Public Hearing - January 30, 2024

                                                                       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
          2024-2025 EXECUTIVE BUDGET ON
 5             ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
    
 6  ----------------------------------------------------

 7                              Hearing Room B 
                                Legislative Office Building
 8                             Albany, New York 
    
 9                              January 30, 2024
                                9:33 a.m.
10  

11  PRESIDING:

12            Senator Liz Krueger
              Chair, Senate Finance Committee
13  
              Assemblyman J. Gary Pretlow
14            Chair, Assembly Committee on Racing and Wagering
    
15  PRESENT:

16            Senator Thomas F. O'Mara 
              Senate Finance Committee (RM)
17  
              Assemblyman Edward P. Ra 
18            Assembly Ways & Means Committee (RM)
    
19            Senator Sean M. Ryan
              Chair, Senate Committee on Commerce, 
20             Economic Development and Small Business  
    
21            Assemblyman Al Stirpe
              Chair, Assembly Committee on Economic 
22             Development, Job Creation, Commerce 
               and Industry 
23  
              Senator José M. Serrano
24            Chair, Senate Committee on Cultural Affairs,
               Tourism, Arts and Recreation

                                                                   2

 1  2024-2025 Executive Budget
    Economic Development
 2  1-30-24
    
 3  PRESENT:  (Continued)
    
 4            Assemblywoman Carrie Woerner
              Chair, Assembly Committee on Small Business
 5  
              Assemblyman Daniel J. O'Donnell
 6            Chair, Assembly Committee on Tourism, Parks, 
               Arts and Sports Development
 7  
              Senator Kristen Gonzalez
 8            Chair, Senate Committee on Internet and
               Technology
 9  
              Assemblyman Steven Otis
10            Chair, Assembly Committee on Science and
               Technology
11  
              Senator Joseph P. Addabbo Jr.
12            Chair, Senate Committee on Racing,
               Gaming and Wagering
13  
              Senator John C. Liu
14  
              Assemblyman Billy Jones
15  
              Senator Michelle Hinchey
16  
              Assemblyman Christopher S. Friend
17  
              Senator George M. Borrello
18  
              Assemblywoman Patricia Fahy
19  
              Assemblywoman Yudelka Tapia
20  
              Assemblyman John T. McDonald III
21  
              Senator Iwen Chu
22  
              Assemblyman Clyde Vanel
23  
              Assemblyman Manny De Los Santos
24  
              Senator Jessica Ramos

                                                                   3

 1  2024-2025 Executive Budget
    Economic Development
 2  1-30-24
    
 3  PRESENT:  (Continued)
    
 4            Assemblyman Edward C. Braunstein 
    
 5            Assemblywoman Jen Lunsford 
    
 6            Senator Pamela Helming
    
 7            Assemblyman Jonathan Rivera
    
 8            Senator Dean Murray
    
 9            Assemblywoman Gina L. Sillitti
    
10            Assemblyman John Zaccaro, Jr.
    
11            Assemblyman Scott Gray
    
12            Assemblywoman Mary Beth Walsh
    
13            Senator James Tedisco
    
14            Assemblyman Brian Cunningham
    
15            Assemblywoman Chantel Jackson
    
16            Assemblywoman Jo Anne Simon
    
17            Assemblyman Tony Simone
    
18            Assemblywoman Nikki Lucas
    
19            Senator Lea Webb 
    
20            Assemblyman Brian Maher
    
21            Assemblyman Al Taylor
    
22            Assemblywoman Marianne Buttenschon 
    
23            Assemblyman Robert C. Carroll
    
24            Senator Cordell Cleare
    

                                                                   4

 1  2024-2025 Executive Budget
    Economic Development
 2  1-30-24
    
 3  PRESENT:  (Continued)
    
 4            Assemblyman Sam Pirozzolo
    
 5            Assemblyman Alex Bores
    
 6            Senator Leroy Comrie
    
 7            Assemblyman Jarett Gandolfo
    
 8            Assemblywoman Taylor Darling
    
 9            Senator Jamaal T. Bailey
    
10            Assemblyman John Lemondes
    
11            Assemblyman Jonathan G. Jacobson
    
12  
    
13  
    
14  
    
15                     LIST OF SPEAKERS
    
16                                      STATEMENT  QUESTIONS
    
17  Hope Knight
    Commissioner
18  NYS Department of Economic
     Development
19  President & CEO 
    Empire State Development                 
20       -and-
    Jeanette Moy
21  Commissioner            
    NYS Office of General Services
22  (OGS)                          
         -and-
23  Erika Mallin
    Executive Director
24  NYS Council on the Arts                 16         42
    

                                                                   5

 1  2024-2025 Executive Budget
    Economic Development
 2  1-30-24
    
 3                     LIST OF SPEAKERS, Continued 
    
 4                                        STATEMENT  QUESTIONS
    
 5  Hannah Gompertz
    Communications Director
 6  Dia Art Foundation
         -and-
 7  Elizabeth Reiss
    President 
 8  ArtsNYS
         -and-
 9  Susan Abbott
    Director of Grant Programs
10  ArtsWestchester                          238       247
    
11  Ross A. Frommer
    VP, Government & Community 
12   Affairs for Columbia University 
     Irving Medical Center
13       -on behalf of-
    NYFIRST, Fund for Innovation in
14   Research & Scientific Talent
         -and-
15  Associated Medical Schools of
     New York
16       -and-
    Dr. John Weston 
17  Assistant Director of OPP 
    Lake Erie College of 
18   Osteopathic Medicine                    250       258
    
19

20

21

22

23

24


                                                                   6

 1  2024-2025 Executive Budget
    Economic Development
 2  1-30-24
    
 3                     LIST OF SPEAKERS, Continued 
    
 4                                        STATEMENT  QUESTIONS
    
 5  Ryan Silva
    Executive Director
 6  NYS Economic Development Council
         -and-
 7  Charles Khan
    Lead for Tax, Wall Street, 
 8   Corporate Accountability
    The Center for Popular Democracy
 9       -and-
    Ron Deutsch
10  Director
    New Yorkers for Fiscal Fairness          275       285
11  
    Winston Berkman-Breen
12  Legal Director
    Student Borrowing 
13   Protection Center
         -and-
14  Michael Santorelli
    Director
15  Advanced Communications 
     Law & Policy Institute
16  New York Law School
         -and-
17  Ashley Ranslow
    New York State Director
18  National Federation of 
     Independent Business 
19   (NFIB)
         -and-
20  Karmen Rajamani
    Vice President of
21   Government Affairs 
    Wireless Infrastructure 
22   Association                              310       325
    
23  

24


                                                                   7

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Good morning, 

 2           everyone.  Hi.  It's another week, another 

 3           group of hearings.  Today we are starting -- 

 4           I'm sorry.  Hi, I'm Senator Liz Krueger, 

 5           chair of the Finance Committee, joined by my 

 6           special guest cochair Gary Pretlow, because 

 7           Helene Weinstein is still out on medical 

 8           leave but hopefully will be back with us 

 9           soon.

10                  So again, today is the budget hearing 

11           on Economic Development Executive 

12           Budget. It's January 30th.  Hopefully this 

13           hearing will last till around 2 o'clock, and 

14           then we'll be starting a second hearing.  We 

15           do these every once in a while; they never 

16           work out timewise, just letting you all know.  

17           For anyone watching who thinks they're 

18           starting at 2 o'clock, keep your eye on who, 

19           what, where, because you're probably not 

20           starting at 2 o'clock.  But let's be 

21           optimistic.  

22                  Again, this is a joint fiscal 

23           committee of Ways and Means in the Assembly, 

24           Senate Finance Committee, relating to the 


                                                                   8

 1           Governor's proposed budget for state fiscal 

 2           year '24-'25.  These hearings are conducted 

 3           pursuant to the New York State 

 4           Constitution and Legislative Law.  Today the 

 5           Senate Finance Committee and Assembly Ways 

 6           and Means Committee will hear testimony 

 7           concerning the Governor's proposed budget for 

 8           the New York State Empire State Development 

 9           corporation, the New York State Office of 

10           General Services, the New York State Council 

11           on the Arts.  

12                  Following each testimony, there will 

13           be some time for questions from the chairs of 

14           the relevant committees and the legislators 

15           from those committees as well.

16                  I will now introduce members of the 

17           Senate, and Assemblymember Pretlow will 

18           follow up with members of the Assembly.  And 

19           I will start out introducing my Democratic 

20           colleagues and then turn it over to 

21           Tom O'Mara, who's the ranker for the Senate 

22           Finance Committee, to introduce his members.  

23                  So let's just pull out my list of 

24           who's here already.  And additional Senators 


                                                                   9

 1           and Assemblymembers will come in and leave 

 2           during the day.  We will try to make sure to 

 3           introduce each of them as they arrive.  

 4                  We have Senator Chu, Senator Ramos, 

 5           Senator Sean Ryan, our chair, and Senator 

 6           John Liu.  

 7                  And Tom O'Mara, who would you like to 

 8           introduce?  

 9                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Good morning.  

10                  We have with us Senators Pam Helming, 

11           Dean Murray, George Borrello and Jim Tedisco.

12                  Thank you.

13                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay.

14                  Assembly?  

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you, 

16           Senator.  Good morning, everyone.  

17                  I'm Gary Pretlow, the chair of the 

18           Assembly's Racing and Wagering Committee and 

19           cochair of today's hearing with my good 

20           friend Senator Liz Krueger.  As she said 

21           earlier, I'm filling in for Helene Weinstein, 

22           who is still recovering; hopefully she'll be 

23           back next week.

24                  I just want to introduce the 


                                                                   10

 1           Assemblymembers that are here.  We have our 

 2           chair of Small Business, Carrie -- 

 3           Assemblywoman Woerner; Science and Technology 

 4           Chair Steve Otis; and newly minted Economic 

 5           Development Chair Al Stirpe.  

 6                  We also have our Assemblywoman Pat 

 7           Fahy, Assemblyman Braunstein, Assemblywoman 

 8           Jackson, Assemblyman -- these are all women.  

 9           Okay.  Assemblywoman Lunsford, Assemblywoman 

10           Buttenschon, Assemblywoman Tapia, 

11           Assemblyman Simone and Assemblywoman Darling.

12                  I'm going to introduce my friend 

13           Ed Ra, who will introduce the members of his 

14           conference.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you, 

16           Mr. Pretlow.  

17                  We're currently joined by 

18           Assemblyman Maher, Assemblyman Gray, 

19           Assemblyman Gandolfo, and 

20           Assemblyman Lemondes.

21                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Great.

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  And Assemblyman 

23           Friend, I'm sorry, our ranker on 

24           Economic Development.


                                                                   11

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Everyone's 

 2           friend.

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  We've also been 

 4           joined by Senator Webb and Senator Serrano.  

 5           And -- oh, no, that's all so far.  

 6           Senator Addabbo, I also believe somebody 

 7           referenced he's here.

 8                  Before we start with our presenters, 

 9           some basic rules of this room.  It was redone 

10           this year, and it's by and large all 

11           radically better than it has been for many 

12           years for us.  There were some issues with 

13           the microphones last week on our first test 

14           week, but in fact they were fixed throughout 

15           the night and into early morning, so we think 

16           they are actually all going to work better 

17           for you to be able to be hearing each other 

18           and you in the audience be hearing.

19                  Please note the microphones in front 

20           of you have to be pressed to green when 

21           you're talking and pressed to red when you're 

22           not talking.  Because they're brand-new, some 

23           of them are pretty stiff and you have to push 

24           really hard, so you'll think, What's wrong 


                                                                   12

 1           with me?  It's not you.  It's that these are 

 2           brand-new and they will soften up, 

 3           supposedly, the more they are pressed on and 

 4           off.  

 5                  But it's helpful for remembering that 

 6           you don't want to be saying things on 

 7           microphone when you didn't mean to say them 

 8           on microphone, because the whole State of 

 9           New York is listening.

10                  We also have new visuals here and here 

11           (indicating).  We're thinking of trying to 

12           put like really pretty scenes of the outdoors 

13           in the back to remind you you're here and not 

14           outside.  

15                  But also we have the language access 

16           so that people can read along with anything 

17           that's said.  Which is actually extremely 

18           helpful to people both here in our event and 

19           also those watching throughout the State of 

20           New York.  Because of course this is 

21           livestreamed to anyone and everyone on both 

22           the Senate website and the Assembly website.

23                  We've also improved the WiFi.  So for 

24           some of you who have spent too much of your 


                                                                   13

 1           lives -- like me -- in this room, it's 

 2           amazing how much better technology is working 

 3           because of the new improved system down here.

 4                  Also for people who don't know -- and 

 5           this is more for the legislators -- if you 

 6           are a relevant chair for this -- for whatever 

 7           panel we're on, you get 10 minutes to ask 

 8           questions.  If you're a ranker, you get 

 9           five minutes.  If you're just a member, not a 

10           chair or ranker, or even a chair but not 

11           relevant to that panel, you get three 

12           minutes.

13                  When we finish the government panel 

14           and we go on to the public panels, everyone 

15           just gets three minutes.

16                  The importance of understanding the 

17           minutes -- and you have clocks here, and they 

18           have green light, red light, yellow light, 

19           and there's beeping if you get to red.  The 

20           total number of minutes is both for the 

21           question and the answer.  So legislators, if 

22           you know you have three minutes, if you spend 

23           two minutes and 30 seconds asking your 

24           question, the chances of your actually 


                                                                   14

 1           getting an answer -- no fault of the 

 2           panelist -- is almost impossible.

 3                  So for testifiers, if you know you 

 4           can't possibly get through the full answer to 

 5           the questions, or even if you got a stump-you 

 6           question and you don't know the answer right 

 7           away, you can always send us in writing the 

 8           answers.  And that's actually very helpful.  

 9                  And you send it to Senate Finance and 

10           Assembly Ways and Means, and we make sure 

11           your answers are distributed to all the 

12           members, whether or not they were the one to 

13           ask the question.  

14                  I think that's the basic rules of 

15           today.

16                  So now I would like to introduce --

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Can I interrupt 

18           one second, Senator?

19                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Of course.  

20           Please.  

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Because a few 

22           members have come in since I last announced 

23           the members of the Assembly that were here, 

24           and a few more have come in.  So I'm just 


                                                                   15

 1           going to read off their names.  We have 

 2           Assemblypeople Bores, Santos {sic}, Sillitti, 

 3           Simon, Cunningham, Taylor, De Los Santos, 

 4           Carroll, Vanel, Jones and Rivera.  

 5                  Thank you.  

 6                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

 7                  And we've also been joined by 

 8           Senator Bailey.

 9                  ASSEMBLYMAN McDONALD:  {Inaudible.}

10                  (Laughter.)

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  And a great 

12           pharmacist {inaudible} McDonald.

13                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And just also 

14           because -- just to make sure that 

15           Assemblymember Pretlow understands that 

16           Assemblymembers who want to be put on the 

17           list to ask questions should either get his 

18           attention or get the attention of the staff 

19           right behind him.  I see many hands being 

20           raised, Rich Ancowitz.  

21                  And the same for the Senate.  If you'd 

22           like to be on the list for questions, you 

23           should get my attention.  And I think you all 

24           have my text, so you just text me usually.  


                                                                   16

 1                  So with that -- are you seeing the -- 

 2           okay.  I think they're working on it.  Sorry.

 3                  And so also one more thing, I'm sorry, 

 4           before we start.  Because we have so many 

 5           legislators here, some are sitting in this 

 6           row behind the table.  When their names are 

 7           called to ask you questions, if the people 

 8           either on the far-right chair or the far-left 

 9           chair would give up their chair, let the 

10           person come forward, ask their questions with 

11           a microphone at the table, and then trade 

12           back afterwards.  

13                  Okay?  I think we're now ready to go.

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  I'm ready.

15                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  We're ready to 

16           go, great.  

17                  So I want to introduce Hope Knight, 

18           the commissioner of the New York State 

19           Department of Economic Development and the 

20           Empire State Development Corporation; 

21           Jeanette Moy, commissioner of the New York 

22           State Office of General Services; and 

23           Erika Mallin, executive director of the 

24           New York State Council on the Arts.  


                                                                   17

 1                  Each of you will have 10 minutes to 

 2           submit -- to read your testimony or, better 

 3           still, highlight the bullet points of your 

 4           testimony if you know it's going to be longer 

 5           than 10 minutes.  And then after all three 

 6           have testified, we will then open up to 

 7           questions.

 8                  Thank you.  So we'll start with you.  

 9           Good morning, Hope.  

10                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Good morning.  

11           Good morning, Chairwoman Krueger, Chairman 

12           Pretlow, and distinguished members of the 

13           Legislature.  

14                  I'd also like to acknowledge 

15           Assemblymembers Stirpe and Woerner as the new 

16           Economic Development and Small Business 

17           chairs.  I look forward to working with you 

18           both.  

19                  Congratulations to Assemblymember 

20           Bronson, too, on his new role as Labor chair.  

21           Confident that we will continue to work 

22           together.  Senator Ryan, I look forward to 

23           continuing our partnership this year.  

24                  My name is Hope Knight, and I serve as 


                                                                   18

 1           president and CEO of Empire State Development 

 2           and commissioner of the New York State 

 3           Department of Economic Development.  

 4                  I'm joined today by ESD's Chief 

 5           Operating Officer and Executive Deputy 

 6           Commissioner Kevin Younis.

 7                  Thank you for the invitation to 

 8           discuss Governor Hochul's Executive Budget.  

 9                  This year has been a great year of 

10           momentum for ESD.  Our dedication to 

11           supporting small businesses is stronger than 

12           ever, including our commitment to minority- 

13           and women-owned businesses.  Thanks to the 

14           added investments from the Governor and the 

15           Legislature, we have eliminated the 

16           longstanding MWBE certification backlog.  The 

17           state has also exceeded its MWBE utilization 

18           goal for state contracts, achieving more than 

19           32 percent during the last fiscal year -- the 

20           highest utilization rate in the country for 

21           the third straight year in a row. 

22                  In this year's budget, Governor Hochul 

23           is proposing to extend the MWBE program for 

24           another five years so that we continue to 


                                                                   19

 1           build on these achievements.  

 2                  This year's budget also includes a 

 3           funding increase for Entrepreneurship 

 4           Assistance Centers -- the first funding 

 5           increase in 15 years.  These centers do 

 6           incredible work supporting entrepreneurs 

 7           across the state, offering services like 

 8           business training, individual counseling, and 

 9           access to capital.  The majority of their 

10           clients are minorities, and more than half of 

11           the participants do not have a four-year 

12           degree.  These centers are typically located 

13           in disadvantaged communities, and are a vital 

14           resource for those wishing to pursue their 

15           dream of running a business.  

16                  Investments in disadvantaged 

17           populations are critical to promoting shared 

18           economic growth across the state.  In the 

19           last fiscal year, over 60 percent of ESD's 

20           awards have been to small businesses, and 

21           more than half of our projects are in 

22           disadvantaged communities.  

23                  Under Governor Hochul's leadership, we 

24           are making historic investments in New York's 


                                                                   20

 1           most valuable asset -- its people.  ESD's 

 2           Office of Strategic Workforce Development 

 3           focuses on expanding training programs for 

 4           quality jobs in high-growth industries, and 

 5           ensuring these opportunities are targeted to 

 6           historically marginalized communities.  To 

 7           date, the office has supported training for 

 8           over 11,000 workers, with over 400 business 

 9           partners.  

10                  Every award from our office is serving 

11           disadvantaged populations and offering 

12           wraparound services such as childcare support 

13           and transportation vouchers.  

14                  This year's budget contains an 

15           exciting new workforce development proposal:  

16           ON-RAMP, or the One Network for Regional 

17           Advanced Manufacturing Partnerships.  Through 

18           this initiative, regional centers will 

19           provide training to disadvantaged populations 

20           to create an "on-ramp" to promising careers 

21           in advanced manufacturing.  These centers 

22           will offer wraparound services and will 

23           leverage local partners and employers for 

24           direct job placement in the advanced 


                                                                   21

 1           manufacturing sector.  

 2                  Our targeted investments into creating 

 3           the workforce of tomorrow serves as a 

 4           valuable business attraction tool and is one 

 5           of the many reasons New York is leading the 

 6           country in reshoring manufacturing.  However, 

 7           our successes have resulted in a shortage of 

 8           shovel-ready sites for incoming businesses. 

 9                  To address this directly, 

10           Governor Hochul has proposed $100 million for 

11           a new round of FAST NY, the state's premier 

12           program to create shovel-ready sites.  This 

13           investment will further the state's business 

14           attraction efforts and continue New York's 

15           momentum in growing the green economy and 

16           semiconductor industry.  

17                  Site preparation was critical for 

18           attracting large companies like 

19           GlobalFoundries and Micron, which helped 

20           solidify New York's position as a leader in 

21           advanced manufacturing.  

22                  To promote continued growth of the 

23           semiconductor investments in New York, the 

24           Governor recently announced the state's 


                                                                   22

 1           support for a new EUV lithography tool and 

 2           related center at the Albany NanoTech 

 3           Complex.  This groundbreaking public-private 

 4           partnership will put New York at the 

 5           forefront of semiconductor research and 

 6           development, ensuring that the next 

 7           generation of chips are developed here in 

 8           New York.  

 9                  These chips will also be critical for 

10           advancements in artificial intelligence, 

11           which will be one of the most important 

12           technological advances of our lifetime. 

13           Through the Governor's Empire AI initiative, 

14           New York will empower its world-class 

15           research institutions to pursue ethical 

16           advancements in AI to create new jobs and 

17           attract investments to our state.  

18                  Tesla's recent announcement of a 

19           $500 million supercomputer in Buffalo also 

20           shows New York's boundless potential for AI 

21           and autonomous vehicle developments.  

22                  As a part of our comprehensive 

23           approach to economic development, we support 

24           Governor Hochul's commitment to growing the 


                                                                   23

 1           state's housing stock.  This is vital, 

 2           because companies have told me that they 

 3           cannot consider locating to a state that does 

 4           not offer ample housing.  To address this, 

 5           the Executive Budget commits $500 million to 

 6           support infrastructure upgrades at 

 7           state-owned properties, which will 

 8           accommodate thousands of units of housing and 

 9           encourage the growth of the state's 

10           workforce.  

11                  Throughout all of our work, we remain 

12           deeply committed to the principles of 

13           transparency, accountability, and data-driven 

14           decision making. We continue to work 

15           diligently to make the agency more accessible 

16           and transparent.  Last year we launched a 

17           new, user-friendly Database of Economic 

18           Incentives, and I appreciate all the 

19           engagement with the Legislature to strategize 

20           ways we can continue evolving this important 

21           resource.  

22                  I am proud of all that ESD has 

23           accomplished this year, and I'm excited about 

24           what these new initiatives will achieve for 


                                                                   24

 1           the state.  I look forward to continuing to 

 2           work closely with all of you to deliver 

 3           results for all New Yorkers.  

 4                  Thank you for the opportunity to speak 

 5           this morning, and I'm happy to take your 

 6           questions. 

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you very 

 8           much.  

 9                  Our next testifier is Jeanette Moy, 

10           from the Office of General Services.  

11                  Good morning.

12                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Good morning.

13                  Greetings, Chairs Krueger and Pretlow, 

14           Ranking Members O'Mara and Ra, and 

15           distinguished members of the Legislature.  My 

16           name is Jeanette Moy, and I'm the 

17           commissioner of the New York State Office of 

18           General Services.  I'm joined today by OGS 

19           Executive Deputy Commissioner Thomas Nitido.  

20                  Thank you for the opportunity to share 

21           the work of our agency and all that has been 

22           accomplished since I last testified before 

23           the Legislature, as well as to talk about the 

24           impact of the Governor's Executive Budget on 


                                                                   25

 1           this agency.

 2                  Governor Kathy Hochul's Executive 

 3           Budget proposes $1.38 billion for OGS, which 

 4           will enable our agency to continue to advance 

 5           her commitment to improving government 

 6           operations and service for all New Yorkers. 

 7           The proposed budget will allow OGS and its 

 8           1,900 employees to continue to provide 

 9           operational and logistical support services 

10           for state agencies so that they can focus on 

11           their core missions effectively.  

12                  Our services are vast.  We manage 

13           20 million square feet of the state's real 

14           property and 468 leases comprising another 

15           12 million square feet.  We provide shared 

16           services, processing transactions for 

17           44,000 state employees.  We provide 

18           $660 million in annual budget and accounting 

19           services for our clients, and directly manage 

20           human resources for another 6,300 state 

21           workers.  We also administer 1,500 

22           centralized contracts with award values of up 

23           to $30 billion.  

24                  Under Governor Hochul's leadership, 


                                                                   26

 1           we've launched a five-year strategic plan 

 2           this year which outlines how OGS will 

 3           incorporate transparency, customer service, 

 4           sustainability, and equity across our 

 5           operations.  The Executive Budget will allow 

 6           OGS to make demonstrable progress in this 

 7           agency's plan, as well as our shared goals of 

 8           making government work better for all 

 9           New Yorkers.  

10                  OGS's role as a support agency is to 

11           ensure that state government runs effectively 

12           and efficiently.  We do this by utilizing 

13           data to help the state to make informed 

14           decisions and by instituting policies, 

15           processes and system changes that allow our 

16           partner agencies to function.  Last year we 

17           built out a Project Management Office, and 

18           this year we will be standing up a data 

19           analytics team.  These functions together 

20           will support the Governor's ambitious agenda 

21           for a more data-driven state government.

22                  For example, enhancing the state's 

23           property database and ensuring the state is 

24           able to use these properties for more 


                                                                   27

 1           strategic and beneficial purposes, such as 

 2           meeting the Governor's goals of developing 

 3           more affordable housing.  

 4                  Our real estate portfolio includes 

 5           over 150 state-owned buildings and structures 

 6           totaling more than $7 billion in assets.  We 

 7           serve approximately 30,000 tenants and 

 8           thousands of visitors.  And most of these 

 9           state office buildings were built between 

10           1965 and 1975, with their critical systems 

11           reaching the end of their useful life.  We 

12           are making prudent investments to meet the 

13           needs of the state's workforce.  

14                  With hybrid work a part of the modern 

15           workplace, we've launched a pilot for ITS and 

16           OGS employees so that we can best learn how 

17           to adapt our existing spaces.

18                  The proposed budget will also allow us 

19           to continue this work, along with a 

20           long-awaited Capitol Eastern Approach 

21           restoration project, and completing work on 

22           the Hawk Street Passage and Capitol 

23           Courtyard.  These projects will improve our 

24           State Capitol's most prominent and historic 


                                                                   28

 1           public spaces.  

 2                  Now, in addition to the significant 

 3           work on OGS facilities, our agency also 

 4           provides design, construction, and project 

 5           permitting services to over 50 state 

 6           agencies.  Our current workload includes 

 7           $1.4 billion in active construction projects 

 8           and another $2 billion in design development. 

 9           This year's successes included the completion 

10           of the wedge wire screen system at the OGS 

11           Hudson River pumping station in Albany, 

12           installation of the Ruth Bader Ginsberg 

13           portrait in the Capitol's Great Western 

14           Staircase, construction of the first phase of 

15           the Adirondack Rail Trail for DEC, and making 

16           substantial progress on DMNA's facility 

17           modernization efforts, from designs for the 

18           Lexington Avenue Armory to breaking ground on 

19           their Troy field maintenance shop.  

20                  Now, across this significant footprint 

21           we have been laying the foundation to help 

22           the state meet Governor Hochul's climate 

23           goals.  In partnership with NYSERDA and NYPA, 

24           we're managing a state program to convert the 


                                                                   29

 1           light-duty-vehicle fleet to zero-emission 

 2           vehicles by 2035.  We are actively planning 

 3           over 138 ports at 39 state facilities 

 4           representing 10 agencies, the first tranche 

 5           of approximately 1400 chargers across the 

 6           state.  

 7                  OGS also began implementing telematics 

 8           into our vehicles to improve performance and 

 9           safety while providing greater insights into 

10           vehicle operations that will ultimately 

11           facilitate our transition to a carbon-neutral 

12           fleet.

13                  We've held the first EV Car Show for 

14           fleet managers and worked with agencies to 

15           craft their EV transition plans.

16                  Finally, OGS was integral to 

17           implementing first-in-the-nation clean 

18           concrete guidelines to reduce greenhouse gas 

19           emissions in state construction.

20                  OGS will also advance the Governor's 

21           call for the state to lead by example, as a 

22           member of her Decarbonization Leadership 

23           Program.  In partnership with NYPA, we are 

24           developing plans to decarbonize major state 


                                                                   30

 1           facilities, including right here at the 

 2           Empire State Plaza. That plan will lay out 

 3           steps to accomplish an approximately 

 4           50 percent reduction in carbon emissions at 

 5           the Plaza complex in the next 10 years, and 

 6           will examine opportunities to achieve full 

 7           decarbonization long-term.  This will result 

 8           in a meaningful reduction in emissions in a 

 9           disadvantaged community right here in Albany, 

10           improving air quality and health for local 

11           residents.  

12                  The Governor's Executive Budget 

13           includes $50 million for energy efficiency 

14           and emissions reduction projects in support 

15           of the implementation of Executive Order 22, 

16           and we hope to use a portion of that funding 

17           to jump-start this important work.  

18                  As we restore our facilities and 

19           assets, we've also reinvigorated our cultural 

20           programming, focusing on community 

21           partnerships and adapting our events and 

22           exhibits to better reflect the diversity 

23           relevant of our state.  We've expanded the 

24           state's annual in-person tribute to 


                                                                   31

 1           Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr, by partnering 

 2           with other State agencies, including the 

 3           Anti-Hate & Bias Campaign from the NYS 

 4           Division of Human Rights, and curated joint 

 5           programs with our agency partners, including 

 6           the Chief Disability Officer, the Office of 

 7           Mental Health, the Office for Prevention of 

 8           Domestic Violence, and the Office of 

 9           Veterans' Affairs, among so many others.  

10           These steps help to make New York State more 

11           equitable by honoring and celebrating the 

12           diversity of our communities.  

13                  Along with our partner agencies, we 

14           are working to improve the customer service 

15           experience for all New Yorkers.  This year we 

16           began the first phase of our e-procurement 

17           initiative for centralized contracts, 

18           launched an e-procurement solution for our 

19           design and construction contracts, and hosted 

20           our first GovBuyU, a fully online procurement 

21           conference for state agencies, authorities, 

22           municipalities and nonprofits.

23                  The Executive Budget will enable OGS 

24           to continue to make it easier to work and do 


                                                                   32

 1           business with the state.  Working with the 

 2           Executive Chamber and ITS, we will help to 

 3           establish a statewide customer experience 

 4           infrastructure for our agency partners.  We 

 5           will also build on the recent expansion of 

 6           the Digital and Media Services Center, 

 7           ensuring that agencies have access to 

 8           user-friendly digital products and services 

 9           that allow them to better connect with 

10           New York businesses and New York residents.

11                  And this year, our Office of Language 

12           Access celebrated its first anniversary, 

13           launched a statewide listening tour and a 

14           "Know Your Rights" campaign for limited 

15           English-proficient communities.  The proposed 

16           Executive Budget will help establish a state 

17           employee certification program for oral and 

18           written language skills.

19                  In closing, the Governor's budget will 

20           enable OGS to begin addressing our aging 

21           infrastructure, modernize and innovate our 

22           operations, and support the state response to 

23           complex challenges that are facing the state 

24           today.  I'm proud of our progress in making 


                                                                   33

 1           New York a healthier, stronger, more 

 2           resilient and more equitable state, and we 

 3           applaud the Governor's investments and 

 4           priorities in this year's Executive Budget.

 5                  I look forward to continuing to work 

 6           closely with many of you as we deliver for 

 7           all New Yorkers.  

 8                  Thank you for the opportunity for 

 9           letting us speak this morning, and I am more 

10           than happy to answer your questions.

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you very 

12           much.

13                  Before we introduce our next 

14           testifier, we've also been joined by 

15           Senator Hinchey and Senator Cleare.  And I 

16           think Senator Tedisco.

17                  Do you have any Assemblymembers to 

18           intro?

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Yes, I do.  

20           Assemblypeople Zaccaro and McDonald have also 

21           joined us.  

22                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay, thank you.  

23           Our next testifier is Executive Director 

24           Erika Mallin, New York State Council on the 


                                                                   34

 1           Arts.

 2                  Good morning.  

 3                  EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  I'm  

 4           pushing.

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I know.  It's 

 6           very hard.  Thank you.

 7                  EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  Chairs 

 8           Krueger and Pretlow, chair of our committee, 

 9           Senator Serrano, other members of our 

10           committee, and all of you here today, thank 

11           you for the invitation to address you.  I'm 

12           Erika Mallin, the executive director of the 

13           New York State Council on the Arts.  My first 

14           day at NYSCA was January 18th -- exactly 

15           12 days ago -- and I am honored by the 

16           opportunity to champion the greatest and most 

17           innovative arts and culture sector in the 

18           world.

19                  It has been my experience -- and I 

20           know this to be true of other organizations 

21           and artists -- that NYSCA's support has 

22           always been the stamp of approval.  It spurs 

23           growth, leverages additional support, and has 

24           always embraced the creation of new work and 


                                                                   35

 1           programs that have influenced artists and 

 2           audiences around the world.

 3                  On behalf of our chair, Katherine 

 4           Nicholls, our council members, staff, and the 

 5           vast cultural industries of New York, we are 

 6           immensely grateful to the Governor and to the 

 7           State Legislature for your vital investments 

 8           in the arts in FY2024.  

 9                  The state of our sector is that of 

10           active and on-going recovery, and this is 

11           true for our state and the nation.  But it is 

12           the funding provided by the Governor and the 

13           Legislature that has been instrumental to 

14           sustaining the work of artists and 

15           organizations and supporting new ways of 

16           working in these pivotal times.  

17                  NYSCA's grant-making wholly supports 

18           the diversity of our state, both culturally 

19           and geographically.  We serve rural areas, 

20           small towns, and a major global city.  We 

21           seed and grow organizations and support 

22           individual artists to cultivate their highest 

23           creative powers.  We partner with others to 

24           increase our impact and provide much needed 


                                                                   36

 1           capital investment in all 10 regions.  

 2                  And we overwhelmingly support small 

 3           and medium-sized organizations.  These tend 

 4           to be organizations that have less access to 

 5           consistent funding.  For FY '24, 50 percent 

 6           of our grantees have budgets under $500,000, 

 7           versus 7 percent having budgets over 

 8           $10 million.  

 9                  And relevant to this time of recovery, 

10           we have seen a significant expansion in the 

11           number of artist applications and first-time 

12           grantees.  This is truly inspiring at this 

13           moment, as many of these grantees make up the 

14           next generation of creative thinkers, art 

15           makers, and global influencers.  

16                  And this investment returns real and 

17           significant dollars, contributing over 

18           $144 billion back to our state, employing 

19           over 450,000 workers, constituting almost 

20           8 percent of our state's economy, driving 

21           tourism, boosting revenue for local 

22           businesses and services.  

23                  Annually, NYSCA supports over 3,000 

24           artists and organizations across all 10 


                                                                   37

 1           regions through its various programs, 

 2           re-grants, and partnerships.  For FY '24, to 

 3           date NYSCA has awarded 2,400 grants totaling 

 4           $81 million.  

 5                  So what does our funding look like?  

 6           One of the most important ways that NYSCA 

 7           supports the field is through general 

 8           operating support, funding the everyday -- 

 9           turning on the lights, opening the doors, and 

10           producing world-class art.  And often NYSCA 

11           is the only source for this kind of support.  

12                  Secondly, we support New York State 

13           artists -- more of them than ever before -– 

14           who are leaders in their crafts and catalysts 

15           for our communities.  Some of our grantees 

16           include Buffalo String Works, which provides 

17           music instruction for marginalized youth, or 

18           the Bronx Documentary Center in New York 

19           City, whose mission it is to share 

20           documentary media to thousands of South Bronx 

21           residents.  

22                  Or filmmakers Michèle Stephenson and 

23           Joe Brewster, whose documentary "Going to 

24           Mars: The Nikki Giovanni Project," was just 


                                                                   38

 1           shortlisted -- like a week ago -- for an 

 2           Academy Award.  

 3                  Or it's Catskill-based visual artist 

 4           Jordan Casteel, who recently was selected as 

 5           a MacArthur Fellow, one of the highest 

 6           achievements one can receive. 

 7                  Over our history, NYSCA has helped 

 8           grow iconic organizations like Alvin Ailey in 

 9           New York, The Everson Museum in Syracuse, 

10           The AKG Museum in Buffalo, The Eastman Museum 

11           in Rochester, and the Saratoga Performing 

12           Arts Center, to name a few.  

13                  And our strategic partnerships and 

14           re-grants also expand our reach, like Arts in 

15           Corrections, in partnership with the 

16           Department of Corrections, Arts on Canals, in 

17           partnership with NY Power Authority, and 

18           A.R.T. NY's Creative Opportunity Fund, which 

19           funds small theaters.  

20                  Our capital projects are also crucial 

21           to supporting new construction and facility 

22           improvements ranging from new HVAC systems to 

23           new ground-up buildings.  We are immensely 

24           grateful for the significant investments in 


                                                                   39

 1           capital funding the Governor and Legislature 

 2           have made for arts facilities, and since 2018 

 3           NYSCA has awarded $182 million in capital 

 4           funding supporting 283 projects across all 

 5           10 regions, with 67 percent of these grants 

 6           going to organizations with budgets under 

 7           $5 million.  

 8                  Our FY '24 capital project opportunity 

 9           just closed this month, with over 260 

10           applications.  Those awards will be announced 

11           this spring.  But some of our recent projects 

12           include Artspace Utica Lofts, to support a 

13           newly constructed, 40,000-plus-square-foot 

14           building with space for low-income artists 

15           and their families to live, work, exhibit, 

16           and perform in downtown Utica; and 

17           Lake Placid Arts Center in the North Country, 

18           which will build a new modern LEED-certified 

19           arts complex, greatly expanding access to 

20           top-tier arts programming as the only 

21           year-round arts facility in a 45-mile radius.  

22                  As NYSCA's reach expands, so do the 

23           measurable benefits of the arts.  As I said 

24           before, our arts and culture sector delivers 


                                                                   40

 1           an astonishing return on our investment.  It 

 2           returns $144 billion back to our state and 

 3           employs over 450,000 people.  

 4                  But to zoom in on a local level, here 

 5           are recent studies.  The nonprofit sector in 

 6           Western New York generated $380 million in 

 7           economic activity, including $189 million in 

 8           audience spending, and supporting over 

 9           8,000 jobs.  

10                  In Westchester County, the nonprofit 

11           arts sector generated $182 million, 

12           supporting over 1,500 jobs, with attendees 

13           spending an additional $36 per person in that 

14           local community.  

15                  And in Long Island, where the 

16           nonprofit arts sector generated $330 million, 

17           supporting 5,000 jobs, and with attendees 

18           spending an additional $37 in that local 

19           community.

20                  And in a recent study on the most 

21           art-vibrant cities and counties in the 

22           nation -- every city, every county measuring 

23           state and federal funding, visitor bureaus, 

24           private investment, and the number of arts 


                                                                   41

 1           workers -- both Oneonta and Ithaca, in 

 2           addition to New York City, made the Top 40 

 3           list.

 4                  I am grateful for Governor Hochul's 

 5           continued investment in our arts and our 

 6           cultural organizations and her 

 7           forward-thinking initiatives that champion 

 8           access to the arts for all, the work of 

 9           artists, and the critical role they play in 

10           our society.  These initiatives include a 

11           focus on public art -- which is always the 

12           first point of access for everyone -- and 

13           artist fellowships in state agencies to bring 

14           creative and humanist approaches to how we 

15           serve communities and the state.

16                  We know that NYSCA can lead the charge 

17           to innovate in this field, develop best 

18           practices, and become a bank of ideas to best 

19           serve New York and beyond.  We want to look 

20           at ways that we can support new leaders and 

21           our vast workforce; create high-profile 

22           convenings that showcase our grantees' 

23           artistic excellence; and cultivate new 

24           partnerships across our field and in our 


                                                                   42

 1           communities.

 2                  Finally, I believe artists and 

 3           cultural leaders are some of our greatest 

 4           influencers and futurists.  And I believe 

 5           that NYSCA is uniquely poised to influence 

 6           the field and, with our core programming and 

 7           new initiatives, inspire the next generation 

 8           of art makers and cultural leaders.  

 9                  Again, I am extremely excited to have 

10           this opportunity to champion arts and culture 

11           in our great state.  I thank you for your 

12           unwavering support and look forward to 

13           working with you in the coming months. 

14                  And I welcome your questions. 

15                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you, 

16           everyone.  We're now going to start our 

17           questioning with Senator Sean Ryan, who is 

18           the chair of -- what are you the chair of, 

19           Sean?  You are the chair of Economic 

20           Development and Commerce.

21                  SENATOR RYAN:  There we go.

22                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Ten minutes for 

23           Sean.  Thank you.

24                  SENATOR RYAN:  Thank you to everybody.  


                                                                   43

 1           To the NYSCA director, welcome.  Really happy 

 2           with the things you're doing all around the 

 3           state.  Happy to hear, you know, the 

 4           shout-out for Buffalo String Works, which is 

 5           a very small nonprofit who for years did 

 6           their thing, had no idea what NYSCA even was, 

 7           but somehow you are all married together now, 

 8           in addition to a lot of local funding, state 

 9           funding coming in from there.  So we 

10           appreciate that.

11                  Commissioner Moy, last year we spoke a 

12           little bit about the escalators that were no 

13           longer being used in this building, and we 

14           see that you're making an effort to sort of 

15           box in those redundant escalators.  We 

16           appreciate that.  Looks much better for the 

17           public.  So thank you for keeping an eye out 

18           for that.  

19                  Commissioner Knight, great to see you 

20           again.  Last year we talked a little bit 

21           about the Database of Deals, and I've noticed 

22           that's advancing quickly.  We appreciate 

23           that.  I imagine it's not the final 

24           iteration.  


                                                                   44

 1                  Last year when we spoke, we spoke of 

 2           trying to make sure that on that database, if 

 3           an IDA subsidy was layered in, it would be 

 4           apparent on the database.  That area of the 

 5           database is still somewhat I think 

 6           incomplete, where it references "if this 

 7           includes the IDA subsidies" -- which would 

 8           give you the inference, if the answer is no, 

 9           that there are no IDA subsidies.  

10                  But I notice several projects with IDA 

11           subsidies said, you know, doesn't include it.  

12           But it doesn't let the taxpayer know that 

13           another source of taxpayer money was layered 

14           in.  So if we can continue working on that 

15           part, we'd appreciate it.

16                  So most of the questions we all have 

17           about economic development is, you know, is 

18           it working.  So in the 2022-23 budget we 

19           called for an independent audit of all the 

20           programs.  So happy that audit will be 

21           completed.  And actually, fortuitously, it's 

22           being released tomorrow.  So we can look at 

23           that, and I expect to have further 

24           conversations about that.


                                                                   45

 1                  So what we endeavor to find out is, 

 2           you know, what programs work and which ones 

 3           don't.  And in this year's budget we have a 

 4           big capital investment going into SUNY 

 5           Albany, a continuation of money there.  I 

 6           think it's nearly a billion dollars in a 

 7           two-step program.  And then we also see money 

 8           going into the Artificial Intelligence 

 9           Consortium.  

10                  How do we measure success of these 

11           state investments?  You know, you could 

12           either talk about Albany, which I think will 

13           have just shy of a billion dollars.  I know 

14           the verbiage said we hope to attract 

15           $500 million of private investment.  So how 

16           do we measure success on that program?  

17                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So thank you for 

18           your question.  This EUV tool is going to be 

19           a cutting-edge piece of equipment that 

20           continues to help us solidify our place in 

21           the semiconductor industry.

22                  SENATOR RYAN:  Yup.

23                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Kevin Younis has 

24           been working on this program with partners, 


                                                                   46

 1           and I'll have him talk a little bit about the 

 2           partnerships and how we see the return on 

 3           investment with this tool.

 4                  ESD COO YOUNIS:  Thanks, Hope.  

 5           Thanks, Senator.  Kevin Younis.  

 6                  So with the High NA EUV, which it is, 

 7           as Hope said, this incredible investment in 

 8           the -- sort of the future of semiconductors, 

 9           which as I think you know is really so 

10           integral to the future of our economy, of all 

11           economies, really.  

12                  The project specifically, though, 

13           leverages $9 billion in partnership 

14           investments.  So our $1 billion will be met 

15           with 9 billion direct commitments by the 

16           partners --

17                  SENATOR RYAN:  Those partners have 

18           already committed contractually for this 

19           money?  

20                  ESD COO YOUNIS:  Yeah, they are -- 

21           they've -- well, we're still finalizing 

22           contracts.  But we have terms, MOUs with all 

23           of them where they commit to their spend, to 

24           leverage.  


                                                                   47

 1                  And then there's an additional -- we 

 2           expect there's -- the CHIPS Act included 

 3           what's called the National Semiconductor 

 4           Technology Center, which is 11 -- almost 

 5           $12 billion in federal funding, which we 

 6           expect to see a substantial portion of that 

 7           invested here.  And the High NA EUV tool 

 8           really positions us in a way that no other 

 9           state or organization in the nation, if not 

10           the world, can -- 

11                  SENATOR RYAN:  So play that out.  If 

12           the $9 billion comes in, how does it ripple 

13           out into the greater economy?

14                  ESD COO YOUNIS:  So with this industry 

15           we see roughly $16 of leveraged spend against 

16           each dollar spent in the industry.  So tools 

17           are purchased, people come and work in these 

18           communities, buy homes in these communities.  

19           There is -- there will be tens of billions of 

20           dollars, direct and indirect investment, as a 

21           result of this one $1 billion of state 

22           investment.

23                  SENATOR RYAN:  So you mention people.  

24           Does that mean there's going to be people 


                                                                   48

 1           working jobs?

 2                  ESD COO YOUNIS:  Yeah.  So they're -- 

 3           directly, there is 700 jobs committed by the 

 4           partners.  And again, the multipliers 

 5           associated with this industry, roughly five 

 6           jobs indirect for each direct job.  It's a 

 7           very high multiplier.  We expect with -- and 

 8           really, that's just the beginning.  The NSTC 

 9           will bring hundreds of jobs as well.  

10                  SENATOR RYAN:  So with the 700 jobs, 

11           when do you think we're going to get those?  

12           And do we have an idea of what they pay?  

13                  ESD COO YOUNIS:  Those will be largely 

14           realized over the first three -- three or 

15           four years, and then maintained for the 

16           duration.  And they pay very well.  I don't 

17           have the numbers, but they're -- these are 

18           largely Ph.D. researchers, very highly paid.

19                  SENATOR RYAN:  And will you report out 

20           the number of jobs that have occurred based 

21           on the state investment?

22                  ESD COO YOUNIS:  Yes.

23                  SENATOR RYAN:  Excellent.

24                  So and then how about -- what about 


                                                                   49

 1           the AI Consortium?  What's -- is that bench 

 2           research, is it commercialization?  What are 

 3           we doing there?  

 4                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So we have 

 5           convened seven partners to be involved in 

 6           this Empire AI Consortium.  The Governor has 

 7           said that whoever dominates the AI industry 

 8           will dominate the next era of human history.  

 9           And right now private-sector companies are 

10           dominating R&D in AI.  And this provides for 

11           an opportunity for public and private 

12           institutions to be involved in cutting-edge 

13           AI R&D.

14                  SENATOR RYAN:  But what do they do 

15           with it?  Is this just pure bench research?  

16           Are we trying to commercialize this if 

17           patents come out of it?  Like --

18                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  We're focused 

19           on --

20                  SENATOR RYAN:  What's the end game?  

21                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  We're focused on 

22           ethical output for AI.  As I said, 

23           private-sector firms do have these super 

24           computers that are involved in R&D right now.  


                                                                   50

 1           The public sector, public interest, does not.  

 2           And we're trying to create this almost like a 

 3           public utility to be able to influence 

 4           productive uses of AI.

 5                  SENATOR RYAN:  Okay.  Be happy to 

 6           continue to observe that as it unfolds.

 7                  The New York Redevelopment of 

 8           Underutilized Sites for Housing -- which does 

 9           spell NY-RUSH.  I've noticed that most of 

10           your programs actually spell a word.  I think 

11           that's remarkable.  You probably have people 

12           on staff who are grammarians to figure this 

13           out --

14                  (Overtalk.)

15                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  They're very 

16           good with that.

17                  SENATOR RYAN:  Yes.  Yes.

18                  So housing on state-owned facilities, 

19           how is that going to work?  And are you folks 

20           going to be doing housing programs?  Is Kevin 

21           Younis going to stop doing digital stuff and 

22           get into framing houses?  Like what's 

23           happening here?

24                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So NY-RUSH is to 


                                                                   51

 1           support the increase in housing supply.  And 

 2           so many of our underutilized, unused state 

 3           sites need tremendous infrastructure support, 

 4           and we imagine that this funding would 

 5           provide the support to deal with the 

 6           infrastructure.  We would --

 7                  SENATOR RYAN:  So you've got a 10-acre 

 8           site in Stony Brook.  Is the state going to 

 9           come in and be the subdivision developer?  

10           We're going to lay streets, put in curbs, 

11           sewers?

12                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  It depends on 

13           each site.  You know, I can give you an 

14           example.  In Eastern Queens, Creedmoor, it's 

15           a state-owned site.  We'll need streets, 

16           we'll need utility upgrades.  I can imagine 

17           that a site like that would be able to access 

18           funding from the NY-RUSH program.  

19                  SENATOR RYAN:  And do you  plan on 

20           keeping that money, or is that going to get 

21           pushed out to HCR or another agency?  

22                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  This funding 

23           will be shared across a number of agencies 

24           that are involved in redeveloping state-owned 


                                                                   52

 1           land.

 2                  SENATOR RYAN:  So when that money goes 

 3           out, it always then becomes a challenge about 

 4           who reports on that money and what are the 

 5           outcomes of the money.  So when the money 

 6           leaves ESD and goes somewhere else, then ESD 

 7           says we don't really know what happened, then 

 8           HCR sends it somewhere else.  

 9                  So I would just ask you to keep in 

10           mind that, you know, we just really are 

11           looking for, you know, transparency.  But 

12           also we want to go back to our taxpayers and 

13           say this was a wonderful program, it yielded 

14           benefits for our community.  But often it's 

15           really hard to figure that out, especially as 

16           the money goes from agency to agency.

17                  But thank you very much.

18                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So we'll make 

19           sure that we track the funding.

20                  SENATOR RYAN:  Yeah.  Excellent.  

21           Always a challenge.  Thank you very much.

22                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you very 

23           much.  Appreciate it.  

24                  Our next testifier is from the 


                                                                   53

 1           Assembly.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you, 

 3           Senator.  

 4                  I think Assemblymember Stirpe, our 

 5           chair of Economic Development, has a 

 6           question.  You have 10 minutes.

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Okay, thank you.  

 8                  Let's stay on the RUSH program.  And 

 9           how many additional housing units, you know, 

10           can really be expected from this program?  

11           Any idea?

12                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So hard to say 

13           right now.  You know, the Governor's calling 

14           for 15,000 units of housing across these 

15           state-owned sites that we have identified.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Are there any 

17           regions in the state with particularly high 

18           amounts of underutilized state property?  

19                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I think it's all 

20           across the state.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Well, would this 

22           program prioritize the creation of affordable 

23           housing?  

24                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Well, we always 


                                                                   54

 1           want to create affordable housing when it's 

 2           possible.  So we would work with HCR to do 

 3           that.

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Okay.  I'll go 

 5           back to my normal complaint every year:  

 6           Centers of Excellence and CATs.  You know, we 

 7           recognize that the return on investment in 

 8           those programs is very high -- probably 

 9           higher than any other program we have -- you 

10           know, 24 to 1.  Why is it every year we have 

11           to go through this dance where you don't just 

12           maintain what was there last year, you 

13           actually cut back all the legislative adds 

14           and then we have to sort of fight to get that 

15           back to ground zero.  

16                  I mean, why haven't we ever attempted 

17           to actually increase the funding?  Because I 

18           know if I were in the private sector and I 

19           had something that was wildly successful, I 

20           probably would increase the funding in that 

21           area, double it or triple it, since these 

22           amounts are so small, actually, compared to 

23           the rest of the budget.  

24                  So what's the philosophy behind doing 


                                                                   55

 1           this every year?  

 2                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Well, I think 

 3           that we understand that the CATs and COEs are 

 4           very important.  We're able to leverage the 

 5           output that comes from both Centers for other 

 6           areas of innovation in our economy.  

 7                  But we have provided for what we 

 8           believe to be the right level of funding.  We 

 9           did not cut the budget from last year.  As 

10           you said, we have just introduced the same 

11           amount that we proposed in the last budget.  

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Okay.  Okay.  

13                  You know, the Economic Development 

14           Program, you've -- there's 45 million in 

15           there for development efforts, Open for 

16           Business Program, Global New York, those 

17           programs.  I mean, how much money spent on 

18           each of these programs last year?  Any idea?

19                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Virtually all of 

20           it.  But I will come back to you with exact 

21           numbers.

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Well, okay.  

23           Since it was all spent, do you think the 

24           funding is sufficient to realize the goals of 


                                                                   56

 1           the program?  

 2                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  We do think it's 

 3           sufficient to realize the goals of the 

 4           program.  

 5                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  All right.  Let's 

 6           talk about FAST NY.  Has the entire first 

 7           round of funding been disbursed already?  

 8                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So almost all of 

 9           the first round of funding has been spent, 

10           About $249 million of it.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  How many sites 

12           were funded?  

13                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I have to come 

14           back to you with the number of sites.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Okay.  Any idea 

16           how successful the program's been in 

17           attracting large employers to the state?

18                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  It's been very 

19           important in attracting large projects to the 

20           state.  We have a number of projects -- we 

21           have a project in Webster, New York, the 

22           Fairlife project, which is going to invest 

23           $650 million to create a plant there.  

24                  We have -- we continue work on our 


                                                                   57

 1           large sites like STAMP.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Okay, good.  

 3           Let's talk a little bit about the ON-RAMP 

 4           program, okay?  So there's $200 million in 

 5           the budget for that.  One of the questions I 

 6           get asked in my conference is, is this 

 7           $200 million going to be spent to build new 

 8           centers?  Why aren't we utilizing community 

 9           colleges that already run a lot of these 

10           types of workforce-training programs?

11                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So the 

12           ON-RAMP program is very important for 

13           advancing the pipeline of workers for 

14           advanced manufacturing.  And Syracuse will be 

15           the flagship center where a facility would 

16           have to be built.

17                  But we envision that community 

18           colleges will be eligible for this funding 

19           because they're a critical part of providing 

20           the training for advanced manufacturing.  

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  How are we 

22           doing -- you know, we spent a lot of money on 

23           workforce development over the last few 

24           years.  I mean, what are the results in areas 


                                                                   58

 1           like nursing, new teachers where we've had a 

 2           teacher shortage, and all that?  I mean, are 

 3           we making a lot of progress?  Is it too early 

 4           to tell, or what?  

 5                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So with respect 

 6           to areas outside of the innovation sectors, 

 7           I'd have to connect with my colleagues who 

 8           are involved on funding training for nurses 

 9           and teachers, because that's not something 

10           that ESD is involved in.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Okay.  Now, we 

12           added a program last year where we sort of 

13           piggybacked on the back of a couple of 

14           federal programs, the SBIR program and the 

15           STTR program.  And our thoughts were, you 

16           know, the federal government has gone through 

17           all the due diligence on these companies and 

18           felt that the technologies they're trying to 

19           develop are really worthwhile, but we knew 

20           that along the way a lot of times these 

21           companies sort of fall into the valley of 

22           death and, you know, there's just not enough 

23           funding there.  

24                  So we thought for those particular 


                                                                   59

 1           companies we would provide state funding.  

 2           Have we got any results from that?  Do we 

 3           know how many companies we've helped?  

 4                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So we are 

 5           launching this program just this quarter, and 

 6           we will be providing matching grants for 

 7           businesses that have gotten federal funding.  

 8           And we've crafted the guidelines to focus on 

 9           companies that are looking at sustainable and 

10           the green economy as well as disadvantaged 

11           communities.  So we can come back to you once 

12           we've gone through that round to give you 

13           some update.

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Let's talk a 

15           little bit about the Downtown Revitalization 

16           initiatives, both the DRI and the New York 

17           Forward program.  Has all the money from last 

18           year or however many years we've had the 

19           program, been put out already?

20                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  There is some 

21           funding waiting to be drawn down for projects 

22           that have not advanced yet.  But I can come 

23           back to you with that information.

24                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Okay.  The 


                                                                   60

 1           Innovation Venture competition.  In '22-'23 

 2           we allocated $75 million to be disbursed over 

 3           five years.  Do you know what the status of 

 4           this funding is?

 5                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  We have been in 

 6           dialogue with the seven competitions that 

 7           exist in the state and have been creating new 

 8           agreements for a five-year contract so that 

 9           those competitions can continue to exist.  

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Do you have any 

11           idea what kind of return on investment we've 

12           had from any of these -- 

13                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  We do have 

14           reporting on that, and I can get you that 

15           information.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Okay.  Okay, how 

17           about the ConnectALL initiative?  We've 

18           provided $1.45 billion in '22-'23, and I'm 

19           just wondering how much of this funding has 

20           been spent.

21                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So with respect 

22           to the ConnectALL initiative, most of the 

23           funding that you reference, about a billion 

24           dollars or so, is from the federal 


                                                                   61

 1           government.  And we have largely not been 

 2           able to draw down on that funding.  We are in 

 3           dialogue and working with the federal 

 4           government to provide the planning documents 

 5           that give us the ability to draw down the 

 6           funding.  We should be able to draw down that 

 7           funding in '25.

 8                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Okay, thank you.

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

10                  Our next questioner is Senator 

11           Serrano, chair of the Arts and Tourism 

12           Committee -- is that correct?  

13                  SENATOR SERRANO:  That's correct.  

14           Thank you very much, Madam Chair, Senator Liz 

15           Krueger, all of my colleagues in the Senate 

16           and the Assembly, my partner in the Assembly, 

17           Assemblymember Danny O'Donnell.  

18                  Appreciate all the testimony we hear 

19           today.  My statements and questions will 

20           focus on the arts.  And Executive Director 

21           Erika Mallin, thank you so much for being 

22           here and for your testimony.  I enjoyed 

23           listening to your remarks on the importance 

24           of the arts and further diversifying how we 


                                                                   62

 1           fund the arts and reaching every corner of 

 2           New York State.  

 3                  I enjoyed our conversation the other 

 4           day where we -- and listening to your 

 5           impressive background, many years in the arts 

 6           and the amount of experience that you bring 

 7           to this role.

 8                  I've mentioned many times the 

 9           importance of the arts as something that is 

10           foundational, I believe, to our state 

11           government.  And it's critically important, I 

12           think now more than ever, that we support the 

13           arts in a meaningful way.  I think -- you 

14           know, there's always sort of been support for 

15           the arts.  But when you look at funding for 

16           grants over the last 20 years, with the 

17           exception of COVID years where there was 

18           additional federal dollars, which gave us a 

19           bump up, which was wonderful -- but, you 

20           know, sort of remaining around 40, 42 million 

21           for grants every single year for many, many 

22           years, despite the fact that costs have 

23           increased, operating has increased.  And it 

24           just makes it harder and harder, I think, to 


                                                                   63

 1           really show support for the arts in ways that 

 2           allow them to plan, to grow, to think about 

 3           their next season.

 4                  But again, NYSCA I think has done a 

 5           good job in trying to reach all corners and 

 6           find new and innovative ways year after year 

 7           to get funding to these groups.

 8                  In this year's new budget, I see -- or 

 9           the proposed Executive Budget -- additional 

10           capital funds, which I think is obviously 

11           important for organizations and institutions 

12           that need to build their space, modernize 

13           their space, be able to bring in more patrons 

14           for the arts.  And I think that is a 

15           wonderful step, and I think it's indicative 

16           of the real understanding that, you know, the 

17           arts provide so much to our state, so much to 

18           our economy.  They are a proven economic 

19           engine.  An investment in the arts provides a 

20           huge return on investment for our economy.  

21           We've seen so many different examples of 

22           economic revitalization in towns and 

23           communities that were economically depressed, 

24           but the arts providing an anchor and a 


                                                                   64

 1           foundation to build upon economic growth for 

 2           many, many different sectors.  

 3                  And I think it's important that, you 

 4           know, that we -- and I -- you know, all of my 

 5           colleagues have been very supportive of the 

 6           arts over the years -- but that we sort of 

 7           make the case that in addition to all of the 

 8           societal benefits that the arts bring, how it 

 9           is transformational in our lives, provides a 

10           vehicle for social justice, for discussions 

11           on equality and diversity.  And it brings 

12           people together in ways that very few other 

13           things can do that.  

14                  Oftentimes we find ourselves 

15           stratified, pushed into our respective 

16           corners.  But the arts brings us together 

17           even on the most difficult issues.

18                  With all that said, you know, 

19           additional funding allows for this wonderful 

20           thing to continue to move forward.  So again, 

21           I was -- just half a step back -- very happy 

22           to see over the past few years that operating 

23           grant funding has increased.  This year the 

24           Executive Budget has gone back down to 


                                                                   65

 1           pre-pandemic.  

 2                  And my question, my concern is with 

 3           this reduction, you know, how does NYSCA plan 

 4           to move forward, with this reduced funding 

 5           capability, in planning, in helping to ensure 

 6           that all of these groups and organizations 

 7           can plan for their next season?

 8                  EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  Thank you 

 9           so much, Senator, for your welcome and for 

10           feeling the importance of the arts, as so 

11           many of us do. 

12                  I think, first and foremost, we will 

13           be as strategic and as efficient as we can 

14           and reach as many, you know, arts 

15           organizations and regranting organizations 

16           throughout the state whatever budget is 

17           enacted here.  

18                  I do think what you're talking about 

19           in terms of our impact is, one, the 

20           re-grants, which allow our spread, you know, 

21           to -- our impact to like double and triple.  

22           But also I think that when we do invest in 

23           things like public art or we do invest in 

24           things where we have artists embedded in 


                                                                   66

 1           public institutions and when we do champion 

 2           artists as thought leaders or problem-solvers 

 3           and convene with them, both as an industry to 

 4           help solve issues in the industry, but also 

 5           to, as you alluded to, you know, have 

 6           conversations about how the arts and, say, 

 7           criminal justice or, say, technology and AI, 

 8           you know, can work together and make a 

 9           difference and, in turn, give back 

10           economically but also transform us 

11           individually or as a community.

12                  So I -- I think it's really a time 

13           where NYSCA can really be a leader in the 

14           field.  One, because we need hope and 

15           understanding and empathy.  That's the soft 

16           power of the arts.  But I also think 

17           leadership, in terms of our state profile, 

18           our national profile, and our global profile.  

19           We have the standing and the foundation to do 

20           that.  We represent rural communities, 

21           midsized cities, a global city with -- you 

22           know, incredibly diverse culturally, which 

23           then puts out artwork and all sorts of 

24           innovative first-time groundbreaking work -- 


                                                                   67

 1           no matter where you live in the state -- that 

 2           is important for us to campaign for, 

 3           achieve -- you know, acknowledge their 

 4           achievement and speak their names, you know, 

 5           throughout the state and throughout the 

 6           nation.

 7                  What we do here can be a model.  You 

 8           know, right now there is a conference being 

 9           held in D.C. with the NEA, you know, about -- 

10           and other funders about what can be done.  We 

11           need to be part of those bigger 

12           conversations.  And I think, given the core 

13           programs that we do have, as well as our new 

14           initiatives, we can do it.

15                  SENATOR SERRANO:  Thank you.  Thank 

16           you for that.  And again, I don't want to 

17           take up too much time; I know we have a lot 

18           to do here today.  But again, the funding 

19           that we did land at last year, my hope was 

20           that that would be the new floor and that 

21           we'd keep building from there.  Because it's 

22           been -- funding has been pretty stagnant for 

23           so many years.  

24                  But again, it's great to hear your 


                                                                   68

 1           ideas and your excitement for this.  Looking 

 2           forward to working with you and with the 

 3           Governor and with all of my colleagues.  

 4                  And with that, I'll yield back any 

 5           remaining time, Madam Chair.  Thank you.

 6                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Assemblymember.

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Yes, next on our 

 8           list is Assemblymember Steve Otis, chair of 

 9           Science and Technologies.

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  Thank you.  

11           Mr. Chair, thank you.

12                  Commissioners, I think I'm going to 

13           start off with Hope Knight and Empire State 

14           Development.

15                  On Empire AI, I think there's an 

16           interest of everyone in the Legislature to 

17           get a little more -- get more specifics in 

18           terms of what this is going to look like.  We 

19           understand it's a collaboration between 

20           colleges and universities in the state.  I 

21           think that one of the questions is are we 

22           going to be relying at all -- and maybe the 

23           colleges and universities have already done 

24           this -- on some of the private-sector players 


                                                                   69

 1           that are already in the AI business, or are 

 2           we starting from scratch in terms of the 

 3           consortium.  

 4                  And this may be a topic for further 

 5           discussions post this hearing, but I think 

 6           there's a desire to get a picture of what 

 7           this looks like.

 8                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So this 

 9           initiative is very important, as I mentioned, 

10           to the, you know, evolution of AI.  The 

11           partners that we have convened for this 

12           initiative are already doing research and 

13           development in AI.  They don't have this kind 

14           of equipment that we seek to purchase.  

15                  But we will use and leverage their 

16           expertise, skills, to develop a framework 

17           around what we focus on going forward.  This 

18           is -- you know, we are early in this process.  

19           There's much to be determined.  And we will 

20           continue to have discussions with you and the 

21           Legislature around the progress.

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  My sense is we've 

23           had great success in the semiconductor- 

24           microchip world -- Micron, IBM, other 


                                                                   70

 1           initiatives that have been a success.  So it 

 2           seems like we're trying to model that success 

 3           and grow this into the AI world.  Is that a 

 4           good analogy?  

 5                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So I think it's 

 6           a little different, in that we're focused on 

 7           the ethical considerations of AI and really 

 8           how does it help the public purpose and 

 9           interest.

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  Very good.  So 

11           that's good.  And certainly that's an area -- 

12           a lot of the AI discussion around the 

13           country, sometimes they talk about 

14           responsible, ethical AI; sometimes there's no 

15           mention of it at all.  So it's good that 

16           that's part of the discussion.  We heard that 

17           from the Governor in her State of the State 

18           message.

19                  Let me turn to another topic, which is 

20           ConnectALL.  And you spoke about we're 

21           waiting for some federal money, but some 

22           money is flowing now.  The ConnectALL office 

23           released an RFP for broadband infrastructure 

24           just a week ago, and that's a positive step.


                                                                   71

 1                  The piece that -- a lot of folks that 

 2           I work with around the state in the digital 

 3           equity/digital inclusion space are wondering 

 4           when the money is going to start to flow to 

 5           help fund those local programs that deal with 

 6           the digital divide.  And some of this is 

 7           wrapped up in the federal funding, and we're 

 8           following that process closely.  

 9                  But if you could share anything about 

10           what the intentions are of the ConnectALL 

11           office.  Their plan has been released and 

12           submitted to the feds and speaks about the 

13           workforce programs, the local community 

14           programs.  But there doesn't seem to be a 

15           roadmap of what the plan is to get money to 

16           those groups so they can really deliver 

17           digital inclusion programs.

18                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So as you know, 

19           over the last year the ConnectALL office has 

20           been engaging with community groups all 

21           across the state regarding input into the 

22           digital equity program.  And we have 

23           allocated $10 million of state funding toward 

24           some digital equity activities and will be 


                                                                   72

 1           providing the additional funding as soon as 

 2           we get that released from the state.  So we 

 3           do have -- from the federal government.

 4                  We do have some programs that are 

 5           focused on how do we create more digital 

 6           literacy, access to devices from a digital 

 7           equity perspective, but are awaiting, as you 

 8           say, more funding from the federal government 

 9           to roll out the entire program.

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  So that sounds 

11           great, and that's probably the money that was 

12           in the 2021 State Budget.

13                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yes.

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  And so it would be 

15           great if we can -- that's old federal money 

16           that we have.  It would be great if we could 

17           get that money moving earlier than the new 

18           federal money that's coming.  

19                  That money would go a long way towards 

20           getting those programs on the ground.  And 

21           the practitioners are out there very eager to 

22           put people in the seats, give them computers, 

23           give them the training.  And so that's great.

24                  My third topic is back to microchips 


                                                                   73

 1           and the great strides New York has made 

 2           already.  Are there other -- is there other 

 3           growth in that area that is forecast beyond 

 4           the agreements that we already have for 

 5           additional semiconductor manufacturing in 

 6           New York?  

 7                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So we continue 

 8           to talk to companies who are interested in 

 9           locating in New York regarding semiconductor 

10           production.  We expect that there will be a 

11           tremendous number of supply chain companies 

12           that will follow on as Micron gets up and 

13           going into production.  And so that is the 

14           expectation that we have.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  That's great.  

16           Thank you so much.  

17                  Commissioner Moy, a question for you 

18           about OGS and EV charging infrastructure, 

19           which you talked about somewhat in your 

20           testimony.  Very important in terms of OGS's 

21           role in state facilities.  

22                  I'm wondering, are any of the EV 

23           charging infrastructure that you're doing for 

24           state agencies -- is any of that 


                                                                   74

 1           public-facing?  Or is it really more for 

 2           state agency fleets?  

 3                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Thank you for 

 4           that question.  Our priority right now is 

 5           ensuring that we have adequate infrastructure 

 6           that can be used by the state fleet.  

 7           Certainly visitors and employees have also 

 8           been able to leverage that technology.  

 9                  We are trying to make sure that we are 

10           prioritizing the installations and locations 

11           where we know the greatest number of state 

12           vehicles are going to be leveraging it.  That 

13           is OGS's particular role.  

14                  There are other agencies that are also 

15           focused on EV infrastructure relative to the 

16           public.  Wherever possible and permissible, 

17           so long as it doesn't impact our ability to 

18           make sure that the fleet functions, we'd love 

19           to make sure that others have access to it.  

20           But our top priority is the fleet.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  That's great.  And 

22           I know you're working with NYSERDA on that as 

23           well.

24                  And I'd say one of the things we hear 


                                                                   75

 1           from local government president and school 

 2           districts is the need for expertise in how to 

 3           grow that.  And I think both NYSERDA and OGS, 

 4           there's a way for you to provide some of your 

 5           learned expertise to save the local entities 

 6           as they try and make the transition as well.

 7                  So appreciate your help on that, and 

 8           it's certainly an exciting space to be in.  

 9           And OGS is moving in a lot of areas that you 

10           discussed very well in your testimony in 

11           terms of the energy transition.  So thank you 

12           for your good work.  

13                  And I am going to yield back the rest 

14           of my time, Mr. Chair.  Thank you both.

15                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

16           There's the green light.  We appreciate 

17           everyone yielding the extra time.  No one 

18           else gets to claim it, just for the record.

19                  (Laughter.)

20                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Senator Kristen 

21           Gonzalez, who is the chair of technology and, 

22           and, and -- Internet and Technology chair.  

23           And I think she's going to take someone's -- 

24           she's got one?  Perfect.  Oh, you're there.  


                                                                   76

 1           I thought you were in the back.  I'm sorry, 

 2           Kristen.  Thank you.  

 3                  SENATOR GONZALEZ:  We're all set.

 4                  All right, good morning, folks.  Thank 

 5           you so much, Chairwoman.  And thank you to 

 6           everyone for joining the panel this morning.  

 7           It's been incredibly informative, and I 

 8           appreciate the deep thought and responses to 

 9           your questions.  

10                  Commissioner Knight, I apologize for 

11           keeping you in the hot seat, but a lot of my 

12           questions are of course directed towards you 

13           because of the nature of your work with 

14           Empire AI and the work that this committee is 

15           doing.

16                  So, you know, I saw that you mentioned 

17           Empire AI in your written testimony.  You 

18           mentioned the $275 million public-dollar 

19           investment.  You've also mentioned the 

20           125 million coming from the private sector.  

21           But of course considering the investment of 

22           our public dollars and the scale of this, 

23           when we talk about ethical use of AI or using 

24           this investment for the public good, you 


                                                                   77

 1           know, I -- while I understand you've added 

 2           some clarity here, I would really love to 

 3           understand what exactly that means or what 

 4           you imagine the outputs being so that we can 

 5           go to New Yorkers and say, This is really 

 6           what the outcome is that we're, you know, 

 7           investing towards.  

 8                  And I'd love to better understand how 

 9           the -- you mentioned there would be a 

10           framework that's being put together.  Who 

11           will be a part of creating that framework?  

12           Who are the stakeholders?  And then how will 

13           you ensure that you are following that 

14           framework so whatever is being developed is 

15           being done so in an ethical way and whatever 

16           is deployed is also being deployed in an 

17           ethical way?  

18                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So thank you for 

19           your question.  

20                  As I mentioned earlier, we have these 

21           seven private- and public-sector academic 

22           institutions that are involved in this 

23           consortium.  Those are the entities that will 

24           help stand up this framework that we will 


                                                                   78

 1           move forward in looking at how we create 

 2           ethical applications to AI.

 3                  When we talk about ethical 

 4           applications, it's really about how are these 

 5           applications benefiting the public good, the 

 6           public interest.  You know, it's difficult to 

 7           talk about what those things may be 

 8           specifically, because a lot of this work is 

 9           happening as we speak.  A lot of AI 

10           innovation is happening on a daily, weekly, 

11           monthly basis.  

12                  And it's difficult to talk about 

13           what's happening today, but we know that 

14           these applications will be a part of our 

15           daily life, and we want to make sure that the 

16           public is protected and there's someone who 

17           has an interest in developing this research 

18           for the public good.

19                  SENATOR GONZALEZ:   Got it.  Right, 

20           and I would agree that it's sometimes hard to 

21           be very specific.  But knowing what the 

22           specific-use cases that we're driving towards 

23           are, it's actually incredibly important when 

24           talking about new technologies like 


                                                                   79

 1           generative AI because they can mean so many 

 2           things.  And, you know, last week we had a 

 3           chance to speak with, you know, Dru from -- 

 4           the CIO of the state, and he mentioned that 

 5           generative AI right now is an imperfect 

 6           system and a system that incorporates a lot 

 7           of bias.  

 8                  So while we would certainly be 

 9           supportive of investing and investigating, 

10           you know, how we can mitigate that bias and 

11           protect the public, if it means deploying new 

12           tools that are public-sector funded or that 

13           we will also be accountable for as a state 

14           government, without a real solution there it 

15           actually could be quite dangerous for the 

16           state to begin deploying those 

17           generative-AI-based tools.  Or for us to, you 

18           know, define what ethical means if it's 

19           inherently imperfect.  

20                  So I certainly have some concerns 

21           there.  I'm also aware that the federal 

22           National AI Research Resource program was 

23           recently created.  It took four years of 

24           planning.  It's a $2.6 billion investment, 


                                                                   80

 1           which is a six-times investment of what we're 

 2           talking about here.  And notably compute will 

 3           happen on the cloud, so Big Tech stands to 

 4           profit from this program.  

 5                  But the main difference between this 

 6           federal program, which mirrors what we're 

 7           doing with Empire AI, is that aside from 

 8           funding and planning that's gone into this -- 

 9           which I don't really see happening here with 

10           Empire AI, or being at that point yet -- that 

11           there are clear priorities of ethics and that 

12           they have an ethics advisory board to push 

13           users towards responsible uses.  

14                  So I would love to also see us, if we 

15           are going to mirror a program like that, do 

16           that.  And also, perhaps instead of 

17           duplicating efforts, work with the federal 

18           program, because in order to create a tool on 

19           that scale we'll need actually more than 

20           seven partners, right?  We'll need a larger 

21           base of universities, both public and 

22           private.  So I wanted -- I wanted to call 

23           that out as well.

24                  But speaking of those universities, 


                                                                   81

 1           you know, you talked a little bit about 

 2           pipeline building and then monies going to 

 3           our specific partners.  Can you talk about 

 4           how that breakdown is going to be determined, 

 5           so which -- within the current set of 

 6           partners, how much money will be going to 

 7           each university?  And then how you're looking 

 8           at building a pipeline towards working on 

 9           jobs, yeah.

10                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Back to the 

11           funding.  We're looking at $250 million 

12           coming from the state and $125 million coming 

13           from the partners.  So the allocation, the 

14           funding will be towards the machine and 

15           equipment.  And there will be some sort of 

16           access agreement as a part of the framework.

17                  SENATOR GONZALEZ:  I know that -- so 

18           it's more for the infrastructure, less 

19           directly to the universities.

20                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Right.  Right.

21                  SENATOR GONZALEZ:  Okay.  That's 

22           helpful.  

23                  And you also mentioned this might 

24           create new jobs.  You know, as an office we 


                                                                   82

 1           are deeply concerned with the digital divide 

 2           and how to shift to more digital government 

 3           services, right, to help with our government 

 4           expedience of use of our services.  But 

 5           without closing the divide, how do you see 

 6           that divide growing if we're going to 

 7           continue investing in new technologies but 

 8           then also not address the digital divide on 

 9           the ground?

10                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Well, I think 

11           that, you know, we're looking at addressing 

12           the digital divide through our digital equity 

13           program, the ConnectALL.  We are focused on 

14           engaging disadvantaged communities in all of 

15           the programs that we invest in, particularly 

16           on the workforce development side. 

17                  SENATOR GONZALEZ:  That's a perfect 

18           segue to the next set of questions, which 

19           you've also spoken to today, which is the 

20           ConnectALL program.  So what are some of the 

21           existing challenges with closing the digital 

22           divide?  And can you provide just some clear 

23           metrics around how we are -- you mentioned 

24           the digital equity program -- how we're 


                                                                   83

 1           measuring success of that program.  

 2                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So we're looking 

 3           at a number of tools and resources to focus 

 4           on the digital divide.  As I said, digital 

 5           literacy, providing training, understanding 

 6           what the baseline is in users and then being 

 7           able to assess, you know, the increase in 

 8           skills.  Understanding the availability of 

 9           resources, devices.  Knowing where the gaps 

10           are, and then being able to provide devices 

11           to secure those gaps.  

12                  And so we'll be looking at a number of 

13           metrics to understand where we came from and 

14           what we get to with respect to providing 

15           these resources.

16                  SENATOR GONZALEZ:  Right.  I certainly 

17           support the idea of creating more digital 

18           literacy education, and also looking at 

19           hardware.  Right?  Do folks have actual 

20           access to devices.  

21                  But I'm curious, have you seen that -- 

22           even the ability to pay for light, for 

23           example, or have access to light in a home 

24           has been a barrier.  It's something that's 


                                                                   84

 1           come up in my own district.  And during the 

 2           pandemic I created a digital mutual aid fund, 

 3           and actually so many of the folks who didn't 

 4           have access to the internet or didn't have 

 5           access to hardware, so a phone or a computer, 

 6           to even access the internet if they had it, 

 7           also were the same folks, and particularly 

 8           the most vulnerable folks who were having 

 9           trouble, you know, keeping the lights on.  

10           Yeah.

11                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So thank you for 

12           that.  And I appreciate that perspective.  

13                  We have looked at a number of the 

14           affordable connectivity programs.  And so in 

15           the state, approximately 1.6 million 

16           households are taking advantage of the 

17           federal Affordable Connectivity Program, 

18           which is about $50 million in subsidy per 

19           month in supporting that digital divide that 

20           you talk about.

21                  SENATOR GONZALEZ:  Got it.  And I did 

22           hear that one of the federal programs is 

23           actually going to run out of money -- 

24                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  That's the one.


                                                                   85

 1                  SENATOR GONZALEZ:  Yeah, that's the 

 2           same.  So do we -- the initial state -- or is 

 3           the state investment looking to close that 

 4           gap if that happens?  Or do we have a plan -- 

 5                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So we're, you 

 6           know, monitoring what's happening in the 

 7           federal government with respect to this 

 8           program.  As I mentioned, that $50 million a 

 9           month is a very, you know, high number with 

10           respect to providing subsidy.  

11                  And so we're exploring ways to think 

12           about how we might, you know, look at that 

13           program.  We don't have enough money to make 

14           it sustainable, so we need to think about 

15           other ways to provide support.

16                  SENATOR GONZALEZ:  Yeah, would be 

17           happy to work together to talk about planning 

18           for that, if and when it does happen.  

19                  But thank you so much.  I can yield 

20           the remaining 10 seconds of my time.  

21                  Thank you.

22                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

23                  Assembly.

24                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Yes, next we 


                                                                   86

 1           have Assemblywoman Woerner, chair of 

 2           Small Business.

 3                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  Thank you, 

 4           Mr. Chairman.

 5                  And thank you to the panel.  It's 

 6           wonderful to see all of you in person.

 7                  I want to start, Hope, with a question 

 8           about the Global Entrepreneur program.  So my 

 9           understanding, just briefly, is that this is 

10           a program to -- directed at students who -- 

11           international students who have studied in 

12           our universities that are here on a visa 

13           program to encourage them, if they want to 

14           set up a small business based on their 

15           research, to do that here in New York State.  

16           Is that correct?  

17                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  That is correct.

18                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  Great.  And 

19           this is a $4 million new program that we're 

20           talking about?  

21                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yes.

22                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  Okay.  So I 

23           did a -- I asked the Department of Labor for 

24           some data on the growth or decline of small 


                                                                   87

 1           businesses over the last five years.  And the 

 2           good news is we've had some great success in 

 3           growing information-based businesses, I think 

 4           thanks in large part to the investments we've 

 5           made in all the CATs and COEs and so forth.

 6                  But I notice that we have actually 

 7           lost 5 percent of our small manufacturing 

 8           businesses.  And so I am thinking about what 

 9           in the budget is directed at trying to 

10           address the cause of the decline in our small 

11           manufacturing businesses.  Do we understand 

12           what the root causes are?  And while we're 

13           setting aside money to attract new 

14           businesses, are we also spending money on 

15           trying to shore up our existing manufacturing 

16           sector?

17                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So thank you for 

18           that question.  

19                  And we do have concerns about some of 

20           the businesses that we have lost in the 

21           manufacturing sector.

22                  We have a number of resources around 

23           the state.  The MEPs, the Manufacturing 

24           Extension Partnerships that provide support, 


                                                                   88

 1           technical assistance for manufacturing 

 2           businesses and look to deploy those more 

 3           directly for businesses that may be at the 

 4           brink of, you know, some difficulty.

 5                  We also have our SSBCI $500 million 

 6           fund that provides for access to capital for, 

 7           you know, anything related to maybe replacing 

 8           equipment, upgrades, to support businesses in 

 9           transition.

10                  And so we have a number of resources 

11           that we can point to to help small 

12           businesses, particularly manufacturers, when 

13           they are at transition points.

14                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  Are we doing 

15           anything to address some of the challenges 

16           that our existing businesses face, like 

17           nation-leading energy costs?  And 

18           particularly in the manufacturing sector we 

19           have a lot of high-intensity energy users and 

20           the cost of energy in New York State is not a 

21           competitive price point.

22                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  To the extent 

23           possible.  You know, we do work with NYPA to 

24           try to provide low-cost power when that is 


                                                                   89

 1           possible.

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  Great, thank 

 3           you.  

 4                  So MWBE, I'm going to turn my 

 5           attention there.  I was delighted to hear 

 6           that you feel like you have gotten through 

 7           all the backlog.  Congratulations.  As you 

 8           and I have talked about, I'm still hearing 

 9           from constituents that are caught in a loop 

10           where it's taking too long.

11                  But one of the things I wanted to 

12           delve into is our incubators and hot spots -- 

13           a successful model for helping to mature 

14           businesses from, you know, early stage to 

15           successful growth across all sectors.  And 

16           I'm wondering if there are any of our 

17           incubators or hot spots that are really 

18           targeted at minority- and women-owned 

19           businesses, whether those are certified MWBE 

20           or not -- but minority- and women-owned 

21           businesses, to help them get those that have 

22           that kind of growth potential to go from 

23           being the, you know, in-the-garage kind of 

24           business to one that is fundable by 


                                                                   90

 1           institutional funding.

 2                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So our 

 3           incubators and hot spots are available to 

 4           support, you know, all businesses.  Not 

 5           necessarily MWBEs specifically, but all 

 6           businesses.  

 7                  And we have a number of competitions 

 8           that support emerging or, you know, MWBE 

 9           businesses.  And we also have our 

10           Entrepreneurial Assistance Centers that are 

11           generally in disadvantaged communities and 

12           support MWBE businesses.  

13                  We also have our venture programs that 

14           provide technical assistance to support MWBE 

15           businesses.

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  I'm sure it's 

17           not going to be a surprise to you when I tell 

18           you that when you look at the amount of 

19           venture money that goes to women-owned 

20           business and minority-owned businesses, it is 

21           a small fraction of the total amount of 

22           venture money that's invested in these 

23           start-up businesses.  

24                  And certainly the Springboard program 


                                                                   91

 1           that is funded -- it is a nationwide program 

 2           funded by a not-for-profit that has been very 

 3           successful at helping women in startup 

 4           businesses to access institutional funding.  

 5                  Is there any intent within ESD to 

 6           replicate those kinds of specific, focused 

 7           venture programs through the business plan 

 8           competitions to enable women- and 

 9           minority-owned businesses to access equity 

10           capital that they may not be otherwise able 

11           to access?

12                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Virtually all of 

13           our venture funding is to support underfunded 

14           populations, women and minorities.  

15                  And so we have a Community Emerging 

16           Managers program, which is a fund of funds 

17           that supports women- and minority-owned 

18           businesses.  We do direct investments in 

19           women- and minority-owned businesses.  We 

20           know the data very well that so little 

21           private venture goes to those kind of 

22           companies, and that's why we're supporting 

23           venture to minority- and women-owned 

24           businesses.


                                                                   92

 1                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  So back to my 

 2           original question about the Global 

 3           Entrepreneurs Fund.  Would the money that 

 4           we're spending to create this new fund to 

 5           support a whole new population of people 

 6           coming to New York State, would that money 

 7           perhaps be better invested in programs that 

 8           we're already doing, but growing them to 

 9           support minority- and women-owned businesses, 

10           say, or additional manufacturing businesses 

11           that need some additional shoring up?

12                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Well, we know 

13           that so many foreign-born students have 

14           business innovation ideas that they want to 

15           grow into businesses.  And those businesses 

16           can, you know, be rooted here in New York 

17           State and employ many more people.  So I 

18           think it's, you know, an augmentation to the 

19           work that we're doing, and the ability to 

20           create jobs in a new way.

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  Okay.  Thank 

22           you.  I'm going to move on to the ConnectALL 

23           program.  

24                  So I noticed that ESD recently, 


                                                                   93

 1           through the ConnectALL office, did a -- 

 2           issued an RFP for 228 million in grants to 

 3           municipalities for publicly owned high-speed 

 4           broadband networks.  My understanding -- and 

 5           I represent rural communities, and one of 

 6           our -- you know, and I'm sure there are many 

 7           people up here that are similarly situated.  

 8                  My understanding is that this funding 

 9           can be used by municipalities that already 

10           enjoy the benefits of high-speed broadband, 

11           as opposed to being focused strictly on 

12           underserved or unserved regions like the 

13           rural communities of upstate New York.

14                  And so I just -- given that this is a 

15           limited pool of money, my question is 

16           shouldn't we be funding -- shouldn't this be 

17           funded giving funding priority to the 

18           unserved and underserved areas that still 

19           exist in the state, as opposed to directing 

20           this money to areas where there is already 

21           the availability of this service?

22                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So a couple of 

23           things about that.  Thank you for that 

24           question.


                                                                   94

 1                  We will be certainly deploying the 

 2           federal funding for unserved locations 

 3           throughout the state.  The goal of the 

 4           Municipal Infrastructure Broadband Program is 

 5           to give municipalities that do provide, 

 6           potentially provide utilities to their 

 7           residents -- to leverage that infrastructure 

 8           for providing competition with respect to 

 9           broadband service providers.

10                  Also, in providing greater access to 

11           public access networks, we can leverage that 

12           technology to create more mobile coverage.  

13           Because we've got to get the mobile coverage 

14           providers to expand their networks.  And by 

15           offering this infrastructure, we can induce 

16           them to do so.

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  Thank you.  I 

18           would just encourage that priority be given 

19           to those communities that don't have any 

20           service.  There's value in competition, 

21           there's no question about that.  But we do 

22           have a fair of number of communities still 

23           unserved.

24                  Thank you.


                                                                   95

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you very 

 2           much.  Our next is Senator Ramos.

 3                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Thank you so much, 

 4           Chair Krueger.  

 5                  Good morning.  My question is for 

 6           Ms. Knight.  I'm wondering with regard to 

 7           contract bids, when assessing bids, what is 

 8           done to ensure you aren't granting contracts 

 9           to bidders with health and safety violations 

10           or even ongoing harassment of Black 

11           employees, like Tesla?  

12                  Do you have access to the DOL 

13           debarment list?  And do you consult it in 

14           your procurement process?  

15                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Thank you for 

16           that question.  I appreciate that.

17                  We make sure that all of the 

18           contractors that we go into contract with are 

19           in compliance with all state and federal 

20           laws.  So we do those searches to make sure 

21           that they are in compliance.

22                  SENATOR RAMOS:  So do you have access 

23           to the DOL debarment list or not?  Do you 

24           consult it in your procurement process?  


                                                                   96

 1                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I believe so.  

 2           But I will get back to you to be certain.

 3                  SENATOR RAMOS:  Okay.  How many 

 4           contracts per year were granted to MWBEs?  

 5           And what tools and services do you provide to 

 6           ensure that those MWBEs are not disadvantaged 

 7           by their lack of access to capital in the 

 8           bidding process?  

 9                  I also would want to know if we are 

10           updating the designation of MWBEs to include 

11           Arab-Americans and North Africans who are 

12           traditionally left out?

13                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So with respect 

14           to the number of contracts that MWBEs were -- 

15           received last year, I will have to get back 

16           to you on that.  

17                  But we do identify race as part of the 

18           MWBE process when they are certified.

19                  SENATOR RAMOS:  So is it going to be 

20           updated to include Arab-Americans?

21                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  We are going 

22           through a disparity study right now, and it 

23           is due in August.  And that will be 

24           determined in the disparity study.


                                                                   97

 1                  SENATOR RAMOS:  All right.  Thank you 

 2           very much.

 3                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Thank you.

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 5                  Assembly.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Yes, next we 

 7           have Chair Daniel O'Donnell, chair of our 

 8           Tourism, Parks, Arts and Sports Development 

 9           Committee.

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Good morning.  

11           Let me begin with a prelude a la a state 

12           Senator.  This is my 22nd Arts budget 

13           hearing -- and final Arts budget hearing.  

14           And I do want to share a bit of my 

15           perspective, which is that regardless of 

16           political party or political philosophy, 

17           every year we come here and whoever is 

18           running the state says "I love arts more than 

19           anything," and then they zero out the funding 

20           and then they wonder why we're pissed off.

21                  Ms. Mallin, I want to welcome you to 

22           the job.  And I know it's only been two 

23           weeks, so I really can't blame you for 

24           anything.  Or Ms. Manus before you, who I had 


                                                                   98

 1           the utmost respect for.  

 2                  But it does suggest a problem.  

 3           Cognitive dissonance, I believe is the 

 4           psychological term.  So you want to know what 

 5           the dissonance comes from?  Do you need an 

 6           example of how arts provide that funding for 

 7           the state?  I'll tell you where to go.  Go to 

 8           Glens Falls, New York, Carrie Woerner's 

 9           district.  Okay?  

10                  I was there on Saturday night.  You 

11           see these lovely pair of reading glasses?  I 

12           rolled over on mine in bed and I broke them, 

13           so I had to buy these.  Betty's, from Glen 

14           Street.  Saturday night, where was I?  At a 

15           fabulous restaurant called Farmacy.  I don't 

16           know why it's called Farmacy.  Really 

17           elevated food.  I didn't get here by looking 

18           at food, let's be clear.  

19                  (Laughter.)

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Really, really 

21           good food.  Okay?  

22                  None of that existed in Glens Falls.  

23           None of it existed.  Where did it come from?  

24           Two young people from New York City, my 


                                                                   99

 1           sister and brother-in-law, founded the 

 2           Adirondack Theatre Festival.  Then they went 

 3           and bought the Woolworth's on Glen Street and 

 4           converted it to a year-round theater that now 

 5           brings people to downtown Glens Falls 

 6           year-round.  

 7                  On Saturday night the joint was 

 8           jumpin'.  Okay?  None of that existed but for 

 9           the arts.

10                  So I don't really understand why every 

11           Governor says "I love the arts" but then cuts 

12           and cuts and cuts.  So I'm going to make some 

13           specific questions.  One has to do with the 

14           Arts Stabilization money.  The Adirondack 

15           Theatre Festival used that in the beginning.  

16                  What does that do?  It's like a credit 

17           card for people who have a business, art 

18           business that have a season.  So if there's a 

19           summer stock or there's a time when they have 

20           all this money coming, in the months when 

21           there's no money coming in, how do they pay 

22           their electric bill, right?  

23                  So I'd like to tell you that I created 

24           it.  I didn't.  I'd like to tell you that I 


                                                                   100

 1           forced them to put it back in the budget last 

 2           year, which I did, in order to help those 

 3           struggling not-year-round companies.  

 4                  And what is in your current proposal 

 5           again is zeroing that out.  Can you bring 

 6           that back for us, Erika?

 7                  EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  I want to 

 8           thank you, Assemblyman O'Donnell, and 

 9           recognize your cochairship of this committee 

10           and your unwavering supports and 

11           understanding of the field.

12                  It's -- I don't know the exact-ness of 

13           the Arts Stabilization program.  I know it's 

14           doing exactly that.  And -- but I do think in 

15           the budget that we have, or be enacted, the 

16           funding that we do have is some of the most 

17           coveted funding that could help companies 

18           year-round, which is general operating 

19           support.  

20                  Right now there does seem to be a 

21           drift, whether it's philanthropy or corporate 

22           support, away from that kind of, you know, 

23           support.  But this is the bread-and-butter of 

24           all arts organizations, that they can put to 


                                                                   101

 1           places where they need the most.

 2                  Additionally, we have capital funding, 

 3           which again I know from having led an 

 4           institution, you know, this is also very key 

 5           to -- when you're not in production and 

 6           you're not, you know, doing things -- the 

 7           time that you take to rebuild your 

 8           infrastructure.  Aging infrastructure is an 

 9           extraordinarily huge drain on companies, 

10           small or big.

11                  So that's what we're trying to do.  

12           And I think this kind of funding is key to 

13           the industry right now.  

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  

15           Editorializing, those numbers in your budget 

16           are woefully inadequate for this year, for 

17           the 1980s.  It's almost an embarrassment, the 

18           Governor's proposal, on what they're doing in 

19           those two areas.  

20                  One of my frustrations is that no 

21           matter where you live, you believe that 

22           you're getting screwed arts-funding-wise.  

23           Makes no difference.  They come to see me on 

24           a regular basis.  And what's hard is that 


                                                                   102

 1           anybody can go found a "my hometown" arts 

 2           organization, and then plop themselves in 

 3           here and say "We don't get enough.  You have 

 4           to give us more."  Even in places where they 

 5           have more than adequate resources to do that 

 6           without government funding, right?

 7                  So could you just help educate us 

 8           briefly on how -- what the process is to vet 

 9           the people who get the funding through NYSCA 

10           versus organizations that may have no vetting 

11           at all?

12                  EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  My 

13           understanding is that all of our grantees or 

14           potential grantees are vetted through a very 

15           rigorous process, first by staff and then by 

16           a peer review on various panels, and then 

17           through, finally, the recommendations of the 

18           Arts Council.  So that's very stringent.  

19                  And I would, you know, also say in 

20           terms of outreach and reaching all 

21           communities -- well, first on the outreach 

22           part, I think NYSCA, particularly in this 

23           last year, made a huge leap forward in 

24           reaching out to people who, you know, we 


                                                                   103

 1           hadn't before.  You know, we have over -- I 

 2           think there was over 4,000 people in direct 

 3           conversations with NYSCA as well as, you 

 4           know, just more and more material on the 

 5           guidelines so that small organizations across 

 6           the state, you know, could have access.  I 

 7           mean, that's a very important thing for us, 

 8           you know, to make sure that people know that 

 9           we're here and that you can access our funds.

10                  And then finally, we are serving, I 

11           think, more than 95 percent of our state.  

12           The remaining percentages are through, you 

13           know, local arts councils.  So I think we are 

14           continually trying to serve and be strategic 

15           and efficient in our grant making.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  Thank you.  

17                  I have one last question.  I worked 

18           very closely with Ms. Manus because a lot of 

19           the -- I'll call them silos that existed 

20           within NYSCA didn't reflect current-day art.  

21           So something that was a video/dance 

22           combination were not eligible for dance money 

23           or video money because they had something 

24           else in it.  


                                                                   104

 1                  And so that led to a lot of 

 2           disgruntlement among certain communities who 

 3           felt that their emerging art had no place 

 4           because they weren't in the silo world that 

 5           you had from when, what's her name, Kitty 

 6           Carlisle Hart ran the thing.  Okay?  

 7                  So could you just address that in 

 8           terms of trying to make sure that we're not 

 9           leaving certain ethnic groups or certain 

10           minority groups behind?

11                  EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  Yes.  I 

12           think one is we have increased or made 

13           categories like multidisciplinary art, you 

14           know, that includes all of that as a 

15           particular application that you will have a 

16           panel of your peers review in that area.

17                  And I think you're absolutely right.  

18           We have to have, you know, our ear to the 

19           ground to make sure that we are reviewing and 

20           encouraging arts that we -- you know, may not 

21           fit directly into the current categories.  I 

22           mean, there could be another category, for 

23           instance, going forward -- again with 

24           technology and AI and, you know, there's a 


                                                                   105

 1           lot of artists focusing specifically on that 

 2           thing.  

 3                  So I take that point and, you know, 

 4           absolutely incorporate it in what we do for 

 5           our grant-making.

 6                  And what was the second part of your 

 7           question?  

 8                  ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  You did fine.  

 9           Thank you very much.  

10                  I'd like to say that I welcome you --

11                  EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  Thank you.

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  I have 11 

13           months left, and you will have my full 

14           support and engagement to make your job 

15           easier and to get you the budget that the 

16           state actually deserves.

17                  Thank you very much.

18                  EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  Thank you.  

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN O'DONNELL:  My 15 

20           seconds are yours, Senator Krueger.

21                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you very 

22           much, Assemblymember.

23                  It's hard to believe it will be your 

24           last hearing as the chair of this committee, 


                                                                   106

 1           because you've been loyal to this forever.

 2                  With that, Senator Tedisco, the 

 3           ranker -- for five minutes -- on Cultural 

 4           Affairs.

 5                  SENATOR TEDISCO:  Thank you very much.  

 6                  And thank you all for being here and 

 7           for your testimony today.

 8                  I'd like to go back to the -- thank 

 9           you for being here -- back to the discussion 

10           that we've been having with ConnectALL, which 

11           is, as you know, we've stated a municipal 

12           program which provides infrastructure grants 

13           for our communities.

14                  Over a billion dollars.  That's a lot 

15           of money, a billion and a half dollars, 

16           that's going to be allocated through that 

17           program.  But it's not going to cover the 

18           over 100,000 homeowners who are not connected 

19           right now.  But it's an important step to 

20           take to utilize that money.  

21                  And as I look at this and I hear the 

22           discussion, I hear the position, they're 

23           talking about a preference, a preference for 

24           under- and unserved individuals.  That's kind 


                                                                   107

 1           of like the basketball player -- there was a 

 2           great basketball player and he never showed 

 3           up for practice in the NBA.  But when he got 

 4           to the games, he was fantastic.  And they 

 5           asked him at a press conference, Why don't 

 6           you show up for practice?  All he could say 

 7           is "Practice?  Practice?  Practice?  Why 

 8           should I show up for the practice?  I score 

 9           35 points a game when I show up."

10                  I think my constituents are saying:  

11           Preferences?  Preferences?  You know what 

12           that tells them?  That those people who are 

13           already served -- and it's been talked about 

14           and said, but I want to reinforce that -- are 

15           going to receive some of this money.  

16                  Commissioner, they shouldn't receive 

17           one penny, one cent of this money.  They're 

18           already being served.  

19                  So I'm going to ask you the question 

20           point-blank.  It shouldn't be a preference.  

21           A hundred percent of this money should be 

22           allocated to those individuals who are under- 

23           and unserved.

24                  Can you guarantee us today that a 


                                                                   108

 1           hundred percent of that money will not go to 

 2           any of those individuals who have service, 

 3           but to all those who are under and unserved?  

 4           Can you guarantee that's going to happen?  

 5           Because that's a real concern right now.  

 6                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Thank you, 

 7           Senator, for that question.

 8                  SENATOR TEDISCO:  You're welcome.

 9                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  We have a number 

10           of programs in the ConnectALL initiative, and 

11           this municipal infrastructure program is just 

12           but one of the programs that is supporting 

13           underserved locations, locations that are 

14           deemed not to be receiving high-speed 

15           internet service, by leveraging existing 

16           municipal infrastructure.

17                  The lion's share of the ConnectALL 

18           funding is going to go to those locations 

19           that do not have access to broadband.  And 

20           that money will be released from the federal 

21           government, and as soon as it is released we 

22           will be working with those underserved 

23           regions -- excuse me, those unserved regions 

24           to deliver broadband to those locations.


                                                                   109

 1                  SENATOR TEDISCO:  Is that a yes or a 

 2           no to my question?  

 3                  Will a hundred percent go to under- 

 4           and unserved?  Will people who have service 

 5           get some of that?  I know you talked about 

 6           leverage, but I --

 7                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  We will be 

 8           supporting locations that are underserved.  

 9           Through these --

10                  SENATOR TEDISCO:  Not a hundred 

11           percent.

12                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  We will be 

13           leveraging the existing infrastructure in 

14           those regions to deliver service.

15                  SENATOR TEDISCO:  Thank you.

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you very 

17           much.

18                  Assembly.

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Yes, we have 

20           Ranker Ed Ra from the Ways and Means 

21           Committee.

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you, Chair.  

23           Good morning, everybody.

24                  Commissioner Knight, thank you for the 


                                                                   110

 1           conversation last week about a number of 

 2           issues.  

 3                  But I wanted to just ask a little bit 

 4           regarding the proposed MWBE extension in the 

 5           budget.  I know in response to a question 

 6           earlier you talked about this very briefly, 

 7           but I'm wondering if you can give us a little 

 8           more information.  I know we have a proposal 

 9           for a five-year extension, but there's not a 

10           disparate study done yet.  What's the reason 

11           for moving forward without that?  

12                  And I think you said you believe one's 

13           going to be due in August, is that what you 

14           said?  

15                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  That is correct.  

16           The disparity study will be due in August.

17                  As I said, the MWBE program is very 

18           important to the state.  We have made great 

19           strides thanks to the Governor and the 

20           Legislature in making operational 

21           improvements.  And we want to see that 

22           continue, that success continue.  

23                  The Governor wants to ensure that this 

24           program continues, which is why she's asking 


                                                                   111

 1           for a simple extension with no modifications 

 2           so that this program can continue to grow.  

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Is there a time 

 4           period that the disparity study that's 

 5           ongoing covers?

 6                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  The last -- it's 

 7           over the past four years.  But having a 

 8           forward look for this five-year period.

 9                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Okay.  Thank you.

10                  One of the other issues I think we've 

11           heard a lot about is certification and 

12           recertification.  My understanding is that 

13           the backlog in certifications has been 

14           cleared up at this point.  Is that correct?  

15                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  The backlog has 

16           been cleared.

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  But I know I -- you 

18           know, I've read about, last summer, a 

19           particular business that took three years to 

20           get their certification back.  What is being 

21           done to try to make that process work a 

22           little more quickly when somebody has to 

23           appeal a certification?

24                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So thanks to the 


                                                                   112

 1           Legislature and the Governor, we were able to 

 2           secure resources to bolster our appeals unit.  

 3           So we have hired a number of administrative 

 4           law judges to support the appeal process, and 

 5           so that's moving much faster now.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Okay.  Any idea on 

 7           what the time frame looks like now, going 

 8           forward, with those changes being made?

 9                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Well, we have -- 

10           because we have gone through so many 

11           certification applications, we have 

12           experienced some denials.  So there's a 

13           greater throughput in that process.  But it's 

14           moving much more smoothly than it had been in 

15           the past.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Okay.  And ESD right 

17           now, as you're dealing with economic 

18           development dollars, how can and how is ESD 

19           in particular, you know, specifically trying 

20           to help our small businesses through economic 

21           development funding?

22                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So ESD has 

23           gotten a $500 million fund through the 

24           federal government for the Small Business 


                                                                   113

 1           Credit Assistance Program.  And that program 

 2           is going to be leveraged 10 times over the 

 3           next 10 years, for a $5 billion program.  

 4                  And so we have created over 

 5           20 programs to support small businesses, a 

 6           number of access-to-capital programs in 

 7           different products -- contractor financing, 

 8           equity products, venture products, and 

 9           lending products.

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Okay.  

11                  And then lastly, I know we've recently 

12           had -- and there was a lot of news reports, 

13           obviously, about this, and we've had other 

14           examples over the years -- but the microchip 

15           factory that didn't work out.  

16                  What are we doing -- as I said, 

17           there's been other instances like this where 

18           we've spent large amounts of money for 

19           private business and it just has not worked 

20           out.  So what are we doing, and maybe what 

21           can the Legislature do as well, to stop these 

22           types of circumstances from happening?  

23           Because I think these are the types of 

24           instances that give the economic development 


                                                                   114

 1           programs in the state a bad name.

 2                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I think you're 

 3           referring to the NexGen project in Syracuse.

 4                  So we are in discussions with Nexgen.  

 5           We will pursue any of the clawbacks in the 

 6           contract that we have with respect to funding 

 7           that we provided for that project.

 8                  In general, the projects that we 

 9           provide assistance for are 

10           pay-for-performance.  And I can get back to 

11           you with more information on that.

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you.  

13                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  You 

14           can get back to us all in writing, thank you.

15                  Next up is Senator John Liu.

16                  SENATOR LIU:  Thank you, Madam Chair.  

17                  Good morning, everybody, and thanks 

18           for joining us.

19                  Speaking of clawbacks, has the state 

20           clawed back everything from Tesla for that 

21           Western New York project?

22                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  We have not 

23           clawed back funding from Tesla, as we were 

24           not -- the contract was actually not with 


                                                                   115

 1           ESD.  It was with a SUNY Poly -- former SUNY 

 2           Poly-affiliated entity.

 3                  SENATOR LIU:  Okay.  But ESD was 

 4           certainly involved.

 5                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Excuse me?

 6                  SENATOR LIU:  ESD was certainly 

 7           involved.

 8                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  We were 

 9           involved.  And we haven't -- 

10                  SENATOR LIU:  Is there any effort, is 

11           there any intent to clawback?

12                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Well, based on 

13           the contracts, they have met all their 

14           commitments.

15                  SENATOR LIU:  They have made all their 

16           commitments.

17                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  They have met 

18           all their commitments.

19                  SENATOR LIU:  Okay.  Well, that's -- 

20           maybe we can have a further discussion about 

21           that.

22                  What about Micron?  Is everything on 

23           track with Micron?  

24                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Everything is on 


                                                                   116

 1           track with Micron.

 2                  SENATOR LIU:  And how much is New York 

 3           State's subsidy for that project?

 4                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Well, we're 

 5           providing green chip tax credits for that 

 6           project.  And it is a pay-for-performance.

 7                  SENATOR LIU:  Okay.  But roughly how 

 8           much is the subsidy?  

 9                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  About 

10           $5 billion.

11                  SENATOR LIU:  About $5 billion.  And 

12           how much is the federal government kicking 

13           in?  Or they still haven't decided.

14                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  We don't know 

15           what the number is.

16                  SENATOR LIU:  But there's got to be 

17           some idea, right?  Because that was the whole 

18           point of the huge investment in Micron, was 

19           to leverage off federal support.

20                  ESD COO YOUNIS:  So we know they're 

21           eligible for the 25 percent investment tax 

22           credit from the federal government, but 

23           they're currently negotiating with the 

24           federal government on their grant.  So we 


                                                                   117

 1           don't -- we don't know what that is.  We know 

 2           it will be something, but we don't know what 

 3           it is.

 4                  SENATOR LIU:  It should -- is it going 

 5           to be at least as large as New York State's 

 6           investment?  

 7                  ESD COO YOUNIS:  We don't -- we 

 8           don't -- it's not our -- it's not our program 

 9           to -- we don't know.

10                  SENATOR LIU:  I know.  But in the 

11           analysis -- ESD I'm sure did some kind of 

12           projection as to what the federal grant might 

13           be.  Or that was completely irrelevant to 

14           New York State's decision?  

15                  ESD COO YOUNIS:  We know they're 

16           eligible for a minimum of $3 billion.  But I 

17           think their hope is to receive substantially 

18           more than that.  But I don't -- we don't know 

19           what that ultimately is.

20                  SENATOR LIU:  So at least 3 billion, 

21           hopefully a lot more.

22                  ESD COO YOUNIS:  Hopefully a lot more.

23                  SENATOR LIU:  Okay.  I would have 

24           expected that ESD -- because when Empire 


                                                                   118

 1           State Development and the Governor announced 

 2           it, there was talk about how we were 

 3           leveraging off of federal subsidies or 

 4           federal support.  I would imagine that there 

 5           would be at least some type of guesstimate as 

 6           to how much that federal support will be.  

 7                  Let me move on to something else, 

 8           because I don't get a lot of time here.

 9                  Yesterday we had a hearing of the 

10           Transportation Committee convened by 

11           Senator Kennedy, and it appears that 

12           State DOT is far behind in their plan to 

13           upgrade rails.  

14                  Has Empire State Development been part 

15           of any of that, the rail system?  

16                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  (No audible 

17           response.)  

18                  SENATOR LIU:  No, okay.  

19                  I will say very quickly that the train 

20           system needs to be part of the economic 

21           development plan for the State of New York.  

22           So maybe you can get in touch with State DOT.  

23                  Thank you.  Thank you, Madam Chair.

24                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you, 


                                                                   119

 1           Senator Liu.  

 2                  Assembly.

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Yes, Member 

 4           Buttenschon?  She -- okay.  Then next we have 

 5           Member McDonald.  Member Tapia.  Member 

 6           Lunsford?  

 7                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUNSFORD:  I win.  

 8                  (Laughter.)

 9                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUNSFORD:  Staying the 

10           course plays in my favor here.

11                  My question is for the ESD 

12           commissioner.  

13                  We are seeing a $100 million 

14           investment in FAST NY and our shovel-ready 

15           projects.  And you brought up earlier the 

16           great success we saw, particularly in my 

17           area, with Fairlife, with STAMP.  And I want 

18           to know how much of this $100 million are we 

19           going to expect to see in upstate New York, 

20           where the dearth of shovel-ready sites is 

21           resulting in us losing businesses not just to 

22           other regions of the state, but to 

23           neighboring states that have a more robust 

24           investment in shovel-ready sites.


                                                                   120

 1                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So thank you for 

 2           that question.  You want to know how much of 

 3           the money do you expect to see in upstate 

 4           New York?

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUNSFORD:  Correct.

 6                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Well, 

 7           traditionally a vast majority of the funding 

 8           goes to upstate sites, because these are 

 9           where the big sites are for projects of the 

10           type that you're talking about.

11                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUNSFORD:  Is there a 

12           particular percentage earmarked per region or 

13           is this a large statewide pot?  

14                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  It's a large 

15           statewide pot.  It's a competitive pot.  

16           Regions, you know, compete for the funding.  

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUNSFORD:  I'd like to 

18           take this moment to advocate for maybe there 

19           being an earmark for a particular upstate 

20           section of this, given that much of our 

21           development requires bringing in power.  

22           We're developing large swaths of truly 

23           undeveloped land, as opposed to downstate 

24           where we might be revitalizing properties 


                                                                   121

 1           that had other uses in the past.

 2                  I'd also like to ask about a question 

 3           about NY-RUSH.

 4                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  New York RUSH --

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUNSFORD:  Yeah, the 

 6           underused state sites.

 7                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yes.

 8                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUNSFORD:  Presumably 

 9           there's going to be an RFP for this, for 

10           developers.  Is that correct?  

11                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  There will be 

12           some solicitation process.

13                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUNSFORD:  So you're 

14           going to utilize private developers to build 

15           housing.  We're not doing it as a state, 

16           correct?  

17                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Right.

18                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUNSFORD:  Who is going 

19           to be issuing that RFP?  Who is going to be 

20           making the choices, and who will have 

21           oversight of those projects?  

22                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So I think it 

23           depends on what the sites are.  You know, ESD 

24           has a number of sites that we're looking at.  


                                                                   122

 1           Some of them were correctional facilities, 

 2           former state facilities.  There are other 

 3           agencies that may be looking at other sites.  

 4           And I think we'll be looking at this jointly 

 5           from a selection process.

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUNSFORD:  So if there 

 7           is, say, a correctional site versus a 

 8           transportation site, the RFPs will actually 

 9           be issued from different agencies?  Is that 

10           what you're saying?

11                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  No, the RFP -- 

12           the RFPs for the sites for development will 

13           be issued by different agencies.  The funding 

14           for the RUSH will be looked at together in an 

15           interagency way.

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUNSFORD:  Okay.  And 

17           then once those sites are developed, who will 

18           be overseeing, who will have oversight 

19           authority on where the funding for that is 

20           coming back to us?

21                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So let me try to 

22           unpack that.  I think, you know -- I'll give 

23           you an example for ESD -- 

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUNSFORD:  We are out of 


                                                                   123

 1           time.  You can send me an email.  Thank you 

 2           very much.  

 3                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I can come back 

 4           to you.

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 6                  Senator Murray, ranker. 

 7                  SENATOR MURRAY:  Thank you, 

 8           Madam Chair.  

 9                  And thank you all for being here 

10           today.  

11                  Commissioner Knight, I was listening 

12           to your testimony and I want to touch on an 

13           issue that we've talked about before, and 

14           that is childcare.  In the testimony, under 

15           the office of Strategic Workforce Development 

16           you had said -- you mentioned wraparound 

17           services in regard to childcare.  

18                  Could you tell me what programs or 

19           services are currently available in regard to 

20           childcare?

21                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So when I talk 

22           about childcare with respect to the Office of 

23           Strategic Workforce Development, those 

24           wraparound services are part of every project 


                                                                   124

 1           that we fund.  And so, you know, in some 

 2           cases it's childcare provided by other 

 3           providers related to the program.  In some 

 4           cases the program actually provides 

 5           childcare.  So there are a range of 

 6           configurations that exist for childcare in 

 7           those training programs.

 8                  SENATOR MURRAY:  But is there a 

 9           collaboration right now with companies?  You 

10           and I have had this conversation.  We talked 

11           about this last year, and I don't know if 

12           really we made any progress.  

13                  I give the Governor a lot of credit.  

14           She has been very proactive, and she's been 

15           trying to address the problem.  The problem 

16           is it's not a simple answer.  We're not just 

17           talking about affordability, we're talking 

18           about accessibility.  We're also talking 

19           about the childcare workforce.  It's hard to 

20           keep childcare workers with the salaries that 

21           they make.  

22                  So in my district we had a roundtable 

23           discussion.  We had all the principals there.  

24           We had childcare providers, the Childcare 


                                                                   125

 1           Council of Suffolk.  We had parents, we had 

 2           teachers, we had the business community, 

 3           chambers of commerce, HR directors -- all of 

 4           that input.  First I'd like to share -- I'll 

 5           email you the link to that so you can see it.  

 6           But at the end, we came up with a couple of 

 7           creative ideas.  But it will take 

 8           collaboration, it will take working together.  

 9           Would that be through the Office of Strategic 

10           Workforce Development?  Is that how you would 

11           recommend we go about this?

12                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I would say 

13           that, you know, with respect to training, 

14           that would be the Office of Strategic 

15           Workforce Development.  

16                  We also have, through our REDC 

17           process, the ability to provide funding for 

18           childcare.  And the REDCs have made a lot of 

19           progress in funding childcare projects around 

20           the state.

21                  SENATOR MURRAY:  So in things like -- 

22           and I'll be quick.  Because again, when I 

23           talk about collaboration, we're trying to 

24           look for win/win all the way around.  So 


                                                                   126

 1           we're trying to get parents back in the 

 2           workforce.  And a lot of times now they're 

 3           sitting down, they're doing the numbers, and 

 4           it will cost them to go back to work because 

 5           of the high cost.  

 6                  So we came up with an idea similar to 

 7           where you have healthcare savings plans -- 

 8           maybe a pretax healthcare savings plan 

 9           through your payroll at work.  And maybe a 

10           matching fund, similar to a 401(k), where 

11           your employer matches.  

12                  Maybe we come up with a creative idea 

13           where there's a childcare savings plan.  The 

14           employer can also match what the employee 

15           gives in.  The government then comes in and 

16           says, we'll give that employee a bit of a tax 

17           credit to participate in this.  

18                  This gets more people in the 

19           workforce.  It helps with the hiring problems 

20           the companies are having.  And the incentive 

21           to the company to do it is by offering these 

22           benefits you'll get very good employees and 

23           probably save on retention.  

24                  And it will also get -- in getting 


                                                                   127

 1           people back in the workforce, the government 

 2           gets taxes through income tax, there's 

 3           ancillary revenue they spend, they get more 

 4           sales tax.  So it's a win/win all the way 

 5           around.

 6                  But we need somewhere, someone, to be 

 7           the central hub that we can work through.  

 8           And I think ESD would be a good place to 

 9           start, considering who you work for.  

10                  So again, a little guidance.  Where 

11           should we go with this?  How can we work 

12           together on this?

13                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Well, look 

14           forward to getting the information that 

15           you'll send, and then we can continue to 

16           discuss this further.

17                  SENATOR MURRAY:  Okay, I appreciate 

18           that.  

19                  And one last thing.  So being a 

20           Senator from Long Island, I'm looking through 

21           the line items here in the proposed budget 

22           and I come across one that says "Retention of 

23           football in Western New York."  And there are 

24           two, actually, items here -- so $5.5 million 


                                                                   128

 1           under Aid to Localities, and then another 

 2           2.5 million, or almost, under capital 

 3           funding.  

 4                  Can you tell me what that is?  Is that 

 5           with the Buffalo Bills?  And how does that 

 6           apply?  

 7                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I have to take a 

 8           look at that.  It is for the Buffalo Bills.  

 9           Okay, it is.

10                  SENATOR MURRAY:  So we're spending 

11           almost 8 million.  Is this -- for what, 

12           though?  

13                  ESD COO YOUNIS:  So the current -- 

14           it's a previously existing agreement, 

15           probably 2013.  So their existing stadium 

16           they continue to utilize while they're 

17           building the new stadium, so it's in support 

18           of that.

19                  SENATOR MURRAY:  Okay.  Might I 

20           suggest, if we want to keep the Bills playing 

21           a little bit longer, maybe we cancel all 

22           flights to and from Kansas City.

23                  (Laughter.)

24                  SENATOR MURRAY:  Thank you, 


                                                                   129

 1           Madam Chair.  

 2                  (Inaudible exchange; laughter.) 

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Wow.  Okay, thank 

 4           you.  

 5                  Assembly.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Member Darling.

 7                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN DARLING:  Hi, 

 8           Commissioner and team.  Thank you for being 

 9           here and for all of your work for New York 

10           State.  

11                  New York State currently has 

12           96 agencies, and we are now in a space where 

13           I've had several discussions with agencies 

14           expressing that they're having difficulty 

15           finding a workforce.  And I've had 

16           constituents express they're having 

17           difficulty securing employment.  

18                  So what plan do we have to better 

19           advertise and recruit for our workforce and 

20           fill these open positions?  That's my first 

21           question.  

22                  And then, what measures are being 

23           taken to promote equitable economic 

24           development across different communities 


                                                                   130

 1           within Nassau County, including those 

 2           historically underserved?  

 3                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  I'm happy to 

 4           take the first question and pass back for the 

 5           second.

 6                  In terms of identifying additional 

 7           individuals to come into the state workforce, 

 8           there are two things that I would note.  

 9                  Our colleagues who are not sitting 

10           here, Commissioner Tim Hogues and 

11           Commissioner Reardon, have been very much at 

12           the forefront of looking at ways to bring 

13           more individuals into the state system.  

14           There is a program that is a part of the 

15           Executive Budget around NY HELPS, which 

16           Commissioner Hogues can speak to, looking in 

17           particular for areas in which there are 

18           provisional challenges, where there are ways 

19           that we can bring folks to some of the titles 

20           in which we have challenges.

21                  My own agency has issues in terms of 

22           recruitment.  We have been all trying to be 

23           much more aggressive around going out into 

24           communities to speak specifically -- 


                                                                   131

 1           particular for those communities where maybe 

 2           they do not have a tradition of being in the 

 3           civil service process, they understand what 

 4           it takes in order to take an exam, what it 

 5           means to have continuous recruitments -- and 

 6           prioritizing those titles in which we have 

 7           the greatest amount of challenges.

 8                  Both the Office of General Services 

 9           and the Department of Labor have been 

10           increasing our social media and our outreach 

11           relative to those titles or challenges.  So 

12           there's a significant increase in the number 

13           of outreach programs and marketing to try to 

14           get more folks involved.

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN DARLING:  I would ask if 

16           we can just include the members in this -- in 

17           whatever campaigns we're doing --

18                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Absolutely.

19                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN DARLING:  -- sending 

20           emails so we can post on social media and 

21           share.  I just hate that New York has so many 

22           resources and we just sometimes miss that 

23           goal of connecting people to the resources.

24                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  I appreciate 


                                                                   132

 1           that, Assemblymember.  And we all are 

 2           incented to try to get as many individuals in 

 3           the state workforce so we can meet the 

 4           requirements of both our budgets and our 

 5           priorities.  So we will follow up.

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN DARLING:  Wonderful.  

 7           Thank you.

 8                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  And thank you.

 9                  With respect to your question around 

10           workforce development providers, we work with 

11           providers that have community-based- 

12           organization relationships that do outreach 

13           directly to the community of those impacted 

14           for the jobs and opportunities that are under 

15           ESD's purview.  

16                  I have other colleagues -- the 

17           Department of Labor, the commissioner of 

18           Health -- and I can give you the information 

19           later.

20                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN DARLING:  Thank you, 

21           Commissioner.  Thank you so much.  I 

22           appreciate you guys just bringing us into 

23           that equation.  Thank you.

24                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.


                                                                   133

 1                  Assemblymember -- Senator Lea Webb.  

 2                  I'm taking your list.  So sorry.

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblyperson 

 4           Buttenschon.

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  No, no, we have a 

 6           Senator next.

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Didn't we just 

 8           do a Senator?

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  No, that was an 

10           Assemblymember.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Oh, Member 

12           Darling.

13                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  That was your 

14           Assemblymember.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  We're getting 

16           confused --

17                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  We haven't 

18           decided which party we represent or which 

19           activity we're doing.

20                  Senator Lea Webb.

21                  SENATOR WEBB:  Thank you all for being 

22           here.

23                  My first question is for Commissioner 

24           Moy.  It's with respect to the Cayuga Salt 


                                                                   134

 1           Mine, which is in my district.  I have 

 2           constituents, myself included, that are very 

 3           concerned about the continued mining and the 

 4           concerns around salination.  And so I know 

 5           Cargill is currently seeking to sell the mine 

 6           to a company that will continue to operate 

 7           it.

 8                  And so my question is, does OGS have 

 9           to provide consent to transfer the mine?  And 

10           what type of review would OGS perform on the 

11           transfer of the state land that has had such 

12           an environmental impact?

13                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Thank you for 

14           that question, Senator Webb.

15                  The location of the Cayuga Mine is a 

16           lease that OGS oversees.  I will have to 

17           confirm whether or not we review any aspect 

18           of the transfer.  I don't believe so, but I 

19           will confirm and get back that information to 

20           you.

21                  The Department of Environmental 

22           Conservation is a regulatory entity.  They 

23           will be looking into those environmental 

24           impacts.  If there are challenges or issues 


                                                                   135

 1           or higher concern relative to salination, 

 2           it's something that we will be speaking with 

 3           them about.  And certainly if there are any 

 4           challenges or changes that take place in that 

 5           permit status, then we would be acting upon 

 6           it.

 7                  So our role, unfortunately, is -- or 

 8           our role is really very much limited to the 

 9           leasing of the property.  But we'll look into 

10           the specifics around the transfer and get 

11           back to you.

12                  SENATOR WEBB:  Okay, thank you very 

13           much.

14                  And then my next question is for 

15           Commissioner Knight, specifically as relates 

16           to MWBEs.  So I have MWBEs in my district 

17           that are in the construction field that have 

18           shared challenges around the current process 

19           with respect to waivers.  And so one of the 

20           things that has been flagged is that larger 

21           general contractors essentially are able to 

22           go around the process and not have to use 

23           MWBEs for jobs.

24                  So my question is, what is ESD doing 


                                                                   136

 1           to monitor the waiver process to ensure that 

 2           the waivers are legitimate?

 3                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So thank you for 

 4           that question.  And we know how important it 

 5           is to monitor the waiver process.  

 6                  Because we have been able to 

 7           operationalize, better operationalize some of 

 8           our systems in the MWBE office, we have been 

 9           paying particular attention around waivers to 

10           make sure that general contractors have been 

11           able to demonstrate that they were not able 

12           to find an MWBE to do the work.

13                  And so we're scrutinizing that very 

14           carefully to make sure that MWBEs are getting 

15           the work that they should.

16                  SENATOR WEBB:  And in that same vein, 

17           I want to go smaller contractors.  What can 

18           we -- well, we'll have to follow up.

19                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  If you can come 

20           back to me.  Yup.  Yup.

21                  SENATOR WEBB:  Thank you.

22                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

23                  Assembly.

24                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Member 


                                                                   137

 1           Buttenschon.

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BUTTENSCHON:  Thank you.

 3                  Thank you to all the commissioners.  

 4           And I thank you for personally coming to my 

 5           district, as it includes many hardworking, 

 6           dedicated individuals, and you were able to 

 7           witness that firsthand.  They have many 

 8           forward-advancement-thinking programs, and 

 9           you have been a part of that.

10                  My first question is for Commissioner 

11           Knight, following up on the MWBEs.  You know 

12           the challenges that we face.  You testified 

13           on the importance of how you're moving 

14           forward on that.  And clearly, do you feel 

15           you have the resources that you need to 

16           continue with bringing this program forward, 

17           as it has been designed within the Executive 

18           Budget, as well as the recertifications that 

19           are necessary for many of the great 

20           businesses?

21                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Thank you for 

22           that question, Assemblymember.

23                  We do have the resources that we need, 

24           thanks to the Legislature and the Governor, 


                                                                   138

 1           for providing those resources for a backlog 

 2           in the certification process as well as the 

 3           appeals process.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BUTTENSCHON:  Okay.  And 

 5           as you know, workforce housing is so 

 6           important to -- it's hand in hand with 

 7           workforce development.  Can you just 

 8           highlight the workforce housing that you're 

 9           seeing within -- throughout the state and how 

10           it's going.

11                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Well, as you 

12           know, the Governor has made it her mission to 

13           increase the housing supply and has charged 

14           all of her commissioners to look at 

15           state-owned properties.  And so many of the 

16           programs that ESD is working on do have a 

17           workforce housing component.  I can mention 

18           one downstate where we're looking at an 

19           affordable homeownership project that is a 

20           workforce housing project.

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BUTTENSCHON:  And -- 

22           thank you.  And this is open to all the 

23           commissioners.  I just met with the 

24           superintendents in my district.  Can you 


                                                                   139

 1           highlight any of the programs you're offering 

 2           for our high school or our community college 

 3           students that tie very well with the entities 

 4           that you oversee?

 5                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Well, I can talk 

 6           about some of the community college programs 

 7           that we are offering.  I think you were at 

 8           one of the graduations of something called 

 9           the "Real Life Rosies," which focuses on 

10           getting women into industrial machining.  And 

11           we have been working with other community 

12           colleges focused on advanced manufacturing 

13           programs.

14                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BUTTENSCHON:  Any high 

15           school programs that anyone's working with?

16                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  I do not.  

17                  However, I would note that one of our 

18           top priorities has been to partner with SUNY 

19           systems as well as with -- as well as with 

20           some of the community colleges to talk about 

21           pathways into state agencies.  We have 

22           certainly a number of trades positions and 

23           other pathways that don't require that you 

24           have a college education.  


                                                                   140

 1                  We're happy to give more information 

 2           on that.

 3                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BUTTENSCHON:  I'll 

 4           follow up, thank you.

 5                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Thank you.

 6                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 7                  Senator Cleare.

 8                  SENATOR CLEARE:  Thank you.  

 9                  Good morning.  Thank you.  I'm just 

10           going to like blurt out a bunch of questions 

11           and hopefully you can answer them.  

12                  Commissioner Knight, thank you so much 

13           for your work, especially in trying to create 

14           the Affordability Homeownership Project, 

15           which happens to be in my district.  I am 

16           looking for deeper affordability and even the 

17           use of vouchers or the acceptance of vouchers 

18           on some of these projects.

19                  In general, I just want to know what 

20           ESD is doing to increase Black businesses' 

21           participation in all aspects, but especially 

22           AI, where there's an opportunity to really 

23           uplift Black entrepreneurs and individuals in 

24           that.  Not just workforce, I'm talking about 


                                                                   141

 1           business ownership and entrepreneurs.  

 2                  And for OGS, also, what are we doing 

 3           to increase community connection and 

 4           inclusion to employment, somewhat similar to 

 5           Assemblymember Darling's question.  The 

 6           programming and then the participation, the 

 7           inclusion of local community members in what 

 8           OGS is doing as well as elected officials, 

 9           who can really boost and help what you're 

10           trying to accomplish.

11                  And for Ms. Mallin, I just want to say 

12           to you, welcome.  I look forward to working 

13           with you.  The cuts are going to be very 

14           detrimental to the arts community, and 

15           especially the Black arts community, which 

16           doesn't benefit as much as the rest of the 

17           arts community in the first place, 

18           historically.  

19                  We need to increase funding of the 

20           arts.  And as someone who represents the 

21           historic community of Harlem, birthplace of 

22           the Harlem Renaissance -- and very much 

23           appreciative of the arts -- I want to see how 

24           we can increase that funding.  That funding 


                                                                   142

 1           is not just about the arts, it is about the 

 2           legacy, it is about the soul of our 

 3           community, and we are very much in need of 

 4           those dollars.

 5                  And at this time we have organizations 

 6           and individuals who are just recovering from 

 7           COVID who have not even recovered from the 

 8           pandemic.  And I'm really urging our Governor 

 9           and our state to invest in the arts, 

10           especially in Harlem, where we have brought 

11           in so much tourism to this state.  And I 

12           think it's very crucial and very important.

13                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So I'll start 

14           with what we're doing to help Black 

15           businesses that are in the innovation space.  

16           I don't have much time, but I can tell you 

17           that we have a number of venture programs 

18           where we're funding Black businesses to be 

19           able to have them participate in the 

20           innovation sector, emerging technologies, 

21           et cetera.

22                  And, you know, we're very focused on 

23           providing support to minority- and 

24           women-owned businesses in that area.


                                                                   143

 1                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  For the Office 

 2           of General Services, DEI has certainly been 

 3           at the top of some of our priorities relative 

 4           to hiring, from the leadership level down to 

 5           the staff level.

 6                  We've also been expanding our 

 7           programming.  We have brought back the --

 8                  SENATOR CLEARE:  You can get back to 

 9           me.

10                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  I'll get you 

11           the information later.  Thank you.

12                  SENATOR CLEARE:  Thank you.

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Member Tapia.

14                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN TAPIA:  Sorry. 

15                  Good afternoon.  It's already noon.  

16           We started in the morning.  It's still 

17           morning.  

18                  Thank you.  Thank you all for being 

19           here, and I appreciate, I have to say, all 

20           your time.  I know it's a long day.

21                  I have two questions for Ms. Knight.  

22           You kind of answered some of them already 

23           while I was here.  But, I mean, of the 

24           250 million in capital funding that the state 


                                                                   144

 1           agencies -- to repurpose certain state agency 

 2           properties into useful housing -- I am from 

 3           the Boogie-Down Bronx, I represent the 

 4           Boogie-Down Bronx, so one of the biggest 

 5           issues that we have is exactly the housing 

 6           crisis that we have all over the State of 

 7           New York, but the Bronx is the one that 

 8           actually suffers the most from it.

 9                  So did you have some more details on 

10           how can you provide -- how you could provide 

11           on this funding.  And what I mean by that is 

12           such as how many units we are looking to 

13           build on those properties that are 

14           underused -- underutilized.  And do you have 

15           a list of specific properties?  And do you 

16           know if it would support any housing in the 

17           Bronx?

18                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Okay, thank you 

19           for --

20                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN TAPIA:  That's fine.  

21           I'm going to have another one, about the 

22           100 million, that you'll also say -- you 

23           probably cannot answer that question, but I 

24           mean one of the biggest issues that we have 


                                                                   145

 1           in the Bronx and especially in my community, 

 2           during the pandemic, because of the remote 

 3           schooling and -- schooling that happened, 

 4           many of our children, especially middle 

 5           school and high school, dropped out from 

 6           school.  

 7                  They didn't participate in remote 

 8           learning.  They didn't have, most likely 

 9           didn't have a computer, a laptop, didn't have 

10           connection to the internet.  It was a program 

11           that was done completely in English, and the 

12           majority of those parents don't speak 

13           English, so they might not be able to work 

14           that out.

15                  So many of them dropped out.  And it 

16           was 180,000 of them in the City of New York, 

17           and many of them were in the Bronx.  And the 

18           majority in middle schools came back when 

19           school restored, but many in high school are 

20           still out there.  They haven't come back.  

21           And we have to -- what I'm thinking is how 

22           are we going to lure them.  Not to come back 

23           to school, maybe -- because they might not do 

24           it.  


                                                                   146

 1                  But how are we going to make sure that 

 2           they get some type of training, some type of 

 3           development that actually would help them 

 4           to -- they're going to have families -- to 

 5           have families --

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you, 

 7           Assemblywoman.  Your answer will have to be 

 8           in writing because you've -- you've exhausted 

 9           your time, I'm sorry.  

10                  Next we have Senator Helming.

11                  SENATOR HELMING:  Thank you very much.  

12                  Thank you all for your 

13           testimony today; I appreciate it.

14                  Commissioner Knight, when I speak with 

15           businesses, when I meet with them, I go out 

16           and tour their facilities, whether it's 

17           manufacturing, retail, my Main Street 

18           businesses, you know, hospitality industry, 

19           the two challenges that they continually 

20           bring up about being a business located in 

21           New York State are taxes and overregulation.  

22           It's a consistent message from everyone.

23                  And listening today about, you know, 

24           the -- all these incentive programs that are 


                                                                   147

 1           available -- Micron's getting $5 billion -- 

 2           it just raises the question what are we doing 

 3           to reduce the tax burden on our businesses, 

 4           and what are we doing to reduce the 

 5           regulatory requirements on businesses?  

 6                  Because it seems like, sitting in the 

 7           Legislature, every day we're creating more 

 8           requirements for businesses to comply with.  

 9           And these small businesses, they don't have a 

10           compliance officer, necessarily.  

11                  So my question is, you know, what are 

12           we doing to make New York State a more 

13           business-friendly state?

14                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So thank you for 

15           that, Senator.  Thank you for that.  

16           Understand the concerns around small 

17           businesses and, you know, what they confront.  

18                  You know, with respect to regulations, 

19           I think everybody agrees that basic 

20           regulations are necessary for public health 

21           and safety.  And, you know, as an entity 

22           looking to grow the economy, we are always 

23           talking to businesses to understand what 

24           regulatory challenges they have and what some 


                                                                   148

 1           reforms could possibly be.

 2                  So, you know, would like to talk to 

 3           you about that.

 4                  SENATOR HELMING:  Yeah, and I'd love 

 5           to have a response to that.  What are you 

 6           hearing, and what are you considering as 

 7           regulatory reforms?  I'd love some specific 

 8           information on that.

 9                  I wanted to real quick, too, talk 

10           about the ON-RAMP program.  I understand that 

11           one of the four sites has already been 

12           designated; it will be located in Syracuse.  

13           And I understand the selection of the 

14           remaining three will be a competitive 

15           process.  And I know the Governor mentioned 

16           that the focus would be on providing 

17           opportunities for disadvantaged populations.

18                  When will we see the exact outlines 

19           for -- you know, what are the requirements?  

20           When will we see an application process?  How 

21           would that look?  

22                  And because I only have a few seconds 

23           left, I want to throw this out there.  I 

24           suggest that when we're talking about 


                                                                   149

 1           disadvantaged populations, that we look at 

 2           rural communities, too, as an area that is 

 3           disadvantaged.  Wayne County -- Finger Lakes 

 4           Community College, located right off the 

 5           Thruway.  Part of -- advanced manufacturing 

 6           is prominent.  We have employers who need 

 7           employees but who are challenged by 

 8           transportation, childcare issues, and so much 

 9           more.

10                  So I was thankful to hear community 

11           colleges will be eligible, but I'd like to 

12           know more about the program.

13                  Thank you.

14                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

15           You'll have to get back in writing because 

16           there's no time for an answer.

17                  Next?

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  (Inaudible.)

19                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Can you turn on 

20           the Assemblymember's mic from upstairs?

21                  You can try.

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Member Simone.

23                  Did he leave?  Okay.  Chantel Jackson.

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  All right.


                                                                   150

 1                  So today's Bible study came from 

 2           Proverbs 27:23, where it says "Know the state 

 3           of your flocks."  And that's about knowing, 

 4           you know, your monies and all, where your 

 5           state of affairs are.  So grateful to have 

 6           this conversation about the finances here in 

 7           the State of New York.  

 8                  Now, the Governor's proposing Global 

 9           Entrepreneurs for $4 million, we're looking 

10           to put $4 million in it.  And 635,000 -- 

11           635,000 towards MWBE.  How do we justify 

12           having 4 million for Global Entrepreneurs and 

13           635,000 for MWBE?  And the removal of 

14           1 million from MWBE.

15                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Thank you for 

16           your question.

17                  With respect to what you're 

18           referencing to MWBE, that's one program 

19           related to MWBE.  I can get you the entire 

20           total of that budget at a later date.

21                  But focused on the Global 

22           Entrepreneurs program, really trying to route 

23           foreign-born entrepreneurs that are creating 

24           innovation enterprises that would hire 


                                                                   151

 1           employees here in New York instead of having 

 2           them take those businesses outside of the 

 3           state and outside the country.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Okay, maybe I 

 5           misunderstood the purpose of the Global 

 6           Entrepreneurs.

 7                  But how many full-time and part-time 

 8           people work for ESD?

 9                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  About 650.

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Six-fifty.  

11           And do we find that to be a good enough 

12           number to execute the day-to-day?

13                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  We do.

14                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Okay.

15                  And then I see that we're in our 

16           eighth round of DRI, which is really 

17           impressive.  But I'm wondering where we are 

18           with the first few rounds.  In particular, 

19           I'm thinking about the Bronx, where I serve, 

20           where we started years ago -- I don't even 

21           know what number we were in the DRI.  

22                  But where are they, where are those 

23           programs in completion of their DRI?

24                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I have to come 


                                                                   152

 1           back to you with a report on that.  The 

 2           Department of State administers the DRI 

 3           program.  But I do have, you know, a 

 4           tremendous amount of awareness of where, you 

 5           know, some of those programs are, and I know 

 6           that the Hub was designated a -- in the early 

 7           rounds.  And a number of those projects have 

 8           been completed.

 9                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  All right.  

10           And so the money has been spent down?

11                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I'm not sure if 

12           it's all been spent down, but definitely some 

13           of it has been spent down.

14                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Okay.  Would 

15           love to know where we are with the spending 

16           of that.

17                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Okay.

18                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  And then I see 

19           we have 250 for the RUSH program.  Are 

20           hospitals a part of that, state -- a spot 

21           being considered, state hospitals?  

22                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I'll come back 

23           to you with that.

24                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Sorry, you'll 


                                                                   153

 1           have to get back to the Assemblywoman.

 2                  Next is Senator Comrie.

 3                  SENATOR COMRIE:  Good afternoon.

 4                  Appreciate you all being here.

 5                  I have a question to each person, but 

 6           I'll just ask in a series of questions.  

 7                  Can you get back to us with your 

 8           numbers on MWBE participation -- not in 

 9           contracting but in procurement and services 

10           and purchasing and supplies?  How well is 

11           your agency doing in making sure that 

12           MWBEs -- especially in the state -- and also 

13           New York businesses are doing well in your 

14           procurement and services area?

15                  The next question would be, what kind 

16           of staffing do you have that reflects MWBE as 

17           well, especially in your executive staff?

18                  And also for the arts, the issue is to 

19           find out what we're doing to make sure that 

20           long-term nonprofits in the cultural area, 

21           especially in the minority, are doing well 

22           with the amount of disbursement in the 

23           State Budget to nonprofits and cultural 

24           programs in the state.


                                                                   154

 1                  And to also the ESD, I wanted to get 

 2           an update on where we are with the Commuter 

 3           Van Stabilization Act, where we are with the 

 4           Community Electrification Act, both of which 

 5           have gone nowhere in two years.

 6                  And then just for the Office of 

 7           General Services, because I only have a 

 8           little bit of time, how is the Office of 

 9           General Services working to make sure that 

10           the physical plant is operating in the 

11           Capitol?  There's still elevators that have 

12           been out since I've been here, and there's 

13           other physical issues that are happening in 

14           and around the Capitol.  And how many 

15           minority contractors are working in this 

16           area?

17                  Those are my general questions.  You 

18           can take -- we've got a minute if anybody 

19           wants to answer any of them.

20                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I'll start on 

21           the Commuter Van Stabilization Fund.

22                  You know, we understand the importance 

23           of the commuter van industry in your 

24           community.  You know I know very well how 


                                                                   155

 1           important the van service is.  And we have 

 2           heard your concerns about the vendor, and we 

 3           continue to have discussions with the vendor 

 4           and will be back to you about how we move 

 5           forward.  We have not signed a contract.  

 6                  And so we will be able to get back to 

 7           you in the next coming weeks around that 

 8           program.

 9                  SENATOR COMRIE:  Thank you.

10                  And then just one other question.  We 

11           need to do something on captive insurance for 

12           downstate, not just for all commercial 

13           vehicles.  They can't afford $60,000 a year 

14           in insurance and try to maintain a vehicle.

15                  I have a captive insurance bill that 

16           works, it's worked in other parts of the 

17           state.  The Governor has ordered for bills on 

18           captive insurance in other parts of the 

19           state.  We need to come to an agreement and 

20           get this done.  We're putting lives at risk.  

21           Most of the commercial vehicles in the state 

22           are illegal.

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you, 

24           Senator.  


                                                                   156

 1                  You'll have to get back to us.  Thank 

 2           you.

 3                  Assemblymember.

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Member Simon.

 5                  I'll just remind everyone that we only 

 6           have three minutes for this round.  And so if 

 7           your question lasts three minutes, there will 

 8           be no time for an answer.  So if the question 

 9           is short and succinct, you may get the answer 

10           that you're looking for.

11                  So anyway, Member Simon.

12                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  I see that my 

13           audience knows that I'm their audience -- 

14           they're my audience.

15                  So thank you very much for your 

16           testimony, all of you.

17                  So I have a question directed around 

18           Atlantic Yards, our favorite place, about how 

19           ESD plans to collect the liquidated damages 

20           from Greenland's failure to meet the 2025 

21           affordable housing deadline when it's 

22           defaulting on its debt, it's lost control of 

23           development rights where the housing is 

24           supposed to be built.  And how it plans -- 


                                                                   157

 1           how do you plan to make up for the affordable 

 2           housing that hasn't been delivered?  That's 

 3           one question.  

 4                  And then the other question is the 

 5           Stop Climate Polluters Handout Act -- that I 

 6           sponsor -- is about eliminating the subsidies 

 7           that New York State currently gifts to the 

 8           most harmful parts of the fossil fuel 

 9           industry.  And with New York facing a 

10           multi-billion-dollar state budget deficit, 

11           alongside the increasing costs of 

12           climate-related damages to taxpayers and 

13           enormous profits in the fossil fuel 

14           industry -- which is the chief instigator of 

15           the damages -- isn't it time to cut some of 

16           the 1.6 billion in fossil fuel subsidies that 

17           New York currently offers?

18                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So good 

19           afternoon, Assemblywoman.  

20                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  Good afternoon.

21                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I'll take your 

22           Atlantic Yards questions first.

23                  As you know, we've been working with 

24           the developer of Atlantic Yards as well as 


                                                                   158

 1           its lender to figure out a way forward.  

 2           There is a default on the debt, and we're 

 3           working with the lender to figure out who 

 4           will step in as the designated developer.  

 5           ESD has to approve that person or entity as a 

 6           designated developer, and we are waiting to 

 7           have those folks step forward.

 8                  With respect to liquidated damages, 

 9           that default provision would kick in next 

10           year.  And so we intend to pursue liquidated 

11           damages if those units are not produced at 

12           that time.

13                  Your next was -- 

14                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  So I guess I'd 

15           like a follow-up question to that, is the 

16           platforms and the likelihood of them being 

17           built and how quickly we can replace that 

18           affordable housing that may not -- from our 

19           perspective, with a developer that can't 

20           perform, may not ever be built.  So how do we 

21           remedy that?  

22                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Well, we have a 

23           lease until 2035.  And so we do have to work 

24           with the current, you know, developer and the 


                                                                   159

 1           lender to determine if we can get a developer 

 2           that ESD approves to step in.

 3                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  Okay.  And could 

 4           you address the tax -- okay.

 5                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I'll come back 

 6           to you.

 7                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  I didn't get my 

 8           question out.

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Sorry, you'll 

10           have to get back to us on that.  Thank you.

11                  Senator Borrello.

12                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  Thank you, 

13           Madam Chair.  

14                  Thank you all for being here.  I'll 

15           start with you, Commissioner Knight.  First 

16           of all, I think you know I appreciate what 

17           ESD does.  I spent 10 years in county 

18           government and, you know, you provide us with 

19           the tools at the local level to level the 

20           playing field when we're competing with other 

21           states.

22                  That being said, my concern -- I think 

23           I've talked about this before with you -- is 

24           that we tend to measure success based on the 


                                                                   160

 1           number of jobs we create.  And that is 

 2           unfortunately a problem, still.  The reality 

 3           is is that there are thousands upon thousands 

 4           of open jobs in New York State.  And we 

 5           talked about workforce.  But also, you know, 

 6           there are industries that could benefit from 

 7           an infusion of capital and support to help 

 8           them essentially modernize and automate their 

 9           industry, so that they can -- they're 

10           screaming for workers.  You know, the food 

11           processing industry in particular.

12                  So how do we shift this conversation 

13           from measuring everything that ESD does, in 

14           success based on the number of jobs that you 

15           create, when the reality is that's not the 

16           issue.  You know, in fact those people that 

17           get incentives that come to New York State 

18           are poaching employees from our existing 

19           employers that are paying the full boat when 

20           it comes to their taxes and everything else.  

21                  So how do we address that?  

22                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Thank you for 

23           that.

24                  We look at the impact of how an entity 


                                                                   161

 1           may create economic activity, the amount of 

 2           taxes into the economy.  We look at a number 

 3           of dimensions when we think about success of 

 4           projects.  But jobs is one major contributor, 

 5           because that definitely, you know, creates 

 6           the economic impact, the tax rolls -- 

 7           revenues to the tax rolls, and provides for 

 8           people to have a place to live and raise a 

 9           family.

10                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  Well, yeah, and I 

11           understand that that's the theory.  Right?  

12           But the reality is is there are open 

13           positions right now that cannot be filled.  

14           you know, that's -- what I'm saying is that 

15           there is -- you know, I think we have to 

16           figure out a way to bring together the idea 

17           that what we need is a well-trained workforce 

18           and people that are encouraged to take those 

19           positions.  And not so much saying we're 

20           going to bring a new company to town.  

21                  Micron, everybody's -- I understand, 

22           everybody's very excited about the chip 

23           manufacturer coming to town.  But they're 

24           going to have thousands of open positions, 


                                                                   162

 1           and most of them are probably going to -- 

 2           they're not going to be coming from people 

 3           moving to New York State; they're going to be 

 4           poaching employees from other -- you know, 

 5           skilled workers from other employers that are 

 6           not getting the tax benefits that Micron is 

 7           getting.  

 8                  And that's my concern.  How do we 

 9           shift that discussion?  

10                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Well, I think 

11           the Office of Strategic Workforce Development 

12           is going a long way to provide these training 

13           opportunities that have direct linkages to 

14           jobs.  And so by getting folks off the 

15           sidelines that may have had barriers to 

16           employment, we can get those folks into jobs.

17                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  Okay, great.  Well, 

18           I only have a few seconds left, so thank you 

19           all very much.

20                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

21                  Assembly.

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Yes, Member 

23           Carroll.  

24                  ASSEMBLYMAN CARROLL:  Thank you.  


                                                                   163

 1                  Good afternoon, Commissioner Knight.  

 2           I'm going to pick up where Assemblymember 

 3           Simon left off, around the Atlantic Yards 

 4           project and the default of Greenland's 

 5           debt and the foreclosure that is currently 

 6           happening.  

 7                  As Assemblymember Simon was saying, 

 8           liquidated damages should kick in in 2025 if 

 9           871 units of affordable housing are not 

10           built.  Zero units are built today.  It does 

11           not seem like there is any possibility that a 

12           single unit will be built by 2025.  

13                  What is EDC's plan?  How are we going 

14           to build these -- this housing?  How are we 

15           going to complete this project?  How are we 

16           going to provide the open space that this 

17           community desperately needs?  Ninety-five 

18           percent of what hasn't been built is in my 

19           district.  There's a giant hole in my 

20           district.  There's a platform that's 

21           supposedly going to get built over the MTA 

22           rail yards.  And there's 871 units of 

23           affordable housing that needs to be built.  

24                  What is the plan?  Do we actually have 


                                                                   164

 1           a buyer who's going to step into the shoes of 

 2           Greenland, or are we going to figure some 

 3           other way out for Greenland to continue on?

 4                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So thank you for 

 5           that question.

 6                  There is an auction that is scheduled 

 7           for next month, and so we believe that there 

 8           will be a buyer to step into Greenland's 

 9           place.

10                  With respect to the 870 units, those 

11           units have to be built or delivered, and so 

12           there could be a situation where Greenland is 

13           able to deliver 870 affordable units.  Which 

14           is why we can't go on the basis of an 

15           anticipatory default, we have to wait until 

16           2025.

17                  And so our plan is to see the outcome 

18           of this auction -- we believe that there will 

19           be a buyer that steps forward -- and begin to 

20           build the housing that this community is 

21           looking to see.

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN CARROLL:  And do you 

23           believe that EDC and the MTA are prepared to 

24           move on the platform that needs to be built 


                                                                   165

 1           over those rail yards so this project can 

 2           continue?

 3                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Well, there's an 

 4           obligation for that platform to be built, 

 5           so -- 

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN CARROLL:  Do we have a 

 7           timeline for that?  

 8                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  We would work 

 9           through a timeline with --

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN CARROLL:  Humor me.  Like 

11           do we have any idea how long that would take?  

12           Do we have any idea what needs to be done 

13           between now and then so that if we find a 

14           developer who can actually build this 

15           project, that we're ready to go with the 

16           platform as soon as possible?

17                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  We know that 

18           there are footings in the ground for the 

19           platform, so it should take a couple of years 

20           to complete the platform.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN CARROLL:  And then, of 

22           course, the building could start for the 871 

23           units.  

24                  So there will be a default.  There 


                                                                   166

 1           will be liquidated damages.  Because if it 

 2           takes a couple of years to build the 

 3           platform, then we're clearly past the 

 4           deadline in '25.

 5                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Unless Greenland 

 6           delivers 870 units.

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN CARROLL:  How would you 

 8           deliver 870 -- 

 9                  (Overtalk.)

10                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  They can convert 

11           existing market-rate -- 

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN CARROLL:  They're already 

13           built at the site.

14                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yeah.  Yeah.  

15           Yeah.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN CARROLL:  Thank you for 

17           that.

18                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

19                  Is Senator Bailey or Senator Hinchey 

20           in the room?  Because I know they all had to 

21           leave for things.  No.  Then I'm the next 

22           Senator.  Thank you.

23                  Okay.  We talked about affordable 

24           housing and using state land before.  And I 


                                                                   167

 1           believe the question was asked that -- is 

 2           there any identification of where these 

 3           projects might go.  And I think you said that 

 4           they hadn't been decided.  But I think the 

 5           Governor did talk about three very specific 

 6           sites.  So I'm just trying to clarify.

 7                  Is there actually sites for the money 

 8           that's in the -- I think it's 250 million per 

 9           year for two years for affordable housing on 

10           state land for specific sites.  Am I right 

11           or -- 

12                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  There are some 

13           specific sites, but we're working through 

14           other sites to understand if those sites have 

15           the ability to be worked on right away, sort 

16           of the readiness of delivering the units.

17                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And she also 

18           talked about 150,000 units on state land, and 

19           you referenced that also.  So is there any 

20           money for all of those other units?  Or is 

21           there just that 250 million per year for two 

22           years?  

23                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So the 

24           $250 million per year for two years is for 


                                                                   168

 1           the infrastructure.  We would work with 

 2           partners like HCR and private developers for 

 3           developing those specific projects.

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  So like 

 5           one-on-one deals --

 6                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yes.  Yes.

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  -- with the state 

 8           fronting the land, so to speak, and the 

 9           developers being able to use the land.  Is 

10           that my understanding?

11                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Depending on the 

12           circumstance, yes.

13                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And do you know, 

14           would it be a model of something like a 

15           99-year lease, as opposed to the state just 

16           giving them the land?  

17                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I think we would 

18           look at these situations on a site-by-site 

19           basis.

20                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And I don't want 

21           to re-ask, but I didn't quite understand.  

22           You said we all agree it should be affordable 

23           housing, but is there any mandate that it 

24           actually has to be some formula of affordable 


                                                                   169

 1           housing if we're giving them or leasing them 

 2           the state land?  

 3                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  We look at 

 4           creating affordable housing in the 

 5           circumstances where we can to create as much 

 6           as possible.  But it depends on the specific 

 7           project and transaction.

 8                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And it would be 

 9           ESDC making that determination, the housing 

10           agency, who? 

11                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I think it's in 

12           concert amongst a number of parties.  You 

13           know, if it's an ESD RFP, you know, we look 

14           at the circumstances of the particular 

15           project, work with HCR to see if we can use, 

16           you know, some of their tools to create the 

17           affordable housing.

18                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And if it's on 

19           state land, is the assumption that you still 

20           have to follow local zoning requirements?  

21                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Well, in many 

22           cases -- 

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  It would be in 

24           some municipality, some county, somewhere.


                                                                   170

 1                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  You know, in 

 2           many cases we use our GPP and, you know, work 

 3           with the municipality and the community to 

 4           determine, you know, the zoning for those 

 5           projects.

 6                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And the Governor 

 7           has separately at some point said she's 

 8           interested in having IDAs get involved in 

 9           building housing.  My reading of the law is 

10           IDAs cannot build housing.  Could you clarify 

11           your understanding of the law?  

12                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I believe that 

13           IDAs can finance housing to some degree.  

14           It's a little bit of a complication in the 

15           law, and so we can come back to you on that.  

16           But that's my understanding.  

17                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I'd love to see 

18           it in writing why you think that's allowed, 

19           because the lawyers I talk to say it's -- 

20           they're not.  

21                  So the arts commissioner -- are you a 

22           commissioner?  No, you're executive director, 

23           sorry.  And she just got here.  

24                  But I've been doing some reading 


                                                                   171

 1           around the economic development value of the 

 2           arts to the economy throughout the State of 

 3           New York.  And it's a pretty dramatic win, 

 4           without quoting all of these different 

 5           reports, some that have been put out by your 

 6           agency, some by others.  But the economic 

 7           development multiplier effect from the arts 

 8           is -- and for wages, for taxes, for 

 9           tourism -- is startlingly good.  

10                  So does economic development recognize 

11           arts programs as eligible for any of your 

12           programs?

13                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yes.  There are 

14           times when some arts programs are funded 

15           through our REDC process.  Sometimes through 

16           the DRI process, Market New York.

17                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay.  You don't 

18           happen to know how much money from that 

19           program ends up going into the arts, do you?  

20                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  No, but I can 

21           get you that information.  

22                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay, appreciate 

23           it.  

24                  Which is sort of an entry to the next 


                                                                   172

 1           question.  How are you evaluating the dollar 

 2           value of returns from each individual 

 3           decision that ESDC is making on awarding 

 4           grants or tax exemptions, et cetera, and then 

 5           holding them up and comparing them and 

 6           saying, Well, the arts would be a really good 

 7           investment; this one, not so much?  

 8                  How are we doing that?  I know we've 

 9           improved the database, there was a discussion 

10           about that, and we're all looking forward to 

11           using that and even adding to that.  But is 

12           there a standard form that you use for 

13           actually evaluating the wins and the loses?

14                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  You know, we 

15           look at our projects individually to see what 

16           kind of economic impact they have, the 

17           output, the contribution to taxes.  You know, 

18           building on the work that is being done by 

19           the Department of Tax and Finance, my 

20           office -- we are issuing an RFP to evaluate 

21           non-tax credit programs.  So we can do some 

22           of that work and looking at some of the 

23           individual programs and how they are 

24           performing relative to others.


                                                                   173

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

 2                  Commissioner Moy, I don't want you to 

 3           feel left alone all this time.  

 4                  So in the Governor's Executive Order 

 5           22, "Leading by Example," she's calling for 

 6           advancing environmental justice, 

 7           sustainability and decarbonization through 

 8           our administrative operations and 

 9           procurement.  "To support the implementation 

10           of Executive Order 22, investments will be 

11           made directly, helping bolster the state 

12           facilities' decarbonization efforts and 

13           providing the resources necessary to initiate 

14           procurement practices that prioritize 

15           sustainable and climate-resilient design 

16           practices, greening our infrastructure while 

17           reducing emissions associated with state 

18           operations."

19                  I wanted to read the whole thing.

20                  So you and I, we now have been talking 

21           about the importance, in my opinion, of 

22           deforestation in our procurement.  So tell me 

23           what else OGS is doing to meet Executive 

24           Order 22's responsibilities.


                                                                   174

 1                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  And I 

 2           appreciate the question.

 3                  The Office of General Services, in 

 4           partnership with a number of other state 

 5           agencies, are a part of the GreenNY Council.  

 6           We do look very carefully at the 

 7           implementation of EO22, and we are a part of 

 8           some of the crafting of the language in the 

 9           support of it.

10                  We are looking at it relative to 

11           decarbonizing our facilities, making sure 

12           that the supply chain opportunities that 

13           exist, that we focus on them.  

14                  So as an example, this past year we 

15           worked through the implementation guidelines 

16           relative to Clean Concrete, certainly an area 

17           in which the creation of concrete, which 

18           happens right here in New York, that we are 

19           looking at opportunities to reduce the 

20           emissions throughout that process, institute 

21           a timeline that allows for the industry 

22           within New York to be able to adapt to those 

23           changes, providing technical assistance to 

24           those that create concrete here in New York.  


                                                                   175

 1                  And certainly it is something where it 

 2           will impact both projects that are 

 3           transportation-oriented -- sort of the 

 4           horizontal construction build -- as well as 

 5           vertical, as we start to look at some of the 

 6           retrofits.

 7                  We are also working with a number of 

 8           entities, whether it is GSA in other states, 

 9           to identify opportunities for us to be able 

10           to address ways to reduce greenhouse gas 

11           emissions.  

12                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

13                  So back to you, Ms. Knight.  So given 

14           the description of the Executive Order and 

15           now what OGS is doing, do you think that any 

16           time you give out a grant or a tax exemption 

17           you also ought to be evaluating the proposal 

18           in the context of it targeting and meeting 

19           our state commitments to decarbonizing and 

20           improving, particularly with procurement and 

21           other new investments that we're making?

22                  (Mic issue; off the record.)

23                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  When we look at 

24           evaluating projects, we're starting to look 


                                                                   176

 1           at how these projects are contributing, you 

 2           know, to a sustainable green economy.  And in 

 3           some of our programs we're providing, you 

 4           know, additional credit for projects that are 

 5           meeting or going beyond those standards.

 6                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  (Mic off; 

 7           inaudible.)  Oh, I'm sorry.  

 8                  So you can actually reject a proposal 

 9           because it doesn't meet these standards.

10                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yes.  We're 

11           looking at projects that are contributing to 

12           the green economy or, you know, have 

13           significant sustainability factors.

14                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

15                  Assembly.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Member 

17           Braunstein.

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Thank you.  

19                  My question is for Commissioner 

20           Knight.  And thank you for being here.  

21                  My question is going to be about the 

22           RUSH program.  I represent the Creedmoor 

23           Campus in Eastern Queens.  And throughout the 

24           course of the last year, ESDC has been having 


                                                                   177

 1           community forums to talk about the proposal.  

 2           And one of the things the community asked 

 3           was -- they were receptive to housing, but 

 4           one of the things the community asked was 

 5           that it be somewhat commensurate with the 

 6           density of the surrounding community.  The 

 7           community suggested four-story buildings, 

 8           maybe a thousand units.  

 9                  And in early December, ESDC, without 

10           informing the local legislators -- I found 

11           out on Twitter -- announced that they're 

12           moving forward with 2800 units, eight-story 

13           buildings.  Right?  Much different than what 

14           the community was proposing.  

15                  And I thought the community was being 

16           reasonable.  This is a single-family-home 

17           neighborhood.  This is garden apartments, two 

18           stories.  Eight-story buildings is -- is just 

19           much different than the surrounding 

20           community.

21                  First off, I was frustrated to find 

22           out on Twitter that this was the final 

23           proposal.  And not just myself, but State 

24           Senator Stavisky, Councilmember Lee -- I know 


                                                                   178

 1           my colleague Assemblymember Vanel, who is 

 2           here -- we found out on Twitter.  

 3                  And I guess my question is with this, 

 4           if the administration knew at the time that a 

 5           month later they were going to put in the 

 6           budget the funding for the infrastructure for 

 7           this project, why wouldn't you reach out to 

 8           the state officials at the time and try to 

 9           reach an agreement that everybody's 

10           comfortable with?

11                  And I -- the other question is if my 

12           colleagues vote on this RUSH funding with 

13           unspecified properties, can they expect to be 

14           part of the process?  Or is this -- a similar 

15           circumstance going to happen to them?

16                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So thank you, 

17           Assemblymember, for your work on, you know, 

18           this engagement process with the community on 

19           Creedmoor.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Can I -- I 

21           just need to interrupt one moment.  Mind you, 

22           during all of this, we are managing a 

23           thousand-person tent shelter that the 

24           administration has put there.


                                                                   179

 1                  So while we're trying to, you know, 

 2           handle that situation, simultaneously we're 

 3           told, right after that, they're going to be 

 4           starting construction on 2800 units.  I'm 

 5           sorry to interrupt.

 6                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So the Creedmoor 

 7           plan was released in December, with a goal to 

 8           maximize the number of housing units.  Going 

 9           forward, we will definitely be working with 

10           the electeds around this engagement process 

11           as we release the GPP and begin the 

12           environmental -- we can talk more about this.  

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Thank you.

14                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

15                  Senator Tom O'Mara, five-minute 

16           ranker.

17                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Good afternoon 

18           already.  Thank you all for your testimony.  

19           It's a pleasure to have you here.

20                  Commissioner Moy, one quick question 

21           for you.  I see there is an item in the 

22           Aid to Localities for $15 million for the 

23           state to pay the federal government for the 

24           rent of Floyd Bennett Field to house 


                                                                   180

 1           migrants.  Why are we paying the federal 

 2           government to use their property to house 

 3           migrants that they have allowed to come here?

 4                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Senator, I 

 5           appreciate the question.  

 6                  It is a requirement of the federal 

 7           government that some payment is made, and 

 8           that was part of the negotiation and 

 9           conversation with the federal government.

10                  SENATOR O'MARA:  So you actually 

11           negotiated with the federal government and 

12           we're still paying them $15 million?

13                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  There are 

14           services that are being provided.  There is 

15           access.  But these were part of the 

16           conversations with the federal government.  

17                  Happy to provide more information 

18           about some of the details to you.

19                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Offline?

20                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  No, we can do 

21           so in the record.  We'll respond and give 

22           information to the full Legislature.

23                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Okay, thank you.

24                  Commissioner Knight, a big concern of 


                                                                   181

 1           mine is manufacturing firms leaving New York 

 2           State.  You know, we just saw a pretty 

 3           significant article in the Times Union just 

 4           last week about Quad/Graphics leaving 

 5           Saratoga, and mentioning that there -- these 

 6           are manufacturing firms that -- they're not 

 7           going out of business.  They have operations 

 8           in other states.  And when they are 

 9           downsizing, consolidating, they're choosing 

10           to leave their New York operations for other 

11           states, typically those that are more 

12           business-friendly from a cost perspective.

13                  Quad/Graphics, for example, also 

14           closed a facility in Illinois, another very 

15           high tax state.  So we're seeing this trend.  

16           The Times Union article mentioned Essity bath 

17           tissue, which moved their operations to 

18           Wisconsin, Kentucky, Ohio and Alabama where 

19           they have operations, closing down in 

20           New York.  

21                  Lehigh Cement moving to Indiana.

22                  What are you hearing from these 

23           companies when they're making these decisions 

24           to leave?  And what are we doing from an 


                                                                   182

 1           economic development perspective in New York 

 2           State to do all we can to retain 

 3           manufacturers and in fact grow them?  Because 

 4           I think manufacturing should be the base of 

 5           our economy, and a lot of other industries 

 6           will grow off of that.  

 7                  So why are we seeing this very 

 8           disturbing trend of companies, when they 

 9           downsize, choosing to exit New York for 

10           lower-tax states?  

11                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So, Senator, 

12           understand your concern about some companies 

13           leaving New York and moving to lower-tax 

14           states.  And we have seen those examples that 

15           you point out.  

16                  But we also are having more companies 

17           move to New York State in the last couple of 

18           years.  Reshoring Institute named New York 

19           the number-one state in reshoring.  And so by 

20           providing, you know, shovel-ready sites and 

21           access to power and utilities and the things 

22           that manufacturers need, we're seeing many 

23           companies move and expand in New York State.

24                  SENATOR O'MARA:  With incentives?  


                                                                   183

 1                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  In some cases, 

 2           incentives.  Providing tax credits that are 

 3           pay-for-performance, yes.

 4                  SENATOR O'MARA:  So it's -- those 

 5           companies that are leaving are those that are 

 6           not getting the incentives.  So the chosen 

 7           ones are able to make it in New York, but 

 8           those that aren't getting significant breaks 

 9           are exiting New York.

10                  Just to move on to the AI Consortium, 

11           $250 million, plus 125 coming from some 

12           universities that are going to be part of 

13           this.  There's absolutely no detail 

14           whatsoever on a timeline, a location, how 

15           this is going to be set up.

16                  At a time when we have significant 

17           deficits -- in fact, looking at a $20 billion 

18           deficit over the next two years -- in looking 

19           at these universities, the top 10 endowments 

20           of New York universities exceed $31 billion.  

21           Yet we're contributing, as a state, twice as 

22           much as we're asking these universities to 

23           contribute towards this?  Why shouldn't that 

24           be reversed?  Or why shouldn't they be doing 


                                                                   184

 1           it on their own out of their excessive 

 2           endowments?

 3                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  We have put 

 4           together a consortium of private and public 

 5           academic institutions to be able to leverage 

 6           their expertise in the work that they're 

 7           doing so that we can, as I mentioned, provide 

 8           ethical applications to AI.

 9                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Okay, thank you.  I'm 

10           out of time.

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

12                  Assembly.

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  I just want to 

14           acknowledge we were joined earlier by 

15           Assemblyman Pirozzolo, and we've been joined 

16           by Assemblywoman Walsh.

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  The next 

18           questioner is Assemblyman Simone.

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN SIMONE:  Thank you.  

20                  I have two questions for Commissioner 

21           Knight.  Good to see you.  

22                  My first is the Penn Station GPP 

23           remains heavily slanted towards commercial 

24           development, requiring less residential 


                                                                   185

 1           development than even the underlying zoning 

 2           would allow for.  

 3                  With the collapse of Vornado's 

 4           commercial plans for the area, why does the 

 5           state not utilize the GPP to tackle the 

 6           housing crisis, particularly on two current 

 7           vacant lots in the planned area of the 

 8           Hotel Penn and Duane Reade site?  

 9                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Thank you for 

10           your questions, Assemblymember.

11                  We will leave the flexibility for the 

12           GPP to create commercial office, as we know 

13           that there will be a need for commercial 

14           office space, particularly over the 

15           significant transit center.

16                  We are looking at housing for the 

17           Penn site and continue to discuss that with 

18           the property owner.

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN SIMONE:  Okay, I would 

20           hope we would look at, closely, how badly we 

21           need affordable housing in that area.  And we 

22           have so many empty commercial offices now.

23                  My second question is, I was glad to 

24           see the Governor proposing $250 million to 


                                                                   186

 1           repurpose state-owned property towards 

 2           housing for the RUSH program, as many of my 

 3           colleagues have mentioned.  In my district on 

 4           the West Side of Manhattan, the local 

 5           community supports a plan -- Community 

 6           Board 4, many block associations and 

 7           leaders -- to develop almost 6,000 housing 

 8           units on state-owned sites.  

 9                  How will these funds be distributed, 

10           and how much growth can be expected from this 

11           allocation?  

12                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So we are 

13           looking at a number of sites across the state 

14           and we're going to use criteria such as, you 

15           know, the number of units that can be 

16           realized, the readiness of the sites, as well 

17           as how the sites would contribute to 

18           community revitalization to neighboring 

19           communities.

20                  And so we'll use those kinds of 

21           guidelines to make a determination which 

22           projects get funded.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN SIMONE:  Thank you.  

24                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  


                                                                   187

 1                  For the Senate -- actually, I think 

 2           it's our last Senator, unless somebody else 

 3           is waving to me, and it's Senator Ryan for 

 4           his three-minute chair follow-up.

 5                  SENATOR RYAN:  So I have to say I 

 6           agree with Assemblymember Woerner and 

 7           Senator Tedisco about the ConnectALL program 

 8           being prioritized for underserved and 

 9           unserved communities.  I would hope that your 

10           policies would reflect that.  

11                  So we're spending a lot of money on 

12           high tech in New York.  Right?  Everyone's 

13           trying to capture the Silicon Valley.  If you 

14           look back in the eighties, you had Silicon 

15           Valley and then the Massachusetts 128 

16           Corridor.  It looked like they were both neck 

17           and neck about being big high-tech corridors.  

18           We had one on the East Coast, one on the 

19           West Coast.  They were going to become the 

20           hubs, which would have been great for our 

21           national economy.  

22                  But you saw, over time, Silicon Valley 

23           took off -- more innovation, more 

24           entrepreneurship -- and the 128 Corridor sort 


                                                                   188

 1           of stagnated, then it kind of fizzled.  You 

 2           know, you really don't really hear about it 

 3           much.

 4                  So people are looking back at those 

 5           and saying, Why did Silicon Valley take off 

 6           and why did the 128 fizzle?  And there's a 

 7           surprising culprit.  Massachusetts had very 

 8           strict and enforceable noncompete laws.  

 9           California had no noncompete laws, which 

10           allowed entrepreneurs, innovators to move 

11           from company to company.

12                  So have you thought about the negative 

13           impact of New York noncompete laws on the 

14           high-tech, publicly funded economy we're 

15           trying to build?

16                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  That's, you 

17           know, an interesting walk through history 

18           about Silicon Valley and Massachusetts and, 

19           you know, some of the factors that led to 

20           Massachusetts not reaching its maximization.  

21                  You know, we have looked at the 

22           noncompete laws and, you know, it's yet to be 

23           seen, of course, what will be the result of 

24           this.  Too early to tell, of course.  But we 


                                                                   189

 1           will be taking a look at it as it --

 2                  SENATOR RYAN:  I would encourage you 

 3           to read the reports out of the Federal 

 4           Reserve from Minnesota.  They looked at this 

 5           issue when Minnesota put in a ban on 

 6           noncompetes.  Minnesota said that "Our state 

 7           investment in the high tech will become for 

 8           naught unless we make it so employees can 

 9           freely go from high-tech company to high-tech 

10           company."  

11                  And right now in New York, I fear 

12           we're going to go down the Massachusetts 128 

13           route.  We're going to invest a lot of money, 

14           and it's not going to take off.  And it's not 

15           going to take off of because of the 

16           restricted ability of employees to go from 

17           sector to sector in the high-tech field.  And 

18           it really stifles the innovation that we're 

19           trying to create, too.

20                  So encourage you to keep thinking 

21           about that, and like to talk to you more 

22           about that in the future.

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

24                  Assembly.


                                                                   190

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Member Fahy.

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN FAHY:  Thank you, Chair.  

 3           Third time was the charm.

 4                  Thank you all.  I know it's been a 

 5           long day.  I want to thank your teams for 

 6           your responsiveness on a host of issues.  

 7                  I want to mention a couple of issues, 

 8           and then I have three quick questions I hope 

 9           I can get through.

10                  First of all, I want to -- appreciate 

11           the emphasis on housing particularly with 

12           SUNY.  We've also talked a little bit about 

13           Harriman.  Would love to make sure we're 

14           working with both of you, as the Higher Ed 

15           chair on SUNY developments and find all of 

16           that promising, given the desperate need for 

17           housing.

18                  With regard to OGS, Commissioner, I 

19           really appreciate your mentioning the 

20           Capitol, the East Fence, as well as the 

21           Courtyard and the Capitol efforts external 

22           and internal to that, as well as the electric 

23           vehicle state fleet.  That was a former bill 

24           of mine and Senator Metzger.  And as well as 


                                                                   191

 1           the decarbonization of the Empire State 

 2           Plaza.  Very much appreciate that.

 3                  With regard to ESD.  If you would, 

 4           could we just get a very brief timeline on 

 5           when you expect to see -- NY CREATES has come 

 6           up a few times today, with the billion-dollar 

 7           investment announced last month.  Can you 

 8           give us a quick timeline on next steps there?

 9                  I'm going to -- again, I've got a 

10           couple more.

11                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I'm going to 

12           give Kevin --

13                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN FAHY:  Okay.  

14                  ESD COO YOUNIS:  Hey, good afternoon.  

15           So the groundbreaking started on the High NA 

16           EUV Center with completion -- substantial 

17           completion by the end of '25 and delivery of 

18           the tool around that time.

19                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN FAHY:  Thank you so 

20           much.  

21                  And then I also want to -- while I 

22           have you, I want to just put a quick plug in 

23           for the Centers of Excellence, which are so 

24           critical.  As you know, we did the weather 


                                                                   192

 1           one or the atmospheric one at UAlbany a few 

 2           years ago.  We are now shooting to do RNA.  I 

 3           know it wasn't in the Governor's budget, but 

 4           want to get that plug in there.

 5                  My two other questions -- one, again 

 6           for ESD, is broadband.  Local governments, 

 7           are we confident that they'll be able to 

 8           manage the technical aspects of the broadband 

 9           rollout?  

10                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Well, in the 

11           cases that we're working with local 

12           governments, many of these local governments 

13           are already delivering utilities to their 

14           customers, residents.  And so we're confident 

15           that they'll be able to manage that 

16           technology.

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN FAHY:  Okay.  Thank you.  

18           And look forward to hearing more.

19                  And then my last question is for the 

20           arts.  I want to echo so much of what 

21           Assemblymember O'Donnell mentioned, 

22           particularly that multiplier effect with the 

23           arts, which is really astounding, especially 

24           in our rural cores as well as in our small 


                                                                   193

 1           towns.  

 2                  Museums, we have the second oldest 

 3           museum in the country, the Art & History 

 4           Institute, as well as we have a children's 

 5           museum, miSci in Schenectady, really 

 6           struggling.  Is there any flexibility with 

 7           the funding to also assist with art 

 8           showcasing, anything that we can do with 

 9           museums to also assist them?

10                  And I know we need funding right 

11           across the board.

12                  Oh, okay, looking forward to following 

13           up with you.  

14                  EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  We'll get 

15           back to you, yes.

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN FAHY:  But museums are 

17           important.

18                  Thank you, Chair. 

19                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Hi.  Because 

20           we've taken so long, we're going to let our 

21           panelists and anyone else take a five-minute 

22           break for stretching legs and other purposes, 

23           and then we will come right back and 

24           continue.


                                                                   194

 1                  Thank you.

 2                  (A brief recess was taken.)

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblymembers, 

 4           please, the five-minute break has expired.

 5                  All right, we're going to try to move 

 6           along quickly now.  Remember, we don't need 

 7           three minute questions.  

 8                  So anyway, Member Jones, you're up.

 9                  ASSEMBLYMAN JONES:  Good morning.  I'm 

10           ready.  I'm ready.

11                  Good morning, all.  Thank you for 

12           being here and joining us.

13                  I first want to reiterate we do need 

14           to get to the unserved communities with our 

15           broadband program before we think about, you 

16           know, going other places with that unserved, 

17           underserved.  I have many of them in the 

18           North Country, the lovely North Country, the 

19           Adirondacks.  Which leads me to my next 

20           question.  

21                  Any of this ConnectALL money eligible 

22           for cellphone upgrading?  Cellphone service, 

23           is that eligible?

24                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So the federal 


                                                                   195

 1           funding for ConnectALL is not eligible for 

 2           cellphone service.

 3                  Some of this work we're doing, like I 

 4           talked about for the Municipal Infrastructure 

 5           Grant Program, provides for being able to 

 6           leverage fiber for cellphone service, which 

 7           is one of the reasons why we believe this 

 8           program is very important.

 9                  ASSEMBLYMAN JONES:  Okay.  So we're 

10           having issues practically all over, upstate 

11           and probably in the city, with cellphone 

12           coverage.  Can we marry that or use some of 

13           that money to marry this technology to get it 

14           on WiFi, to get it on towers -- or to get 

15           WiFi on these towers to help these 

16           communities out?  

17                  I represent a large swath of the 

18           Adirondacks in the North Country, and the 

19           issue has become more about cellphone service 

20           than broadband, believe it or not.

21                  So can we marry those technologies?  

22           And can we use this money to do that?  

23           There's been a coalition of us upstate that 

24           really want to see this happen.


                                                                   196

 1                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So like I said, 

 2           we are using the money to leverage the fiber 

 3           so that we can create open access networks so 

 4           that these commercial service providers of 

 5           mobile coverage will expand their service.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN JONES:  So we're working 

 7           on that?

 8                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yes.

 9                  ASSEMBLYMAN JONES:  Okay, thank you.

10                  Also, regulation within the 

11           Adirondacks.  We need help with that, because 

12           you -- you can't have a tree that's 50 feet 

13           over a cellphone tower, or trees, and expect 

14           it to work.

15                  My last question is MWBE.  I have been 

16           asking the same question for the last seven 

17           years now.  How is the program working?  I 

18           know there's put in place for an extension in 

19           it.  I believe in the program.  But if we 

20           cannot get our people certified, this is 

21           ridiculous.  I mean, I have women-owned 

22           businesses, minority-owned businesses calling 

23           my office time after time, that says they 

24           can't get certified, can't get certified.  


                                                                   197

 1           And people come in and they ask, and I ask 

 2           this question every time.  They go, What else 

 3           do we need to do?  Do we need to get a 

 4           divorce from a marriage?  Do we need to give 

 5           a blood sample?  What do we need to do?  

 6                  This program needs to run more 

 7           effectively and smoothly so we can get these 

 8           women-owned and minority-owned businesses 

 9           certified.

10                  Thank you.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Member Sillitti.

12                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SILLITTI:  Hi.  Good 

13           afternoon.  So I have a bunch of questions; 

14           I'm going to try to talk really, really fast.

15                  The first is for Executive Director 

16           Mallin.  Thank you, by the way, for your 

17           unwavering support of the arts.  

18                  We have a lot of organizations on 

19           Long Island that, you know, can certainly 

20           benefit from, you know, funding from you 

21           guys.  One of those groups in my district 

22           reached out this week, actually, and said 

23           that Nassau and Suffolk received about 

24           3.5 percent of the council's funding -- 


                                                                   198

 1           although Long Island, as you know, makes up 

 2           about almost 15 percent of the state's 

 3           population.  

 4                  So my question to you is, do those 

 5           percentages sound accurate to you?  If yes, 

 6           what can we do to do better for Long Island, 

 7           get some more funds in?  And if you have a 

 8           breakdown, you don't have to give it to me 

 9           now, of Nassau and Suffolk on the funding 

10           that each get.  

11                  EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  I don't 

12           have that number off the top of my head.  So 

13           can we get back to you on that?

14                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SILLITTI:  Absolutely.  

15           Thank you so much.

16                  EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  Thank you.

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SILLITTI:  Next is for 

18           Commissioner Moy.  Very quick question.  

19                  Are there plans in the works -- 

20           nothing to do with my district -- for 

21           improved ventilation at the LOB building?  

22           The reason why I ask is last year, with the 

23           Canadian wildfires, the Capitol was pretty 

24           okay, we were able to breathe all right.  But 


                                                                   199

 1           man, you walked into that LOB and it was a 

 2           plume of smoke.  And it sat there for days.  

 3                  And that's where all of our staff 

 4           sits.  And, you know, we make them sit all 

 5           day long.  I, for one, told me my staff not 

 6           to come.  

 7                  So anyways, so, you know, again, you 

 8           don't have to get back to me now.  But it's 

 9           something that we had talked about last year, 

10           and I mentioned it to the leadership, and 

11           it's something that I would like you guys to 

12           think about going forward.  We should be 

13           protecting our people that work in this 

14           building.

15                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  I appreciate 

16           the question, Assemblymember.  I'll look into 

17           the specifics of the projects in the 

18           Legislative Office Building.  

19                  There are a number of infrastructure 

20           projects that are planned, and I'll look 

21           specifically around the ventilation and get 

22           back to you.

23                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SILLITTI:  Fantastic.  

24           And then lastly, Commissioner Knight, how are 


                                                                   200

 1           you?  So nice to see you.  

 2                  The Long Island Fund, our favorite 

 3           fund -- my favorite fund.  Approximately how 

 4           much is left that you can tell me in the 

 5           fund?  And I know you probably can't get into 

 6           proposed projects, but if there's proposed 

 7           projects in the works, what's left after 

 8           those?  

 9                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So I can tell 

10           you approximately $200 million is going to be 

11           used to launch a housing fund.

12                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SILLITTI:  Out of what's 

13           left.

14                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yes.

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SILLITTI:  And is there 

16           anything else after that?  

17                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Well, we have a 

18           number of projects that have been funded, you 

19           know.  You know, the -- 

20                  (Overtalk.)

21                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yeah, exactly.  

22           The -- many in your district, yes.

23                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SILLITTI:  All right, 

24           thank you so much, Commissioner.  


                                                                   201

 1                  That's it.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Member 

 3           Cunningham?  

 4                  Member Bores.

 5                  ASSEMBLYMAN BORES:  Good afternoon.  

 6           My first question's for Commissioner Knight.  

 7           I'm glad you mentioned ethical AI is part of 

 8           the Empire AI initiative.  

 9                  There's an initial set of universities 

10           that are involved.  Is it safe to assume that 

11           other universities may be able to join in the 

12           future, that this consortium can grow?

13                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  That is a 

14           possibility.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN BORES:  Great.  

16                  And then has there been an analysis of 

17           the environmental impact, the GPUs running 

18           big calculations can put a big demand on the 

19           grid.  Have we done any planning on adding 

20           new renewable energy or the effects on the 

21           grid of this buildout?

22                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  We would 

23           certainly be looking at how we could mitigate 

24           the --


                                                                   202

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN BORES:  I know it's early 

 2           days in it.

 3                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yes.

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN BORES:  But whatever 

 5           there's any plan around that, or thoughts 

 6           about how we're adding, I'd love if you could 

 7           send that over.

 8                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Okay.  Very 

 9           good.

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN BORES:  Thank you.  

11                  And then Commissioner Moy.  You 

12           mentioned the Environmental Bond Act in your 

13           testimony.  I know you have a role in 

14           distributing money but you're not primarily 

15           deciding where it's going, there's all of 

16           these different agencies involved, et cetera.

17                  I am disturbed that, you know, the 

18           first quarter of a billion dollars has gone 

19           out and none of it was to New York City 

20           projects.  So my question is from your 

21           perspective, are there any challenges or 

22           restrictions to New York City getting this 

23           money from a contracting perspective, from a 

24           procurement perspective?  Anything that 


                                                                   203

 1           you're seeing that would block New York City 

 2           getting access?  

 3                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Thank you for 

 4           that question.  

 5                  I want to clarify that our role in the 

 6           bond act was to support the rollout and some 

 7           of the listening sessions.  The decisions 

 8           around how those funds are going to be 

 9           allocated don't rest with OGS.

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN BORES:  Totally.  And just 

11           from like a contracting, procurement -- any 

12           issues that you're --

13                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  I'm not 

14           familiar with any.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN BORES:  Great.  Thank you.  

16                  And then second of all, as you know, 

17           New York is the last large state to have an 

18           e-procurement system.  The 2023 strategic 

19           plan is actually excellent in addressing 

20           this.  It talks about revising processes as 

21           part of the modernization, which is key.  It 

22           talks about more feedback from users.  So I'm 

23           really excited about what you're doing there, 

24           and I just want to give props on that.  


                                                                   204

 1                  The question is, what metrics will you 

 2           use to evaluate that new system?  Like what 

 3           should we look for changing as it's rolled 

 4           out and expanded?  

 5                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  It's a great 

 6           question.  So right now we're actually in 

 7           design sessions.  We've already begun, in our 

 8           stakeholder analysis, hearing back from 

 9           vendors what is -- what is most painful, 

10           frankly, about using the current systems, 

11           where there are opportunities for using 

12           digital signatures as opposed to paper forms, 

13           where is there repetition.  

14                  There's also information that our 

15           contract managers would want to have better 

16           information on, and frankly the Legislature 

17           does ask questions about, in terms of which 

18           contracts are being used and what is the 

19           level of risk associated with any particular 

20           vendor.

21                  So our hope is to make sure that we 

22           are improving for businesses, so it's less 

23           cumbersome, and that for users of our 

24           contracts they can more easily find services 


                                                                   205

 1           and commodities.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN BORES:  Wonderful.  I 

 3           think those are great goals.  If there are 

 4           metrics underneath that -- you know, how long 

 5           it takes to get a contract, how easy is it to 

 6           find, how many bids, things like that that we 

 7           can just track, that would be very useful.

 8                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Absolutely.  

 9           And happy to hear some feedback from you 

10           about the things that would be most helpful.  

11           So certainly we can follow up.

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN BORES:  Thank you.  

13           Appreciate it.  

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Member Friend.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  Thank you, 

16           Chair Pretlow.  

17                  And I'd like to thank all of you for 

18           being here today and answering our questions.

19                  Commissioner Knight, thank you for 

20           your continued outreach with my office.  

21                  I want to start with the ConnectALL 

22           project that's come up multiple times -- 

23           specifically, the $228 million for the 

24           Municipal Infrastructure Grants.  If I 


                                                                   206

 1           understand it correctly, we're looking at 

 2           that to leverage the possibility of bringing 

 3           more broadband to communities that are 

 4           unserved, is that correct?

 5                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  To leverage that 

 6           to bring unserved, underserved, as well as 

 7           leverage that to bring cellphone service to 

 8           induce providers that can expand their 

 9           coverage for cellphone because of the open 

10           access that we hope to deliver.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  That's great 

12           news.  In the area that I live in, it is 

13           rural, but really the big problem is just the 

14           topography, the hills that we have.  We could 

15           have somebody live just across the street 

16           from somebody that has great coverage, great 

17           cellphone service, but they don't have 

18           broadband and their cellphone service is nil 

19           because they're in the shadow of that hill.  

20                  So I think that's a really wise 

21           investment going forward, and it's definitely 

22           really important that we continue on that.

23                  I'd like to move to RUSH-NY.  And is 

24           this -- I realize that you're going to be 


                                                                   207

 1           investing in the infrastructure.  But the 

 2           housing that's going to be going in, what 

 3           percentage is going to be low-income 

 4           affordable housing or mixed housing?  Do you 

 5           have any idea of that?  

 6                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I think the 

 7           projects are going to be determined on a 

 8           case-by-case basis in terms of the type of 

 9           projects they will be.

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  Okay.  And will 

11           there be an opportunity for public comment 

12           after the project comes forward?  Or how is 

13           that going to work?  

14                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Well, if ESD is 

15           involved in moving a residential project 

16           forward, we're generally going to do a 

17           general project plan, which there is 

18           tremendous opportunity for public comment.

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  Okay.  And then 

20           I'd like to move to the Regional Economic 

21           Development Councils and the new guideline 

22           that they have to be housing-certified.  

23                  So in the Southern Tier, again, we're 

24           a very mixed community.  You have Binghamton 


                                                                   208

 1           within the Southern Tier -- very dense, great 

 2           public transport.  But then you have 

 3           Tioga County.  And just a few years ago when 

 4           we changed their reimbursement for public 

 5           transportation, they no longer have any kind 

 6           of public transportation.  So if you were to 

 7           locate and try to force them to put housing 

 8           somewhere out in the community up in Candor 

 9           or Richford, it could be very difficult for 

10           that person to get to a job or to social 

11           services or to the hospital -- the things 

12           that they might need.

13                  So who's going to decide when they -- 

14           how are they going to get that housing 

15           designation?

16                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Well, the 

17           Governor put out an executive order last year 

18           for a pro-housing designation which would be 

19           determined through HCR.  The municipality 

20           would have to apply, provide an authorized 

21           letter from official -- their zoning codes, 

22           and provide information on housing 

23           application approvals for the last five 

24           years.  And that would provide for the 


                                                                   209

 1           pro-housing designation.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  Okay.  And just 

 3           kind of following up with that, is there 

 4           anything in there to try to help support the 

 5           public transportation system to get that 

 6           reinvigorated in a community like Tioga?  

 7                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I understand 

 8           that that's a -- you know, an economic 

 9           development issue for the county, and so we 

10           can have that discussion at another time.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  Okay.  I really 

12           appreciate that.

13                  And Commissioner Moy, with the 

14           charging stations that are being installed, 

15           is there any coordination, whether it's 

16           school districts -- I mean, we have more than 

17           600 school districts across the state, and 

18           especially, again, in the rural upstate 

19           portion of our communities, the electric 

20           school bus initiative that's going forward 

21           starting in 2027 is going to be devastating.  

22                  So if -- when you're putting these 

23           charging stations in, are you coordinating 

24           with the school districts so that they could 


                                                                   210

 1           have access to them or have them along their 

 2           routes to be able to use them?  

 3                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Appreciate the 

 4           question.  In terms of the EV transition, our 

 5           priority is around the state fleet.  We have 

 6           17,000 vehicles that are light-duty that need 

 7           to be transitioned onto all-EV to meet the 

 8           Governor's goals by 2035.  

 9                  So certainly happy to have some 

10           conversations around where we could partner, 

11           but our priorities are making sure that as we 

12           start to convert those fleet vehicles from 

13           internal-combustion engine to EVs, that we'll 

14           be able to service and support the state 

15           agencies that leverage them.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  Okay.  Thank you.

17                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Absolutely.

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  And I will turn 

19           back my six seconds.

20                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  And if I can 

21           also mention, we do have a state contract 

22           where we do support school districts to help 

23           them with the negotiation and some of the 

24           technical assistance in their application.


                                                                   211

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  Thank you.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Member Gandolfo.

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN GANDOLFO:  Thank you, 

 4           Chairman.

 5                  And thank you all for your testimony 

 6           today.  

 7                  My question is also going to be 

 8           directed at ESD over the NY-RUSH program.  

 9           I'm trying to understand a little better 

10           about how the zoning would work if a 

11           municipality has a property -- the property 

12           would be zoned one way, and -- I'm referring 

13           mostly to the -- one of the publicized 

14           properties in Babylon Village, which is near 

15           the Long Island Rail Road station.  

16                  Now, how would the state work in 

17           conjunction with that municipality to build 

18           housing on that particular property?

19                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So I'm not 

20           familiar with the project that you're 

21           speaking about.  But the state would work 

22           with the municipality and the developer to 

23           figure out what infrastructure needs would be 

24           required to build the property.  


                                                                   212

 1                  And this RUSH fund would probably look 

 2           at it, you know, on a competitive basis 

 3           around how many, you know, units can be 

 4           built, how quickly they can be built, in 

 5           terms of allocating funding for those 

 6           projects.  

 7                  So it depends on the circumstances of 

 8           the project.  And we can talk about the 

 9           particulars at another time.

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN GANDOLFO:  Okay.  All 

11           right.  So just then if a state-owned 

12           property was located within a municipality, 

13           would the state be beholden to that 

14           municipality's local zoning restrictions?  Or 

15           is it just kind of a --

16                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  The state 

17           generally undertakes a GPP process.  And so 

18           that would provide for zoning of the 

19           particular project.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN GANDOLFO:  Okay.  Now -- 

21           and the projects that the state is eyeing on 

22           the SUNY campuses for the housing, I assume 

23           those are going to be tenant-occupied 

24           apartment buildings.  Or is there any plans 


                                                                   213

 1           to do anything owner-occupied with this pot 

 2           of funding?

 3                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  There could be 

 4           some homeownership with this pot of funding.  

 5           It's just -- like I said, it depends on -- 

 6           it's a project-by-project basis.

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN GANDOLFO:  Okay, thank 

 8           you.  And final question -- well, not really 

 9           a question, more of a statement.  I hope that 

10           ESD and the state can figure out a way to 

11           really include the local community if they do 

12           identify the state properties.  Like we heard 

13           with my colleague from Queens, they were 

14           upset that the Creedmoor proposal came out 

15           and they found out via Twitter.  

16                  So I just hope that there is a process 

17           put in place that the local community could 

18           weigh in, and the municipality isn't  

19           blindsided by it.  So just please take that 

20           under consideration.

21                  Thank you.  

22                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Absolutely.  

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  (Inaudible.)  

24           Lemon-odeez?


                                                                   214

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN LEMONDES:  Le-mondese.  

 2                  Thank you, Chair.  

 3                  Thank you, panelists, for testifying 

 4           today.  I appreciate it.  

 5                  First, a statement.  I want to 

 6           acknowledge the continued need for rural 

 7           broadband enhancements.  I know there's been 

 8           some, but I want to make sure that that is 

 9           communicated for Central New York as well.

10                  I want to read something, and then 

11           I'll ask my questions after.  Acknowledging 

12           that New York's business climate is impeded 

13           by thousands of pages of regulations, I want 

14           to read to you three rankings.  New York 

15           State ranks 49th in state business tax 

16           climate.  New York State additionally ranked 

17           49th, best and worst states for business.  

18           New York State received a grade of F by the 

19           Thumbtack Small Business Friendliness Survey.

20                  Recognizing where we are, generally on 

21           the bottom of the 50 states when it comes to 

22           business friendliness, what regulatory 

23           burdens affecting small businesses are your 

24           top priority to eliminate?


                                                                   215

 1                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So thank you for 

 2           that.  I understand the need for looking at 

 3           regulatory reform.  

 4                  Right now there are no regulatory 

 5           focus areas that we are looking at.  We're 

 6           really looking at trying to create a healthy 

 7           and resilient environment for businesses to 

 8           locate and operate in New York State.

 9                  The Reshoring Institute deemed 

10           New York number one in reshoring advanced 

11           manufacturing jobs.  And so more companies 

12           are coming to New York to locate for what I 

13           believe to be superior access to utilities 

14           and power and water and the ingredients that 

15           you need for advanced manufacturing.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN LEMONDES:  So thank you 

17           for that answer.  

18                  How do you think New York State 

19           compares to other states when it comes to our 

20           regulatory environment?  And as was cited 

21           previously, lots of businesses leaving, lots 

22           of jobs being left behind.  Let's just take 

23           right in Central New York, Remington Arms 

24           factory -- started in 1816, iconic national 


                                                                   216

 1           company.  The last of its 207 jobs are going 

 2           to be left.

 3                  So I'm wondering what we're going to 

 4           do to bring more people in, to bring more 

 5           businesses in, in light of what has happened.  

 6           And I know you can't answer that right now.  

 7           That's a deep question.  I would encourage 

 8           correspondence, and ask for that.  

 9                  Thank you.  Thank you, Chair.

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Member De Los 

11           Santos.  

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN DE LOS SANTOS:  All right.  

13           Thank you so much for your time here today.

14                  As you know, a lot of our small 

15           businesses, mom-and-pops, have not fully 

16           recovered since COVID.  So I'm curious to 

17           know what's the plan moving forward to ensure 

18           that a lot of those businesses that remain in 

19           underserved communities receive the 

20           assistance and support that they need.

21                  In addition to that, I'm looking at 

22           the 2019 Annual Report on the State of Small 

23           Businesses.  The percentage, 3 percent.  And 

24           when I look at that, can you please provide 


                                                                   217

 1           insight into the methodology that was used to 

 2           calculate the percentage percent in order to 

 3           better understand the accuracy and the 

 4           reliability of the data?

 5                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So I'll talk 

 6           first about the state Small Business Credit 

 7           Initiative that has been provided by the 

 8           federal government for small businesses.  We 

 9           know small businesses have had a tough time 

10           recovering from COVID and just making their 

11           way out.

12                  And so this fund, which will be 

13           leveraged ten times, it will be a $5 billion 

14           fund to provide access to capital to small 

15           businesses around a number of products -- 

16           loan products, guarantee products, a number 

17           of products that small businesses can access.

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN DE LOS SANTOS:  How will 

19           this information be provided to them?  How do 

20           they access this information?  

21                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So we've worked 

22           with community-based organizations that are 

23           focused on access to capital.  So CDFIs 

24           across the state know that we have this 


                                                                   218

 1           funding and can provide access to many of 

 2           these programs.

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN DE LOS SANTOS:  I'm trying 

 4           to get, also, clarity on the method that was 

 5           used as it relates to the 2019 report, the 

 6           3 percent.  What took place?  How do you 

 7           explain the percentage percent in order 

 8           for -- to create more accuracy and more 

 9           reliability on the data that was presented on 

10           that report?  I think it's a 3 percent, and 

11           then the other shows on the summary, in the 

12           Executive Summary, shows minus 3.6.

13                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  And that -- 

14           excuse me, that is in reference to?

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN DE LOS SANTOS:  The Small 

16           Business Report.

17                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Small Business 

18           Report.  In what dimension?  

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN DE LOS SANTOS:  As it 

20           relates to the growth in economy trends to 

21           small businesses.  I'm just trying to get the 

22           calculation.  How do you get there?

23                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So I need to 

24           take a look at that report.  It was done 


                                                                   219

 1           before I was in this seat.  And I can get 

 2           back to you on that.

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN DE LOS SANTOS:  All right, 

 4           thank you.

 5                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Member Vanel.  

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN VANEL:  Good afternoon, 

 7           Commissioners and Executive Director.  

 8                  I have three things.  I'm going to 

 9           talk about the RUSH program with -- at 

10           Creedmoor, which is -- which I share that, in 

11           that district.  Then I'll talk about the 

12           broadband connectivity program and Empire AI.

13                  First the RUSH program at Creedmoor.  

14           I'm really concerned that I also found out 

15           about the program on social media.  We are 

16           from a district and a community of 

17           single-family homeowners, low density.  

18           Really concerned about the scale and the 

19           scope of that project, and really concerned 

20           that we participate fully, the lawmakers, the 

21           policymakers, and the community.  Can we get 

22           a commitment to work to figure out this 

23           process?

24                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  You can 


                                                                   220

 1           absolutely get a commitment that our team 

 2           will be working with the local elected 

 3           community and community stakeholders as we go 

 4           through the GPP process.

 5                  ASSEMBLYMAN VANEL:  Okay.  So now 

 6           ConnectALL, the broadband connectivity 

 7           program.  Really important.  We were looking 

 8           at the ACP program to see how it was spent 

 9           and that money was spent.  Concerned that the 

10           money is running out.  But also concerned 

11           about the quality of the services.  Right?  

12                  So people were getting not 

13           good-quality services, right?  So the 

14           megabits per second were averaging, under 

15           50 megabits per second, which is really slow 

16           quality.  So concerned about that.  

17                  Also concerned about the affordability 

18           of data plans.  So even for, you know, 

19           average-income individuals, the average price 

20           of a data plan is over $100.  Really 

21           concerned about what we're doing with 

22           affordability.

23                  So yeah, if you could address those 

24           things.


                                                                   221

 1                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So I'll start 

 2           with your first point with respect to -- 

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN VANEL:  Wait, let me get 

 4           one more question in before my time ends.  

 5           Empire AI.  Really concerned about Empire AI.  

 6           I know it's broad, or what have you.  But 

 7           we're concerned about the broadness of how 

 8           broad it should be.  

 9                  So we're concerned about -- you know, 

10           with the already wide digital divide and 

11           knowledge gap, and especially when, you know, 

12           technologies like AI coming, we're really 

13           concerned about making sure that we invest in 

14           training, we invest in making sure we close 

15           the digital divide.  We also have to invest 

16           in making sure that there's regional 

17           diversity, so people across the state are 

18           exposed to training in these technologies.  

19                  Also concerned that our community 

20           colleges aren't participating.  So we'd like 

21           to see training and access to these 

22           technologies, to women and to minorities.

23                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So I'll go back 

24           to your question around ConnectALL.  When you 


                                                                   222

 1           talk about underserved, the way we define 

 2           underserved is being able to get -- not being 

 3           able to get service of a hundred megabytes 

 4           per second.  And so that's why we're looking 

 5           at -- well, I can talk to you about that 

 6           going forward.

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN VANEL:  Okay.  

 8                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Member Lucas.

 9                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Good afternoon, 

10           everyone.  Thank you so much.  

11                  So from the time that I've actually 

12           been in office, I've talked about workforce, 

13           creating incubators, piloting programs in 

14           areas like East New York, specifically 

15           East New York.  

16                  So I recently watched the Governor 

17           speak about the four workforce programs for 

18           potential industries that are coming.  I 

19           specifically spoke about CIMR, which is 

20           continuous infectious microbial reduction, 

21           which addresses the killing of mold and 

22           infections without disturbing infrastructure, 

23           which is an emerging technology that's 

24           available now that's being contracted through 


                                                                   223

 1           the National Guard.  It does not discriminate 

 2           in its workforce.  And it actually has jobs 

 3           that will journey with the individuals.  

 4                  I simply asked for funding when it 

 5           came to developing a training center, not 

 6           only just to train for those specific things, 

 7           but those partners with NYSERDA in areas of 

 8           such.

 9                  I know that ESD has workforce; I heard 

10           you talk about home ownership opportunities.  

11           And this would be a perfect marriage as it 

12           pertains to building a healthy home and 

13           developing a strong workforce.

14                  So my question is how do we access 

15           some of these workforce dollars in these 

16           programs to roll it into CIMR training and 

17           business development for contractors in my 

18           district?  

19                  Additionally, to add to that, I'd be 

20           interested in knowing is there any discussion 

21           of bringing back or creating a new 

22           Empire Zone program, which actually began 

23           first in the designated zone of 

24           East New York, Spring Creek, Fairfield and 


                                                                   224

 1           the East Brooklyn BID.  And what overall are 

 2           we planning to do to address underresourced 

 3           communities downstate?  That's my questions.  

 4                  Thank you.

 5                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Thank you, 

 6           Assemblywoman.  I think we had a preliminary 

 7           discussion about --

 8                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Yes, in all 

 9           fairness.

10                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yes.  And we 

11           would like to continue to have that dialogue 

12           around workforce development, training.  

13           We'll put you in touch with the Office of 

14           Workforce Development to think about how this 

15           training could be deployed for members in 

16           your district.

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Okay.  And it 

18           would definitely be an expansion to other 

19           districts, because they can be training with 

20           other areas.  

21                  Thank you.

22                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Thank you.  

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you.  

24                  Member Jon Rivera.


                                                                   225

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN RIVERA:  Good afternoon.  

 2           The first question is for Executive Director 

 3           Mallin.  

 4                  In your statement you said:  "The 

 5           nonprofit sector in Western New York 

 6           generated 380 million in economic activity, 

 7           including 189 million in audience spending, 

 8           and supporting over 8,000 jobs."

 9                  I'm happy that you're touting Western 

10           New York, because obviously that's my neck of 

11           the woods.  But I obviously have to, you 

12           know, state something that's pretty glaring, 

13           and that is, you know, we're touting the 

14           successes of arts funding while we're 

15           simultaneously proposing a reduction of tens 

16           of millions of dollars in arts funding.  So 

17           on one hand we're excited about what we're 

18           doing, but on the other hand it's almost as 

19           if we're penalizing entities for doing good 

20           work.

21                  So I know that it's not your call to 

22           determine how much funding is in for NYSCA in 

23           this budget, but what's your take on 

24           organizations that are, like you said, 


                                                                   226

 1           supporting 8,000 jobs and facing pretty 

 2           serious cuts?

 3                  EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  As I said 

 4           earlier, we will, you know, absolutely be 

 5           strategic about the budget that the Governor 

 6           has put forth -- or is enacted here.  

 7                  I think, going back to 

 8           Senator Krueger's point about the multiplier 

 9           effect, understanding that more directly.  

10           And I think that NYSCA does have the 

11           opportunity to connect the dots, you know, 

12           with ESD and other agencies to, you know, 

13           foster the ripple effect of these artists and 

14           arts organizations.  Because we know they're 

15           huge, and we know they revitalize.  So --

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN RIVERA:  It -- and I don't 

17           want to cut you off, but obviously, you know, 

18           I'm short on time here.  It's a little 

19           confusing, obviously, to say that we're going 

20           to focus so much on this ripple effect and 

21           everything else we're going to be doing, 

22           while simultaneously looking at the numbers 

23           that we're looking at, so ...

24                  I'm hopeful that something looks 


                                                                   227

 1           different soon, but I know that there's a lot 

 2           of entities probably all over the state that 

 3           are tremendously concerned.  

 4                  The next question is for 

 5           Commissioner Moy.  And that is earlier this 

 6           year you visited Lafayette High School in my 

 7           district -- also Senator Ryan's district -- 

 8           and you started your feedback session tour 

 9           around language access, which is an issue 

10           that's super-close to my heart.  How's that 

11           going?

12                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  The Office of 

13           Language Access just celebrated its one-year 

14           anniversary, and it's really been an 

15           incredible journey.  The team has staffed up.  

16           We've identified data analysts.  We're 

17           starting to work with agencies to help them 

18           with their expansion of additional languages 

19           beyond those that are mandated.  We've also 

20           expanded our work to also consider ASL, which 

21           is beyond, a little bit, of the scope of the 

22           executive order.  

23                  It's been a tremendous opportunity to 

24           also think about the ways the state can 


                                                                   228

 1           change the way it offers services.  And part 

 2           of those priorities for the upcoming year, 

 3           which the Governor has included, is the 

 4           language access certification process.

 5                  Thank you very much.  We'll share 

 6           more.

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you.

 8                  Member Gray.

 9                  ASSEMBLYMAN GRAY:  Thank you very 

10           much.  I appreciate it.

11                  Commissioners, thank you for being 

12           here.  Patience is a virtue.  Look at all the 

13           real estate we have up here now -- 

14                  (Laughter.)

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN GRAY:  -- so there's 

16           plenty of places to get seats.

17                  So a couple of things I just want to 

18           say.  Commissioner Moy, thank you very 

19           much -- and Commissioner Knight, both.  We 

20           were here last year, we talked about the 

21           St. Lawrence Psychiatric Center property.  A 

22           year later, we have action on that property 

23           now, after many -- much communication.  So I 

24           appreciate your diligence in that regard.


                                                                   229

 1                  Also, for the utilization of state 

 2           buildings, you know -- and a lot of 

 3           communities will reinstate those other 

 4           centers of activities for both cultural and 

 5           festivals and things like that.  So the 

 6           affordability is important to that.

 7                  And Commissioner Knight, thank you 

 8           very much for your attention to Clarkson.  I 

 9           know you've come up for the annual event that 

10           we have up in -- it was Lake Placid last 

11           year.  So it's important, I think, that we're 

12           going to connect Clarkson, the R&D at 

13           Clarkson, with Micron.  You know, I hear the 

14           Governor talk about the Thruway corridor.  I 

15           like to say it's the Route 81 corridor, 

16           anchored by Clarkson R&D.  We have the 

17           workforce development that we're just putting 

18           in a significant amount of millions of 

19           dollars into developing out at Fort Drum that 

20           will support Micron.  So I want to continue 

21           to emphasize the I-81 corridor.

22                  So a couple of things, one on the 

23           ConnectALL.  Is there any -- is there going 

24           to be any consideration -- we have a lot of 


                                                                   230

 1           towers that are out there currently for, you 

 2           know, emergency services.  And a lot of those 

 3           towers are underutilized, and we have 

 4           vertical space available.  

 5                  Is there any -- is there consideration 

 6           for WiFi and/or cellphone coverage on some of 

 7           the emergency towers that we have already, 

 8           collocating on some of the -- you know, many 

 9           of these counties are undergoing 

10           multi-million-dollar investments in their 

11           emergency tower systems.  So is there any 

12           consideration for that?

13                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I know that the 

14           office is looking at siting guidelines, and 

15           so I'm sure that will be a part of the 

16           consideration.

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN GRAY:  Okay, yup.  I 

18           would, you know -- it's just -- I think it's 

19           imperative that we work with the counties to 

20           try to, you know, collocate on there.

21                  Talking a little bit about RUSH-NY.  

22           you know, I've been very concerned about our 

23           nonperforming assets that we have throughout 

24           the state, whether they're on SUNY campuses, 


                                                                   231

 1           the Psychiatric Center property, the prisons 

 2           that are decommissioned and vacant.  So we 

 3           have a lot of, you know, underperforming or 

 4           nonperforming assets.  

 5                  What -- so I know you talked a little 

 6           bit about the engagement of the communities.  

 7           Can you talk a little bit more about that?  

 8           You know, where are they going to be?  Is it 

 9           going to be a very active approach?  Do 

10           communities have to come to you folks?  Do 

11           you have to come to the communities?  Or how 

12           is that going to play out?

13                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So thank you for 

14           that question.  As you know, we wrapped up 

15           the work of the Prison Redevelopment 

16           Commission, which provided for some 

17           recommendations related to closures.  

18                  And so, you know, our office, ESD, is 

19           really focused on the post-closure process, 

20           and we'll be engaged with community leaders, 

21           elected officials to understand what it is 

22           that they want to see in their community and 

23           how we can be supportive in repositioning the 

24           property for an economic development use.


                                                                   232

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN GRAY:  Okay.  So -- and 

 2           then I just wanted to touch base a little bit 

 3           on the nexus for the RUSH program and the 

 4           requirement on the REDC to be pro-housing 

 5           communities.

 6                  So a community has to develop a 

 7           pro-housing approach, right, to be eligible 

 8           for -- you know, to move forward, as well as 

 9           the DRI.  Right?  But they also have 

10           state-owned property that could be utilized 

11           for housing.  So there's got to be a nexus 

12           somewhere in there between those two 

13           programs.

14                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So when we're 

15           looking at some of our traditionally very 

16           successful programs like REDC and DRI 

17           programs, the Governor is looking for a 

18           pro-housing certification that HCR will 

19           deliver to the municipality, that would 

20           provide for -- is a requirement to access 

21           some of that funding.

22                  So we certainly look at 

23           pro-housing-designated communities, and 

24           separately look at the assets that are 


                                                                   233

 1           available for redevelopment.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN GRAY:  Okay.  Thank you 

 3           very much.

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Member Walsh.

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WALSH:  Good afternoon.

 6                  Commissioner Knight, these questions 

 7           are for you, and they have to do with 

 8           unemployment insurance.

 9                  At the beginning of the COVID-19 

10           pandemic New York State borrowed $10 billion 

11           from the federal government to help pay for 

12           unemployment insurance claims through 

13           unemployment insurance -- the Unemployment 

14           Insurance Trust Fund, the UITF.  Which, as 

15           you know, is funded by unemployment payroll 

16           taxes paid for by all for-profit businesses 

17           in the state.

18                  New York State has a $7.3 billion 

19           outstanding balance owed to the federal UITF.  

20           According to the Citizens Budget Commission, 

21           31 other states use CARES Act funding and 

22           ARPA funds to repay some or all of that debt.  

23                  Why didn't New York State do that, and 

24           wouldn't that have been a prudent thing to 


                                                                   234

 1           do?

 2                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I understand, 

 3           you know, the impact that this is having on 

 4           businesses across the state.  But it's my 

 5           understanding that this interest is being 

 6           paid down.  

 7                  This is something that is happening 

 8           through the Department of Labor.  I'm in 

 9           touch with the commissioner, and she's very 

10           aware of this item.

11                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WALSH:  Yeah, we're all 

12           aware of this item.  I mean, this kind of 

13           goes into my second question, which I'll ask 

14           real quickly.

15                  Due to the unpaid debt, the state owed 

16           and will continue to owe in coming years an 

17           interest assessment surcharge, an IAS, to the 

18           federal government.  In 2022, the state 

19           passed the interest payment of $160 million 

20           on to employers.  These businesses have 

21           already had to weather through the COVID 

22           pandemic and all the restrictions that came 

23           with that -- many of whom never reopened, 

24           even -- and now they're being crushed by that 


                                                                   235

 1           IAS surcharge and the FUTA tax.

 2                  What is the state's plan?  Is it to 

 3           continue to let New York State businesses 

 4           suffer, you know, under these taxes?  And 

 5           does the state have any plan to cover the 

 6           costs of the IAS for employers, as proposed 

 7           by a bill carried by one of my colleagues, 

 8           Mr. Ra, Assembly Bill 2982?

 9                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Assemblywoman, I 

10           understand, you know, like I said, the 

11           critical nature of this issue.  I know that 

12           my colleague, the commissioner of Labor, I 

13           think is going to be testifying this 

14           afternoon, and I would defer to her to answer 

15           that question.

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WALSH:  And I would love 

17           to be here to ask it again, but I'll be in 

18           session.  So you got the question instead 

19           of -- hopefully someone else will ask that of 

20           Commissioner Reardon, because, you know, our 

21           small businesses and our businesses are so 

22           important to our state.  And as has been 

23           mentioned by a lot of our colleagues, we have 

24           businesses that are finding the climate in 


                                                                   236

 1           New York State -- not the weather climate, 

 2           but the business climate -- so unfavorable 

 3           that they're leaving.

 4                  And I think that this type of 

 5           decision-making at the state level has been a 

 6           contributing factor.  

 7                  Thank you for your time.

 8                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you.

 9                  I'm going to call the absentees  

10           {inaudible}.  

11                  The Assembly is done.  Thank you.

12                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And thank you 

13           very much.  The Senate had been done.  So we 

14           appreciate all of your many hours with us 

15           today.  

16                  I think everybody has some questions 

17           to respond to in writing.  Again, forward 

18           them to the Ways and Means staff and to the 

19           Senate Finance staff, and we'll make sure 

20           everybody gets the answers.  

21                  Appreciate your time today.  Thank 

22           you.  

23                  And just for those of you who thought 

24           we would never finish Panel A, we are now 


                                                                   237

 1           inviting Panel B to come down.  Some people 

 2           who might want to grab Panel A members, 

 3           please do in it the hallway so we can move 

 4           quickly to the next panel:  The Dia Art 

 5           Foundation, ArtsNYS, and ArtsWestchester.

 6                  And for legislators and panel, we now 

 7           are the stage of the hearing where each 

 8           panelist has only three minutes to present 

 9           their testimony, and each legislator has only 

10           three minutes to ask and get answered their 

11           questions.  We refer to these as the 

12           lightning rounds.

13                  So I see our Panel B people.  

14                  (Off the record.)

15                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Good afternoon.  

16                  All right.  And again, I mentioned it 

17           many hours ago, but these microphones are a 

18           challenge to push.  But you need to push the 

19           little button till the green light goes on in 

20           order to have your mic on, and then you push 

21           that button till you get red to turn the mic 

22           off.  

23                  And some of us are up here laughing, 

24           because some of them just don't work.  But 


                                                                   238

 1           we're going to do our best.  It's a test of 

 2           your physical strength of your index finger, 

 3           I think.  

 4                  So with that, why don't we start with 

 5           Hannah Gompertz, if I said it correctly.  If 

 6           not, she'll correct me.  

 7                  MS. GOMPERTZ:  Yes, that's right.  

 8                  Hi, my name is Hannah Gompertz.  I'm 

 9           the director of communications and marketing 

10           at Dia Art Foundation.  And thank you, I'm 

11           very happy to provide this testimonial on 

12           behalf of Dia about the potential the arts 

13           and cultural resources have to enact powerful 

14           economic and community change.  

15                  Dia was founded in 1974 to help 

16           artists achieve visionary projects that might 

17           not otherwise be realized because of scale or 

18           scope.  Today Dia operates sites in New York 

19           City, Long Island, and in the Western 

20           United States.  

21                  We brought our internationally 

22           significant program to the Hudson Valley with 

23           the opening of Dia Beacon in 2003.  Dia 

24           Beacon is one of the largest contemporary art 


                                                                   239

 1           exhibition spaces in the country.  When we 

 2           opened, the City of Beacon was a small 

 3           community struggling to overcome the loss of 

 4           local factories and manufacturing jobs.  

 5           Today, it is a vibrant Hudson Valley 

 6           destination.  

 7                  Dia and the museum have played a vital 

 8           role not just in this transformation, but in 

 9           the area's ongoing pandemic recovery over the 

10           past three years.  It's been estimated that 

11           the Dutchess County cultural sector has an 

12           economic impact of $28.5 million annually and 

13           creates more than 1,000 jobs.  Dia Beacon 

14           alone brings in an estimated $8 million in 

15           regional tourism per year, and invests about 

16           $6 million in the operation of the museum and 

17           its payroll of around 100 employees and 

18           25 teaching artists.  

19                       Beyond this revenue, Dia, like 

20           the majority of arts organizations, provides 

21           a range of critical services to our 

22           community.  The museum offers school group 

23           tours, professional development for local 

24           educators, a summer intensive for English 


                                                                   240

 1           language learners, workshops for people 

 2           living with dementia, workforce development 

 3           opportunities for teens and young people, and 

 4           a range of partnerships with local 

 5           organizations.  

 6                  Our work would not be possible without 

 7           the support of New York State.  A 

 8           relationship with Empire State Development 

 9           helped us to complete the renovation and 

10           opening of Dia Beacon 20 years ago, and 

11           annual funding from the New York State 

12           Council on the Arts supports our general 

13           operations.  

14                  Recent gifts have funded projects like 

15           a facade restoration, an HVAC replacement, 

16           restroom renovations, and the expansion of a 

17           daily free admission program which now serves 

18           residents of both Beacon and Newburgh.  

19           Beginning this summer, state funding will 

20           also help realize a major landscaping 

21           project.  

22                  We rely on our regional electeds to 

23           understand these needs, and funding 

24           distributed through state agencies is 


                                                                   241

 1           critical in helping us maintain our sites and 

 2           core operations without compromising our 

 3           programming or community services.  Your 

 4           support fuels the creative economy and allows 

 5           us to continue expanding our impact beyond 

 6           our museum walls.  

 7                  The success of Dia Beacon over the 

 8           past 20 years is itself a testimonial to what 

 9           can be achieved with these investments.  

10                  Thank you very much for allowing me to 

11           testify today.

12                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

13                  Next up we have Elizabeth Reiss, 

14           ArtsNYS.  

15                  MS. REISS:  Hello.  Thank you for 

16           having us.  

17                  On behalf of ArtsNYS, I also want to 

18           share with you that I'm the director of the 

19           Art Center of the Capital Region in Troy.  So 

20           I came a long way for this.  

21                  We are here today to share our hope 

22           that the New York State Council on the Arts 

23           budget will continue at $100 million, with an 

24           additional $50 million allocated for capital 


                                                                   242

 1           programming.  Furthermore, we request that 

 2           $10 million be allocated to regional arts 

 3           councils.  

 4                  We all have heard today that our 

 5           communities spark revitalization, that the 

 6           arts help spark revitalization.  Our request 

 7           for $10 million to be directed to arts 

 8           councils is grounded in a local 

 9           decision-making approach that enables the 

10           councils to reach deep into their regions to 

11           support groups that directly serve and 

12           strengthen their own communities.  

13                  In 2023, seven arts councils funded 

14           861 projects across 21 counties -- 

15           49.7 percent of those projects engaged 

16           diverse, historically marginalized, or 

17           underresourced communities; 39 percent 

18           reached first-time grant applicants; and 

19           22.8 percent supported Black, indigenous and 

20           people of color initiatives.  

21                  Given the tremendous success of this 

22           model, we advocate for its renewal and 

23           expansion to all 62 counties of New York 

24           State, especially as we've seen unprecedented 


                                                                   243

 1           growth of artist populations outside of 

 2           New York City. 

 3                  In 2021, in upstate, the artist 

 4           population increased by 26.5 percent, 

 5           significantly outpacing total population 

 6           growth in those areas.  Here in Albany, the 

 7           resident artist population growth surged by 

 8           50 percent, compared to 3 percent growth 

 9           overall.  It's clear that focusing in on our 

10           regions is the next step in growth for art in 

11           New York State.  

12                  Echoing Ms. Mallin's and NYSCA's 

13           testimony, it's clear that the arts sector is 

14           a robust economic engine.  We already heard 

15           that Western New York's nonprofit arts sector 

16           generates $381 million in audience and 

17           organizational spending and it supports 8,221 

18           jobs.  In the Greater Syracuse area, 

19           47 organizations reported over $148 million 

20           in economic activity and supported almost 

21           6,000 jobs.  Long Island's non-for-profit 

22           sector and audiences contributed 330 million 

23           in economic activity, supporting 4,900 jobs.  

24           In Rochester, the arts generated 93 million 


                                                                   244

 1           to the local economy and supported 3,600 

 2           jobs.  

 3                  Locally, here in Troy, state funding 

 4           was used to create a public art program that 

 5           revitalized an alley that was in disuse and 

 6           dangerous.  And now we're sparking tourism 

 7           because we just won USA Today's Best 

 8           New Festival of the Year.  

 9                  And so we can see directly how the 

10           arts help our community, and we hope that we 

11           can continue to depend on the support of 

12           New York State.  

13                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you very 

14           much. 

15                  Next we have ArtsWestchester, 

16           Susan Abbott.  

17                  MS. ABBOTT:  Good afternoon.  My name 

18           is Sue Abbott, and I'm the director of 

19           grant programs at ArtsWestchester in 

20           Westchester County.  On behalf of our staff, 

21           board, and our CEO, Janet Langsam, it is a 

22           pleasure and a privilege to be speaking in 

23           front of you today.  

24                  Echoing the sentiments of my 


                                                                   245

 1           colleagues that have already spoken today, 

 2           I'm here to speak about the impact of the 

 3           arts, particularly in the Lower Hudson 

 4           Valley, and also the impact that the New York 

 5           State Legislature has had in supporting the 

 6           arts in our area.  

 7                  ArtsWestchester is one of nine local 

 8           arts councils around New York State that 

 9           received significant support in several 

10           recent budget cycles.  We are so grateful for 

11           your leadership and for Majority Leader 

12           Stewart-Cousins' support in securing a 

13           $10 million appropriation in the State Senate 

14           Budget for regional arts councils funding for 

15           2023 and again for 2024.  Within that 

16           allocation, seven regional councils -- 

17           including ArtsWestchester -- each received 

18           $1 million, and two others each received 

19           500,000.  

20                  With this funding, in the 2023 grant 

21           year ArtsWestchester awarded $550,000 in 

22           grants to 100 organizations and 64 individual 

23           artists between Westchester and Rockland 

24           counties.  This is light-years away from just 


                                                                   246

 1           five years ago in the 2018 cycle, when we 

 2           awarded 105,000 across 45 organizations and 

 3           just five artists.  Within those 164 grantees 

 4           are 65 who received ArtsWestchester funding 

 5           for the first time.  

 6                  The support that you allocated 

 7           fostered new relationships across all 

 8           disciplines:  Artists created new work, so it 

 9           furthered their artistic careers; students of 

10           all ages experienced arts education programs; 

11           and audiences were drawn to performances and 

12           events throughout Westchester and Rockland. 

13                  In a recent survey of this year's 

14           grantees, over 80 percent of respondents said 

15           that this awarded funding enabled them to 

16           expand their audiences.  Like many of our 

17           colleagues, ArtsWestchester also participated 

18           in the recent Americans for the Arts economic 

19           impact survey, and the results showed the 

20           arts generated 182.2 million in direct 

21           economic activity in Westchester.  

22                  It has been said many times today:  

23           the arts support the economy.  And this 

24           funding is vital in the ongoing creative and 


                                                                   247

 1           economic recovery of the arts industries in 

 2           Westchester and Rockland.  With that in mind, 

 3           we have submitted our request for the renewal 

 4           of the $10 million appropriation to the 2025 

 5           budget which includes, again, a $1 million 

 6           allocation for each of seven councils, 

 7           including ArtsWestchester.  

 8                  On behalf of the organizations and 

 9           artists we represent, we thank you for your 

10           dedication to the arts.  We are eager to 

11           continue this partnership and build an even 

12           more vibrant, inclusive, and artistically 

13           rich New York State.  

14                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you very 

15           much, all of you.  Appreciate it.  

16                  And Sean Ryan will be our first 

17           questioner.  

18                  SENATOR RYAN:  It's actually more of a 

19           thank you.  So thanks for the work, you know, 

20           that you do in the arts.  

21                  I think there's a growing acceptance 

22           that the arts, besides enriching communities 

23           and changing lives, are also a good economic 

24           development program.  I've seen in Buffalo 


                                                                   248

 1           the combination of arts and the historic tax 

 2           credit has really made downtown Buffalo and 

 3           different parts of Buffalo a different place.  

 4                  So we support the arts, whether it's 

 5           theater or big arts, like our Albright-Knox 

 6           Art Gallery that recently underwent a major 

 7           expansion that brings people in.  We know 

 8           that over a 52-week period, more people come 

 9           into Buffalo to see the arts than they do to 

10           come in to see professional sports.  

11                  But we do find ourselves continually 

12           in this battle where you have to take a real 

13           long time to explain why the arts are 

14           important to the economy.  And it doesn't 

15           really necessarily make sense to a lot of 

16           people at first.  

17                  So, you know, I will endeavor -- if I 

18           had a magic wand -- that more Empire State 

19           Development funds would be made available to 

20           the arts, because your arts organizations 

21           often show a much better return on investment 

22           than some of the out-of-state corporate 

23           entities that we fund.  

24                  So I would encourage you to keep up 


                                                                   249

 1           your good work, but also keep making the link 

 2           between how arts can help strengthen our 

 3           economy.  

 4                  Thank you.  

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Assembly?

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  There are no 

 7           questions from this side.  

 8                  But I also want to echo the Senator's 

 9           remarks.  The arts are very important.  And 

10           give my regards to Janet.  

11                  But just a quick note.  When you're 

12           asking for something, don't say how much you 

13           got the last time.  Keep that quiet, you 

14           know.

15                  (Laughter.) 

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you.  

17                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I also just want 

18           to thank you all for testifying and 

19           reinforcing what I had said earlier in front 

20           of the previous panel about that we don't 

21           look at the arts as economic development, 

22           when all the data shows it is a direct 

23           correlation between supporting the arts and 

24           investing in activities that generate 


                                                                   250

 1           enormous amounts of money at the local level.  

 2                  I happen to represent an island called 

 3           Manhattan.  We have a little bit of the arts 

 4           going on there.  But we know that it is a 

 5           huge draw for tourism, for business, for the 

 6           correlated businesses to live performance of 

 7           all kinds, and the visual arts.  

 8                  And we even recognize, many of us, 

 9           that it's a much better use of our time and 

10           money to invest in the arts than, say, have 

11           casinos in Manhattan, just as an example of 

12           what is economic development and what is not.  

13                  So I want to thank you all for being 

14           here.  I don't think we had any other 

15           Senators, so we're going to thank you and 

16           move on to the next panel.  Thank you very 

17           much.  

18                  (Off the record.) 

19                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  NYFIRST, Fund for 

20           Innovation in Research and Scientific Talent, 

21           Columbia University Irving Medical Center; 

22           Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine; 

23           and the Food Industry Alliance of New York 

24           State.  Clearly all related to health.  


                                                                   251

 1                  And we have Ross Frommer.  We have a 

 2           replacement for Richard Terry -- I believe 

 3           John Weston.  And we're looking for a third 

 4           representative.  

 5                  We only have two on the panel?

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  I only have two 

 7           on my list.

 8                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Oh, just two?  

 9           Oops.  Sorry, one got moved off.  Sorry about 

10           that.  

11                  Okay.  Hello, gentlemen.  How are you?

12                  MR. FROMMER:  Good afternoon.

13                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Why don't we 

14           start with you.  

15                  MR. FROMMER:  Good afternoon, and 

16           thank you for inviting me to appear before 

17           you today.  My name is Ross Frommer, vice 

18           president for government and community 

19           affairs at Columbia University Irving Medical 

20           Center.  

21                  Columbia is a member of the Associated 

22           Medical Schools of New York, on whose behalf 

23           I am also appearing.  AMSNY represents the 

24           interests of New York's 17 medical schools.  


                                                                   252

 1                  I am here today to speak on behalf of 

 2           the New York Fund for Innovation in Research 

 3           and Scientific Development {sic} program, or 

 4           NYFIRST.  Senator Ryan, that also spelled out 

 5           a good -- a nice word.  

 6                  As it is commonly referred to, NYFIRST 

 7           is an economic development initiative run by 

 8           Empire State Development, which provides 

 9           funds to medical schools across New York 

10           State to recruit and retain top scientific 

11           talent. 

12                  Six billion dollars.  That's how much 

13           Texas, the State of Texas, has spent on 

14           supporting biomedical research out of 

15           government funds in Texas.  Eight-point-five 

16           to $9 billion, that's how much California has 

17           spent.  Two-point-five, Massachusetts.  One 

18           billion, Connecticut.  And many other 

19           states -- although numbers smaller in terms 

20           of proportion of their population -- equally 

21           as high.  New York's numbers are nowhere near 

22           this.  

23                  Why is biomedical research so 

24           important?  Well, obviously research leads to 


                                                                   253

 1           saving lives.  But having it in New York also 

 2           means greater access to clinical trials and 

 3           it also means jobs.  Research brings in money 

 4           and creates good jobs, good-paying jobs with 

 5           good benefits.  

 6                  One point -- if there's one point I 

 7           hope you will take from my testimony, it is 

 8           that when looking at biomedical research and 

 9           especially biomedical research, investment, 

10           funding, money, jobs, venture capital follows 

11           the talent.  If you increase scientific 

12           talent in your state, you're going to get 

13           more investment in biomedical research.  If 

14           you lose scientific talent in your state, 

15           you're going to get less so.  

16                  That's because with NIH, the funding 

17           follows the investigator.  That's what 

18           NYFIRST is meant to address.  It helps 

19           medical schools recruit and retain top 

20           scientific talent.  

21                  It is a fairly new program, fairly 

22           small.  So far the state has invested only 

23           $9 million, but the returns are quite 

24           astonishing.  Of that $9 million, in only 


                                                                   254

 1           three years it's created 183 new jobs at 

 2           New York medical schools.  Good-paying jobs, 

 3           the kind that can build strong communities.  

 4                  The medical schools are required to 

 5           put up a two-for-one match.  Right now we're 

 6           running at almost a four-to-one match.  So 

 7           the return on investment is twice what was 

 8           expected, and that's very early on.  

 9                  And I see I'm running out of time, but 

10           I just want to thank you.  I have more in my 

11           testimony, but I'm happy to answer any 

12           questions that you may have.  

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you.  And 

14           my second mic is working as badly as my first 

15           mic.  

16                  I notice we have Lake Erie College of 

17           Osteopathic Medicine, John Weston.  

18                  DR. WESTON:  Yes, sir.  Just thank you 

19           all for allowing me to speak.  I really 

20           appreciate it.  Dr. Terry was supposed to 

21           speak.  He's much better looking than I am, 

22           and much better at this, so I apologize that 

23           you're stuck with me.  

24                  I'm a family physician, and I've been 


                                                                   255

 1           practicing medicine in upstate New York for 

 2           23 years.  I'm also a regional dean at LECOM.  

 3                  And so what we really are looking for 

 4           is for you to appreciate our medical students 

 5           and what we're trying to do.  So right now 

 6           there's 240 medical students at LECOM Elmira, 

 7           and they're studying the basic sciences to 

 8           become physicians.  

 9                  And out of that 240, about 150 are all 

10           New York State residents.  We really try to 

11           get New York State residents.  We want to 

12           recruit them, that's our mission.  

13                  And then we have 500 medical students 

14           that are out with your physicians taking care 

15           of your constituents, your friends, your 

16           families.  They're out there helping them, 

17           and they're learning to become physicians.  

18           They're taking the medical knowledge they 

19           learned in those first two years and then 

20           they're translating it and learning the art 

21           of medicine.  

22                  So you have 740 LECOM students 

23           practicing in New York State.  Each of them 

24           spend about $30,000 a year to live here, so 


                                                                   256

 1           that translates to about $22 million that 

 2           they're putting into the local economies. 

 3                  And 70 percent of them are going into 

 4           primary care.  As you know, we have a 

 5           primary-care shortage in New York State, and 

 6           they're here to help us.  So I think LECOM's 

 7           doing a good job of giving us some -- as a 

 8           native New Yorker, giving New York some money 

 9           and also helping us with the physician 

10           shortage.  

11                  We have training sites in 

12           Niagara Falls, Buffalo, Rochester, Watertown, 

13           Binghamton, Elmira, the Mohawk Valley.  We 

14           also have St. John's Riverside in Yonkers and 

15           St. John's Episcopal in Far Rockaway.  

16                  And what we'd like to do is take what 

17           we're doing and expand it and make it better.  

18           What we want to do is really focus on 

19           students -- go to the middle schools, go to 

20           the high schools, and really mentor those 

21           students that might not think they can be 

22           physicians and say, Hey, look, I can do this, 

23           you can do this; we want you to become 

24           physicians.  


                                                                   257

 1                  So we want you to help partner with us 

 2           and help us recruit students that are going 

 3           to stay and become physicians in New York 

 4           State.  

 5                  Then we'd like to create a curriculum 

 6           in the first and second years that really 

 7           focuses on underserved regions and rural 

 8           regions and really focuses at doing research 

 9           and coming up with a curriculum that really 

10           focuses on rural and underserved regions.  

11           And then help us as we go along.  

12                  So we want to recruit, we want to 

13           educate, and we want to train them.  More 

14           residencies -- as you can see, our 

15           residencies in those clinical sites are all 

16           in rural and underserved regions.  And so 

17           allow us to do better, to do that -- we want 

18           to put one in Dunkirk, New York.  Maybe up in 

19           Plattsburgh, New York.  Let us expand rural 

20           residencies.  

21                  So let us recruit, let us train and 

22           educate, and then let us -- those physicians, 

23           wherever they sort of get trained, that's 

24           where most likely they're going to live.  And 


                                                                   258

 1           then they're going to stay here.  Because 

 2           right now we're losing more physicians in 

 3           New York State than we're getting.  So let us 

 4           help with that.  

 5                  I'm running out of time.  Thank you so 

 6           much for listening, too.  I really appreciate 

 7           you guys.  I saw what you did this morning.  

 8           This is a hard job, but you guys do it.  

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

10                  Any questions?  

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Does the Senate 

12           have any questions?

13                  SENATOR RYAN:  Sure, I have a 

14           question.  

15                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Sean Ryan. 

16                  SENATOR RYAN:  To Dr. Frommer --  

17                  MR. FROMMER:  Mr. Frommer.  I work in 

18           the medical school; I do not have a medical 

19           degree.  

20                  SENATOR RYAN:  Mr. Frommer.  So tell 

21           me about the NYFIRST program.  A $15 million 

22           program last year?

23                  MR. FROMMER:  It was passed, I 

24           believe, first in 2018.  There's been three 


                                                                   259

 1           rounds -- excuse me, four rounds of funding 

 2           so far.  The fifth round, I believe the 

 3           applications are due sometime in May; I could 

 4           be off a little bit.  After that, that 

 5           initial $15 million investment is very likely 

 6           to have been exhausted.  

 7                  SENATOR RYAN:  And it's for every 

 8           dollar that you get, you have to show a 

 9           $2 million match?  

10                  MR. FROMMER:  That is correct, the 

11           $2 million match.  

12                  As mentioned so far, the medicals have 

13           put up -- so we've generated over 

14           $4 million -- excuse me, a four-to-one match 

15           so far.  We're required two-to-one; we've 

16           demonstrated a four-to-one.  

17                  SENATOR RYAN:  What's the ripple 

18           effect of that spending?  How does it affect 

19           our economy, our healthcare outcomes?  What 

20           are you aiming to do?  

21                  MR. FROMMER:  A whole bunch of things.  

22                  First of all, science is for the 

23           purpose of creating new knowledge that will 

24           help us prevent disease, learn about the 


                                                                   260

 1           human condition, better treatments, better 

 2           cures.  

 3                  We will conduct more clinical trials 

 4           in New York.  Greater access of New York 

 5           residents to the latest developments in 

 6           biomedical technology.  

 7                  Venture capital will come to where our 

 8           faculty are, because our faculty are creating 

 9           new knowledge.  They're turning that 

10           knowledge into products, into drugs, into 

11           prevention strategies.  

12                  But even in the short term, it brings 

13           in more federal funding.  The way NIH 

14           works -- National Institutes of Health, the 

15           largest funder of biomedical science in the 

16           world -- with minor exceptions, the grants 

17           follow the primary investigator.  So if we 

18           have a scientist from California or Texas 

19           with $3 million in NIH funding, if we bring 

20           that person to New York, they bring their 

21           NIH funding with them.  So on day one, they 

22           are creating jobs, they are bringing in 

23           resources, they are attracting philanthropy, 

24           venture capital -- all the good things we 


                                                                   261

 1           want our scientists to do.  

 2                  SENATOR RYAN:  Which state's a leader 

 3           in trying to match federal money with state 

 4           money?  

 5                  MR. FROMMER:  Well, I mentioned Texas 

 6           and California, the ones who have made the 

 7           greatest investment in that.  

 8                  New York has a small NYSTAR -- now 

 9           ESD -- matching grants funding.  

10                  But I will say the Texas program, of 

11           that $6 billion, I think close to $1 billion 

12           is specifically dedicated towards recruiting 

13           out-of-state scientists to come to Texas.  

14                  There's a famous story -- and I'm 

15           blanking on his name.  He used to be at MSK, 

16           went there -- Memorial Sloan Kettering, was 

17           recruited to Texas, created a whole new 

18           cancer program down at M.D. Anderson, a 

19           wonderful cancer institution, but it's not in 

20           New York.  

21                  He later won the Nobel Prize.  Okay?  

22           They stole one of our Nobel Prize -- 

23                  SENATOR RYAN:  We had him; we let him 

24           go.  


                                                                   262

 1                  MR. FROMMER:  That is correct. 

 2                  SENATOR RYAN:  So should we put more 

 3           money into these types of programs?

 4                  MR. FROMMER:   Absolutely.

 5                  SENATOR RYAN:   Thank you, 

 6           Mr. Frommer.

 7                  MR. FROMMER:  Thank you, Senator Ryan.  

 8                  SENATOR PRETLOW:   Thank you.  Maybe 

 9           the Governor will put them on a bus and send 

10           them to New York.  

11                  (Laughter.)

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Anyway, Carrie 

13           Woerner, you had a question?

14                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  Thank you so 

15           much.  

16                  I'm going to -- I'm going to pick up 

17           where my colleague Mr. Ryan ended and ask -- 

18           so you've been receiving the NYFIRST funds 

19           for a couple of years now.  

20                  MR. FROMMER:  Yes.  

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  And you 

22           mentioned that the intent here is that that 

23           research will eventually result in new 

24           products and private-equity funding will 


                                                                   263

 1           commercialize that.  

 2                  MR. FROMMER:  Hopefully, yes.

 3                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  Right?  So 

 4           over -- and it might be that it's just too 

 5           soon to have this response.  But have we -- 

 6           have you -- have there been patents filed or 

 7           other sorts of milestones hit on the path 

 8           towards developing new products and 

 9           commercializing them and creating new 

10           businesses?  

11                  MR. FROMMER:  Yes.  And I can give you 

12           some Columbia-specific numbers.  So our first 

13           NYFIRST recipient -- that's a mouthful -- was 

14           Dr. Jordan Orange, who's a pediatrician, does 

15           a lot of work in what they call killer cells.  

16           He has submitted three invention reports 

17           and -- and how many patents -- and filed 

18           three patents already since he came to 

19           New York in 2019 -- 2018.  And he's in the 

20           process of creating a start-up company.  

21                  Our second NYFIRST recruit was 

22           Dr. Simon John, who's a Ph.D. who does a lot 

23           of work in eye disease.  He has filed -- I 

24           have this here -- five invention reports and 


                                                                   264

 1           four patent applications.  

 2                  I'll also say that Dr. Orange now has 

 3           33 new jobs in his lab, and Dr. John has 

 4           15 new jobs in the -- small numbers but, 

 5           based on a very small investment, a huge 

 6           return.  

 7                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  Terrific.  

 8                  And so the first milestone obviously 

 9           is filing for a patent application and 

10           hopefully getting that done.  Have there been 

11           any licenses, any license agreements entered 

12           into on the basis of those patents?  

13                  MR. FROMMER:  I am not aware of any.  

14           I'd have to check on that.  

15                  I will say that there is actually -- 

16           although NYFIRST is a new program, there was 

17           a precursor to this program, a similar thing 

18           which New York State had in the two thousand 

19           and aughts, if you will, called the Faculty 

20           Development Program.  And there was a lot of 

21           good data, and I can follow up about 

22           recipients of those grants.  Again, 

23           tremendous return on investment.  

24                  We have one gentleman at Columbia 


                                                                   265

 1           named Rudy Leibel.  In 2002, he was set to go 

 2           to Baltimore.  The state gave us a $750,000 

 3           grant in order to keep him here.  He's 

 4           created -- I think it's, you know, over 

 5           $54 million in economic activity.  A 75-to-1 

 6           return on investment, something like that.  

 7                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  Fantastic.  

 8                  In my last 14 seconds, is there any 

 9           requirement that once the technology has been 

10           patented and licensed and is in the process 

11           of commercialization, that that 

12           commercialization must take place in New York 

13           State?  

14                  MR. FROMMER:  I do not believe it's a 

15           requirement.  However, New York medical 

16           schools are going to look to New York first.

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  Great.  Thank 

18           you so much.

19                  MR. FROMMER:  Thank you.  

20                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

21                  Senator Tom O'Mara.

22                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Thank you. 

23                  Dr. Weston, I want to thank you for 

24           filling in for Dr. Terry today.  I spoke with 


                                                                   266

 1           him last night, and for the other members 

 2           here, he's down with COVID.  So -- better 

 3           he's not here.  

 4                  You did a fine job standing in for 

 5           him.  You actually kept it to three minutes.  

 6           With his exuberance and enthusiasm, he never 

 7           would have been able to do that.  

 8                  So, you know, Lake Erie College of 

 9           Osteopathic Medicine -- founded in Erie, 

10           Pennsylvania, is my understanding.  And you 

11           now have a standalone medical school in 

12           Elmira, New York, correct? 

13                  DR. WESTON:  Yes, sir.  As well as 

14           Seton Hill, it's in Pittsburgh.  And we also 

15           have one in Bradenton, Florida.  

16                  SENATOR O'MARA:  And your focus and 

17           commitment -- I'd like you to describe a 

18           little more in your request here in this 

19           budget for funding for a Center of Excellence 

20           for Rural Health and Underserved Areas. 

21                  Can you just talk a little more about 

22           your commitment and the college's philosophy 

23           towards looking to recruit students from 

24           rural New York and underserved communities in 


                                                                   267

 1           New York and the efforts to working to get to 

 2           keep them to practice in those communities 

 3           once they graduate?

 4                  DR. WESTON:   Yes, sir.  

 5                  Once we came to Elmira in 2012 -- and 

 6           we opened the medical school in 2020 -- we 

 7           established residency and centers of training 

 8           in Niagara Falls, in -- that would be 

 9           Niagara Falls Memorial -- and also 

10           Sisters Hospital in Buffalo; Samaritan 

11           Medical Center in Watertown; Our Lady of 

12           Lourdes in Binghamton; Elmira; and we also 

13           have one in Yonkers and Far Rockaway, Queens.  

14                  So as you can see, all those areas are 

15           pretty much rural areas.  And they're also 

16           areas of need.  And so what we're envisioning 

17           is we want to keep -- we want to train 

18           students and get students from New York.  

19                  And how do we do that?  A lot of 

20           people don't think they can be doctors, 

21           they're not smart enough.  I just say, if I'm 

22           smart enough to make it through, you're smart 

23           enough to make it through.  

24                  And I just use myself as an example.  


                                                                   268

 1           I come from a working-class town in Endicott, 

 2           New York.  And I got lucky, and I made it to 

 3           medical school.  

 4                  So if we go in and mentor these kids 

 5           and start in middle school and start in high 

 6           school and say, You can do this -- and we 

 7           partner them up with our medical students in 

 8           those sites, right, so they spend some time 

 9           with them -- we can bring them to LECOM and 

10           show them what we do there and say, This is 

11           something that you can do.  

12                  We're the largest medical school in 

13           America.  We give out large -- a lot of 

14           scholarships, and we want to do even more of 

15           that.  So if -- and we have a very -- we're 

16           one of the most affordable colleges in the 

17           country as well.

18                  SENATOR O'MARA:   Now, in the last 

19           30 seconds, for the Centers for Excellence 

20           for Rural and Underserved Health, what is 

21           your ask, dollar amount, to get this in --

22                  DR. WESTON:  We're humbly asking for 

23           $250,000.  And that's humbly.

24                  SENATOR O'MARA:  $250,000.


                                                                   269

 1                  DR. WESTON:  Yes, sir.

 2                  SENATOR O'MARA:  To recruit doctors. 

 3                  DR. WESTON:  To recruit, educate, 

 4           train.

 5                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Within New York 

 6           State, for serving in underserved and rural 

 7           parts of New York State.

 8                  DR. WESTON:  Absolutely, sir.  Thank 

 9           you for leading me in that.  I appreciate 

10           that.

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

12                  Assembly, anyone?  

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Yes.  

14                  Assemblyman Ra.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you.  

16                  Thank you both for being here.  

17                  Mr. Frommer, you just talked about, 

18           you know, what it means when this type of 

19           research goes on in New York, and obviously a 

20           situation where we lost somebody.  

21                  So can you elaborate on how the 

22           NYFIRST helps increase and improve New York's 

23           research workforce?

24                  MR. FROMMER:  Sure.  When we are 


                                                                   270

 1           trying to recruit somebody, a rock star, a 

 2           scientist who has a tremendous record of 

 3           scientific achievement but also fundraising, 

 4           commercialization, all the things that the 

 5           NYFIRST grant looks for, we have to put 

 6           together a package.  We have to convince that 

 7           recruit from Texas, California, that they 

 8           want to bring his or her lab to New York.  

 9                  And that costs money.  And it involves 

10           sometimes, you know, physical or capital 

11           renovations.  It can involve staff.  It can 

12           involve equipment.  

13                  The NYFIRST grant helps us put that 

14           package together and to make that package 

15           more enticing, more inviting.  It gives us a 

16           leg up, if you will, on whatever the 

17           competition may be.  And let me tell you, 

18           some of these folks, there is competition for 

19           them.  

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Okay.  And I know 

21           New York has done a lot in recent years to 

22           support the life sciences industry.  How will 

23           NYFIRST compliment that work?  And how could 

24           it enhance those programs?


                                                                   271

 1                  MR. FROMMER:  So actually NYFIRST is 

 2           technically a small part of the life sciences 

 3           initiative, but most of the life sciences 

 4           initiative tends to be focused on what I call 

 5           the output -- on building that biotech 

 6           sector, on the new companies, on the 

 7           industry, on the things that can build sort 

 8           of large-scale manufacturing.  

 9                  We are the input.  We are the science, 

10           we are the knowledge, we are the hard work 

11           that goes into creating those devices, those 

12           drugs, those prevention strategies.  Output 

13           is great, but you can't have output without 

14           the input.  

15                  I should mention that our ask -- I 

16           forgot to mention it -- is $25 million for 

17           NYFIRST.  I should have mentioned that 

18           earlier.  

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  And that input, then, 

20           you know, I guess to sum it up, is why it's 

21           so important to recruit biomedical research 

22           here, because they're the input in this.  

23                  MR. FROMMER:  Absolutely.  And that 

24           input is good science, it is proximity to 


                                                                   272

 1           clinical trials.  But we are the -- this is 

 2           the Economic Development Committee.  It also 

 3           is jobs, it is funding, it is mentorship for 

 4           future generations for science.  It is sort 

 5           of building a long-term biotechnology, 

 6           bioscience community.

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Great.  Thank you.

 8                  MR. FROMMER:  Thank you.

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Any other 

10           Senators?  Any other Assemblymembers?  

11                  I'm looking over there.  He had a hand 

12           up over there, Gary.  

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:   Oh.  Member 

14           Friend.  

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  Thank you, 

16           Chairs.  

17                  Dr. Weston, I'd like to congratulate 

18           you on your upcoming graduation of your first 

19           class of DOs.

20                  DR. WESTON:  Thank you.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  That's really 

22           exciting for our area and for your college.  

23                  Could you elaborate a little more on 

24           the impact that the Centers of Excellence for 


                                                                   273

 1           Rural Health would have on the Southern Tier, 

 2           Western New York, Central New York, 

 3           communities like -- that have hospitals like 

 4           Arnot Ogden?  

 5                  DR. WESTON:  So what we're hoping is 

 6           by attracting students from these different 

 7           regions to come to LECOM Elmira, and 

 8           recruiting them, is that after we train 

 9           them -- and we have residency sites there -- 

10           they can go back to their home and then they 

11           can train there and then become physicians in 

12           that region.  

13                  You know, right now we contribute 

14           about 26 million to the New York State 

15           economy.  And I think as we can keep more and 

16           more physicians in New York State and take 

17           care of this problem we have, a dearth of 

18           physicians, I think that's a huge benefit.  

19                  I mean, being in Elmira -- being in 

20           Elmira before we had the school and now being 

21           in Elmira after, it's amazing.  We've got 

22           apartments going up, we've got buildings that 

23           were dilapidated being rebuilt, we've got 

24           coffee shops coming up.  It's just amazing 


                                                                   274

 1           what -- like these little -- these are little 

 2           centers of economic development.  

 3                  Each medical student that we have, you 

 4           know, spending $30,000 over four years and 

 5           then doing residency in those places, it's 

 6           just really phenomenal.  

 7                  I know you guys talk about the arts, 

 8           and I love going to New York City.  I mean, 

 9           I've loved going to the Frick and the Met, 

10           and I love doing that stuff.  But I think 

11           each medical student we train is a little bit 

12           of an economic engine that is -- then we 

13           disperse throughout the state, and then we 

14           create more of these rural residencies.  

15                  As you guys fund us a little bit, we 

16           can create more of these and then come up 

17           with specific evidence-based plans to really 

18           take care of these people that need better 

19           healthcare and people that don't believe they 

20           can be doctors.  

21                  Listen, if I can do it, anyone can do 

22           it.  Right?  That's what I try to tell these 

23           students.  

24                  Thank you, sir.  


                                                                   275

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  Thank you.

 2                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  We thank you both 

 3           very much for joining us today.  Appreciate 

 4           it.  

 5                  And we're going to ask the next panel 

 6           to come up and join us.  And that is New York 

 7           State Economic Development Council, Center 

 8           for Popular Democracy, New Yorkers for Fiscal 

 9           Fairness, and Reinvent Albany.  

10                  Hello.  Are we still waiting for one 

11           more to come?  

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Someone's 

13           missing.

14                  MR. DEUTSCH:  John Kaehny will not be 

15           here today.  

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay.  Thank you 

17           for clarifying that.  

18                  (Off the record; laughter.)

19                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Shall we start 

20           with, just in the order they're listed, with 

21           Ryan Silva, New York State Economic 

22           Development Council.  

23                  MR. SILVA:  Excellent.  

24                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Good afternoon.


                                                                   276

 1                  MR. SILVA:  Good afternoon.  Thank 

 2           you, Senator Krueger, Assemblymember Pretlow, 

 3           Senator Ryan, Assemblymember Stirpe, as well 

 4           as all members of the Legislature, for the 

 5           opportunity to testify here today.  

 6                  While there are several items in the 

 7           Executive Budget I would like to address, I 

 8           would like to first spend a few minutes 

 9           talking about economic development in general 

10           and the evolution of the work that we do. 

11                  Our 1,000 members represent 

12           communities from Suffolk to Erie County and 

13           every community in between.  They represent 

14           urban, suburban and rural areas.  They 

15           represent a broad cross-section of public, 

16           private, academic and nonprofit 

17           organizations.  Their ultimate mission is to 

18           increase the health, wealth and prosperity of 

19           the communities they serve.  

20                  Job creation and job retention is at 

21           the core of what all economic developers do.  

22           Our members support and leverage 

23           private-sector investments totaling more than 

24           $114 billion.  Those public-private 


                                                                   277

 1           partnerships help to create or retain nearly 

 2           half a million jobs annually and represent 

 3           $7 billion in annual payroll, according to 

 4           New York State Comptroller data.  

 5                  This is one component of what economic 

 6           developers do, but it is not all that we do.  

 7           Our members also play a critical role in the 

 8           revitalization of downtown corridors, 

 9           removing blight, creating new housing starts, 

10           adaptively reusing dilapidated or 

11           underutilized buildings, supporting workforce 

12           development, and generating thousands of 

13           megawatts of new renewable energy.  

14                  Economic development isn't about 

15           chasing smokestacks.  It's about increasing 

16           the quality of life and creating 

17           opportunities for all New Yorkers.  It's 

18           building a new nursing school for the local 

19           community college in Corning.  It's turning 

20           unused and vacant land into renewable energy 

21           generation and millions in new tax revenue to 

22           communities across the North Country.  

23                  Economic development is revitalizing 

24           Main Street corridors in cities like 


                                                                   278

 1           Schenectady and Oswego and creating 

 2           transit-oriented hubs in Ronkonkoma and 

 3           Wyandanch.  It's creating entrepreneurial 

 4           assistance programs to underserved 

 5           communities in Babylon and supporting great 

 6           organizations like Minority Millennials.  

 7                  It's investing in a Makerspace for the 

 8           next generation of manufacturer in Troy, 

 9           New York.  It's creating much-needed 

10           workforce housing in Westchester County and 

11           across Long Island.  

12                  And yes, IDAs do have the authority to 

13           support commercial housing projects, based on 

14           an OSC opinion and multiple court rulings in 

15           the New York State Supreme Court authorizing 

16           IDAs to support commercial housing.  

17                  Finally, it's building out our 

18           21st-century infrastructure to support our 

19           state's renewable energy goals, from 

20           Plattsburgh down to New York City.  

21                  These are but a few examples of the 

22           work our members are doing and why we need to 

23           update the data we collect and the metrics we 

24           use to measure economic success.  These 


                                                                   279

 1           initiatives come together from public-private 

 2           partnerships and our members, and they come 

 3           from support from the Legislature and the 

 4           Governor.  

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:   Thank you.

 6                  MR. SILVA:  Thank you.

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:   Thank you.  

 8                  Next up is Charles Khan, Center for 

 9           Popular Democracy.

10                  MR. KHAN:  Hi.  A pleasure to be with 

11           you all today.  

12                  I just want to take a second to talk 

13           about how New York State does economic 

14           development and then why we should put a 

15           pause on how New York State does economic 

16           development.  

17                  Our economic development program 

18           across the state has grown to $11 billion.  

19           New York State leads the nation in megadeals 

20           over $50 million, and those megadeals are by 

21           far the most risky and most likely to fail.  

22                  There's been no shortage of headlines 

23           over failed deals and lost taxpayer money 

24           across New York State.  And every year, 


                                                                   280

 1           school districts across New York State and 

 2           the children that those school districts 

 3           serve lose $1.8 billion to IDA tax abatements 

 4           and economic development deals that are often 

 5           hidden behind nondisclosure agreements so the 

 6           public has no opportunity to see them.  

 7                  Just on that $1.8 billion, localities 

 8           only have two options.  They can try and do 

 9           more with less, or they can raise property 

10           taxes.  And I know that any homeowners in 

11           this state -- myself being one of them -- 

12           have felt, you know, the crisis on property 

13           taxes.  And that is largely driven by school 

14           spending that is necessary, but is often -- 

15           the problem is exacerbated by these tax 

16           abatements.  

17                  I also want to be clear that New York 

18           has very little to show to the public on 

19           these deals, in part because across our 

20           economic development programs there is no 

21           transparent standard on what the return on 

22           investment should be, on what counts as a job 

23           created.  There's no standard methodology on 

24           economic forecasting.  There's no standard of 


                                                                   281

 1           metrics or evaluations.  And that is 

 2           precisely the problem and why we need to put 

 3           pauses on those deals.  

 4                  In this year's budget the Governor 

 5           said that she wants to protect New Yorkers' 

 6           hard-earned money.  I think that it is only 

 7           possible to say that and to go out into the 

 8           public and have them believe that if we do 

 9           that.  And year after year I think it's been 

10           shared that there are concerns about the 

11           economic development program here in New York 

12           State, and year after year we increase the 

13           funding to that program without putting in 

14           the necessary transparency or guarantees that 

15           New York taxpayers' money will be well spent.  

16                  As I said, Plug Power, Tesla, NexGen, 

17           the Central New York Film Hub, Belmont, the 

18           Buffalo Bills Stadium -- there are lots of 

19           embarrassments that are to be had.  And the 

20           question is sort of, why do these deals keep 

21           happening, particularly with the megadeals.  

22                  This is -- (showing photos) this is 

23           why they happen, right?  The deals are 

24           unaccountable, but they make good press.  


                                                                   282

 1           Buffalo Bills, Belmont -- over and over 

 2           again, we've made the same mistake.  

 3                  This is the year where we can fix 

 4           that, where we can make a change, save 

 5           New York taxpayers' money, invest it in the 

 6           things that work.  

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  (Mic off; 

 8           inaudible.)

 9                  MR. DEUTSCH:  Hello.

10                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  How are you, Ron?

11                  MR. DEUTSCH:  I'm well.

12                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Good.

13                  MR. DEUTSCH:  My name is Ron Deutsch. 

14           I'm here today as the director of New Yorkers 

15           for Fiscal Fairness.  I'm also a senior 

16           policy fellow with Reinvent Albany.  

17                  I thank you for the opportunity to 

18           testify here again today.  I think this is 

19           something like my 27th time before you.  So 

20           bear with me, I'll be quick.  I only have 

21           two minutes and 39 seconds left.  

22                  So I agree with Charles and what he 

23           had to say about hitting the pause button.  

24           As you all know, we're waiting for a report 


                                                                   283

 1           that's supposed to be coming out.  It's an 

 2           independent report that was supposed to look 

 3           at all the different tax subsidy and 

 4           abatement programs that the Department of 

 5           Tax & Finance operates.  That report is 

 6           supposed to be issued this month, oddly 

 7           enough.  

 8                  So we're still waiting to see the 

 9           results of that, but yet we are forging ahead 

10           with a myriad of, you know, tax subsidy 

11           programs, tax abatement programs, when we 

12           don't even have the evidence to show whether 

13           or not we get a good return on our 

14           investment.  

15                  Clearly all the academic research 

16           points to the fact that we are not getting a 

17           good return on our investment when it comes 

18           to economic development programs.  We seem to 

19           have this addiction to giving billions of 

20           dollars to billionaires.  That just defies 

21           logic to me.  Whether it's Elon Musk or 

22           Amazon or the Buffalo Bills -- you know, you 

23           take your pick -- we're obviously subsidizing 

24           billionaires to the tune of billions of 


                                                                   284

 1           dollars.  

 2                  So I really do believe that we need to 

 3           start to redefine what we think of as 

 4           economic development.  And I've said this 

 5           before.  When we look at SUNY and CUNY, to 

 6           me, that's economic development.  That's 

 7           preparing a skilled workforce, which is one 

 8           of the things that businesses want more than 

 9           anything, right, a good, skilled workforce.

10                  We also need to acknowledge that 

11           childcare is economic development.  It allows 

12           people to go to work, and that is essential.  

13           And it also has a significant contributing 

14           economic contribution to our communities.  

15                  And finally, with all due deference 

16           and respect to my friend Ryan Silva, I would 

17           say IDAs are unaccountable, they are 

18           unelected, and they really need to be reined 

19           in.  

20                  And in particular, one of the things 

21           I'm going to be discussing tomorrow at a 

22           press conference is to prohibit IDAs from 

23           giving away school district tax revenue.  

24           This happens all too often, and to the 


                                                                   285

 1           detriment of our schools, to the detriment of 

 2           our communities.  And we need greater 

 3           accountability, especially when it comes to 

 4           IDAs.  

 5                  So thank you very much.

 6                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

 7                  Senator Ryan for a question.  

 8                  SENATOR RYAN:  So little time, 

 9           Senator Krueger.  

10                  So let's talk for a second about the 

11           problem with IDAs and the school taxes.  

12           Could you walk through the linkage a little 

13           bit of that for me and why it presents a 

14           problem?

15                  MR. DEUTSCH:  Sure.  In my point of 

16           view and in my opinion, what we're seeing 

17           happening is these local individual -- these 

18           local IDAs are basically giving school 

19           district revenue away to businesses, right?  

20           They're abating school district revenues, in 

21           the form of payment in lieu of taxes such as 

22           PILOTs or other means.  And as a result of 

23           that, you know, our study that was done by 

24           Good Jobs First is clearly showing a loss of 


                                                                   286

 1           about $1.8 billion in 2021 as a result of 

 2           those abatements to school taxes.

 3                  SENATOR RYAN:  All coming from the 

 4           local tax base?

 5                  MR. DEUTSCH:  Yes.

 6                  SENATOR RYAN:  And then the local 

 7           school districts come here?

 8                  MR. DEUTSCH:  And then, you know -- I 

 9           mean, we're in a situation right now, 

10           obviously, where the Executive Budget 

11           proposal is going to be cutting education aid 

12           for hundreds of school districts across the 

13           state.  And at the same time we're also in a 

14           position where IDAs are basically telling 

15           businesses, You don't have to pay school 

16           taxes or you only have to pay a certain 

17           percentage of what you would normally have to 

18           pay in school taxes, for a period of 10 years 

19           or 20 years or what have you.  

20                  So that, to me, is significantly 

21           problematic.  And then actually when IDAs 

22           dole out these abatements, they are also 

23           getting fees.  So they're generating income 

24           for the IDA -- 


                                                                   287

 1                  SENATOR RYAN:  Does that fee go back 

 2           to the local taxpayers?

 3                  MR. DEUTSCH:  My understanding is that 

 4           fee goes to the IDA to spend as they need to 

 5           spend.

 6                  SENATOR RYAN:  With no accountability?

 7                  MR. DEUTSCH:  In my opinion, sure.  

 8           You know, these are unelected bodies, so --

 9                  SENATOR RYAN:  Can they take that 

10           money and pay lobbyists with that money?

11                  MR. DEUTSCH:  I -- you know, perhaps 

12           that's the case, yes.  Certainly, I think it 

13           goes to their associations -- 

14                  SENATOR RYAN:  Do you have any opinion 

15           about whether IDAs are authorized to 

16           currently do housing in New York State?

17                  MR. DEUTSCH:  I don't believe they 

18           are, no.

19                  SENATOR RYAN:  And if in fact they 

20           were able to do housing, what would that 

21           effect have on the school tax base?

22                  MR. DEUTSCH:  I think that would also 

23           have a detrimental impact.  

24                  I mean, look, I think we can look at 


                                                                   288

 1           providing tax credits of some sort for 

 2           housing or affordable housing.  But quite 

 3           frankly, IDAs are not the mechanism to be 

 4           engaging in affordable housing development.

 5                  SENATOR RYAN:   I'm running out of 

 6           time.  But do you know what the "I" stands 

 7           for in IDA.  

 8                  MR. DEUTSCH:  Industrial.

 9                  SENATOR RYAN:  Not housing? 

10                  MR. DEUTSCH:  No. 

11                  SENATOR RYAN:  Not retail? 

12                  MR. DEUTSCH:  No. 

13                  SENATOR RYAN:  Okay.  Thank you so 

14           much. 

15                  MR. DEUTSCH:  All right. 

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

17                  Assembly.  

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  We were joined 

19           by Assemblyman Jacobson a little earlier.  

20                  And I have a question from 

21           Ms. Woerner.  I'm sorry, Member Woerner.  

22                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  (Mic issues.)  

23           It worked before.  There we go.

24                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  There you go.


                                                                   289

 1                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  All right.  

 2                  Thank you all very much.  

 3                  Ryan, I wanted to direct my comments 

 4           to you.  

 5                  I note in your written testimony that 

 6           you reflected on issues that manufacturing 

 7           businesses are experiencing in the state, and 

 8           this is an area of great interest to me 

 9           because I'm seeing the numbers of 

10           manufacturers in New York State decline even 

11           as we make significant investments in trying 

12           to attract new manufacturing to the state.

13                  And you mentioned in your testimony 

14           that there were -- that businesses are 

15           issuing WARN notices to -- which is the step 

16           that they have to take to close out their 

17           business.  I have had three in my district in 

18           the last year, so this is a problem that is 

19           personally impacting my area.

20                  So can you talk a little bit about 

21           what some of those challenges are that you 

22           are seeing?  

23                  MR. SILVA:  Sure, Assemblywoman.  

24                  And, you know, Saratoga County is 


                                                                   290

 1           supposed to be one of the most 

 2           business-friendly communities in all of 

 3           New York State.  So to see manufacturers 

 4           either closing up shop or laying off 

 5           significant members of their staff is very 

 6           concerning.  

 7                  As you know, our members are the ones 

 8           doing the work on the ground.  And the 

 9           feedback that we have gotten is that the cost 

10           of doing business is significantly higher.  

11           There are real concerns about access to the 

12           energy needed for manufacturers to not only 

13           maintain their presence here, but to expand 

14           their presence here.  

15                  I know the New York Independent System 

16           Operator has done a number of quarterly 

17           reports that do raise some concerns about the 

18           state's ability and capacity to hit our 

19           renewable energy goals and do that from a 

20           standpoint of capacity.  

21                  It's one of the reasons why our 

22           members are doing what they can in any way 

23           possible to support renewable energy 

24           projects -- wind solar, offshore wind -- to 


                                                                   291

 1           try and get as much renewable energy onto the 

 2           grid so that we can meet those aggressive 

 3           timelines.  

 4                  But I think there is a real concern 

 5           about the timeline as it's set up that we're 

 6           hearing about, in that we need to make sure 

 7           that we not only have affordable utilities, 

 8           gas, electricity, but also make sure we have 

 9           the capacity.  Because we do not need rolling 

10           brownouts in this state anytime in the near 

11           future.  

12                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  And is 

13           manufacturing -- I mean, this is sort of a 

14           gimme question, but manufacturing is an 

15           energy-intensive business.  

16                  MR. SILVA:  Correct.

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  Regardless of 

18           what it is you're manufacturing, you need -- 

19           you need power and natural gas.  

20                  MR. SILVA:  That is correct. 

21                  You know, there are ways that these 

22           businesses are trying to adapt, but the 

23           economic realities make it very challenging 

24           right now to do those things.  


                                                                   292

 1                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  Thank you. 

 2                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay.  Senator 

 3           Murray.  

 4                  SENATOR MURRAY:  There we go.  Thank 

 5           you.  

 6                  Mr. Silva, we're time-sensitive here.  

 7           So when we talk about the PILOTs, we talk 

 8           about the IDAs and the benefits and the 

 9           school districts losing money, I don't 

10           believe we're talking about actual real 

11           numbers here, because the starting points 

12           aren't exactly correct.  

13                  When we talk about these losses, what 

14           are we comparing?  Are we comparing real 

15           numbers or -- or -- in other words, is it 

16           what it would be at full value compared to 

17           what it is with the PILOT?  But isn't there 

18           another option?  

19                  MR. SILVA:  Thank you, Senator.  

20                  You know, the number that is being 

21           quoted in the Good Jobs First -- while it's 

22           being attributed to industrial development 

23           agencies, I believe it takes into account 

24           every tax abatement program that exists in 


                                                                   293

 1           New York State.  So 421-a, 487-a, 

 2           485-a, -b -- whatever, you know, number and 

 3           letter you want to throw in front of it.  

 4                  The data that we rely on is the data 

 5           that we get from the New York State 

 6           Comptroller.  And their data shows that the 

 7           dollars abated by IDAs towards schools is 

 8           significantly less than that $1.8 billion 

 9           number.  

10                  Secondly, it's based upon a belief 

11           that all these projects are going to occur 

12           regardless of whether or not the IDA is 

13           supporting this project.  And we know that 

14           the vast majority of projects that IDAs 

15           support need the economic development 

16           assistance.  

17                  So in almost every case when an IDA 

18           supports a project, the dollar amount of new 

19           revenue going to school districts is 

20           significantly higher than if nothing was 

21           occurring at that site to begin with. 

22                  SENATOR MURRAY:  So, Mr. Silva, wait, 

23           let me get this straight.  

24                  So if the business doesn't get a break 


                                                                   294

 1           and they decide they're not going to locate 

 2           there or they're going to leave, how much 

 3           does the school district get in tax?  

 4                  MR. SILVA:  I would say they probably 

 5           get whatever the property was or is 

 6           generating before -- 

 7                  SENATOR MURRAY:  Of a vacant lot or 

 8           something.  

 9                  MR. SILVA:  It would probably be 

10           significantly less than if the PILOT or the 

11           project were occurring on the site.

12                  SENATOR MURRAY:  So you're telling me 

13           they'd actually get more through a PILOT.  

14                  Have you had any superintendents reach 

15           out to you and complain about this, to say 

16           this is unfair?  

17                  MR. SILVA:  Not directly to me.  

18                  We do know that one of our members and 

19           board members has actually a very good 

20           working relationship with their school 

21           superintendent.  They happen to sit on the 

22           IDA board, and they recognize that the 

23           economic development projects that they're 

24           supporting bring about net new revenue for 


                                                                   295

 1           the school district.  

 2                  And so our encouragement and our hope 

 3           is that our members will continue to increase 

 4           communication, work collaboratively where you 

 5           can.  There are several -- 

 6                  SENATOR MURRAY:  I'm running out of 

 7           time, so let me just close with -- 

 8                  MR. SILVA:  Yeah.

 9                  SENATOR MURRAY:  Sorry to cut you off.  

10                  But real quick, so the fallacy that if 

11           we -- that the companies would stay anyway 

12           and wouldn't leave -- according to News 10 in 

13           Albany, 158 companies managing almost a 

14           trillion dollars in assets have left when 

15           they haven't worked out these deals.

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  Thank 

17           you very much.  

18                  Next, Assembly?  

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  I don't believe 

20           so.  

21                  Oh, Member Stirpe.

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Thank you.  

23                  You know, I think we kind of live in 

24           the real world, and things that Ron said and 


                                                                   296

 1           things Ryan said are both kind of true.  I've 

 2           sat in on meetings where, you know, in front 

 3           of the IDA the company's asked:  Would you be 

 4           here if it wasn't for a PILOT?  And they 

 5           haven't been given the PILOT yet, and they'd 

 6           answered yes, it might take us a little bit 

 7           longer to ramp up to the number of jobs, but 

 8           we'd still be here -- and still see the IDA 

 9           give them a PILOT.  So that's -- that's a 

10           problem.  

11                  But on your side, you know, I've seen 

12           lots of projects that have happened and the 

13           only reason they did happen is because there 

14           were significant benefits that were given to 

15           them.  

16                  The other thing I see that things 

17           happen in New York State -- and I'll pick 

18           Micron for an example -- is the investment 

19           that New York State's made over maybe the 

20           last 40 years in higher education.  Because 

21           one of the keys to getting Micron was that 

22           within a two-hour drive of Syracuse there are 

23           7200 engineering students that graduate every 

24           year.  


                                                                   297

 1                  So, I mean, there's a lot of blame 

 2           that can go around for what we think is waste 

 3           and everything.  But, I mean, the state is 

 4           attacking the problem at many different 

 5           levels, not just in economic development.  

 6                  But you're right, SUNY and CUNY, those 

 7           are great investments.  That's the kind of 

 8           stuff we need to do.  But we do need to do a 

 9           lot of different things, and we all have to 

10           sort of acknowledge that.  I'm just hoping 

11           that we can be a little more careful.  

12                  You know, I'll give you an example.  

13           In addition to Micron, in my district I have 

14           Amazon, the second-largest warehouse in the 

15           world, and they have 3600 people working 

16           there now, whereas it was a golf course 

17           before.  And I think the school taxes that 

18           were paid were maybe $50,000 or $60,000 a 

19           year.  And I know in the PILOT they pay a lot 

20           more than that.  

21                  So, you know, is it better that we 

22           gave them a benefit like that in order to 

23           have 3600 jobs that start at -- I don't know 

24           if it's $20 or $22 an hour now.  The only 


                                                                   298

 1           problem with that is all the rest of the 

 2           small businesses are hurting, because the 

 3           workers went for higher pay and instant 

 4           benefits and everything like that.  

 5                  So it's not easy, and it's going to be 

 6           uneven, but we're competing against the rest 

 7           of the world.  That's it.

 8                  Okay, thank you.  

 9                  MR. DEUTSCH:  I would just say, with 

10           the few seconds left, that the School Boards 

11           Association, the New York State Council of 

12           School Superintendents, and the New York 

13           State PTA will be coming out against IDAs 

14           giving away school district money tomorrow as 

15           well.

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

17                  I guess I'll jump in next with a 

18           follow-up question.  

19                  Do you know how many states outlaw 

20           giving away tax credit --

21                  MR. DEUTSCH:  There are a number --

22                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  -- tax money of 

23           schools?

24                  MR. DEUTSCH:  Yeah, there are a number 


                                                                   299

 1           of states.  We are currently behind Florida, 

 2           Louisiana and Alabama, if that makes you feel 

 3           any better.  

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you. 

 5                  Ryan, you referenced that you have 

 6           used IDAs for commercial housing.  I've never 

 7           heard the term "commercial housing."  What 

 8           does that mean?  

 9                  MR. SILVA:  Well, I have certainly not 

10           done that myself.  Industrial development 

11           agencies support commercial housing projects 

12           which are apartments, adaptive reuse, and 

13           have been doing so probably since that 1985 

14           OSC opinion.

15                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  So you used the 

16           term "commercial housing" for what we all 

17           call multifamily housing, apartment 

18           buildings?  

19                  MR. SILVA:  It's defined as commercial 

20           housing.  And it's --

21                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay, that's a 

22           term I've really not ever heard before.  I 

23           was thinking you were talking about hotels.  

24                  Again, I've asked EDC from the 


                                                                   300

 1           previous panel to -- ESDC, sorry, to give me 

 2           information about why they think it actually 

 3           is legal, because I don't agree.  I don't 

 4           believe the statute does allow for it.  

 5                  And do you know, since we're on this 

 6           topic, in the commercial housing that IDAs 

 7           have been involved in, do they follow all the 

 8           housing laws?  Are these affordable units?  

 9           Do these meet housing code?  What are these 

10           units?  

11                  MR. SILVA:  Well, these units have to 

12           pass all local planning and zoning laws that 

13           are required of the community of which 

14           they're being placed in.  So without being 

15           able to look at specific data, I would say 

16           they have to, otherwise they wouldn't be 

17           allowed to come to market.  

18                  The data that we have and the data 

19           that we've generated from survey activity -- 

20           which is limited -- shows about 27 percent of 

21           the units that are generated over at least 

22           the last five years are considered affordable 

23           housing units.  

24                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  So I'd love to 


                                                                   301

 1           see any materials you have on that.

 2                  MR. SILVA:  I would like to, 

 3           honestly -- 

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Yes.

 5                  MR. SILVA:  -- if I may, put in a plug 

 6           for updating the existing Public Authorities 

 7           Reporting Information System, which is 

 8           something we've asked for for a variety of 

 9           years, to generate the type of data that we 

10           need to really examine the IDAs' roles in a 

11           variety of goals that frankly the state has 

12           put forth -- renewable energy, again, being 

13           another one of those.  

14                  Are we seeing a difference?  Are we 

15           moving the needle, so to speak?  

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And you raise 

17           another issue.  So thank you.  I was -- I 

18           asked the agencies that were here before what 

19           they were doing to evaluate meeting the 

20           Governor's executive order on decarbonizing 

21           and meeting green standards in any projects 

22           we are supporting with tax money.  

23                  Do you think that IDAs should also 

24           have to hold to that same level of green 


                                                                   302

 1           decarbonization in your projects?

 2                  You might have to tell me in writing 

 3           afterwards, because my time's up.

 4                  MR. SILVA:  I will.

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 6                  MR. SILVA:  Thank you.

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Senator Borrello.

 8                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  Thank you, 

 9           Madam Chair.  

10                  To you, Ryan -- I'll just direct this 

11           towards you.  So I want to dig in a little 

12           deeper to what was brought up before, because 

13           we talked about school districts losing 

14           money.  

15                  So if you have a vacant building and 

16           that building is paying -- you know, it's 

17           been reassessed lower because it's vacant.  

18           And now you bring in and offer a PILOT on 

19           that vacant building, and a new development 

20           goes in there.  Does the school district lose 

21           any money?  

22                  MR. SILVA:  I don't believe they would 

23           lose any revenue from what that building was 

24           paying --


                                                                   303

 1                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  Right.  Because the 

 2           base is what the vacant building was paying, 

 3           right?

 4                  MR. SILVA:  Correct. 

 5                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  And then typically 

 6           in a PILOT, you know, over the course of, 

 7           say, a 10-year PILOT, that escalates, right?

 8                  MR. SILVA:  It does.  It escalates and 

 9           expires eventually.

10                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  Right.  So it 

11           eventually expires.  

12                  So how does a school district lose 

13           money when a vacant building, which probably 

14           could be foreclosed upon and then revalued 

15           again to an even lower amount, which would 

16           actually cause real loss to a school 

17           district -- how could a new building or a 

18           new, say, manufacturing facility cause a 

19           school district to lose money?  

20                  MR. SILVA:  The belief would have to 

21           be that that project was going to happen 

22           regardless of whether or not the IDA 

23           supported it.  

24                  The reality is is that New York is a 


                                                                   304

 1           challenging place to do economic development.

 2                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  Amen.  

 3                  I live on the border of Pennsylvania 

 4           and, you know, we use every tool in our 

 5           economic development toolbox.  All it does is 

 6           level the playing field when Pennsylvania 

 7           does nothing.  And that's a problem.  

 8                  But I want to direct my remaining 

 9           questions to the two gentlemen next to you.  

10                  We talked a lot about loss to our -- 

11           billions of dollars lost for our school 

12           districts.  I agree with you.  

13                  New York City remains a sanctuary 

14           city -- $2.4 billion in the budget this year, 

15           $2 billion last year.  That's a lot of money.  

16           Would you support New York City rescinding 

17           its sanctuary status?  And if not, why not?  

18                  MR. KAHN:  I wouldn't support that.

19                  As we said, New York State has a 

20           $230 billion, $233 billion budget, and we 

21           have to prioritize how to spend that money.  

22           A budget is a moral document.  We spend it on 

23           the things that we believe.  And I think 

24           people that are seeking asylum, they are 


                                                                   305

 1           legally able to be here and -- 

 2                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  Ninety percent 

 3           don't qualify for asylum -- 90 percent don't 

 4           qualify, so -- 

 5                  MR. KAHN:  -- we should be able to 

 6           support them -- 

 7                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  Four-point-four 

 8           billion dollars just in this year and last 

 9           year, you don't think that could help our 

10           schools, if all we did was take away -- roll 

11           up the welcome mat that's out in front of 

12           New York City and New York State?   You don't 

13           think that -- I'm just trying to understand 

14           the practical applications of beating up 

15           economic development when we have -- when 

16           we're spending billions of dollars because 

17           New York City is a sanctuary city.

18                  MR. KAHN:  Absolutely.  So, I mean, 

19           the goal of economic development, the goal of 

20           government is to help people.  I can show you 

21           here that economic development is losing 

22           money.  Right?  We spent $4 million per job 

23           on Plug Power.  That was a waste of public 

24           money.  We --


                                                                   306

 1                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  I understand that.

 2                  MR. KAHN:  Just let me finish.  We 

 3           sold the Tesla factory equipment at a loss, 

 4           right?  That didn't help anybody.

 5                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  I want to say that 

 6           I agree with --

 7                  (Overtalk.)

 8                  MR. KAHN:  When we help migrants, 

 9           we're actually helping people.  And that's 

10           what should matter the most.  

11                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  They're throwing 

12           out 8,000 meals a day, courtesy of the 

13           taxpayer.  

14                  (Overtalk.)

15                  MR. DEUTSCH:  Immigrants are economic 

16           development. 

17                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you, 

18           Senator Borrello.  Thank you.  

19                  Any other people have -- oh, 

20           Senator O'Mara, you were on the list. 

21                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Thank you. 

22                  Mr. Silva, as it comes to housing and 

23           industrial development, do employees and 

24           workers at a plant that's incentivized to be 


                                                                   307

 1           there, an industry, do they live at the 

 2           plant?  

 3                  MR. SILVA:   I don't believe so.

 4                  SENATOR O'MARA:  I think they need 

 5           housing in the community to be able to 

 6           support the working families, correct?  

 7                  MR. SILVA:   Housing is where jobs go 

 8           after 5 p.m., or 7 p.m., depending -- or 

 9           9 p.m., depending upon the shift you work.

10                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Now, with respect to 

11           the loss of tax dollars, taking away from 

12           them, if there is a dilapidated or vacant 

13           industrial site that's paying $10,000 a year 

14           in property taxes, as it's vacant, and it 

15           gets developed in part with incentivizing by 

16           a PILOT and it ends up paying $100,000 in 

17           taxes, even under a PILOT, that seems to me 

18           to be a net benefit to the school district 

19           and other taxing entities of $90,000.  Not a 

20           loss of tax dollars.  I mean, that's the way 

21           I look at these.  

22                  MR. SILVA:  That's the way we view it 

23           as well, you know, that these are net new 

24           gains.  


                                                                   308

 1                  I do want to address Alabama and 

 2           Florida, because they were brought up.  

 3                  Alabama spends $10,000 a year per 

 4           student, or $7.6 billion annually.  They rank 

 5           46th in the country in education.  Florida 

 6           spends $9,800 a year per student, or 

 7           $28 billion annually, and Florida ranks 42nd 

 8           in the nation for education.  

 9                  New York State spends $37,000 per year 

10           per student, and New York ranks sixth in 

11           education.  

12                  I don't think we want to be like 

13           Florida and Alabama when it comes to 

14           education.  And frankly, when we talk about 

15           them not abating those programs, you can't 

16           abate when you don't spend.  And they don't 

17           spend on K through 12 education the way 

18           New York State does.  

19                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Thank you.  

20                  Just in the last minute, I went over 

21           with ESD Commissioner Knight on the seeming 

22           trend in losing manufacturers from New York 

23           State, particularly manufacturers that have 

24           operations in other states.  When they're 


                                                                   309

 1           making decisions to downsize, they're closing 

 2           New York and going to lower-cost states. 

 3                  What data or information do you have  

 4           on that?  And is anybody doing exit 

 5           interviews with these companies?  Because, 

 6           you know, seemingly you wake up and get 

 7           notice that 400 jobs are leaving and nobody 

 8           knew about it, nobody did anything.  And I 

 9           don't see the companies really making a 

10           statement on that.  

11                  So who's doing the exit interviews on 

12           these?  

13                  MR. SILVA:  That's a great question.  

14                  I don't know that there's a specific 

15           individual, organization or entity that's 

16           appointed to do that.  You know, ESD may 

17           collect information or ask companies about 

18           why they're leaving.  I know our members try 

19           to do that as well.  So there's work to be 

20           done.

21                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Thank you.

22                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you very 

23           much.  

24                  So I'm going to end this panel and 


                                                                   310

 1           thank all the gentlemen for their 

 2           presentations.  

 3                  MR. SILVA:  Thank you.

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  You're welcome to 

 5           follow up on questions in writing to us.  

 6                  Before I call the last panel of this 

 7           hearing, I want to remind everyone it is the 

 8           last panel of this hearing.  So when this 

 9           panel's done, we're going to take a 10-minute 

10           break.  Then we're going to come back as a 

11           brand-new hearing.  

12                  So anybody out there listening, if 

13           you're going -- if you think you're coming to 

14           the Workforce Hearing that in theory should 

15           have started at 2:00 -- but I warned everyone 

16           we're never on time, that it's more likely 

17           would be starting at around 3:00.  And so 

18           hopefully the people on the first panel of 

19           Workforce will be here and ready to start.  

20                  With that, last panel:  Student 

21           Borrower Protection Center, New York Law 

22           School Advanced Communications Law and Policy 

23           Institute, National Federation of Independent 

24           Business, and Wireless Infrastructure 


                                                                   311

 1           Association.  

 2                  If any of these folks are still with 

 3           us, waiting, I want you to come on down for 

 4           the panel.  

 5                  Good afternoon, everyone.  So let's 

 6           start with the Student Borrower Protection 

 7           Center.  And remember you have to press hard 

 8           so the green light's on.  Okay.  Hi.  

 9                  MR. BERKMAN-BREEN:  Hi.  

10                  Good afternoon, Chairs, ranking 

11           members, and members of the Legislature.  My 

12           name is Winston Berkman-Breen.  I'm the legal 

13           director at the Student Borrower Protection 

14           Center, a national policy nonprofit focused 

15           on eliminating the burden of student debt 

16           across America, including for over 

17           2.5 million New Yorkers.  

18                  In this role I regularly work with 

19           consumer protection laws across the country.  

20           Prior to joining the SBPC, I was the director 

21           of consumer advocacy and student loan 

22           ombudsman at New York Department of 

23           Financial Services, and a legal services 

24           attorney before that.  


                                                                   312

 1                  Thank you for the chance to testify 

 2           about the Governor's proposed Consumer 

 3           Protection Act, Part JJ of the TED 

 4           Article VII bill in the budget.  I submitted 

 5           more detailed written testimony, so I'll use 

 6           my time today to emphasize one point:  New 

 7           York's basic consumer protection law, 

 8           New York Business Law 349, lags far behind 

 9           the rest of the country, fails to protect 

10           New York households and small businesses, and 

11           was called toothless by the National Consumer 

12           Law Center.  

13                  The national standard for consumer 

14           protection at both the state and federal 

15           levels are so-called UDAP laws -- bans 

16           against unfair, deceptive, and abusive acts 

17           and practices.  These terms are well-defined 

18           by statute and courts and are generally 

19           applicable to all aspects of the economy and 

20           already applied in New York through federal 

21           law.  

22                  New York, often considered a bastion 

23           of consumer protection, is one of only eight 

24           states without a true UDAP.  Our law 


                                                                   313

 1           prohibits only deceptive acts and practices 

 2           and has several outdated provisions and 

 3           judicially imposed limitations.  This leaves 

 4           New York open to all manner of unfair and 

 5           abusive economic conduct that is unlawful 

 6           elsewhere and puts honest companies at a 

 7           competitive disadvantage.  

 8                  This affects student loan borrowers, 

 9           homeowners, nursing home residents, 

10           car owners, and mom-and-pop shops, among 

11           others.  This vacuum also allows bad actors 

12           to target and extract wealth from communities 

13           of color.  New York is overdue to modernize 

14           its consumer protection laws.  

15                  As proposed in her initial Article VII 

16           bill, Governor Hochul's Consumer Protection 

17           Act would address some of the issues with the 

18           current consumer protection law, such as 

19           prohibiting unfair and abusive acts and 

20           practices alongside deceptive conduct.  These 

21           are meaningful changes, but advocates were 

22           deeply troubled to see that the proposed text 

23           omits critical fixes to existing law that 

24           ultimately undermine its effectiveness.  


                                                                   314

 1                  Senator Comrie and Assemblymember 

 2           Weinstein have already introduced legislation 

 3           that would bring New York's consumer 

 4           protection law into parity with the rest of 

 5           the country:  The Consumer and Small Business 

 6           Protection Act.  This bill is similar to the 

 7           Governor's Consumer Protection Act, but 

 8           includes the key provisions that are missing 

 9           in the budget language.  

10                  My written testimony compares the 

11           existing law, the budget text, and the 

12           legislation, but today I'll say that the 

13           Comrie/Weinstein bill reflects best practices 

14           from across the country and incorporates 

15           New Yorkers' lived experiences and is the 

16           gold standard for consumer protection.  

17                  For this reason, I urge the 

18           Legislature to adopt the Consumer and 

19           Small Business Protection Act in their 

20           one-house budget proposals and to engage with 

21           the Executive to improve New York's existing 

22           law as part of the budget process.  With a 

23           true UDAP in place, honest businesses will 

24           thrive and consumers will navigate the 


                                                                   315

 1           marketplace without fear of being taken 

 2           advantage of.  

 3                  Thank you, and I'd be happy to answer 

 4           questions.  

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you very 

 6           much.  Next is New York Law School, Advanced 

 7           Communications Law and Policy Institute, 

 8           Michael Santorelli. 

 9                  MR. SANTORELLI:  Good afternoon, 

10           distinguished members.  Thank you for the 

11           opportunity to testify today.  

12                  My name is Michael Santorelli.  I'm a 

13           director of the ACLP at New York Law School.  

14                  My written testimony touches on a 

15           number of issues related to the efforts of 

16           the state's ConnectALL office to distribute 

17           more than $1 billion in grants to close 

18           New York's digital divide.  

19                  I'd like to focus my remarks now on 

20           the state's recently announced Municipal 

21           Infrastructure Program, which will allocate 

22           about $228 million in support of municipal 

23           broadband projects.  

24                  It was eye-opening to hear ESD earlier 


                                                                   316

 1           admit that the program will, in fact, waste 

 2           once-in-a-lifetime funding on projects that 

 3           will create duplicate broadband networks in 

 4           served areas.  

 5                  Make no mistake, ConnectALL is poised 

 6           to support construction of additional 

 7           broadband networks in served areas at a time 

 8           when that funding could be used to facilitate 

 9           broadband expansion into areas that lack even 

10           a single provider.  

11                  We have written extensively on the 

12           topic of municipal broadband.  These projects 

13           are incredibly risky because, in almost every 

14           case, they're built in markets that are 

15           already served, placing them in direct 

16           competition with private internet service 

17           providers that are much nimbler and more 

18           experienced when it comes to running a 

19           business.  

20                  Many public networks struggle or fail 

21           to sustain themselves financially.  

22           Oftentimes localities must prop up these 

23           networks with taxpayer funds to offset 

24           financial losses.  In dozens of cases, 


                                                                   317

 1           networks have failed and been sold to private 

 2           entities at a steep loss.  

 3                  And respectfully, contrary to what the 

 4           commissioner stated earlier, broadband is 

 5           significantly different than electricity or 

 6           water utility service.  Water and electricity 

 7           are monopoly services that do not compete 

 8           with others.  Broadband services, broadband 

 9           providers are in a competitive marketplace.  

10                  Given these facts, we have argued that 

11           all available broadband funding should focus 

12           first and foremost on serving unserved areas.  

13           Only after that critical policy objective is 

14           achieved, the state should carefully study 

15           whether subsidizing municipal broadband 

16           overbuilding makes sense.  

17                  If the state chooses to subsidize 

18           municipal broadband overbuilding, then it 

19           should do so with the understanding that its 

20           financial support will lead to the assumption 

21           of many risks by a city or town once it 

22           enters the broadband market.  It does not 

23           appear from publicly available information 

24           that ConnectALL has taken these reasonable 


                                                                   318

 1           steps.  

 2                  Also left unaddressed is what happens 

 3           when these networks struggle -- and there 

 4           will be struggles.  Will the state subsidize 

 5           struggling projects?  How will the state deal 

 6           with failed networks?  Is the Legislature 

 7           willing to allocate additional taxpayer funds 

 8           to prop up these networks in perpetuity?  

 9                  We recently published a profile of 

10           broadband in New York, and among many other 

11           things we analyzed the history of municipal 

12           broadband and its potential fate in New York.  

13           I submitted a copy of that with my testimony 

14           and commend it to the committees for review.

15                  So in closing, the ACLP respectfully 

16           submits that all available funding for 

17           broadband should be focused on closing the 

18           digital divide.  

19                  Thank you.  

20                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

21                  Our next speaker is from NFIB, 

22           Ashley Ranslow.  

23                  MS. RANSLOW:  Thank you very much.  

24           Thank you very much for allowing me to 


                                                                   319

 1           testify today.  

 2                  NFIB, the National Federation of 

 3           Independent Business, is a member-driven 

 4           organization representing over 11,000 small 

 5           businesses across the state of New York.  

 6           NFIB members are the businesses that we all 

 7           think about when we think of small business.  

 8                  Local hardware stores, independent 

 9           restaurants, florists, barbers, retailers, 

10           dry cleaners, convenience stores -- whatever 

11           you could think of, those are NFIB members.  

12                  There are close to 500,000 small 

13           businesses with employees in New York.  These 

14           small businesses employ 40 percent of the 

15           state's private-sector workforce, and that's 

16           over 3 million New Yorkers.  And their 

17           production accounts for nearly half of the 

18           state's GDP.  

19                  A strong, vibrant small business 

20           ecosystem supports local tax bases, 

21           governments and schools.  Sixty-seven cents 

22           of every dollar that you spend at a 

23           small business is recirculated in a local 

24           economy.  


                                                                   320

 1                  Small businesses are local job 

 2           creators and the bedrock of our state and 

 3           local economies, but they continue to face 

 4           significant financial challenges, from 

 5           inflation to elevated gas and energy prices, 

 6           the highest possible state unemployment 

 7           insurance taxes, and the exodus of workers 

 8           from the labor force.  

 9                  Post-pandemic financial challenges and 

10           New York's difficult business environment 

11           have taken a toll on small businesses.  

12           According to Empire State Development, since 

13           2018 New York has lost more than 17,000 small 

14           businesses.  

15                  Supporting pro-small-business 

16           priorities, as proposed in the Governor's 

17           budget, addressing the state's outstanding 

18           unemployment insurance debt, and overhauling 

19           the state's economic development strategy are 

20           the best ways to spur economic growth in 

21           communities across our state.  

22                  There are four provisions -- which I 

23           lay out in my testimony -- that we support.  

24           First and foremost, sunsetting the state's 


                                                                   321

 1           outdated COVID sick leave law as proposed in 

 2           the Governor's budget, the ELFA Part M.  

 3                  Also in ELFA, Part K, which makes 

 4           clarifications to Labor Law 191 that prevents 

 5           businesses from further harm by clarifying in 

 6           the Labor Law that it does not entitle a 

 7           manual worker to receive liquidated damages 

 8           if they were paid at least biweekly or 

 9           semimonthly.  Small businesses have been 

10           victims of these lawsuits, and it has put 

11           businesses out of business or in very dire 

12           situations.  

13                  Thirdly, we encourage the state to 

14           tackle the $7.3 billion unemployment 

15           insurance debt, which is leading to the 

16           highest possible state UI taxes, interest 

17           assessment surcharges, and increased federal 

18           UI taxes.   

19                  And lastly, the state must rethink its 

20           economic development strategy that benefits 

21           Main Street businesses that have been here 

22           for generations and, year after year, paying 

23           taxes to the State of New York.  We have to 

24           make sure that money is invested and is 


                                                                   322

 1           benefiting local independent small 

 2           businesses.  

 3                  We thank you for the time and 

 4           consideration in working together to create 

 5           an environment that helps small businesses 

 6           for the betterment of their employees, local 

 7           communities, the economy and all New Yorkers.  

 8                  Thank you.  

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you very 

10           much.  

11                  And our last testifier is Karmen 

12           Rajamani -- close?  

13                  MS. RAJAMANI:  Yes.

14                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay.  

15                  -- Wireless Infrastructure 

16           Association.

17                  MS. RAJAMANI:  Yes.  A gold star for 

18           you, Chairwoman.  

19                  (Laughter.)

20                  MS. RAJAMANI:  I am Karmen Rajamani.  

21           I am the VP of government affairs with the 

22           Wireless Infrastructure Association.  And 

23           thank you for the invitation to testify 

24           today.  


                                                                   323

 1                  We advocate for the widespread, 

 2           responsible deployment of wireless 

 3           infrastructure to enable connectivity 

 4           everywhere and ultimately to close the 

 5           digital divide.  More than 132,000 households 

 6           in the State of New York lack broadband 

 7           access, a fact that we cannot accept in 2024.  

 8                  Despite substantial state and federal 

 9           investment, there are barriers to universal 

10           connectivity.  One of these is the sluggish 

11           and inconsistent nature of municipal permit 

12           review.  

13                  In a recent report by Hudson Valley 

14           Pattern for Progress entitled "Making it 

15           Mesh: How the Hudson Valley Can Prepare for 

16           Next-Gen Wireless," it analyzed the different 

17           jurisdictional permitting processes across 

18           the state.  These variations led to delays 

19           and even the derailing of critical projects 

20           designed to bring that next-generation 

21           wireless connectivity to communities 

22           statewide.  

23                  The report emphasized the 

24           impracticality of the current application 


                                                                   324

 1           process for all stakeholders involved.  This 

 2           piecemeal application process imposes a 

 3           substantial administrative burden on 

 4           municipal staff as well as service providers.  

 5           In the end, it's citizens who pay the price 

 6           as they are deprived of the high-speed, 

 7           reliable online access they need.  

 8                  While federal regulations aim to 

 9           tackle inefficiencies in permitting review, 

10           it is important to note that New York can 

11           maintain its status as a home-rule state 

12           while improving its processes.  Legislation 

13           is critical to streamline the permitting 

14           review for wireless telecommunications 

15           applications, bringing predictability, 

16           proportionality, and transparency to the 

17           permitting process for communities and 

18           service providers, resulting in faster 

19           broadband deployment.  

20                  I urge the committee to prioritize 

21           this crucial issue for the benefit of all 

22           New Yorkers.  And I thank you for the time, 

23           and I'm happy to answer any questions.  

24                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:   Thank you very 


                                                                   325

 1           much.  

 2                  And Senators -- hello.  Senator 

 3           Borrello.

 4                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  (Inaudible.)

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  You're the only 

 6           hand I see at the moment. 

 7                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  Thank you.  Thank 

 8           you, Chair Krueger.  

 9                  First of all, I wish I could say 

10           something for all of you, but I'm going to 

11           have to focus on NFIB, because I'm a proud 

12           member.  And I want to just ask a question.  

13                  You brought up the unemployment 

14           insurance that -- it's very timely, because I 

15           literally got an email this morning from my 

16           wife, which she forwarded to me from our 

17           payroll company, about the amount of money 

18           they're going to impound in order for 

19           New York State -- New York State's failure to 

20           do anything with the unemployment insurance 

21           debt.  And she lists the thousands of dollars 

22           that our little companies are going to pay in 

23           order to satisfy the penalties and interest, 

24           on top of paying the highest unemployment 


                                                                   326

 1           insurance rates now every business in 

 2           New York State is paying.  

 3                  Can you please explain to the panel 

 4           what this is doing to small businesses and 

 5           what they are actually paying for because of 

 6           New York State failing to apply any money 

 7           whatsoever from the federal COVID relief 

 8           money to the unemployment insurance debt.  

 9           Please explain that.

10                  MS. RANSLOW:  Sure.  

11                  So there's -- they're really being hit 

12           on multiple fronts.  So when the solvency of 

13           the fund hit zero -- which New York's is at 

14           because it's still in debt -- it triggers the 

15           highest possible state UI tax rates.  So 

16           you're automatically in the highest sort of 

17           bucket.  

18                  So that averages about an extra $250 

19           per employee per year.  Right?  And we've 

20           been doing this now for a few years.  But you 

21           also have to pay the interest on the state's 

22           debt.  So every summer, businesses are hit 

23           with what we called an interest assessment 

24           surcharge, which is $20 to $25 -- it depends 


                                                                   327

 1           on the interest level -- per employee.  

 2                  But also the federal government has a 

 3           tool to try and get state governments to pay 

 4           back their debt by offsetting the federal UI 

 5           taxes.  So New York, because it's been in 

 6           debt after a couple of years now, our FUTA, 

 7           what they call the FUTA adjustment, has been 

 8           offset.  

 9                  So we're paying the highest possible 

10           state UI taxes, plus the interest assessment 

11           surcharge, plus extra federal UI taxes.  All 

12           in all, you're talking north of $300 per 

13           employee that businesses are paying per year.  

14                  And again, we've been doing this now 

15           for a couple of years.  So you're -- these 

16           are thousands of dollars.  This is a lot for 

17           small businesses.  That's a lot of money.  

18                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  Absolutely.  

19                  And we never got an answer from the 

20           Department of Labor as to how much fraud was 

21           experienced, but the Comptroller estimated 

22           about $11 billion, which is about the same 

23           amount of money that we were in debt.  

24                  So essentially the debt that every 


                                                                   328

 1           small business, every business in New York 

 2           State is paying off now, is a result of 

 3           fraud, unchecked fraud in the unemployment 

 4           insurance system, wouldn't you say?

 5                  MS. RANSLOW:  So it's -- you know, I 

 6           think the Department of Labor has one set of 

 7           numbers, the Comptroller obviously has 

 8           another set of numbers.  It's unclear sort of 

 9           whose numbers --

10                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  I don't think the 

11           Department of Labor gave us any numbers.  

12           They didn't give us any numbers as to what 

13           the fraud was experienced -- 

14                  MS. RANSLOW:  Yeah.  So, I mean, fraud 

15           was certainly -- it's something that should 

16           have been addressed, needed to be addressed, 

17           wasn't addressed.  And that certainly led to 

18           a significant flow of dollars out of the 

19           system that unfortunately we haven't gotten 

20           back. 

21                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  Thank you very 

22           much. 

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

24                  Assembly?  


                                                                   329

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Member Woerner.

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  Thank you so 

 3           much.  

 4                  Ashley, I want to start with you.  So 

 5           we -- in the last panel when you were here, I 

 6           saw, there was a lot of conversation about 

 7           the role of IDAs in economic development.  

 8           And there are some IDAs that have, through 

 9           application fees that they have collected, 

10           they have generated reserves, cash reserves 

11           that they really can't do much with.  

12                  When you think about reforming our 

13           economic development process, could you 

14           imagine a role for those IDAs in making 

15           investments and stabilizing Main Street 

16           businesses and the communities that they 

17           represent?  

18                  MS. RANSLOW:  Absolutely.  I think 

19           any -- so whether it's IDA or, you know, 

20           state economic development dollars coming 

21           through ESD through various programs, I think 

22           what we have seen -- if you look at these 

23           programs, you know, good or bad, they're 

24           highly specific to, you know, innovation or 


                                                                   330

 1           technology or life sciences, et cetera, 

 2           et cetera.  

 3                  That's not your typical small 

 4           business, you know, that's lining your 

 5           Main Street.  But those are the ones who've 

 6           been there year after year, who are paying 

 7           taxes to the state, who, you know, are 

 8           creating the local jobs, et cetera.  

 9                  I think any time we can look at how -- 

10           a way to sort of redirect some of those 

11           economic development dollars to those 

12           Main Street businesses is a win-win for 

13           New York State.  You know, we've certainly -- 

14           I mean, losing 17,000 small businesses since 

15           2018, we need to reverse that trend.  Right?  

16           So we need to come up with a way of using our 

17           economic development dollars so we're not 

18           picking winners and losers. 

19                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  Great.  Thank 

20           you very much.  

21                  Ms. Rajamani, so I want to just follow 

22           up on something you were saying about how 

23           challenging it is to get through local review 

24           processes when the processes are different -- 


                                                                   331

 1           different lengths of time.  

 2                  Wireless companies have choices as to 

 3           where they spend their money, where they make 

 4           investments. 

 5                  MS. RAJAMANI:  Yes.

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  To what extent 

 7           have you seen companies choosing to put their 

 8           money in other states where the review 

 9           process is more streamlined and predictable 

10           across localities?  

11                  MS. RAJAMANI:  Yes.  That's a great 

12           question, Assemblywoman.  

13                  That we do see that -- as a trade 

14           organization, we have a wide variety of 

15           members, and we work with them on their 

16           challenges.  But we do see that, that from a 

17           wireless carrier, if they have a dollar to 

18           spend, that deployment dollar they would 

19           rather spend in actually deploying the steel, 

20           the antennas to make the connectivity work, 

21           bring it into new areas or provide coverage 

22           or capacity -- gaps.  

23                  They would rather spend the dollars 

24           there.  Frankly, from a business and I think 


                                                                   332

 1           from your community and residents, they'd 

 2           rather it do that too.  

 3                  But yes, those dollars go to other 

 4           states where it's easier and faster to deploy 

 5           and spend that dollar.

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  Thank you very 

 7           much.

 8                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

 9                  Senator Sean Ryan.

10                  SENATOR RYAN:  Thank you.  

11                  Thank you, Ashley, for your testimony.  

12           It's always good to see and work with you. 

13                  Michael, I have a question about the 

14           broadband.  So where I live we don't really 

15           have a free market.  It's a -- the city signs 

16           a franchise agreement with the cable company, 

17           and then no one else could come into the 

18           market.  And there's another fiber company 

19           trying to come in.  

20                  Do you think we should use the 

21           reconnect money -- or the ConnectALL money to 

22           assist that second company?

23                  MR. SANTORELLI:  Well, first of all, 

24           thank you for the question.  


                                                                   333

 1                  Well, I mean, it is a free market.  

 2           Anyone can enter the market if the finances 

 3           work for the ISPs.

 4                  SENATOR RYAN:  Well, you can't.  Once 

 5           you -- I mean, the city's signed a franchise 

 6           agreement with the cable provider -- 

 7                  MR. SANTORELLI:  Anyone else can come 

 8           in.  Yes, I mean --

 9                  SENATOR RYAN:  You can get on-the-pole 

10           access if -- 

11                  MR. SANTORELLI:  I mean, if you can 

12           negotiate it and come to an agreement, anyone 

13           can connect --

14                  SENATOR RYAN:  With the city. 

15                  MR. SANTORELLI:  Right.  

16                  SENATOR RYAN:  Yeah.  But they're not 

17           going to sign more than one. 

18                  MR. SANTORELLI:  Well, they could.

19                  SENATOR RYAN:  Well, usually their 

20           agreements say you can't.  

21                  MR. SANTORELLI:  Right.

22                  SENATOR RYAN:  There's exclusivity. 

23                  MR. SANTORELLI:  But, I mean, so 

24           regardless -- I mean, I would argue that --


                                                                   334

 1                  SENATOR RYAN:  I don't have an opinion 

 2           here about -- but I was just --

 3                  MR. SANTORELLI:  Well, I would argue 

 4           that any ISP could explore and potentially 

 5           enter the market.  But your market is already 

 6           technically served, so arguably -- and what 

 7           we think and what many others think is that 

 8           available broadband subsidies should go to 

 9           the areas that are not served first.

10                  SENATOR RYAN:  So they should go to 

11           the unserved --

12                  MR. SANTORELLI:  Right.

13                  SENATOR RYAN:  -- before the 

14           underserved.

15                  MR. SANTORELLI:  Yes. 

16                  SENATOR RYAN:  So I have pretty 

17           slow -- and I see the wheel (gesturing; 

18           grinding noise). 

19                  MR. SANTORELLI:  Right.

20                  SENATOR RYAN:  But it's way better 

21           than people a few miles away who have 

22           nothing.

23                  MR. SANTORELLI:  Right.  Right, yeah.

24                  SENATOR RYAN:  Doesn't a lot this just 


                                                                   335

 1           go back to the fact that we don't regulate 

 2           internet like we do other utilities -- water, 

 3           gas, you know, electric?  

 4                  You know, we allowed Verizon to build 

 5           a statewide FIOS fiber optic network almost 

 6           20 years ago, and we gave them permission to 

 7           skip Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse and Albany.

 8                  MR. SANTORELLI:  Right.  So as I 

 9           mentioned before, broadband is completely 

10           different from the national monopoly services 

11           of electricity and water.  And rightly so, 

12           because it can be delivered in various 

13           different ways -- cable, fiber, wirelessly, 

14           fixed wireless, mobile wireless.  

15                  Electricity and water, you get through 

16           one pipe.  And the regulatory systems are 

17           completely different for that reason alone.  

18           You don't want to regulate broadband like a 

19           monopoly service and then close the door to 

20           all other providers and stop innovation in 

21           the delivery of services, because over --

22                  SENATOR RYAN:  Have we really seen 

23           innovation in this? 

24                  MR. SANTORELLI:  Sure.  Fixed wireless 


                                                                   336

 1           has exploded in recent years in many of these 

 2           rural, underserved areas through T-Mobile, 

 3           Verizon --

 4                  SENATOR RYAN:  I hope the innovation 

 5           comes to my area soon, because, you know --

 6                  MR. SANTORELLI:  Sure.  I mean, the 

 7           localities can probably work with their --

 8                  SENATOR RYAN:  It's still taking a 

 9           long time to download a Netflix movie. 

10                  (Laughter.) 

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  (Mic off; 

12           inaudible.)

13                  SENATOR RYAN:  Yeah.  Thank you very 

14           much.

15                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  All right.  Thank 

16           you all for -- oh, do you have any other 

17           Assemblymembers?  

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Yes.  

19                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Sorry.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Member Otis.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  Thank you, Chairs.  

22                  And thank you all for your testimony.  

23           You all have little different silos of this, 

24           all very interesting, and good work on all of 


                                                                   337

 1           your parts.  

 2                  I have a question for Mr. Santorelli.  

 3           Interested in knowing more about your 

 4           institute, but curious whether your institute 

 5           has a position and done reports on local 

 6           digital inclusion programs.  You know, most 

 7           of the federal money and a lot of the state 

 8           money is on the macro-broadband 

 9           infrastructure.  And we need to do that, but 

10           there's also a need to make sure that we're 

11           sending a share of the big funding to these 

12           local programs that close the digital divide, 

13           people that have been excluded.  

14                  So tell me about your work, if any, in 

15           that silo.

16                  MR. SANTORELLI:  Absolutely.  And 

17           That's actually been a personal passion of 

18           mine.  And for many years we've always argued 

19           that what we call the demand side of 

20           issues -- the digital literacy, the 

21           adoption -- has been completely overlooked by 

22           the state.  

23                  Now it's being forced to come up with 

24           a plan as a result of receiving I think 


                                                                   338

 1           twenty or $30 million in federal funding, 

 2           digital equity funding -- they have to come 

 3           up with a plan to finally address these 

 4           issues on a statewide level.  

 5                  Over the years we've seen pockets 

 6           of -- New York City has a digital equity 

 7           plan, and other parts of the state have that, 

 8           but there's never been a comprehensive look 

 9           at these issues.  And that's been a true 

10           failing of the state, frankly, and a 

11           frustration of mine, again, because 

12           regardless of -- you know, experiences with 

13           services notwithstanding, the state is 

14           incredibly well served when you look at the 

15           data, and adoption rates are actually pretty 

16           high.  But it still lags in certain 

17           communities:  Low-income households, older 

18           adults, and some others.  

19                  And there's been very few studies or 

20           looks at digital literacy skills, which is 

21           increasingly important now in the age of AI 

22           and with everything being online.  There's no 

23           curriculum for digital literacy, there's no 

24           standards for digital literacy, there's no 


                                                                   339

 1           data for digital literacy.  

 2                  So it's been a failing.  Hopefully the 

 3           state will come around and, through the 

 4           implementation of its digital equity plan, 

 5           finally get the state on the right track on 

 6           these issues. 

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  So -- and 

 8           ConnectALL has done their -- two reports that 

 9           they've submitted to the federal government.  

10           I think the focus -- and maybe you'll share 

11           in the advocacy of this -- is to make sure 

12           that we're getting a healthy amount of money 

13           to use local practitioners.  

14                  Because, you know, you can build the 

15           infrastructure, but if people still don't 

16           have the digital literacy skills, you're not 

17           providing the access that we desire.  

18                  So thank you, and eager to learn more 

19           about your institute.  Thank you. 

20                  MR. SANTORELLI:  Thank you.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Member Ra.  

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you, Mr. Chair.  

23                  Ms. Ranslow, can you -- well, I guess 

24           this is general in terms of what we've been 


                                                                   340

 1           talking about all day today.  But first a 

 2           question -- and I think I know what your 

 3           answer is -- and then if you can elaborate on 

 4           how we can do better.  

 5                  But, you know, we've talked about 

 6           $11 billion in economic development in this 

 7           state.  Many people, myself included, would 

 8           say that it spends too much for what return 

 9           we get.  So, A, are these programs designed 

10           in the best way they can be to benefit our 

11           small businesses in New York State?

12                  MS. RANSLOW:  No.

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Okay.  And how can we 

14           make them better benefit our small businesses 

15           so that we can reverse that loss of 

16           17,000 small businesses since 2018 that you 

17           spoke about earlier?

18                  MS. RANSLOW:  I think we need to look 

19           at -- you know, we have a lot of different 

20           programs, for example, that offer tax credits 

21           or certain, you know, tax-advantageous 

22           benefits to certain types of companies or 

23           programs, et cetera.  

24                  We need to look at opening those up.  


                                                                   341

 1           Right?  We've put -- to small businesses.  

 2           Right?  Because you look at it -- and I had 

 3           this conversation with Senator Ryan not too 

 4           long ago.  You know, we're giving out money 

 5           to larger businesses or bigger corporations 

 6           who arguably might have the resources to do 

 7           X, Y or Z.  

 8                  Small businesses don't necessarily 

 9           have the access or resources to do the same 

10           thing.  And for example, wouldn't it be great 

11           for an independent bookstore on your 

12           Main Street to be able to use a grant or use 

13           a tax-credit program to invest in additional 

14           point-of-sale software or website development 

15           so that it could sell goods online like 

16           Amazon can, right, or whoever.  

17                  So, you know, how do we look at the 

18           way we spend economic development dollars and 

19           reimagine them so that small businesses can 

20           take advantage of some of these tax credit 

21           and different related programs that we offer 

22           to other types of businesses.  

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you.

24                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Assemblymembers?


                                                                   342

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN PRETLOW:  Member Stirpe.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Thank you.  

 3                  And as chair of Small Business once 

 4           upon a time, I'm sure Ashley remembers how 

 5           many press conferences we did trying to get 

 6           some assistance on the unemployment insurance 

 7           issue.  

 8                  What you might not know is we came 

 9           very close.  Because in conference we got to 

10           the point where we were going to pay all the 

11           interest and we were going to refinance a 

12           bunch of it at a lower interest rate; then 

13           the labor came in and said, Well, if we're 

14           giving business that, you've got to give us 

15           this.  And that blew up the whole deal.  So 

16           we came close, but not quite. 

17                  But one thing -- I'd like to clear up 

18           maybe a misperception.  We've lost 17,000 

19           small businesses, but there's not a week that 

20           goes by that I don't send out letters to 

21           12 new small businesses in my district, and I 

22           think you can spread that across the state.  

23                  Most businesses fail within the first 

24           five years, and most of them are small 


                                                                   343

 1           businesses.  So there's a lot of swirl 

 2           basically as far as businesses starting and 

 3           businesses ending.  So I don't think we're 

 4           quite as bad as maybe some of the numbers 

 5           might make us look.  

 6                  And Ms. Rajamani, do you have a 

 7           prototype of a process that we could 

 8           standardize that, you know, would make it 

 9           easier to go through the permitting process?

10                  MS. RAJAMANI:  Yes, actually.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  You do.

12                  MS. RAJAMANI:  And that with our 

13           association, that we championed one 

14           earlier -- I forget, I'm -- is it a new year?  

15           But at the end of last year, we worked with 

16           the Adirondack Park Agency, that they were 

17           going through a code rewrite.  That they're a 

18           rural area, they need connectivity.  

19                  They have been very innovative -- 

20           we've been talking about where is the 

21           innovation.  They've been very innovative and 

22           understand that there is a push/pull on the 

23           aesthetics, perhaps, of these 

24           infrastructures, but everyone understands the 


                                                                   344

 1           necessity for them.  So how do we get it 

 2           with -- in a way that the community will 

 3           accept?  

 4                  And so we were able to work with the 

 5           agency very successfully, that they came up 

 6           with a code rewrite.  It wasn't perfect.  Of 

 7           course from an industry perspective, we'd 

 8           like a little something else, but we left 

 9           that for another day.  And it does a lot to 

10           address community, aesthetic concerns, 

11           siting.  

12                  And -- but it was technology-agnostic, 

13           so it allows for all the different sorts of 

14           technologies to help close the digital 

15           divide.  It took the community involvement -- 

16           it's part of the process at the beginning of 

17           frankly where to site it.  But after that, 

18           it's a permit.  

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Would you be 

20           willing to send me whatever you have -- 

21                  MS. RAJAMANI:  Oh, absolutely.

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  -- as a 

23           prototype?  I'd appreciate it.

24                  MS. RAJAMANI:  Sure. 


                                                                   345

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

 2                  And I'm not going to use the time, but 

 3           for NFIB, I would love if you could help us 

 4           understand -- even though we talk about the 

 5           numbers of small businesses closing, based on 

 6           the previous question -- what is the normal 

 7           churn, so to speak, of businesses going out 

 8           of business or starting up?  

 9                  And since you're national, is 

10           New York's rate in fact dramatically 

11           different than other states?  

12                  I understand, lots of businesses 

13           close, but I actually don't know whether 

14           we're out of the norm.  And of course you 

15           have to look at, I guess, pre-COVID, 

16           current -- pre-COVID, during COVID, and 

17           post-COVID, because we know that had an 

18           enormous impact on the business community for 

19           everyone.  

20                  So I would love that as follow-up.

21                  MS. RANSLOW:  Sure.

22                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

23                  And with that -- I'm just 

24           double-checking -- we're going to thank the 


                                                                   346

 1           last panel of this hearing.  I'm going to 

 2           officially gavel us out of this hearing.  

 3                  I'm going to give everybody who's 

 4           going to come for the first time, or come 

 5           back, 10 minutes, and at 3:30 we'll start the 

 6           next hearing.  

 7                  Thank you so much.

 8                  (Whereupon, the budget hearing 

 9           concluded at 3:20 p.m.)

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