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Hochul says there's a 'mountain' of work as session draws to a close

state capitol building
UpstateNYer
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CC BY-SA 3.0/Wikimedia Commons
The eastern side of the New York state Capitol in Albany, NY.

The legislative session is scheduled to end on Thursday, and Gov. Kathy Hochul and the Legislature hope to accomplish several major issues, including further protecting abortion rights and more gun safety measures.

Lawmakers are not expected to conclude until well into the weekend.

“There’s a lot of work to do,” Hochul said. “But it is not unusual to have a mountain of work to do in the final weeks. That is the nature of Albany.”

In the wake of mass shootings this month in Buffalo and in Texas, Hochul has prioritized anti-gun violence measures. The suspects in both incidents were 18 years old and had reportedly purchased AR-15 rifles recently. The governor is seeking to raise the age on the purchase of AR-15 rifles to 21.

“I don’t want 18-year-olds to have guns,” Hochul said. “At least not in the state of New York.”

The governor also wants to strengthen the state’s red flag law, which allows a judge to order weapons to be seized from people believed to present a danger to themselves and others. The law was not invoked when the alleged Buffalo shooter threatened to commit a murder-suicide at his high school in 2021.

Mike Groll
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Office of Gov. Kathy Hochul
Gov. Kathy Hochul outlines her priorities for the end of the legislative session at a bill-signing ceremony for the Adult Survivors Act on May 24, 2022.

Hochul wants to make it mandatory for police to activate the red flag process whenever they encounter someone who is making violent threats.

Hochul also wants to tighten some loopholes in the state’s gun control laws to include what are known as AOWs, or any other weapon. She said the weapons are essentially guns, but are deliberately designed to evade the laws.

The governor also wants to require microstamping on all semi-automatic pistols to create a “fingerprint” on the bullets to help crime investigators track the guns and potentially link the weapons to other crimes.

Another priority for Hochul and Democratic leaders of the Legislature is to respond if the U.S. Supreme Court strikes down the 1973 abortion rights decision Roe v. Wade. The move is expected after a draft opinion that would overrule Roe leaked earlier this month.

New York has already codified the rights in the decision into state law, but lawmakers, including Senate Finance Committee Chair Liz Krueger, would like to go further and include those rights in the state’s constitution.

The proposal would add new categories of protection, including sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, national origin, ethnicity, age, disability, and sex, which Krueger said includes pregnancy.

“The right to privacy and nondiscrimination in pregnancy and in pregnancy outcomes,” Krueger said. “Whether it is your choice to continue a pregnancy or not to continue a pregnancy.”

If Roe is overturned, it’s expected that people from states where abortion would be banned would come to New York to seek the procedure. Krueger is sponsoring bills to protect New York’s abortion and reproductive health care providers against legal actions from authorities in those other states.

There are a number of criminal justice reforms under discussion, including the Clean Slate Act. It would allow some people convicted of some crimes to have their records sealed if they’ve completed their time in prison and post-release supervision or parole.

At a rally, Clean Slate supporters said it would enable them to move forward with their lives, and get jobs and housing.

“We are robbing people of opportunity simply because we are a society of revenge and not rehabilitation,” said state Sen. Zellnor Myrie, a sponsor of the act.

Another criminal justice measure would allow early release for elderly people who are ill.

Lawmakers are also weighing a two-year moratorium on cryptocurrency mining in New York. Cryptocurrency companies require vast amounts of energy to run computer networks that “create” the bitcoins. A former coal-burning plant on Seneca Lake in the Finger Lakes is already in operation, and more are planned in other locations, including North Tonawanda in Niagara County.

The governor said she can see both sides, and that there is a “balancing act” between environmental concerns and the need for jobs in economically depressed areas. She said she will take the Legislature’s lead on the bill.

Some items may not get resolved before the session ends, including revamping an affordable housing tax credit for real estate developers known as 421-a. Critics have said the program is a tax giveaway to developers and does not create enough affordable homes.

Hochul said whatever does not get resolved in the next few days will be taken up again in January. Still, she said she expects most key items will be settled.

“I’ve got all my pens ready to go,” Hochul said.

The early June end of session may not be the final meeting of the Senate and Assembly this year. Hochul said she may call a special session to deal with an expected challenge by the U.S. Supreme Court to New York’s concealed weapons ban. The governor said allowing concealed carry could further increase the rising rate of gun violence, and she will propose new laws to prevent that.

Karen DeWitt is Capitol Bureau chief for the New York Public News Network, composed of a dozen newsrooms across the state. She has covered state government and politics for the network since 1990.