10                 Let me also repeat that it is our 

11          belief that no one supports the more violent 

12          system depicted by these graphs.  We just do 

13          not agree on the root causes of this epidemic 

14          or how to reverse it.  

15                 I would like to clearly and concisely 

16          state what the dedicated professionals of 

17          NYSCOPBA believe.  We believe it takes 

18          resources to effectively provide care, 

19          custody and control of inmates.  This is 

20          especially true because a larger percentage 

21          of the inmates inhabiting correctional 

22          facilities -- nearly 2 out of 3 -- have been 

23          convicted of violent felonies.  

24                 It is also the case that inmates that 


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 1          were originally assigned to maximum-security 

 2          facilities based on the nature of their 

 3          conviction have been reshuffled to 

 4          medium-security facilities to address 

 5          overcrowding at the maximum-security 

 6          prisons -- overcrowding, I should mention, 

 7          that still exists today.  

 8                 The necessary resources I just 

 9          mentioned come in the form of a sufficient 

10          number of regularly and uniformly trained 

11          corrections officers outfitted with equipment 

12          that enables them to both do their job and 

13          return home safely to their family each 

14          night.  

15                 While we are encouraged by the 

16          increase in correctional officer positions 

17          that have been filled in the current fiscal 

18          year, we have not yet reached a staffing 

19          ratio that allows posts critical to the 

20          safety of inmates and staff to remain open as 

21          their security plan dictates.  

22                 Meaningful training is not regularly 

23          available once a corrections officer leaves 

24          the academy.  All too often what is provided 


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 1          does not focus on the tools and techniques 

 2          corrections officers need to provide security 

 3          to a facility.  

 4                 While we are encouraged by the 

 5          additional money proposed in this budget for 

 6          better equipment at Clinton and certain other 

 7          facilities, in many cases the equipment 

 8          correction officers rely on is embarrassingly 

 9          outdated and inadequate.  And we are not 

10          talking about high-tech devices you may see 

11          in the movies; we're talking about basic 

12          needs such as flashlights, batons, radios, 

13          vehicles and the like.  

14                 NYSCOPBA has articulated its stance on 

15          these critical issues frequently and 

16          consistently at hearings like this and 

17          through official channels like 

18          labor-management meetings at both the state 

19          and facility levels.  All too often, the 

20          response has been a polite acknowledgement 

21          but no meaningful follow-through by the 

22          department.  

23                 NYSCOPBA hopes that the release of the 

24          inspector general's report will spur 


                                                                  511

 1          meaningful and concerted action to reform a 

 2          correctional system that had already been in 

 3          crisis prior to June of 2015 -- a crisis that 

 4          no one can now deny.  

 5                 The men and women of NYSCOPBA, each of 

 6          whom walks the toughest beat in law 

 7          enforcement, as Senator Nozzolio often 

 8          states, remain committed to such reform.  

 9                 Thank you again for the opportunity to 

10          share our views.  We'll do our best to answer 

11          any questions you may have.

12                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, 

13          President Powers.

14                 Senator Gallivan.

15                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Thank you, Madam 

16          Chair.

17                 Mr. President, thanks for your 

18          testimony, the work that you and of course 

19          all of your members do.

20                 We all acknowledge that this past year 

21          has been a challenging year.  I sense some of 

22          the frustration in your voice that we share 

23          while we all wait for that inspector general 

24          report.


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 1                 I know that you sat through 

 2          Commissioner Annucci's testimony.  There was 

 3          talk about resources, there was talk about -- 

 4          certainly an emphasis on safety and security 

 5          in facilities.  I actually talked with him 

 6          about the same data that you made reference 

 7          to in your testimony here, and he 

 8          acknowledged that, and that something has to 

 9          be done.

10                 But nonetheless, he outlined some 

11          things in his testimony, focusing on 

12          technological enhancements, training 

13          improvements and policy changes.  The one 

14          thing that we did not talk about, we did not 

15          talk about the proper classification of 

16          inmates.  And I recognize that, point noted, 

17          and I share that concern.

18                 But nonetheless, as he talked about 

19          the technological enhancements, training 

20          improvements, policy changes, he mentioned a 

21          number of different things, like expanded use 

22          of canine units, elimination of metal 

23          containers and such.  What other things do 

24          you think need to be done that he did not 


                                                                  513

 1          mention, to ensure that our facilities are 

 2          safe and secure for everybody?

 3                 PRESIDENT POWERS:  Through much of our 

 4          communication with the department and the 

 5          administration, much of our concerns are 

 6          actual posts.  While we recognize a rise in 

 7          our staffing levels -- which still has quite 

 8          a ways to go to balance out and to be 

 9          effective in the field -- what we're lacking 

10          are actual posts in our facilities.  We have 

11          an issue with post closings and actual posts 

12          in the facilities and the staff to staff it.  

13          That's just one of many things.  

14                 You know, he mentioned new technology 

15          and --

16                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Can we stay with 

17          the posts for a minute?  So post closings I 

18          understand.  When you say posts, do you mean 

19          that there are posts that you believe should 

20          exist that do not?

21                 PRESIDENT POWERS:  Yes.  And with -- 

22          the post closings, as you're familiar with, 

23          create breaches in security in the facility.

24                 If I can give you an example real 


                                                                  514

 1          quick here, and for something for you to 

 2          understand, as you look outside of this hall 

 3          and you recognize the men's room on the other 

 4          side of this wall over here, and the angle at 

 5          which that hall juts and comes down -- if the 

 6          men's room or the hallway down at the end of 

 7          the hall was an area of recreation, and that 

 8          post was closed and we didn't have a staff 

 9          member in there, you can see the blind spot 

10          from the front of this, the entrance of this 

11          hall.  And then as we come down the hall, we 

12          don't have security staff there.  

13                 And that could be a viable post.  I 

14          mean, and sometimes those posts get closed.  

15          And that's where the staff comes in to be 

16          able to allow us to staff those positions in 

17          some of the blind spots in our facilities.

18                 EX. VICE PRES. SAWCHUCK:  What 

19          President Powers is saying is that you could 

20          give us a hundred new correction officers, 

21          but if you close a hundred posts, we've 

22          gained nothing.

23                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  No, I understand 

24          about the post closings.  What I wanted to 


                                                                  515

 1          understand better was the existence of -- 

 2          your belief that additional posts should 

 3          exist.

 4                 Now, I'm assuming that -- I think I 

 5          understand correctly that that becomes part 

 6          of the staffing security analysis that you 

 7          have the opportunity to weigh in on?

 8                 PRESIDENT POWERS:  We do.  We do.  

 9          We've -- and as Tammy was alluding, we've 

10          seen an increase in items, officers, but 

11          we're not seeing the posts that are critical 

12          in our facilities.

13                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Would you be able 

14          to follow up and be more specific for the 

15          various facilities?  I mean -- I don't mean 

16          today, but --

17                 PRESIDENT POWERS:  Absolutely.

18                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  -- like going 

19          through the facilities --

20                 PRESIDENT POWERS:  Be happy to share 

21          that with you.  With anybody, of course.

22                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  -- the things that 

23          you think should exist that don't.

24                 There was some discussion with the 


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 1          commissioner about the renaming, 

 2          restructuring of the Office of Special 

 3          Investigations.  What are your thoughts about 

 4          that?

 5                 PRESIDENT POWERS:  I know they had 

 6          their issues a while back.  I believe those 

 7          issues still exist.  We have our own concerns 

 8          with OSI.  We realize that it's new and they 

 9          may be feeling their way, but that doesn't 

10          stop the day-to-day operations that we have.

11                 You know, they talk of new plans and 

12          implementation, yet they discipline us 

13          towards the old style, so to speak.  We're 

14          coming in, thanks to a lot of our 

15          intervention and a lot of our barking, if you 

16          will, to the department to implement new 

17          changes, and we're starting to see some of 

18          that.  But we're being treated as if we're 

19          the old guard, so to speak, and it's becoming 

20          an issue for us.  And it's coming through 

21          timeliness, through disciplines towards 

22          staff, and towards the lack of discipline, 

23          sometimes, to deter criminal activity in our 

24          correctional settings.


                                                                  517

 1                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Is it your opinion 

 2          or do you have any thoughts on whether or not 

 3          the so-called internal affairs, for lack of a 

 4          better way of saying it, should be run by the 

 5          department?  Or should there be separate 

 6          outside oversight, as some have proposed?  If 

 7          you have thoughts.

 8                 PRESIDENT POWERS:  We provide care, 

 9          custody and control.  You know, we're charged 

10          with providing that.  We have our issues, we 

11          share them with the department.  And in the 

12          interim, until we either get the fair shake 

13          that we just rightly deserve, then we'll 

14          decide whether or not we proceed forward with 

15          any of our concerns.

16                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Fair enough.  Thank 

17          you.

18                 PRESIDENT POWERS:  Thank you.

19                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, Senator.

20                 Anyone on the Assembly side?

21                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  We're good.

22                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Senator Nozzolio.

23                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Thank you very 

24          much, Madam Chair.  


                                                                  518

 1                 President Powers, always good to see 

 2          you.  Thank you for the work that your 

 3          members do each and every day to keep us 

 4          safe.

 5                 PRESIDENT POWERS:  Thank you.

 6                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  That's not said 

 7          enough.  I appreciate you quoting me in 

 8          the -- I hope those words live forever.  The 

 9          fact is, you do walk the toughest law 

10          enforcement beat in America.  Your members 

11          are put in harm's way each and every day, 

12          each and every hour of every day, with 

13          nothing much to protect them other than their 

14          wits and your abilities.

15                 There's $47 million of capital money 

16          in the State Budget proposal by Governor 

17          Cuomo to reflect the settlement with the 

18          special housing -- the SHU settlement, the 

19          special housing.  That NYSCOPBA and I worked 

20          very closely when I had Senator Gallivan's 

21          responsibilities, closely on the issue of 

22          establishing different special housing for 

23          those mentally ill inmates.  

24                 And I must say, NYSCOPBA was terrific 


                                                                  519

 1          in ensuring the seamless transition of that 

 2          very major program in our state correctional 

 3          facilities.  It wasn't easy, but major 

 4          expenditures -- down at Auburn, down at even 

 5          Five Points, who didn't have that type of 

 6          facility constructed.  

 7                 Tell us what types of anticipated 

 8          concerns or protocols, procedures, safety 

 9          issues that you see in the development of 

10          this new settlement.  And just to preface 

11          that question with a statement, that I 

12          understand what special housing has been.  

13          It's been to, in many cases -- certainly in 

14          some cases to discipline, but in many cases 

15          to ensure the protection of the inmate, so an 

16          inmate who may have needed special housing.

17                 Tell me what this new settlement looks 

18          to develop.

19                 PRESIDENT POWERS:  Well, thank you for 

20          the acknowledgment.  We consider ourselves 

21          the best in the nation in this line of law 

22          enforcement.  And it's a good question, and 

23          I'm glad you asked, because quite frankly 

24          you're the only one that's asked us.


                                                                  520

 1                 And with that being said, you know, 

 2          minus the mental health aspect -- and the 

 3          commissioner mentioned, I believe, 18 percent 

 4          of the population has mental health issues.  

 5          And the NYCLU settlement addresses that quite 

 6          well.  But from a disciplinary standpoint, 

 7          when you take out the mental health issue, 

 8          from a disciplinary standpoint and an 

 9          operational standpoint in the Department of 

10          Corrections and Community Supervision, to 

11          keep the facilities operating in a timely 

12          fashion, these -- these -- this new 

13          settlement has -- doesn't have a deterrent to 

14          criminal activity.

15                 And there's plenty of criminal 

16          activity inside the walls and fences of our 

17          correctional facilities.  And I'm not to say 

18          that -- you know, a majority of them go to 

19          program, go to -- you know, they're looking 

20          for their rehabilitation process.  But we 

21          have a small factor, and that factor that 

22          comes into play, that acts out criminally, 

23          doesn't have the deterrent anymore after a 

24          short SHU sentence or a -- or a longer one, 


                                                                  521

 1          to come back out and modify his behavior or 

 2          her behavior from that aspect.

 3                 I believe Tammy could speak a bit on 

 4          it as well, as she was a supervisor in a SHU 

 5          for many years and we -- you know, I mean, we 

 6          have our concerns with it, but we implement 

 7          it, we'll roll it out, because we are the 

 8          best at what we do.  And, you know, we'll 

 9          work with it.  We'll have to wait and see.

10                 I mean, in 2014 the interim 

11          stipulation settlement that was agreed to in 

12          the NYCLU case didn't significantly drop the 

13          numbers of acts of violence in our 

14          facilities.  I mean, with the reintroduction 

15          of heroin and the introduction of K2 and the 

16          epidemic of K2, that the -- even the 

17          commissioner acknowledges has created a very 

18          violent workplace.  And it's created a -- 

19          a -- a mode of behavior that doesn't have a 

20          deterrent to bad behavior.

21                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Do you think 

22          that -- this proposal, are you suggesting, 

23          will basically eliminate, significantly 

24          reduce, at best, the deterrent factor in 


                                                                  522

 1          terms of inmate discipline?

 2                 PRESIDENT POWERS:  I'm sorry, could 

 3          you repeat that?

 4                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  This settlement, 

 5          this proposal to construct additional -- to 

 6          retrofit the housing, taking -- you believe 

 7          it takes away the deterrent tool of -- that 

 8          exists today for deterrence --

 9                 PRESIDENT POWERS:  Yes.

10                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  -- with special 

11          housing?

12                 PRESIDENT POWERS:  Yes.

13                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  So that -- how -- 

14          to those who haven't worked in our 

15          correctional facilities, what does that mean?

16                 PRESIDENT POWERS:  If there's a 

17          criminal act that takes place in the 

18          correctional setting -- I'll give you an 

19          example.  If we suspect somebody of using a 

20          narcotic inside the facility, and we test 

21          them for that narcotic, there's usually a -- 

22          you know, there could be a confinement, they 

23          could be confined from their programs, 

24          confined from recreation, confined from 


                                                                  523

 1          certain privileges that they get.  Not 

 2          necessarily visitation or anything 

 3          family-related; they still have 

 4          correspondence and everything with that.  But 

 5          from a privilege inside the facility, they 

 6          could lose that.

 7                 That's being modified significantly at 

 8          this point with this settlement.  And that is 

 9          not -- we'll continue to see the action.  If 

10          an individual didn't submit to the urine 

11          sample and the urinalysis, then the penalty's 

12          not there anymore.  So, you know, is there a 

13          deterrent for drug use?  No.

14                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Very difficult 

15          situation going to be made worse.

16                 PRESIDENT POWERS:  Makes it extremely 

17          difficult for our front-line staff.

18                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  My time is long 

19          since up.  Thank you very, very much for your 

20          work and your testimony.

21                 PRESIDENT POWERS:  Thank you.  Thank 

22          you for your service to the people of the 

23          State of New York.  And best wishes.

24                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, Senator.


                                                                  524

 1                 And thank you, President Powers and 

 2          all of you for what you do for us on behalf 

 3          of the people of New York State to keep us 

 4          safe every single day.  We appreciate you 

 5          very much.  So thank you.

 6                 PRESIDENT POWERS:  Thank you for your 

 7          time.

 8                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  Thank you.  

 9                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Our next speaker is 

10          President Patrick J. Lynch, New York City 

11          Patrolmen's Benevolent Association.  

12                 Welcome, President Lynch.  It's great 

13          to see you again.  

14                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Thank you.  Good to 

15          be with you.

16                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  So happy you can 

17          join us.  I'm sorry this is a marathon, not a 

18          sprint today, but we're getting there.

19                 Could you please introduce the 

20          gentlemen at the table with you?

21                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Sure.  To my left is 

22          Mubarak Abdul-Jabbar, he's our second vice 

23          president in the PBA.  And our counsel, 

24          Michael Murray.


                                                                  525

 1                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you very 

 2          much.  

 3                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  And also the people 

 4          that do the work, actually -- behind me is 

 5          John Nutholtz {ph} and Valerie Dabas in the 

 6          gallery.

 7                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Great.  Welcome to 

 8          each and every one of you, and we look 

 9          forward to your testimony today.

10                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Thanks very much.

11                 Good evening, Senators and 

12          Assemblymembers.  Thank you for the 

13          opportunity to testify.  

14                 In the interests of time, I will 

15          summarize the written remarks that I've 

16          submitted on to the record, and I know it's 

17          been a long day of testimony for all of you.

18                 As many of you may know, New York City 

19          police officers have made extraordinary gains 

20          in restoring our city's public safety over 

21          the past 25 years.  This renaissance has been 

22          tremendously important to New York City's 

23          economic vitality, to its fiscal health, and 

24          by extension to the health of New York State 


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 1          as a whole.  

 2                 Unfortunately, we're not currently 

 3          receiving the support we need to maintain 

 4          these public safety gains.  To help remedy 

 5          this situation, we respectfully request your 

 6          support for the following initiatives in the 

 7          budget process and also in the legislative 

 8          session.

 9                 One priority is the three-year 

10          extension of the Taylor Law's interest 

11          arbitration provisions, which is included in 

12          the Governorís Executive Budget.  As you may 

13          know, the Taylor Lawís impasse resolution 

14          process represents New York City police 

15          officers' only recourse in the face of the 

16          city's long-standing refusal to pay us at a 

17          rate even approaching our local and national 

18          counterparts.  Our salaries have fallen 

19          30 percent or more behind our counterparts in 

20          comparable local jurisdictions, largely due 

21          to the one-sided bargaining environment and 

22          skewed impasse resolution process that we 

23          faced throughout the 1990s.

24                 This Legislature attempted to help 


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 1          close that gap when it granted the PBA the 

 2          right to resolve impasses under the Taylor 

 3          Law in 1998.  Nearly two decades later, 

 4          however, we remain in virtually the same 

 5          uncompetitive position as we were under the 

 6          previous administration's regime, for several 

 7          reasons.

 8                 One glaring issue is the complete lack 

 9          of codified ethical standards for neutral 

10          arbitrators.  Given the current scrutiny on 

11          public officials and police officers at all 

12          levels of government, it is especially 

13          important for taxpayers and public employees 

14          to be able to trust that the arbitration 

15          process is unbiased.  We are therefore 

16          seeking legislation to establish a code of 

17          conduct for arbitrators in Taylor Law 

18          proceedings, modeled on the ethical codes 

19          already in widespread use in other private- 

20          and public-sector arbitrations.

21                 The second item of concern:  Our 

22          current lack of training and equipment 

23          necessary to counter the type of 

24          active-shooter style and terrorist attacks 


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 1          that we've recently witnessed, unfortunately, 

 2          in Paris, San Bernardino, and other places.

 3                 Law enforcement best practices now 

 4          dictate that the first police officers on the 

 5          scene of an active-shooter incident, usually 

 6          a police officer on routine patrol, must 

 7          immediately engage the attacker to minimize 

 8          any further casualties.  According to a 

 9          report by the Public Executive Research 

10          Forum, PERF, one-third of police officers who 

11          attempt to stop an active shooter alone are 

12          shot by that attacker.

13                 New York City police officers on 

14          patrol are currently equipped with only a 

15          .9mm handgun and basic ballistic restraint 

16          vests that provide no protection from a 

17          high-powered rifle round.  In this respect, 

18          the NYPD lags behind many other law 

19          enforcement agencies nationwide, which 

20          already train and equip their patrol officers 

21          with long guns, ballistic helmets and 

22          enhanced body armor. 

23                 The Governor has also requested 

24          funding for similar equipment and training 


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 1          for all New York State troopers in his 

 2          Executive Budget.  We believe that the police 

 3          officers who patrol our nationís top terror 

 4          target must be similarly trained and 

 5          equipped.  We will therefore be asking and 

 6          seeking legislation that will provide a 

 7          mandate for the NYPD to equip every New York 

 8          City police officer with an Anti-Terrorism 

 9          Response Kit of the type I have just 

10          outlined, and provide training in advanced 

11          counterterrorism tactics.

12                 The third item of concern:  Our city 

13          and our state's moral obligation to provide 

14          for police officers who are disabled in the 

15          line of duty.  That obligation is not being 

16          met for New York City police officers hired 

17          after July 1, 2009, under the Tier 3 pension 

18          plan.  Although they face the same dangers as 

19          their more senior colleagues, they are 

20          subject to a reduced accident disability 

21          benefit that would not allow them to feed or 

22          care for their families if they are disabled 

23          on the job.  They are the only police 

24          officers in the state who face this unjust 


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 1          situation.

 2                 Simply put, it is not in the public 

 3          interest for police officers to ask 

 4          themselves whether they can risk their 

 5          families' financial future by going into 

 6          harms way.   We are therefore calling upon 

 7          the Legislature to establish a statewide 

 8          minimum standard for police officers' 

 9          accident disability benefits that will 

10          equalize those benefits for New York City 

11          police officers in Tier 3.

12                 The issues I've just outlined 

13          represent our members' top concerns heading 

14          into the budget cycle, but there are many 

15          other issues that we'll want to address as 

16          the legislative session moves forward.  

17                 I thank you once again for your time 

18          and your consideration of my testimony.  A 

19          longer version has been submitted.  I 

20          appreciate the opportunity to testify here 

21          today.

22                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Senator Diane 

23          Savino.

24                 SENATOR SAVINO:  Thank you, Senator 


                                                                  531

 1          Krueger.

 2                 Good afternoon, President Lynch.

 3                 As you know, I was the sponsor of the 

 4          bill that was unfortunately vetoed by 

 5          Governor Paterson in 2009, I think it is now.  

 6          Last year we attempted to resolve the 

 7          situation, but we ran into a roadblock with 

 8          the City Council of the City of New York who 

 9          decided that they couldn't provide us a home 

10          rule message.  

11                 Are we making any progress with the 

12          council with respect to that?  

13                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  No, we've made no 

14          progress whatsoever with both sides of City 

15          Hall, whether the City Council or the Mayor's 

16          Office as well.

17                 SENATOR SAVINO:  So they still remain 

18          obstinate about this issue?

19                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Absolutely, every 

20          step of the way.  

21                 SENATOR SAVINO:  And since the veto of 

22          the Tier 2 extender, can you tell me how many 

23          New York City police and firefighters are 

24          currently affected by that veto?  


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 1                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  We have, just in the 

 2          NYPD, we have upwards of 10,000 younger New 

 3          York City police officers on patrol who are 

 4          covered under Tier 3.

 5                 SENATOR SAVINO:  How many of them have 

 6          been injured on the job since then?

 7                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  That exact number I 

 8          can get you.  But as we go through that 

 9          number, just the risk itself has an effect on 

10          every police officer.

11                 SENATOR SAVINO:  Right.

12                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  If you have a more 

13          senior police officer like myself in a radio 

14          car who's covered by Tier 3, and my partner 

15          sitting next to me is Tier 3, it's unfair 

16          that we both go into the same job, face the 

17          same risk, but unfortunately, if we're 

18          disabled together, I'll be able to take care 

19          of my family on into the future but my 

20          partner won't be able to do that, under 

21          Tier 3.  

22                 SENATOR SAVINO:  I really would be 

23          interested in finding out the number of 

24          officers that have been injured that are now 


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 1          facing this financial burden.

 2                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  I've heard that --

 3                 SENATOR SAVINO:  You don't have to 

 4          give it to me today, but it will be helpful 

 5          in us pushing this -- what is really an 

 6          unfair situation.

 7                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  I'm looking forward 

 8          to getting you that information.

 9                 SENATOR SAVINO:  Thank you.  

10                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Thank you, Senator.

11                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Evening.  

12                 Assembly?  

13                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  Thank you, 

14          Senator.  We will hear from Assemblymember 

15          O'Donnell.

16                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Thank you for 

17          staying around.  

18                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Good evening.  

19          Thanks.  

20                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  You sound like 

21          a true New Yorker, may I say, and you spoke 

22          very quickly.  So I wanted to just ask one 

23          quick question.  

24                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Sure.


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 1                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  You said in 

 2          the beginning that you are compensated at 

 3          less of a level than comparable other 

 4          officers, so I'm curious to know what you 

 5          meant by comparable.  Do you mean compared to 

 6          Boston or Philadelphia?  Do you mean compared 

 7          to Westchester or Nassau?  What did you mean?  

 8                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Actually, both.  

 9                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Okay.

10                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  When you compare us 

11          across the country, both locally and 

12          nationally, we're 30 percent behind.  All 

13          those --

14                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  So you're 

15          30 percent behind what they pay in 

16          Washington, D.C., and Philadelphia and 

17          Boston?  

18                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  The exact numbers I 

19          can get you.  But when you average it 

20          nationally across the country as well as 

21          locally, we're 30 percent behind.  

22          Absolutely.

23                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  But there's 

24          nothing really we can do about that, right?  


                                                                  535

 1          That's a negotiation between you folks and 

 2          the City of New York -- 

 3                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Yeah.

 4                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  -- and whoever 

 5          the mayor and City Council happen to be at 

 6          the time, right? 

 7                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  What's important, 

 8          though, in what we're asking, is that be a 

 9          code within the arbitration process.  First, 

10          that we -- 

11                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  I understood 

12          you very clearly.  I'm just trying to get to 

13          the money part.

14                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Sure.

15                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  The money part 

16          is -- there's nothing here in the State 

17          Capitol that can really be done to address 

18          the money part.  It's your own negotiation 

19          with the collective bargaining agreement with 

20          the City of New York; correct?  

21                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Right.  And what we 

22          can do is encourage the city to reasonably 

23          negotiate, which they haven't.  They rely on 

24          a negotiation that says pattern bargaining, 


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 1          one size fits all.  And as we know, whether 

 2          it's a pair of gloves or it's negotiation, 

 3          one size never fits all.  

 4                 So what you should do at the 

 5          bargaining table is negotiate to solve 

 6          problems on both sides.  

 7                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Right.

 8                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Pattern bargaining 

 9          doesn't do that.  So our only recourse is to 

10          go to the Taylor Law, to go to arbitration in 

11          that process.

12                 So first we need to make sure that law 

13          gets re-signed, and then we want to add some 

14          fairness and ethics into that process as 

15          well.

16                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  I didn't mean 

17          for you to slow down.  I heard you the first 

18          time.

19                 (Laughter.)

20                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Speak as slow 

21          or as quickly as you want.  

22                 I just want to say that I have 

23          extraordinarily good working relationships  

24          with the 2-4 and 2-6 in my district, and I 


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 1          thank you for being here and for your 

 2          service.

 3                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  And thank you for 

 4          being a voice for us.

 5                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Senator Michael 

 6          Nozzolio.

 7                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Thank you,  

 8          Senator.  

 9                 President Lynch, it's good to see you 

10          again.

11                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Thank you, Senator.

12                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Thank you for your 

13          cogent testimony.

14                 A big surprise that for all that we 

15          have been through as a city, a state -- all 

16          our cities are going through today, with 

17          New York City being blessed with the most 

18          professional police force possible -- but 

19          it's a shock to hear of the lack of tools 

20          that you have on the front lines.  

21                 Tell us, is the administration doing 

22          anything to heighten the awareness of -- this 

23          is a serious homeland security issue.  It's 

24          one that the federal government should be 


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 1          invested in.  Tell us about any discussions 

 2          you've had on that score.

 3                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Sure.  Our concern 

 4          is this.  In any active shooter-style 

 5          incident -- and we see from the attacks that 

 6          we've had, they can happen anyplace, at any 

 7          time.  It can happen in a cafe, it can happen 

 8          in a mall in one of our boroughs, or the 

 9          subway system as well.  So the first police 

10          officer that will respond to that attack or 

11          that 911 call will be a local police officer 

12          on patrol, what we call our sector police 

13          officers.  When they respond, they're going 

14          to respond with bullet-resistant vests that 

15          are basic, and a .9-millimeter weapon.  

16                 What we need to do is have an 

17          anti-terrorism kit.  Now, what the department 

18          has done is grown those different departments 

19          within our agency, but they're not the first 

20          ones to respond.  We need to be able to 

21          respond and neutralize that attack 

22          immediately, the first police officer on the 

23          scene.  

24                 For instance, if you looked in the 


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 1          films of San Bernardino tragedy, when the 

 2          attack happened, you had police officers 

 3          respond.  The local sector cars, police 

 4          officers on patrol, responded.  They had long 

 5          guns, ballistic helmets, and ballistic vests.  

 6          And then the specialized units -- what we 

 7          call emergency service, many know as SWAT -- 

 8          they responded.  But we were able to protect 

 9          ourselves as we went in to stop that attack 

10          right from the get-go.  

11                 In New York City, the local police 

12          officer in your precinct, in your 

13          neighborhood, will respond and unfortunately 

14          most likely will be shot, because we're not 

15          equipped to be able to hold off that -- the 

16          specialized unit, they come later, they're -- 

17          minutes, in an attack like this, are 

18          important.  It takes time for them to get 

19          there.  But the local police officer in your 

20          neighborhood that gets that radio run, as we 

21          call it, they'll be there within minutes and 

22          get shot.

23                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  You'd certainly 

24          expect units to be developed.  It makes 


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 1          sense.  But it appears that the terrorist 

 2          threat is a moving target, in the sense that 

 3          it's -- they're changing tactics all the 

 4          time.  It is much more of almost a guerilla 

 5          on-scene situation -- 

 6                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  That's correct.

 7                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  -- as opposed to 

 8          major events.  I mean, who knows, but the 

 9          fact is we need to be equipped for 

10          everything.  And this appears that yes, the 

11          unit makes sense.  However, we seem to be 

12          equipping the unit, but not those on the 

13          front lines -- in Times Square, or where 

14          people gather, or in one of the stadiums or 

15          wherever.  

16                 Is that the basic concern of our PD?

17                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Yes, absolutely.  

18          And we have to be concerned with multiple 

19          things  happening at once, as we've seen in 

20          Paris, where you may have one of our 

21          boroughs, an incident happen, and 

22          simultaneously in Times Square or in one of 

23          our neighborhoods -- I live in Queens -- out 

24          in Queens, and one of our malls -- it all 


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 1          goes on at the same time.  

 2                 So then those specialized units will 

 3          be stretched.  But if our local police 

 4          officers are equipped and trained in those 

 5          techniques, we'll be able to respond and hold 

 6          it off and save folks' lives.  And that's 

 7          something that --

 8                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  And this is not a 

 9          hypothetical situation.  

10                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  No.

11                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Just look at what 

12          happened in Paris.  In Paris, if that's a 

13          template.  

14                 So keep us informed, let us know what 

15          this group can do.  Particularly our areas of 

16          public protection, the requests we need to 

17          make from Washington as well.  You raise 

18          excellent points, and we'd be glad to be 

19          supportive.

20                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Senator, I 

21          appreciate that.  

22                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Assembly?

23                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  Our next 

24          speaker is Assemblymember Malliotakis.  


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 1                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN MALLIOTAKIS:  Thank you.  

 2                 Thank you for being here.  

 3                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Thank you, 

 4          Assemblymember.

 5                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN MALLIOTAKIS:  I want to 

 6          say first off, well, thank you to the men and 

 7          women of the NYPD, thank you for what you do 

 8          each and every day.  I want to say that I 

 9          support the initiatives that you outlined 

10          here today -- 

11                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Thank you.  

12                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN MALLIOTAKIS:  -- and 

13          especially when it comes to the parity issue 

14          and disability.  Certainly they all take the 

15          same risk, and one shouldn't be treated 

16          differently than the other.  And so I support 

17          you and I lend my voice to you to use as you 

18          continue to fight this fight.

19                 I just had three relatively quick 

20          questions.  In October, we had a terrible 

21          tragedy with the shooting of Police Officer 

22          Randolph Holder.  I believe that there is a 

23          tremendous problem with the drug diversion 

24          laws that we have currently in the State of 


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 1          New York.  

 2                 I wanted to get just your opinion, if 

 3          you could just talk a little bit about this.  

 4          Someone who had four felony drug convictions, 

 5          in my view, should never have been released 

 6          from prison and put into a diversion program.  

 7          And had he been kept in jail where he 

 8          belonged, I believe that Police Officer 

 9          Holder would be alive today.  And so I'd like 

10          to just get your perspective on this.  And 

11          what are your concerns about the drug 

12          diversion law, and should it be changed?

13                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  I think that when 

14          you have someone with such a violent history 

15          that's there, when they go before the judge, 

16          he or she needs to have all the information 

17          in front of them to make that decision.  

18          Someone that goes into a diversion program 

19          should be someone that's nonviolent, that 

20          shows a proclivity to do better, to get 

21          better, and maybe they've made a mistake.  

22                 But what we've seen is that that's 

23          been bastardized, where you go in, it's just 

24          they clear the calendar, they clear the 


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 1          docket to let's just put them in the 

 2          diversionary program for drug treatment, 

 3          alcohol treatment, and all those different 

 4          types of things -- which are fine for certain 

 5          folks.  

 6                 When you have a violent repeat 

 7          offender, I don't believe they should be 

 8          allowed to go in that program.  Because what 

 9          will happen is we will face them while we're 

10          riding the subway and our members, the 

11          New York City police officers, will have to 

12          face them on the street.  And we had that 

13          with Randolph Holder, that police officer who 

14          stopped a bicycle robbery and he spun around 

15          and shot that police officer and killed him, 

16          a police officer from a family of police 

17          officers.  Why?  Because that perp was 

18          allowed to go back on the street through a 

19          diversionary program which he never, ever 

20          should have been included in.

21                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN MALLIOTAKIS:  Has the 

22          City of New York or anyone else in the state 

23          asked you your opinion on this, or to work 

24          with them in changing the law?  


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 1                 Senator Marty Golden and I are 

 2          actually working on legislation now.  I was 

 3          wondering if anyone else has talked to you 

 4          about this.  Or has the mayor had any 

 5          discussions with you?  

 6                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  No, just the public 

 7          discussion that happened after Officer 

 8          Holder's assassination that day.  But no.  

 9                 But we look forward to working with 

10          you and to get that accomplished to make all 

11          of us, quite frankly, all of us safe.  But if 

12          the first-line police officers aren't safe, 

13          there's not a chance for the rest of us.

14                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN MALLIOTAKIS:  Sure.

15                 On that note, we are one of three 

16          states that does not consider the danger 

17          level of defendants when setting bail.  I was 

18          just curious if you would comment on that as 

19          well and if you have any proposals to change 

20          that.

21                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Yes, traditionally 

22          now it's -- bail is used, will that person 

23          come back to court.  So we have cases where 

24          they don't and they still get bail.  But 


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 1          obviously you should look and say what 

 2          condition are they in, what crimes that they 

 3          have, and will they commit a violent crime.  

 4          Even if they have the funds to be able to get 

 5          out on bail and whether they'll come back or 

 6          not, what will they do while they're out?  

 7                 So I think it's very important that 

 8          you look at the background of each defendant 

 9          in that case and make an educated decision on 

10          the information.  So I believe that if you 

11          have a violent background, you should not be 

12          out.  

13                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN MALLIOTAKIS:  Okay.  So 

14          you would support, obviously, changing that 

15          law, then.

16                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Yes.

17                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN MALLIOTAKIS:  Okay. 

18                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Yes.

19                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN MALLIOTAKIS:  One last 

20          question.  The 2014 sanctuary law prohibits 

21          NYPD from cooperating with Immigration and 

22          Customs Enforcement.  In fact, there was a 

23          report that was issued by the criminal 

24          bureau, justice bureau of the NYPD that says 


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 1          474 of the 504 immigration detainers received 

 2          from the feds were not honored.   

 3                 I find this to be a little shocking.  

 4          I mean, I think these sanctuary laws that 

 5          were put in place by the City Council are 

 6          really misguided.  Do you have an opinion on 

 7          this?  I just want to know what -- what are 

 8          your thoughts on this as well?  Because -- 

 9          well, I'll let you speak first.

10                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  So we have -- we 

11          should be allowed to use every tool on the 

12          street as police officers to take someone 

13          that committed a crime.  Look, police 

14          officers don't want to go out and go after 

15          undocumented folks, it's not what we're 

16          looking to do.  We're out looking to keep 

17          everyone safe and do the job.  But 

18          unfortunately, sometimes those same folks are 

19          committing crimes, just like a person that's 

20          legally here in this country may commit a 

21          crime.  

22                 So in both of those cases, we should 

23          be allowed to look at and use every aspect.  

24          Sometimes that aspect may be deportation.  So 


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 1          we shouldn't be too quick to close doors on 

 2          what we can use to make the streets safe.

 3                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN MALLIOTAKIS:  There was 

 4          an incident where someone who was 

 5          undocumented on Staten Island was arrested 

 6          for trespassing, was released back on the 

 7          street, then later on was accused of rape.  

 8          Then they were brought back in.  

 9                 But the issue I find with some of 

10          these laws and the bail laws is that some of 

11          these individuals won't come back for their 

12          court dates.  

13                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  That's right.

14                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN MALLIOTAKIS:  So I think 

15          that's a major issue that we need to address 

16          as well.  Do you have any suggestions on that 

17          front?  

18                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  I think, again, part 

19          of the tools -- and I'll begin to research it 

20          some more for you, and with you.  But I think 

21          all those tools should be allowed.  But if 

22          there's a violent history there or there's a 

23          chance they're not coming back, they 

24          shouldn't be allowed out on bail.  It's as 


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 1          simple as that.  

 2                 We think it should be a fair system in 

 3          court, we think it should be a system where 

 4          they're before the judge.  But in order to 

 5          make sure that happens, we have to make sure 

 6          they show up.  So if there's a violent 

 7          history or they're illegal, then they may not 

 8          come back.  

 9                 ASSEMBLYWOMAN MALLIOTAKIS:  It seems 

10          some of these policies, they don't have 

11          common sense behind them.  

12                 But I thank you so much for sharing 

13          your opinions.  Thank you so much for what 

14          you do.

15                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Thank you.  

16                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  

17                 Senator Krueger.

18                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Evening.  Hi.

19                 So my district is the 19th, 17th, and 

20          13th Precincts, and happily I think we 

21          sometimes have more arguments about bikes on 

22          the sidewalks, and the irritation of 

23          hovercraft bumping old people over, than 

24          organized crime.


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 1                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  We hope that's 

 2          everyone's problem to deal with.

 3                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Exactly.  Just for 

 4          the record, you don't support electric bikes 

 5          or hovercrafts, do you?  

 6                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  No.  

 7                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Thank you very much.  

 8                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  I think I'd probably 

 9          fall off it, but --

10                 (Laughter.)

11                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  It's just -- it's 

12          creating too much chaos.  

13                 But more seriously, although that is 

14          an issue in my district --

15                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Of course, of 

16          course.

17                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  -- my understanding 

18          is every NYPD officer is going to be given 

19          some kind of Apple phone that gives you 

20          direct access to records of anyone you're 

21          picking up.  So partly as follow-up to that 

22          question, you will or now have more direct 

23          data about the people that you are stopping 

24          on our streets.  Can you talk to me about 


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 1          that program?  

 2                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Yeah, sure.  The new 

 3          Apple phones that the department is providing 

 4          for all out police officers on patrol is 

 5          basically like a minicomputer in your hand 

 6          where you can more quickly run the names of 

 7          the folks to find out if they have warrants, 

 8          what's their background, the location you're 

 9          going to, has there been other incidents in 

10          that apartment or that building.  So it's a 

11          safety factor for the member, as well as 

12          knowing what you're walking into as a police 

13          officer.

14                 And it's more extensive than that.  

15          It's a huge amount of information at your 

16          fingertips literally in that radio car where, 

17          when I came on the job in 1984, there was no 

18          computer in the car, you'd have to possibly 

19          take that person in, run the name at the 

20          stationhouse.  Sometimes they popped a 

21          warrant, sometimes they didn't, but it was 

22          consuming of time.  

23                 This is -- for a safety reason, it 

24          works.  To make sure we're dealing with the 


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 1          right folks and not the wrong folks, it 

 2          works.  So it's a good tool to get the job 

 3          done.  

 4                 And it's more extensive than that.  

 5          You can even see what other 911 calls are 

 6          going on in your area, a patrol in your 

 7          sector, in your foot post, so it educates the 

 8          police officer on exactly what she or he is 

 9          dealing with on their post.  So I think it's 

10          a good tool that helps us get the job done.  

11                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  And is it rolled out 

12          completely now, or is it rolling out?  

13                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  It's not rolled out 

14          completely, but it's well on the way to doing 

15          that, to make sure every police officer on 

16          patrol -- so I would venture to say it's more 

17          a question of the department -- but I would 

18          definitely say by midyear, the end of the 

19          year, that every police officer will have 

20          them.

21                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Great.  And then 

22          just one more question, I know it's so late.  

23                 Following up, I think, on Senator 

24          Nozzolio's questions about your proposal for 


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 1          an anti-terrorism package for each police 

 2          officer, so would you actually propose that 

 3          patrol officers who are walking a beat are 

 4          carrying long guns?  

 5                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  No, we would have 

 6          the -- what we call the radio car in your 

 7          neighborhood, the patrol -- that'd be 

 8          equipped, it would be in their trunk, 

 9          safeguarded, so when they're going to an 

10          incident like that they can equip themselves 

11          and take it out.  

12                 Now, if you're on a foot post, 

13          obviously it wouldn't be practical to be 

14          standing at a foot post with a rifle slung 

15          over your shoulder.  But in an incident like 

16          that, that you'd be able to have each 

17          stationhouse equipped with that equipment, 

18          that when it's an all-hands-on-deck kind of 

19          call, that those police officers on foot can 

20          respond to the stationhouse, get prepared, 

21          and then respond out to the scene and help 

22          get that job done.  

23                 So we're not proposing that our police 

24          officers be walking around with a rifle on 


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 1          their back.  We're not suggesting that.  But 

 2          we should have access to them no matter what 

 3          our assignment is, and the training to use 

 4          them properly and the techniques in 

 5          anti-terrorism, so, quite frankly, we don't 

 6          have to use them.  But our techniques will 

 7          help stop it.

 8                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Thank you very much.

 9                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Thank you, Senator.

10                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  

11                 Senator Hassell-Thompson.

12                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Thank you.  

13                 Just very briefly, I just -- somewhere 

14          in there, my ears got pricked up because I 

15          just -- it almost sounded as though you did 

16          not feel that bail was a tool that should be 

17          used at all.

18                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Say again, I'm 

19          sorry?  

20                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  My ears 

21          heard, I didn't say you said --

22                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Fair enough.  Well 

23          put. 

24                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  -- my ears 


                                                                  555

 1          heard you expound on bail.  Have you taken a 

 2          look very closely at what the bail reform is 

 3          that is being proposed?  

 4                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  We're looking at it 

 5          and will continue to look at it to better 

 6          educate ourselves on those opinions.  But 

 7          what our concern --

 8                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Okay, wait, 

 9          wait --

10                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Sure.  Go ahead.

11                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Don't go 

12          ahead of me.

13                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  That's quite fine.

14                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Thank you.  

15          Because this is your area of expertise, so 

16          you have to take it slow with me.

17                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Sure.  

18                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  I asked -- 

19          you know, I asked you that question very 

20          specifically because bail is, as I earlier 

21          stated to one of the other presenters, is 

22          supposed to be administered or recommended 

23          before the presumption of guilt has been 

24          established.  So therefore when you start to 


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 1          talk about who should and shouldn't get bail, 

 2          that's where I want you to enter.

 3                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  What I'm saying, in 

 4          a process that -- and the legislation, we'll 

 5          continue to review and make our opinions as 

 6          we get educated on it more -- right now, as I 

 7          understand it, the process is will that 

 8          person that's accused come back to court.  

 9                 What we've found is many times that's 

10          not the case, those that may have been 

11          released on bail have a violent past and, 

12          while they're out on bail, continue to follow 

13          through on that violence as well.  

14                 So what I think should happen is you 

15          should have the judge have all the 

16          information in front of her or in front of 

17          him that can make an educated decision on 

18          what kind of threat is this person if we do 

19          release them on bail.  It's just purely a 

20          safety issue for our members and for the 

21          public we serve.  

22                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Okay.  

23          Because I asked the question that way very 

24          deliberately, because again, when you look at 


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 1          it, you know, one of the things that we have 

 2          to determine -- and we're not clear that it's 

 3          really the best way to go -- is that we 

 4          should be legislating that for the judges.  

 5          Because then we'll end up with nobody getting 

 6          out.  

 7                 And so we want to be very -- but we 

 8          want to be able to give, in any of our 

 9          legislative initiatives, the greatest 

10          latitude of discretion with the greatest 

11          amount of information.

12                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  That's right.  

13                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  And so we 

14          kind of agree on that part.

15                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  We're kind of on the 

16          same page.  

17                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Yes.  So 

18          that the decision that's made is made in such 

19          a manner that fairness occurs.  

20                 Our problem is, and as we have 

21          discussed sometimes -- most times it's 

22          budgetarily, sometimes it's case caps -- and 

23          if you listened, if you sat through all this 

24          today, so you understand why those of us who 


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 1          continue to push for bail are cognizant of 

 2          the fact that there are so many cases, and 

 3          that you know when you come before the bench, 

 4          neither the judge has had the opportunity to 

 5          kind of read the disposition -- 

 6                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  That's right.

 7                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  -- nor has 

 8          the attorney that's representing the client 

 9          had the proper amount of time to be able to 

10          understand this, to instruct their client in 

11          order for them to get the best chance for 

12          justice.

13                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  And that should be 

14          all of our mission.  That judge should have 

15          every bit of information.  And quite frankly, 

16          at the end of the day you want fair justice.

17                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  But timing.  

18          But timing.  Some of these cases -- we talked 

19          about backlog, we talked about all of those 

20          things today.  

21                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Sure, sure.  Yeah.

22                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  And I think 

23          that when we really push for justice -- I'm 

24          just interjecting this because I want people 


                                                                  559

 1          who think I'm soft on crime to understand 

 2          that I'm not at all soft on crime -- 

 3                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Look, justice should 

 4          never be rushed.

 5                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  -- but 

 6          rather, I do want to be sure that the process 

 7          is as just as we can make it.

 8                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Sure.  And --

 9                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Because 

10          those are the cases we don't want to get 

11          thrown out.  

12                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  That's right.  No, 

13          we agree there should always be justice, 

14          that's what we work on as police officers.  

15          We want to be fair to everyone, and justice 

16          should never be rushed.  

17                 So whatever -- and there may be others 

18          that can testify more cogently on this issue 

19          in the courts.  What do we need to make sure 

20          is that it's not rushed but also, because 

21          we're not rushing, they're not behind bars 

22          longer they should be because there may be 

23          someone innocent that's there.  We want to 

24          get to the right answer, the right result.  


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 1                 So whatever we need to do to keep the 

 2          folks safe, that's what we should be looking 

 3          at, that's what we should be legislating in 

 4          all cases.  You should be deliberate in your 

 5          deliberations, absolutely.

 6                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Thank you.  

 7                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.

 8                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  Thank you, Senator.  

 9                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Because my 

10          time ran out.  I had a great question --

11                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  I understand.

12                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  -- but my 

13          time ran out.

14                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  

15                 And we want to thank you, President 

16          Lynch, and all your members for all that you 

17          do on behalf of the people of New York City 

18          and the people of New York State.  We 

19          appreciate you being here.

20                 PRESIDENT LYNCH:  I thank all the 

21          Senators, the Assemblymembers as well.  And 

22          any other information you need, we'll gladly 

23          provide it to you.

24                 Good evening, everyone.


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 1                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you very 

 2          much.  

 3                 Next we have the New York State Public 

 4          Employees Federation.  And representing the 

 5          New York State Department of Corrections and 

 6          Community Supervision, we have Steve Drake 

 7          and Paul Rigby.  And also, from the New York 

 8          State Office of Technology Services, Penny 

 9          Howanski.

10                 I see you've got a book with you. 

11                 Welcome.  I was hoping that we could 

12          maybe summarize the highlights of your 

13          testimony.  We do have this, we will read it, 

14          but just in the interests of it being 

15          7 o'clock -- what you have to say is very 

16          important, and we will take it to heart, but 

17          if we could maybe streamline this a bit, it 

18          would be helpful.

19                 So welcome.

20                 MS. BRATE:  Absolutely.  And thank you 

21          for the opportunity to speak before you 

22          today.

23                 My name is Nikki Brate.  I am a PEF 

24          vice president.  Penny Howanski is that local 


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 1          council leader that you heard of earlier 

 2          today.  She has submitted her testimony, but 

 3          I wanted to just speak about a couple of 

 4          points that came up during the course of the 

 5          day and just to clarify some concerns that we 

 6          had.

 7                 Ms. Miller clearly does not understand 

 8          the workforce, the current workforce.  She 

 9          did in fact reach out to PEF 24 hours prior 

10          to the budget being printed to ask PEF to 

11          accept her plan.  She really wasn't willing 

12          to work with us, collaborate or communicate, 

13          or even allow us positions, it was a yes or 

14          no for that.

15                 What we found most intriguing and 

16          incredible is that, you know, Ms. Miller says 

17          that we can't hire mid-level.  We have 

18          promotional exams, correct?  And we even went 

19          so far as to have in the 23s, which are some 

20          of the mid-levels, actually can come off of 

21          open competitive.  

22                 That said, when you're looking at 

23          wanting to outsource your help desk, your 

24          Layer 1 and 2, that's where that expertise 


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 1          starts to be learned, right?  So if you're 

 2          going to outsource that, later on down the 

 3          road you are not going to have that expertise 

 4          that they're claiming that we don't have 

 5          right now.  

 6                 And that is a huge concern when you 

 7          look at the stability of the workforce that 

 8          you have in place today.  If you have that 

 9          aging workforce that's going out, you're not 

10          bringing in them at that beginning level so 

11          that the mid-level can down-train, that is an 

12          absolutely huge problem.

13                 Ms. Miller talked about wanting to 

14          have a strong permanent workforce.  But the 

15          hiring of contracting shows the opposite.  

16          Her words were much different than the 

17          actions that have been experienced, and the 

18          misinformation quite frankly is troublesome.

19                 It appears that a lot of thought went 

20          into the planning for the RFP outsourcing.  

21          Not planning on investing in the existing 

22          employees, not allowing for the knowledge 

23          transfer, and not allowing the opportunities 

24          that Ms. Miller quite frankly gave lip 


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 1          service on.  The way that the OITS has been 

 2          progressing, that is what has begun the 

 3          creation of the silos.  

 4                 Again, the succession plan for OITS 

 5          simply is privatization.  A little example:  

 6          New York City did a lot of outsourcing and 

 7          contracting at one point.  What New York City 

 8          did, and other jurisdictions, they determined 

 9          that those jobs need to be insourced.  Not 

10          only for cost savings, but for the security 

11          and protection of the data and the network 

12          and the infrastructure.  

13                 Ms. Miller's plan fails the workforce, 

14          it fails the State of New York.  Ms. Miller's 

15          plan quite frankly is a recipe for disaster.

16                 One other thing I wanted to say that's 

17          a little bit off of that was I heard a lot 

18          about the cybersecurity today.  The 

19          cybersecurity that ITS really provides is 

20          fundamental security over our networks and 

21          our data.  It requires a specific skill set.  

22          The other part of the security that you 

23          really need is security against cyberwarfare.  

24          This is a different skill set that is needed.  


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 1                 So when we talk about yes, we're 

 2          throwing off some of the threats, those are 

 3          some of the tools that they have on that they 

 4          can do it, but cyberwarfare is certainly a 

 5          scare, and it's a whole different skill set 

 6          than you need for those that are providing 

 7          cybersecurity at the level in ITS.

 8                 Thank you.

 9                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  

10                 Next speaker?

11                 MR. DRAKE:  Good evening, 

12          distinguished committee members.  My name is 

13          Steve Drake.  I'm a vocational instructor at 

14          Mohawk Correctional Facility, and I've worked 

15          for the department for over 23 years.

16                 The New York State Public Employees 

17          Federation represents thousands of members 

18          within the Department of Corrections and 

19          Community Supervision.  These include those 

20          who work in the prison health system, 

21          rehabilitative services, education, 

22          vocational training, and drug treatments. 

23          These are all areas critical to help DOCCS 

24          maintain their mission, which is preparing 


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 1          and ensuring an inmate's ability to become a 

 2          productive member of our communities upon 

 3          their release.

 4                 I'm going to consolidate some of this 

 5          for you.  

 6                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you very 

 7          much.  

 8                 MR. DRAKE:  I would like to bring an 

 9          issue of urgency to your attention.  Our 

10          members rely on personal alarms for their 

11          safety in the prisons, commonly called a 

12          personal alarm system, or PAS.  These are 

13          small devices similar to a pager that our 

14          members activate during an inmate assault or 

15          potential danger.  The current PAS system is, 

16          in some instances, 20 years old or older. 

17          Technology has advanced greatly during this 

18          time period, and there are now PAS systems 

19          that can pinpoint locations, which we would 

20          request, for quicker response times by 

21          security.  

22                 There was a plan in place to update 

23          the PAS system, but with budget cuts in 

24          recent years, this very important item has 


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 1          been pushed to the back burner.  As a 

 2          priority, and for everyoneís safety, I am 

 3          requesting that you help us make this 

 4          lifeline possible.

 5                 Next, PEF represents numerous licensed 

 6          medical professionals within DOCCS.  These 

 7          medical professionals provide vital health 

 8          care 24 hours a day, every day, for all of 

 9          the inmates in the facility and any staff who 

10          get hurt or have other medical emergencies at 

11          work.  

12                 DOCCS, as many state agencies, suffers 

13          from recruitment and retention problem of 

14          licensed professionals, which PEF represents, 

15          such as nurses, doctors, pharmacists, and 

16          nurse practitioners within its facilities.  

17          The nurse vacancy rate has increased from 

18          10 percent in January 2015 to 15.85 percent 

19          in November 2015 -- an increase of nearly 

20          6 percent in less than one year -- and this 

21          situation is not improving.

22                 These vacancies are attributed to, in 

23          part, salary disparities between what is 

24          offered by New York State compared to similar 


                                                                  568

 1          jobs in the community, resulting in the 

 2          inability to attract and maintain a 

 3          sufficient number of staff.  

 4                 Salary disparities are further 

 5          exacerbated by the workplace conditions for 

 6          these professionals.  Recruitment and 

 7          retention problems result in frequent 

 8          scheduling and assignment changes, as well as 

 9          a high volume of voluntary and mandatory 

10          overtime.  Medical professionals represented 

11          by PEF are unsung, undervalued, and 

12          needlessly overstretched.

13                 Two points that I'd like to make to 

14          you, and our key point thing is DOCCS has the 

15          most "no mandatory overtime" violations of 

16          all state agencies.  And with that, DOCCS has 

17          violated this law 2,729 times between July 1, 

18          2009, and November 2015, forcing nurses to 

19          work beyond their regular shift, repeatedly 

20          and unethically, in violation of the New York 

21          State Labor Law 167, Part 177.

22                 I would like to say at this point that 

23          it is imperative that we begin to look at 

24          increasing the base pay of nurses from a 


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 1          Grade 16 to a Grade 18 to help in the 

 2          recruitment and retention of qualified 

 3          nurses.  With Tier 6 in place, and stagnant 

 4          salaries, there is no incentive for qualified 

 5          nurses to come to the state for employment or 

 6          remain with the state for a career.

 7                 At this time, I'll let Paul speak.

 8                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Mr. Rigby?

 9                 MR. RIGBY:  Good evening.  Thank you 

10          for allowing me to come today -- 

11                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Good evening.

12                 MR. RIGBY:  -- and testify on the 

13          Executive Budget for fiscal year 2016-2017 

14          and to provide testimony at the Public 

15          Protection hearing.

16                 My name is Paul Rigby.  I'm employed 

17          as a senior parole officer for the State of 

18          New York.  I worked as a corrections officer, 

19          a parole officer, and a senior parole officer 

20          for the last 17 years.  I am the council 

21          leader for all the parole officers and the 

22          senior parole officers for the entire state.  

23                 We've heard testimony today by Acting 

24          Commissioner Annucci, we've heard testimony 


                                                                  570

 1          from the commissioner for DCJS, and I wanted 

 2          to give some stats and clarify some of the 

 3          positions that they didn't have earlier for 

 4          you guys to consider.

 5                 Right now, let me give you some facts.  

 6          You heard Acting Commissioner Annucci give 

 7          you the prison population.  There's 52,000 

 8          inmates in the Department of Corrections 

 9          right now.  And there's about 24,000 

10          corrections officers that supervise them, and 

11          it's a tough job.  I know, because I was one 

12          of those officers.

13                 But there are 36,000 parolees in the 

14          State of New York, and right now 650 parole 

15          officers are responsible for supervising 

16          those 36,000 parolees.  I've heard many of 

17          the Senators testify and ask Acting 

18          Commissioner Annucci questions about the 

19          rising crime.  A lot of local municipalities 

20          have been asking what's going on with 

21          parolees in the community, why are they 

22          committing so many crimes nowadays.

23                 Well, I can tell you, since I've been 

24          around through the transition, that, you 


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 1          know, we also heard about the risk and needs 

 2          tools.  We heard about the COMPAS tools.  I 

 3          heard Assemblyman O'Donnell talk about the 

 4          Parole Board was not used in this.  What is 

 5          that designed to do?  It's designed to give 

 6          an inmate a questionnaire and, based upon 

 7          their responses, it determines the risks and 

 8          needs that a person has on there.  

 9                 And I would agree that some parolees 

10          come out with more risks, they come out with 

11          more needs.  Some are undomiciled.  We heard 

12          about the shelter system in New York City and 

13          how it's overcrowded.  We hear about these 

14          young kids who are coming out, you know, 

15          without the skill sets.  We heard so much 

16          from the commissioner when he testified about 

17          what they're doing inside the facilities to 

18          help these kids get along and come out 

19          better, these inmates.  

20                 But we did not hear the 

21          commissioner -- what's disturbing to me is 

22          that during his direct testimony he never 

23          testified about anything in Community 

24          Supervision.  I would tell you there was 


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 1          definitely a disconnect between what happens 

 2          in the facilities and what happens out here.  

 3                 Prior to our merger, and prior to the 

 4          old parole supervision, a parole officer 

 5          would supervise up to 40 parolees when he 

 6          first came out for the first year.  That was 

 7          called intensive supervision.  It allowed the 

 8          parole officer to meet with these people two, 

 9          three, four times a month inside the office, 

10          allowed them to meet with them two, three, 

11          four times a month in the community.  You 

12          made sure they're doing well, because the 

13          parole officer has to wear two different 

14          hats.  We wear the hat as law enforcement,  

15          but we also wear the hat as a counselor to 

16          help these guys out.  

17                 Nowadays the new COMPAS system allows, 

18          you know, four different levels, you know, 

19          where a parolee can be supervised on 25 to 

20          1 -- one parole office for 25 people -- 40 to 

21          1.  Where it gets disturbing nowadays is that 

22          there's Levels 3s and 4s which they consider 

23          being low risk, where one parole officer is 

24          supervising 80 people and a Level 3 caseload, 


                                                                  573

 1          and then the Level 4 caseload, one parole 

 2          officer is supervising 160 people.  And 

 3          they're considered low risk.

 4                 And how COMPAS determines -- you know, 

 5          weighs it, a lot of it deals with age.  A lot 

 6          of these low-risk parolees for COMPAS, 

 7          they're a guy who has a murder, he has double 

 8          homicide, robbery first, just did 30 years 

 9          inside the facility, and he's coming out as a 

10          low-risk parolee.  Now, you can't imagine the 

11          face on these parolees.  And they're low risk 

12          because the standard at a Level 4 is that you 

13          see them once every four months.  For the 

14          first two months you see them, you know, 

15          pretty much weekly, but then after your first 

16          two months, you know, where you're telling 

17          them "I need you to go to treatment, this is 

18          a job, where you can find a job," you tell 

19          the parolee "I'll see you in four months," 

20          and they look at you like you're crazy.  

21          Because they're like, What do you mean, four 

22          months?  You don't want to see me for four 

23          months?  No, that's how the science says we 

24          have to supervise you.  


                                                                  574

 1                 And I can tell you right now, we're 

 2          failing these people dramatically.  Because 

 3          not seeing them in four months, not seeing 

 4          them in three months, we're losing out.  The 

 5          reason why I supervise a sex offender 

 6          caseload as a supervisor, the reason why the 

 7          sex offenders recidivate at such a low rate, 

 8          is that we see them all the time.  We are on 

 9          top of them.  We know if they miss one 

10          treatment program.  We know as soon as 

11          they're positive for drugs.  

12                 The new COMPAS system right now was a 

13          cost-effective tool to eliminate parole 

14          officers, and it's a rise to crimes, 

15          unfortunately.  And I apologize for that.

16                 I would also like to clarify a couple 

17          of things that they talked about.  You heard 

18          about the two different warrant sweeps, the 

19          absconders.  And you heard about -- I think 

20          Assemblyman Oaks talked about police officers 

21          doing our jobs.  And I think it's wonderful 

22          to have the information come our way, but you 

23          also hear about the absconder -- excuse me -- 

24          the absconder thing in which they did -- OSI 


                                                                  575

 1          is the Office of Special Investigation.  It's 

 2          run by the Department of Corrections.  It's 

 3          the former Inspector General's office.  They 

 4          led two different warrant sweeps on 

 5          absconders.  

 6                 Senator Nozzolio told you that the 

 7          department talks about one to 200, one parole 

 8          officer for 200 absconders.  OSI ran a 

 9          warrant sweep in Rochester in December, the 

10          22nd through -- I think the 19th through the 

11          22nd.  They brought 100 different correction 

12          officers, CERT officers, and a few different 

13          parole officers.  They focused on 36 parole 

14          absconder warrants.  During that time, they 

15          caught 13 people.  It cost the state, to pay 

16          their overtime, their regular salary and 

17          lodging, approximately $250,000 to run that 

18          one operation.  That was a net rate of 

19          $19,000 per one absconder.  

20                 The one in Brooklyn cost the state I 

21          believe it was around $450,000.  They caught 

22          50 absconders, I think 59, running the state 

23          $8,000 per absconder.  

24                 I can tell you in Syracuse, during 


                                                                  576

 1          that same three-day period they did the 

 2          warrant attempt in Rochester, I had my 

 3          regular parole officers who were still seeing 

 4          their parolees for the office in their home, 

 5          we did our own warrant sweep without paying 

 6          any overtime.  I caught nine, costing the 

 7          state no money extra.

 8                 We have problems also with OSI running 

 9          the operations.  Due to many different 

10          reasons right now -- Assemblyman O'Donnell 

11          heard from the Corrections Institute, and 

12          they talked about reform for OSI and the 

13          problems that have plagued OSI across the 

14          state.  We heard Assistant Commissioner 

15          Annucci talk about reforms which they're 

16          trying to put forward with OSI.  We have a 

17          lot of problems with that.  I can tell you 

18          right now, the Rochester sweep -- we're 

19          effective public, you know, safety right now.  

20          We were always told, you know, your 

21          relationship with your parolee is what's 

22          going to save you as a parole officer.  You 

23          need to build that relationship, you build 

24          that trust, you build their care, you build 


                                                                  577

 1          the family's trust, and that's how you get 

 2          by.  

 3                 What they did when they ran these 

 4          warrant sweeps, instead of talking your way 

 5          in, they introduced CERT canine units, they 

 6          had CERT officers there with assault rifles.  

 7          They answered the door with a ballistic 

 8          shield in their hand and someone pointing a 

 9          gun behind there when grandma and grandpa and 

10          mom and dad and the loved ones answered the 

11          door.  

12                 So what they did there is that they 

13          trampled over our relationship, because we 

14          understand, we violate that guy's parole, 

15          he's coming back in 90 days.  We've got to 

16          work with them.  We got to make them succeed.  

17          We want him to succeed, we want him to be 

18          productive.  And what they did, they trampled 

19          over that whole relationship.  

20                 And we question the motive on which 

21          they're doing that, because the day that they 

22          announced the warrant sweep and that OSI was 

23          going to take over our warrants was a day 

24          after the Corrections Association made their 


                                                                  578

 1          I think 107-page testimony to Crime and 

 2          Corrections.  So we question the motive 

 3          behind there.  

 4                 We heard a lot of different things 

 5          about vehicles.  Mr. Annucci -- before I go 

 6          back, let me revert back real quick.  They 

 7          said that these warrant sweeps are not going 

 8          to stop.  And that's problematic for us, 

 9          because it was $700,000 for two warrant 

10          sweeps.  If they continue those warrant 

11          sweeps the rest of the year, it would cost 

12          $4,350,000 for one year.  

13                 New York City has a high number of 

14          absconders down there, and the reason why the 

15          high number of absconders is down there is 

16          that prior to the merger we used to have 

17          seven different warrant teams down there, 

18          with a senior parole officer and six parole 

19          officers.  Now it's down to only two teams,  

20          trying to find all those absconders.  

21                 So just to talk real quick about the 

22          vehicles, and I'll be done, I promise --

23                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Okay, because we do 

24          have a lot of people waiting.


                                                                  579

 1                 MR. RIGBY:  All right.  Yes.

 2                 The vehicles -- Commissioner Annucci 

 3          talked about 37 new vehicles, and I've heard 

 4          the State Police talk about their vehicle 

 5          fleet.  I can tell you, our vehicle fleet 

 6          right now for Community Supervision, it's 

 7          219.  Out of those, only 186 are assigned to 

 8          parole officers that supervise 36,000 

 9          parolees.  And we have right now 57 vehicles 

10          that have over 125,000 miles on them.  A lot 

11          of them have over 200,000 miles on them.  

12                 We are asking for that to be changed 

13          and for more money to be put into the budget 

14          to add more vehicles for our fleet as a 

15          resource in which we need to do -- because if 

16          there's not a vehicle available for the state 

17          vehicle, we're forced to use our own personal 

18          vehicle in which we take our family members 

19          in, we have our kids traveling in, and it's a 

20          danger to my officers' safety.

21                 Thank you.  

22                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  Thank 

23          you, Mr. Rigby.  

24                 Senator Nozzolio.


                                                                  580

 1                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Good evening.

 2                 MR. RIGBY:  Good evening, sir. 

 3                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  This is important 

 4          stuff.  I'm in no hurry.  We've been at this 

 5          for 10 hours.  And I think the fact of the 

 6          matter is -- 

 7                 (Applause from audience.)

 8                 -- when your job -- when your job is 

 9          not being done to the standards that you have 

10          just described, people die.  It is life and 

11          death.  So this -- many, many important 

12          issues.

13                 Let's start with, maybe, from my left 

14          to right, is it Howanski?  

15                 MS. BRATE:  My name is Nikki Brate.  

16          Penny gave the written testimony.

17                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Nikki, what's your 

18          last name again?

19                 MS. BRATE:  It's Nikki Brate.  

20          B-R-A-T-E.  And I'm a vice president with 

21          PEF.

22                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Great.  Thank you.  

23                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Thank you.  

24                 I won't belabor the testimony.  I 


                                                                  581

 1          think it's important that we recognize that I 

 2          do not subscribe to the director's testimony 

 3          here and the rosy picture that was put 

 4          forward.  

 5                 I am very fearful that the data of New 

 6          Yorkers is not being properly kept.  That I 

 7          don't think you're suggesting that we 

 8          eliminate people with knowledge and 

 9          appropriate expertise to come in and help, 

10          but you're just saying as a replacement for 

11          those workers, you're objecting to.

12                 So I think -- is that -- do I have 

13          that message correct?

14                 MS. BRATE:  Can you repeat what you 

15          just said?

16                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Yeah.  What I 

17          gather from your message was that you 

18          objected to certain consultants taking over 

19          the workload of otherwise state employees 

20          that are entrusted with taking an oath of 

21          office and ensuring that they protected the 

22          data, the information, that's existing.  

23                 Is that not correct?

24                 MS. BRATE:  So what I was saying is 


                                                                  582

 1          that we have various -- we have a very 

 2          talented workforce, and absolutely sometimes 

 3          you will need to augment some of that with a 

 4          consultant.  But outsourcing all of that is 

 5          taking out a lot of that institutional 

 6          knowledge that will provide that future 

 7          protection and the institutional knowledge 

 8          that we have and the members that built those 

 9          systems, know those systems.  And that is why 

10          we need to keep this workforce in play.

11                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  And I'm not going 

12          to go overboard with that, because frankly 

13          the world is changing rapidly, and that the 

14          state has an obligation to come in to provide 

15          the best minds with the most experience in 

16          the quickest possible time.  

17                 So my recommendation is you don't 

18          fight that, you work with it.  And if it 

19          comes to the point where you have suggested, 

20          that the security is jeopardized because of 

21          privateers coming in and doing all the work 

22          or a substantial amount of the work or an 

23          amount of the work that is detrimental to the 

24          safety and security of the data, then we need 


                                                                  583

 1          to know about it.  

 2                 But don't fight those that are 

 3          trying -- and I guess that's the sense that I 

 4          have, is that the technology department 

 5          suggests it uses a major consultant, but I'm 

 6          not sure to what extent.  And maybe you could 

 7          give us an offline, off-this-testimony report 

 8          on exactly what is being provided.  Because I 

 9          left that testimony shaking my head -- not 

10          your testimony, but the testimony of the IT 

11          director, shaking my head because I don't 

12          have a clear picture, I don't believe any 

13          member of the panel has a clear picture of 

14          what she is describing.

15                 Going to -- 

16                 MR. DRAKE:  Steve Drake.

17                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  To -- Steve?

18                 MR. DRAKE:  Yes.

19                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  I've been around a 

20          long time.  I worked with Dave Stallone many 

21          years ago -- do you remember, does that name 

22          sound familiar to you?

23                 MR. DRAKE:  Absolutely.

24                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  That we got those 


                                                                  584

 1          antique pagers -- except they were high-tech, 

 2          cutting edge at the time.  Twenty years ago 

 3          is a long time in the technical world.  Those 

 4          things are necessary to the teachers in our 

 5          correctional system, absolutely.  I'm shocked 

 6          they haven't been upgraded in all this period 

 7          of time.  

 8                 Do you have specific proposals 

 9          relative to upgrading and the protecting?

10                 MR. DRAKE:  We can provide you that 

11          information.  

12                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Would you do that?

13                 MR. DRAKE:  Yes.

14                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  And do it quickly?  

15          That's what Dave Stallone did 20 years ago.  

16          I hope you'll follow up in that path.

17                 MR. DRAKE:  Absolutely.

18                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  I don't know if you 

19          heard any of the comments I made during the 

20          questioning of Commissioner Annucci.

21                 MR. DRAKE:  I did, sir.

22                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  That the staffing 

23          ratios are the structural problem that is 

24          creating a dangerous situation.  I think 


                                                                  585

 1          that's the bottom line.  That's your bottom 

 2          line.  Certainly there are people who are 

 3          trying to do the best in changing protocols 

 4          and providing additional infrastructure and 

 5          equipment.  But with these kind of ratios, I 

 6          don't know how effective that will be.  

 7                 Please comment.

 8                 MR. RIGBY:  Yes, sir.  The ratios 

 9          nowadays are unacceptable, and I think that's 

10          where the system is failing nowadays.  I 

11          mean, it's failing the community because 

12          community safety is being jeopardized, it's 

13          failing the parolee because the parolee's not 

14          getting the service which they used to 

15          receive.

16                 I mean, the relationship and the bond 

17          between the parole officer and the parolee 

18          cannot be undermined, and when you don't see 

19          a person for three, four months at a time and 

20          you don't get to meet mom -- you know, when I 

21          used to visit my parolees when I was a parole 

22          officer, I'd be out there two, three, four 

23          times a month.  The parents knew me.  The 

24          sisters knew me.  The kids knew me.  "Hey, 


                                                                  586

 1          Mr. Rigby, how are you?"  You built that 

 2          bond, you built that relationship, because 

 3          they tell you, "Hey, Johnny's doing right, 

 4          Mr. Rigby."  

 5                 And when you don't see these people, 

 6          we've got a disconnect nowadays, and it's 

 7          causing the problems.  And if the parolee 

 8          does relapse and he starts using drugs, we 

 9          don't know about it sometimes three, four 

10          months down the road.  And then we're losing 

11          them by that time, because it's going too far 

12          along.  

13                 If you dropped the numbers back down 

14          to something that was manageable and a parole 

15          officer could have an active contact with the 

16          parolee in the community, we'd be much safer 

17          and we'd be much more successful.  

18                 Commissioner Annucci only gave you the 

19          rate of recidivism for a person committing a 

20          felony.  Right now, our rate of recidivism 

21          for a parole violator is about 49 percent.  

22          And we have many different alternative 

23          programs they have in there.  

24                 And another problem they have is they 


                                                                  587

 1          have us doing a lot of duties which we never 

 2          did before.  I know, you know, I think --  

 3          you know, everybody in here because -- about 

 4          five years ago, one of our parole officers 

 5          was shot and killed in -- shot and injured in 

 6          Manhattan, at the office.  We put metal 

 7          detectors in there.  And then the state 

 8          developed an ISO item to guard our metal 

 9          detectors.  

10                 But what happens right now is that 

11          when that ISO officer is no longer able to 

12          man that metal detector, the department has 

13          parole officers, Grade 21s, doing Grade 9 

14          work.  They will not run the academy until 

15          they have five empty items.  We waste tens of 

16          thousands of hours, parole officers taken out 

17          of the community to work a Grade 9 metal 

18          detector because they refuse to run the 

19          academies.  And it's not acceptable.

20                 Those parole officers need to be in 

21          the community.  They need to be having 

22          contact with these parolees to help them 

23          succeed.

24                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  I'm out of time, 


                                                                  588

 1          so -- in terms of the clock, I know others 

 2          want to speak.  But thank you very much for 

 3          the focus on this, and please continue to 

 4          provide us the input we need to help change 

 5          these policies.

 6                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, Senator.  

 7                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  We'll now hear 

 8          from Assemblymember O'Donnell.

 9                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Thank you very 

10          much, Mr. Rigby.  You're not from New York 

11          City, but you speak as fast as Mr. Lynch.

12                 (Laughter.)

13                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Which is quite 

14          an accomplishment.  And the way you say 

15          Manhattan, I know you're not from New York 

16          City.

17                 So one of the problems is you have a 

18          huge amount of information with a lot of 

19          acronyms and letters that I've come to know 

20          what a lot of them are, but many people 

21          don't.  Okay?  So I want to start first with 

22          the definition section.  

23                 In the day, 20 years ago, no one got 

24          out of prison until the Parole Board said 


                                                                  589

 1          "You can go."  So everyone had a sentence 

 2          with two numbers -- it was two-to-six or 

 3          one-to-three, whatever else it was -- and at 

 4          some point they say, "Oh, you're a good guy 

 5          to go home."  

 6                 We changed that system, and now we 

 7          have a system where we have a solid number, 

 8          one number -- five -- and then five years of 

 9          community supervision.  So when someone says 

10          someone was, quote, paroled, in a lot of 

11          people's minds that means someone decided to 

12          let them go, which may not be the case.  But 

13          they're under supervision.

14                 So you're not even really parole 

15          officers anymore, you're technically 

16          community supervision officers.  Is that 

17          right?  

18                 MR. RIGBY:  That's the new term, sir.  

19                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Okay, yeah.  

20          So I want to make sure that you understood my 

21          criticism earlier about the COMPAS system was 

22          not directed at you or anybody who does your 

23          job.  It was entirely directed at the 

24          Parole Board, which, when getting that 


                                                                  590

 1          instrument, is not following the law that we 

 2          wrote about how to use it.  It had nothing to 

 3          do with the way that you hardworking men and 

 4          women do your job.  So I'll be very clear 

 5          about that.  Okay?

 6                 MR. RIGBY:  Okay.

 7                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Now, you seem 

 8          to have new presidents on a regular basis at 

 9          the PEF.  I just want to share that with you, 

10          you seem to roll through them -- I don't 

11          criticize you for that, but I've met with the 

12          previous ones and now your new one has asked 

13          for a meeting with me with, I believe, people 

14          in the Parole Department.  Are you on the 

15          list of --

16                 MR. RIGBY:  I will see you next week, 

17          sir.

18                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  See?  Now who 

19          knows my schedule better than me?  

20                 I'm very happy, because you clearly 

21          know quite a bit about the way that works.  

22          And I want to assure you that I have the 

23          utmost respect for the people who do your 

24          job, and I will do everything I can to help 


                                                                  591

 1          you do your job better.  

 2                 MR. RIGBY:  Thank you, sir.  I 

 3          appreciate it.

 4                 (Applause from audience.)

 5                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  

 6                 Senator Gallivan.

 7                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Thank you.  

 8                 And thanks to all of you for your 

 9          work, your members' work, and your testimony.  

10                 Senator Nozzolio covered much of what 

11          I wanted to cover, so I'll spare two of you.  

12          But, Officer Rigby, if I can follow through 

13          on the discussion regarding the caseload 

14          ratios.  

15                 So first, tell me -- so a parole 

16          officer.  An individual is released from the 

17          prison and is assigned to your caseload.  

18          What is your responsibility?

19                 MR. RIGBY:  Well, prior to the 

20          individual being released from the facility, 

21          he has that COMPAS risk-and-needs-assessment 

22          tool done to him.

23                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  No, let me ask -- I 

24          just want to know -- I'll get into COMPAS.  


                                                                  592

 1          But I just want to know what is the 

 2          responsibility -- what does it mean when 

 3          you're supervising a parolee?  

 4                 MR. RIGBY:  Well, when they're first 

 5          initially released, they come to your office, 

 6          you go over the rules and regulations, you 

 7          talk about their housing, you talk about 

 8          their needs, you talk about their goals.  You 

 9          take a look at what they need to have happen.  

10          We want to refer them to DSS.  

11                 I know the department's been working 

12          tirelessly trying to get Medicaid on board, 

13          but each county's a little different in 

14          trying to have those services available.  

15                 So we take a look at, you know, their 

16          history.  They might have a substance abuse 

17          history; we'll refer them to get substance 

18          abuse treatment.  They might be a domestic 

19          violence guy, we refer them to treatment.  So 

20          after we get our first initial referral set 

21          up, we'll say, "Hey, come back and see us 

22          next week, this is my report date."  

23                 We go -- we visit them in the 

24          community, we make sure they're staying where 


                                                                  593

 1          they're supposed to be staying, we meet with 

 2          the family to make sure they're transitioned 

 3          and they head home where they're supposed to 

 4          be.  If they're homeless, we're working with 

 5          them, "Hey, who do you know" -- because a lot 

 6          of times they don't know someone, they might 

 7          run into somebody on the street and say, 

 8          "Hey, Johnny says you can take me in.  He's 

 9          my friend."  Then we go take a look at that 

10          house.  

11                 We refer them to a lot of different 

12          programs, the Department of Labor, so they 

13          get help finding work.

14                 So we're trying to prioritize with 

15          them and meet with them to address their 

16          needs and to help them to stabilize 

17          themselves, because those first eight weeks 

18          are crucial.  

19                 So the initial first eight weeks 

20          depends on the COMPAS score.  We meet them 

21          weekly.  But then where the disconnect comes 

22          through, Senator, is after that.  Because 

23          then COMPAS kicks in, and then that 

24          determines when we got to see them again.


                                                                  594

 1                 The Level 1s and 2s are high risk, 

 2          maybe not so much the high needs, I would 

 3          argue sometimes, and we still see them on a 

 4          monthly basis.  But where we're losing the 

 5          battles, and I cannot stress enough, are the 

 6          3s and 4s who are being supervised by one 

 7          parole officer to 80 parolees on the 3s, one 

 8          parole officer to 160 -- because I can't tell 

 9          you, the look on their face when we say "Come 

10          back and see me in three months, come back 

11          and see me in four months."  We were their 

12          crutch, and now you just took that crutch 

13          away from them.  

14                 And that's the difference between 

15          nowadays, with the COMPAS, and prior.  

16          Because they can rely on us for one full 

17          year, and after one full year, if they did 

18          well, they earned their way back down to 

19          lower-level supervision.  Because we all want 

20          them to have a lower level of supervision, we 

21          all want then to succeed.  

22                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  So now we get to 

23          the Level 4s that have the 160-to-1 ratio.  

24          Over the course of a four-month period, 


                                                                  595

 1          you're seeing them once every four months?

 2                 MR. RIGBY:  Twice.  

 3                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Twice?

 4                 MR. RIGBY:  You see them once in the 

 5          office, and once at home.

 6                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  And how much time 

 7          does that involve?

 8                 MR. RIGBY:  Well, I can tell you, the 

 9          ones in the office visit might be five, 

10          10 minutes.  The ones at the home visit might 

11          take an officer five, six, seven days.

12                 And here's the problem.  Because when 

13          you have this disconnect -- and the parolee's 

14          not supposed to change his residence unless 

15          we know about it -- the parole officer might 

16          go to his house two months from now, knock on 

17          the door, the guy's not there.  He tries then 

18          two weeks later, goes there, he's not there.  

19          Goes up again next week, he's still not 

20          there.  We talk to mom, mom says:  "No, he 

21          moved last week.  He didn't tell you?"

22                 And so there's a lot of wasted time 

23          trying to catch back up with these guys.  And 

24          a lot of times they're trying to hide from us 


                                                                  596

 1          because they know they relapsed on drugs, 

 2          they know they did something wrong.  

 3                 And we're no longer proactively 

 4          supervising these people.  The parole 

 5          officers are making their standards, but I 

 6          can tell you they're not being supervised, 

 7          based upon the new COMPAS system. 

 8                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Let me, for the 

 9          sake of time -- and I agree with Senator 

10          Nozzolio that I wish we had much more time 

11          today to talk about this, but of course 

12          there's other speakers, and we can follow up 

13          separately.

14                 What I want to get to is -- so you're 

15          five, 10 minutes once or twice a month with 

16          an individual that has committed what types 

17          of crime?

18                 MR. RIGBY:  The COMPAS Level 4 -- 

19          because COMPAS uses age as a primary factor 

20          in weighing out stuff.  A lot of those guys 

21          are guys who committed murder, homicide, 

22          robbery first, because they're the guy that 

23          just did 25, 30 years in the facility.

24                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Okay.  Thanks.


                                                                  597

 1                 MR. RIGBY:  They're a little bit 

 2          older.

 3                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Now --

 4                 MR. RIGBY:  Here's the problem, 

 5          though, is the guy --

 6                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  No, no.  Timewise, 

 7          I'm sorry.

 8                 MR. RIGBY:  Sorry.

 9                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  And then I will let 

10          you finish.  

11                 Is the COMPAS instrument the only 

12          thing that determines those caseload ratios?

13                 MR. RIGBY:  Yes.  COMPAS is the 

14          primary driver for that.

15                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  All right.  Thanks.

16                 And then, finally, you mentioned two 

17          different areas, which I believe is why 

18          everybody should care.  And it doesn't matter 

19          where you start.  You could start with the 

20          community that I care about and talk very 

21          briefly why this is wrong and we're failing 

22          the community in helping to ensure community 

23          safety, public safety.  And we all also care, 

24          I believe, about rehabilitation and reducing 


                                                                  598

 1          recidivism.  And you mentioned that we're 

 2          failing the inmate.  

 3                 Finish with commenting on both of 

 4          them, please.

 5                 MR. RIGBY:  I will.

 6                 It's kind of plain and obvious to see 

 7          that communities' safety is jeopardized when 

 8          we're not seeing these people on a regular 

 9          basis.  If we can catch them when they first 

10          relapse to drugs, when they first start 

11          violating their curfew -- I always believe in 

12          the mantra that I always sweated the small 

13          things and the small conditions because if we 

14          took care of all the small things, we never 

15          had big things.  You know, so if I kept them, 

16          you know, for the first year doing the right 

17          things, they'd relapse, I'd talk to them, I'd 

18          get them to a little more treatment -- it 

19          kind of corrected itself, you know.  

20                 So by keeping these people involved in 

21          programs, helping them find the jobs, helping 

22          them become productive, they're less likely 

23          to engage in new criminal behavior.  You 

24          heard the commissioner talk about all these 


                                                                  599

 1          educational programs?  We try to also send 

 2          them to educational programs, vocational 

 3          programs in the community.  

 4                 Now, on the flip side, that's about 

 5          the parolee.  The community supervision and 

 6          safety part is hand in hand there.  Parolees 

 7          are committing crimes because they're not 

 8          being supervised the same way they used to be 

 9          supervised, Senator.  We do not have an 

10          adequate amount of parole staff supervising 

11          these people.  Our ratio is at an all-time 

12          high right now.  And if that COMPAS risk and 

13          needs assessment was so perfect, why do I 

14          always have to override all the sex 

15          offenders?  They come up as 3 or 4, as low 

16          risk.  I've always got to override them.  Why 

17          am I always overriding the domestic violence 

18          cases to make them a higher level?  Because 

19          it does not ask the right questions and does 

20          not assign the right amount of supervision.  

21          And that's the problem we're having today, 

22          sir.

23                 SENATOR GALLIVAN:  Okay.  It sounds 

24          like you have an impossible task, and that's 


                                                                  600

 1          very troublesome.  None of it falls on the 

 2          shoulders of your officers, but we recognize 

 3          the problems.  Thank you.

 4                 MR. RIGBY:  Thank you.  

 5                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  

 6                 Assembly?

 7                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  So I have a 

 8          couple of questions, and I'm going to start 

 9          at the left and work through to the right.  

10          And I'll be as quick possible.

11                 First of all, Nikki, you heard my 

12          comments earlier when the director was 

13          speaking.  I do want to continue to follow up 

14          on that.  I have a great challenge when we're 

15          spending hundreds of millions of dollars in 

16          overtime on consultants, because I don't know 

17          if the supervision is there.  We all agree, 

18          and you admitted it yourself, there's going 

19          to be a time and place.  But it shouldn't be 

20          the practice all the time, and I do agree 

21          that middle level is a great opportunity to 

22          grow committed employees in this department.

23                 Steven, in regards to the salary 

24          disparity you're talking about with the 


                                                                  601

 1          professionals -- the nurses, the pharmacists, 

 2          whatever it may be -- what is the disparity 

 3          percentage-wise between what the market is 

 4          bearing and where they're being compensated 

 5          at?  

 6                 MR. DRAKE:  I mean, it varies across 

 7          the board, you know, across the state.  But 

 8          like in Central New York, where I work, you 

 9          know, our biggest competitor is SUNY Upstate.  

10          And they offer thousands -- $8,000 to $10,000 

11          more than the salaries that we can pay in the 

12          local facilities. 

13                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  Right.

14                 MR. DRAKE:  And we compete against, 

15          you know, local hospitals as well, who 

16          offer -- they may offer different programs 

17          for them that we can't offer.  And we start, 

18          you know -- nurses are way underpaid.  We 

19          can't compete.  We can't even -- honestly, we 

20          can't even get extra service or outside 

21          services to come into a lot of our facilities 

22          as well.  

23                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  All right, 

24          thank you.  


                                                                  602

 1                 And Paul, as a gentleman who was 

 2          privileged to be mayor of a small city for 

 3          13 years and one who represents five cities 

 4          now, the coverage criteria that you were 

 5          telling me absolutely scares the life out of 

 6          me.  I appreciate all the work that all of 

 7          you do.  I would like to know at a 

 8          follow-up -- and Nikki knows how to get hold 

 9          of me, she sees me regularly -- a little more 

10          detail on the coverage here, particularly 

11          here in the Capital Region.  

12                 You guys play a very interesting role.  

13          Yes, you're enforcement, to a degree, but 

14          you're guidance and you're support.  And 

15          let's face it, when individuals are released  

16          from facilities, they're getting their feet 

17          back on the ground and they need the support 

18          as much as possible.  

19                 And at the same token, I can tell you 

20          that I have mayors calling me regularly 

21          saying -- because the cities, naturally, will 

22          attract many people being released.  They 

23          usually return to where they came from, and 

24          that's where most of the crime tends to be, 


                                                                  603

 1          unfortunately -- right, wrong, or 

 2          indifferent.  And there's a frustration at 

 3          the local law enforcement level, which -- I 

 4          know you guys work well together, but still 

 5          it's a challenge.  

 6                 So I am very interested in greater 

 7          detail, particularly with here in the 

 8          Capital Region.  Thanks for all the work that 

 9          all of you do.

10                 MR. DRAKE:  Thank you. 

11                 MR. RIGBY:  Thank you, sir.

12                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.

13                 Senator Savino.

14                 SENATOR SAVINO:  Thank you, 

15          Senator Young.  I will be brief.

16                 You know, last night your president  

17          was here.  We were with him, the vice 

18          president, and you during the workforce 

19          hearing, and a lot of discussion was around 

20          the shortage of staff in all of these 

21          agencies and the difficulty that your members 

22          now face meeting the demands of these 

23          agencies, whether it's Parole or DOCCS or 

24          OCFS or OMH, OPWDD -- the list goes on and 


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 1          on.

 2                 We heard earlier tonight from the 

 3          DOCCS -- earlier today from the DOCCS 

 4          commissioner that overtime is a little bit 

 5          less than last year, and that everything 

 6          seems to be okay.  But I get the sense that's 

 7          not necessarily the case.  I understand that 

 8          there's a real problem with attracting and 

 9          recruiting and retaining medical 

10          professionals in DOCCS; is that correct?

11                 MR. DRAKE:  That's correct.

12                 SENATOR SAVINO:  I mean, I think -- 

13          there used to be this poor nurse, I'm not 

14          going to name her name, but she would always 

15          list the highest overtime in the state at 

16          Bedford Correctional Facility.  I think she 

17          finally retired, thank God.  But, you know, 

18          seriously, thank God for her.

19                 But I'm seriously concerned about the 

20          ability of your members to deliver medical 

21          care in our facilities, to be able to track 

22          parolees, to be able to deal with the 

23          developmentally disabled, to plan or to 

24          handle engineering, and this is -- so agency 


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 1          by agency, we're seeing this.  But this is a 

 2          real problem.  It's the number of staff and 

 3          the number of -- and the ability to recruit 

 4          and retain quality staff.  

 5                 I mean, do you guys have -- can you 

 6          give us any sense of how short-staffed you 

 7          are in these three divisions?

 8                 MR. RIGBY:  I'll start.

 9                 Right now, if you look at our BIFL,  

10          when you look at the warrant sweep they did 

11          in Brooklyn and they caught the 59 parole 

12          absconders -- they were short 37 parole 

13          officers prior to the last recruit class 

14          coming out.  So when you wonder why, you 

15          know, they caught 59 out of 200, it's because 

16          no one was looking for them for a while 

17          because they were down 37 items.  

18                 SENATOR SAVINO:  Mm-hmm.

19                 MR. RIGBY:  You know, the problem is 

20          right now, using the new parole math, when 

21          you say one officer can supervise 160 

22          people -- prior to COMPAS, that was four 

23          officers supervising those people.  So if you 

24          use their new math, their math is going to 


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 1          say that we might be down 10 percent, but if 

 2          you use the old math, we're probably down 

 3          about 45 percent.  

 4                 SENATOR SAVINO:  Mm-hmm.

 5                 MR. RIGBY:  I mean, our ratio right 

 6          now is one parole officer per 55 parolees, 

 7          where before it was right around one per 38.  

 8          You know?

 9                 SENATOR SAVINO:  Mm-hmm.

10                 MR. RIGBY:  So our staffing levels are 

11          down dramatically, and the commissioner 

12          alluded to two academy classes this year.  I 

13          did not see that in the budget.  I'm not sure 

14          where he's getting that from, but I did not 

15          see the two academy classes for parole 

16          officers in the budget.

17                 SENATOR SAVINO:  Mm-hmm.  I mean, 

18          conceivably there are some positions that can 

19          be contracted out.  Some things can't.  You 

20          cannot contract out parole supervision, 

21          right?

22                 MR. RIGBY:  Correct.

23                 SENATOR SAVINO:  Exactly.  So there is 

24          a case to be made that this budget doesn't 


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 1          really reflect the needs of the agency or the 

 2          responsibilities that have to be delivered by 

 3          these agencies and your members.

 4                 MR. DRAKE:  From our standpoint in the 

 5          facilities, I can't give you the actual 

 6          number, but I know that there's 200-some-plus 

 7          new full-time employees that they're adding, 

 8          and a large portion of them are medical 

 9          services.

10                 But the ability to recruit and bring 

11          those people in to fill those is nearly 

12          impossible.  I mean, our facility just 

13          underwent a $30 million renovation, with the 

14          plan hopefully sometime in the next couple of 

15          months to open that new wing for inmate care.  

16          And we're going to be looking for -- well, 

17          right now we're short 12 nurses, and with the 

18          new increase, we'll be looking for almost 

19          21 nurses in our facility.  

20                 SENATOR SAVINO:  Unbelievable.  

21                 Thanks.  I just want to -- I 

22          constantly want to get it on the record that 

23          the agencies are drastically understaffed and 

24          that hiring has got to be a consideration, 


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 1          not just for the administration of the 

 2          mission of the agencies but for the safety of 

 3          the staff as well.  Thank you.  

 4                 MR. DRAKE:  Thank you.  

 5                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  

 6                 I have a comment and a question.  I 

 7          share Senator Savino's concern about 

 8          understaffing, and especially about the 

 9          medical understaffing.  And in the 2016 

10          budget, this year's budget, the Legislature 

11          felt so strongly about mental health services 

12          in the prison system because, as you know, 

13          we've seen real-life tragedies where people 

14          have been severely injured and killed by 

15          inmates who have left the system without the 

16          supports that they need within the system and 

17          outside.

18                 And so apparently $18 million of that 

19          funding has been expended to treat the 

20          psychiatric prisoners who have violent 

21          tendencies.  Have you seen that happen?  

22          Because it's concerning to me to see that 

23          there was an MOU between OMH and DOCCS which 

24          expired in 1999 -- that's incredible to me -- 


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 1          that outlines the duties of the nurses 

 2          between psychiatric nurses and regular 

 3          nurses.  Could you expound on that?  

 4                 And my question, also, if you've seen 

 5          any changes over the past year regarding that 

 6          issue and are there additional measures being 

 7          taken or is there additional attention to the 

 8          psychiatric prisoners, and how does it affect 

 9          your members?  

10                 MR. DRAKE:  From my standpoint, 

11          there's definitely been an increase in 

12          training for all staff, I will say, from the 

13          initiative from the department to educate us 

14          on handling mental health inmates.  Our 

15          facility earlier on, prior to when we first 

16          started taking mental health inmates in or 

17          dealing with them, there was basically -- you 

18          were a normal correctional facility one day 

19          and then you became a mental health facility 

20          the next day, with no real training to the 

21          staff.  

22                 Over the last three years there's been 

23          an initiative with the department and 

24          ourselves from the union standpoint to train 


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 1          staff in informing them how to deal with 

 2          that.  They're still looking at developing 

 3          some of that training and including 

 4          correction officers to deal with, you know, 

 5          some of that.  Because some of the correction 

 6          officers are not getting that same training 

 7          that the civilian staff are getting.

 8                 As far as the MOU goes, there's a lot 

 9          to be said.  Supposedly, that we heard today 

10          that they are almost done with revising the 

11          MOU between the two departments.  But there 

12          is still -- is nothing that distinguishes 

13          between the psychiatric nurse and a regular 

14          nurse in the facilities.  

15                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  So it's taken since 

16          1999 to get the MOU done.  Thank you for 

17          that.  And I want to sincerely thank you for 

18          being here today, and all of your members.  

19                 And, you know -- does the Assembly 

20          have any more? 

21                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  We're good.

22                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Oh, you're good.  

23          Okay.

24                 Well, what I was going to recommend is 


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 1          that PEF continue to be in touch with the 

 2          Senators and the Assemblymembers.  We 

 3          appreciate the work that you do.  We're 

 4          concerned about the issues you raised 

 5          tonight; we would like to hear more about 

 6          those issues so that they can be addressed.  

 7                 So again, thank you for being here 

 8          tonight.  We really appreciate it.  

 9                 (Applause from audience.)

10                 MR. DRAKE:  Thank you.  

11                 MS. BRATE:  Thank you.  

12                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Our next group is 

13          from the New York State Defenders 

14          Association.  We have Executive Director 

15          Jonathan Gradess and Legal Director of 

16          Veterans Defense Programs Art Cody.

17                 Glad to have you here.

18                 MR. GRADESS:  Thank you.  And thank 

19          you for your patience.

20                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you for your 

21          patience.

22                 MR. GRADESS:  Well, mutual admiration.

23                 As you noted, I am joined by Captain 

24          Art Cody, U.S. Navy, retired.  I want to 


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 1          apologize for Gary Horton, the director of 

 2          the Veterans Defense Program; he had to be 

 3          back in Batavia in about 10 minutes, so he 

 4          left here a bit ago, disappointed.

 5                 I want to talk about four things.  Art 

 6          will help me with VDP.  But I want to talk to 

 7          you about the Backup Center, a part of which 

 8          is the Veterans Defense Program.  I want to 

 9          talk about the IPP program, the indigent 

10          legal services budget, and the Fahy bill -- 

11          the Fahy-DeFrancisco bill, forgive me.

12                 Before I do that, I'd like to sort of 

13          paint a little bit of a picture because I 

14          think, for the first time in many years -- 

15          and I have been coming before you for many 

16          years -- we have a watershed moment in New 

17          York, and it is a watershed moment in which I 

18          think we may all be on the same page, which 

19          is a wonderful thing.  And that page is 

20          mandate relief.  

21                 And everything I want to talk to you 

22          about actually can be viewed as mandate 

23          relief.  And in recent years, I have talked 

24          to you about my efforts to create a global 


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 1          settlement for the Hurrell-Harring lawsuit.  

 2          They were uniquely unsuccessful.  And then 

 3          there came the settlement last year, and that 

 4          has created a real opportunity for 

 5          conversation in New York unlike anything I 

 6          have seen since 1978 when I started with the 

 7          Backup Center.

 8                 Sometimes I've come before you 

 9          whining, sometimes thanking you, thanking you 

10          particularly last year for the Veterans 

11          Defense Program and always saving the Backup 

12          Center from what is this year a 58 percent 

13          cut by the Governor that I hope will be 

14          restored by you.  But right now, we have 57 

15          counties in the State of New York who are up 

16          in arms about the nature of the settlement.  

17                 One of the reasons we urged a global 

18          settlement in Hurrell-Harring was because we 

19          thought that would empower the state to move 

20          incrementally and do what is right for all 

21          the counties.  Recall, please, that when the 

22          New York Civil Liberties Union sued the State 

23          of New York, it sued the State of New York.  

24          It didn't sue the five counties that were 


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 1          named in the suit eventually.  Those were 

 2          added by the judge.  This was a lawsuit on 

 3          behalf of counties against the State of 

 4          New York to say the State of New York is 

 5          responsible for funding public defense 

 6          services -- not the responsibility of 

 7          Onondaga and Schuyler and the other 

 8          defendants, but also not the responsibility 

 9          of Seneca or Albany or anywhere else.  

10                 And that reality, I think, has now 

11          come home to roost, because the settlement 

12          called on ILS to engage in quality 

13          development in each jurisdiction to develop 

14          Counsel at First Arraignment programs, to 

15          develop eligibility standards and caseload 

16          relief.  

17                 And so as Bill Leahy so eloquently 

18          said before, you have this situation of 

19          Suffolk County getting a present and 

20          Nassau County feeling coal in their stocking.  

21          You have two assigned-counsel programs that 

22          surround Onondaga, one to the north, one to 

23          the west.  They're both in the same kind of 

24          problem.  And it's true on the Southern Tier, 


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 1          where Schuyler sits, that the surrounding 

 2          counties all need the help, as I think you'll 

 3          hear when Mark Williams testifies.  

 4                 So what I want to say is that all of 

 5          what I am asking you to look at is part of 

 6          that mosaic that puts us together for the 

 7          first time in history to recognize that the 

 8          state has an obligation to fund and care and 

 9          take care of the constitutional right to 

10          counsel.

11                 So when Bill Leahy talks about the 

12          $34 million of local assistance that is in 

13          the ILS budget, it shouldn't be passed over, 

14          because it begins to repair the kind of 

15          things in the other 57 counties that the 

16          settlement did for the five.  

17                 I would hope that each of you -- I 

18          know Assemblyman McDonald is on the bill, I 

19          don't think anybody else is -- get on the 

20          DeFrancisco bill.  He's on the Fahy bill, but 

21          there's now consensus in both houses that 

22          that bill that would call for the 

23          reimbursement of localities for the 

24          expenditure of public defense services.  That 


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 1          bill makes tremendously good sense, it allows 

 2          for the incremental repair of the state, and 

 3          it reverses what's happening with the five 

 4          down, 57 to go, as we call it, that has 

 5          resulted from the settlement.

 6                 The Backup Center, which you have 

 7          helped for every year that I have been in 

 8          Albany, is in need of your assistance once 

 9          again.  It is in need of your assistance 

10          because last year we came to you for 

11          $3.5 million; this year is for $4.25 million.  

12          The difference really is the incremental 

13          increase for the Veterans Defense Program 

14          that I'd like to speak about in a second.  

15                 But the Backup Center is really the 

16          poster child for the original mandate relief.  

17          When we were housed with NYSAC, it was 

18          recognized that if in one single place you 

19          could put the expertise that would help 

20          localities and public defenders, you could 

21          bring up the boats in the state.  And we now 

22          have a case management system in 67 offices 

23          in 45 counties, we are doing 35 to 40 

24          training programs a year for defenders, we do 


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 1          thousands of cases a year where lawyers can 

 2          call us, there are 6,000 lawyers that we're 

 3          under contract to serve in 120 defender 

 4          plans.  And they need us.  

 5                 So all of these things create a 

 6          mosaic.  We need the Local Assistance budget, 

 7          we need the Fahy bill, we need the Backup 

 8          Center to be funded, we need the IPP 

 9          program and -- I'm sorry Senator Gallivan 

10          isn't here -- we need that to be restored by 

11          the Senate.  

12                 And we very much need to increase the 

13          Veterans Defense Program.  Last year you were 

14          kind enough to put $500,000 into the budget.  

15          That program has exploded and is doing 

16          wonderful work across the state.  You should 

17          each have a copy of this report, which is our 

18          activities report, which I think will show 

19          you that you ought to be proud of what you 

20          did.  We asked the Governor to pick it up at 

21          $1.1 million this year, because we thought it 

22          would be a natural.  Apparently it was a 

23          little unnatural; he did not pick it up.  

24                 We're asking for $1.1 million for VDP.  


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 1          That's within the $4.25 million total we're 

 2          asking.

 3                 I'd like to ask Captain Cody to talk 

 4          about what he's been doing, because he's been 

 5          working like a dog.  And we're very proud of 

 6          the work of the program, and I think he 

 7          should be too.

 8                 MR. CODY:  Thank you, Jonathan.  

 9                 What I want to talk to you about 

10          tonight, quickly, is the scope and the 

11          urgency of the catastrophe that our veterans 

12          are suffering in New York State courts every 

13          day.  Myself and Gary Horton, our director, 

14          are on the ground every day assisting these 

15          cases.  We hear the horrific stories of what 

16          our veterans have been through.  We see the 

17          resulting post-traumatic stress disorder and 

18          traumatic brain injury.  We see the military 

19          combat trauma.  Without our help, their 

20          stories are often never told to the judges, 

21          the prosecutors, and the juries that will 

22          pass judgement on them.  

23                 We have assisted, in the past year, 

24          over 1,000 veterans and defense attorneys.  


                                                                  619

 1          Our requests, however, have grown 

 2          exponentially.  We've assisted veterans 

 3          literally from Montauk to Niagara, from 

 4          Canton to New York City.  Each attorney we 

 5          train, each veteran we help generates new 

 6          referrals with the success that we've had 

 7          that are discussed in the report that you 

 8          have.  The VDP has a staff of three, only two 

 9          of which are attorneys.  

10                 You can be assured we will never turn 

11          a veteran away who needs our help.  But we 

12          desperately need help.  We cannot cover as 

13          much as is the need.  The requested increase 

14          in our appropriation will make possible 

15          additional staff members and permit us to 

16          carry on this much-needed work that our 

17          veterans need and deserve.

18                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  Thank you.  

19                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Points well made.  

20          Thank you very much for your input.

21                 MR. CODY:  Thank you.  

22                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  No comment?

23                 Gentlemen, thank you very much.  We 

24          have no other comment.


                                                                  620

 1                 MR. GRADESS:  Thank you very much.

 2                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  We 

 3          appreciate you being here tonight.

 4                 MR. CODY:  Thank you.

 5                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you for all 

 6          that you do for veterans.

 7                 Our next speaker is from the 

 8          Chief Defenders Association of New York, Mark 

 9          Williams, president-elect and public defender 

10          in Cattaraugus County, my home district. 

11                 Welcome, President-Elect Williams.

12                 MR. WILLIAMS:  Thank you, Senator 

13          Young.  It's my pleasure to be here.

14                 I was going to start off by letting 

15          you all know that I forgot to bring 

16          certificates for you, but you all qualify or 

17          are getting pretty close to qualifying as 

18          honorary public defenders because, from what 

19          I hear last night, you were here until 

20          10 p.m.  Tonight you'll probably be here 

21          until 10 p.m.  

22                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  At least.

23                 MR. WILLIAMS:  And that's the typical 

24          day of an upstate public defender.  We start 


                                                                  621

 1          at 8 o'clock or 8:30 in the morning, and we 

 2          go until 10 o'clock at night.  And usually 

 3          without breaks for dinner or sometimes even 

 4          lunch.  So I just want to welcome you to my 

 5          world.

 6                 I have my prepared comments; I'm not 

 7          going to read those to you.  But what I want 

 8          to point out is that right now in New York 

 9          State, as Jonathan Gradess has stated, it's a 

10          united world for indigent defense.  We are 

11          all on the same side.  Whether you're a 

12          public defender on Long Island or in the City 

13          or anywhere upstate, we all are of one mind, 

14          and that is that it's time for reform, it's 

15          time for change.  It's time for the state to 

16          recognize its obligation to provide indigent 

17          defense.  Not the counties.  

18                 And this point is being brought home 

19          to us now from the standpoint of the grants 

20          that ILS has sent out in the last couple 

21          of -- last three years, actually, the grant 

22          that 25 counties applied for and were 

23          accepted for Counsel at First Appearance.  

24          The grant for caseload reduction that, again, 


                                                                  622

 1          it was 46 counties applied for and were 

 2          awarded.  Those grants are going to expire 

 3          later this year.  

 4                 Cattaraugus County is the beneficiary 

 5          of both of those grants, and what has 

 6          happened is my office has added staff, we've 

 7          added two attorneys, we've added an 

 8          investigator, we've added clerical help.  All 

 9          of those people are working to allow us to 

10          have more time or try to find the time to do 

11          Counsel at First Appearance, and also for 

12          caseload reduction.  

13                 You know, one thing I mentioned in my 

14          testimony that I submitted is that in my 

15          county last year we had a trial that ended 

16          with a not-guilty verdict on four felonies, 

17          three of which were violent felonies.  My 

18          client was facing 20 years or longer in 

19          prison.  She was found not guilty of those 

20          felonies, and it's directly attributable to 

21          the fact that we had the money from ILS to 

22          start on that case from the moment she was 

23          first arraigned in the local court.  Now, we 

24          weren't successful in keeping her from going 


                                                                  623

 1          to jail on bail that she could not afford.  

 2          It was in the amount of about -- I think it 

 3          was $25,000 cash, $50,000 bond.  She was a 

 4          single mother, 23 years old, she had no job, 

 5          she was taking care of her child and another 

 6          child.  She had never been arrested for 

 7          anything, not even a parking ticket.  

 8          Nothing.  She went to jail for a year for 

 9          this case to work through the court system 

10          and have the trial, when she was acquitted 

11          and she was released.  

12                 Now, the reason why I bring that up is 

13          that the Counsel at First Appearance money, 

14          if that ends, Cattaraugus County will get rid 

15          of that attorney and that investigator that 

16          were so critical in helping us defend this 

17          young woman.

18                 When I look to see the five counties 

19          in the Hurrell-Harring settlement, those 

20          counties are going to be able to continue 

21          their program, to have counsel at first 

22          appearance.  We will not be able to do that 

23          if this grant money ends.  And under the 

24          Executive Budget that has been presented to 


                                                                  624

 1          you, that will happen.  

 2                 We're asking you to not let that 

 3          happen.  The ILS budget needs to be fully 

 4          funded.  The $139.26 million or $139.27 

 5          million that ILS has requested is going to 

 6          start to make a dent in the rest of upstate 

 7          New York so that we can have caseload 

 8          standards.  

 9                 My attorneys and myself, because I 

10          carry a full caseload, we are handling cases 

11          that it would take a staff of probably 

12          15 attorneys to handle.  Caseload reduction, 

13          if we lose that grant, if we lose the Counsel 

14          of First Assignment, we're going to go down 

15          to five attorneys handling those cases.  The 

16          number of cases are not going to go down.  So 

17          what's going to happen?  Less justice.  

18                 You know, when I think about my client 

19          and her 3-year-old daughter, Avery -- who 

20          I've now seen two or three times, and every 

21          time I see her, she thanks me for freeing her 

22          mother -- when I think about that, I don't 

23          sleep at night at times.  And it's because we 

24          have to prioritize, we are like triage nurses 


                                                                  625

 1          in an emergency room.  There's not enough 

 2          people to treat everyone that comes through 

 3          the doors.  And so you've got to decide, do 

 4          we take care of this person, do we take care 

 5          of that person.  And so for everybody like 

 6          Avery's mom who we are able to successfully 

 7          represent, there's probably five to 10 people 

 8          that their cases aren't getting the attention 

 9          that they deserve.  

10                 You know, one great myth that's out 

11          there is that -- well, it's actually people 

12          believe that when somebody gets arrested, 

13          they must have done something wrong.  It's 

14          not always that way.  A lot of people that 

15          get arrested are innocent, and they need to 

16          have that right to counsel and have an 

17          attorney that's there with a support staff 

18          fighting for them nonstop.

19                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, 

20          Mr. Williams.  

21                 I know Senator Hassell-Thompson has a 

22          question for you.

23                 MR. WILLIAMS:  Yes.  Senator?

24                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Just one.  


                                                                  626

 1          Thank you.  Well, I had several, but I'll ask 

 2          one.  

 3                 What is your opinion regarding the 

 4          Governor's bail reform proposal, which is to 

 5          include in statute consideration of public 

 6          safety as a factor determining bail?

 7                 MR. WILLIAMS:  As a public defender 

 8          representing indigent folks, it scares me.  

 9          And it scares me because so far New York 

10          State hasn't lived up to what they should be 

11          doing when the determination of bail is set.  

12          And that is, number one, a whole lot of 

13          people are being arraigned still without 

14          having counsel even there when that decision 

15          is being made.  

16                 So if we're going to do that, if 

17          you're going to have any kind of reform, 

18          let's have counsel at every arraignment.  

19                 The second is that the public 

20          defenders -- and it's been an issue that 

21          NYSDA has talked about for several years 

22          now -- but we are not qualified agencies to 

23          get criminal histories of our clients when 

24          they're done through the eJustice system.  


                                                                  627

 1          And what that means is that in the old 

 2          days -- and I used to be a town judge back in 

 3          the 1980s -- I would get the rap sheets and I 

 4          would get two of them, one for me and one to 

 5          give to the defense attorney.  That no longer 

 6          happens.  The rap sheets are produced that 

 7          way.  So the statute that says that the 

 8          defense attorney is entitled to that -- it 

 9          doesn't happen.  Because the judges are in 

10          the eJustice system, we are deemed not to be 

11          a qualified agency, so we don't get access to 

12          it.  

13                 Now we've made arrangements with OCA 

14          that during the business day we can send them 

15          an email and they will send us the criminal 

16          history for our clients, maybe in six to 

17          eight hours.  It doesn't work that way at 

18          arraignments.  So we're not getting that 

19          information.  Whether the judges run that 

20          eJustice report or not, I don't know.  

21                 But that brings up the next point I 

22          want to make about it.  And that is that if 

23          you are a prior felon with two felony 

24          convictions at any time in your prior 


                                                                  628

 1          history, local judges cannot set bail.  It 

 2          has to be done by a county or supreme court.  

 3          It's got to be done by a superior court.  So 

 4          a whole lot of those people that you've heard 

 5          talk about that, well, they're a danger to 

 6          society, you know, for public protection, 

 7          public safety -- well, if those people have 

 8          two prior felony convictions, bail isn't 

 9          being set when they're arraigned in the local 

10          court anyways.  

11                 And in upstate New York, 85 to 90 

12          percent of the arraignments are done by local 

13          judges who are, most of the time, not 

14          lawyers.  It scares me to think that we're 

15          going to say to those folks, well, you've got 

16          to take into -- a public safety 

17          consideration, a concern whether this person 

18          is going to go out and commit more crimes.  

19                 They're going to lock up everybody.  

20          They're already trying to lock up a whole lot 

21          of people.  They will change that, and they 

22          will start locking up everybody if that 

23          reform is done without taking into 

24          consideration these other factors.  


                                                                  629

 1                 So with that, I also want to add that 

 2          how are they going to make that 

 3          determination?  They're going to use a 

 4          COMPAS-based, computer-based assessment, 

 5          right?  I've sat through and watched as 

 6          probation officers ask my clients those 

 7          questions when it's somebody that might be 

 8          released under supervision.  A computer is 

 9          making the ultimate decision.  Is that what 

10          we've come to?  Are we going to turn over 

11          these important issues to a computer program 

12          that's going to say yes, this person has got 

13          a propensity for violence?  

14                 I sit at times and read to the court 

15          those COMPAS assessments, because they make 

16          no sense.  And the judge sits and looks at me 

17          and is like, "That says that?  Where did you 

18          get that term from?  Where did you get that 

19          information from?"  It's scary to me to do 

20          that.  

21                 If we start working the system the way 

22          that it should be, by having counsel at every 

23          arraignment, by having criminal histories 

24          given to the attorneys or letting us have 


                                                                  630

 1          access to it through eJustice at that time, 

 2          and maybe not having local judges who aren't 

 3          attorneys making that decision, then after we 

 4          do that, then let's talk about the rest of 

 5          that reform.

 6                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Thank you 

 7          very much.

 8                 MR. WILLIAMS:  Thank you.

 9                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Assemblyman 

10          McDonald.

11                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  We will hear 

12          from Assemblymember O'Donnell.

13                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  I walked in in 

14          the middle, but I have a solution to one of 

15          your problems.  I have a bill currently in 

16          bill drafting that would allow non-lawyer 

17          judges to arraign someone but deprive them of 

18          the ability to put them in.

19                 MR. WILLIAMS:  The ability to put them 

20          in jail?

21                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  That's 

22          correct.

23                 MR. WILLIAMS:  Yes. 

24                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  So you can 


                                                                  631

 1          apprise them of what they've been accused of, 

 2          you can do all those other things -- serve 

 3          their notices, if that's what you want to do.  

 4          But if you're not a lawyer and you're the 

 5          judge who's sitting in that town justice 

 6          part, you don't have the authority to put 

 7          them in jail.

 8                 Maybe that'll change the way the town 

 9          justice system works.  I originally had a 

10          bill that I thought was going to just sail 

11          through here, because it came from Judge 

12          Kaye's report, that would have simply said 

13          that if a defendant in a town or village 

14          justice court system wanted to, they could 

15          request or require that they be only heard by 

16          a lawyer who's a judge.  But the Magistrates 

17          Association, which apparently has immense 

18          amount of power in this building, said no, 

19          we're not going to have any of that.

20                 But that's a solution I've come up 

21          with to try to address some of what you're 

22          talking about here.  And thank you.

23                 MR. WILLIAMS:  As a member of the 

24          State Magistrates Association, they should be 


                                                                  632

 1          supporting that bill.

 2                 ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Yeah, well --

 3                 MR. WILLIAMS:  They should be letting 

 4          their -- you know, allowing that decision to 

 5          be made because it's too critical of a 

 6          decision that's happening.  

 7                 A last thing that I want to just add, 

 8          if I can quickly.  The Backup Center, NYSDA, 

 9          we need to have them fully funded.  An office 

10          like mine, with seven attorneys and two 

11          investigators, two legal secretaries and 

12          three clerical positions, we don't have the 

13          time to do what we need to do without the 

14          Backup Center.  I refer to them as my back 

15          office.  They're so critical, again, to the 

16          upstate offices, where we don't have the 

17          resources available to us to present and to 

18          get the information that we need at times to 

19          defend our clients.  

20                 Whether it's finding experts for us, 

21          whether it's coming up with an argument, I 

22          call them during trials, they know I'm on 

23          trial, two minutes later I have an answer 

24          texted to me in court that may save the day 


                                                                  633

 1          for a client.  So we need them fully funded.  

 2                 And the very last thing is the 

 3          Veterans Defense Program.  As a retired Navy 

 4          commander, as a two-time county commander of 

 5          the American Legion in Cattaraugus County and 

 6          commander of my post, our veterans need your 

 7          attention.  And there's no reason -- when the 

 8          largest veteran population in the state lives 

 9          in New York City, we need to have that office 

10          in New York City.  So we need to have that 

11          program fully funded at the $1.1 million that 

12          they requested.  

13                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, 

14          Mr. Williams, for your valuable testimony.  

15          Glad to have you here tonight.  We appreciate 

16          you coming all the way from Cattaraugus 

17          County.

18                 MR. WILLIAMS:  Thank you.  My 

19          pleasure.

20                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  I'm sure we'll be 

21          talking soon.  Thank you very much.

22                 Our next speaker is President Patrick 

23          Cullen, New York State Supreme Court Officers 

24          Association.


                                                                  634

 1                 Hi, President Cullen.

 2                 PRESIDENT CULLEN:  Thank you, Madam 

 3          Chair.

 4                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  Look 

 5          forward to your testimony.

 6                 PRESIDENT CULLEN:  Thank you.  

 7                 Good evening, members of the 

 8          Legislative Budget Committee.  I am once 

 9          again thankful for the privilege to address 

10          you all, and it's an honor to appear in front 

11          of you on behalf of the men and women I 

12          represent.  They are New Yorkers who put 

13          service first and bravely protect their 

14          fellow citizens.  They are also New Yorkers 

15          who have consistently continued to do our 

16          best as the engine of the judicial branch, 

17          under adverse financial circumstances and 

18          extraordinarily lean personnel conditions.  

19                 So today I thank you as we can --  

20          well, tonight I thank you as we can, with one 

21          voice, express our concerns about how the 

22          Unified Court System budget affects both the 

23          professional and personal aspects of our 

24          lives.


                                                                  635

 1                 As Judge Marks outlines in this yearís 

 2          budget, the last five judiciary budgets have 

 3          left the court system "unable to fill the 

 4          positions left void by attrition."  Perhaps 

 5          the most glaring problem of that sentiment is 

 6          the inability, through the oversight, to 

 7          maintain the standards of safety and security 

 8          that this system has proudly enjoyed for 

 9          years.  

10                 The depth of our losses can not be 

11          simply stated in a sentence or two.  Our 

12          court officers are, quite candidly, spread 

13          too thin.  There are just not enough of us to 

14          get the job done in the tremendous fashion we 

15          have become known for.  We are working with 

16          13.3 percent less security staffing than in 

17          2009 while absorbing more work, done by more 

18          judges, in shorter periods of time.  It is 

19          unacceptable to put at risk the safety and 

20          well-being of all court employees, court 

21          users, and jurors.  

22                 Court parts formerly staffed by four 

23          or five officers are now staffed by two or 

24          three.  Supervisors normally in charge of one 


                                                                  636

 1          part are now in charge of managing three or 

 2          four.  All of this occurs while we see an 

 3          annual increase in the amount of cases 

 4          handled.  The need for full staffing in our 

 5          facilities prevents our officers from being 

 6          sent for yearly training for equipment and 

 7          CPR.  Many officers cannot spend their 

 8          accrued vacation time with their families 

 9          because managers cannot afford to grant them 

10          the time.  

11                 The system is not recovering and our 

12          employees are suffering. In fact, the system 

13          itself is staying above water on the already 

14          overburdened backs of its employees.  In a 

15          preventative health initiative introduced by 

16          our union, we found our membership to be 

17          19 percent higher than the national average 

18          for hypertension.  The dearth of staffing and 

19          the administrationís failure to restore our 

20          losses will have a profound effect and a 

21          long-lasting effect on these men and women -- 

22          not only at work, but as husbands and wives 

23          and mothers and fathers. 

24                 Furthermore, these austerity budgets 


                                                                  637

 1          have actualized deficiencies in our 

 2          courthouse infrastructure.  Early closures 

 3          and the cessation of overtime have left our 

 4          buildings empty at a much earlier hour than 

 5          in the past.  We have found homeless people 

 6          living in the bowels of our courthouses and 

 7          discover people in unauthorized areas on a 

 8          very regular basis.  These are avoidable 

 9          security breaches that in the past, at full 

10          staffing, would be unheard of, a time when 

11          the emphasis was on people and not the bottom 

12          line.  

13                 These landmarks of justice are 

14          targets, and we will see catastrophic events 

15          take place if we do not restore staffing and 

16          overtime to its proper levels, levels which 

17          protect New York.

18                 Our bargaining unit will be without a 

19          contract for five years come March 31st.  Our 

20          members want a fair contract; they deserve 

21          one.  What they cannot afford to do is accept 

22          a contract that sets them back and gives back 

23          provisions they have earned.  Many 

24          non-security personnel in our system have 


                                                                  638

 1          done that, and we are expected to follow 

 2          suit. We cannot support or accept working 

 3          under a restructured pay scale which 

 4          negatively alters these employees' earnings. 

 5                 Additionally, this budget calls for 

 6          funds in excess of $100 million to be spent 

 7          on steering business into the judicial 

 8          system.  A budgetary item to ensure court 

 9          engagement is improper when the very same 

10          budget begs so many shortcomings.  The system 

11          must stand on its own two feet again before 

12          it can use its own funds to escort people 

13          into the system.  Our members remain those 

14          who keep our system on its feet.

15                 Judge Marks has also been on the 

16          record at the Commission on Judicial 

17          Compensation, as well as in the media, 

18          espousing the financial woes of the 

19          judiciary.  What is interesting to note is 

20          that much of what he says applies to our 

21          members as well.  He says that the state "has 

22          the ability to pay the increase advocated" in 

23          reference to a $27,000 increase in salary for 

24          each of the state's judges.  My members are 


                                                                  639

 1          certainly not seeking such a wage hike, just 

 2          a fair and equitable wage over the last five 

 3          years.  

 4                 Judge Marks also states that New York 

 5          is historically the most expensive state to 

 6          live in.  Well, 99 percent of our members 

 7          live in this great state.  He goes on to say 

 8          that inflation has gone up 42 percent since 

 9          1999.  If so, it has gone up for all of us, 

10          including members of this committee and the 

11          workers I represent. 

12                 Finally, Judge Marks advocates the 

13          introduction of an automatic cost-of-living 

14          adjustment into the judicial pay package.  I 

15          too support this for our members, because it 

16          is the only way to keep up with the 

17          ever-rising costs associated with living and 

18          working in New York.  

19                 I applaud Judge Marks for bringing to 

20          light important financial issues, but they 

21          must apply to everyone within the framework 

22          of the system.  I fully understand the role 

23          of the judiciary.  However, if these 

24          principles are not addressed to include all 


                                                                  640

 1          under its banner, then the Unified Court 

 2          System is widening an already existing double 

 3          standard.  The judiciary is the face of 

 4          fairness and equity, and it must practice 

 5          what it preaches.

 6                 I have continued to advocate for new, 

 7          innovative and useful projects to enhance 

 8          security at all court facilities.  I renew 

 9          the call for budgeted funds to create a K9 

10          program for which studies have already been 

11          done.  This program was green-lighted, only 

12          to be derailed at the last minute because an 

13          administrator did not like dogs.  All of 

14          New York will like dogs when they prevent an 

15          explosive device from being planted or deter 

16          the plans of a potential active shooter and 

17          the damage these types of events could 

18          inflict.  

19                 The fact is this is a program that 

20          this system should have implemented 20 years 

21          ago.  Archaic thinking and an inability to 

22          install advanced training procedures have 

23          left us in the last century.  A real and 

24          mandatory active-shooter protocol is sorely 


                                                                  641

 1          needed.  We must be prepared for its near 

 2          inevitability, based on recent national 

 3          events, including one in our very own 

 4          Middletown City Court.  We need practical, 

 5          experienced training from the top experts in 

 6          the field.  This is not a program you want to 

 7          have to install after a mass carnage event.  

 8                 A real endeavor must be made to 

 9          upgrade our magnetometers, our x-ray 

10          machines, radios and cameras to the latest 

11          technologies used in federal facilities and 

12          by thousands of police departments 

13          nationwide.  These programs and ideas will 

14          also help us not only do our jobs the way 

15          they should be done, but with an eye toward 

16          the future.  Law enforcement has become a 

17          dynamic field, and we must embrace that with 

18          personnel, philosophy and financial support.

19                 This is a brief synopsis of some of 

20          the most conspicuous problems facing our 

21          workforce in the court system of New York.  

22          These things must be met with certitude that 

23          our system needs to be brought up to speed. 

24          Our court officers cannot be left behind 


                                                                  642

 1          again.  We are playing catch-up, and it is 

 2          only a matter of time before calamitous 

 3          circumstances result.  We are a proud and 

 4          patient group of the state workforce, but our 

 5          patience is eroding and our pride is being 

 6          destroyed by a continued neglect to the 

 7          things we need to properly execute the duties 

 8          we have nobly sworn.  

 9                 I ask this committee to pass the 

10          judicial budget as it is constituted and not 

11          to make further cuts.  It is critical to the 

12          system's recovery and frankly to our survival 

13          within the workforce.  The time has come to 

14          make a stand and aid in the restoration of 

15          the system and those of us who protect it and 

16          all it stands for.

17                 I want to thank everybody here and for 

18          your time and for your hard work.  

19                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

20                 Assembly?  

21                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  No questions 

22          from the Assembly, but thank you for your 

23          testimony.

24                 PRESIDENT CULLEN:  Thanks.


                                                                  643

 1                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  We thank you very 

 2          much for your testimony.

 3                 Next up is -- 

 4                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  Pamela Browne.

 5                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  -- Pamela Browne, 

 6          thank you, Court Clerk Association.  

 7                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  And on deck is 

 8          Billy Imandt, from the Court Officers 

 9          Benevolent Association of Nassau County.

10                 PRESIDENT BROWNE:  Good evening, 

11          esteemed Senators and Assemblypeople.  My 

12          name is Pamela Browne, and I'm the president 

13          of the New York State Court Clerks 

14          Association.

15                 Thank you for the opportunity to 

16          discuss Governor Andrew Cuomo's Executive 

17          Budget.  I represent about 1,550 court clerks 

18          in the City of New York.  We support 

19          increased money to the courts as you 

20          legislators examine the courts and approve a 

21          budget.

22                 The budget crunch in 2010 left my 

23          union with 250 fewer court clerks to make the 

24          courts work.  There was a freeze on hiring, 


                                                                  644

 1          but there was no retirement freeze.  The 

 2          workload did not decrease, however, but it 

 3          increased with each new program, initiative, 

 4          task, and system.  When anything new is 

 5          introduced and when you pass any new laws, it 

 6          falls upon the clerks to carry it out, which 

 7          we do, as we are consummate professionals.  

 8                 The staffing shortage continues, but 

 9          the number of clerks and other court 

10          personnel is severely depleted.  There are 

11          court clerks working off the clock because 

12          they are diligent and conscientious and do 

13          not want to see unfinished work the next day.  

14          They want to start off clean.

15                 Working at a manic pace should not and 

16          cannot be sustained.  Additionally, working 

17          off the clock is illegal.  Not all courtrooms 

18          can be staffed.  We have clerks covering 

19          multiple parts, and we have had judges 

20          sitting in chambers for lack of staff.  All 

21          parts must be adequately staffed.  

22                 The courts are closing earlier, and 

23          special permission is mandated before 

24          overtime can be approved.  A woman went to 


                                                                  645

 1          family court seeking an order of protection, 

 2          and she was told to go to criminal court as 

 3          it was past the hour that family court was in 

 4          operation.  There was a strict closing time 

 5          to not yield overtime, and the directive 

 6          indicated that such cases were to be referred 

 7          to criminal court.

 8                 Previously she would have been allowed 

 9          to file in family court.  Criminal court sent 

10          her back to family court, as they were 

11          probably unaware of family court's closing at 

12          that the hour.  Dejected, she obviously gave 

13          up and left.  She was subsequently killed by 

14          her husband.  

15                 If she were a DuPont or a Carnegie, 

16          this case would have received a lot of 

17          attention.  But she was an ordinary 

18          New Yorker with no name recognition or fame.  

19          This was the ultimate.  Someone lost their 

20          life so the courts would not incur overtime 

21          costs.  What price is a life?  Lack of 

22          funding has life and death consequences.  

23                 Not all insufficient funding has such 

24          immediate egregious outcomes.  Most are 


                                                                  646

 1          smaller, but harmful nonetheless, and affect 

 2          people's well-being.  The shortage of funds 

 3          for court clerks has created tremendous 

 4          backlogs in every court in many areas -- 

 5          i.e., warrants and housing court, small 

 6          claims are backed up for months, and 

 7          judgments that are yet to be entered, to name 

 8          a few.  

 9                 Not everyone is so middle class that 

10          they can easily miss work to come to court.  

11          There must be adequate staff, in particular 

12          court clerks, to minimize the time the public 

13          spends away from their jobs.  People cannot 

14          and should not have to spend all day in 

15          court.  Many people have such little vacation 

16          or sick time that a day in court is a day 

17          without pay.

18                 The public is suffering and receiving 

19          short shrift.  Justice delayed is justice 

20          denied.  And family court, in the referee 

21          parts, there is the referee and the court 

22          clerk.  The court clerk is a receptionist, 

23          security, court attorney, and court clerk all 

24          in one.  These parts handle orders of 


                                                                  647

 1          protection, custody, visitation, and foster 

 2          care.  Previously these cases were handled in 

 3          a courtroom with a judge, a court clerk, 

 4          security, and a law assistant.  

 5                 The staffing in these referee parts 

 6          was created legislatively, and it must be 

 7          corrected legislatively.  Each of these parts 

 8          must be required to have two court clerks.  

 9          You must make this right.

10                 Over the years there has been the 

11          realignment of lines and titles, and 

12          negotiation and talks have failed to correct 

13          a classification system that is severely out 

14          of balance.  We have been told that these 

15          issues would be addressed, but this has not 

16          come to fruition.  Court officers have been 

17          reclassified for a third time, and the clerks 

18          have not been reclassified once in 38 years.  

19          The court officers deserve their 

20          reclassification.  But as their supervisors, 

21          we also deserve this.  This has upset the 

22          hierarchy.  How can you not upgrade the 

23          supervisors?  You cannot promote up only to 

24          lose ground.  This is against the natural 


                                                                  648

 1          order.  

 2                 The courts are in the business of 

 3          dispensing justice and equitable relief, and 

 4          it is the court clerks who facilitate this.  

 5          We are the backbone of the court system.  

 6          During the years of the budget crunch, court 

 7          clerks were number one on the wish list of 

 8          chief clerks.  Seasoned judges tell new 

 9          judges, If you don't listen to the clerk,  

10          you're crazy. 

11                 (Laughter.)

12                 PRESIDENT BROWNE:  Clerks are retiring 

13          in unprecedented numbers for a non-buyout 

14          year.  The hiring freeze and zeroes have 

15          erased the career path.  The clerks are not 

16          receiving the credit, acknowledgement, or 

17          appreciation we have earned.  We want, need, 

18          deserve, and have earned reclassification.  

19                 It is the clerks who move the 

20          paperwork and allow the courts to function.  

21          Whenever any new change is invoked, the task 

22          of the court clerk changes as well.  Our jobs 

23          as court clerks have become convoluted, 

24          complex, and all-encompassing.  Court clerks 


                                                                  649

 1          supervise court officers, and they promote 

 2          into our ranks.  With their third 

 3          reclassification, the salary gap between us 

 4          has shortened.  There are newly promoted 

 5          court clerks who have chosen to go back to 

 6          the ranks of officers.  The job of a court 

 7          clerk has become so challenging, and with 

 8          such a small pay difference, that officers 

 9          would prefer to roll around on the floor with 

10          defendants and litigants.  This never 

11          happened before, and is due to a lack of 

12          reclassification for court clerks which has 

13          turned everything upside down.  

14                 To become a court clerk, you must pass 

15          a test which some attorneys could not pass.  

16          You give up months of your life and forgo 

17          numerous activities for the sake of studying.  

18          Some court officers sacrifice so much to 

19          become clerks, and despite their forfeiting 

20          so many endeavors, they're going back to 

21          uniform.

22                 In order to stay competitive, we must 

23          be reclassified, which would reflect the 

24          changes in our function and value and allow 


                                                                  650

 1          us to reestablish our rightful place.  There 

 2          must be sufficient funding for the courts, 

 3          the judiciary, and court clerks.  The budget 

 4          must have sufficient funding which would 

 5          allow us to be reclassified.  Equilibrium 

 6          must be restored, the rank structure must be 

 7          preserved.  The financial consequences of the 

 8          underfunding of the court budget, and its 

 9          effect on court clerks and consequently the 

10          courts, must be reversed.  

11                 The loss of 250 court clerks saved 

12          $22.5 million annually for the last six 

13          years, a total of $135 million.  We have more 

14          than paid for our own reclassification.  We 

15          who made the biggest effort and sacrifice in 

16          keeping the courts functioning smoothly must 

17          reap our just reward.

18                 Are there any questions?  

19                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Any questions?

20                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  No questions 

21          here. 

22                 ASSEMBLYMAN OAKS:  Thank you.  

23                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  We appreciate your 

24          coming and testifying tonight.  


                                                                  651

 1                 Thank you very much.

 2                 ASSEMBLYMAN OAKS:  My wife is a clerk 

 3          in a justice court, but she would agree 

 4          you're crazy if you don't listen to the 

 5          clerk.

 6                 (Laughter.)

 7                 PRESIDENT BROWNE:  Thank you.

 8                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Thank you very much.  

 9                 And our next testifier is Billy 

10          Imandt, president, Court Officers 

11          Bevenolent -- Court Officers Benevolent 

12          Association of Nassau County.  I can't speak 

13          anymore.

14                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  That's getting 

15          there.

16                 ASSEMBLYMAN OAKS:  That's easy enough 

17          for you to say.  That's a mouthful.

18                 ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  And up next is 

19          Bill Dobbins, from the Suffolk County Court 

20          Employees Association.

21                 PRESIDENT IMANDT:  As you've been here 

22          for about 11 hours, so have I.  And my 

23          mouth -- of course, I had dry mouth, so -- 

24          indulge me just a minute.


                                                                  652

 1                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  So did I.

 2                 PRESIDENT IMANDT:  (Pausing to drink 

 3          water.)  Thank you.

 4                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.

 5                 Welcome.

 6                 PRESIDENT IMANDT:  Thank you very 

 7          much, Madam Chairperson.  My name is Billy 

 8          Imandt, and I'm a 32-year court employee and 

 9          I am the president of COBANC, the Court 

10          Officers Benevolent Association of Nassau 

11          County, representing not only court officers 

12          but approximately 65 different job titles 

13          including court clerks, court attorneys, 

14          reporters, interpreters, analysts, judge's 

15          secretaries, judge's law clerks, and what we 

16          call the back office workers, who really 

17          should be called the backbone-of-the-system 

18          office workers, just to name a few of the 

19          titles.

20                 I asked to speak to you today to give 

21          you a report from the trenches and let you 

22          know how well my members are equipped and 

23          supported to handle the business of serving 

24          the public in their vital role as the support 


                                                                  653

 1          staff in the administration of justice to the 

 2          citizens of Nassau County and, of course, 

 3          New York State.  

 4                 My message to you is we're just barely 

 5          holding on.  For over seven years, with 

 6          layoffs and an attrition-based budget -- that 

 7          being when someone retires, no one is hired 

 8          to replace them, and the responsibilities of 

 9          their job are spread out to the remaining 

10          workforce -- we have been getting the job 

11          done, as I said, for years now.  In my 

12          bargaining unit, COBANC, we have 20 percent 

13          less workers then seven years ago, and we're 

14          still getting the job done.  

15                 We have been spread thin, working 

16          harder than ever, without a decent 

17          compensation package offer to any of the 

18          court unions.  In fact, we have been offered 

19          the worst compensation package of any 

20          municipality in New York State that I know 

21          of, and that's after taking 20 percent 

22          layoffs.  Over the past five years, inflation 

23          has increased by almost exactly 10 percent. 

24          Our -- and all court union workers -- 


                                                                  654

 1          compensation package has been zero, zero, 

 2          zero, 2 percent and 2 percent, or 4 percent 

 3          over those same five years.  And again, with 

 4          20 percent less workers.  And the job is 

 5          still getting done.

 6                 In 2011 when our contract expired, the 

 7          state was just beginning to come out of the 

 8          worst period of the worldwide recession.  And 

 9          when it came time to discuss a new contract, 

10          we knew that it would probably be less then 

11          we deserved, and we understood it.  Working 

12          with no contract and the prospects of zero 

13          compensation, we forged on, still getting the 

14          job done.  Even as desk after desk became 

15          vacant and more and more work was put on our 

16          desks, again we understood.  We are extremely 

17          professional and prideful, and our work ethic 

18          wouldn't allow us to have work backlog or to 

19          slide the window closed at exactly 5 o'clock, 

20          leaving members of the public to go home and 

21          try again tomorrow because the members 

22          weren't getting compensated past that time. 

23                 Many of my members, unsanctioned by 

24          their union, are actually coming in earlier, 


                                                                  655

 1          working through all or part of their lunch 

 2          hour, and leaving well after 5 o'clock.  Off 

 3          the clock.  This was, and is, virtually --  

 4          I'm sorry, there was and is virtually no 

 5          overtime, and my members -- and I say God 

 6          love them -- refused to let that demoralizing 

 7          condition affect their work product.  They 

 8          were, and are, doing this to make it work.  

 9          To make it work until the cavalry comes to 

10          the rescue.  

11                 Well, it's been five years since we 

12          had a contract, and it's time.  We cannot 

13          hold our breath underwater for too much 

14          longer.  Sick leave usage is up, disciplines 

15          are up, grievances are up, and morale is way 

16          down.  Senator Savino said at Justice 

17          DiFiore's confirmation hearings not to be 

18          afraid to ask for more money for the budget, 

19          and said "We want to help."  Committee 

20          members, we need your help.  

21                 I'm hoping you can help now, because 

22          COBANC is at the impasse stage of 

23          negotiations with the Office of Court 

24          Administration and, unless something changes 


                                                                  656

 1          dramatically, we will be back to you in 

 2          Albany to settle our contract.  We don't have 

 3          binding arbitration, as do many of our police 

 4          and sister and brother peace officer 

 5          organizations, and our remedy to resolving 

 6          our contract, when all else fails, is you 

 7          here in Albany.  

 8                 It doesn't have to come to that.  

 9          Being that the court system had three flat 

10          budgets, or zero percent increases, while the 

11          Governor was calling for a 2 percent cap, we 

12          feel that this vital segment of society, the 

13          court system, is owed more than the 

14          2.4 percent increase it is now asking for.  

15                 As you know, the courts are not a 

16          discretionary agency.  We are included in the 

17          U.S. and New York State Constitution as an 

18          absolute right that society is entitled to, 

19          an important part of life, liberty and the 

20          pursuit of happiness.  How would we function 

21          if the criminal courts didn't have funding to 

22          complete their task?  There would be a real 

23          potential for anarchy.  Wouldn't society soon 

24          be crippled if, due to lack of funding, there 


                                                                  657

 1          were not enough court workers and judges on 

 2          staff to interpret and enforce contracts? 

 3          They wouldn't be worth the paper they are 

 4          written on.  What about the havoc that would 

 5          rain down if our matrimonial courts are not 

 6          funded to the point where there could be 

 7          swift resolution to one of the more volatile 

 8          divisions of what the court system handles?  

 9                 Over the past half a decade, our 

10          courts have been funded at an average of 

11          approximately 1.4 percent when the Governor 

12          has capped everybody else at 2 percent.  And 

13          by the way, that's again with 20 percent 

14          layoffs and still getting the job done.  It's 

15          time to put the proper amount needed back in 

16          the system.  I not only ask you to grant the 

17          requested 2.4 percent increase, but to 

18          determine how much funding the court actually 

19          needs to get back on its feet, be it an 

20          increase of 3 percent, 4 percent, or whatever 

21          is needed to properly serve the citizens of 

22          New York State.  

23                 During contract negotiations we were 

24          told that the Office of Court Administration 


                                                                  658

 1          had no money at all to increase the 

 2          compensation for a respectable, somewhat 

 3          close to cost-of-living offer, so we started 

 4          digging to see how the budget was spent.  And 

 5          you don't have to dig too far to see that 

 6          there's a whopping $85 million budgeted for 

 7          fiscal 2016-2017 for a program that is known 

 8          as Civil Legal Services.  And as you know, 

 9          this is a program to help the public that 

10          cannot afford counsel for important civil 

11          legal matters -- foreclosures, family court 

12          matters, and landlord-tenant matters, just to 

13          name a few.  

14                 A noble and worthy program, no doubt.  

15          However, we feel it has no business being 

16          funded through the court budget.  The Office 

17          of Court Administration budget is 90 percent 

18          paychecks to people.  We don't have tractors 

19          and trucks like the DOT.  Ninety percent of 

20          that budget money goes to workers' paychecks, 

21          which then of course gets circulated back 

22          into the communities and into paying taxes. 

23          We can't afford to fund a program of this 

24          magnitude through the court budget.  It even 


                                                                  659

 1          has a sense of impropriety that the court 

 2          budget money is going to attorneys that 

 3          appear before the same organization that 

 4          funded them to represent people of need.  

 5                 We have been reading that the state is 

 6          so flush with money now that we feel this 

 7          should be a program that is financed through 

 8          the executive branch and not the Office of 

 9          Court Administration.  We can't afford it.  

10          Our buildings are in horrendous condition, 

11          our staffing needs to be reinforced, and our 

12          workers, who are the foundation of the court 

13          system, need to be treated with the respect 

14          they have earned by being compensated fairly 

15          and equitably.  

16                 We are the middle class.  We fuel the 

17          economy.  If we do well, history has shown 

18          that society does well.  You can't fund 

19          programs from money intended to make the 

20          courts work, on all levels, on the backs of 

21          middle-class workers in that system.  In 

22          fact, ironically, the Civil Legal Services 

23          program was formally created and expanded at 

24          the same time we were being laid off and 


                                                                  660

 1          offered zero compensation.  

 2                 If the Civil Legal Service program was 

 3          picked up by the executive branch, we could 

 4          fund the judges' raises and fair and 

 5          equitable compensation for my members and 

 6          members of the other court unions.  And with 

 7          all the surplus money that New York State 

 8          has, I think they should expand the Civil 

 9          Legal Services program -- under the executive 

10          branch, though.

11                 That would most probably instantly 

12          resolve the contracts of the remaining 

13          one-third of the unions without a contract.  

14          Three of the four without a contract are 

15          speaking today.  It would not burden future 

16          budgets with recurring monies, and it would 

17          show appreciation and recognition for how 

18          hard and long all state court employees have 

19          been working and sacrificing.  

20                 I believe that Justice DiFiore -- 

21          Chief Justice DiFiore, excuse me -- could 

22          also require that the approximately 60,000 

23          non-municipal New York State Bar Association 

24          attorneys donate 14 hours pro bono a year, or 


                                                                  661

 1          half a day per quarter, to keep this program 

 2          operating as it has been.  Or she can caucus 

 3          with the legislature, her OCA experts, bar 

 4          association representatives, and union 

 5          leaders to figure out how to take this 

 6          program out of the court budget. 

 7                 Honorable members of this committee, 

 8          please don't kick the can down the street.  

 9          Because as I said, if we don't resolve this 

10          situation now, very soon we will be back in a 

11          number of months asking you to impose what 

12          would be a fair contract on us and the Office 

13          of Court Administration.  We don't want to 

14          give you more work, but we may have no 

15          choice.  We are willing to roll the dice as 

16          to what you think is fair, because we don't 

17          think anyone would fathom, with a 20 percent 

18          reduction in workforce and the job still 

19          getting done every day in every courthouse in 

20          every county, that reasonable people such as 

21          you would think that the fair number is zero.  

22                 Due to low-paying salaries, I've been 

23          told by human resources that the courts are 

24          having a retention problem.  Now couple that 


                                                                  662

 1          with the fact that the state has the ability 

 2          to pay.  With the inadequate budgets that 

 3          they've been given, OCA keeps cutting and 

 4          cutting to the point now where we have 

 5          retention problems, staffing problems, 

 6          contract problems, people working out of 

 7          title, and very serious morale problems and 

 8          extreme security issues.  

 9                 Although OCA's own security staffing 

10          guidelines say that there should be a minimum 

11          of three court officers in a court -- in a 

12          criminal court -- and two officers on 

13          perimeter patrol, they're actually down to 

14          one now.  We didn't squawk when it was two, 

15          although we didn't think it was safe -- but 

16          again, we tried to make it work.

17                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you for that 

18          testimony, and we appreciate it, 

19          President Imandt.  And we would like for you 

20          to keep in touch with us and let us know how 

21          things are going.  

22                 You heard a lot of concern today from 

23          legislative members about the court system 

24          and making sure that they're adequately 


                                                                  663

 1          staffed and up to speed, so I think you have 

 2          a lot of people here who are concerned about 

 3          the courts.  And we appreciate the jobs that 

 4          you do, especially in difficult 

 5          circumstances -- that's what it sounds like.

 6                 Do we have any members who have any 

 7          questions?  Okay.

 8                 So thank you very much.  Did you have 

 9          anything else that you wanted to add?  

10                 PRESIDENT IMANDT:  Well, I just did 

11          have to say that --

12                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Because we do have 

13          your testimony in writing, so --

14                 PRESIDENT IMANDT:  Right.  

15                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Your --

16                 PRESIDENT IMANDT:  Well, I just want 

17          to say that I'm the president of COBANC, once 

18          again, and we're the proud members of the 

19          court system.  

20                 Thank you very much for your time.  I 

21          appreciate it.

22                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  We appreciate it so 

23          much.  And we appreciate you being here.  

24          Thank you.  


                                                                  664

 1                 I would remind our speakers that 

 2          there's five minutes on the clock.  

 3                 And our next speaker is President Bill 

 4          Dobbins, Suffolk County Court Employees 

 5          Association.

 6                 Welcome, President Dobbins.

 7                 PRESIDENT DOBBINS:  Good evening, 

 8          Madam Chairperson.  Thank you all for having 

 9          me come here to speak today -- tonight.  

10                 I just want to express to you -- the 

11          reason I'm here is to express a major concern 

12          that we have.  I want to convey to you 

13          problems that our courts in Suffolk County 

14          are facing.  And the best way to say it is 

15          the state of our courts are extremely poor.  

16          Morale is suffering, people are doing more 

17          work with less help, and it's been happening 

18          for a period of over six years.  And it seems 

19          like there's no end in sight.  

20                 The budget cuts from several years ago 

21          have really disabled our court system.  The 

22          hardworking members of our union, the very 

23          heart and soul of the court system, are 

24          working with lack of appreciation, lack of 


                                                                  665

 1          help, and any sense of hope.  Staffing levels 

 2          have been so diminished that our courts are 

 3          no longer operated in the manner that they 

 4          should be.  Public safety is deteriorating as 

 5          a result.  We are in crisis, and it seems as 

 6          though we are spinning out of control.  

 7                 One of the major concerns in our 

 8          courts is security.  As a previous speaker 

 9          spoke of, the court officer staffing in 

10          courtrooms -- in district court, we currently 

11          are using one court officer in a courtroom.  

12          It's unconscionable that that is happening.  

13          In a criminal court courtroom, one court 

14          officer.  And what surprises me is that, God 

15          forbid, something happens.  In the sense of 

16          saving money, in the sense of not spending a 

17          little bit more, we're waiting for something 

18          to happen.  Are we waiting for the next 

19          headline?  Are we waiting for the next mass 

20          shooting because we didn't have enough money 

21          to put more court officers in a courtroom?  

22                 There's more sophistication out there 

23          today.  Weapons can be secreted into our 

24          buildings despite the magnetometers, despite 


                                                                  666

 1          the line of defense at the front doors of the 

 2          courthouse.  We have titanium knives that are 

 3          undetected by metal detectors.  We have guns 

 4          made out of plastic that can come into our 

 5          courthouse and be used.  There were speakers 

 6          earlier today that spoke of the criminal 

 7          activity in prisons.  Well, there's no doubt 

 8          that there's criminal activity happening in 

 9          our courts every single day, and it seems 

10          like the administration just wants to ignore 

11          the problem.  

12                 It's time that we wake up.  We don't 

13          need another situation like San Bernardino.  

14          We don't need another situation like what 

15          happened in Paris.  Unfortunately, the sense 

16          is it's not going happen to here, it's not 

17          going to happen here.  But what if it does?  

18          What are we going to do?  

19                 We need more money to hire more staff.  

20          We need more money to hire more court 

21          officers.  That would solve so many of the 

22          problems.  

23                 Judge Marks spoke earlier about the 

24          shortage and he said -- he spoke to us, and 


                                                                  667

 1          he said there's a class coming in February 

 2          29th, 150 brand new court officers, that will 

 3          help with the staffing problems.  Well, you 

 4          know what, they're coming out in June and 

 5          Suffolk County has been promised to get maybe 

 6          15 out of those 150.  The problem is that by 

 7          June, we're going to lose 15 officers.  So 

 8          that 15-officer gain will not even help us.  

 9                 The hiring is not moving fast enough, 

10          the retirements are going quicker and 

11          quicker.  We are losing staff.  The courts 

12          are definitely not safe.  And unfortunately, 

13          the judges in our courts are under the 

14          misconception that they are safe with just 

15          one court officer, because they're being 

16          misinformed by superior officers.  

17          Misinformed.  God forbid something happens, 

18          and I hope it never does. 

19                 In the meantime, the courts throughout 

20          New York and especially in Suffolk County are 

21          foundering.  Our back-office staff is working 

22          exhaustively without any help.  We have boxes 

23          and boxes of files in our records room on the 

24          floors, on the tables, just waiting to be 


                                                                  668

 1          filed or waiting to be worked on.  Our 

 2          foreclosure courts in Riverhead -- I was out 

 3          there two weeks ago, there are motions for 

 4          summary judgements on those foreclosures 

 5          dating back to 2011 and 2012 not even 

 6          touched.  They're sitting on windowsills in 

 7          the courthouse on Griffing Avenue in 

 8          Riverhead.   

 9                 We're supposed to be public servants, 

10          and it seems that we're more and more public 

11          disservice.  We're not doing anything to help 

12          the public anymore.  It's about just getting 

13          by, what can we do to save money, what can we 

14          do to get to a calendar.  If we want to bring 

15          a prisoner up from the cell block to come to 

16          a courtroom, we have to wait until other 

17          courtrooms close before we can properly staff 

18          a team to bring prisoners up to a courtroom.  

19                 Sometimes attorneys -- Assemblyman Al 

20          Graf spoke earlier, he said he waited three, 

21          four, five hours, sometimes, for a 

22          prisoner -- ultimately they get frustrated 

23          because they have cases in other parts or 

24          cases in other jurisdictions that they have 


                                                                  669

 1          to handle.  Inevitably, they waive their 

 2          client's appearance.  So now this poor 

 3          defendant, transported 33 miles from 

 4          Riverhead Jail, sits in a holding cell in 

 5          Central Islip hoping, waiting for his case to 

 6          come up so that he can be brought to the 

 7          courtroom.  And it doesn't happen.  It 

 8          doesn't happen.  

 9                 Talk about a waste of resources.  What 

10          did it cost to bring that defendant from 

11          Riverhead Jail to the Central Islip 

12          Courthouse?  What did it cost?  We're talking 

13          about saving money, and we're wasting money 

14          left and right.  We're wasting it.  But 

15          nobody looks at that.  The Judiciary Budget 

16          talks about Civil Legal Services, which is a 

17          great thing, we don't think it's bad -- but 

18          we don't think it should come from our 

19          budget.  We think it should come from the 

20          executive branch budget.  It just doesn't 

21          seem right that the judiciary is paying for 

22          attorneys that have to argue before them.  It 

23          just gives that sense of impropriety -- it 

24          doesn't mean that there is, but it just gives 


                                                                  670

 1          that sense that there is something amiss.  It 

 2          doesn't seem right.  And again, we advocate 

 3          for it.  We think these people need help when 

 4          they're dealing with their civil issues.  

 5          They're poor people.  But we think it should 

 6          be paid by somebody else.  

 7                 I urge you to pass the budget that was 

 8          submitted by the Office of Court 

 9          Administration.  I urge you to pass it 

10          because we need the funding so that we can 

11          hire people, so that we can staff our courts, 

12          so that we can make sure that our courts are 

13          safe.  We had a gang fight outside the court 

14          building.  We have court officers, trained 

15          peace officers with the ability to arrest, 

16          they carry firearms.  They couldn't even go 

17          outside to attend to the problem.  They had 

18          to call local police.  A problem that could 

19          have taken care of right then and there, it 

20          took ten minutes for police to arrive.  What 

21          did that delay have to cause?  Did anybody 

22          get hurt?  Who knows.  Could anybody have 

23          gotten hurt?  Who knows.  The money has to be 

24          spent properly.  I implore you to pass the 


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 1          budget, pass more so that everything can be 

 2          paid for.  Everything could be paid for.  

 3          Because we've been neglected far too long.  

 4                 Thank you.  

 5                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  Thank 

 6          you very much, President Dobbins, for that 

 7          testimony.  

 8                 And as I said previously, we're very 

 9          concerned about the condition in our courts 

10          right now, and it's very helpful for you and 

11          all the people from the court system who have 

12          been here tonight to hear firsthand your 

13          testimony and real-life cases and how that 

14          affects the people of New York State.  

15                 So we appreciate what all the people 

16          who work in the courts do every single day.  

17          It sounds like a very difficult job, and we 

18          truly appreciate you staying so late tonight.

19                 PRESIDENT DOBBINS:  Thank you, 

20          Senator.

21                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  

22                 Our next speaker is Colonel Jack Ozer, 

23          New York Wing of the Civil Air Patrol.  

24                 And again, speakers are allotted five 


                                                                  672

 1          minutes of time.  And if you could summarize, 

 2          if you have a lengthy testimony especially, 

 3          if you could just please summarize the 

 4          highlights and the high points, because we 

 5          still have other people waiting.  Thank you.  

 6                 Good to see you, Colonel.

 7                 COLONEL OZER:  Good evening.

 8                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Good evening.  

 9                 COLONEL OZER:  And thank you very 

10          much.  I noticed we have one member, Senator 

11          Young, who's a member of our legislative 

12          squadron.

13                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  That's correct.

14                 COLONEL OZER:  And Senator 

15          Hassell-Thompson, who is a Civil Air Patrol 

16          cadet.  That's great.

17                 I will make it very brief.  For those 

18          of you don't know, the Civil Air Patrol is 

19          the auxiliary of the United States Air Force.  

20          It has been called upon for numerous things 

21          in New York State, which I'll get on to in a 

22          minute.  It has three functions:  emergency 

23          service, cadet programs, and aerospace 

24          education.  


                                                                  673

 1                 Our emergency service includes 

 2          homeland security, it includes disaster 

 3          relief, it includes counterdrug operations, 

 4          missing person searches, et cetera.  Our 

 5          cadet program is a unique program that 

 6          teaches cadets things like self-discipline, 

 7          honor, integrity, and respect.  And our 

 8          aerospace education program teaches people 

 9          about science, math, engineering, and 

10          technology in how the future will be.

11                 We are very unique in one respect.  

12          Although we come to you for money, we have 

13          saved the State of New York 10 times the 

14          money they've given us.  In the last several 

15          years, we've saved New York State in excess 

16          of $2 million for our people through 

17          Hurricane Sandy, Hurricane Irene, programs of 

18          fire watchers, Department of Transportation 

19          overflights, missing person searches, 

20          sheltering of people during disasters.  And 

21          this has worked out very well.

22                 Two years ago we came and asked for 

23          funding, $200,000, and that was because we 

24          realized after Hurricane Sandy we were not -- 


                                                                  674

 1          although we did the job, we had problems too.  

 2          We didn't have electricity in a lot of our 

 3          bases.  We didn't have enough cameras, we 

 4          didn't have enough support.  That money went 

 5          to put in -- for example, Long Island, our 

 6          mission base, received a new heating system, 

 7          a permanent generator system.  Our base in 

 8          Rome received a permanent generator system.  

 9          We've purchased more cameras.  We've 

10          purchased more equipment, more training 

11          funds, and that's gone a long way.

12                 One of the things we did with our 

13          cadet program, which was great, is we 

14          started a "Depressed Area Initiative," we 

15          called it, for areas of the state where the 

16          cadet programs are really needed for our 

17          youth but they can't afford it because the 

18          funding is not there.  The parents can't 

19          afford the registration, they can't afford 

20          uniforms, so part of this money went to, in 

21          fact, buy uniforms, fund people that couldn't 

22          afford the program to get into our program.  

23          The program is so important to them, and to 

24          help them in the future, that money should 


                                                                  675

 1          not be the object.  That's what we've done.  

 2          We continue to do it.  

 3                 With the added money we are asking, we 

 4          will continue to build our infrastructure, 

 5          put more money into the cadet program, more 

 6          science kits for our cadets, more cameras, 

 7          computers -- so that every time the State of 

 8          New York calls us or any of the 

 9          municipalities within the State of New York 

10          calls us up, we're ready and willing to help.  

11                 As you can see, the paperwork that was 

12          given out -- I don't want to go and lengthen 

13          this with questions -- we are a very 

14          professional organization that actually is 

15          the cheapest game in town, and the amount of 

16          money we save is tremendous.  So we're asking 

17          the state to just give us our budget this 

18          year so we can continue our work.

19                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you very 

20          much, and it's an excellent program.  I've 

21          seen the results firsthand with the cadets, 

22          and I appreciate all that you do.  So thank 

23          you for being with us tonight.

24                 COLONEL OZER:  Thank you.  


                                                                  676

 1                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  You want -- okay, 

 2          all set.  Thank you.  Thank you so much.

 3                 COLONEL OZER:  Thank you.  

 4                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 5                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Our next speaker is 

 6          Executive Director Charlotte Carter, from the 

 7          New York State Dispute Resolution 

 8          Association, and she is joined by Julie 

 9          Loesch, director of the Center for Resolution 

10          and Justice at Child & Family Services.

11                 Welcome.  I know it's been an 

12          extremely long day, and we appreciate your 

13          tenacity.

14                 MS. CARTER:  Thank you, Madam 

15          Chairwoman, and thank you all for this 

16          opportunity to speak.

17                 We're here on behalf of a statewide 

18          network called CDRCs, the Community Dispute 

19          Resolution Centers.  And thank you for that 

20          introduction.  

21                 The New York State Dispute Resolution 

22          Association is a bit of a hybrid.  We're a 

23          statewide contract program administrator, and 

24          we also are a professional association.  The 


                                                                  677

 1          CDRCs are among our members.  Together we 

 2          provide access to justice and tools like 

 3          mediation to help people to address conflict 

 4          productively and quickly, and those services 

 5          are provided in every county in New York.  

 6                 We're here to request $3 million as a 

 7          legislative add to stabilize our network and 

 8          to allow us to respond to emerging community 

 9          needs.  

10                 In 1981, the New York Legislature was 

11          the first in the country to pass legislation 

12          to create the CDRC network, and the funding 

13          and oversight was provided by OCA.  The 

14          budget grew from an initial $529,000 for 

15          17 counties to a little over $9 million in 

16          2010.  In 2011, that funding was slashed by 

17          nearly 50 percent, and it has not increased 

18          significantly since then.  

19                 Despite the dramatically reduced 

20          funding, the CDRCs have continued to provide 

21          free or low-cost mediation and conflict 

22          resolution services to your constituents.  

23          They help ensure that people do not lose 

24          their homes, their jobs, or basic human 


                                                                  678

 1          services.  Mediation solves disputes between 

 2          neighbors, family members, business owners 

 3          and customers, and they're resolved often 

 4          before those disputes escalate to require 

 5          intervention by police or the court system.  

 6                 In addition to this low-cost, 

 7          high-yield conflict management process, 

 8          there's a very high compliance rate.  Also, 

 9          92 percent of the participants are very 

10          satisfied with their mediation.  Everyone 

11          benefits from the restoration of important 

12          personal and business relationships.  

13                 Last year the network served over 

14          70,000 individuals and handled over 28,000 

15          cases.  Mediation saves the state and the 

16          court system money and resources.  From start 

17          to finish, the average mediation costs $336, 

18          which is far less than court costs for even 

19          minor criminal or civil matters.  

20                 CDRCs match state funding dollar for 

21          dollar.  They use professionally trained 

22          community volunteers to mediate cases, with 

23          donated time valued at over $2.3 million 

24          annually.  Over 75 percent of mediations 


                                                                  679

 1          conclude with a written agreement, usually 

 2          within a few weeks of the initial intake.  

 3                 The CDRC offers access to efficient 

 4          and effective justice for all New Yorkers, 

 5          especially for our most vulnerable 

 6          populations.

 7                 MS. LOESCH:  The demand for the work 

 8          mentioned by Charlotte continues to grow, 

 9          but so do the costs of providing services.

10                 My CDRC covers Allegany, Cattaraugus, 

11          Chautauqua, Erie, Genesee, Niagara, Orleans, 

12          and Wyoming counties, and yet we have only 

13          six staff providing services across this vast 

14          eight-county region in which one of my 

15          offices can be nearly two hours from the 

16          other.

17                 We have slowed our expansion of elder 

18          and veterans mediation, and all but stopped 

19          our conflict education and peer mediation 

20          programs in local schools, despite increasing 

21          requests for these services.

22                 My story is not unique.  Each of you 

23          here today has a CDRC in your community with 

24          a similar story of unfortunate realities and 


                                                                  680

 1          difficult choices about who to serve and who 

 2          must wait for mediation and other services.  

 3          Given the many ways in which CDRC services 

 4          benefit communities beyond the court system, 

 5          we come to ask you to help diversify and 

 6          stabilize our base funding.  We have been 

 7          meeting with legislators in districts and 

 8          here in Albany, and we're pleased that we've 

 9          had a great response on the ground.  

10                 The $3 million legislative add will 

11          make it possible for the CDRC network to 

12          continue to provide responsive, effective, 

13          and acceptable dispute resolution services to 

14          all of your constituents.

15                 Thank you.

16                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you very 

17          much.  And thank you for covering such a wide 

18          territory.  We appreciate it.  

19                 But we appreciate you being here 

20          tonight and staying so long, and your 

21          testimony was very helpful, so thank you.

22                 MS. LOESCH:  Thank you.

23                 MS. CARTER:  Thank you.

24                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.


                                                                  681

 1                 Our next speaker is Connie Neal, 

 2          executive director of the New York State 

 3          Coalition Against Domestic Violence.

 4                 Thank you for being here.  

 5                 MS. NEAL:  Well, good evening, 

 6          everyone.  I really appreciate this 

 7          opportunity to speak with you tonight.  

 8                 I'm Connie Neal, executive director of 

 9          the New York State Coalition Against Domestic 

10          Violence.  We are a statewide membership 

11          organization of local domestic violence 

12          programs located throughout the State of 

13          New York.  Currently there are 249 

14          residential and non-residential programs with 

15          a shared commitment to create and support 

16          social change necessary to prevent and end 

17          domestic violence.

18                 Each year, the National Network to End 

19          Domestic Violence coordinates a National 

20          Census of Domestic Violence Services.  This 

21          census recently took place on September 16, 

22          2015, and provides a one-day, unduplicated 

23          count of adults and children seeking services 

24          from domestic violence programs in all states 


                                                                  682

 1          and U.S. territories.  Later this month, the 

 2          National Network to End Domestic Violence 

 3          will provide a briefing to Congress on the 

 4          results of the 2015 survey.  The information 

 5          in that briefing will include some staggering 

 6          information about New York State.  

 7                 According to the census, New York has 

 8          the highest demand for domestic violence 

 9          services in the country.  From this census 

10          this past fall, on one day in New York nearly 

11          7,000 victims of domestic violence received 

12          services.  Also on that same day, almost 

13          1,000 requests for domestic violence services 

14          went unmet because programs did not have 

15          funding or the staff to respond to those 

16          requests for service.  

17                 We also know that domestic violence 

18          programs reduced 148 individual domestic 

19          violence service options for survivors and/or 

20          eliminated them during 2015.  And finally, 

21          domestic violence programs reported that 115 

22          staff positions -- mostly direct service 

23          advocates -- were reduced or eliminated 

24          during the same time frame.  


                                                                  683

 1                 We have an incredible demand for 

 2          domestic violence services here in New York, 

 3          as you can see, and I believe this is a call 

 4          to action for the State of New York.  We have 

 5          the opportunity in front of us now to create 

 6          the strongest network of domestic violence 

 7          services in the country and, equally 

 8          important, to provide a clear message that a 

 9          meaningful investment in domestic violence 

10          services and primary prevention is a top 

11          priority for public protection in our state.  

12                 Currently the New York State Executive 

13          Budget contains little state-originating 

14          dollars to support domestic violence services 

15          and relies heavily on federal funding 

16          sources.  Clearly that federal funding is not 

17          enough.  

18                 Lessons from an August 2014 report on 

19          domestic violence programs and practices in 

20          other states indicates it is important to 

21          insure that services are stable and available 

22          for victims throughout a state.  Victims, 

23          their communities, and states are best served 

24          by the presence of a network of local 


                                                                  684

 1          programs whose sole purpose is to ensure that 

 2          services and support for victims and their 

 3          children exist, and that gaps and needs are 

 4          identified and met.  Frequently that includes 

 5          the need for victims to flee their homes and 

 6          communities in order to remain safe.  

 7                 It is difficult to achieve these goals 

 8          when programs are competing with one another 

 9          for limited funds, are constantly facing the 

10          threat of losing funding, and grant 

11          administrators view local programs as vendors 

12          instead of as experts that offer 

13          comprehensive solutions to a serious social 

14          problems.  

15                 So today, we're asking that you ensure 

16          the following items are prioritized in the 

17          final budget.  First, address some 

18          long-standing gaps in funding for local 

19          domestic violence programs across the state 

20          that have resulted due to several years of 

21          flat or reduced investments.  And that 

22          includes $6 million in TANF funding for 

23          non-residential domestic violence programs, 

24          providing at least a 3 percent increase in 


                                                                  685

 1          the domestic violence shelter per diem rate 

 2          as well.  

 3                 Secondly, stabilize and increase civil 

 4          legal services for domestic violence victims 

 5          statewide.  I ask that you review the funding 

 6          levels in last year's budget, restore and 

 7          increase it in order to meet the demands for 

 8          services that are just so critical for 

 9          domestic violence survivors.  

10                 Third, provide $4.5 million in funding 

11          for local domestic violence programs to 

12          collaborate with colleges and universities in 

13          implementing the recent "Enough Is Enough" 

14          campus policy mandates that also include 

15          dating violence, domestic violence, and 

16          stalking services.  This support for domestic 

17          violence programs is intended to complement 

18          the 4.5 million that's already provided in 

19          support for rape crisis programs and their 

20          work to prevent sexual assault.  

21                 We know that this was incredibly 

22          groundbreaking legislation that was passed 

23          during the last legislative session, and I 

24          encourage you to provide the funding for 


                                                                  686

 1          domestic violence programs so that they can 

 2          adequately support this legislation by 

 3          addressing dating violence, domestic 

 4          violence, and stalking in conjunction with 

 5          colleges and universities across the state.  

 6                 And then, fourth, create a primary 

 7          prevention funding stream for domestic 

 8          violence programs in New York by establishing 

 9          a $17.25 million fund in the public 

10          protection budget that will be dispersed 

11          through coordinated support to the coalition 

12          and local programs statewide.  We know that 

13          the consequences of homicides are 

14          significant, not only for those immediate 

15          individuals involved but also communities and 

16          neighborhoods and our larger society.  The 

17          average cost per homicide can exceed 

18          $17.25 million when considering medical 

19          costs, lost future earnings, public program 

20          costs, property damage and losses, and 

21          quality of life losses.  

22                 We know that innovations are critical 

23          in the work to end domestic violence, and a 

24          lot of those innovations have come from 


                                                                  687

 1          states with reliable, noncompetitive funding 

 2          practices and strong state coalitions.  

 3                 Also, just a couple of notes about 

 4          primary prevention.  This is a relatively new 

 5          concept for many working to end domestic 

 6          violence, whose main focus has been 

 7          responding to victims.  However, it is clear 

 8          that a shift is at hand here for us  and to 

 9          include looking at programs and services that 

10          promote social change through activities, 

11          programs, and policies that change the 

12          attitudes, behaviors, and social norms that 

13          allow domestic violence to thrive.  

14                 Again, because the cost of a single 

15          homicide can be well over $17.25 million, we 

16          are requesting funds at this level to 

17          demonstrate New York State's commitment to 

18          preventing domestic violence before it 

19          occurs.  That's the crux and the basis of 

20          primary prevention services, to shift it to 

21          the front end.  

22                 So New York has a long history of 

23          being a leader across the nation, and we 

24          certainly should not want to be the 


                                                                  688

 1          number-one state in the country regarding 

 2          demand for domestic violence services.  The 

 3          time is now for us to move forward.  It's a 

 4          time for us to confirm our collective 

 5          commitment to ending domestic violence by 

 6          increasing these investments in vital 

 7          programs, and it's a time for us to look at 

 8          ways that we can really shift the process, 

 9          shift the focus, shift the services so that 

10          we can prevent domestic violence from 

11          occurring in the first place.  

12                 I look forward to working with you and 

13          your colleagues with the goal in mind of 

14          creating the strongest statewide domestic 

15          violence coalition, network of domestic 

16          violence services, and primary prevention 

17          initiatives in the country.  And I want to 

18          thank you again for this opportunity to speak 

19          with you tonight.  

20                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you very 

21          much.  

22                 Senator Nozzolio.  

23                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Thank you, Madam 

24          Chair.  


                                                                  689

 1                 I certainly agree with the points you 

 2          raised, particularly the issue of preventing 

 3          domestic violence before it occurs.  That 

 4          you're asking for a sea change in our 

 5          society; that's a good thing to ask for.  

 6                 I think one of the first steps could 

 7          be the establishment of Brittany's Law, which 

 8          the Senate has passed a number of years, 

 9          which you and I have talked about and you've 

10          failed to really support.  

11                 You're talking about prevention, you 

12          highlight prevention.  Well, Brittany's law, 

13          otherwise known as the Domestic Violence 

14          Prevention Act, is a step in that direction.  

15          And it's been a step in that direction for a 

16          number of years now.  

17                 There were two homicides that resulted 

18          in the development of this statute, a double 

19          homicide of a daughter and a granddaughter.  

20          I wish you would relook at that, or at least 

21          look at it again -- I'm not sure if you've 

22          ever looked at it.  But it's one thing to 

23          talk about prevention, it's another thing to 

24          ask for money for prevention, it's another 


                                                                  690

 1          thing to work to positive steps to establish 

 2          a way that citizens could be forewarned about 

 3          violent behavior from the people that they 

 4          associate with.  

 5                 I believe you know what I'm talking 

 6          about.  I would hope that you would put your 

 7          action where your comments are and in fact 

 8          support this measure.  

 9                 Thank you.

10                 MS. NEAL:  Thank you very much.

11                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  Anyone 

12          else?  

13                 Thank you for being here tonight.  

14          Appreciate it.  

15                 Our next speaker is Executive Director 

16          Soffiya Elijah, Correctional Association of 

17          New York.  

18                 Following Executive Director Elijah, 

19          we will have people from Prisoners' Legal 

20          Services.  So if you want to move closer to 

21          the front, that might be helpful.  

22                 Good evening.  

23                 MS. ELIJAH:  Hi.  Good evening.  I'm 

24          glad I'm not saying good morning.


                                                                  691

 1                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Yeah, I know -- 

 2          well, that may happen.  

 3                 Okay.  This is quite an extensive 

 4          amount of testimony.  Would you be able to 

 5          streamline that and hit the highlights, 

 6          please?  

 7                 MS. ELIJAH:  I have definitely 

 8          summarized it.  Do you have the -- 

 9                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  You're the best.  

10          Thank you.  

11                 MS. ELIJAH:  I'm going to hit some 

12          highlights, and you can ask questions, of 

13          course, if you want.  

14                 I'm going to focus first on Raise the 

15          Age.  Some specific things, of course:  We 

16          are asking that the Legislature this year 

17          raise the age of criminal responsibility and 

18          get all of our children out of adult jails 

19          and prisons.  

20                 As we know, raising the age is good 

21          for public safety.  When Connecticut moved 

22          the majority of the cases for 

23          16-and-17-year-olds out of adult court, their 

24          arrests plummeted, including those for 


                                                                  692

 1          violent crime.  We believe that New York can 

 2          experience the same.  

 3                 Children prosecuted as adults can 

 4          carry permanent criminal records, forever 

 5          impacting their ability to obtain stable 

 6          housing, employment, and education, each of 

 7          which are key to successful community 

 8          reentry.  And all of these harms are 

 9          disproportionately experienced by black and 

10          Latino children.  

11                 So we ask that you support seven key 

12          elements.  First, raise the age overall for 

13          all offenses for juveniles to age 18.  

14                 Raise the lower age of juvenile 

15          delinquency from age 7 to 12.  

16                 Ensure that no youth are held in adult 

17          jails or prisons, but are instead placed in 

18          youth facilities, and create youth facilities 

19          that utilize evidence-based therapeutic youth 

20          development models in small residential 

21          settings that have been proven to be most 

22          effective.

23                 Originate as many cases of 

24          16-and-17-year-olds in Family Court as 


                                                                  693

 1          possible, and create Youth Court parts in the 

 2          adult court system for the remaining cases.  

 3                 Ensure parental notification upon the 

 4          arrest of any 16- or 17-year-old, and ensure 

 5          that all youth under 18 are interviewed using 

 6          best practices.  

 7                 Expand opportunities for diversion 

 8          from the system, reducing the unnecessary and 

 9          ineffective confinement of low-risk youth 

10          while increasing access to community-based 

11          interventions, which is good for children and 

12          good for the public.

13                 And last, allow for the sealing of 

14          records for crimes committed by those under 

15          age 21, to provide relief from collateral 

16          consequences of an adult conviction.  

17                 Now I want to focus just briefly on 

18          another very central issue for the 

19          Correctional Association, and that is the 

20          issue of violence and abuse in our prisons.  

21          And specifically we're talking about the 

22          violence and abuse that is experienced by the 

23          people who are incarcerated at the hands of 

24          people who are public employees, paid with 


                                                                  694

 1          our tax dollars -- to wit, correctional 

 2          officers.  

 3                 As most of you know, there's been 

 4          quite a bit in the media over the past 

 5          12 months about violence and abuse and the 

 6          beating to death of people who are 

 7          incarcerated by corrections officers.  That 

 8          information was brought to light through the 

 9          media by the work of the Correctional 

10          Association.

11                 Mr. Harrell was killed in April of 

12          last year, as was Mr. Taylor, both at the 

13          hands of corrections officers.  Mr. George 

14          Williams was beaten within an inch of his 

15          life at Attica back in 2011 and still, the 

16          guards who did that, although they pled 

17          guilty, were allowed to keep their pensions 

18          and are still resisting civil penalties.  At 

19          Clinton, Mr. Strickland was beaten to death, 

20          and unfortunately we saw the beating on video 

21          camera, and still no one was held 

22          accountable.  And the atrocities that 

23          happened at Attica continue throughout the 

24          system on a regular basis, and no one is held 


                                                                  695

 1          accountable.

 2                 We must address the underlying culture 

 3          and environment of abuse and violence.  This 

 4          is not a case of a few bad apples.  

 5          Unfortunately, it is a system that is fueled 

 6          by racism, dehumanization, and an overly 

 7          punitive approach.  

 8                 We could start this process by closing 

 9          Attica Prison and bringing an end to the 

10          abusive culture that exists within our prison 

11          system.  Related to that, we must expand 

12          public oversight.  We must provide for media 

13          access and public reporting, support for the 

14          Department of Justice to investigate and 

15          expand the oversight abilities of the 

16          Correctional Association.  

17                 We must also closely examine the 

18          abusive use of solitary confinement.  We feel 

19          that the settlement brought about by the 

20          NYCLU suit is an important first step, but 

21          there are still hundreds of people 

22          languishing in solitary confinement in our 

23          prisons.  

24                 I will stop there.  The bulk of my 


                                                                  696

 1          testimony, as you have it, is in writing.  If 

 2          you have any questions, I'm happy to address 

 3          them.  Thank you.

 4                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you very 

 5          much.  

 6                 Senator Hassell-Thompson would like to 

 7          speak.  

 8                 MS. ELIJAH:  Good evening.  

 9                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Good 

10          evening.  Thank you.  

11                 I obviously have not had a chance to 

12          read your testimony, but what I looked for 

13          was to see if you had included in here any of 

14          the discussion -- I know that you've been a 

15          part of a coalition of prison reform groups 

16          who have looked at aging out in the 

17          correctional facilities, and those -- as you 

18          heard earlier, because I know you've been 

19          here for several hours, and so I know you 

20          heard the conversation that I had with 

21          Commissioner Annucci talking about release 

22          for those who are medically indigent.  

23                 Can you just elaborate for a minute, 

24          because of the amount of money that is stated 


                                                                  697

 1          in that report that's really involved -- and 

 2          I just want to go on the record again as 

 3          talking about, just very quickly, about the 

 4          fact that the numbers of people who are very, 

 5          very ill and whose conditions are exacerbated 

 6          by being in prison, just by virtue of the 

 7          facilities themselves and the lack of the 

 8          ability to get the kind of timely care that's 

 9          necessary.

10                 MS. ELIJAH:  Yes, thank you.  We did 

11          focus on that issue in our written testimony.  

12          Just in the interests of time, I didn't go 

13          into it in my summary.  But we have, and I 

14          did address this last year, a growing and 

15          increasing number of people over 50 years old 

16          who are requiring more and more medical care.  

17                 It costs approximately $60,000 a year 

18          to maintain someone under 40 in the DOCCS 

19          system, but as they get older that cost, 

20          because of medical expense, goes up as high 

21          as $240,000 to $260,000 a year.  We have not 

22          enough medical beds available for those 

23          people who are in need of significant 

24          cognitive medical care.  And we know that 


                                                                  698

 1          those people by and large do not present any 

 2          concern for public safety, and therefore the 

 3          more humane and economically intelligent 

 4          thing to do would be to move them out of the 

 5          DOCCS system.  They could be paroled and 

 6          maintained in the community.

 7                 We have approximately 9,000 people in 

 8          the current system who are over 50 years of 

 9          age, and that number is growing faster than 

10          any other segment of our prison population.  

11                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Somewhere 

12          in the report, that I think I read that it's 

13          over 78 percent of the people incarcerated 

14          are over the age of 50.  That's a tremendous 

15          number.

16                 MS. ELIJAH:  It is.  

17                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  And the 

18          other quick thing that I wanted, before my 

19          time runs out, is to talk about the fact that 

20          the evaluation, when they come up for parole, 

21          they're denied release, time and again, due 

22          to the immutable fact of the nature of 

23          offense for which the person has been 

24          convicted.


                                                                  699

 1                 MS. ELIJAH:  Yes.

 2                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Help me 

 3          with that one as well.

 4                 MS. ELIJAH:  Many of the people who we 

 5          find in our system who are 50 years of age 

 6          and older are serving long sentences.  And 

 7          when they become parole-eligible, and having 

 8          completed all the programming that's been 

 9          required of them, they're being denied parole 

10          even though they have a low risk assessment 

11          score, over and over again, because of the 

12          nature of their crime.  It's one thing that 

13          they can't change, any more than any of us 

14          can change our date of birth.  

15                 And so you find people who've been 

16          denied seven, eight, nine, and 10 times from 

17          being released on parole, despite the fact 

18          that they've had no disciplinary problems for 

19          many, many years and their risk assessment 

20          score is very low.  

21                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  I just want 

22          to take my couple of seconds to thank you, 

23          number one, for your diligence and the work 

24          that you've done on behalf of our corrections 


                                                                  700

 1          system.  

 2                 And, you know, there's always this 

 3          sense that we care more about the prisoners 

 4          than we do the people who work there, but 

 5          it's absolutely not true.  I think it's as 

 6          important for us to distinguish at this 

 7          budgetary time the importance of both and how 

 8          the care of -- if we want to be considered a 

 9          humane society, that our prisons is the place 

10          to begin.

11                 MS. ELIJAH:  I couldn't agree with you 

12          more.  

13                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  And I thank 

14          you again.

15                 MS. ELIJAH:  Thank you.  

16                 SENATOR HASSELL-THOMPSON:  Thank you, 

17          Madam Chair.

18                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you very 

19          much.

20                 MS. ELIJAH:  Okay.  Thank you.

21                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Our next speakers 

22          are from Prisoners' Legal Services.  And we 

23          have Karen Murtagh, executive director; 

24          Thomas Curran, member of the board of 


                                                                  701

 1          directors; and John Dunne, also a member of 

 2          the board of directors.  Except we're missing 

 3          one.

 4                 MR. CURRAN:  John escaped.

 5                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Okay.  He escaped.  

 6                 (Laughter.)

 7                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Well, thank you for 

 8          sticking it out, and welcome tonight.  We 

 9          look forward to your testimony.

10                 MS. MURTAGH:  Thank you.  I think --

11                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Again, it is quite 

12          thick, so if you could summarize, that would 

13          be helpful.

14                 MS. MURTAGH:  Oh, no problem at all.  

15          That's our plan.

16                 John did apologize for not being able 

17          to be here this evening.  He was here until 

18          about 5:30.  

19                 MR. CURRAN:  His wife summoned him 

20          home.  

21                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  We saw -- we did 

22          see that.  

23                 MR. CURRAN:  Mine has summoned me 

24          home, but yet I remain.


                                                                  702

 1                 MS. MURTAGH:  He told me he was under 

 2          house arrest.

 3                 MR. CURRAN:  I'm hoping she's asleep 

 4          by the time --

 5                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Yes.  Well, he was 

 6          sighted in the building.  And we did see 

 7          John Dunne, so thank you very much.  

 8                 MS. MURTAGH:  So my board member, 

 9          Tom Curran, is going to begin.

10                 MR. CURRAN:  The basic mission of 

11          Prisoners' Legal Services is to assure, or to 

12          try to assure, that New York's prisons are as 

13          humane as they can and should be.  There's 

14          not a frivolous thing about it.  This is not 

15          a starry-eyed lot.  The Prisoners' Legal 

16          Services board, PLS's board, consists of 

17          former prosecutors, judges, defense lawyers, 

18          general practitioners, mental health 

19          professionals, and former legislators.  

20                 PLS is dedicated and extremely 

21          hardworking.  I've seen this staff and its 

22          board.  The board votes with its wallet.  We 

23          actually actively support this organization.  

24          We don't believe in the abolition of prisons, 


                                                                  703

 1          but we believe in making them better.  

 2                 And the fundamental belief is that it 

 3          is incongruous for the criminal justice 

 4          system to take away a person's liberty for 

 5          violating perceived and acceptable norms of 

 6          conduct, only to incarcerate them in settings 

 7          that themselves don't fully uphold basic 

 8          social norms and standards of justice.  

 9                 Among other ills, we believe that such 

10          a systemic failure contributes to the scourge 

11          of recidivism and represents an ongoing 

12          threat to the safety of our communities.  

13                 Also PLS works, we believe, with DOCCS 

14          in order to make our prisons better and make 

15          them better places for the DOCCS personnel to 

16          work, and I think that Karen's going to 

17          educate you on that too.  

18                 And I'm out.  

19                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  

20                 MS. MURTAGH:  Thank you.  Thank you,  

21          Madam Chairman.  

22                 As all of you know, the five of you 

23          that are left, PLS was created in 1976 as the  

24          number-one post-Attica reform.  Fast-forward 


                                                                  704

 1          to today, we have four offices across the 

 2          state when we used to have seven.  We have 

 3          15 attorneys when we used to have 50.  Our 

 4          attorneys have to provide civil legal 

 5          services to over 52,000 prisoners in 

 6          54 prisons located across the state.  

 7                 Tom mentioned that we are a partner 

 8          with the Department of Corrections.  We are a 

 9          critical partner with not only DOCCS but with 

10          the Executive, the Judiciary, and the 

11          Legislature.  With DOCCS, over the past 

12          several years we've created the Albion 

13          telephone program, so women prisoners can 

14          call PLS for assistance.  We have worked with 

15          them to create a reentry video, which is 

16          shown at reception to all incoming prisoners.  

17          We have worked with the Executive and DOB on 

18          both encouraging prisoners to apply for 

19          Medicaid and on the Executive's clemency 

20          efforts.

21                 We also work with the Judiciary.  The 

22          Court of Appeals reaches out to us, time and 

23          time again, to take cases that it has granted 

24          leave to appeal in.  Last year we accepted at 


                                                                  705

 1          least three cases.  

 2                 And we work closely with the 

 3          Legislature.  A number of you send us letters 

 4          that you've received from your constituents 

 5          concerned about loved ones in prison, and we 

 6          follow up on those letters and help to 

 7          resolve those issues.

 8                 But the most telling about PLS' role, 

 9          partnership role, is what happened this past 

10          summer with the Clinton escape.  After the 

11          escape happened, family members contacted 

12          PLS, frantic because they could not find what 

13          happened to their loved ones at Clinton.  

14          They called Clinton, they tried to visit, 

15          there was a lockdown, nobody could get in.  

16          Nobody was giving them any information.

17                 I contacted both the Executive and 

18          Tony Annucci.  We worked together for PLS to 

19          put together a notice that we put on our 

20          Facebook page and our webpage, telling all 

21          the family members what was going on -- when 

22          the lockdown was going to be lifted, what 

23          meals were being served, letting them know 

24          that medical care was being given.  So many 


                                                                  706

 1          things that they were worried about that we 

 2          were able to calm their fears about, which in 

 3          turn results in calming the tension of the 

 4          prison.

 5                 And if you look back at what happened 

 6          at Attica, and you look back at what we were 

 7          able to do this summer to calm those 

 8          tensions, it is like night and day.  That is 

 9          why PLS is so important.  

10                 We also were asked to go to Clinton 

11          with Assemblyman O'Donnell and Assemblywoman 

12          Duprey and meet with the inmate liaison 

13          committee to discuss their complaints about 

14          what was going at Clinton.  We met with them, 

15          and then we met with the superintendent, and 

16          we shared those complaints and we worked 

17          through many of those issues.

18                 In the interests of time I just want 

19          to say I'm here today to ask the Legislature 

20          to add money to the appropriation in the 

21          Executive Budget.  Governor Cuomo put us in 

22          the budget for $2.2 million.  I'm asking the 

23          Legislature to add $1.3 million.  Last year, 

24          you added $1.2 million.  


                                                                  707

 1                 I'm asking for that add because we 

 2          have been grossly underfunded for the past 

 3          16 years, and even though we do a fabulous 

 4          job, we cannot do the job the state has 

 5          tasked us to do without additional funding.  

 6                 Thank you very much.  

 7                 MR. CURRAN:  You won't regret funding 

 8          this organization.

 9                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you very 

10          much.  We really appreciate you staying so 

11          late, and thank you for your valuable 

12          testimony.  

13                 MR. CURRAN:  Thanks for the 

14          opportunity.  

15                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.  

16                 MS. MURTAGH:  Thank you.  

17                 MR. CURRAN:  Thank you.  

18                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Next, Executive 

19          Director Paige Pierce, Families Together in 

20          New York State, Inc.  

21                 And following Executive Director 

22          Pierce there's Terry O'Neill, director of the 

23          Constantine Institute.  So if you could get 

24          ready.


                                                                  708

 1                 MS. PIERCE:  Hi.  Thank you so much 

 2          for staying.  I know it's been a long day for 

 3          you.  I appreciate it.

 4                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  It's been a long 

 5          day for you.  So we appreciate you too.

 6                 MS. PIERCE:  As CEO of Families 

 7          Together in New York State, a nonprofit, 

 8          parent-run organization serving families of 

 9          youth with social, emotional, and behavioral 

10          challenges, I have dedicated my career to 

11          serving our stateís most vulnerable citizens, 

12          connecting them with community-based 

13          supports, and advancing sound social welfare 

14          policies in response to family identified 

15          needs.  

16                 As such, we have been advocating for 

17          juvenile justice reforms, specifically 

18          legislation to raise the age of criminal 

19          responsibility from 16 to 18.

20                 As you are well aware, New York State 

21          continues to be only one of two states that 

22          automatically prosecutes and incarcerates 

23          16- and 17-year-olds as adults.  Upon arrest, 

24          they are interrogated without so much as a 


                                                                  709

 1          call to their parents, charged and 

 2          incarcerated with the adult population in the 

 3          local jail while awaiting trial.  

 4                 Should they be found guilty, they are 

 5          incarcerated with the adult prison population 

 6          where they are five times more likely to be 

 7          sexually assaulted, two times more likely to 

 8          be injured by prison staff, and five times 

 9          more likely to complete suicide than if they 

10          were in a juvenile facility.  They are also 

11          more likely to recidivate upon release, do so 

12          at a higher level, and perpetuate public 

13          safety concerns. 

14                 While the Governor recently issued an 

15          interim-measure executive order that will no 

16          longer allow for incarceration of youth in 

17          adult facilities, the measure does not reach 

18          out to county jails.

19                 For the last two years, I've shared 

20          stories of our children whose lives have been 

21          destroyed or even ended.  I have them in my 

22          written testimony, and I won't read them all 

23          now, but I would really encourage you to read 

24          them.  


                                                                  710

 1                 They're stories like Ben Van Zandt and 

 2          Kalief Browder, who are no longer with us.  

 3          They were both teenagers and arrested and 

 4          imprisoned with the adult population, and 

 5          both took their own lives.  

 6                 Throughout the time span of these 

 7          horror stories, I along with other advocates 

 8          have been here in Albany attempting to 

 9          advance systemic reforms.  Given the fact 

10          that I am here before you yet again this 

11          year, it leads one to beg the question, how 

12          many more children will be irrevocably harmed 

13          or lost before we implement reforms?

14                 As you are aware, the Governor again 

15          included in his Executive Budget proposal a 

16          comprehensive Smart on Crime initiative that 

17          allows us to keep intact a strong response to 

18          violent offenses and cost-effective 

19          evidence-based diversion reforms that will 

20          result in a higher level of public 

21          protection.

22                 Over the course of the past several 

23          weeks, we have met with several legislators, 

24          and similar to last year, the response has 


                                                                  711

 1          been positive regarding Raise the Age -- with 

 2          some concerns raised as well, related mostly 

 3          to the violent offenses and a misguided 

 4          notion that we are suggesting youth convicted 

 5          of crimes such as murder or rape will be 

 6          slapped on the wrist and forgiven.  That is 

 7          not now, nor has it ever been, the position 

 8          of the Raise the Age advocates.  Nor has it 

 9          ever been reflected in the many bills 

10          drafted.  

11                 Under the current proposed language, 

12          these youth would still be processed through 

13          the adult court system with stiff sentencing.  

14          The difference is that they would not be 

15          remanded to an adult facility until they are 

16          indeed an adult.  And they would be given the 

17          appropriate services while incarcerated.  

18                 It is, however, important to remember 

19          that such heinous crimes are an 

20          infinitesimally small percentage of the 

21          crimes committed by youth.  The majority of 

22          initial crimes committed by youth are much 

23          less serious -- but despite evidence to the 

24          contrary, we continue to prosecute and in 


                                                                  712

 1          many instances incarcerate them as adults.  

 2                 In one study, the MacArthur Foundation 

 3          Research Network on Adolescent Development 

 4          and Juvenile Justice examined the 

 5          effectiveness of prosecuting teens as adults 

 6          by comparing New York teens with teens in 

 7          New Jersey.  In New York, juveniles as young 

 8          as 13 can be charged in an adult court, while 

 9          in New Jersey most juvenile offenders under 

10          the age of 18 are processed in juvenile 

11          court.  

12                 When comparing youth arrested for the 

13          same felony offenses in New York City and 

14          New Jersey, data showed that adolescents 

15          processed in New York adult courts were more 

16          likely to be rearrested, they were rearrested 

17          more often and more quickly and for more 

18          serious offenses, and they were 

19          reincarcerated at higher rates than those in 

20          the New Jersey juvenile courts.  This is not 

21          a smart on crime approach, nor is it one that 

22          takes public safety into consideration.

23                 We heard earlier stories of violent 

24          crime committed by recent parolees.  We are 


                                                                  713

 1          producing these adult criminals by sending 

 2          our children to adult prisons.

 3                 We've also heard concerns about costs. 

 4          While there is a modest up-front capital cost 

 5          associated with imprisonment, the overall 

 6          results are expected to decrease costs.  As 

 7          Soffiya Elijah stated earlier, Connecticut 

 8          was a recent state to implement Raise the 

 9          Age, and they've seen costs go down 

10          significantly.  And I talk about that more in 

11          my written testimony.

12                 So again, we contend that the fears 

13          are unlikely to be realized.  The evidence 

14          overwhelmingly demonstrates our current model 

15          in New York State is archaic in its design, 

16          ineffective as a deterrent model, and 

17          exorbitantly costly.  Renowned 

18          neuroscientists, respected researchers, and 

19          even our nationís Supreme Court have all 

20          registered concerns and recommended that we 

21          utilize the wide breadth of evidence to build 

22          a better system.  It's time we heeded this 

23          advice. 

24                 I urge you to lead New York down a 


                                                                  714

 1          path of reform in 2016.  Last year I left you 

 2          with a quote from Maya Angelou that says 

 3          "When we know better, we do better."  As I 

 4          noted then, we know better and as a result, 

 5          we need to do better.  

 6                 This year I will suggest we ponder the 

 7          words of Mahatma Gandhi:  "There is a higher 

 8          court than courts of justice, and that is the 

 9          court of conscience.  It supersedes all other 

10          courts."  We cannot in good conscience leave 

11          this issue unattended again this session. 

12                 Thanks for your time.

13                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you.

14                 Our next speaker is Director Terry 

15          O'Neill, from the Constantine Institute, Inc.  

16                 And then our final speaker will be 

17          Anne Erickson, CEO of the Empire Justice 

18          Center.

19                 Welcome.

20                 MR. O'NEILL:  Thank you for your kind 

21          welcome, and thank you for your patience and 

22          forbearance this evening.  I've been 

23          attending these meetings for over 30 years, 

24          so I know what you're going through.  And 


                                                                  715

 1          obviously the prepared statement that I gave 

 2          you is not something I'm going to attempt, 

 3          even though I'd like to dazzle Mr. O'Donnell 

 4          with some real speed reading.

 5                 So what I'm going to do, I'm just 

 6          going over about three items that are in our 

 7          program.  The one that is most timely and 

 8          important is -- you know, we're all aware, 

 9          across the nation, and notwithstanding, as 

10          Mr. Green said today, that crime continues to 

11          go down in New York and, as Commissioner 

12          Annucci told us, our prison population has 

13          been steadily shrinking -- but out in the 

14          streets and neighborhoods in this state and 

15          all over the nation, there's been an eruption 

16          of public dissatisfaction with the kind of 

17          policing services that people are getting.  

18                 And we all know the stories that have 

19          been in the news in the last couple of years.  

20          So our prescription for dealing with this is 

21          the concept of community policing, which has 

22          been around for over 25 years, and which was 

23          derailed here in New York in 1994 when Bill 

24          Bratton took over the New York City Police 


                                                                  716

 1          Department and started American policing down 

 2          the road of data-driven policing.  So now, 

 3          all across the nation, police chiefs and 

 4          mayors are pointing to their downward- 

 5          trending statistics as evidence that 

 6          everything is just fine when we're hearing 

 7          from people who have to live under these 

 8          policing tactics that they don't like being 

 9          treated like dots on one of Bill Bratton's 

10          crime maps.  

11                 So I'm not saying that we shouldn't 

12          have this kind of management tool, but it has 

13          to be balanced by some investment in 

14          restarting the community policing movement 

15          that's been -- we've lost total momentum on 

16          that.  And I think that Mr. McDonald here and 

17          Pat Fahy can tell you that here in Albany, 

18          our police department over the past six years 

19          or so has gone down the road of recovering 

20          that community policing spirit many miles.  

21          And all you have to do is introduce yourself 

22          to how police is being provided in our 

23          neighborhoods, with neighborhood engagement 

24          units and a citizen organization that 


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 1          interacts with the police on these issues on 

 2          a continuing basis.  

 3                 So you may have heard last week that 

 4          our mayor got shouted down by people from the 

 5          Black Lives Matter movement, and they've 

 6          called for our police chief to be fired.  

 7          They're mistaken.  Things are going better 

 8          here in Albany than anywhere else, although 

 9          last year we had an incident that upset many 

10          people.

11                 Now, I was reading the other day the 

12          report that the Assembly minority put out on 

13          a heroin-addiction tour of hearings.  And one 

14          thing that jumped out at me, and Mr. Giglio 

15          tells me he heard this at every venue they 

16          went to in their seven-hearing tour, is that 

17          there is a big hole in our prevention 

18          program.  We do not have a program that 

19          credibly reaches an audience of high school- 

20          aged kids.  The whole philosophy behind the 

21          DARE program is just inappropriate for their 

22          way of thinking and accepting things.  

23                 So what experts are telling us is that 

24          what will work is a peer-to-peer approach 


                                                                  718

 1          where you enlist kids in school bodies to 

 2          take on the responsibility of carrying the 

 3          message to their schoolmates.  And I have 

 4          found a program that is doing exactly that.  

 5          It's called Mentor International.  It was 

 6          founded by the Queen of Sweden in 1994, and 

 7          six years ago Mentor opened an office in 

 8          Washington, D.C., and started networking 

 9          schools in the D.C. metropolitan area.  

10                 And I've been determined to introduce 

11          this program to New York, and I was very 

12          happy in November when a foundation 

13          headquartered in Columbia County came up with 

14          the money to offer this program in three 

15          public schools in Columbia County.  I 

16          attended two of them, and I can tell you that 

17          it went over very, very well with the kids.  

18          And what happens is they come in and do 

19          workshops and identify kids that have been 

20          pre-selected by teachers who would be likely 

21          to participate well in this program.  They 

22          develop a program that's offered at a 

23          school-wide rally the next day, and after the 

24          rally on the third day, the mentor starts 


                                                                  719

 1          sitting down with these kids and giving them 

 2          training so that they can replicate this 

 3          program on their own in their schools and in 

 4          their community, because it also involves a 

 5          linkage with the business community to create 

 6          mentoring opportunities for kids in the 

 7          community.

 8                 So there was one other thing that's in 

 9          there in my written testimony.  There's 

10          appended a draft of a bill that I've been 

11          promoting for quite a number of years.  The 

12          bill would create a new program at the State 

13          University focusing on transnational 

14          organized crime.  It doesn't interfere or 

15          conflict with anything else that the 

16          University is doing on homeland security or 

17          management or emergency disaster 

18          preparedness.  It's something quite 

19          different, and it comes uniquely out of the 

20          history of the State Police and its 

21          pioneering exposure of the existence of the 

22          Mafia back in 1957.  

23                 They had quite a record of 

24          achievement, and their late superintendent 


                                                                  720

 1          Tom Constantine is credited with having 

 2          brought down -- from the time he was a field 

 3          commander in 1985 through his years at the 

 4          DEA -- the Cali cartel, the largest drug 

 5          conspiracy in history.  And then he went on 

 6          to Northern Ireland and helped end three 

 7          decades of terrorist violence there.

 8                 So this is a whole story that comes 

 9          out of the very personality and character of 

10          our State Police.  And as their anniversary 

11          is next year, I'd like to bring this proposal 

12          out into the open and make it a gift to the 

13          men and women of the State Police.

14                 So with that being said, thank you 

15          again for your time and attention.

16                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Thank you, Director 

17          O'Neill.  Thank you for your perseverance.  

18                 And our final speaker of the night, 

19          last but not least, is Anne Erickson, CEO of 

20          the Empire Justice Center.  

21                 Thank you for joining us.

22                 MS. ERICKSON:  Thank you so much.  And 

23          as usual, I admire the stamina.  I'm not sure 

24          if I was quite last last year, but close to 


                                                                  721

 1          it.  

 2                 So thank you very much.  My name is 

 3          Anne Erickson; I'm president and CEO of the 

 4          Empire Justice Center.  We are a statewide 

 5          organization that provides training, support, 

 6          and technical assistance for basically the 

 7          back up center for the civil legal services 

 8          side.  We engage in legislative and 

 9          administrative advocacy, and we provide 

10          direct representation in one of our four 

11          offices around the state in Rochester, 

12          Albany, Westchester, and out on Long Island.

13                 So again, thank you.  You've heard a 

14          lot today about the judicial investment in 

15          civil legal services, and I just wanted to 

16          provide a little bit of context.  You have my 

17          testimony; I'm not going to go through that.  

18                 But when the task force to expand 

19          access to legal services, which is now the 

20          Judicial Commission on Access to Justice, 

21          first started operating in 2009, one of the 

22          things they did was take a look at where are 

23          we in New York State in terms of access to 

24          justice on the civil side.  


                                                                  722

 1                 And what we found was that for those 

 2          households on incomes at or below 200 percent 

 3          of poverty, nearly half of them, 3 million 

 4          people, experienced at least one civil legal 

 5          need each year, and 1.2 million of them had 

 6          three or more incidents where they needed 

 7          civil legal assistance.

 8                 And what are these kinds of needs?  

 9          We're talking about housing, we're talking 

10          about evictions, we're talking about 

11          foreclosures, we're talking about income 

12          supports, we're talking about healthcare, 

13          disability -- we're looking at families, at 

14          the elderly, at the disabled, at veterans, at 

15          low-income homeowners.  All of our 

16          constituents across the state, low- and 

17          moderate-income households who come up 

18          against the civil legal services system in 

19          ways that many of us do not.  You know, they 

20          just confront issues that are driven by their 

21          poverty and by their economic fragility.  

22                 At that point we were meeting about 

23          20 percent of the legal need of the poor and 

24          low-income households.  The investment by the 


                                                                  723

 1          Judiciary in civil legal service has made a 

 2          tremendous difference.  We are now meeting, 

 3          as we heard earlier today from Judge Marks, 

 4          about 30 percent of the civil legal needs of 

 5          low- and moderate-income households in this 

 6          state.  

 7                 We've made progress, but 70 percent of 

 8          the civil legal needs of our constituents are 

 9          still not being met.  We have a long way to 

10          go.  So this is really -- we are making 

11          inroads, but we are nowhere near where we 

12          need to be.

13                 I also wanted to touch on the impact 

14          on the courts.  We heard very powerful 

15          testimony earlier today and this evening from 

16          the court clerks and from the court officers 

17          about the impact, from their perspective, on 

18          the courts, and I am with them.

19                 But when we first looked at what was 

20          happening on the civil side of the court 

21          system, 2.3 million litigants were coming 

22          into civil court unrepresented on an annual 

23          basis.  Two-point-three million people 

24          walking into civil court without the benefit 


                                                                  724

 1          of counsel, about to lose their homes, having 

 2          lost their health care, having been denied 

 3          unemployment, having had any array of issues 

 4          that come at them.

 5                 We again have made some inroads:  

 6          1.8 million people are now in front of our 

 7          civil courts unrepresented, down from 

 8          2.3 million.  Still a long way to go.  

 9                 So as you deliberate this budget -- 

10          and I know there's a lot of pressure from a 

11          lot of different areas -- this is an 

12          investment we need to make, and we need to 

13          continue and hold strong to that commitment.  

14          It's the first time that New York State has 

15          really looked at this civil legal needs side 

16          of the equation in any systemic way since 

17          I've been around, and I've been doing this, I 

18          hate to say, for 26 years.  

19                 So we can't stand still, we can't walk 

20          backwards.  We're finally where we need -- on 

21          the path that we should be on.  

22                 I also just wanted to mention the 

23          distribution of the funding.  I have to 

24          really give the court, the OCA, a lot of 


                                                                  725

 1          credit, because what they did is they 

 2          distributed the funding based on judicial 

 3          department, based on the number of households 

 4          under 200 percent of the poverty.  Very 

 5          equitable distribution across the state.  I 

 6          represent programs outside of New York City; 

 7          I'm always afraid, you know, it's all going 

 8          to go to the City.  That has not happened.  

 9          It has really gone where the need is.

10                 And then I would also just say on the 

11          economic impact in my testimony, you have 

12          information drawn from the most recent 

13          commission report, and they're estimating 

14          that every dollar invested in civil legal 

15          services draws back in about $10 into the 

16          New York State economy.

17                 So it's a good investment, it's a just 

18          investment.  I would urge you to keep working 

19          with us, as we're finally on the path we need 

20          to be on in New York State.  

21                 And with that, I thank you very much.

22                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  Any questions?  

23                 Thank you.

24                 SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  We've gone full 


                                                                  726

 1          circle.  We started with this subject today, 

 2          now we're finishing with it.  Thank you very 

 3          much.  

 4                 MS. ERICKSON:  See?  Clean-up hitter.

 5                 Thank you guys very much.

 6                 SENATOR KRUEGER:  Thank you, Anne.

 7                 CHAIRWOMAN YOUNG:  So thank you, Anne.  

 8                 That concludes our public hearing, 

 9          joint public hearing on Public Protection and 

10          the New York State budget proposal, and I 

11          want to thank all of my diehard colleagues 

12          for staying so late yet again tonight.  

13                 And I'd also like to thank all of the 

14          participants for hanging in there with us, 

15          so -- and the staff, too.  So thank you very 

16          much.

17                          -  -  -

18                 (Whereupon, the budget hearing 

19          concluded at 9:42 p.m.)

20                           -  -  -

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