Public Hearing - August 13, 2020

             NEW YORK JOINT SENATE AND STATE ASSEMBLY



            SENATE STANDING COMMITTEE ON LABOR
            SENATE STANDING COMMITTEE ON BANKS
SENATE STANDING COMMITTEE ON INVESTIGATIONS AND GOVERNMENT
                        OPERATIONS

           ASSEMBLY STANDING COMMITTEE ON LABOR
           ASSEMBLY STANDING COMMITTEE ON BANKS
    ASSEMBLY STANDING COMMITTEE ON OVERSIGHT, ANALYSIS
                     AND INVESTIGATION




                  PUBLIC VIRTUAL HEARING

           IMPACT OF COVID-19 ON THE WORKFORCE




                     August 13, 2020

                 10:00 a.m. - 11:00 p.m.
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Joint Hearing COVID Impact on Workforce, 8-13-20

SENATORS PRESENT:

  SENATOR JESSICA RAMOS,
  Chair, Senate Standing Committee on Labor

  SENATOR JAMES SANDERS,
  Chair, Senate Standing Committee on Banks

  SENATOR JAMES SKOUFIS,
  Chair, Senate Standing Committee on Investigations and
  Government Operations

  SENATOR JOHN LIU

  SENATOR ANDREW GOUNARDES

  SENATOR GEORGE BORELLO

  SENATOR DIANE SAVINO

  SENATOR MONICA MARTINEZ

  SENATOR PATRICK GALLIVAN

  SENATOR JAMES TEDISCO

  SENATOR ROBERT JACKSON

  SENATOR DAPHNE JORDAN

  SENATOR TODD KAMINSKY

  SENATOR GUSTAVO RIVERA

  SENATOR SHELLEY MAYER

  SENATOR JEN METZGER

  SENATOR THOMAS O'MARA

  SENATOR BRAD HOYLMAN



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ASSEMBLY MEMBERS PRESENT:

  ASSEMBLY MEMBER THOMAS ABINANTI,
  Chair, Assembly Standing Committee on Banks

  ASSEMBLY MEMBER JOHN MCDONALD,
  Chair, Assembly Standing Committee on Oversight,
  Analysis and Investigation

  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MARIANNE BUTTENSCHON

  ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRIAN MANKTELOW

  ASSEMBLY MEMBER HARRY BRONSON

  ASSEMBLY MEMBER ROBERT SMULLEN

  ASSEMBLY MEMBER KEVIN BYRNE

  ASSEMBLY MEMBER JOSEPH DESTEFANO

  ASSEMBLY MEMBER JO ANNE SIMON

  ASSEMBLY MEMBER ALFRED TAYLOR

  ASSEMBLY MEMBER CARMEN DE LA ROSA

  ASSEMBLY MEMBER CATALINA CRUZ

  ASSEMBLY MEMBER N. NICK PERRY

  ASSEMBLY MEMBER YUH-LINE NIOU




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                                   INDEX

                                                                      Page
PANEL 1:

Roberta Reardon                                                        12
     Commissioner
     New York State Department of Labor


PANEL 2:

Karen Cacace                                       128
     Labor Bureau Chief
     New York State Office of the Attorney General


PANEL 3:

Mario Cilento                                                         162
     President
     New York State AFL-CIO

Mike Neidl                                                            162
     Legislative Director
     New York State AFL-CIO


PANEL 4:

Wayne Spence                                                          202
     President
     New York State Public Employees Federation

Pat Kane, RN                                                          208
     Executive Director
     New York State Nurses Association




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PANEL 5:

Ron Busby                                                             257
     President & CEO
     U.S. Black Chambers, Inc.

Ken Pokalsky                                      261
     Vice President
     The Business Council of New York State, Inc.

Melinda Mack                                      266
     Executive Director
     New York Association of Training and Employment
     Professionals


PANEL 6:

Robert W. Newell, Jr.,                            296
     President
     United Food and Commercial Workers Union Local 1500

Amanda Jensen                                                         302
     Policy and Legislative Coordinator
     New York State Laborers' Union

Jared Trujillo                                     306
     President
     Association for Legal Aid Attorneys, UAW 2325

Carlos Villalba                                                       311
     Cashier/Member
     1199 SEIU United Healthcare Workers East


PANEL 7:

M. Patricia Smith                                                     330
     Of Counsel
     National Employment Law Project

James A. Parrott, PhD                                                 334
     Director for Economic and Fiscal Policies
     Center for New York City Affairs




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PANEL 7, cont'd.:

Nicole Salk                                                              340
     Senior Staff Attorney
     Legal Services NYC

Richard Blum                                                             344
     Staff Attorney
     The Legal Aid Society


PANEL 8:

Jacalyn Goldzweig Panitz                                                 370
     Paralegal Casehandler
     Legal Aid Society of New York City

E. Jeanne Harnois                                                        374
     Worker

Gaela Solo                                                               380
     Worker

Yamilez Quinones                                                         384
     Worker


PANEL 9:

Zubin Soleimany                                                          402
     General Counsel
     New York Taxi Workers Alliance

Rafael Espinal                                                           408
     Executive Director
     Freelancers Union

Stephanie Freed                                                          416
     Worker/Co-Founder
     ExtendPUA.org


PANEL 10:

Richard Winsten                                                          429
     State and Broadway, Inc.



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PANEL 11:

Deborah Axt                                                            436
     Co-Executive Director
     Make the Road New York

Carlyn Cowen                                                           442
     Chief Policy and Public Affairs Officer
     Chinese-American Planning Council

Diana Moreno                                                           448
     Programs Director
     New Immigrant Community Empowerment


PANEL 12:

Charlene Obernauer                                483
     Executive Director
     New York Committee for Occupational Safety and Health

Rebecca Miller                                                         490
     Deputy Legislative & Political Director
     Communication Workers of America District 1

Maritza Silva-Farrell                                                  496
     Executive Director
     ALIGN: The Alliance for a Greater New York


PANEL 13:

Lisa Zucker                                                            513
     Legislative Attorney
     New York Civil Liberties Union

Margaret McIntyre                                                      518
     Attorney at Law
     National Employment Lawyers Association
     New York Chapter




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2                   (The public hearing commenced at 10:00

3       a.m.)

4                   SENATOR JESSICA RAMOS, CHAIR, SENATE

5       STANDING COMMITTEE ON LABOR:                    Okay. Well, good

6       morning everyone. My name is Jessica Ramos, I am

7       the state senator representing District 13 in

8       Queens and I also have the honor of chairing the

9       Senate Committee on Labor. Today, we will be

10      holding a workforce development hearing so that

11      we can better understand how COVID impacted New

12      York workers. And I'm very glad we are joined by

13      many of my colleagues, including Senator Skoufis,

14      Senator Liu, Senator Jordan, Senator O'Mara,

15      Senator Serino, Senator Borello, Senator

16      Martinez, Senator Gounardes, Senator Tedisco and

17      Senator Jackson and I hope I didn't miss any of

18      my colleagues. Raise your hand if you're missing.

19                  But, the importance of this hearing is

20      really critical to figuring out how we can

21      prevent some of the confusion and lack of

22      resources that we saw in the responsiveness to

23      the crisis of New Yorkers trying to access their

24      benefits. And that's why we are all here today,



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2       to hear from not only the Department of Labor,

3       but many other entities, so that we can figure

4       out how we can work better, make sure that we're

5       protecting our workers not only with unemployment

6       insurance and other benefits, but making sure

7       that they've been provided with PPE and other

8       protections in light of, well, the disaster that

9       COVID wreaked in our state, unfortunately.

10                 Right now, as of June, the statewide

11      unemployment rate is at 15.7 percent. Needless to

12      say that my colleagues here and I, and my

13      colleagues from the assembly, who you will meet

14      in a second, will be working in lockstep to

15      ensure that we are fighting for New Yorkers, that

16      we're rebuilding our economy in a responsible way

17      and that we are putting our New Yorkers and

18      workers first. So with that, I want to kick it

19      off to my colleague from the New York State

20      Assembly and he is the chair of the Oversight

21      Committee, and that is Assemblyman John McDonald.

22                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER JOHN MCDONALD, CHAIR,

23      ASSEMBLY STANDING COMMITTEE ON OVERSIGHT,

24      ANALYSIS AND INVESTIGATION:                  Thank you, senator,



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2       and good morning to everybody. And I'm also

3       joined by our co-chair, another co-chair, the

4       Chair of Banking, Tom Abinanti. As many of you

5       may know, the labor chair position is currently

6       vacant, but be not afraid, there are many

7       dedicated and trusted staff that are following

8       every single word and moment of testimony today

9       to make sure all thoughts and concerns and

10      solutions are captured properly.

11                 What I'd like to do first of all is

12      recognize our colleagues in the assembly that

13      have joined us today, Marianne Buttenschon, Harry

14      Bronson, Jo Anne Simon, Joe DeStefano, Kevin

15      Byrne, Robert Smullen, ranker Bryan Manktelow and

16      I think that's it for now. Anybody who hasn't

17      been recognized, follow the senator's lead and

18      raise your hand.

19                 Just a little bit of process today. We

20      have 14 panels, which is an awful lot of panels.

21      And it's important because we have a lot to hear

22      and a lot to consume, and therefore we are going

23      to move along in an appropriate process that

24      we've been working on the last couple of days



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2       with 31 hours of testimony on nursing homes. Each

3       panelist will be given five minutes to speak and

4       it's a hard five, I'll be very clear. Each chair

5       and each ranker will also be given five minutes

6       for questions and responses, and then members of

7       the respective committees that are hosting this

8       event will have three minutes for questions. Be

9       not afraid if you don't get your questions in or

10      if you're not one of those committees. Please

11      feel free to forward to the senator or myself

12      your questions your questions and comments and we

13      will make sure to get them to the appropriate

14      entities, and to ensure a timely response within

15      a couple of weeks from when that letter is sent.

16                 I think that's it. The only thing that I

17      want to share before we get started and turn it

18      back to the senator is Dick Gottfried, who is our

19      health chair has a nice little comment that he

20      talks about. Because we expect to go for a period

21      of time, so after three hours we will take a

22      break for what he calls ambulation and toileting.

23      Being a healthcare professional, I want to add

24      nutrition to that, so ambulation, toileting and



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2       nutrition will be in three hours, give or take.

3       And we'll give you a heads up and that way those

4       who are watching can plan their day accordingly,

5       so senator, back to you to introduce our first

6       panel.

7                    SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you, assemblyman.

8       I want to add one more point of information for

9       our colleagues, and that is if you do wish to be

10      recognized, make sure to use the raise hand

11      function on Zoom, so that way we can put you in

12      the queue. And with that, our first panel, which

13      is a member of one, is our Department of Labor

14      commissioner, Roberta Reardon, who now has five

15      minutes to testify before we begin questions.

16      Thank you.

17                   MS. ROBERTA REARDON, COMMISSIONER, NEW

18      YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF LABOR:                       Good morning.

19      And thank you for inviting me today. I'd like to

20      especially thank the chairs and distinguished

21      members of each committee for convening this

22      hearing, so could I speak directly with you about

23      the unprecedented challenges the Department of

24      Labor has been facing over the last five months.



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2       And the emergency measures we have taken to get

3       money into the hands of unemployed New Yorkers

4       during this crucial time.

5                  As you know, we are in the midst of a

6       crisis no one saw coming. Every state has

7       experienced an historic surge in unemployment

8       claims and every state systems have been pushed

9       to the limit by this pandemic. However, in New

10      York we have moved faster and more aggressively

11      than any other state in the nation to get much

12      needed benefits into the hands of unemployed New

13      Yorkers.

14                 To give you some context about this

15      crisis, since the COVID-19 pandemic began in

16      early March, the Department of Labor has paid

17      almost $40 billion in unemployment benefits to

18      more than 3.3 million New Yorkers in just over

19      five months. In 2019, we paid just $2.1 billion

20      in total. In that context, we have paid over 18

21      years worth of benefits in just over five months.

22                 That's staggering and sobering. Before

23      this pandemic, the highest number of new

24      unemployment claims in one week nationally was



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2       695,000 in October of 1982. During the height of

3       this crisis, we saw one week with 6.8 million new

4       claims. That means this economic crisis is

5       greater than anything the United States has seen

6       since the Great Depression and every state is

7       struggling. In fact, we have seen 20 straight

8       weeks with over one million national unemployment

9       claims. And these numbers are simply unheard of.

10                 The surge of applications crashed on New

11      York like a wave, pushing our systems to the

12      brink. In a typical week before the current

13      crisis, our call center averaged about 50,000

14      calls. But during the peak week in late March,

15      our call center received over 8.2 million phone

16      calls, a 16,000 percent increase. And our

17      website, which typically received 350,000 hits

18      during the course of a week, received over six

19      million visits one week an increased 1,600

20      percent.

21                 As this wave was crashing over New York,

22      we immediately began to address these issues with

23      real time technology updates including building

24      and launching a new online unemployment



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2       application backed by Google cloud technology. To

3       free up our phone lines, we launched a callback

4       initiative and we increased the number of DOL

5       representatives making outgoing calls, answering

6       incoming calls and processing applications from

7       400 to over 7,000.

8                  We were able to do that because of our

9       incredible state workforce. Thousands of state

10      workers came from other state agencies to join us

11      in this massive effort. We also expanded call

12      center and online filing hours to seven days a

13      week. And despite cumbersome federal guidelines,

14      we updated our online application to provide a

15      seamless experience for pandemic unemployment

16      assistance applicants on April 20th, weeks ahead

17      of other major states.

18                 We have launched new proactive

19      communication initiatives to keep New Yorkers

20      informed throughout the process. This included

21      identifying the number one reason why

22      unemployment applications go into partial status,

23      which was an incorrect or missing federal

24      employer identification number. We issued a



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2       directive to all New York based businesses

3       reminding of their legal obligations to provide

4       employees this information. We also took steps to

5       proactively inform New Yorkers that they must

6       submit a federally required certification each

7       week to receive their benefits. And we rolled out

8       a new online system to help them quickly and

9       efficiently submit previous weeks'

10      certifications. Through the automated system and

11      DocuSign technology, they can now be done much

12      faster.

13                 In addition we launched another tool,

14      which has directly contacted millions of New

15      Yorkers via e-mail and text messages as their

16      applications moved through each step of the

17      process. We've also implemented an automated chat

18      bot on our website to answer New Yorkers most

19      frequently asked questions. And lastly, we've

20      introduced a triage phone system that better

21      connects unemployed New Yorkers with the help

22      they need.

23                 We did everything within our power and

24      authority to cut through the bureaucratic red



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2       tape and get New Yorkers their benefits as

3       quickly as possible. However, we are bound by

4       specific federal laws and regulations to

5       safeguard against fraud. Thanks to the proactive

6       efforts of agency investigators and the strong

7       protections built into our application system,

8       the New York State Department of Labor has

9       identified over 42,200 fraudulent claims during

10      the COVID-19 crisis and stopped fraudsters from

11      stealing over $1 billion in taxpayer money.

12                 We knew very early on in the crisis the

13      workplace was going to be forever changed. As

14      people return to work, there is an underlying

15      fear of safety in the workplace as it relates to

16      COVID-19. To educate employers about the their

17      responsibility to keep their employees and their

18      businesses safe, we established our DOL COVID

19      complaint portal. If any New Yorkers feels unsafe

20      or has another COVID related workplace concern,

21      they can file a complaint right on our website at

22      labor.ny.gov/covidcomplaint. We've had over

23      30,000 complaints to the portal and the vast

24      majority of complaints are resolved quickly and



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2       voluntarily.

3                  Now that New York is moving forward

4       through the reopening process, we want to help

5       connect every job seeker in New York with the

6       right job opportunity. We are sending proactive

7       recruitment e-mails and encouraging both

8       businesses in need of workers and in New Yorkers

9       in need of a job to take advantage of our jobs

10      express web website at jobs.ny.Gov. There are

11      over 1,000 [unintelligible] [00:11:27]

12                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Commissioner,

13      we need you to wrap it up, so we can get on to

14      questions.

15                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Okay. I'm right

16      there, concluding.

17                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you.

18                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Okay. Personally

19      these last five months have been heartbreaking on

20      many levels. We have dedicated every resource we

21      have to helping New Yorkers weather this storm.

22      Many of your staffs were right there with us on

23      the front lines and I sincerely thank you for

24      your efforts. And I just want to take a moment to



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2       say how proud I am of my staff, who has worked

3       tireless throughout the pandemic while also

4       trying to navigate this crisis within their own

5       families. They continue to work overtime and they

6       will continue working until this crisis has

7       passed.

8                  We have all worked endlessly, seven days

9       a week around the clock to get the job done and

10      we will continue to do whatever is necessary to

11      help all New Yorkers get through this crisis. Now

12      I'm happy to take your questions.

13                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you for your

14      testimony, Commissioner Reardon, thanks for

15      joining us this morning, it's good to see you.

16      Can you tell us a little bit about the return to

17      work guide that was posted by the Department of

18      Labor, which was a little misleading considering

19      that we weren't exactly promoting people or

20      urging people to return to work per se, states

21      that only employers with public facing workers

22      have to supply face masks, which violates section

23      193 of the Labor Law. How does this address co-

24      workers transferring COVID to each other and



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2       can't non-public facing workers transfer COVID as

3       well?

4                   COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So I'm looking

5       for a little guidance from my staff here. I'm not

6       quite sure what you are referring to. We do have

7       the COVID complaint form up on the website and

8       that's for anybody, whether they're public facing

9       or not. If you have a concern about your

10      workplace, if you feel that your employer is not

11      properly sanitizing the workplace or offering the

12      kinds of protections that are required, you

13      should go on the COVID website and register your

14      complaint and we will follow up. There is

15      guidance about what everybody has to do, wear

16      masks, wash your hands, make sure the area is

17      sanitized and I'm actually not clear which

18      direction.

19                  It's on your website, it's called the

20      return to work guide.

21                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So, I don't have

22      my website on in front of me. Can I get back to

23      you in a minute? I'm going to have somebody give

24      me some information about it.



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2                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Sure. So, in the

3       meantime, can you tell us about what the

4       Department of Labor is doing to protect workers

5       from wage theft during the pandemic?

6                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   As always, our

7       inspectors are out and ready to go inspect if

8       somebody thinks that their wages are being

9       stolen. We have an online application for that

10      and of course they can always call the number

11      that is registered for wage fraud issues and we

12      have followed up during the pandemic. There, our

13      investigators have been very busy. Obviously,

14      they are working remotely as much as possible.

15      It's very difficult for them to go to work sites,

16      as it is difficult for workers to go to work

17      sites. But they're following up and we are

18      continuing to enforce the laws as we always do.

19                 SENATOR RAMOS:              So, I'm assuming that

20      you're working closely together with OSHA of

21      course, to make sure that workplaces are as

22      compliant as possible. Can you tell us what the

23      process --

24                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   To be clear, we



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2       don't enforce the OSHA regulations. We do it for

3       public health, but the private industries are

4       overseen by the federal government.

5                   SENATOR RAMOS:             Right. Okay. So can you

6       tell us when complaints are received about an

7       unsafe workplace, what happens then? What is the

8       process for that?

9                   COMMISSIONER REARDON:                  So the

10      investigators follow up. They talk to the worker

11      who has lodged the complaint, they contact the

12      employer to see what the situation is and as I

13      said in my testimony, the overwhelming majority

14      of those cases are resolved quickly and

15      voluntarily. We have had very few people resist

16      making changes in order to ensure that their

17      businesses are safe. I mean, remember, it is in a

18      business owner's best interest to have a safe

19      workplace. They don't want to harm their workers

20      and frankly they don't want to depress their

21      business.

22                  SENATOR RAMOS:             But we also know that

23      there are unscrupulous employers who will cut

24      corners at any opportunity --



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2                    COMMISSIONER REARDON:                  We've always had

3       that.

4                   SENATOR RAMOS:              -- because they largely

5       see many workers, especially undocumented people,

6       as disposable, unfortunately, and we've seen this

7       in the construction industry. So unfortunately

8       that's not always the case. But I do -- I wanted

9       to move on and ask how workers are being educated

10      about their right to refuse unsuitable or unsafe

11      work so that they can remain eligible for

12      unemployment benefits.

13                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So if a worker

14      feels that they are being put in an unsafe

15      position, they can apply for pandemic

16      unemployment assistance, which is specifically

17      for COVID reasons and they have to say that

18      they're turning down this job because of a COVID

19      reason and then they can apply for the benefits

20      and they can get the benefits. That does not mean

21      that a worker can say I have a generalized fear

22      of COVID. That is not an allowable instance in

23      order to collect benefits. But if they feel

24      they're being put in harm's way, if they have a



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2       medical condition, if they have a person in their

3       home that they have to take care of who would be

4       endangered by this, then they the absolutely are

5       eligible to receive their benefits.

6                  MS. RAMOS:           Okay, and then we have a few

7       minutes left. I don't want to start talking about

8       this. So can you talk about the possible

9       expansion or why it would be important to expand

10      partial UI during the pandemic. I know obvious

11      will I we have received some guidance from the

12      federal administration. Now is that new guidance

13      going to be implemented or what concerns are

14      there at the state level?

15                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So I think

16      partial unemployment, you mean being able to work

17      and collect at the same time, having a day or two

18      of employment and then also collecting

19      unemployment benefits? So there are currently

20      regulations in New York State governing that.

21      There is a ratio the first day I think you lose

22      25 percent of the benefit and goes down from

23      there until you reach the max.

24                 There is also a program that we have



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2       called shared work that an employer registers for

3       and it allows them to have their workers return

4       to work at a reduced schedule. They file a plan

5       with the Department of Labor, we approve it and

6       those workers are able to follow the plan and

7       they can receive partial unemployment under the

8       shared work program and maintain connection with

9       the employer. Remember that a lot of these

10      regulations are federal laws that cover how

11      people receive their benefits.

12                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you, commissioner.

13      I will now yield to Assemblyman McDonald for his

14      questions.

15                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you,

16      senator, and commissioner good morning and thank

17      you for joining us.

18                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Good morning.

19                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Actually, I

20      just want to pick up on a quick point towards the

21      end. The shared work program, that's actually

22      been in effect for a long period of time,

23      correct.

24                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Mm-hmm.



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2                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Are you able

3       to measure how much participation in the past,

4       but also how much now?

5                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   I don't have the

6       figure for past engagements. I know during the

7       last recession it was a very valuable tool for a

8       lot of employers. Right now, we have 88,000

9       workers enrolled in the shared work program. It

10      is 100 percent federally covered, so it's a

11      wonderful program for employers. And as I said,

12      it allows, you know, what is happening with a lot

13      of businesses are people coming back at half

14      speed. They don't have enough work to keep

15      everybody 100 percent employed. And this way, you

16      can keep them.

17                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     And speaking

18      since you said 100 percent federally covered,

19      overall with employment and all the other

20      benefits, what is the total cost? What is the

21      state on the hook for at this stage of the game?

22                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So the numbers

23      are really staggering. The benefits paid from

24      March through August of 2020 is $40.0 billion,



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2       but remember that almost three-quarters of that

3       money is federal money. FPUC, the $600 is totally

4       federally covered, some of the emergency

5       extensions are totally covered, so that the part

6       of state UI is much smaller. We are on a federal

7       loan at this point, it is interest free. And that

8       is not unusual, I think many, many, many states

9       if not all states are now in a loan status

10      because of the pandemic.

11                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                    Well,

12      obviously there has been a lot of discussion

13      about the process and a lot of the headaches that

14      everybody, whether it's the department, your

15      staff who really are, have done yeoman's work in

16      a difficult situation and of course the ones

17      we're most concerned about, our constituents, the

18      people who are struggling and suffering. What is

19      the current backlog of unemployment claims as of

20      this moment and compare that to what it was at

21      the peak.

22                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                  So, I'm very

23      happy to say right now we don't really have a

24      backlog. Anything that's three weeks old or newer



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2       from three weeks back to now is not a backlog. It

3       essentially takes three weeks to fully process

4       the average claim. Some people go through in a

5       week, some people go in three weeks, so we say

6       three weeks. There are pockets of people who are

7       waiting for adjudication. There are pockets of

8       people who have identity issues and we have to

9       further identified who they are and we're needing

10      documents, people with foreign work

11      certifications, also we need to get copies of

12      those, so there are issues. Sometimes people have

13      holds on their claims but it is not a large

14      number of people.

15                 And remember that all of these things

16      are done. We carefully look at all of these

17      filings because of the fraud issue. So we've

18      stopped over a billion dollars worth of fraud

19      from going out the door.

20                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     That is a

21      very eye opening number. I'm sure there will be

22      more information shared with all of us probably

23      as we are going through this hearing today.

24      That's remarkable.



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2                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Yes.

3                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Absolutely

4       remarkable. You know, what's been interesting

5       about this financial crisis, and it's a good

6       thing is that traditional workers were able to go

7       through process but in the past, independent

8       contractors, gig workers were never really

9       allowed this benefit and actually initially they

10      were all like, thank God. But the process has

11      been a little bit problematic, I would think you

12      would admit.

13                 Could you walk us through the challenges

14      that we dealt with in that because -- and the

15      other thing is are we getting cooperation from

16      the gig companies in regard to providing

17      necessary information?

18                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So we all

19      remember the pandemic started in early March. The

20      Federal CARES Act was not passed until March 27th

21      and we did not get federal guidance on how to

22      administer it, which meant we couldn't do

23      anything until April 5. That CARES Act is what

24      established pandemic unemployment assistance and



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2       that is the form of benefit that's available for

3       people who have COVID reasons for not being

4       employed, but also for people who don't have

5       regular W-2 employment.

6                  We had to stand up a new benefit system,

7       as I say to people, it looks like UI, it talks

8       like UI, it's not UI. So we had to figure out

9       with a mainframe system, how to get this into the

10      coding so the machine could process it. All of

11      that took a certain amount of time. But we also

12      had to reach out to a community over a million

13      workers who now were able to apply for this

14      benefit, most of whom had never been in UI

15      before. They had no idea what to expect. They

16      were afraid. They were desperate, they were

17      locked in their homes, they were afraid to go

18      outside, they had no work. It created a huge

19      amount of anxiety for people. Everybody in the

20      system thought they had to call us. And that was

21      one of the first problems we had. As you know,

22      our phone systems went down repeatedly because

23      they just couldn't sustain, we had over a million

24      phone calls a day.



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2                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you,

3       commissioner. Being a moderator, I have to be

4       respectful of the time because the members will

5       get on us. Senator, back to your team.

6                  SENATOR RAMOS:              All right. Thank you

7       Assemblyman McDonald. Next, we have my colleague

8       Senator James Skoufis.

9                  SENATOR JAMES SKOUFIS, CHAIR, SENATE

10      STANDING COMMITTEE ON INVESTIGATIONS AND

11      GOVERNMENT OPERATIONS:               Okay. Thank you and thank

12      you, commissioner for your appearance today and

13      answering our questions, nice to see you. And I

14      do want to acknowledge and thank all the really

15      tremendous work, the enormous undertaking that

16      the Department of Labor has been involved in over

17      the past five months or so.

18                 But I do want to drill down into some

19      things and your testimony certain, it's important

20      to highlight all of the challenges and the, quite

21      frankly, the achievements of the department over

22      these many months. But I think it did gloss over

23      some of the associated pain that our constituents

24      received and were on the receiving end of,



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2       especially early on in March, April and May. And

3       I know this and I know all my colleagues know

4       this because we were getting all these calls,

5       too.

6                    COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Yes.

7                    SENATOR SKOUFIS:               You know, my office,

8       we assisted over 4,000 constituents with

9       unemployment issues, liaising with your

10      department. And so, if I may, so March 22nd,

11      nonessential workers were directed to stay home.

12      I suspect that is really when the crush began, at

13      or around that time, as businesses, workplaces

14      were closing. Yet the large majority, as far as I

15      could tell, of the improvements that were made to

16      the system didn't occur until May and correct me

17      if I'm wrong, so DOL Servers working with Google

18      were at four. I think they scaled up to 60 or a

19      little more than 60.

20                   COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Sixty-five I

21      think.

22                   SENATOR SKOUFIS:               It was my

23      understanding that DOL reps went from 400 to a

24      little over 3,000. You had mentioned 7,000 in



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2       your testimony, so I'm not sure which it is, but

3       it scaled up tremendously either way. Can you, as

4       it stands now on August 13, do we still have

5       those 60 plus servers?

6                   COMMISSIONER REARDON:                  Oh yes.

7                   SENATOR SKOUFIS:              Yes?

8                   COMMISSIONER REARDON:                  Oh, yes, I mean

9       out of --

10                  SENATOR SKOUFIS:              How many of the

11      thousands of additional DOL reps are still either

12      employed or contracted with, as it stands today?

13                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                  We still have,

14      let me see if I actually have the hard number

15      here. We went up to 7,000 in total, and right now

16      we have 4,500.

17                  SENATOR SKOUFIS:              Okay.

18                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                  And that includes

19      other workers within the DOL, who do other parts

20      of the agency. They've all been trained to do UI

21      work as well as, you know, the vendors that we

22      also brought on board. Let me take one --

23                  SENATOR SKOUFIS:              Presumably that number

24      will, as we continue to move through the pandemic



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2       and all continues to go well, presumably those

3       numbers will continue to go down.

4                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   We hope.

5                  SENATOR SKOUFIS:               And you'll return to

6       maybe not 300 or 400 but somewhere in that

7       ballpark. And so my question is, looking forward

8       here, it took months to scale up to where you are

9       and where you needed to be, as people waited

10      months and months themselves to get benefits,

11      they're out of work, they and many simply didn't

12      know how to make ends meet. And so, what sort of

13      confidence can you give us that it will not take

14      two months again to scale up, get to where you

15      need to be and, you know, if we have a second

16      wave, some people think the second wave might be

17      worse than the first wave. God help us.

18                 Does the economy shut down again and do

19      we have the same exact situation? We can't be

20      going through the same motions where our offices

21      are getting calls with people crying on the other

22      end because they can't even get a call back from

23      DOL after two, two-and-a-half, three months of

24      waiting?



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2                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So let me just

3       point out 75 percent of all the claims that came

4       in since the beginning of the pandemic, 3.3

5       million claims, 75 percent of those claims never

6       had to talk to an agent at all. They went into

7       the computer system, they were handled by the

8       computer system and they received their benefits.

9                  SENATOR SKOUFIS:               Yeah, but respectfully

10      with 25 percent of the literally millions is

11      still an enormous number.

12                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   [unintelligible]

13      [00:28:20] got handled immediately. That says to

14      me that something was working even though it

15      wasn't 100 percent working, it was working better

16      than we had any right to expect. Moving forward,

17      we now know more about what this pandemic can do

18      to people and we know more about how to handle

19      this vast number of people in a more agile way.

20      We have updated our systems we have automated the

21      way we that we report to people. We have

22      automated the way that people work within the

23      system. We had --

24                 SENATOR SKOUFIS:               Just because my time



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2       is running out, so if we go through a very

3       similar situation again, similar circumstances,

4       how long will it take for you all at DOL to scale

5       up. It took two months in March, April and May.

6       How long, given these improvements will it take

7       to scale up for the next time?

8                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   First of all, let

9       me point out it did not take us two months to

10      scale up. What happened was at the beginning

11      because there was such an overwhelming surge of

12      cases, we had the backlog issue because we

13      couldn't get to them. But we were approving

14      people right along. April 20th was when the new

15      Google application went live and had the seamless

16      PUI application, so it did not take until mid

17      May.

18                 That said, we know what we are doing now

19      with the improved systems that we've got. We've

20      got a trained pool of workers, not just in the

21      DOL but across the state workforce and in the

22      world of vendors. We know how to get the help

23      that we need, so I am very prepared for anything

24      that comes. But let me point out. We went one



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2       week from 16,000 applications, the next week had

3       over 100,000 applications and it went up from

4       there for weeks. So that was the problem. We

5       completely renovated our system, we automated the

6       way people worked with us. We've got chat bots to

7       answer questions and more than anything else, we

8       are telling people you do not have to call us in

9       order to complete your claim.

10                 SENATOR SKOUFIS:               Thank you.

11                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Google was a huge

12      change in the way people came in.

13                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Okay. Thank

14      you. We're going move to the Assembly and it

15      looks like Member Marianne Buttenschon has her

16      hand up. Marianne.

17                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MARIANNE BUTTENSCHON:

18      Good morning everyone. It is a pleasure to be

19      here and to the commissioner as well as to your

20      staff, please extend our sincere appreciation for

21      the hard work and dedication and commitment. And

22      I just want to add to what some of my colleagues

23      have already brought up, but clearly there are

24      still some issues that we are seeing. Retroactive



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2       pay is still an issue in the area that I come

3       from, which is the Utica Rome area, we're still

4       receiving calls. We're also receiving calls from

5       individuals that were on unemployment,

6       unfortunately were laid off again and tried to go

7       back on, so the only way it works is delete,

8       completely delete them out of the system. But

9       this is what is happening with these individuals.

10      So I just want to bring it forward that these are

11      issues that we're dealing with from individuals

12      that, for months past.

13                 And finally, the portal, as I know the

14      portal was set up, and the challenge we have is

15      it's a one-way communication so the individual

16      has attempted, reaches out to one of the offices

17      for assistance, being mine, and the staff follows

18      the procedure, receives a confirmation that the

19      information has been received. We ask the

20      individual to be patient, to give you a week and

21      we hear from them after the week that they still

22      are waiting. So if there's a possibility that not

23      only a confirmation or a call possibly to our

24      office or an e-mail that says we have reached out



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2       to this constituent and we are working on it.

3       Because we find that that is probably the biggest

4       challenge is the one-way communication with your

5       office. So we're not sure, clearly, if someone is

6       helping this individual, unless the individual

7       calls the office, which enthusiastically tells us

8       that they've had this taken care of. So I just

9       wondered if this is something that you're aware

10      of, that your staff is working on or if it

11      possibly could be rectified.

12                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Yes, and I will,

13      I'm having conversations with staff now how to do

14      that. As you know, we are not allowed to discuss

15      any personal details of a claimants' case, so

16      that may be one reason they're hesitant do it.

17      But I'm going to talk to them. I'm very happy to

18      say that we have worked through the portal list

19      100 percent. They've all been contacted. Now,

20      remember contacting a claimant doesn't mean that

21      they are automatically made whole. Some of the

22      people have very difficult cases, some of them

23      have been, there are fraud issues, they've been

24      victims of fraud, they have adjudication issues,



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2       they have identity issues. So they may not have

3       been made 100 percent whole in the moment but we

4       are working them. The other thing to remember is

5       unfortunately sometimes people don't like the

6       answers that they get from us and we can't change

7       that.

8                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER BUTTENSCHON:                           No, and I

9       understand that. But the community that I'm

10      honored to represent has a large refugee

11      population, so we have the ability that we've

12      created these relationships to be able to work

13      with them and possibly help your staff through

14      whether it's a communication issue or a concern,

15      as you stated.

16                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     And ladies,

17      speaking of relationships we are going back to

18      the senate. Thank you. Senator.

19                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you, Assemblyman

20      McDonald. I appreciate that we're really sticking

21      to the schedule here. Before we move on to the

22      next senator, I want to recognize that we have

23      been joined by Senators Kamisky, Sanders,

24      Gallivan and Metzger. And up next we have senator



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2       George Borello, you have three minutes to ask

3       Commissioner Reardon your questions.

4                  SENATOR GEORGE BORELLO:                    Thank you very

5       much, Chair Ramos, I appreciate it. Good morning,

6       commissioner, I want to start off by saying thank

7       you for the hard work of you and your staff. Like

8       other senators and assembly people, we have been

9       inundated with calls and your staff that we work

10      with one-on-one and we appreciate the hard work,

11      so thank you for that.

12                 I'm speaking to you not only as a

13      senator but also as a small business owner, who,

14      you know, my family-owned business employs nearly

15      200 people. And despite the fact that we had this

16      crisis in unemployment, I can tell you that, like

17      many other small business owners, we watched as

18      the unemployment claims piled up on my wife's

19      desk while she was desperate to hire employees

20      because we could not get people to work. And this

21      is something I've heard across the spectrum from

22      big businesses to small businesses, that we could

23      not get workers despite the fact that you paid

24      out $41 billion in unemployment insurance claims.



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2                  So my question to you is what is going

3       to happen with unemployment insurance

4       experiencing ratings and the impacts on business?

5       It seems wholly unfair that while we were trying

6       to hire people that we could not, largely because

7       New York State gave the longest list of reasons

8       why you could collect unemployment and quit your

9       job and not work. So please let us know how that

10      is going to impact and hopefully not add further

11      insult to injury to the the business owners of

12      New York State.

13                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So, look, we

14      understand at the DOL and the governor

15      understands that this pandemic is unlike anything

16      we have ever experienced and that goes for

17      businesses as well as workers. And the shutdown

18      of New York State businesses was not something

19      that you asked for. So we are looking at, the

20      governor signed an executive order and allowed us

21      to look into the issue of the experience ratings

22      and how that might be adjusted for businesses and

23      we are working on that right now, because we

24      understand. I always understand, I say to my



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2       folks all the time the relationship between a

3       worker and a business person is symbiotic. The

4       worker needs the paycheck, the business person

5       needs that worker so one can't exist without the

6       other. And we will do everything we can to make

7       sure that New York business, particularly small

8       businesses, which are the backbone of New York

9       State, remain healthy and can grow in this state.

10      We take it very seriously. At the same time --

11                 SENATOR BORELLO:               Well, I'm glad to hear

12      you say that. Go ahead, I'm sorry.

13                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   People are

14      allowed to collect the benefits according to the

15      federal regulations.

16                 SENATOR BORELLO:               Yeah, I understand.

17      That was in my opinion, a mistake made in

18      Washington that was weaponized in Albany by

19      allowing virtually anyone to claim unemployment,

20      even if they didn't have a real legitimate excuse

21      and that's really where we have the problem here.

22      That's why like I said, we've watched

23      unemployment claims pile up on the desks of small

24      business owners across New York State while we



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2       paid out a record amount of unemployment claims,

3       many of which are unnecessary in my opinion,

4       since 70 percent of the workers were making more

5       on unemployment than they were making when they

6       were working. So I realize that was not your

7       mistake but it something that's now laid at your

8       feet and the governor's feet to ensure that we

9       don't have further flight of businesses from New

10      York State. Thank you.

11                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Thank you.

12                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Okay. Thank

13      you, back to the assembly and we will now go to

14      Robert Smullen for three minutes. Roberty? Going

15      once, going twice, gone, three times. We'll go to

16      Harry Bronson. Oh, he's back, he's there, go

17      ahead, Robert.

18                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER ROBERT SMULLEN:                        Yeah,

19      I'm here. Can you see me now?

20                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Yeah, we can.

21                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Hi.

22                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER SMULLEN:                      Great.

23      Commissioner, thank you for coming before us

24      because it's been rare to see you in public to be



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2       able to answer questions about this unemployment

3       insurance issue, which has grievously affected my

4       constituents. Not only those who have been put

5       out of work but more importantly those who have

6       simply been unable to navigate the process and

7       haven't gotten the attention, despite our best

8       efforts from legislative inquiries to be able to

9       adjudicate their claims. And I want to go back to

10      what my colleague said about the difficulties in

11      navigating the system. Now who is responsible for

12      the Google contract to get this system up and

13      running in your organization?

14                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   The person? I

15      mean we, these contracts go through the usual

16      state process, Department of Budget, you know,

17      OSC is actually the person who signs off on it.

18                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER SMULLEN:                     And they --

19      and now that software is run by the Department of

20      Labor and administered by your department?

21                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Mm-hmm.

22                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER SMULLEN:                     So there seems

23      to be a lot of holes in this system and one in

24      particular, one of my constituents, Kathy Katuchi



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2       has been waiting nine weeks for her unemployment

3       benefits. We've submitted numerous legislative

4       inquiries. Where can I direct Ms. Katuchi to be

5       able to get a person to be able to specifically

6       help her navigate the system between the New York

7       unemployment insurance and the federal pandemic

8       unemployment assistance program?

9                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Why don't we talk

10      offline and I can take care of that.

11                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER SMULLEN:                     It would be

12      very helpful because she's not alone. Like I

13      said, I have a mixed district in the Mohawk

14      Valley and through the mountains, 2,200

15      legislative inquiries from my constituents. It's

16      been the number one issue and their major

17      frustration with New York State government

18      working for them. And it's been a variety of

19      things from March until, you know, here we are in

20      the middle of August and people are still

21      confused as to how to navigate the system. And we

22      are doing very our best to help those people, but

23      it would be helpful if now that there are DMVs

24      open that DOL offices would also be open where



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2       people could go in in-person that are not

3       computer savvy or not able to work the system

4       online. And I appreciate that much of it's

5       automated, but I think now is the time with

6       appropriate guidelines in place to meet people in

7       person. When is the DOL going to open up in

8       person offices again?

9                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   We are looking

10      into that. As you can appreciate, it is a

11      difficult thing to handle 96 career centers

12      across the state and the last thing we want to do

13      is create any kind of unsafe situation, either

14      for our workers or for your constituents. We are

15      working very hard to make sure we can bring

16      people back safely and appropriately. But again

17      we have worked very hard to make sure our online

18      presence is as easy to navigate as possible.

19      Right now, if somebody has been waiting for --

20                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you,

21      commissioner, and speaking of presence, I think

22      the senate has somebody who would like to speak.

23                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you, assemblyman.

24      We have been joined by Senator Mayer and up next,



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2       I want to recognize Senator Robert Jackson, who

3       has three minutes to ask questions.

4                  SENATOR ROBERT JACKSON:                    Thank you. Hi

5       commissioner, how are you?

6                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Hi. You're my

7       senator.

8                  SENATOR JACKSON:               I know. And listen,

9       during this pandemic, I understand that this was

10      like a disaster for everyone and there was no

11      pull out the playbook in order to get it done.

12      But obviously knowing the systematic process in

13      DOL and I worked in DOL from `75 to `80

14      investigating fraud, so I know some of the old

15      processes that existed. But clearly my staff,

16      along with all the other staff in the state of

17      New York as far as legislators, were basically

18      inputting the information and sending it up. And

19      we were communicating directly with the

20      governor's office who was the liaison with DOL.

21      And now, from my staff and I found that the best

22      way is to go straight to your employees to

23      resolve matters. But we still, like some of my

24      colleagues have some, a group of individuals that



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2       are still outstanding in which we would like to

3       get that list to whoever you determine and like I

4       can talk to you or have someone offline to

5       contact me so we can get that to you, because the

6       more people wait, the more they're suffering and

7       we're just trying to relieve the suffering that

8       our constituents are seeing right now and having.

9       So I would appreciate that that's number one.

10                 Number two, as you know, I formerly work

11      as an employee of PEF, the New York State Public

12      Employees Federation and get their newsletter and

13      found out that hundreds, if not thousands, of PEF

14      employees that were working and was made to work

15      overtime or they worked overtime and were being

16      paid at like a grade nine even though they may be

17      a grade 14 or grade 18, and obviously, that's not

18      right. So, I hope that that matter is resolved

19      internally within the state of New York, rather

20      than them pursuing all of the legal aspects that

21      they have. It's not right to tell people you

22      continue to work and do your job as a

23      professional, but we're going to pay you as grade

24      nine, totally unacceptable.



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2                  But other than that, I say to you that I

3       understand the complexities and I understand, but

4       your staff, I believe, within the past couple of

5       weeks, they've gotten hold of everything and

6       moving things faster but there are still some

7       wrinkles here that we have to work out. So I

8       thank you and your staff for understanding our

9       concerns as representatives of the people and so

10      please help us out. Thank you.

11                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   We will. And

12      thank you. Let us know what we can do to help.

13                 SENATOR JACKSON:               Thank you.

14                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Good to see you.

15                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     I'd like to

16      recognize my colleague Al Taylor, who's joined us

17      and I would like to now ask Harry Bronson to join

18      us for a comment. Although he's a former labor

19      chair, he only gets three minutes. Sorry, Harry.

20                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER HARRY BRONSON:                         Well,

21      first of all, John, thank you. I haven't been

22      labor chair yet. We may work on that.

23                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Oh, sorry

24      about that. I gave out a secret. All right.



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2                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRONSON:                     That's okay.

3       Commissioner how are you doing today? Very nice

4       seeing you.

5                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Thank you, it's

6       good to see you, Harry.

7                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRONSON:                     Thank you. So,

8       One of the senators asked some questions about

9       getting ready for the next wave, things of thing

10      that nature. Can you explain to us what you are

11      doing to get ready for any changes that come down

12      where the federal government is dictating it,

13      whether we are moving 600 to 400, those kinds of

14      changes? What are we doing right now so that we

15      can get money in the hands of our families.

16                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So we've already

17      mapped out various scenarios, if it's a flat fee,

18      if it's a portion of a person's former salary,

19      which would be a terrible idea by the way. Just,

20      you know, statistically for us, but we've looked

21      at various iterations of plans. Unfortunately,

22      right now, what has come out of the federal

23      government is incredibly garbled and probably

24      going to be litigious. So we have our tabletops



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2       ready, but we have yet to receive any guidance

3       from the federal government that tells us how

4       they want us to do it. So we're waiting for them

5       to let us know. But we are mapping out scenarios

6       so we know if it's this, we can do that, you

7       know, we're not waiting until they tell us. We

8       have it in the pipeline.

9                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRONSON:                     All right. And

10      we know that caused some delays in this wave

11      previously without those guidance coming until

12      April sometime.

13                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Right.

14                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRONSON:                     My next

15      question really isn't about UI, I want to thank

16      you for all your efforts on that though. I know

17      you and the workers worked very hard to make that

18      happen. My next question is what are we going to

19      do as we move forward? My suspicion is that we

20      are going to have a lot of hybrid in facility

21      remote workers and we're probably not going to go

22      back to where people go to facilities all the

23      time in many industries. Some industries, that's

24      a necessity. What are we doing to deal with



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2       workers who will now be working remotely, at

3       least part of the time, and are we anticipating

4       any changes as that relates to independent

5       contractors and gig workers?

6                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So, let's put the

7       independent contractor and gig worker on another

8       question because one, I'd really like to focus on

9       the remote work, the mixed remote, some here,

10      some there. It is a looming issue. Now, during

11      the pandemic, the state workforce worked

12      remotely. My DOL Staff were calling people from

13      their homes on cell phones, so we understand

14      firsthand what it takes to provision a worker to

15      begin to supervise remotely, what the work plans

16      look like and we are working with industry. I've

17      already had a conversation with the Long Island

18      REDC about this. I expect to talk to other REDC

19      about this. I expect to talk to the other REDCs.

20      We're reaching out to our business partners now.

21                 But we understand that this is going to

22      require a different kind of direction from the

23      employer and a different kind of discipline from

24      the worker. And it's going to require a lot of



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2       different materials. So, we are looking to see

3       how we can facilitate this, how we can help

4       workers up their digital skills and help

5       employers have better approaches to remote work.

6       It is going to be quite the experience in a

7       short-term kind of way. Long-term, three years

8       from now, who knows? Once there's a vaccine, will

9       people want to gather together again? I mean

10      that's yet to be seen. But right now, it is going

11      to be a mix and it's going to be a struggle for

12      some people who are not digitally savvy, both the

13      businesses and the workers.

14                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRONSON:                     All right,

15      well, my time is up, but --

16                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you,

17      commissioner. Thank you, Harry. Senator.

18                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you. We've also

19      been joined by Senator Hoylman and up next, we

20      have Senator Tom O'Mara who, as a ranker on the

21      Committee of Investigations is allotted five

22      minutes for questioning.

23                 SENATOR TOM O'MARA:                 Thank you,

24      chairwoman, thank you, commissioner, for being



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2       here with us today in these very difficult times

3       and was has certainly proven to be very

4       frustrating times for all of us, without

5       question. As you were finishing your last

6       comments there, you mentioned that some

7       businesses and a lot of individuals are not

8       computer tech savvy and that's been a real issue

9       with these claims being made and also with the

10      lack of broadband in many areas it is difficult

11      or somewhat impossible for individuals to be able

12      to have that kind of computer portal connection.

13                 Since we are helping so many individuals

14      with their claims, why can't there be some type

15      of a release from the claimant that would allow

16      our staff, myself, to be able to communicate

17      directly with DOL about the individual's claim,

18      so that that contact is being made and we would

19      have individuals working in conjunction with DOL

20      from our offices helping the claimants when we

21      just kind of -- we make the contact and then say

22      wait for DOL to call you.

23                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So, we're looking

24      into that. Remember that there are federal



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2       regulations surrounding a lot of the privacy

3       issues. Those are not New York State regulations.

4       Those are federal regulations. Given that, we

5       would like to be able to facilitate your offices

6       and the claimants. We'll do everything we can but

7       we are limited by the federal laws.

8                  SENATOR O'MARA:              And a release can't be

9       made under federal law?

10                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   We can look into

11      it. They haven't been very forthcoming lately.

12                 SENATOR O'MARA:              Well, I think we should

13      look into that and we should press them on that

14      because we have, my staff and myself are

15      virtually spending 90 percent of our effort on

16      unemployment claims. And they're still coming in

17      daily, several a day into my office still, and we

18      still have some claims that have not been

19      resolved from April, even despite repeated

20      contacts with our labor representative that we

21      have that we can contact through our office. It's

22      just very frustrating when we have to say wait

23      for a callback and then the call doesn't come or

24      it comes and nothing happens. For us to be



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2       involved and help those constituents would be,

3       would, I think make it easier for labor too

4       dealing with someone that knows the process on

5       the claimant's end as well.

6                  At the outset of this, you had, I think,

7       thousands of state workers from other agencies

8       starting, handling these claims. What happened to

9       those workers and why were they taken off the

10      jobs, the state workers from other agencies?

11                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Well, you know,

12      you can imagine that the other agencies also have

13      work that they have to do. So they gave us a lot

14      of time during the very height of the pandemic

15      when it was really critical. But as I said, we

16      have 4,500 workers right now working on these

17      cases. And remember that in order to have someone

18      come in and work with us, it takes a lot of

19      training. As you can imagine, these are very

20      intricate cases. There are a lot of laws apply to

21      them. You don't get trained in an hour or two.

22      You don't even get trained in a day or two. So

23      this is a very extensive process and we were very

24      thankful for the help we've gotten. But frankly a



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2       lot of these people have their day jobs in other

3       state agencies and they could not stay with us

4       forever. But we do have 4,500 workers doing it.

5                   SENATOR O'MARA:             Yes, and I appreciate

6       that, but I think the many that I knew that were

7       involved in it only did it for a couple of weeks.

8       And they were ready, willing and able to continue

9       and were somewhat surprised they were taken off.

10      Certainly I think this should have been all hands

11      on deck to get people the money that the they

12      deserve because, you know, frankly, they were

13      starving.

14                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                  So this may have

15      been a decision by other agencies, it was not a

16      decision by us.

17                  SENATOR O'MARA:             What is the department

18      doing with the issue of the extra unemployment

19      being paid and some people earning or receiving

20      more than they did at their regular job before

21      they were laid off? If that job is offered back

22      to the claimant, what is the department doing

23      about making sure that person goes back to their

24      job or cutting off their benefits?



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2                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So let's remember

3       that FPUC, which was the extra $600 ended the end

4       of July, that is no longer being paid. So they

5       are only getting whatever their unemployment

6       insurance or PUA amount is and that's remarkably

7       lower than it was with FPUC. So we have even a

8       decrease over the last couple of weeks in new

9       cases and we've seen, you know, things are

10      beginning to lower on the phone volume and we can

11      only assume that people are beginning to go back

12      to work. We, the law, the federal regulation is

13      that you need to be ready, willing and able to

14      work in order to collect and if you turn down an

15      appropriate job offer, then you are not ready,

16      willing and able and then we would have to cut

17      off your benefits.

18                 SENATOR O'MARA:              How many people do you

19      have working on following up on those issues?

20                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   I don't know that

21      we do it in the way that you are thinking, but

22      when somebody asks for an adjudication, it goes

23      to an adjudication person and is looked into. I

24      don't know offhand how many people that is.



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2                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you

3       very much. We're going to move back to the

4       Assembly. I also want to recognize my colleagues

5       Carmen De La Rosa and Catalina Cruz, who joined

6       us and we will now go to Joe DeStefano. Joe?

7                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER JOSEPH DESTEFANO:

8       Commissioner, I have only a couple of questions.

9       One of them was when you mentioned earlier before

10      when someone who is experiencing the pandemic and

11      they are offered to go back to work and they

12      choose to opt out either because of a family

13      issue or illness or anything like that, is there

14      any verification of proof or anything like that

15      required to receive that benefit?

16                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   You mean like a

17      doctor's note?

18                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER DESTEFANO:                      A doctor's

19      note, some kind of documentation that somebody in

20      their care needs to be cared for and they're the

21      only ones that can help them so therefore, they

22      can't go back to work?

23                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   I don't think

24      it's like that, as you had described it.



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2       Remember, this is federal legislation. Anybody

3       collecting PUA is paied 100 percent by the

4       federal dollars and it is completely covered by

5       the CARES Act, it's not New York State

6       legislation at all. So the federal government set

7       up that system and they wrote the guidance for

8       it.

9                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER DESTEFANO:                      Okay. So,

10      basically we can assume by that, that it's the

11      honor system. If someone claims that they can't

12      go back to work for whatever reason, then it's

13      assumed that it's just something that's covered

14      under the PUA.

15                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   It's whatever the

16      CARES Act set forth as the requirements is what

17      we enforce.

18                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER DESTEFANO:                      Secondly,

19      again, I'd like to you and your staff for all

20      your efforts. I spent many an afternoon with all

21      of my Long Island colleagues, with Dana going

22      over all of the unemployment claims and problems

23      that we had, and under the circumstances, your

24      team did a remarkable job. Obviously it did fall



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2       short in a lot of places. I still have

3       constituents calling on a daily basis saying they

4       called in April or March and they still haven't

5       received anything. And as you say there are

6       complex cases that need to be gone through. But

7       it's certainly understandable under the siege

8       that you guys were under. But I do appreciate it,

9       and my office appreciates it.

10                 Also, the last thing I'll touch on is

11      the governor has already indicated that if the

12      executive order that the President signed about a

13      week or so ago, that he's opting out. He's not

14      going to partake in the new executive order that

15      was signed. How is that going to affect you and

16      the staff and obviously the constituents of the

17      state? Where does that leave them?

18                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So, right now I

19      don't think we have a final determination on any

20      of this. Frankly, we've gotten very mixed

21      messages from the federal government and the U.S.

22      DOL on what the memorandum actually means. So

23      it's very hard to say with any reliability what

24      they're asking us to do. Our hope is that this



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2       will be an enticement for the Congress to come

3       back together and actually pass a law that will,

4       you know, be sustainable and we can work with.

5       But right now we don't really know the parameters

6       of what they're asking.

7                  I can say that if we had to pay an extra

8       $100 for every claimant currently between now and

9       the end of December, it would be something like

10      four plus billion dollars in cost to New York

11      State. It would be completely intolerable. We

12      couldn't do it.

13                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you,

14      back to the Senate.

15                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you. I want to

16      shout out Senator Gustavo Rivera and I apologize.

17      Apparently, he's been with us from the beginning

18      and I skipped over him. My apologies. But up next

19      we do have Senator Monica Martinez who has three

20      minutes on the clock to for her questions.

21                 SENATOR MONICA MARTINEZ:                     Hello, can you

22      hear me?

23                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Yes.

24                 SENATOR MARTINEZ:                All right. So



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2       commissioner first of all, I love the new hairdo.

3                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Thank you.

4                  SENATOR MARTINEZ:                It looks great. And

5       again, I just want to say thank you for

6       everything that you've done thus far in helping

7       my office with things that we've had. But I just

8       want to say we are still going through things and

9       I just want to make sure that we communicate a

10      little better. But here are my questions. In

11      terms of some of our labor issues that we've been

12      having in the districts is regarding protecting

13      employees in terms of how that's being handled.

14      We have a couple of businesses and distributors,

15      big distributors here on Long Island who have

16      one, failed to negotiate any type of fair labor

17      agreements, working conditions to be fair enough

18      and they haven't really been I guess forthcoming

19      in trying to provide PPE for employees at certain

20      factories.

21                 What are we doing in terms of that

22      process and is there a way to put a complaint --

23      I know you said earlier that there is a way to

24      put a complaint in. But I'm also afraid that



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2       people will be afraid to put a complaint in if

3       they have to provide any type of information,

4       such as their name. I don't know if on the

5       website there is a way that you can become

6       anonymous or be anonymous in terms of what they

7       can put in as a complaint.

8                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So you have, if

9       you file a complaint with the Department of Labor

10      against your employer, we do not disclose any

11      identification to the employer. It is anonymous

12      for the very reason that you're talking about. We

13      understand it's hard to come out and say my

14      employer is harming me. We protect your identity.

15      We also have a retaliation unit, so if something

16      should happen and the employer retaliates against

17      the employee, we will go after the employer. We

18      take it very seriously. So they should not be

19      afraid to come to us. We do this all the time,

20      work with everybody who comes in. We understand

21      how hard it is to take that first step. But if

22      you don't take the first step, we won't have the

23      ability to come in and look at what's going on.

24                 SENATOR MARTINEZ:                And I appreciate



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2       that. So I have one in particular, Quality King.

3       They have a couple of distributing centers in my

4       district, one being in Bellport and they have yet

5       to provide our employees with the proper

6       equipment needed. And I've tried to call them.

7       They refuse to call me back and the union has

8       tried to negotiate, but they are not responding

9       what can we do to protect those employees?

10                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Let us know.

11      Absolutely, go on the website or call the office,

12      let us know who this is and we will absolutely

13      look into it. If there's a union involved, tell

14      them to reach out them to me as well. That's an

15      additional piece of leverage that we have, but we

16      take this very seriously. This is an airborne

17      disease and a contact disease. And last thing we

18      want is workers being forced to go to work in

19      unsafe conditions, it's not supportable.

20                 SENATOR MARTINEZ:                And I appreciate

21      that. And my last question is do you have a total

22      number of businesses that have reported not

23      having adequate safety measures?

24                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Do I have a phone



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2       number for businesses or?

3                  SENATOR MARTINEZ:                No, no, no if you

4       have -- how many businesses do you have that have

5       put a complaint in that they have not been able

6       to provide adequate safety measures? Whether it's

7       funding or whether it's just they don't know how

8       to do it. I mean do you have a total?

9                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   No, I don't have

10      -- but, but we can talk about that offline, I

11      don't have that right in front of me but we can

12      certainly have that conversation.

13                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     And speaking

14      of offline, we're going to go back to the

15      Assembly and we're going to ask my colleague, Jo

16      Anne Simon to the panel. Good morning, Jo Anne.

17                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER SIMON:                   There we go. I'm

18      starting my video. There we go, okay.

19                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Beautiful.

20                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER SIMON:                   All right, so

21      thank you very much. Good morning, commissioner

22      and thank you for your testimony.

23                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Good morning.

24                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER SIMON:                   I have a series



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2       of questions, I'm going to lay them out to

3       maximize time. And so a couple things that are

4       new trends. Number one, we are getting more and

5       more older cases that had been successfully

6       certifying and are now having difficulty

7       certifying. And we don't understand why that

8       might be. Back pay is still a problem. The

9       process and the ability for people to get through

10      that process is still very sticky. And so they're

11      forced to call our offices repeatedly and by time

12      we get them, and we have to call your office

13      again and again, by time we get that, it's

14      already protracted. So there's quite a gap for

15      people.

16                 Also contesting, is some people who feel

17      they're not getting the level of benefit they

18      should be, but that process to contest is the

19      same as appealing, you know, applying for

20      unemployment and so that kind of slows that down.

21      There doesn't seem to be a more streamlined way

22      to do that and so we just find that a lot of the

23      sort of general communications are still very,

24      very sticky. We are following up with your office



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2       numerous times and we realize everybody is

3       overworked, but we have very little staff as

4       well.

5                   And then the other thing is there was an

6       Uber lawsuit and there was a question about those

7       Uber workers who were employees under state law

8       who were not falling into the right category or

9       something. And there was a finding for those

10      employees and is the Department of Labor now

11      processing them and how is that going?

12                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So, let me work

13      backwards, I made a list. The Uber case of course

14      is in litigation and I can't comment on that. The

15      reconsideration for your benefits, we are doing

16      those as we speak, and I can look into, you know,

17      cases and see if there's a particular problem

18      that you're having. The back pay, people get a

19      DocuSign document sent to their e-mail, they fill

20      it, it has their information and it automatically

21      goes into the computer. So they should watch for

22      the DocuSign and fill it out when it comes. We've

23      paid out $4 billion in back certifications

24      through the DocuSign system, so they should make



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2       sure that if the DocuSign system comes in, they

3       have to use it. It's the most efficient way to

4       get back certifications. Remember, nobody ever

5       back certified before the pandemic. This is all

6       brand new. And difficulty certifying now, that is

7       an oddity, if there was a break in their claim,

8       if they forgot to certify for a week, that might

9       be the problem, because then they had a break in

10      service. But, you know, we'll look into it and

11      see. It should be automatic, you can certify

12      every week online, so they shouldn't be having a

13      problem.

14                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER SIMON:                  That was our

15      view too, they shouldn't be having a problem

16      because they had been doing that regularly. And

17      so let me just, if I can, follow up on your point

18      about the DocuSign document and people should be

19      getting it regularly. What if they're not get --

20      I think the problem is they're not getting

21      anything. They're never getting the DocuSign

22      document.

23                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                  Okay. Then, we

24      need to talk to them. It could be that they gave



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2       us a bad e-mail. It's all done by e-mail if we

3       have a bad e-mail, that's why. So we need to have

4       a conversation. If they have two-way

5       communication on their account, if they signed up

6       for that, then they can just send that through

7       two-way communication and we can begin the

8       process that way. But, usually, if they didn't

9       get a DocuSign it's because we don't have a good

10      e-mail.

11                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER SIMON:                   Okay. Thank you.

12                 SENATOR RAMOS:              All right. Thank you.

13      Thank you, assemblywoman. Up next, we have state

14      Senator Diane Savino who has three minutes on the

15      clock for her questions.

16                 SENATOR DIANE SAVINO:                   Thank you,

17      Senator Ramos. Good morning, commissioner. A lot

18      of my questions have been answered so I'm not

19      going to repeat them for time. I do want to talk

20      about two issues that I think are important

21      because you and I have had this conversation in

22      the past about the issue of staffing and not just

23      your agency, it's in every state agency. And as a

24      result of the pandemic and the demands upon your



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2       agency, you were forced to bring people in from

3       other agencies. And I think you used the number

4       of 4,500 people -- have they come in from other

5       agencies or is that 4,500 people from other

6       agencies plus temps from outside agencies?

7                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So we've hired

8       about 500 people at this point, I think, in the

9       DOL. We have outside vendors. We may still have

10      some volunteer, you know, people from other state

11      agencies. I don't know of that mix. But let me

12      just point out because you and I have talked

13      about this a lot. In the universe of UI, our

14      budget is mainly, almost 100 percent federal. So

15      the ability to hire more staff is really a

16      federal dollars issue and it's an inverse

17      proportion. When the economy is good, our

18      staffing shrinks, because we don't need them.

19      When the economy is bad, we grow. That's why we

20      just hired 500 people. We get administrative

21      funds from US DOL to do that. It's not state

22      dollars that's paying for them.

23                 SENATOR SAVINO:              So the two other issues

24      I want to mention and you can answer. The



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2       strength or the safety of the trust fund, we've

3       spoken about in the past. Maybe you can address

4       that. And two, I know that in 2019, the

5       department decided to implement a new computer

6       system because the system had you in place dated

7       back to the 1970s and the new system is not quite

8       yet in place.

9                    COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Correct.

10                   SENATOR SAVINO:              Or you may have been in

11      the process of implementing it. This could not

12      have happened at a worse time, so you brought on

13      60 servers from Google and now you still have the

14      new processors that are supposed to come in. Are

15      you going to continue with the implementation of

16      I believe it's the Tata system to complement the

17      Google servers that you have? Or what do you see

18      as the future of technology in the Department of

19      Labor?

20                   COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Great question.

21      Thank you. So, I'm happy to say all through the

22      pandemic, the outside contractors and the staff

23      that we had devoted to, we call it UISIM is the

24      acronym for this, devoted to the rebuild of the



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2       system. They worked throughout the pandemic on

3       the rebuild. They focused, they took all the

4       information -- remember we got a lot of new

5       information that we had never -- we never

6       expected to serve three million people for

7       instance, so that has enriched this program

8       enormously. They are continuing to work through

9       it. We have a very aggressive timeline for it.

10      The Google information has very helpful. TCS is

11      the American part of Tata and they are doing a

12      superb job and we are looking forward to rolling

13      that out.

14                  You're right. We were nowhere close to

15      being able to have it ready during this. But the

16      good news is they're working very hard on it. The

17      trust fund, we are on a federal line of credit at

18      the moment. It is interest free and there is a

19      lot of talk in Washington about some kind of

20      federal forgiveness of at least some of the loan

21      for states because every state in the country is

22      facing this.

23                  I am very happy to say that the work at

24      you all did in the legislature following the last



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2       recession to rebuild the system of the trust fund

3       really worked. Our trust fund was solid, we got

4       through the first part of it without having to

5       take out a loan which was great. And we

6       appreciate the work you did and I know once this

7       is all over I'm sure we will revisit this whole

8       conversation, because this has changed

9       everything.

10                 SENATOR SAVINO:              Thank you.

11                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you. Up next we

12      have, oh I should mention that we don't have any

13      more assembly members on the list, so we are

14      going proceed with the rest of my colleagues who

15      have questions. And up next we have state Senator

16      James Sanders who has five minutes for his

17      questions.

18                 SENATOR JAMES SANDERS:                   Thank you, Madam

19      Chair and thanks to the other chairs. Good to see

20      you commissioner, how are you?

21                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   I'm well, thank

22      you.

23                 SENATOR SANDERS:               Good. Let me follow up

24      with Senator Savino's question of computer



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2       systems. Computer systems often have problems of

3       being merged. How do we get rid of one system and

4       grab a different system or what is the plan after

5       this? Are we going to -- are we going to still

6       another system and who is going pay for this

7       Since this was a problem to begin with.

8                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So remember, the

9       UI system is by and large almost 100 percent

10      federally funded. We have appropriate fundings

11      for this rebuild. It is not coming out of the

12      trust fund, would never come out of the trust

13      fund, not coming out of state dollars. It is, as

14      you can imagine, I used to say to people at the

15      height of the pandemic, you are you are not

16      buying socks off Amazon, this is a huge knowledge

17      machine and they are highly complex. That's why

18      the rebuild of the system is years long instead

19      of months long. There will be migration of

20      information from one system to another, there

21      will be bridges. It would take me way too long to

22      begin to explain the little bit that I understand

23      about technology to you.

24                 But it is a highly complex system and we



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2       have excellent, and I mean excellent people

3       working on it. We have, of course, the outside

4       vendor, but we have our own subject matter

5       experts and people from around the rest of the

6       state government, ITS is working with us. So,

7       it's huge. It will be a complex issue and once

8       it's rebuilt, I'm very excited because I think

9       with a rebuilt system, we would not have the same

10      kind of problems that we did today. We've learned

11      so much from this COVID disaster and all of that

12      is being integrated into our thinking for the new

13      system.

14                 SENATOR SANDERS:               Well, Madam

15      Commissioner, all of these things were being done

16      in theory before this disaster struck. What's to

17      ensure and what timeline do we have to make sure

18      that we're automated?

19                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So we remain

20      automated. We've done a lot of upgrades to our

21      system during the pandemic. We literally rebuilt

22      the plane while we were flying it and that's a

23      good thing. And a lot of the progress we've seen

24      in the last six weeks is because of all that



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2       technology that we've been able to use.

3                  The pandemic has taught us some

4       interesting lessons. We had done a lot of

5       scenarios, obviously going into the rebuild of

6       the system, no one ever envisioned shutting down

7       New York State, no one. And so now we do envision

8       it and we know how to prepare for that. Other

9       states are asking us how we have gotten through

10      this pandemic. As difficult and problematic as it

11      has been, we have been months ahead of other

12      states. I had a call in mid-May from a

13      neighboring state saying how did you set up your

14      third party call centers? We set them up in early

15      April. I know other states were just beginning to

16      pay PUA at the end of May and into June. We paid

17      ours in early April, as soon as we could.

18                 So as painful as it's been for us, we

19      are leading the country. And I'm very proud of

20      that we have learned all of those lessons and we

21      are not going to forget any of them.

22                 SENATOR SANDERS:               Madam, since time is

23      up my friend, let me put in two questions to you.

24      We've heard a lot of this talk of people earning



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2       more on unemployment than work. I'd like to have

3       a quantification of that, how true is this. Then

4       the other, I have so many people in my district

5       that are crying out, screaming out, dealing with

6       the question of depression, suicide, et cetera,

7       because they're not getting their needs met. So

8       if you can answer with assurance, how do I go it

9       these people and their needs met? And how true is

10      this comment that lots of people are earning more

11      from unemployment than work?

12                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So there have

13      been a number of studies, not just in New York

14      State but across the country, about that very

15      large issue and there are a large number of

16      people in various states, including New York who

17      have earned more on unemployment than they did at

18      their job. I think that speaks more to the low

19      wages than it does to the system that's assisting

20      them. Let's remember that this system was devised

21      to keep people home, so they did not get sick and

22      it worked. And I think it was worth every penny

23      that we have all spent to protected our citizens.

24                 As far as people being desperate, I hear



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2       you. I think it is a terrible situation I want to

3       get people back to jobs and not just some crummy

4       low wage job, I want to get people back to good

5       jobs. I want to help people find a better career,

6       I want to offer them the opportunity for training

7       so that they can improve the lives for them and

8       their families.

9                  And by the way, we are participating

10      with Head Space. It's a company that does mental

11      health counseling and there are lots of resources

12      there, call me offline and we can give you the

13      information for your constituents. It's all free,

14      it's all confidential. People should never suffer

15      the way they've been suffering these days and we

16      have help available.

17                 SENATOR SANDERS:               Thank you, Madam

18      Commissioner, thank you Madam Chair.

19                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                  Thank you.

20                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you. We

21      will now move back to the Assembly, co-chair Tom

22      Abinanti for five minutes.

23                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER ABINANTI:                     Thank you

24      all. Commissioner, thank you very much for



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2       joining us. You and I have had a conversation on

3       a bit more of a general area. And I'd like to

4       take you away from unemployment insurance to

5       another part of your role. If you look back, a

6       year ago, the unemployment rate in this country

7       and in New York was you know, much, much lower,

8       New York, we were talking maybe four percent. Now

9       we're talking 15 percent, New York City 20

10      percent.

11                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Yes.

12                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER ABINANTI:                     And we have

13      seen so many people lose their jobs. We've seen

14      so many sectors of the economy that have been

15      badly damaged and we may be losing them

16      permanently, or at least they're going to be it

17      is going to be a long time before they come back.

18      And so we need to find a way to restore parts of

19      our economy or substitute new ones we need to

20      find a way to support the green economy and move

21      towards the sustainable jobs that are not going

22      to be affected or not going to damage the economy

23      or the environment and which are going to be

24      there if there's a second round of COVID. So what



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2       are we doing to make employees feel safe that

3       they can leave their homes? What do we do to

4       stimulate other areas and do we need to raise the

5       minimum wage so that we don't face this issue of

6       unemployment benefits being better and more than

7       working for 40 or 60 hours a week? Your thoughts?

8       Do you have a plan? Where do we go from here?

9                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Let me start with

10      the green economy. I am fortunate to be on the

11      clean, the climate counsel and I am co-chairing

12      the Just Transition working group, so we have

13      begun working throughout the pandemic for that

14      future because the green economy is the future

15      and it has a lot of jobs in it. We are currently

16      assessing what are the skill sets people need,

17      what kind of training do they need. How

18      sustainable are those jobs and where are those

19      jobs going to be? So we are in actually in

20      process right now, looking at where in the state

21      they are, where the workers could be and what

22      they need, what skill sets they need in order to

23      compete. It's a great area and it is literally

24      the future.



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2                  We also know, as I said earlier, being

3       digitally savvy is going to be more and more

4       critical as we move forward because workers,

5       those workers who can work remotely are going to

6       need to know how to work, how to work through the

7       internet, how to work on a telephone, how to send

8       their work product back and forth and that means

9       a skill set that a lot of people have minimal

10      comfort with. So we are looking at where do you

11      get that kind of training, how do you assist

12      those people.

13                 Employers also need this kind of

14      training. It is very difficult for some employers

15      to manage their workforce remotely, so we are

16      looking at how can we work with our business

17      partners and help them develop the skill sets.

18      DOL developed a telecommuting policy over a year

19      ago. We are the first agency that I know of in

20      New York State to float one. And it was not easy

21      to do, but it was highly productive. And when

22      this pandemic hit, in that sense, we were ready

23      with a plan, we know what it takes.

24                 So businesses have to be digitally



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2       savvy, they have to be willing to trust their

3       employees to be able to work remotely and report

4       accordingly. We found at the DOL, workers are

5       often more productive remotely than they are in

6       the office. So, you know, these are changing

7       paradigms that people need to get comfort with.

8       We have to have public conversations. We need to

9       work with our education partners. We signed an

10      agreement with Empire State, which is mostly an

11      online college last year so that we could help

12      our people in our work centers go to Empire State

13      for training. So that is a great solution and

14      we're looking to build up more of that.

15                 It's education, it's public awareness,

16      it's making sure that people have the technical

17      knowhow and the infrastructure, the cell phones,

18      the laptops, the iPads, whatever it is. Broadband

19      is critically important. We said earlier parts of

20      the state have very bad access to broadband.

21      Without that you can't work, so there are

22      definitely things we need to do.

23                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER ABINANTI:                     Commissioner,

24      you mention the REDCs. I don't know, these are



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2       kind of, the governor's economic development arm.

3       How do we get them to understand what you just

4       said? How do we get them to change their focus to

5       the things that you are talking about? And

6       secondly, I'm going to come back with this whole

7       concept of the minimum wage. I think we have to

8       have a minimum wage that is different in every

9       part of the state, but has to be raised quite a

10      bit so that we encourage workers to come out. I

11      appreciate what you're saying about the digital

12      savvy. This COVID has taught me to become

13      digitally savvy. I was just on two different

14      meetings at the same time. I see some of my

15      colleagues were on the other meeting. I literally

16      have two computers in front of me right now and

17      I'm doing two Zooms at the same time. I got

18      remember to shut the right one off at the right

19      time so can I talk to the right one.

20                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     speaking of

21      shutting off --

22                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER ABINANTI:                     But that's

23      what has taught me to do that, and I think we've

24      got to have a plan and would I like to continue



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2       this conversation in the future. We need your

3       leadership --

4                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     In the

5       future, and not now.

6                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER ABINANTI:                     -- in helping

7       everybody [unintelligible] [01:22:42].

8                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you

9       senator, go right ahead.

10                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER ABINANTI:                     Thank you.

11                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you, guys. Up next

12      we have Senator Shelley Mayer, who has three

13      minutes for her questions. Thanks for keeping it

14      lively.

15                 SENATOR SHELLEY MAYER:                   Thank you, thank

16      you Madam Chair and thank you commissioner, nice

17      to see you.

18                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Good morning,

19      nice to you see you. As you know, because you and

20      I have had many conversations, I am still

21      fighting incredibly hard, as I know all of my

22      colleagues on this call are, for their

23      constituents, many of whom have been waiting

24      since March. Every day, I send five, what I call



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2       urgent, new urgent cases to the department for

3       resolution. So I know that you've greatly

4       improved your operation, but no one should take

5       away from this hearing that our constituents

6       aren't still absolutely in the midst of dealing

7       with challenges with the Department of Labor

8       itself. And so I appreciate the attention you

9       have brought to it, but I don't think we should

10      minimize and pat ourselves on the back because we

11      are not in perfect situation.

12                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   No one has ever

13      said we're perfect.

14                 SENATOR MAYER:              Well, I know, and I

15      appreciate that. But I think during the pandemic

16      there was a tendency several times, to blame

17      applicants for so called you have forgotten to

18      certify, you have haven't dealt with knowing a

19      particular number. I think we ought to take a

20      lesson learned from that. Many of our applicants

21      could not certify because of problems. They were

22      not at fault. So I just think language wise,

23      there's a lesson to be learned here. We're all in

24      it together. You were very much with it with our



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2       constituents who are suffering. Let us not blame

3       those who are trying to get through a difficult

4       situation. So I just, lesson learned for all of

5       us in my opinion, but I think it's important to

6       raise it.

7                   I have a question about hazard pay for

8       the many workers who had to go out like nurses,

9       for example, people who work in group homes. You

10      know, many of them serve at the bottom end of the

11      wage scale, many black and Latino women in most

12      of our districts. I wonder whether you could

13      consider under the provisions of Article 19 of

14      the labor law convening a wage board to look at

15      whether they ought not to be entitled to hazard

16      pay, given what they may go through in another

17      pandemic.

18                  I think there are real questions about

19      whether there health be endangered by their work

20      and I think the Department of Labor has power to

21      review that and consider whether we couldn't add

22      to their pay a statutorily required hazard pay.

23      So I just put that before you as something to

24      consider.



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2                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Thanks.

3                  SENATOR MAYER:              And thank you for your

4       comments on shared work. I wonder, what is the

5       department doing to ensure to promote shared

6       work, which is a fantastic idea.

7                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So we have worked

8       with a lot of businesses, as you know, we have

9       business services reps across the state, they

10      have very well developed networks with businesses

11      and we've reached out very extensively.

12      Obviously, not to everybody because that's

13      impossible, but we try to tell it wide and far

14      that shared work is available. We also worked

15      internally to make sure that our internal

16      processes were ready to take the onslaught,

17      because we knew it would really ramp up quickly,

18      and I'm very happy to say we've automated a lot

19      of it so it's no longer a paper-driven exercise

20      and we're able to handle these shared work issues

21      in real time which is very, very helpful.

22                 You know, I've made the offer to you and

23      I've made the offer to a number of other people.

24      If you want us to come out and meet with a



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2       business group, with your local chambers of

3       commerce, whoever, we are happy to send a

4       representative out and walk them through A to Z

5       what shared work is and how it works. It is an

6       excellent way to hold on to your trained work

7       force.

8                    SENATOR MAYER:              Thank you. That's great

9       and I will take advantage of it. Thank you very

10      much. Thank you, commissioner.

11                   COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Good to see you.

12                   SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you. We don't have

13      an assembly person signed up for questions at

14      this time, so up next, we have state Senator

15      Daphne Jordan. You have three minutes for your

16      questions.

17                   SENATOR DAPHNE JORDAN:                   Good morning

18      everybody. Thank you to all the committee

19      chairman for putting this public hearing together

20      and thank you very much, commissioner for

21      answering so many questions. Many of the

22      questions I would have asked you have already

23      been asked and they dealt with my constituents

24      having a hard time getting their claims. And we



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2       still are working on quite a number of claims and

3       several do come in each day that need assistance.

4                  But I guess my question goes back to

5       something you said in the opening statement and,

6       you know, really, this has been, COVID has been

7       about a terrible loss of lives, but it's been

8       about a terrible loss of livelihoods as well. And

9       your department has been the lifeline for very

10      many people. In your opening you had said that

11      you've paid out $40 billion worth already and

12      that's 18 years of unemployment claims within

13      just five months.

14                 So I know that in order to replenish the

15      UI fund, that the state had applied and received

16      from the federal government $5 billion through a

17      unique federal loan and I guess it's interest

18      free for the first year. It was a disaster type

19      lean, and I don't know all about it, but how are

20      you planning to pay that back. And I guess the

21      fear that I've heard from some of the companies

22      is that the state will raise unemployment taxes

23      on them to pay back the debt and they're already

24      hurting. So, it's like a spiral, it could be a



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2       spiral downward.

3                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So here's the

4       really good news about that atrocious number, the

5       $40 billion, 75 percent of that is federal

6       dollars because of federal programs created

7       during the Cares Act. Only 25 percent of that

8       comes from the UI trust fund, so our trust fund

9       loan, while it's big, is not $40 billion and

10      hopefully never will be. We are working very

11      hard. The governor gave us the authority to look

12      at the experience rating issue. We understand

13      that businesses are under a tremendous amount of

14      pressure because they've lost their ability in

15      many instances to have a business, so we're

16      looking at all of these issues and we will be

17      making recommendations you know, relatively soon.

18                 The experience rating itself does not

19      get sent out, the new year's experience rating is

20      not sent out from the department until February

21      of next year, so we have some time to really work

22      through all of this and see what's really going

23      to help everyone. But we are definitely looking

24      at it. But remember, $40 billion is not $40



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2       billion out of the New York State UI trust fund.

3       It's only, that's only a quarter. It's like we

4       only have a loan of $5 billion which is large but

5       it's not 40.

6                   SENATOR JORDAN:              Do you foresee that you

7       will be needing more than the $5 billion that

8       you've taken already?

9                   COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Well, we have

10      over three million claimants in the system, so

11      yes. You know, it really depends on how quickly

12      the economy recovers, how quickly people go back

13      to work. There are a lot of variables, do people

14      with higher benefits go back to work sooner? That

15      leaves you with less being paid out. It all, it's

16      a great variable. But it is interest free at the

17      moment and I know that there is interest in

18      Washington to see if the federal government can

19      forgive some of these problems because, of

20      course, it's not just New York State, it's every

21      state in the union. Everybody is suffering from

22      this.

23                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you.

24      Back to the Assembly. Carmen De La Rosa, come on



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2       down.

3                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER CARMEN DE LA ROSA:

4       Hello commissioner, how are you?

5                   COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   I'm well, how are

6       you?

7                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER DE LA ROSA:                       Good to see

8       you and thank you to all my colleagues for

9       putting together this hearing and for you for

10      attending. I have a question about workers that

11      have not been able to get any assistance. You

12      know, we have been working with some workers that

13      were not able to get any federal relief from the

14      economic stimulus plan and workers who have not

15      been able, unfortunately, to qualify for

16      unemployment because they're not part of the

17      traditional workforce. Yet they're considered

18      essential in our communities and in keeping our

19      city running, our state running.

20                  What can you do within your authority to

21      help bring some relief to some of these families

22      that are in this moment, you know, facing

23      homelessness, hunger and historic unemployment?

24                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   It is a



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2       heartbreaking situation. And I take it very

3       seriously. Unfortunately for us in the UI system,

4       we are heavily regulated by the federal

5       government and they have regulations on

6       citizenship, how you qualify for benefits. If you

7       are participating in the cash economy, by and

8       large you are not considered eligible for either

9       PUA or UI. And that is a serious problem.

10                 There are other forms of assistance in

11      the state government and at the federal level and

12      we can talk offline about some of them in case

13      there are ones that we know about that you don't

14      know. But unfortunately, for me, as the head of

15      the DOL, for the UI system and the federal CARES

16      Act, we are very limited by the federal

17      government itself.

18                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER DE LA ROSA:                       And as far

19      as wage theft and other practices that may put

20      workers at risk, what oversight is your

21      department going to have, for example, for

22      employees who are coming back to work to ensure

23      that they are safe but also that they're being

24      paid what they're supposed to be paid rather



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2       than, you know, whatever the economy allows.

3                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Yes, and I've

4       heard that from a number of people. It is, you

5       know, it's a concern to have and I share it. So

6       any worker who is concerned about the safety of

7       their workplace can go online, on our COVID

8       complaint form and fill it out, and again it is

9       anonymous. We do not go to the employer and say

10      Jane Doe registered this complaint. We would

11      never do that. So we protect the identity of the

12      worker, we contact the employer and assess are

13      you handing out the proper PPE, are you doing

14      proper sanitizing, are you enforcing all the

15      regulations.

16                 And most of the compliance that we've

17      gotten, almost all of it has been voluntary

18      because you know, most businesses don't want to

19      endanger their workers. There are some that do, I

20      know that. So there's that.

21                 If a worker feels that they are being

22      abused on their pay scale, certainly if a worker

23      is being paid less than minimum wage, immediately

24      let us know, because that is a violation and we



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2       take it very seriously. Same thing with overtime,

3       if you're working 42 hours and getting paid for

4       40 let us know. Again, we will look into it

5       immediately because these are not allowable in

6       this society. And I know that there are

7       unscrupulous employers who think I'm not making

8       enough so you can't make enough. That's not the

9       system. We have laws.

10                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER DE LA ROAS:                       And finally

11      with your discretion, if we were to get a second

12      wave, which hopefully we don't, is your agency

13      prepared, financially but also with the

14      technology in place to begin to quickly upload

15      these cases [unintelligible] [01:34:16]?

16                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Yes. So that, you

17      know, we are running those scenarios as well,

18      because we are very concerned about a second

19      wave. On one hand a lot of the workers who might

20      again be laid off would already have a UI claim

21      in the system, so it's much easier to reconnect

22      them. But we understand where the speed bumps

23      were before, what the kinds of fixes we need to

24      make, how we need to expand our workforce in



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2       order to accommodate it. You know, we started out

3       with something like 1,700 ports and we now have

4       over 10,000 telephone ports that allow more calls

5       to come in. So we're very aware of where the pain

6       points were before.

7                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER DE LA ROSA:                       Thank you.

8                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you, thank you

9       ladies. Up next, we have state Senator Andrew

10      Gounardes, who has three minutes for his

11      questions.

12                 SENATOR ANDREW GOUNARDES:                       Okay. There

13      we go. I'm in my car, so thank you very much

14      commissioner. I first just want to echo the

15      sentiments of -- thank you for answering a lot of

16      questions that we have, but really echo the

17      sentiments of Senator Mayer about the language

18      that we use, and not just for your department but

19      I think at all levels of government when we use

20      certain words and certain phrases, how it affects

21      people's psyche, especially when they're going

22      through such severe economic trauma like they

23      have been the last couple of months. So I would

24      just urge you to consider that as the department



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2       continues work to help get money into the hands

3       of people who need it.

4                  And I also want to echo the sentiment

5       about hazard pay. I have grocery workers in my

6       district who have had hazard pay taken away from

7       them and yet they are still subjected to really,

8       really difficult working conditions and anything

9       we can do to hold those employers accountable but

10      also support those workers, I think, is very

11      important.

12                 I do want to focus my questions on the

13      public employers and public employees

14      specifically and I know that the Department of

15      Labor has the Public Employee Health and Safety

16      Bureau and I was wondering if you could share

17      with us how many complaints of unsafe public

18      workplaces has the bureau received over the last

19      five months while employees have had to come into

20      work during the pandemic

21                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So, I don't

22      actually have that number. I can get it for you

23      offline, but remember that for a lot of public

24      employees, they also were sent home. The DOL



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2       Workers who were working on this crisis, by and

3       large, were working from their homes, not from

4       our offices. We have, you know, I'm in building

5       12 right now and we could hold over I think 1,500

6       employees in here. We have maybe 500 at max. So

7       many, many agencies do not have their staffs on

8       site. And that's a good thing. That is an

9       important way to protect people. So, but I can

10      find out what kind of complaints we got.

11                   SENATOR GOUNARDES:                Yeah, that would be

12      great.

13                   COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Let me just go

14      back to the --

15                   SENATOR GOUNARDES:                Sure.

16                   COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   I just want to

17      point out, it is critical for us to educate our

18      users on how to access their benefits correctly

19      and we say you need to certify every week. If we

20      don't say that, people don't. And I'm not

21      criticizing people, but if they don't know to do

22      it, this won't do it. And then they will not get

23      service. So when we say you must certify every

24      week, that's a reminder and we send it out. This



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2       is a federal requirement. We cannot do it

3       automatically at New York State. The federal

4       requires an individual to personally certify

5       their benefit every week.

6                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:                Sure, thank you. I

7       appreciate that. And just circling back to the

8       public employee question again, while many

9       agencies and many departments may have sent their

10      workers home, as chair of the Civil Service

11      Committee, I receive several dozen complaints

12      from workers across the state, as well as some

13      unions who, for totally administrative jobs were

14      being told to come into work and being told to

15      come into work without any equipment, any

16      protection, anything whatsoever. So it's

17      obviously very concerning that that is happening,

18      even into end of April, May, et cetera. So, I

19      would really like to see those numbers and see

20      what else we can be doing to make sure that as

21      we're sending workers back and preparing for a

22      potential second wave, we are keeping our public

23      employees safe and we are holding public

24      employers at all levels of government fully



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2       actable for a safe work place.

3                   COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Absolutely.

4                   SENATOR GOUNARDES:                Thank you.

5                   SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you, and up next,

6       we have Senator Brad Hoylman, three minutes.

7       Hoylman going once, Brad Hoylman going twice.

8                   SENATOR BRAD HOYLMAN:                   I'm here. I'm

9       here.

10                  SENATOR RAMOS:              He's here.

11                  SENATOR HOYLMAN:               Sorry, sorry. Hello

12      commissioner, good to see you thank you for being

13      here and testifying. I just wanted to ask a

14      question. Thank you, Madam Chair for indulging

15      me. As you know, Key Bank has a contract with the

16      Department of Labor to provide benefit banking

17      services, which includes issuing Key Bank branded

18      debit cards on which unemployment insurance

19      recipients can receive their UI benefits.

20                  And it's come to our office's attention

21      that Key Bank charges UI recipients between $1.50

22      and 3 bucks per ATM withdrawal if a benefit

23      recipient draws down on their benefits on an ATM

24      outside of key bank's network and that's in



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2       addition to whatever fees those outside ATMs

3       might also charge. You know, particularly at a

4       time when so many New Yorkers are struggling and

5       out of work, it seems unconscionable, would you

6       agree, that UI recipients can be nickeled and

7       dimed like this by their, from their benefits?

8                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Let me address

9       this, because we've had a lot of conversations

10      about this. There's information on the Key Bank

11      site, there's information on the DOL Site and

12      there's information on the packet that comes with

13      the debit card. First thing, it's always better

14      to have direct deposit into the bank account.

15      That's the best way to get it, it's the fastest

16      way, the most convenient. If you get a debit

17      card, they list on their sites and on the card,

18      on what comes with it, there are over a thousand

19      sites in New York State outside, it's a network,

20      outside of Key Bank, where you can withdraw your

21      money fee free. And I can't remember the name of

22      it at the moment, I can get it to you, but there

23      are over a thousand of these sites. They're

24      available, they're in all five boroughs of New



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2       York City, why people line up in front of the one

3       branch on East 31st Street, I don't know. But

4       they are also telling them there you don't have

5       to a Key Bank in order to withdraw without a fee.

6                  If you use the debit card outside of the

7       network, yes there is a fee. Same thing with, I

8       bank at a credit union and I have a network and I

9       try to use that network, but if I have to use

10      another one, that's what I do. It's called All

11      Point Network and they have over a thousand

12      branches available fee free with your credit

13      card, you debit card.

14                 And just to set the record straight,

15      only 20 percent of our participants get the debit

16      card, 80 percent have it direct deposited. And if

17      you want to change to a direct deposit, you can

18      go on the website, do it yourself automatically.

19      It's safe and then your money goes right into

20      your bank account.

21                 SENATOR HOYLMAN:               It seems to me though

22      that we should be doing everything we can to make

23      sure that, you know, that these benefits stay in

24      the pockets of the recipients. Is it something



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2       you may consider looking at changing in the

3       future with your contract with Key Bank? I mean

4       they are taking on a very important

5       responsibility during this pandemic.

6                   COMMISSIONER REARDON:                  We can certainly

7       have any number of conversations with them, but

8       it is standard practice. Again, my credit union

9       has a large network where I can withdraw for free

10      but they're not everywhere, so if I --

11                  SENATOR HOYLMAN:              I would argue,

12      respectfully, this is not a standard banking

13      procedure, this is banking in the middle of a

14      pandemic.

15                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                  They still have

16      over a thousand places they can withdraw for free

17      and they are noticed everywhere on the websites,

18      on the package. We can certainly have a

19      conversation to see if they want to expand their

20      network. But they can also transfer to their own

21      bank account if they'd rather not struggle with a

22      debit card.

23                  SENATOR HOYLMAN:              Thank you very much.

24      Thanks for looking into it. I appreciate it.



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2                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Sure.

3                  SENATOR RAMOS:              All right, thank you,

4       Senator Hoylman. Up next we have Senator John

5       Liu. You have three minutes to ask your

6       questions.

7                  SENATOR JOHN LIU:                Thank you, Madam

8       Chair and thank you commissioner, for being with

9       us this whole time. Actually Assembly Member

10      Members Bronson and Simon already asked questions

11      along the lines of my questions but you didn't

12      have a chance to respond to them because they ran

13      out of time. So with regard to the digital

14      marketplace employees, I know you had mentioned

15      there is a lawsuit going on with the Uber drivers

16      right now. But it is my understanding that

17      ultimately, many of these drivers did get their

18      unemployment insurance. Is that correct or what

19      happened there?

20                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Many of them did.

21      I mean there was no set policy one way or the

22      other. The UI and PUA rules were determined by

23      the federal government and we follow them. That's

24      all can I say about the lawsuit. But like many



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2       people who work in the gig economy, they got most

3       of them got on to the PUA benefits without a

4       problem.

5                  SENATOR LIU:            Okay. So, I mean --

6                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   [unintelligible]

7       [01:43:43] in that area.

8                  SENATOR LIU:            I just seem to recall that

9       at toward the beginning of the administration of

10      the unemployment benefits that many of these

11      drivers were left out in the cold. And so was

12      that --

13                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Not so much

14      drivers, but for people who were going to be able

15      to get the PUA benefits, originally the federal

16      government had a regulation that said they had to

17      apply for unemployment, be denied and then apply

18      for PUA.

19                 SENATOR LIU:            Got it.

20                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   People thought

21      that they were denied for benefits. We fixed

22      that. On April 20th, we rolled out the new Google

23      application that was a seamless way for people to

24      be guided to one benefit or the other. But



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2       unfortunately in those first weeks, people

3       thought they were being denied benefits. They

4       were not. That was just the federal regulation

5       that got in our way.

6                    SENATOR LIU:            Well they, I mean from

7       their perspective, and we also have to try to put

8       our ourselves in the shoes of our constituents,

9       from their perspective, they were denied. And

10      they were, in fact, based on what you were

11      saying, they were told they had to be denied

12      first for unemployment before they could get the

13      PUA. So that's what happened. Okay. There's

14      nothing that DOL could have done differently

15      there.

16                   COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   No. After we had

17      the application, we dealt with it with a tech

18      fix. But we, remember, we did not get guidance

19      from the federal government on how to administer

20      that until April 5th.

21                   SENATOR LIU:            All right. With regard to

22      lessons learned thus far, and I know we are all

23      learning a lot of lessons, what has transpired

24      with the digital marketplace workers that can



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2       probably be applied going forward long after we

3       hopefully get out of this pandemic situation?

4                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   In what regard?

5                  SENATOR LIU:            Well, so, for example,

6       they were somehow afforded unemployment benefits,

7       right. I mean from their perspective, it is

8       unemployment benefit.

9                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   They were

10      afforded pandemic unemployment assistance by the

11      CARES Act. That is not straight up unemployment

12      insurance. And it's a --

13                 SENATOR LIU:            Yeah, but it's still

14      called pandemic unemployment assistance.

15                 COMMUNITIES REARDON:                  Yes. But it's not

16      UI. And that's a significant difference and

17      people need to understand --

18                 SENATOR LIU:            I understand it's not

19      unemployment insurance per se, that it's -- but

20      it's still unemployment assistance, which somehow

21      connotes that they are employed. So all I'm

22      saying is that -- and my time is up. I don't want

23      to keep you much longer. But we need to figure

24      out how to move forward here recognizing that



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2       these drivers are just really not independent

3       contractors, but are employees of employers,

4       which is why they're getting unemployment

5       assistance. Thank you.

6                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you, Senator Liu.

7       That actually exhausts both the Senate and the

8       Assembly lists when it comes to questions. So we

9       are, as chairs going to be asking a second round

10      of questions, and I will begin. I wanted to ask

11      about something you said earlier, commissioner,

12      with regard to voluntary agreements when there

13      are complaints. And I'm wondering what it is that

14      if these voluntary complaints don't take place,

15      how is it that any of these conflicts are

16      resolved, is there any enforceable law, I'm

17      sorry, when it came to the voluntary resolutions.

18                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Mm-hmm. So, we

19      work on a compliance model and we work and we do

20      this, we did this before the pandemic. We did it

21      in a lot of situations. We go out and we work

22      with the employer and we say, you know, these are

23      the issues that we see in your workplace. These

24      are the things you need to remediate. And for the



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2       most part, they do. And you know, we're very

3       happy with the results. You know, very rarely do

4       we have to follow up and do any kind of, you

5       know, further work with them.

6                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you. With regard

7       to the DOL having obviously more servers, you

8       still can't actually apply for PUA in Spanish,

9       let alone other languages. You need to call to

10      receive language access and yet people haven't

11      heard from your department in months. How are,

12      you know, are any efforts dedicated to ensuring

13      that non-English speaking people are being

14      prioritized in any way and made sure that they're

15      able to access their benefits?

16                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So, fortunately

17      we do have some agents that are bilingual and we

18      use them first when someone calls, particularly

19      in Spanish because that's the most generally, you

20      know, that's usually the second language that we

21      have available. And if they do not have someone

22      who can speak in that language, then we have to

23      use language line, and we use that all the time.

24      Unfortunately, it takes longer, as you know, it



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2       takes longer because you speak in one language,

3       it translated, so it doubles the time. And that's

4       just the nature of the business. We print up, all

5       of our printed material is printed up in six

6       languages. We are working on some of our

7       automated phone lines and we're getting them

8       translated into Spanish first and then perhaps

9       into other languages. We understand the issue.

10                 We recently had a meeting with a lot of

11      the advocates for these other language groups to

12      make sure that we were all working together and

13      they were very helpful, and, you know, we are

14      happy for the assistance. I understand the

15      difficulty. The governor takes it very seriously

16      --

17                 SENATOR RAMOS:              But you're not telling

18      me how you are addressing the problem. How are

19      people who don't speak English going to be able

20      to access their benefits, when it's been

21      increasingly frustrating for them to do so?

22                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   When someone

23      speaks in another language, if we do not have

24      someone on, available in the telephone claim



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2       center who speaks that language, they have to use

3       the language line. They call the language line

4       for whatever language is spoken, and that person

5       translates. And that is the system that we've

6       always had. We are actually trying to automate

7       some of our automated responses in Spanish.

8       That's actually being worked on right now. And we

9       hope to real that out soon so you can understand

10      when you go to certify, all of that it will be in

11      Spanish as well, and that is what we are doing.

12                 SENATOR RAMOS:              All right, one more.

13      When asked about gig workers, you responded with

14      answers about PUA, but the point is that they're

15      not eligible for UI, they're actually eligible

16      for unemployment insurance and not PUA. You can't

17      get PUA if you're eligible for unemployment

18      insurance. If you had to process their

19      unemployment insurance applications, workers

20      wouldn't have had to worry about PUA. That's why

21      I understand there was the lawsuit about Uber and

22      Lyft. What have you done to implement the

23      Postmates decision? When did the DOL begin to

24      make app-based employers contribute UI fund and



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2       when will you receive earning data from app-based

3       employers?

4                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   That's all under

5       litigation and I can't comment on it.

6                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Okay. Well, then in that

7       case, can you answer why if quarantine leave

8       guidance can be expanded, like it was for certain

9       healthcare workers by the Department of Health,

10      so more essential workers can qualify without

11      having to go to their local health department?

12                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   I'm sorry. I

13      don't understand. Ask me again. I didn't -- I

14      don't understand.

15                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Sure. The quarantine

16      leave guidance can be expanded, or can it be

17      expanded like it was for certain healthcare

18      workers by the Department of Health. Is that

19      something you're able to do in order to cover

20      more essential workers who can qualify without

21      having to go to their local health departments?

22                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   I'd have to look

23      into that. I don't have an answer for that. I can

24      get back to you.



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2                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Okay. And by any chance

3       if we go back to my first question, has your

4       staff given you the guidance from your website

5       that I had referenced before?

6                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So the return to

7       work talks about UI, it talks about what happens

8       when you get an offer, when you can decline the

9       offer. That's the UI part of it. Is that, if

10      that's what you were talking about, that really

11      is how I'm being called back to work, I don't

12      feel safe, what are my options? We talk about,

13      you know, the COVID reasons for not going back to

14      work. I think there are seven, the federal

15      government listed them out. And you can, if one

16      of those is your reason for not returning to

17      work, then you can turn down the job and you

18      qualify, I think usually for PUA in that

19      instance, because PUA is actually for COVID

20      reasons. That's one of the reasons PUA was

21      invented, to cover people to have COVID reasons

22      for not working.

23                 SENATOR RAMOS:              But PUA is not included

24      the in guidance. It is not in the document.



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2                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   It is, they're

3       telling me. Let's take this offline. I'd be happy

4       to have that conversation, but, you know, this is

5       about how you can return to work and how you can

6       turn down work.

7                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Okay. All right. Very

8       good, thanks. I'll yield my time, and I believe

9       Assemblyman McDonald, do you have more questions?

10                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Yes, actually

11      I really don't have a second round except for

12      chairs. Kevin Byrne got tied up in a meeting so

13      we're going to ask if we can give three minutes

14      for Kevin to ask some questions of the

15      commissioners, and then the assembly will rest.

16                 SENATOR RAMOS:              All right, and then we

17      have Senator Skoufis.

18                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Okay, great.

19      Thank you.

20                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER KEVIN BYRNE:                           Thank you,

21      Chair McDonald, and commissioner, for your

22      testimony. Like Chairman Abinanti, I was

23      multitasking with another meeting as well, and I

24      was able to hear bits and pieces. I do want to



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2       start first by thanking you personally for

3       directly reaching out to me. I know you reached

4       out to colleagues throughout this pandemic. We

5       had hundreds of constituents in my district going

6       through this very, very painful process, having

7       been forced to go on unemployment, waiting for,

8       quite frankly, months to not just get checks but

9       in some cases just to get some answers. And in

10      many ways I think you would accept that members

11      of the legislature, our offices in some ways

12      became an extension the Department of Labor just

13      by the very nature of the constituent services we

14      were providing.

15                 So I did want to at least thank you.

16      It's pretty clear to me, and this is not a

17      criticism of you or the department necessarily,

18      but that we were unprepared because this was such

19      an unprecedented virus. And I don't think any

20      state was fully prepared for this. But now that

21      we're, you know, we've flattened the curve, that

22      the infection rate is lower, that we're preparing

23      for the potential second wave, and I understand

24      that there's going to be the financial component



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2       to this from the state and the federal government

3       that we're always going to be looking for. Are we

4       prepared, is the state Department of Labor

5       prepared with its website, with its phone

6       systems? I know you increased capacity with other

7       I think outside, I'm not sure if telemarketer is

8       the right word but people answering the phones.

9       It's not the right word. Call centers, right,

10      there it is, call centers.

11                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Yes.

12                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER BYRNE:                   Fair enough.

13      Okay. Do we have that built in? Are you ready? Is

14      the Department of Labor ready, so folks who are

15      forced potentially to go back on unemployment and

16      I really hope that does not happen, for many

17      reasons -- are we ready to make sure that they

18      don't have to wait months and months and go

19      through every state legislator, every senator,

20      congressperson? I'm happy to provide constituent

21      services, a great part of our job, but I would

22      rather they just get something that's owed to

23      them up front.

24                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   I'm with you. So,



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2       yes, we have done a tremendous amount of work to

3       update, modernize, digitize our system. We have a

4       chatbot on our website now that can answer all

5       kind of questions for people. It won't answer

6       about your individual claim yet but it can answer

7       how do I file? This has happened, what do I do?

8       It's a really useful tool. We also have greatly

9       expanded the number of people working in the

10      telephone claims center. We have almost all of

11      the staff of the DOL now has at least some

12      training on how to work on UI. Our inspectors in

13      worker protection know how to do it. Our career

14      center workers know how to do it. Our executives

15      know how to do it. I've worked on the phone. Many

16      of us have. So we are ready.

17                 And we know that should the second wave

18      come, we know where the pain points are, we know

19      where to focus our efforts. One of the things

20      that we did that was really critical that we

21      didn't realize until this pandemic hit, we live

22      if an on-demand society now and people expect

23      answers immediately, so we have now set up a

24      robust communication tool that sends out texts



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2       and e-mails. You're at this stage of your

3       process. Congratulations, your claim is being

4       processed. Don't forget to certify every week.

5       Here's your DocuSign for your back

6       certifications. We send out, last weekend we sent

7       out a mass e-mail about the President's

8       memorandum because we knew people were puzzled.

9       Does this mean I'm getting more money or not? So

10      we sent out a quick message by e-mail and text to

11      over three million people in the system saying

12      this is what the memorandum does. Nothing is

13      coming now. We will alert you when you need to do

14      anything. Please don't call the TCC because we

15      have to help other claimants. It worked

16      beautifully.

17                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER BYRNE:                   Thank you,

18      commissioner. I know I'm out of time. I'll just

19      say I still have some constituents with

20      outstanding claims that will reach out directly

21      to your office, and thank you for sticking it out

22      and answering all of our questions.

23                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Thank you.

24      They're not telemarketers.



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2                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER BYRNE:                   Yes. Call

3       center, right.

4                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Yes.

5                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you.

6                  SENATOR RAMOS:              All right. James

7       Skoufis, round two.

8                  SENATOR SKOUFIS:               Okay. Thanks very

9       much. And I just have a couple of additional

10      questions, if I may, and thank you for spending

11      now the entire morning with us. First, very

12      specifically, if you have a construction site,

13      out-of-state workers who have driven to this New

14      York construction site, the contractor has not

15      employed local labor. Do the quarantine rules, if

16      those out-of-state workers come from a state on

17      the governor's list, apply to those workers? Do

18      the fines apply to the workers and/or the

19      employers, the contractors, et cetera?

20                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So this is a

21      question that has come up. We can look into

22      individual cases. I mean, by and large, essential

23      workers are essential workers and so they don't,

24      you know -- if I'm an essential worker and I have



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2       to go out of state to a state that's on the list

3       and I come back, I'm not required to quarantine

4       if I'm well. So that's --

5                   SENATOR SKOUFIS:               So these are not New

6       York, so these are people who live in these other

7       states who have been brought here to work for a

8       period of time.

9                   COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Yeah. It's a

10      complicated question, and let's talk offline

11      about it. We've had a lot of conversations with

12      various construction unions about it and various

13      communities, so I'd love to have that answer but

14      I need to know a little bit more about each

15      thing. The question about the fines, fines for

16      what?

17                  SENATOR SKOUFIS:               So I know there are

18      $2,000 fines for individuals who don't follow

19      this directive and self-quarantine after coming

20      in through an airport or driving to New York, et

21      cetera. So I'm asking if the fines apply in these

22      cases, but it sounds like, as you said, this is

23      complicated and it's --

24                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   It's actually the



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2       Department of Health that oversees all of that.

3       It's not the Department of Labor. So they would

4       be able to answer that question better than I

5       could.

6                    SENATOR SKOUFIS:               Okay. Got it. When

7       filing complaints, I know this has come up from a

8       couple of other colleagues, but one of the issues

9       that I have heard from a number of people about,

10      is the inability to file COVID-related workplace

11      complaints anonymously. And despite your

12      assurances, and I understand what you're saying

13      completely, where you're not giving up the

14      employee's name to the employer, I get that. But

15      nevertheless, two things, one, if it's a very

16      small business, there might only be one or two or

17      three employees.

18                   COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Yeah, and you're

19      in trouble.

20                   SENATOR SKOUFIS:               And they may know

21      where the complaint is coming from, even if you

22      don't give up his or her name. And the other is

23      despite any assurance like that, people just

24      naturally are not going to feel comfortable one



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2       way or the other giving their name on this form.

3       And so what can be done in those kind of

4       situations where you do have problems in a

5       workplace and people either, they're just not

6       comfortable or they're not in a position to file

7       a complaint with their name attached.

8                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So we're a

9       complaint-driven agency. That's the way it works

10      for us. If a person, and, you know, as an actor,

11      when as I often was the only actor on a gig, so

12      if I had a complaint they'd know who it was, so I

13      understand that scenario very well. If a worker

14      feels very uncomfortable, they should by all

15      means call our worker protection people and talk

16      to one of them and explain the situation and see

17      how they can work it out. Because more than

18      anything, we want to make sure that the worker is

19      protected and that they are treated according to

20      the law. So they should pick up the phone and

21      call the DLO number. It's much easier to get

22      through to worker protection than it is to UI,

23      and talk to somebody and we will make every

24      effort to protect them.



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2                  SENATOR SKOUFIS:               Okay. Great --

3                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Because that's

4       what --

5                  SENATOR SKOUFIS:               No, I appreciate that.

6       That's helpful information. And just lastly a

7       comment, I know you had mentioned availing your

8       representatives to come to our districts or

9       virtually or in person, come to our districts for

10      events. I just wanted to bring to your attention

11      we actually were planning an event that my office

12      was hosting. We tried actually three times to get

13      someone from your department to join us. We were

14      met with unresponsiveness. And so I just want to

15      let you know to flag that. You've offered it to

16      all my colleagues here, and to just bring to your

17      attention that there just needs to be a bit more

18      responsiveness.

19                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Yeah, just let me

20      know because that should not happen.

21                 SENATOR SKOUFIS:               Thank you.

22                 SENATOR RAMOS:              All right, we have one

23      last round of second questioning, Senator

24      Jackson.



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2                  SENATOR JACKSON:               Sure, hi commissioner.

3                  SENATOR RAMOS:              And then we're moving on

4       to the second panel.

5                  SENATOR JACKSON:               Yeah, hi. Hi,

6       commissioner.

7                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Hi.

8                  SENATOR JACKSON:               Just glad you're still

9       hanging in there, and you have answered most of

10      the questions. I just have a question about DOCCS

11      summer teachers. As you know, they were not

12      getting unemployment because of COVID, but my

13      understanding was that gig workers like Lyft and

14      Uber got. Will they be treated the same, meaning

15      that they should be entitled to unemployment

16      insurance during the summer?

17                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   So we're looking

18      at all of this. I mean, part of the issue for

19      teachers is that they typically work a 12-month

20      contract, and, you know, so those are the rules

21      that apply to them. We are looking at individual

22      cases. I know it's different now. The pandemic

23      has changed everything for everybody. So we are

24      definitely taking it under advisement. But as you



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2       know, a lot of teachers actually have a 12-month

3       contract and that's the problem.

4                    SENATOR JACKSON:               Okay. All right. I

5       would just ask to raise this as an issue, that

6       not only downstate but it's all of the correction

7       facilities in the state of New York.

8                    COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Yes.

9                    SENATOR JACKSON:               Thank you. Thank you,

10      Madame Chair.

11                   SENATOR RAMOS:              Amazing. Assemblyman

12      McDonald, would you look to introduce the second

13      panel?

14                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     I will. I

15      think co-chair Tom Abinanti just wants to say

16      goodbye so if we can unmute him for a second, he

17      wants to say goodbye to the commissioner, like we

18      all do.

19                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER ABINANTI:                     Yes,

20      commissioner, I just want to thank you for being

21      with us this morning, and I look forward to

22      taking you up on your offer to have a

23      conversation about where we go from here. I do

24      think we're going to need some state legislation.



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2       I think we're going to need some cooperation

3       between the executive branch and the legislative

4       branch and I look forward to working with you

5       very soon --

6                  COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   Thank you.

7                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER ABINANTI:                     -- because we

8       really need to address some of the things that

9       you highlighted as to where we go from here, so

10      thank you very much.

11                 COMMISSIONER REARDON:                   My pleasure.

12      Thank you.

13                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     And, thank

14      you, commissioner. We are now moving on to panel

15      number two. So if we could allow Karen to join

16      us, there she is, she's on the screen. Do we have

17      her video? There she is.

18                 MS. KAREN CACACE, LABOR BUREAU CHIEF,

19      NEW YORK STATE OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL:

20      Hi, good morning.

21                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     So, from the

22      New York State Attorney General's office, and

23      Karen, I apologize, I'm a pharmacist, I'm not a

24      linguistics expert but it's Karen?



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2                  MS. CACACE:           It's Cacace.

3                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Cacace, very

4       good. You have five minutes for your testimony,

5       thank you.

6                  MS. CACACE:           Thank you. Good morning,

7       committee chairs and members. My name is Karen

8       Cacace and the I'm the bureau chief for the New

9       York State Attorney General's Labor Bureau. I

10      want to you thank you for convening this

11      important hearing at such a vital time for

12      workers of all levels and in all industries

13      throughout New York and for giving our office an

14      opportunity to share our recent experiences,

15      feedback and insight.

16                 Today's hearing offers many of us

17      working on labor issues in New York State the

18      chance to report back on how the state system and

19      laws have fared under extreme stress from the

20      coronavirus and resulting economic toll and to

21      discuss possible legislative and policy changes

22      to address any such issues.

23                 At the outset, I want to note that

24      Attorney General Letitia James and the rest of



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2       our office continue to appreciate the strong and

3       constructive relationship between our office and

4       the legislature and with other issues we've

5       worked on together. We offer our time and any

6       relevant expertise we may have to assist with

7       legislative objectives of these committees or

8       legislative leadership or other individual

9       legislators.

10                 Following the governor's executive order

11      202.8 that required businesses deemed

12      nonessential to reduce by 100 percent their in-

13      person workforces, our office began responding to

14      workers throughout the state to who were unsure

15      if their employer could legally require them to

16      report to work on Monday, March 23rd. Over the

17      past nearly five months, our office has received

18      over 12,000 inquiries from workers regarding

19      whether they should be allowed to telecommute,

20      health and safety requirements for workplaces

21      that remained open, employer obligations under

22      the new state and federal paid sick leave laws,

23      and most concerning to our office, allegations of

24      retaliation against workers who complain about



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2       unsafe working conditions in work places that

3       remained open.

4                  We created a comprehensive know your

5       rights brochure, which we published on our

6       website, and sent to all workers who contacted us

7       by e-mail. The brochure will be attached to our

8       written testimony. In collaboration with the

9       state Department of Labor, we have responded to

10      these workers' inquiries and concerns, provided

11      information about the constantly changing

12      workplace health and safety requirements, and

13      contacted employers to discuss discussion a

14      resolution of the employees' concerns.

15                 Our office has directly contacted over

16      850 employers and in more cases these

17      conversations, resulted in employers voluntarily

18      agreeing to comply with the applicable laws

19      without need for further action by this office.

20      The employers allowed employees to telecommute,

21      improve safety standards, agreed to compensate

22      employees for sick leave, and reinstate workers

23      who had been fired in retaliation for complaining

24      about health and safety conditions.



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2                  In some cases, however, employers did

3       not initially agree to comply with the executive

4       orders of the health and safety requirements, the

5       entire [unintelligible] [02:08:06] laws and the

6       new sick leave and emergency quarantine laws. In

7       those cases we sent formal demand letters. To

8       date, we have sent 80 of those, which resulted in

9       those employers complying.

10                 For those employers who appear to have

11      failed to remedy or correct their unlawful

12      practices, we have opened formal investigations

13      including one into the practices at Amazon's

14      fulfillment center on Staten Island.

15                 This crisis has demonstrated that many

16      employees in low wage jobs are absolutely

17      essentially to the functioning of our economy and

18      society, even in a pandemic. But unfortunately,

19      are not adequately protected by existing laws.

20      Protecting these workers requires, among others

21      things, stronger safety standards, increased

22      protection from retaliation, elimination of non-

23      compete requirements, and updates to the

24      unemployment insurance laws.



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2                  Our office also welcomes the opportunity

3       to share our input on any ideas that the

4       legislature is [unintelligible] [02:08:57] to

5       strengthen worker protections.

6                  Regarding safety standards, because OSHA

7       has failed to create standards to protect workers

8       from COVID-19 specifically and airborne illnesses

9       generally, the state can and should create

10      specific enforceable standards for all

11      industries. These standards should also cover

12      employer provided housing. It is imperative that

13      employers be required to provide safe working

14      conditions for their employees. This is true in

15      any time, particularly during this pandemic. The

16      legislature can mandate that the Department of

17      Labor and Department of Health create these

18      standards and empower our office to enforce them.

19                 As I mentioned, employer retaliation

20      against employees who speak up about health and

21      safety concerns is one of the chief concerns in

22      this office in recent months. We have seen

23      several situations where employees raised

24      concerns about safety issues at their workplace



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2       and were fired soon after raising those concerns.

3       This has a chilling effect on other workers.

4       Workers should not have to choose between keeping

5       their jobs and advocating for safe working

6       conditions. New York's current whistle blower

7       law, New York labor law 740, is limited to both

8       the type of activity it protects and the remedies

9       it provides. In order for worker conduct to be

10      protected, the worker must oppose action by the

11      employer that violates a law, rule or regulation

12      and the action must create a substantial and

13      specific danger to public health and safety. This

14      restricted definition should be broadened.

15                 In addition, currently employees may

16      only get obtain back pay reinstatement and

17      attorneys fees as a remedy. For employers of low

18      wage workers, the financial risk of retaliation

19      is much too low to deter them from taking action

20      against employees who complain. In order to

21      sufficiently deter employees and to adequately

22      compensate whistleblowers who risk their jobs,

23      employers should also be liable for additional

24      damages.



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2                   Another area that I would like to

3       highlight is non-compete clauses and labor

4       contracts. Non-competes signed by employees and

5       usually required to start or continue a job

6       prevent employees from working for that

7       employer's competitors or starting a competing

8       business after they leave that job for a certain

9       amount of time in a certain geographic area.

10                  Historically, non-competes were used

11      sparingly for executives with trade secrets or

12      confidential business information and these

13      executives were typically represented by lawyers

14      who negotiated the terms of the agreement with

15      the employer. In recent years --

16                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Karen?

17                  MS. CACACE:           Yes, oh, sorry.

18                  SENATOR RAMOS:              You're actually out of

19      time.

20                  MS. CACACE:           Okay.

21                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you so much for

22      your testimony. I'm sure hopefully the rest of

23      your testimony will correspond with the upcoming

24      questions. And first up is actually the Assembly



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2       on this one.

3                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Very good.

4       And Karen, thank you for your testimony. There

5       was a little bit of feedback so I may have missed

6       parts of it, so this if this question is

7       repetitive I apologize. But have we seen a

8       significant increase in violations in employees'

9       rights and protections during this time, these

10      last three or four months? And really what should

11      we be advising our constituents, the employees,

12      to be on the lookout for?

13                 MS. CACACE:           Well, what we have seen the

14      increase in is concern about whether they have to

15      go to work, what the safety conditions are when

16      they are there, retaliation if they're

17      complaining about safety conditions. That is all

18      new related to the pandemic. There are continuing

19      ongoing issues of minimum wage and overtime but

20      the complaints coming in to us have been COVID-

21      related, the vast majority.

22                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     And when you

23      do these investigations, is it mostly interaction

24      just with the complainant? There must be



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2       interaction with the employer group as well,

3       correct?

4                  MS. CACACE:           Yes, right. So that's what

5       I'm saying, that there were 12,000 inquiries came

6       in. Out of those cases, we felt it was necessary

7       to speak with 850 employers, so and those 850

8       cases, we have contacted the employer and have

9       tried to explain to them what their obligations,

10      and in most of the cases they were able, they

11      were agreeable and remedied the situation.

12                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     That's

13      encouraging to hear. I can tell you as an

14      employer myself, it's been challenging to follow

15      the shifting sands of what we're supposed to do

16      if you're well-intentioned. And we also know that

17      there are some employers that are not well-

18      intentioned and those are the ones I would hazard

19      a guess probably weren't as cooperative with you,

20      but thank you. Senator, back to you.

21                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you, John. And

22      thank you, Karen, for testifying with us today.

23      I'm a little -- I want for you to elaborate a

24      little bit on what you said in terms of the



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2       restrictive definition when it comes to I guess

3       whistleblowers, and you mentioned another issue

4       that keeps being brought up. It has to do with

5       minimum wage and overtime and overall compliance

6       with wage laws. Can you tell me how rampant these

7       concerns are and what can be done through your

8       office or beyond to address that?

9                  MS. CACACE:           Right, so for the

10      whistleblower laws, it's New York labor law

11      section 740 and it requires that if a worker is

12      concerned about the safety condition at work and

13      they oppose it, their activity is only protected

14      if what their employer was doing violated a law,

15      rule or regulation, so it has to be specific,

16      that there's a specific law, rule or regulation

17      that was at issue, and that it is a substantial

18      threat to public safety.

19                 So the pandemic actually is one of the

20      rare circumstances that I think leads to claims

21      that arise under this law, that the activity is

22      covered because workers are saying it's not safe

23      for me to go to work, and if we do have an

24      executive order, particularly focused on safety



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2       conditions, we can say that's the law, rule or

3       regulation and it is a threat to public safety.

4       But if, and I'm sorry. One of the lines, I didn't

5       catch that in my testimony was the need for more

6       clear safety regulations and laws, because there

7       are many industries it's not clear exactly what

8       the employers need to do, and so that's something

9       I would encourage the legislature to take a look

10      at to see if there is room to regulate because

11      then it would be we would be able to enforce

12      that, and everyone would be able to enforce that.

13                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you so much. And

14      how do you feel about expanding partial UI?

15                 MS. CACACE:           Yeah, I was going to get to

16      that. That was later on --

17                 SENATOR RAMOS:              I figured.

18                 MS. CACACE:           -- in the testimony. And so

19      absolutely. So, the way partial unemployment

20      works, that was very confusing for workers. I

21      think it is difficult for the Department of Labor

22      administer. If you work even one hour one day

23      you're disqualified for that entire day and that

24      could be even if you're doing work that you're



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2       not actually getting paid for, your own business

3       type of thing. There's a much simpler way, is

4       just to actually subtract the amount of wages

5       that you earn. If you work part-time, you earn a

6       certain amount, and that's what the Department of

7       Labor could look at, and many other states do it

8       that way. So I would certainly encourage Albany

9       to look at an amendment, and I think that you've

10      already been doing that, to focus on amending the

11      UI law in that way.

12                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you. So before I

13      yield over to the Assembly, are there any other

14      mechanisms that would be helpful to you and your

15      office in order to address health and safety

16      concerns? Whether they be legislative or

17      otherwise.

18                 MS. CACACE:           I think legislation really

19      would be important to address the pandemic going

20      forward. As we all know, as people are going to

21      be back to work, there are more and more concerns

22      about what does the workplace -- what is a safe

23      workplace, and I think there is room for the

24      state legislature to fill the void that the



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2       federal government has left and to create those

3       safety standards so that we will be able to

4       enforce them.

5                  SENATOR RAMOS:              All right. Thank you.

6                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you, to

7       the Assembly Member Harry Bronson.

8                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRONSON:                     Thank you.

9       Thank you, chairs. You brought up some statistics

10      regarding the number of complaints, I think it

11      was 12,000 inquiries. Do you have the breakdown

12      of the numbers by industry?

13                 MS. CACACE:           I don't have it with me,

14      but we could find that and provide that to you.

15                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRONSON:                     All right.

16      That would be helpful for us so that as we

17      develop future policies, we can determine whether

18      it's an industry-specific problem or if it's all

19      industries or something of that nature. How about

20      demographics of the workers? By race, by gender,

21      et cetera.

22                 MS. CACACE:           That we do not, I don't

23      think we collected that information. I don't know

24      if we'll be able to tell.



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2                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRONSON:                     Okay. And do

3       you have information of those inquiries or

4       complaints broken down by the wage level of the

5       workers who came to you?

6                  MS. CACACE:           I think for most, we

7       probably could provide that.

8                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRONSON:                     Again, that

9       would be helpful. As we know, many wage theft

10      violations occur for low-wage earners.

11                 MS. CACACE:           Yes.

12                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRONSON:                     Not others.

13      And then lastly, you started to talk a little bit

14      about the non-compete clauses, what your office

15      did. I'd be interested in having you complete

16      your thoughts about what it is about the non-

17      compete clauses in connection with COVID.

18                 MS. CACCE:           Thank you. Particularly, I

19      was going to mention the low-wage workers and

20      healthcare workers, and so in these industries

21      where there really is not about a reason to have

22      a non-compete clause, it is -- these jobs still

23      exists and for a lot of low-wage workers they are

24      essential workers, and to not allow them to get a



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2       different job that might be safer working

3       conditions, let's say for healthcare workers, I

4       just think it's really wrong. And so I think that

5       the legislature can take action to address the

6       validity of the non-compete clauses, so we really

7       encourage you to take a look at that.

8                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRONSON:                    Okay. And you

9       may or may not be aware, a number of years ago

10      about a decade ago, there was a law passed that

11      prevented non-compete clauses in connection with

12      small media markets and with reporters shifting

13      jobs. So I would be interested in working with

14      your office to see if we can really narrow the

15      parameters of non-compete so it really addresses

16      the issue. And that is, you know, professional

17      managerial folks who might to go a competitor and

18      have trade secrets. I mean that's really the

19      purpose there. The downside of non-competes is

20      that it prevents people from being gainfully

21      employed after they leave an employer.

22                  MS. CACACE:          Yeah, we'd be happy to work

23      with you.

24                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRONSON:                    I look forward



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2       to having those conversations with you.

3                   MS. CACACE:           Thank you.

4                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Senator, back

5       to you.

6                   SENATOR RAMOS:              And I'll throw the ball

7       to --

8                   SENATOR SKOUFIS:               You cut out there.

9                   SENATOR RAMOS:              Sorry. I was introducing

10      you. I was introducing you, Senator Skoufis. I'm

11      so sorry. It's your turn.

12                  SENATOR SKOUFIS:               I just wanted to be

13      sure. Thank you. And thank you for your

14      testimony, as well as the Attorney General's and

15      your whole team's leadership over these past five

16      months making sure that our workers are

17      protected. So I just am looking for some clarity

18      myself, and I suspect that if I don't have

19      clarity, there are many thousands of my

20      constituents that don't have this clarity.

21                  Can you speak to I guess the distinction

22      between violations that are handled by the

23      Attorney General's office versus violations that

24      are handled by the Department of Labor. Are there



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2       areas of jurisdiction? Is there a complete

3       overlap? Who handles what kind of violations?

4       Where do people go, if you can speak to that.

5                  MS. CACACE:           It's an excellent question,

6       and it evolved during the last five months

7       because our office just did not have enough staff

8       to answer 12,000 inquiries. So we collaborated

9       with the Department of Labor and through that

10      partnership, we were able to respond to all of

11      these workers who were calling. And so

12      Commissioner Reardon described some of have some

13      of the investigators at the Department of Labor

14      were doing the initial contact with the workers

15      and potentially with the employers.

16                 If they were -- if the Department of

17      Labor was not able to resolve it, they were and

18      are continuing to refer cases to us for

19      enforcement. So, we are continuing to ask people

20      to file the complaint on the Department of

21      Labor's website if it's a COVID related issue and

22      they will then take the first, you know, sort of

23      the first crack at trying to resolve it and then

24      referring it to us.



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2                  SENATOR SKOUFIS:               Got it. That makes

3       perfect sense. I thank you.

4                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Assembly, it

5       would be Jo Anne Simon. We hear her. Here she is.

6                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER SIMON:                   Okay. It's time

7       for them to send you the signal that allows you

8       to support video.

9                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     We should

10      have lead-in music or something like that.

11                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER SIMON:                   Yeah, exactly.

12      Anyway, thank you very much, Ms. Cacace for your

13      testimony. I have a couple of questions for you

14      and I think that like a number of people I

15      probably didn't hear everything you said terribly

16      clearly. There is something of an echo, at least

17      as I'm hearing it.

18                 But the issue about 740 and the need to

19      change the definition of what would constitute

20      the basis for a retaliatory claim is a question

21      I've been trying to get some movement on this in

22      the legislature. We have two bills, for example,

23      and this may be an injudicious question, but

24      there are two bills out there that would address



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2       some of the issues you've raised with regard to

3       740. I'm curious whether your office is familiar

4       with those bills and/or has an opinion about

5       which way they would need to go. There are some

6       differences, availability of damages, not

7       availability of damages, those types of things,

8       but they address that issue about 740. And I'm

9       curious about that.

10                 And then the other thing is the safety

11      standards you talked about. Do you believe those

12      should be legislatively established? That's my

13      other question.

14                 MS. CACACE:           Yes, I apologize for the

15      audio. Is it better with the headset?

16                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER SIMON:                   Much better.

17                 MS. CACACE:           So sorry. So, yes, on 740,

18      we are aware that there are different bills

19      pending. Our hope really is just that it is

20      expanded. And both bills expand coverage of

21      what's protected, and I believe expand damages

22      that are allowed. So it's just really important

23      to us that some expansion happens, and so I hope

24      that can happen quickly because, as I said, it's



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2       -- we are seeing -- people are calling us. And a

3       lot of people asked questions about this during

4       the first panel.

5                   What about workers who are afraid to

6       report safety standards, safety violations? It is

7       an enormous problem for workers. It puts their

8       job at jeopardy. And so the more protection, the

9       better, and it is really desperately needed. So I

10      would just really encourage you all to expand it

11      in whatever way you can agree on.

12                  And then your second question -- I'm

13      sorry, could you remind me?

14                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER SIMON:                   You talked about

15      the need for --

16                  MS. CACACE:           Safety standards.

17                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER SIMON:                   -- safety

18      standards as they return to work.

19                  MS. CACACE:           Right.

20                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER SIMON:                   And housing as

21      well.

22                  MS. CACACE:           Yes, right. Because right,

23      there's a lot of farm workers where there's

24      employer-provide housing and in some other



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2       industries as well. And there is, you know, the

3       executive orders provide some specifics but not

4       enough, I think, to cover all of the safety

5       concerns that workers have and are going to have

6       going forward. And so I think that there could be

7       legislation that will require either the

8       Department of Labor or the Department of Health

9       to go industry by industry and mandate what those

10      safety standards are.

11                  And so some of this has been done in the

12      forward documents that have been put out by the

13      state but I think it certainly could be

14      strengthened through legislation.

15                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER SIMON:                   Thank you very

16      much.

17                  MS. CACACE:           You're welcome.

18                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you. Senator James

19      Sanders, you have five minutes.

20                  SENATOR SANDERS:               I have to get up to

21      unmute. I'm here. Thank you. I have to jump up to

22      exercise, exercise. Thank you, Madame Chair.

23      Thank you, Mr. Chair. Let's see. Thank you very

24      much for coming to testify to us. Can you tell me



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2       -- I want to go back, I just have one question

3       and I'll be finished in one minute. Let's go to

4       the issue of the undocumented workers. Is there

5       any way that we can sue to see if we can't get

6       their needs met? They're by and large not being

7       met in this economy, and that is so dangerous. Is

8       there anything that the AG's office can do here?

9                  MS. CACACE:           So all of the labor laws

10      with the exception of unemployment insurance

11      cover undocumented workers. So, if an

12      undocumented worker is not paid the minimum wage

13      or overtime, we absolutely can and have sued on

14      their behalf and recovered them wages. If they

15      are a whistleblower and they fall within the

16      whistleblower law we can sue on their behalf.

17      They are not however, if don't have work

18      authorization, eligible for unemployment

19      insurance, so that's an enormous gap.

20                 SENATOR SANDERS:               Okay. Can I encourage

21      guys to continue bouncing this around to come up

22      with some -- you're office has been very

23      creative. We really need to bounce this around to

24      see how we can protect these workers.



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2                   MS. CACACE:           It's an absolute priority

3       for us.

4                   SENATOR SANDERS:               Okay. Thank you. Thank

5       you, Madam Chair.

6                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you,

7       and back to the Assembly and Marianne

8       Buttenschon. Come on down. Or come on in. How's

9       that?

10                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER BUTTENSCHON:                           Thank you

11      very much. And thank you to the Attorney

12      General's office as well as my colleagues. I just

13      have one question in regards to you talked about

14      the 12,000 cases that you're working on, and I

15      appreciate those efforts. Are you hearing in

16      regard to -- we have been receiving comments that

17      an outside entity is identifying themselves as a

18      Department of Labor and asking personal

19      information from individuals that have not

20      applied. And I just wondered if it's outside of

21      the state or is it an in-state issue and what's

22      the status that the office has been able to work

23      with those.

24                  MS. CACACE:           Yeah. So we have certainly



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2       gotten complaints of identity theft or identity

3       fraud related to filings of unemployment

4       insurance claims. So we have in our know your

5       rights brochure information about where to report

6       those, and we have coordinated with DOL and

7       referred any complaints that we have gotten to

8       DOL on those.

9                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER BUTTENSCHON:                           So is it a

10      work in progress that's progressing? I guess

11      that's the question more.

12                 MS. CACACE:           Well, I mean it's on an

13      individual basis, you know, for each person, and

14      I'm looking in our know your rights brochure, so

15      I can tell you exactly where to, uh, to report

16      it.

17                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER BUTTENSCHON:                           Okay. I

18      will reach out to your office later.

19                 MS. CACACE:           Yeah, and it'll be in our

20      testimony. We're attaching all the know your

21      rights information, which goes on for like 15

22      pages, so it's very detailed.

23                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER BUTTENSCHON:                           Thank you.

24                 MS. CACACE:           You're welcome.



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2                  SENATOR RAMOS:              All right. Up next is

3       Senator George Borello. You have three minutes.

4       Senator Borello? Senator Borello going once.

5       Senator Borello going twice. All right. I suppose

6       we yield to the assembly for this turn.

7                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     And back to

8       you. We're going to give you a former assembly

9       member in return, Shelley Mayer. Don't forget

10      where you came from, Shelly.

11                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Don't forget where you

12      are.

13                 SENATOR MAYER:              Thank you. Thank you

14      both. Thank you and thank you, Karen, pleasure to

15      see you.

16                 MS. CACACE:           You too.

17                 SEANTOR MAYER:              Let me start my video.

18      One, as you know, I want to thank the Attorney

19      General's office for their willingness to jump in

20      on the WARN Act action in my district involving

21      the layoff of over 200 people on Christmas Eve

22      with no notice, and were it not for your

23      persistence and willingness to enter into this

24      case, I'm not sure we would ever have had a path



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2       to recover for these individuals. But it brings

3       up the issue of what we're going to do about the

4       WARN Act. On the Department of Labor's website

5       today, there's probably 20 major institutions

6       that have filed WARN Act notices as they are

7       beginning to close or lay off large numbers of

8       people including the Metropolitan Opera, Neiman

9       Marcus, Restaurant Associates.

10                 What is the Attorney General planning to

11      do to ensure that every one of these employees in

12      these mass layoffs gets both the money they are

13      entitled to and every other protection they are

14      entitled to, given our very poor experience with

15      the employer at the Double Tree Hotel.

16                 MS. CACACE:           So thank you for bringing

17      Doral to our attention and thank you for bringing

18      this up now. I think that you are right, that

19      employees may not know about their rights under

20      WARN Act, and if employers are not advising them

21      of that, it is incumbent on us to reach out to

22      them to make sure that they do know. So it's

23      something that we can -- that we should and we

24      can do some outreach on.



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2                  SENATOR MAYER:              Well, to that point, I

3       mean, I think we need to clarify that the

4       Department of Labor can intervene as a party in

5       these lawsuits, otherwise, there really is no

6       advocate, and I hope you will support me in a

7       bill to both expand the liability for large

8       employers and to ensure that the Department of

9       Labor has standing to intervene.

10                 MS. CACACE:           Yes.

11                 SENATOR MAYER:              Secondly, during the

12      period of the pandemic, do you know how many

13      enforcement actions the Department of Labor has

14      commenced as a result of violations of provisions

15      of law related to employees during this time?

16                 MS. CACACE:           I don't have that

17      information, no, but I'm sure we can ask the

18      Department of Labor.

19                 SENATOR MAYER:              No, I meant from you,

20      from the Attorney General's office, affirmative

21      actions that you have commenced during this time.

22                 MS. CACACE:           Oh, we have not actually

23      sued anybody in court yet. So we have, as I said,

24      hundreds of employers that we have reached an



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2       informal resolution with and we have ongoing

3       investigations, but we have not -- we haven't

4       sued anybody yet.

5                  SENATOR MAYER:              And finally, did the

6       Attorney General's office advise the Department

7       of Labor on how to interpret the PUA requirements

8       that you actually apply and be rejected by the

9       Department of Labor? Were you advising them on

10      how to interpret the federal regulations?

11                 MS. CACACE:           No.

12                 SENATOR MAYER:              No? Okay.

13                 MS. CACACE:           I don't think so, no.

14                 SENATOR MAYER:              Thank you. Thank you

15      very much.

16                 MS. CACACE:           Sure.

17                 SENATOR RAMOS:              All right. Thank you. I

18      have actually just one more question for you, if

19      that's okay, based on some comments that you just

20      made about acknowledging issues with wage theft

21      in our state, unfortunately. We recently re-

22      passed the SWEAT bill in both houses of the state

23      legislature, and you know it's largely baited on

24      the mechanics' lien, yet there has been some



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2       conflict around how it is that -- whether there's

3       going to be an ex parte judicial review before a

4       lien is actually placed on the employer's assets,

5       which largely we see as not only a reason to

6       dissuade particularly undocumented workers from

7       seeking relief, but also gives the employer an

8       opportunity to transfer assets. Does your office

9       take a position on the SWEAT bill? And if not, is

10      there another mechanism that you guys are

11      advocating for in order to solve this $1 billion

12      problem?

13                   MS. CACACE:           It is a bill that our

14      office has been in support of. And the issue that

15      you identified is a significant issue, and so we

16      would very much like to see it come into law as

17      it is.

18                   SENATOR RAMOS:              All right. Well, thank

19      you very much. And I guess that concludes our

20      questions for you.

21                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Senator, I'm

22      sorry. I'm sorry. We have a late bloomer,

23      Chairman Tom Abinanti. Are you in or out, Tom?

24                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER ABINANTI:                     I'm in. I'm



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2       in. Thanks.

3                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     All right,

4       then that'll be it. Thank you.

5                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER ABINANTI:                     Thank you for

6       joining us. I am actually the chair of the

7       banking committee, so I want to ask you -- you

8       may not be the person in our your office to

9       respond to this, but the federal government used

10      the banks as the way to funnel money into the

11      states in an attempt to get the employers to keep

12      people on their payrolls or put them back on, the

13      PPP program.

14                 Has your office had any involvement with

15      that? Have you had any complaints about banks not

16      doing what they were supposed to do or employers

17      taking the money and then not funneling it back

18      to the employees like they were supposed to? I'm

19      just wondering if there's been anything involved

20      in this. And who is doing the enforcement? Is

21      this purely federal enforcement or do you have

22      some role in enforcing this?

23                 MS. CACACE:           So those complaints have

24      not come to the labor bureau and I can find for



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2       you if they have come to another bureau within

3       the AG's office and let you know.

4                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER ABINANTI:                     Yeah, I would

5       appreciate that because I think we, in the

6       banking committee, would like to hear a little

7       bit about how that program is working its way

8       through. We've already held a hearing on how

9       effective it was about getting money out. Now

10      we're to the next stage, okay, the money is

11      getting out, is it actually getting to the

12      employees.

13                 MS. CACACE:           Okay. We'll follow up.

14                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER ABINANTI:                     Thank you.

15                 SENATOR RAMOS:              We have another late

16      bloomer. I understand state Senator George

17      Borello is back. Is this true? Are you there?

18                 SENATOR BORELLO:               Yes, thank you. I was

19      here the whole time, but I got kicked out.

20                 SENATOR RAMOS:              That's okay. You have

21      three minutes.

22                 SENATOR BORELLO:               Thank you very much.

23      First of all, thanks for your testimony. I

24      appreciate it. I certainly appreciate all that



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2       you're doing on of behalf workers and those folks

3       that may potentially be taken advantage of, but

4       also businesses, many businesses I spoke with

5       have had reports of fraudulent paperwork or

6       claims being filed by employees that either quit

7       or never actually worked at the company. And I

8       didn't hear you speak about any actions being

9       taken to protect not only those businesses,

10      because we talked about experience claims and the

11      cost, the tremendous cost from an increased

12      experience claim that were unjustified, but also

13      bilking the taxpayers by having to might

14      potentially millions if not more in unnecessary

15      claims. So I'm curious what the AG's office is

16      doing to address this fraud.

17                 MS. CACACE:           Those complaints have not

18      come to the labor bureau. I would imagine that

19      they're ever they're going to the Department of

20      Labor, but I can follow up with the Department of

21      Labor to find out if they are enforcing -- you

22      know, if they've gotten those complaints and are

23      taking enforcement actions. I know that in

24      general on UI fraud, and I think Commissioner



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2       Reardon testified about that, they are actively

3       investigating an enormous amount of,

4       unfortunately, UI fraud. But I can follow up on

5       that.

6                   SENATOR BORELLO:               Yeah, because you had

7       mentioned before that you were working closely

8       with them because of the inordinate amount that

9       they've had to really take on, the Department of

10      Labor, and we all know this has been a tremendous

11      strain on that, so I'd certainly like to ensure

12      that we're also protecting those businesses that

13      work so hard to provide employment to people.

14      It's kind of a two-way street, I would say. We

15      want to protect the businesses as well as the

16      employees. So we'd love to see you get involved

17      in that very actively. Thank you.

18                  MS. CACACES:            Okay. Thank you.

19                  SENATOR RAMOS:              All right. And, Karen,

20      thank you for taking the time out of your day to

21      testify and answer our questions.

22                  MS. CACACES:            Thank you for having me,

23      and I'm so sorry about the audio earlier.

24                  SENATOR RAMOS:              That's okay. Thank you.



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2                    ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you,

3       Karen.

4                    MS. CACACES:            Bye-bye.

5                    SENATOR RAMOS:              Now for panel three, we

6       have from the AFL-CIO, president Mario Cilento

7       and legislative director Mike Nield. Gentlemen,

8       can you share your testimony?

9                    MR. MIKE NEIDL, LEGISLATIVE DIRECTOR,

10      NEW YORK STATE AFL-CIO:                 Is Mario there? Hello,

11      senator.

12                   SENATOR RAMOS:              Hey, Mike.

13                   MR. NEIDL:           Mario has the -- there he

14      is.

15                   SENATOR RAMOS:              All right.

16                   MR. MARIO CILENTO, PRESIDENT, NEW YORK

17      STATE AFL-CIO:           Can you hear me now?

18                   MR. NEIDL:           There he is.

19                   MR. CILENTO:            Yeah, can hear me?

20                   MR. NEIDL:           All right.

21                   MR. CILENTO:            Thank you, senator, and

22      thank you all for holding this hearing today and

23      for the opportunity to present testimony on

24      behalf of the two-and-a-half million members of



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2       the New York State AFL-CIO. I'll get right to it.

3       We all know that countless workers continue to

4       risk their lives and their physical well-being to

5       serve all of us, and they deal with the mental

6       toll because they're constantly worried about the

7       continued risk of getting sick on the job and

8       they're constantly questioning just the safety

9       plans or the inadequate adherence to those plans.

10                 So what we're saying is fines for

11      inadequate safety plans and adherence to those

12      plans must be steep. We've already passed a bill

13      to establish safety standards in the public

14      sector, and we should built on that by passing

15      the New York HEROES Act to require safety and

16      health plans specific to COVID-19 for private

17      sector employers that also include workers

18      participation and an enforcement mechanism.

19                 We know in addition all workers, I think

20      we all agree on this, I know we all agree on

21      this, should have adequate PPE recognizing the

22      unique nature of certain sectors, such as

23      healthcare in preparation for a second wave, a

24      90-day supply of PPE should in place as well as



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2       adequate staffing plans and backup plans.

3                  For example, we all understand that

4       reopening school building represents a huge

5       challenge. We must have clear protocols for how

6       and when school districts must close their

7       buildings and how health officials will perform

8       contact tracing and initiate quarantines in the

9       event of a positive COVID-19 cases in schools.

10      Most important, no matter what, we must act on

11      the side of caution at all times. In the event

12      that a worker is exposed in the workplace, that

13      worker should receive the best available care at

14      no cost to the worker, as well as wage

15      replacement benefits and survivor benefits

16      should, God forbid, they die. This can be

17      achieved, as we've said, many times over the last

18      few months, by establishing a rebuttable

19      presumption on workplace exposure.

20                 In addition, workers are economically

21      stressed as well. We have to ensure prompt access

22      to unemployment insurance benefits for everyone.

23      We must remove hurdles for workers to access

24      quarantine and isolation paid family leave



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2       benefits. We have to reform the state's partial

3       unemployment insurance standards to remove the

4       penalty for part-time work. And we must remove

5       restrictions on eligibility for unemployment for

6       voluntary separation such as if an employee has a

7       heightened health risk or is aware of unsafe

8       conditions in workplace. And keep in mind because

9       the UI trust fund is now below the threshold

10      levels, there's not going to be an increase in

11      unemployment insurance benefits this upcoming

12      year.

13                  The state also must fully implement the

14      decisions from the Department of Labor, the

15      unemployment insurance appeals board, the court

16      of appeals and now the federal judiciary by

17      processing app based works claims as unemployment

18      claims and by compelling contributions from app

19      companies to the unemployment insurance trust

20      fund.

21                  And speaking of app-based workers, I'm

22      going to say it again, state administrative

23      agencies and the courts have begun to reaffirm

24      what we all know. These workers are employees.



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2       The pandemic has highlighted the disparity

3       between the rights of gig workers and employees.

4       And if there ever was a time for the legislature

5       to pass a comprehensive law to protect these

6       workers, it is now.

7                  Moving forward, we have to create middle

8       class jobs, opportunities include increasing

9       investment in public transportation, roads and

10      bridges, telecommunications infrastructure,

11      offshore wind, other renewable energy projects.

12      Also, adult use marijuana can also bring in a new

13      industry with solid wages for workers that can be

14      invested right back into local economies. And

15      somewhat related to all this is as we hopefully

16      increase the number of New Yorkers getting back

17      to work on a regular basis, funding and

18      programmatic changes to ensure working families

19      have access to childcare is critical. I have

20      three daughters of my own.

21                 Last, this pandemic has hurt workers,

22      it's hurt poor people, it's marginalized

23      communities while having less of an impact on

24      wealthy. And we have heard over and over again



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2       that people must sacrifice, and if that's the

3       case, sacrifices must be made by all. And that's

4       why we must raise revenue at all options, need

5       and should be on the table.

6                  With bold leadership, I think amongst

7       everyone who's here today, we can protect all New

8       Yorkers from the worst of the health and economic

9       effects of the pandemic. And I have to say this

10      is not just labor's hope, but on behalf of two-

11      and-a-half million members and their families,

12      it's our expectation.

13                 So, again, I want to thank you for

14      allowing me to join all of you today. We know

15      that unemployment numbers, it was mentioned

16      before at over 15 percent. It's much more than

17      that, and we're going to have to address all of

18      these situations, create jobs and make sure that

19      everyone who is out of a job is taken care of

20      properly. And I just want to say we look forward

21      on behalf of the two-and-a-half million members

22      of the state AFL-CIO to work with all of you to

23      make sure that New York emerges stronger and

24      healthier and more united as a result of these



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2       joint efforts. So again, I thank you for allowing

3       me time this morning and please all, stay safe.

4                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you,

5       Mario and Mike. It's good to see you as well.

6       Jessica, why don't we start off with the

7       Assembly. I don't know where you went, so I don't

8       see you on my screen.

9                  SENATOR RAMOS:              I'm right here. Sorry. I

10      fell off. I'm sorry. I apologize. Do you want to

11      start with the Assembly again?

12                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Let's start

13      with the Assembly. It's up to you. Well, yeah,

14      we'll start with the Assembly. Mario, it's

15      amazing that you are able to take your multipage

16      report and condense into five minutes. Great job.

17                 MR. CILENTO:            That was not bad, right?

18                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     No, it was

19      pretty darn good and congratulations on your re-

20      election. You know, your report was very

21      thoughtful and very comprehensive. Actually I

22      thought I was reading the state budget for a

23      little bit, because it has a little bit of

24      everything in it. And that being said, you know,



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2       sometimes -- I like to paraphrase Dick Gottfried

3       every once in a while. Plagiarism sometimes can a

4       good thing. Are there things other states are

5       doing? You're obviously the largest group in the

6       state, but you also work across the country. Are

7       there things other states that are doing that we

8       really need to take a hard look at? To protect

9       our employees.

10                 Mr. CILENTO:            That's a great question,

11      John. And I serve on all these different

12      committees with the nation AFL-CIO and we have

13      meetings by region, we have national meetings,

14      and there are some states that are doing some

15      things. Some of them have the rebuttable piece

16      for the workers' comp that the -- for workers'

17      comp for those dealing with COVID. So I think

18      there were 12 or 13 states -- you'd have to

19      correct me on that -- who have already done

20      something to address that. There are some other

21      things here and there, but for the most part I

22      have to say they have looked to us for

23      leadership. We are the largest state labor

24      movement in the country. And I would say the



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2       workers' comp piece is probably the one that

3       other states have taken a lead on.

4                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Okay. How

5       has, for your members, the unemployment process,

6       and of course, it's a very bad situation for all

7       of us to be in, but what has the feedback been

8       from your membership who have been enduring the

9       process?

10                 MR. CILENTO:            Well, look. It's been

11      talked about quite a bit here this morning. I

12      thought the commissioner did a great job. And I

13      do want to say I'm very proud and we all are

14      proud of the labor movement and the job that our

15      brothers and sisters at CSEA and PEF did really

16      throughout the initial period and that they

17      continue to do. I would just say they experienced

18      all of the sort of the hiccups at the beginning

19      that everyone else has gone through, no more, no

20      less than anyone else. And as we go throw it now

21      and it's gone through the last month or two,

22      things have gotten smoother, so they have seen

23      improvements in the system that the commissioner

24      was talking about this morning.



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2                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Great. And I

3       thank you, and I thank you for your comments and

4       response. Senator, over to the Senate.

5                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you, assemblyman.

6       President Cilento, I was hoping you can tell us a

7       little bit more about the Postmates decision and

8       what we think about come of it, what you think

9       the DOL's consideration should be for app-based

10      workers.

11                 MR. CILENTO:            Well, we feel that these

12      workers should be treated as employees and have

13      the, get under the employment insurance benefits

14      as all other employees in the state. We feel that

15      moving forward these workers should in fact be

16      considered employees for all of the other rights

17      and protections, whether it's minimum wage or

18      overtime pay, the right to organize. We know that

19      they're in discussions now and taking a look at

20      where things are. But we do, in fact, would like

21      them to follow the ruling as it was adjudicated,

22      and that's our position.

23                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you. And what

24      about for quarantine leave? Have you heard of any



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2       workers having trouble qualifying for it? What

3       can we be doing in the state legislature and/or

4       at the DOL to make it easier for them?

5                   MR. CILENTO:            Well, I think

6       communication is most important. And again anyone

7       who is required to take that type of leave should

8       receive quarantine pay, so I think we need to

9       have that communication and make sure that we

10      understand why it is they were out, why they're

11      coming back, what the situation is, and just make

12      sure that they are paid.

13                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Okay. And I would

14      imagine there's been a lot of concern around

15      employers providing PPE. Of course, for non-union

16      workers, but for union workers as well. How have

17      you been fielding sort of those complaints from

18      your own, the members of your umbrella union, so

19      that we can help fight for better protections for

20      them?

21                  MR. CILENTO:            Well, again, as I had said

22      before, we want to make sure that there are

23      standards in place and that the employers are

24      held accountable. You've had many conversations



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2       this morning. Most employers want to do the right

3       thing. They really do. But to be honest, to keep

4       the bad actors in place, we must have really

5       strong standards and requirements in place,

6       making sure that PPE, you have at least a 90-day

7       supply, that, in fact, the workers in the

8       workplace have a voice in what it's going to look

9       like, what that workplace is going to look like

10      moving forward, whether it's PPE, whether it's

11      other standards, everything that is involved in

12      how we're going to move forward.

13                 So we've heard all of the, particularly

14      at the beginning, about how sometimes it was a

15      struggle to get employers on the same page. If

16      you're a union member, it's a little easier

17      obviously because you're going to have a

18      collective voice, so I can only speak to that.

19      And once the first few weeks went by, voices were

20      raised, and it's been a little easier, but I

21      would just ask all of you to work with us to

22      ensure that the employers who may not be

23      predisposed to being helpful here are held

24      accountable. And the only way you're able to do



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2       that is to put a financial component on it for

3       them. So that's what I would ask, senator.

4                  SENATOR RAMOS:              What about in terms of

5       the presumption of coronavirus? What impact has

6       had that on your members?

7                  MR. CILENTO:            Well, you know, we don't

8       have the rebuttable presumption right now. So

9       what that means is if you are a grocery store

10      worker, if you are a nurse, take a nurse who sees

11      at the height of this thousands, thousands maybe

12      patients in the course of a couple of days. If

13      you're a grocery store worker, even now and you

14      see hundreds of people come by the check-out

15      line. Without that, you would have to actually

16      figure out which customer gave you the

17      coronavirus.

18                 Think about that for a second. You'd

19      have to figure out which customer, you saw 300

20      people come through your line today for eight

21      hours, you're a nurse and you had 400 patients

22      today and you're going pick out which customer or

23      which patient gave it to you? What we're saying

24      is for the presumption, it should be presumed --



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2       it doesn't mean the employer isn't going to have

3       the ability to contest it. They still are going

4       to be able to do that. That's not taken away from

5       them. What we're saying is presumptions should be

6       if you are in a job such as that, under those

7       circumstances, that they should have that

8       presumption, and then move forward with the case

9       at that point, from that point of view.

10                 SENATOR RAMOS:              All right. Thank you so

11      much. It's good to see you President Cilento and

12      be congratulations on your re-election.

13                 MR. CILENTO:            Thank you.

14                 SENATOR RAMOS:              The workers are very

15      lucky to have you.

16                 MR. CILENTO:            You're very kind.

17                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Back to the

18      Assembly. Harry Bronson.

19                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRONSON:                     Thank you.

20      Hello, Mario. How's everything going, and how is

21      the start of your new term as president?

22                 MR. CILENTO:            So far so good. This is

23      the most difficult day so far, so I'm not bad.

24                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRONSON:                     You're among



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2       friends, so I think you'll be okay. I want to

3       touch on a couple of things some of my colleagues

4       have already asked you, but I want to delve into

5       a little bit more. First of all, your comment

6       about reaching out to labor and having you as

7       part of the discussions, whether we're talking

8       about PPE, we're talking about making sure that

9       employees get unemployment insurance, the

10      workers' comp, all of that. I'm a firm believer

11      that if labor and management work together, then

12      we usually come up with the best solutions. So I

13      will definitely take you up on that so that the

14      state can be part of those conversations.

15                 Two areas, though, I want to hone in on

16      a little bit. The first is the misclassification

17      of workers or sometimes we refer to in current

18      times as gig economy or app-based workers. You

19      had talked about having app-based workers

20      contribute to the UI trust fund.

21                 MR. CILENTO:            Employers.

22                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRONSON:                     Pardon me?

23                 MR. CILENTO:            The companies, not the

24      workers, the companies.



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2                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRONSON:                     Yes. How do

3       you see that actually working? Because there's

4       that constant debate, some of us believe that

5       they're employees, others don't. How do you see

6       that working with the app employers contributing

7       to the fund?

8                  MR. CILENTO:            They'd have to go about it

9       as any other employer would have to go through it

10      in the state, which is having a finite

11      understanding of how many workers there actually

12      are at a given time who are out there working and

13      what their hours are and compiling the same

14      information that every other employer in this

15      state has to go through, and by the way is

16      subsidizing the app-based companies who aren't

17      paying into the UI trust fund and the workers'

18      compensation fund. So it's just the same rules

19      would apply.

20                 MR. NEIDL:           I might add to that, Mario.

21      Assemblyman, the courts are now finding that

22      these are employees after several decisions. It's

23      not just what you might think or we might think.

24      There's rulings now that have found that they are



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2       employees, and like every other employer, the DOL

3       can charge them based on the payroll records. It

4       shouldn't be that difficult.

5                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRONSON:                     And I would

6       suggest in response to that, Mike, we actually

7       need to pass the legislation so it doesn't have

8       to be litigated and make it clear, everybody will

9       know who is an employee and the benefits that

10      flow from that.

11                 MR. LNEIDL:           Right.

12                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRONSON:                     In connection

13      with the rebuttable presumption, I think it's

14      important for us to point out it's a rebuttable

15      presumption. So the presumption is you got

16      exposed to COVID at the workplace, but the

17      employer can rebut that presumption. And so I

18      think that that's an important distinction. Just

19      real quick and my time is running out, Mario, the

20      workers' comp system isn't really employee-based

21      at this point. They're not neutral. And are there

22      steps we can take to ensure that if we make this

23      change, that the workers actually get their lost

24      wage replacement and their medical care as



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2       quickly as possible.

3                  MR. CILENTO:            Well, again I would say

4       that as long as we classify these workers as

5       employees, they would have the same rights and

6       protections as everyone else, they would have to

7       go through the same process, and I would be

8       confident at that point that they would, in fact,

9       receive the same benefits.

10                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRONSON:                     All right.

11      Thank you so much.

12                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you,

13      gentlemen. Thank you. Senator.

14                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Yes. Senator James

15      Skoufis, you're up next. You have your five

16      minutes.

17                 SENATOR SKOUFIS:               Thanks very much. It's

18      good to see you both. I echo my colleagues,

19      congratulations, President Cilento on your re-

20      election. You and I know, you all know there are

21      some elements, especially on the far right, who

22      have argued for as long as I've been involved in

23      legislature, that unions have not been important

24      and necessary since children were working 70, 80



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2       hours, 100 years ago. But I think this pandemic

3       is really exhibit A as to how important unions

4       continue to be. And quite frankly, they are as

5       important now that is they have ever been, in my

6       opinion was as people look for safer workplaces

7       to return to.

8                  With that in mind a couple, sort of a

9       multifaceted question, one, I know there's still

10      some uncertainty, especially given what, if

11      anything, is going to be in the stimulus for

12      state and local governments that will impact what

13      happens to your members in CSEA, ASFCME, PEF, et

14      cetera, potentially. But can you share some

15      insight as how this pandemic has impacted the

16      roles, the union roles here in New York State.

17                 And the second piece is I suspect that

18      there are some New Yorkers who maybe were not as

19      welcoming to joining a union pre-pandemic who

20      maybe have seen the light now and want a safe

21      workplace and want all the protections that are

22      afforded to the members of a union. Is there an

23      effort, a new effort underway, especially in the

24      private sector side, to organize in some



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2       industries and in some areas that maybe there

3       wasn't a lot of attention paid to with that in

4       mind? If you can speak to those couple issues.

5                  MR. CILENTO:            Yeah. Well, to get to the

6       first part first, the role of labor at times like

7       these. I think it's certainly heightened. I think

8       members are in the most part aware of what their

9       union does, for the most part.

10                 When you have a situation like this or

11      when you have a situation where you have

12      Hurricane Irene, Hurricane Sandy and those

13      situations, big, big large scale events where you

14      have to have a union, where you have to have a

15      voice in the workplace and it's even heightened,

16      I think workers are even more aware of what it is

17      that their union does for them, because whether

18      it was unemployment insurance or workers' comp or

19      how do you deal with an employer to reopen as

20      they've been gradually reopening, workers are

21      even more involved in the day-to-day workings of

22      their particular union, paying even more

23      attention than they normally would, that's our

24      role. That's what we're supposed to be there for.



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2                  It's actually not a bad thing when

3       members, you don't want to say take for granted,

4       but when members aren't calling or maybe they're

5       not part of every single thing or aware of every

6       single thing, it sort of means that everything is

7       going smoothly, right.

8                  So you have a situation here where you

9       have more involvements and that's been helpful

10      because we've asked our members to poll their

11      congressional representative, so we can get

12      federal aid in to the state, right, into the

13      states that need it, so they're more active in

14      that end of it.

15                 And as for the second part about

16      organizing, most of our unions are out there

17      organizing every day against situations like

18      this, senator. You make a good point. It

19      certainly heightens the awareness of those who

20      aren't members to help us. In this state, we've

21      been sort of fortunate anyway, we have two-and-a-

22      half million members and it's the highest in the

23      country, the largest in the country. But to your

24      point, yes, it does heighten others' awareness



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2       outside of the labor movement on why it may be

3       important to join.

4                  And it also gives them the understanding

5       that what we fight for aren't just wages, right?

6       People think of wages, vacation pay, all those

7       other things. Now they're recognizing it's about

8       having a concerted voice for your basic safety on

9       the job, which a lot of people take for granted.

10      So that's also heightened as well, and I would

11      expect going forward, once we get past this --

12                 SENATOR SKOUFIS:               I'm glad to hear that.

13      And hopefully that bears fruit in terms of the

14      number of people who want to join union

15      membership. I just want to clarify. My first

16      question, when I spoke to union rolls, I meant r-

17      o-l-l-s not r-o-l-e-s and I wonder what's the

18      impact on the number of people in unions here in

19      New York State, you know with all these

20      businesses closed on the private side, have we

21      seen a decline in numbers? What's been that

22      impact?

23                 MR. CILENTO:            We didn't, we haven't seen

24      a decline in numbers. What we have seen is a



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2       greater number of members on unemployment. So

3       whether if it's the entertainment industry, you

4       know, there are some unions that are

5       entertainment industry, over the last five months

6       that are at about 95 to 97 percent unemployed;

7       members in the hotel industry, hospitality

8       industry, 97 to 99 percent unemployed. So they're

9       still part of their union. They're out of work

10      like everyone else is.

11                 SENATOR SKOUFIS:               Sure. Okay. Thank you.

12                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thanks,

13      senator, back to the assembly. Ranker Brian

14      Manktelow, you have five minutes.

15                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MANKTELOW:                      Thank you.

16      Mario, could you explain something to me again if

17      you don't mind. I come in a little late. You were

18      giving the example of the grocery clerk or

19      whatever that's working in the store. Can you

20      just explain that to me one more time, please.

21                 MR. CILENTO:            Right. As things stand

22      now, it would be incumbent upon the actual worker

23      to prove that, for example, if you're working in

24      a grocery store and you're working at the check-



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2       out counter, in the course of an eight-hour day

3       you might see 200 or 300 customers come by your

4       lane. If you are a nurse and you are seeing a

5       couple hundred patients, particularly at the

6       heightened level that it was a few months ago,

7       right now, you would have to point out which

8       particular customer who came by on that line in

9       that grocery store or that supermarket, gave you

10      the virus. What we are saying is there should be

11      a presumption that if you're in that line of work

12      and that you are in that situation, that if you

13      have contracted the virus, that you contracted it

14      at work, so that you start from that beginning,

15      from that premise. It does not preclude the

16      employer from rebutting it and controverting the

17      claim. It just means that you're starting from a

18      different viewpoint to start the conversation.

19                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MANKTELOW:                      Okay. So

20      employee X comes in to work the cash out that

21      day, employee X comes down with COVID two days

22      later. How do we really know where that

23      individual got the COVID from? I mean you've got

24      to think about the employer as well because I



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2       want these jobs to stay here. We need the jobs.

3       We need the employers to do this. So how does

4       that work? How do we know that individual didn't

5       get it on the way in on the bus? And, in fact,

6       maybe exposed some of the people coming into the

7       grocery store, maybe some of or her coworkers,

8       how do we differentiate from that?

9                  MR. CILENTO:            Right, it could be any of

10      those. It could be the coworkers. It could be

11      going in on the bus. It could be anything at any

12      point. What we're saying is that if you are in

13      that job during that time, that you would be

14      presumed. Mike, am I missing anything on that?

15                 MR. NEIDL:           No, I think in the context

16      of what you're asking, assemblyman, that we're

17      looking for, and one of the things Assembly

18      Member McDonald asked before is what can we look

19      to other states. There's 12, 14 other states that

20      have enacted a presumption like what Mario was

21      describing. And your question, so the presumption

22      is rebuttable, meaning the issues you're bringing

23      up, if you can show there was a family member or

24      a worker had traveled somewhere else and



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2       contracted COVID elsewhere, that's a rebuttable

3       presumption. But in the absence of that, it would

4       be assumed they got it at work if they were

5       otherwise healthy and went to work and showed up

6       without having to go through those normal really

7       excruciatingly long hearings to prove that you

8       got it at work. That's the difference.

9                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MANKTELOW:                      As an

10      employer, what right do I have to ask my employee

11      what they did in their personal time when they

12      were not at the job?

13                 MR. NEIDL:           That happens through the

14      workers' compensation hearing process. The

15      employer doesn't do that directly. That happens

16      through the process.

17                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MANKTELOW:                      Well, Mike,

18      once it get to the workers' compensation hearing,

19      everybody knows that a majority of those cases

20      will side with the worker, and I'm not saying

21      that's wrong or right --

22                 MR. CILENTO:            That's, that's not true.

23                 MR. NEIDL:           I would dispute that. I

24      would respectfully disagree with that.



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2                  MR. CILENTO:            That's not true.

3                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MANKTELOW:                      Do you know

4       what the stats are?

5                  MR. CILENTO:            You, you just said that

6       they're mostly employee-related. What are the

7       stats that back that up?

8                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MANKTELOW:                      I'm not

9       saying that --

10                 MR. NEIDL:           The Workers'Comp Board has

11      those stats. Those are obtainable. We see some,

12      we think there's stats available soon related to

13      COVID, specific to COVID, but that is information

14      that the Workers'Comp Board does have, and

15      there's an army of worker -- there's attorneys

16      involved in this process as well, so there are a

17      number of cases that controverted, and employers

18      always have the right to question a claim by an

19      employee that they were hurt at work.

20                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MANKTELOW:                      No, I

21      understand that, but I just know that the numbers

22      tend to side with the employee. It's pretty tough

23      to reverse one. Once it gets to the comp board,

24      I've been involved in this for a long time, once



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2       it gets to the comp board, it's pretty tough to

3       overrule that comp board. It really is.

4                    And that's not my question. My question

5       is how do we really know where the employee got

6       the coronavirus, the COVID from. And I just want

7       to make sure we don't get rid of after all our

8       businesses. We have to make it work for both

9       sides.

10                   MR. CILENTO:            And I would agree with

11      you. Let me just say this. We don't want our

12      employers to go out of business. We want to have

13      that working relationship. And I think that's

14      very important.

15                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER MANKTELOW:                      Absolutely.

16                   MR. CILENTO:            So let me just be clear

17      about that, and that's why we go through the

18      process of the Workers'Comp Board.

19                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER MANKTELOW:                      And I just,

20      you know, I love businesses, I love employees. I

21      think as a business owner taking care of the

22      employees is my number one asset, because they're

23      the most important person to me in my operation.

24      So I just want to be sure that we're looking at



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2       it equally for both sides for both sides because

3       I just don't want, you know, we have some of the

4       best workmen's comp stuff in New York right now.

5       And the other states are coming on board. They're

6       not leading. We're still leading in that area.

7       They're catching up to New York State.

8                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you,

9       gentlemen. And we'll move it back to the Senate.

10                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you. Up next, we

11      have Senator Jackson. Uncle Bob, your floor.

12                 SENATOR JACKSON:               I got to go because I

13      got to ask this question. Thank. You're welcome,

14      Bill. Hi. Okay, Bill. Thanks. All right. Thank

15      you. Hi, Mario.

16                 MR. CILENTO:            How you doing, senator?

17                 SENATOR JACKSON:               I'm doing good. I was

18      talking to one of our former union president,

19      Bill DeMartino from Long Island, so he sends his

20      regards. But let me thank you for your service

21      and, Mike, let me thank you. I have a question

22      about, I understand that the situation currently

23      as it exists and I understand some of the

24      questions that have been asked already and your



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2       responses.

3                  I am very concerned about the lack of

4        federal money and that I'm so happy that our

5        leaders Andrea Stewart-Cousins and Carl Heastie

6        have come together to say that we need to raise

7        revenue in order to save jobs and maintain the

8        status for people to survive this pandemic. What

9        is your position as the head of the union as far

10       as us, if we have to raise revenue so there's no

11       layoffs, you've heard them project 20 percent cut

12       to education, 20 percent cut to healthcare, 20

13       percent cut to municipalities, and to agencies.

14       So I'm very, very concerned about that, that

15       that's the direction if we don't raise revenue.

16                 So are we working together to raise

17       revenues when we need to do that in order for

18       everyone to survive? And especially our workers

19       that are not collecting unemployment, they're not

20       getting any other type of government assistance.

21       These are people that are in desperate need.

22                 MR. CILENTO:            Yeah, thank you for that

23      question, senator. Yes, we have long been, the

24      state AFL-CIO, has long called for raising



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2       revenue, whether that's tax increases on

3       millionaires and billionaires, whether it's the

4       stop transfer tax, whether it's the

5       [unintelligible] [03:11:03] tax, our point of

6       view is, as we said, any deficits we run are

7       always going to be to hurt those at the bottom

8       end of the economic scale more than anyone else

9       because they rely on the services you're going to

10      have to cut to bridge that deficit. So we have

11      been working, all of our affiliates coordinating,

12      not only     here in the state but just so you know

13      we coordinate with the other states to have them

14      reach out to their congressional representatives

15      across the country, to call for the federal

16      funding. So, yeah, we have long been on that, and

17      again, without it the services and the jobs,

18      first of all you're going to lose X amount of

19      jobs, whatever that would be. And the services

20      that those workers provide are vital to the

21      everyday lives of everyone across the states. And

22      again, those at the lower end of the economic

23      spectrum end up relying on those services more

24      and have been hurt again. So we're with you on



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2       that, senator.

3                  SENATOR JACKSON:               I appreciate that.

4       It's imperative that we continue to talk about

5       the options that we must look at in order to make

6       sure that we sustain ourselves, so I appreciate

7       you expanding on in your responses. Thank you,

8       co-chairs.

9                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you.

10      Back to the Assembly, oh, wait a minute. Where

11      did he go? Well, I saw Nick Perry arrived. I

12      thought he had his hand up and it may have been

13      just to let us know that he's here, so senator

14      I'm going to push it back to you until somebody

15      else shows up.

16                 SENATOR RAMOS:              All right. Senator James

17      Sanders.

18                 SENATOR SANDERS:               Thank you, co-chair.

19                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Five minutes.

20                 SENATOR SANDERS:               Absolutely. I'm not

21      going to take that much, but a guy like Mario,

22      he's got all the answers so I don't have to worry

23      about that. Brother Mario, let me take you to the

24      issue of undocumented workers, undocumented



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2       workers. What's your organization, AFL-CIO's

3       stance on this sir, on how do we aid the

4       undocumented workers?

5                  MR. CILENTO:            They should have the same

6       rights and protections. They go to work. They're

7       in the workplace. They deserve the same rights

8       and protections of everyone else, regardless of

9       where they came from at any particular time.

10      They're doing the same work as everyone else, as

11      we see it, everyone is equal regardless.

12                 SENATOR SANDERS:               Well put, sir.

13      Following up Senator Jackson's point, at the end

14      of the day, if there is a budget shortfall, and I

15      have no idea why anybody was looking to White

16      House for aid to the states and cities, I have

17      absolutely no idea. There's no history of this,

18      and why anybody thought that we would get

19      anything from that, I have no idea.

20                 However, why is there a hesitation in

21      some of the upper realms of New York State

22      government in dealing with any of these taxes

23      that you spoke of transfer, stock transfer, any

24      of the one percent taxes?



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2                  MR. CILENTO:            You know, I can't answer

3       for anyone who opposes that. They're going to

4       have to answer for themselves, and there are some

5       are on record. I can only tell you, senator, that

6       from our point of view, from the labor movement's

7       point of view, we wholeheartedly support raising

8       revenue in every way, shape or form necessary to

9       curtail those cuts, to keep people working and to

10      keep those services running, because without it,

11      you're going to see cuts in education and

12      healthcare and transportation and infrastructure

13      and sanitation and law enforcement and

14      firefighting and everything else across the

15      board. So from our point of view, senator, we're

16      on the same page, and we will continue to voice

17      our support for the raising of revenue moving

18      forward.

19                 SENATOR SANDERS:               There's only, as you

20      know well, sir, there's only a couple of things

21      that one can do when you're in a hole like this.

22      You can hope to find money, maybe gold somewhere.

23      It doesn't seem like it. You can raise taxes on

24      those who have plenty, or else you're going to



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2       cut to the middle class and to the working class

3       or else you're going to cut social safety net.

4       And those are the only choices that we have. And

5       all of this other talk, whose ox is going to be

6       gored, or we can just cut services left, right

7       and center and make this a very unappealing

8       state, and we're up to that level. Thank you very

9       much for fighting for the working people of this

10      state. You guys, while everybody else was running

11      all over and hiding under the beds, you guys were

12      up front, and I'm just scared that the essential

13      workers today will become the furloughed and

14      fired workers tomorrow. Thank you very much.

15      Thank you to the chairs.

16                 SENATOR RAMOS:              All right. Thank you. We

17      currently don't have any assembly members with

18      their hands raised, so we're going to move on to

19      state Senator Diane Savino. She has three minutes

20      for her questions.

21                 SENATOR SAVINO:              Thank you. Good

22      afternoon, Mario, and first of all,

23      congratulations on your re-election. Obviously,

24      people recognize how important you are and we're



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2       so lucky to have you in the labor movement today.

3       I just want to briefly touch on an issue that you

4       and I and Mike and others have been working on

5       for a couple of years now, and that's the issue

6       of what we call the gig economy. And so last

7       year, remember we introduced a bill at the end of

8       the session, the Dependent Workers Act, and

9       everybody hated about it. The industry hated and

10      it workers hated it, and in fact I will tell you,

11      I've gotten a lot of nasty e-mails in my career

12      in the state senate but none was nasty as the e-

13      mails I got from some people who insisted they

14      did not need the protections of the legislature,

15      many of them were freelancers, independent

16      contractors, 1099ers who told me to mind my own

17      business, that they didn't need any protections

18      whatsoever, that they were happy with the

19      flexibility that they had and the ability to

20      negotiate the value of the labor that they were

21      trading in this new marketplace.

22                 And then the pandemic hit. And

23      proverbial crap hit the fan, and we saw the

24      effect it had on the UI system, as people who



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2       were currently not eligible for traditional UI

3       now becoming eligible under the pandemic

4       assistance that the feds put in place. And so now

5       we had thousands and thousands of people who are

6       currently recognizing how important these

7       workplace protections are.

8                  So I think it resets the table for us in

9       our discussion. And I'll just ask you your

10      opinion on this. Two days ago, the CEO of Uber

11      wrote an op ed for the New York Times about how

12      they believe that Uber drivers and others should

13      have these same types of protections and that

14      they're prepared to create a third way, paying

15      into systems, providing those workplace

16      protections, but failing, or falling short on the

17      definition of an employee which, of course,

18      follows other protections.

19                 So what I'm concerned about is people

20      may jump on that and say, well, let's allow that

21      to happen, but it excludes the most important

22      protection that workers should have, which is, of

23      course, the right to organize. So how do we push

24      back on that and make sure that we use this



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2       crisis to really fully flesh out that working

3       people should have the same protections, whether

4       they are obtaining employment through an app or

5       punching a time clock somewhere, on working in a

6       government agency?

7                  MR. CILENTO:            Great question, senator,

8       great question. I read that op ed a couple of

9       times and it just seemed to me that he wanted or

10      he wants to provide some benefits for workers but

11      on his own terms, right.

12                 SENATOR SAVINO:              Right.

13                 MR. CILENTO:            So in other words, I'll

14      give you, you should have some benefits. We'll

15      decide what they are. We'll decide how much we

16      put in. But we don't want to be held accountable

17      as every other business or enterprise in the

18      state or in this country, right. So again,

19      everything we already know. No minimum wage. No

20      overtime. No workers' comp. No paid family levee.

21      No grievance procedures at a time of COVID, where

22      workers who are doing this kind of work have

23      nowhere to go if they feel unsafe or if they, in

24      fact, feel they could contract the virus. So it



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2       seems as though it was on their terms. We're

3       going to pick and choose. And remember now, if

4       you do that, and there are certain things you

5       provide, those workers in fact feel certain,

6       they're certainly beholden to you in some way,

7       but not really because you don't really have a

8       voice in the workplace.

9                   So we have to be careful of that, we

10      have pick up, senator, from where we left off

11      last year and finally pass the legislation that

12      allows these workers to have a real voice on the

13      job, have every other right as every other

14      employee in the state, including the right to

15      organize.

16                  SENATOR SAVINO:             Thank you.

17                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                    Thank you.

18      That concludes our comments from this panel.

19      Mario before you leave and we take a little bit

20      of a break, I would like to thank you. You

21      mentioned something earlier in regards to the

22      fact that you are reaching out across all the

23      states to share the message about the work that

24      needs to be done in Washington. And many of us in



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2       New York sometimes worry because we tend to one

3       of the blue states that our voices aren't being

4       heard but we appreciate the fact that you're

5       reaching out with your brothers and sisters to

6       share that message because COVID-19 has impacted

7       everybody in every state. It doesn't matter what

8       political leaning they are. So thank you very

9       much. We will be taking a ten minute --

10                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER ABINANTI:                     Before you

11      end, can I just jump in and join you in thanking

12      Mario for joining us. Tom Abinanti here, I was

13      listening very carefully to what you were saying,

14      because I did not have any questions doesn't mean

15      I wasn't paying attention. Thank you for joining

16      us. I appreciate it.

17                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     And now that

18      that has been documented, we will now move on --

19                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Thanks, Tom.

20                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     -- to a 10-

21      minute break. Why don't we say 1:45 because I

22      want to get my coffee. Thank you for the

23      panelists so far, and we look forward to

24      finishing this up in a timely manner. So see you



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2       at 1:45 live.

3                  [OFF THE RECORD]

4                  [ON THE RECORD]

5                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you, we're back.

6       And Assemblyman McDonald would you like to

7       introduce the fourth panel?

8                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Absolutely.

9       Our fourth panel is a panel of one, but an

10      important one, like they all are, but it's our

11      friend Wayne Spence from PEF. Wayne, you have

12      five minutes of testimony. Welcome aboard.

13                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER ABINANTI:                     Panel of two.

14                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     It's good to

15      see you. Wayne, we need you to unmute yourself.

16                 MR. WAYNE SPENCE, PRESIDENT, NEW YORK

17      STATE PUBLIC EMPLOYEES FEDERATION:                       Okay. Can you

18      hear me now?

19                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     You're great.

20      Thank you.

21                 MR. SPENCE:           All right, so thank you

22      again for this opportunity, so to the senate

23      chairs, Ramos, Sanders and Skoufis, thank you. To

24      the assembly chairs Abinanti and McDonald, again,



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2       thank you for this. If I was to read through my

3       introduction I would run through the five-minute

4       clock which I can't see. I could see that before.

5                  So again, I want to take this

6       opportunity to thank and just say a bit. I

7       submitted something in writing more lengthy. But

8       what I want to say is that at the start of this

9       pandemic, New York State residents have had to

10      realize the importance of government services and

11      support. I represent 52,000 state workers in the

12      professional, scientific and technical titles in

13      the bargaining unit. So we represent workers that

14      served on the frontline in the state response to

15      the COVID-19 pandemic.

16                 And what we saw from this from what

17      happened was that chronic understaffing and under

18      resource of state agencies led to really bad

19      outcomes. I heard and saw the testimony earlier

20      from the Department of Labor commissioner. The

21      Department of Labor did not have the technology

22      nor the manpower to process the wave of

23      unemployment applications and the enhanced

24      benefits afforded others under the CARES Act.



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2                  Several years ago, I testified in front

3       of Senator Savino and I remember she saying to me

4       back, I think in probably 2016 that we were at

5       diminished return when it comes to the workforce.

6       We weren't more with less, we were actually doing

7       less with less. And that was so apparent during

8       the pandemic. Years of two percent artificial

9       budget lines of no increase beyond two percent

10      led to some bad outcomes. And I'm hoping that we

11      really take a look at this.

12                 If there's no help from Washington, I

13      guess we'll be looking at potential furloughs and

14      layoffs. And what will mean to the state

15      workforce that's already at a point of diminished

16      returns in terms of the number of state workers

17      that can do the job. Nursing shortages, that was

18      so apparent. We have struggled and the SUNY

19      hospitals struggled to meet their mission when it

20      came to the COVID crisis. SUNY Downstate, SUNY

21      Stony Brook have struggled.

22                 Our members were left short staffed.

23      They had to deal with failures of management to

24      confront the imposition of mandatory overtime,



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2       forced redeployment, hiring freezes, lower wages,

3       challenging patient population and poor working

4       conditions and staggering student debt loans,

5       which has limited nurses to stay in the

6       profession or even want to come into the

7       profession when it comes to working for New York

8       State government, especially at SUNYs in the

9       capacity as a nurse.

10                 Management other workforce planning

11      problems, again we had to deal with issues around

12      agencies that had to deal with the governor's

13      directives about designation of essential versus

14      nonessential personnel. It was a scramble from

15      day-to-day when the governor came on television

16      and would have his briefing. Because every

17      briefing was almost like a gut wrench for me what

18      is he going to say today that is not going to be

19      able to work out when it comes to the state

20      workforce.

21                 It was almost two sets of rules, what

22      the governor said seemed to apply to everybody

23      else but their own workforce. Because there

24      didn't seem to be any real direction from the



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2       state commissioners of how was these things going

3       to be implemented. You heard the governor said

4       one person is going to get one PPE per day, but

5       yet, we knew nurses were getting one PPE per

6       week. They were telling to expect to use an N95

7       mask once a week. So then when I heard about the

8       talk what happened in the second wave? What does

9       a 90-day supply mean of PPEs? Does it mean that

10      it's one respirator per patient, per nurse, as

11      the N95 mask manufacturer said it should be done?

12      Or is it going to be one per week? So what does a

13      90-day supply look like?

14                 There's a host of things that we need to

15      have some conversations about, that went wrong

16      and should be addressed should and when another

17      pandemic come about.

18                 Again, my members are the ones who are

19      actually processing the UI applications and we

20      know it's been a disaster. How I know? I've

21      experienced it myself. My daughter worked in a

22      mall that was shutdown and had to go and apply

23      for UI. My son had to do the same thing. And for

24      them to tell me that it takes them two days just



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2       to process an application online because of the

3       software?

4                   Again, PEF members are the ones that's

5       blamed when these things happen and I'm hoping

6       that we can look at those things and evaluate it

7       and make sure we can come up with fixes for these

8       things.

9                   The overtime payments, so again to meet

10      the crisis, many agencies have relied on

11      mandatory or voluntary overtime. Staff at the

12      Department of Labor were mandated to work 15

13      hours overtime a week, staff at the Department of

14      Motor Vehicles are being asked to work six days a

15      week, to cover expanded hours and staff. And

16      staff at the Department of Health are being asked

17      to work overtime as contract tracers at regional

18      airports. But guess what? They're not being paid

19      the same rate as what they were hired at. So for

20      instance, you if were hired at a rate of $15 an

21      hour, they're now telling you when you work at a

22      airport, that's a clerical function, so you're

23      going to $9 an hour. These are the things that's

24      going on right now across the state.



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2                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Wayne,

3       speaking of overtime, unfortunately we are

4       overtime. But I know we're going to go back to

5       this issue in our question and answer period.

6                  MR. SPENCE:           All right.

7                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     So, thank you

8       for your comments. And Pat, a mea culpa on my

9       part. On the agenda I had, you were on a

10      different panel by yourself but you're in there

11      with Wayne, so Pat Kane from NYSNA. Welcome

12      aboard.

13                 MS. PAT KANE, RN, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR,

14      NEW YORK STATE NURSES ASSOCIATION:                       Thank you I'm

15      glad to be with my brother, Wayne. Hi everyone

16      and thanks for the opportunity to testify this

17      afternoon. So my name is Pat Kane and I am the

18      executive director of the New York State Nurses

19      Association and I've been a hospital-based RN for

20      more than 30 years. NYSN represent more than

21      40,000 frontline nurses that reported to work

22      every day during the worst of this pandemic and

23      thousands of them became ill, many of them

24      seriously ill, sadly some of them succumbed to



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2       this disease and we still can't get an accurate

3       count or information about those numbers.

4                    We know that nurses worked in dangerous

5       conditions without adequate personal protective

6       equipment and Matilda's law did not apply to our

7       most vulnerable nurses. Staffing levels were

8       stressed to the breaking point and waves of COVID

9       patients came through our doors. And as we

10      struggled to cope with all of this, we were

11      frustrated by constantly changing federal and

12      state infection control guidelines. The DOH

13      sanctioned the use of the CDC's downgraded

14      protocols, including crisis capacity strategies

15      and these are for use during a known shortage of

16      PPE and they carry risks for our patients and our

17      staff.

18                   Many hospitals instituted policies that

19      were even worse than the crisis guidelines and

20      nurses were forced to provide care sometimes with

21      only a surgical mass or reuse the disposable N95

22      respirators for as long as a week. In some

23      places, management was using unproven methods to

24      sterilize and reuse N95s, which the DOH also



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2       reduced the guidelines that reduced the isolation

3       and quarantine period for healthcare workers and

4       this was dangerous for us and our patients.

5                  We often received policy directives that

6       made no sense and we were rarely if ever

7       consulted or included in these decisions. So as

8       we draw these lessons from this first surge,

9       there are some things we would like you to

10      address as we approach possible second.

11                 First of all, we need to implement

12      minimum safe staffing standards. Staffing was a

13      huge problem before the crisis and the shortage

14      of nurses and other direct care staff made us

15      even more vulnerable. Minimum staffing standards

16      applied to all hospitals would have reduced

17      preventable deaths and lessened the inequalities

18      that we saw and we often read about. We need to

19      pass the Safe Staffing for Quality Care act to

20      provide an adequate base to be able to surge

21      capacity for future emergencies.

22                 Second, we have to solve this PPE

23      problem. We need to make sure that we have

24      coordinated control over the production,



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2       stockpiling and distribution of PPE to all

3       hospitals equally, transparently and based on

4       needs and not just hospitals, all the places that

5       need it. We also need to move to reusable,

6       elsatomerics and [unintelligible] [03:31:35] so

7       we don't have to face this running out of PPE

8       again. And this is actually going to save

9       hospitals money and provide us with the

10      protection that we need on the frontlines.

11                 Third, we need to implement science-

12      based standard infection control protocols and

13      PPE standards that acknowledge that this is an

14      airborne transmitted disease. We need COVID

15      occupational safety standards to protect workers

16      similar to the blood born pathogen standard that

17      we do have.

18                 Third, we need to protect nurses and

19      other essential workers who are exposed or become

20      ill. We need to have the same quarantine period,

21      get the same days of paid sick leave that

22      everyone else does for our sake and for our

23      patients. And for those that become seriously ill

24      or do die, we have to treat COVID as an



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2       occupational disease and create a presumption

3       that it's work-related.

4                  Finally, we have to give healthcare

5       workers and other essential workers a seat at the

6       table. The state and local agencies talk to our

7       hospitals and employers, they need to talk to us

8       on the frontlines. We are the experts.

9                  Lastly, as healthcare workers are still

10      suffering greatly from all the trauma and harm

11      they've endured during the height of the

12      pandemic, now unbelievably, these heros after

13      facing the fear of losing their lives to save

14      others, are facing the fear of losing their

15      livelihoods. They're being threatened with

16      layoffs and furloughs as we speak. We've heard

17      over and over that this pandemic is not over, but

18      somehow healthcare workers, the frontline of this

19      battle are now expendable.

20                 You know, last year the WHO declared

21      2020 as the international year of the nurse and

22      midwife, who knew what we were going to be

23      facing. But they did that because the world needs

24      nine million more nurses by 2030 to achieve



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2       universal healthcare. So let's protect and grow

3       one of our most precious resources both for our

4       immediate needs during this time and also for our

5       children's futures, so thank you for letting me

6       testify.

7                   SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you panelists,

8       thank you so much for your testimony. It's very

9       good to see you both. I wanted to begin --

10                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Jessica, are

11      you there? Well, oh, there she is. Sorry about

12      that.

13                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Sorry, about that, I

14      just got dropped for a second. But I wanted to

15      ask both panelists what happened to your members

16      when they requested additional PPE? Was there any

17      formal request that needed to be submitted? And

18      then what was the process for that? And what were

19      folks told, what were your members told if and

20      when they were denied?

21                  MS.KANE:         Do you want to start, Wayne?

22                  MR. SPENCE:           Yeah, sure. It depended

23      where it was. There was nothing consistent. Just

24      so you know, we spent over quarter of a million



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2       dollars purchasing PPEs, and most of the time we

3       ran into bit problems trying to secure

4       specifically the N95 respirators. The only place

5       we could find them, where every state across the

6       country, the whole world was looking for it was

7       China. And what we found out was the ones we,

8       when we did get them into the country, they

9       turned out to be, they were fake. They weren't

10      the real stuff. And so we tried to distribute

11      them as much as possible. There was just not a

12      consistent plan.

13                 For example, there was a drug treatment

14      center in Brooklyn and when this pandemic hit, if

15      you remember it was during what was considered to

16      be regular flu season. They had no respirators at

17      all. They should have had something there. They

18      were actually telling people how to make PPEs out

19      of coffee filters. I had two members that died at

20      that facility. About seven PEF members died as a

21      result of exposure to COVID. One of them was a

22      psychiatrist who worked at an OPWDD facility

23      because that facility had no PPEs to give out. So

24      we were literally life and death. We spent over,



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2       we housed nurses from March 17th to May 22, we

3       actually put up with dues money, nurses in hotels

4       because there was a lack of PPEs for nurses and

5       they were afraid to go home, because if you

6       remember at that time, we'll bring you back, no

7       one knows how the virus was transmitted, so if

8       you had a vulnerable person at home, if you were

9       living at home with your elderly parent, nurses

10      were worried that they would bring it home and

11      they would die. So you got nurses who actually

12      live in hotels.

13                 And when we asked SUNY, again, you ask

14      SUNY who has campuses and housing to house nurses

15      and they said to you I'll get back to you. They

16      never got back to us. To this day, they never got

17      back to us. We put people in hotels. And spend

18      again, over a quarter of a million dollars out of

19      our pocket.

20                 Are we expected to do that again? When

21      does the union expect to do these things? And are

22      we expected to do that should a second wave hit?

23      I want you guys to know that these are the things

24      that we had to do.



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2                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Well, thank God for the

3       union, huh?

4                  MS. KANE:          Yeah, really. And just to add

5       to your question, you know, after this all

6       started in most places, the PPE was put under

7       lock and key. And very often that was problematic

8       for nurses to get into the manager's office on

9       overnight shifts in particular, sometimes they

10      had to call security. Now normally these things

11      are out on the unit, they're available whenever

12      you need them because that's where they should be

13      in order to have everyone be protected.

14                 In some places, when you received an n95

15      respirator, you actually had to sign for it and

16      if you went back and asked to have another one

17      before you had worked five shifts the supervisor

18      would often ask you what happened to the one that

19      you got last Thursday. Sometimes they would have

20      to produce that one if it was broken. In some

21      instances, nurses sent me pictures where they

22      were told to staple a rubber tourniquet to the

23      N95 when the strap had broken. So they were --

24                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Sorry to cut you off, I



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2       have one minute and a half left and I want to ask

3       one more question. Feel free to fold it in. I

4       wanted to ask about overtime and hazard pay for

5       both of your members both PEF and NYSNA. What has

6       been the conversation around that, I mean we know

7       that there's corona presumption issues going on

8       for you guys as well. Can you speak to those

9       types of issues that are happening to our

10      essential workers?

11                 MR. SPENCE:           Just --

12                 MS. KANE:          Real quick and then Wayne can

13      go. Our public sector workers who are hardest

14      hit, you know, in the public sector we are not

15      able to get any hazard pay, and the private

16      sector some did. Go ahead, Wayne.

17                 MR. SPENCE:           Yeah, that's pretty much

18      it. To date, not one public sector nurse or

19      healthcare worker got any hazard pay while in

20      some places like Long Island Jewish, they got

21      $2,500, other places got one week of extra

22      vacation. Nada. Zilch. Nothing. Heroes, what

23      zeros when it comes to the state employees.

24      That's it.



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2                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Okay.

3                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you. I'll yield

4       the rest of my time.

5                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Okay. Back to

6       the Assembly and actually, it's going to be

7       myself. Pat, thank you for your testimony, I've

8       had the privilege to listen in or interact with

9       NYSNA for probably three days in the past week

10      and a half. So your testimony is real and it's

11      not being ignored or discounted, but I want to

12      reserve some of my time with Wayne today on a

13      couple of things because I really haven't had the

14      chance to follow-up on some of the concerns that

15      were raised earlier and Wayne has reinforced.

16                 Probably within the last month, I

17      remember seeing the release from you in regards

18      to basically it mentioned to the governor about

19      making sure that all the state agency buildings

20      have the proper filters in place. This is kind of

21      around the same time as a decision was made on

22      what type of filter. As more science is evolving,

23      it was recognized that there needs to be a

24      certain MERV value for filters for malls and I



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2       think around that same time, you in your

3       leadership position put out a release about that.

4       Have you had any response to that?

5                  MR. SPENCE:           Yes. The response we got

6       from state was it's that we're working on it, as

7       we bring people back in. And I believe it was a

8       fair question to be asked. If you're asking malls

9       to do this, then why are you not going to ask the

10      state workforce in terms of the Harlem state

11      office building, the office building in the

12      Brooklyn state office building, the various state

13      office buildings and even the ones that's under

14      contract with private entities, with private

15      landlords. I believe they should have the same

16      value then, because then you send a message to

17      the people that we do value you as a worker. And

18      to date it's not consistent. We still haven't got

19      a consistent response.

20                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     So have they

21      indicated like an assessment is being done or? I

22      mean reality is we can't just replace them all in

23      30 days, more than likely. But there hasn't been

24      we're doing an assessment? Or just working on it?



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2       Is that what you're hearing?

3                  MR. SPENCE:           We heard that we're just

4       working on it. And I didn't make a big issue

5       about it, because what I was led to believe was

6       telecommuting was working, so a lot of these

7       places were not fully staffed and the number of

8       staff was minimal.

9                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Okay.

10                 MR. SPENCE:           But that's not what is

11      going on now. More and more members are being

12      told they are returning to work in full drove,

13      not even staggered, but at full capacity, full-

14      time. And so then, let's go back and have that

15      conversation. Are we going to have those MERV-9

16      or higher filters?

17                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     I agree with

18      you on that and that's something we should be

19      following up jointly. The other thing, it was

20      mentioned about, I think it was during the

21      Department of Labor commissioner's comments,

22      basically, members of PEF and probably other

23      organizations have been working and being paid at

24      lower grade levels. Could you walk me through



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2       that please, because that seemed to strike me a

3       little bit odd.

4                  MR. SPENCE:           So when the big rush for UI

5       claims hit and what we recognized was that the

6       state system was antiquated. So let me give you

7       an example. If you are a student or a parent

8       filling out the FAFSA, you might have six

9       questions. And if you don't know, say you don't

10      have your social security number you can skip

11      that question and go to the next one. Not with

12      the state system. If you get to question six out

13      of 12 and you can't answer six, you get timed out

14      and you have to start all over again. And so that

15      was frustration right there, so because of those

16      things they said idea, let's see if we can get

17      people to walk people through the application

18      process. So you start asking state workers from

19      other agencies to help in. So they said fine,

20      I'll volunteer. I make $20 an hour, I could use

21      the extra 15 hours. After they volunteered to do

22      it, they were then told no, this was really a

23      clerical function, so we're not going to pay you

24      at your state rate, we're going to pay you at a



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2       different rate, which could be $10 an hour.

3       People felt they were bamboozled into doing it.

4                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                    Yeah, no,

5       that's a little bit mis- [unintelligible]

6       [03:43:11] that's for sure. Has there been any

7       response from the administration about that?

8                   MR. SPENCE:          They felt that they have

9       the right to do that. And so we've actually now

10      taken the state to court on this matter and we

11      didn't want to do that. We understand again that

12      the state is in a financial situation. But have a

13      conversation with us.

14                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                    Right.

15                  MR. SPENCE:          Don't play three-card Monte

16      with the members. Have a conversation with us

17      about it.

18                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                    I agree.

19      Thank you. Senate?

20                  SENATOR RAMOS:             Thank you. Up next, we

21      have Uncle Bob is back, who used to be a member

22      of PEF.

23                  SENATOR JACKSON:              Once a member of a

24      union, always a member of a union.



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2                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Solidarity forever,

3       brother.

4                  SENATOR JACKSON:               So let me just first

5       thank Wayne and Pat for chiming in, because as

6       you know, nurses were the frontline, along with

7       doctors and everybody else that were dealing with

8       this, patients from -- you know, those members of

9       1199 and all the other unions. And quite frankly,

10      you deserve, all of you, deserve to be taken care

11      of because you took care of hundreds of thousands

12      of people that were our loved ones. I say that

13      loud and clear. I know it, because Pat, I've been

14      with the Zoom calls with your membership. And

15      Wayne, you know, I'm talking to Darlene Williams,

16      who is the region 10 which is Manhattan and the

17      Bronx coordinator. So it's imperative to know how

18      the members are feeling.

19                 And then when I hear that if we don't

20      get federal money and you know the state is

21      considering to lay off 20 percent in healthcare?

22      After everything that you all have done? Totally

23      unacceptable by any standard, so I'd say to you,

24      I want to know from you Wayne and Pat, what is



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2       the morale of the people that you represent?

3       Understanding one, they didn't get paid

4       appropriate overtime and number two, as far as

5       the projection if we don't get federal money, we

6       don't raise revenue against the wealthiest New

7       Yorkers that there's going to be layoffs in

8       healthcare. What are the members saying to you?

9                  MR. SPENCE:           I will defer to Pat this

10      time, let her go first, if that's okay.

11                 MS. KANE:          You know, the members are

12      terrified about the possibility of a second wave,

13      we're really not ready. They still really haven't

14      recovered. I mean they're in the process. This is

15      going to take a long time for that healing to

16      take place, right. They have each other, they get

17      a lot of support from each other. But the idea

18      that they're facing now losing their livelihoods

19      as well is very bad.

20                 I mean, you know, just to have all that

21      own you and have all that on your back, and then

22      to kind of just be -- they feel like they are

23      just expendable, that they're considered

24      sacrificial. It's nice that people clap at 7:00



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2       o'clock every day, and that helps I think, get

3       the people through, to a certain extent. But they

4       really feel like they have been used up, abused,

5       and are now just being tossed away.

6                   SENATOR JACKSON:               Wayne, now that we

7       have only about 17 seconds, can you respond to

8       that as far as your members, whether they're in

9       New York City or upstate New York, because you're

10      statewide?

11                  MR. SPENCE:           They feel exactly the way

12      Pat described. Basically, used heroes but now

13      being treated like zeros, if you want to put it

14      in a metaphor.

15                  SENATOR JACKSON:               Hmm.

16                  MR. SPENCE:           That's exactly how they

17      feel.

18                  SENATOR JACKSON:               Well, thank you both

19      for coming in and representing your members. It's

20      imperative that union stays strong and you know

21      Mario was on earlier speaking on behalf of all of

22      the AFL-CIO and let me just thank the co-chairs

23      for allowing me the time to say hello.

24                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you,



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2       senator. Harry Bronson, state assembly.

3                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRONSON:                     Hello, folks.

4       Wayne, Pat, thank you so much for being here. And

5       thank you for representing your members so aptly.

6       I only have three minutes so I'm going to try to

7       ask each of you one question and we'll do a

8       minute-and-a-half. Pat, we'll start with you. We

9       have had a couple of hearings in connection with

10      nursing homes and things that we needed to do to

11      make sure that we better provided for the

12      residents and the staff people. Minimum nursing

13      staffing came up repeatedly. Could you share with

14      us the impact of staffing in the hospital

15      setting?

16                 MS. KANE:          Sure. We saw, at the height

17      of the pandemic, nurses being responsible for

18      assignments that were up to four times what they

19      normally should be. And another feature of this

20      was that nurses were taken out of clinical areas,

21      like I was an open heart OR nurse for 20 years.

22      It would be like taking me and now putting me

23      after 20 years in the open heart operating room

24      on a medical surgical floor or in a medical ICU



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2       with little or no training. So we definitely felt

3       that -- nurses felt unsafe. You know, the

4       liability, immunity is one thing, but we are held

5       to a standard of care to serve our patients. It

6       was very distressing. I mean some of our members

7       were literally in tears what was going on with

8       the staff.

9                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRONSON:                     Thank you,

10      Pat. That's an issue we have to work on both

11      because of COVID and even predating COVID, making

12      sure we have appropriate staffing.

13                 Wayne, I want to talk a little bit about

14      again, the nursing home, it's really congregate

15      living. A lot of your members are in those

16      settings, whether it's through the Office of

17      Mental Health, the Office for People with

18      Disabilities. Can you share with us what's

19      happened in those settings for your members?

20                 MR. SPENCE:           Those settings, it was a

21      disaster in the OPWDD settings and OMH setting.

22      Especially in places like Creedmoor in Queens and

23      in Rockland Psychiatric Center and some of the

24      group homes. Literally, similar settings, but



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2       when private nursing homes were requesting

3       testing, you had to take a test, a temperature

4       test in the very beginning, we were saying what

5       is the difference between a nursing home, private

6       nursing home and these congregate living? Why are

7       we not doing the same thing? We were saying that

8       in April. It took letters to you guys and the

9       governor for the state commissioners to recognize

10      that these things should happen. But by the time

11      it did happen several of our members already

12      died. Several residents died. You saw the New

13      York Times reports, and it is a damn shame that

14      you have to go to the New York Times to get a

15      story out to save lives.

16                 I personally lost two people that was in

17      a nursing home. I lost my father-in-law and my

18      uncle-in-law within a space of four weeks. They

19      lived in nursing homes and I didn't want to see

20      the same thing happen in congregate living. It's

21      as if somebody think that the congregate living

22      was somehow different than a nursing home and

23      they were exactly the same. But no one listened

24      to us and the expertise from our members until



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2       after the fact.

3                    And, senator I'm afraid that another

4       pandemic, management, state management is going

5       to take that high horse approach and disregard

6       our members and the staff, as if they're

7       disposable and that cannot happen. And I'm asking

8       you to make sure that it doesn't happen.

9                    ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRONSON:                     Well, thank

10      you, Wayne. And I certainly heard from your

11      members here at the Rochester Psych Center about

12      this issue and we need to take care of it and

13      make sure that there's personal protective

14      equipment, there are safeguards, there's tracing

15      that's happening and things of that nature. So,

16      thank you both Pat and Wayne for your testimony

17      today.

18                   MR. SPENCE:           Thank you.

19                   SENATOR RAMOS:              All right, thank you. On

20      our end we have Senator Shelley Mayer, three

21      minutes.

22                   SENATOR MAYER:              Okay I will try to hurry

23      up and get this on. Thank you, Wayne and Pat

24      both, thank you for your work here. Two



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2       questions, Wayne, how often during the pandemic

3       and these issues of your members were you meeting

4       with the governor's representative about the

5       issues your members were facing?

6                  MR. SPENCE:           We tried to meet as fluid

7       as possible. We understand again and again, I'm

8       going to give the governor credit where credit is

9       due. We watched him every day. And so while we

10      were fighting about respirators, meaning the

11      N95s, we know that the governor had something big

12      on his [unintelligible] [03:52:33] could he get

13      ventilators, so I tried to balance that.

14                 And what we tried to do was we

15      recognized from time to time that what was

16      happening on the ground was not being telegraphed

17      to Mujica, to Melissa, and to those people you

18      saw on television. So we tried to, as best as

19      possible, so from the point of March 17th until

20      all the way maybe June, myself and my staff were

21      working I would say 17-hour days. Most of the

22      time our conversation with the governor usually

23      happened on a Sunday, which was an off day and we

24      tried to let them know what was going on.



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2                  But the frustration was that the

3       departments were not being truthful to the

4       governor. It's one of those things where the

5       emperor had no clothes on. The governor would put

6       out something, and he would say it on TV and then

7       we kind of have an idea what was going on. But we

8       didn't realize that that was not being translated

9       down into what was on the ground.

10                 For instance, PPEs, when the governor

11      said one PPE per person --

12                 SENATOR MAYER:              Right.

13                 MR. SPENCE: -- we had to then let him

14      know it was not happening at Stony Brook, it was

15      not happening at Creedmoor. And thank God for

16      senate and assembly leaders like you, because

17      when we then said to management it wasn't

18      happening, it took letters to you, when we could

19      cc you on a letter for them to draw. But that is

20      that the way you should govern. We should not

21      govern that way. And I hope that as we move

22      forward that will not be the case.

23                 SENATOR MAYER:              Right. We need to do

24      better. I'm not faulting the governor, but you



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2       bring up a good point that we have not addressed

3       enough, which is the shortfall on information, so

4       thank you for that. And then, Pat, for your

5       members that, you know, the need for hazard pay.

6       So many of your members worked and got no

7       additional funds, even though they were under

8       extraordinary burdens and challenges. What is

9       NYSNA doing to fight for, even going forward, to

10      ensure there if there is another outbreak your

11      members get hazard pay?

12                 MS. KANE:          You know, we've had multiple

13      conversations with employers. You know, and I

14      have to say, even some of our smaller community

15      hospitals have come up with something.

16                 SENATOR MAYER:              I know.

17                 MS. KANE:          But the city was not able to

18      do anything. And it's just really unfortunate,

19      they were the hardest hit and they were really,

20      you know, and to begin with their pay rate is

21      lower than a lot of the privates, and there's

22      still also private sector hospitals in other

23      places, so we're just, we just keep trying.

24                 SENATOR MAYER:              Thank you. Thank you for



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2       that. And thank you for what your members have

3       done and continue to do. Thank you both, thank

4       you. Thank you Madam Chair.

5                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Assembly?

6                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Sorry. On the

7       Assembly, it's now time for Nick Perry. Do we

8       have Nick Perry in the house?

9                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER N. NICK PERRY:                         Yes.

10                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     There he is.

11                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER PERRY:                   Just trying to

12      get unmute, yeah.

13                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     There you go.

14                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER PERRY:                   So I was -- let

15      me say hello to Wayne and my NYSNA chair, Pat. I

16      listened to you, Wayne and I agree with you that

17      we have an obligation as leaders in our state to

18      make sure that first responders are not just

19      hailed as heroes publicly for the show of it, but

20      that they are never left to feel like zeros, as

21      you seem convinced have been the case.

22                 I received a tremendous amount of

23      complaints about the PPE situation, the lack of

24      it or the distribution of it. I also received a



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2       lot of complaints about concerns with first

3       responders that they were made to worry about

4       their time back, because they did not -- if they

5       felt, if they felt symptoms that they needed to

6       get attended to, whether they could stay home and

7       feel better before they report too, and all of

8       those concerns that I think should not be among

9       the matters when you are concerned about trying

10      to be at work, to be there for those who need

11      your services. What -- can you give me some

12      response as to the level of that concern among

13      your workers and how that might have impacted and

14      affected their ability to provide the excellent

15      service that they are trained to provide without

16      that duress and stress that comes from the other

17      stuff that's monetary at the end of it. And what

18      recommendations you might have, both Pat and

19      Wayne --

20                 MR. SPENCE:           Well, well, Nick, the

21      stress of --

22                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER PERRY:                   -- the PPE,

23      regarding the protocol for supply and

24      distribution, and who controlled that and what



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2       recommendations -- what we could do to make it a

3       better process as we move more into this pandemic

4       control operations.

5                  MR. SPENCE:           So I'm going to take the

6       last one first and go backwards. So, one of the

7       things that would help, Nick, and I'm sorry,

8       Assemblyman Perry, because we know each other, I

9       don't want to be --

10                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER PERRY:                   Nick is fine, no

11      problem.

12                 MR. SPENCE:           Part of the thing is this,

13      when you hear and recently -- I'm going to use

14      SUNY Downstate Medical Center. We recently had a

15      meeting and they said they have a 90-day supply.

16      How do you quantify a 90-day supply of PPEs? Is

17      it 90-day supply based on the manufacturer's

18      recommendation of one mask per patient? Or is it

19      going to be one a week? Because -- or one a day?

20      Because the 90-day supply, they need to quantify

21      and qualify what the 90-day supply is based on

22      because that 90-day supply could end up becoming

23      only a two-week supply if they do it properly. So

24      it would be great if we could put clarification



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2       on what the supply is. If you go by the N95

3       manufacturer, it's supposed to be one mask per

4       patient, because you can actually transfer the

5       virus to other patients if you use it. But during

6       the pandemic, we did what we had to do. But we

7       should be beyond that now and be prepared to do

8       it the proper way. In terms of being sick, if you

9       come into the hospital now and say I have a

10      scratchy throat, it's allergy season, they'll

11      tell you to go home and get tested, COVID tested.

12      But then they'll tell you, you have to take ten

13      days. And if you don't have ten days, you're out

14      of a paycheck for ten days. How is that right?

15      Because that's what's going on.

16                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Gentlemen,

17      thank you for your comment, we need to continue

18      to move on. Back to the senate.

19                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Yes, up next we have

20      Senator Skoufius, you have five minutes.

21                 SENATOR SKOUFIS:               Thank you very much

22      and thanks to each of you for your testimony and

23      for everything that your members have done over

24      these past many months. So tomorrow, we're told



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2       to expect the long awaited Department of Health

3       study on staffing in hospitals, nursing homes and

4       other venues. Obviously, this is I'm sure, of

5       great interest to NYSNA, but PEF, you have

6       significant interest I'm sure in this as well.

7       You have nurse members and other members in

8       healthcare.

9                  I'm curious, what's been each of your

10      union's involvement in that Department of Health

11      study? Have they spoken with you much? Do you

12      have any expectations as to what tomorrow's study

13      will have? And where do you think we need to go

14      from here?

15                 MR. SPENCE:           So the study was due back

16      on the 31th of December.

17                 SENATOR SKOUFIS:               That's right.

18                 MR. SPENCE:           So, wow. Finally, so here's

19      what, what are they going to say? One, I don't

20      think they're going to say much. What I'm hoping

21      that we will see out of this is stop ignoring the

22      problem that we know exists and recognize that

23      there's a need to attract and retain nurses and

24      personal care staff. Lift the hiring freezes that



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2       was established and go with safe minimum. And I'm

3       going to let my NYSNA counterpart finish because

4       I know our time is together, because I think we

5       have some of the same issues.

6                  MS. KANE:          Sure, we do, Wayne,

7       absolutely. And that I think that goes to the

8       whole point of having the state staffing

9       standard, right. So as far as how much

10      interaction we had with the Department of Health

11      during the study, I guess it's going to be

12      fantastic because it's taken so long, very little

13      in the beginning. We did have some interaction.

14      But actually I think that that individual isn't

15      even at the Department of Health anymore. So you

16      know, very little, some in the beginning when it

17      first passed, but really nothing since then.

18                 You know, we've been at this fight for

19      many, many, many years talking about how we need

20      a minimum standard. And I think we've all seen

21      how this disease has really laid bare the

22      inequalities, the communities of color that were

23      hardest hit, the hospitals hardest hit. And I

24      think, you know, just as a basic principle, can



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2       we agree that everyone deserves the same level of

3       care and the same access to care.

4                  As far as what they're going to say, I

5       think it will be interesting. I expect they're

6       going to say something along with the hospital

7       industry has been saying about it's really hard

8       to establish a number. And just guys, remember

9       what we're talking about is a minimum standard,

10      right. We do recognize that we do have to have

11      individual standards in particular facilities,

12      depending what's going on. But we have to start

13      with a minimum. A minimum guarantee of what's

14      going to be there in order to provide safe care.

15      We've had staffing committees in contracts for a

16      long time and have struggled with this issue and

17      we need this legislative fix.

18                 SENATOR SKOUFIS:               As we look towards the

19      next public health crisis, whether it's a second

20      wave or some other pandemic, how important is

21      this issue of staffing as we try to best prepare

22      for the next time? Is it the most important

23      issue? Is it top three? Making sure we have

24      adequate staffing in hospitals and nursing homes



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2       and healthcare facilities around the state. Can

3       you give us as legislators some sense of just how

4       important this issue of safe staffing is?

5                    MS. KANE:          I would say the most

6       important.

7                    SENATOR SKOUFIS:               The most important?

8                    MS. KANE:          Yeah. We heard about bed

9       capacity, we heard about ventilators all the

10      time. I really very -- and, you know, we heard

11      what was being done about staffing and getting

12      volunteers as if people can all of a sudden know

13      how to work in a particular facility or be

14      trained to handle these kind of diseases. If you

15      want to improve the outcomes and save more lives,

16      safe staffing, I think it's the most important

17      thing.

18                   MR. SPENCE:           Also, one of my biggest

19      fear when I was hearing that was if you don't

20      have the staff and you have the ventilators,

21      who's going to operate them?

22                   MS. KANE:          Exactly.

23                   MR. SPENCE:           And as we saw nurses

24      getting taken down because of the COVID



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2       requirement, remember there was an exposure in

3       the beginning, 21 days, we weren't sure how many

4       days and how, so you had nurses who did not want

5       to come to work and the management who did not

6       want to bring the nurses in because we weren't

7       sure in March how the virus was spreading. As we

8       know more about it, we're still very cautious,

9       but if you don't have the staff and you're not

10      going to have it.

11                 And there's another piece that we

12      haven't spoken about was the post traumatic

13      stress on nurses. These nurses that worked in

14      these areas like in Downstate and in Queens, it

15      was as if they were in a MASH unit, it was as if

16      they were actually in a war zone, because that's

17      what they experienced. If you were a neonatal

18      nurse, if you dealt with mostly the delivering of

19      babies, but then you were thrust into an ER and

20      you watching people die by the minute, you're not

21      going to recover from that.

22                 SENATOR SKOUFIS:               That's right. We

23      actually spoke about exactly that at yesterday's

24      hearing. It's important you bring it up. And we



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2       have -- it has not been adequately prioritized. I

3       agree with you completely, but my time is up. I

4       thank both of you.

5                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you,

6       senator, and now we're back to the Assembly.

7       Assembly Member Marianne Buttenschon.

8                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER BUTTENSCHON:                           Good

9       afternoon, thank you for being here this

10      afternoon. I sincerely appreciate your leadership

11      as well the hard work that your members have done

12      throughout this horrific pandemic that we have

13      faced. And I have heard from many of your members

14      and many of my questions were answered today, but

15      I just I wanted to follow-up a little bit in the

16      question that was just recently asked in regards

17      to your top three priorities as you see them

18      today. And I know that safe staffing you said is

19      number one. Could you just elaborate on those? As

20      I'm very concerned about the mental health of

21      your members as they are the individuals that

22      face daily what so many of us just take for

23      granted, as we know they're either working within

24      our facilities or within hospitals or any other



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2       area that they're providing the care for others

3       that need it.

4                  MR. SPENCE:           Well, we've been trying to

5       pass safe staffing for quite some time and I

6       understand that management, the hospital

7       administrators have come out and said no, it's

8       not necessary it's not needed. I'm hoping this

9       pandemic and the aftermath of that shows that we

10      were woefully unprepared. And we need to go back

11      and look at what happened in California.

12      California passed it and hospitals did not close.

13      As a matter of fact, certain diseases actually

14      were more preventable, SARS and certain other

15      things did not spread in hospitals when we went

16      to safe staffing.

17                 So to suggest that somehow, it would

18      cripple the hospital industry in New York State,

19      that's not true because it didn't happen. But,

20      and I would hope that people recognize that we

21      could have had much better outcomes and we did

22      have good outcomes for the rest of the country.

23      But it could have even been better. Remember when

24      we were at 800 deaths per day? I don't want



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2       people to ever forget that because that took a

3       toll on our nurses. Nurses work shifts. And, in

4       such a way where if you are working a lot and you

5       don't get enough sleep, you are then susceptible

6       to that disease because your body can't fight it

7       off. So then, you're at a minimum staffing levels

8       and we were beyond, we're lower than the minimum

9       staffing levels, what did you expect in terms of

10      an outcome? And what will people expect in the

11      next wave when some nurses walked away.

12                 Nurses quit at Downstate Medical Center.

13      And some people are not looking to come back into

14      nursing, based on what they went through and saw

15      their loved ones went through. So we really need

16      to get a hard look on what we're going to do to

17      attract and keep nurses, especially within the

18      state workforce and I'll defer to NYSNA.

19                 MS. KANE:          So, two other things. I

20      mentioned the reusable respirators. We really

21      have to -- just, the top three things related to

22      this, to COVID. The reusable respirators, the

23      elastomeric respirators, we actually have a pilot

24      going on in Brooklyn. You know, we're really



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2       depending on like charity to do this work. But

3       that's a really big deal. Getting stuff like

4       that, that'll make us more resilient and ready.

5                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you,

6       Pat. Thank you, Marianne. Back to the senate.

7                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you so much. Up

8       next, we have Senator Tom O'Mara, who as a

9       ranker, has five minutes on the clock.

10                 SENATOR O'MARA:              I'm coming, sorry, I

11      had to pull over. Thank you, can you hear me now?

12                 MR. SPENCE:           Yes, sir.

13                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Yes.

14                 SENATOR O'MARA:              Great. I want to say

15      thank you for the tremendous work of your

16      membership throughout this crisis, it's truly

17      been amazing. I have two sisters who are nurses

18      and I know a little bit about anyways, what goes

19      on and the issues you are faced with and have

20      been faced with, with this. And I want to state

21      for the record that I think one of the most

22      insulting things we've seen, you were talking

23      earlier about hazard pay and not getting any

24      hazard pay, is that the governor actually froze



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2       wage increases that were bargained for and

3       contracted for prior to this disaster. And I

4       think that just adds insult to injury for the

5       great effort that your membership has put forth

6       throughout this. And I have been outspoken about

7       that wage freeze and continue to be here today.

8       But I wanted to say thank you, I don't have

9       questions for you. Thank you for you and thank

10      you to all your membership for your hard work.

11                 MR. SPENCE:           Thank you, sir. Appreciate

12      hearing that from you.

13                 SENATOR O'MARA:              That's all I have.

14                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Senator, it

15      looks like it will be the Senate on the table

16      now.

17                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Well, that's all that I

18      have on my end as well. So I think all that's

19      left is to say thank you to both Wayne and Pat

20      and please extend our appreciation to your

21      members.

22                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Senator.

23                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Oh, someone else?

24                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     I think



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2       you've got a couple names up there.

3                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Oh, on, yeah, you're

4       right. I just got Andrew Gounardes, Senator

5       Gounardes are you still here?

6                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:                Unmute, there we go,

7       I'm here, sorry about that.

8                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Three minutes.

9                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:                Thank you very much.

10      Thank you both Wayne and Pat for speaking today.

11      You've answered a lot of questions about what

12      your members faced, and so thank you for sharing

13      their stories, their perspectives. I want to

14      focus and I believe it was someone on the

15      Assembly side who picked up the questioning with

16      the labor commissioner about workplace complaints

17      on the public sector side for employees that had

18      to report to work for nonessential tasks. So this

19      question is more for Wayne than for Pat, but

20      Wayne, do you have examples or instances where

21      your members were still told to come into work

22      even though they were not deemed essential or

23      they were doing purely administrative things that

24      they could have been doing home and they brought



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2       into work where without proper precautions and

3       safety guidelines being adhered to?

4                   MR. SPENCE:           Yes, senator. We had

5       members of ITS who were, who could have done work

6       from home. They were told to go to the

7       facilities, they had to take the train. And

8       that's at the time when the train was now being

9       filled with folks who did not have a place to

10      stay, where there was a big homeless population

11      on the train and there were no social distancing,

12      that was not a big term them. They died. One of

13      those people died actually, and we believe the

14      contracting of that actually came from traveling

15      on the train and that was not necessary at the

16      time.

17                  We have a person when there was a

18      quarantine on people visiting private nursing

19      homes, we had PWDD in Brooklyn that was running

20      CPR training and the trainer was a woman who was

21      six months pregnant. So she said, I am expected

22      to do this. And if I don't do this, then I'm

23      going to lose my job. I had to write letters to

24      the commissioner of OMH with threats to cc the



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2       letters to the New York Times and the Daily News.

3       Why should we -- why isn't that common sense?

4                   SENATOR GOUNARDES:                So, let me ask you,

5       since my time is running out soon, what was the

6       response you got from the public employers when

7       you brought that to their attention?

8                   MR. SPENCE:           Well, most of the time, we

9       got no response and then we would have to go to

10      Melissa or Mujica because GOER was silence also,

11      and that's what it took. And at the time, Melissa

12      and them, they were busy trying to find

13      ventilators. They shouldn't have to deal with

14      that.

15                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:                Right. Got you, let

16      me ask one more question before my time expires.

17      You know we passed a line of duty death benefit

18      bill for public workers who die from COVID. We

19      left out the question about long-term disability.

20      I know it's still early. But for your members

21      that got sick, for both Pat and Wayne, have you

22      started to see any long-term effects from your

23      members who have been sick with COVID and their

24      ability to do their jobs right now? Or has not



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2       yet manifested itself?

3                   MS. KANE:          No, it has manifested. I

4       think it's the viral load they're exposed to,

5       Andrew, or something. I mean it seems like even

6       people who recover, it just does take the nurses

7       longer and we are seeing people with long-term

8       disabilities now.

9                   MR. SPENCE:           The same thing here. We

10      have seen people who have gotten ill, who said

11      that since they have come back to work, they are

12      more fatigued. There seems to be a lot more long-

13      term issues to somebody getting back to full

14      health when they contract COVID.

15                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:                Okay. Thank you

16      both.

17                  MR. SPENCE:           And thank you for what

18      you're doing on behalf of the public sector

19      workers, in terms of your bill, sir. I appreciate

20      that.

21                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:                My pleasure.

22                  SENATOR RAMOS:              All right and then, I

23      guess we don't have another assembly member on

24      the list, is that correct, Assemblyman McDonald?



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2                    ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     That's

3       correct. We're good.

4                    SENATOR RAMOS:              All right. So then up

5       next and to close for the Senate is state Senator

6       Daphne Jordan. You have three minutes on the

7       clock.

8                    SENATOR JORDAN:              Good, I thought you

9       were going to forget me and I've had my hand

10      raised since the beginning. But anyway, thank you

11      to the panelists for your hard work and for the

12      work that your members have done. We've touched

13      upon mostly the physical needs and that would be

14      PPE and proper pay and proper hours that your

15      members need. And we've touched upon just very

16      lightly, the mental needs and we don't see those.

17      And so it is a problem, because I heard yesterday

18      in the hearing for hospitals that that is

19      something that affects everybody that has seen

20      the tragedies of COVID. And I only saw news clips

21      and I can't get those out of my head. But I

22      cannot imagine dealing with all of that. Is there

23      a program that you have set to help the mental

24      health needs of the healthcare workers, of the



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2       nurses?

3                  MS. KANE:          So, in our union at least, we

4       do provide services through a company where our

5       nurses can access 24/7, they can talk to a

6       counselor that's credentialed and nurses have

7       been availing themselves of that. You know, I

8       think, you know, and a lot of hospitals have kind

9       of put forward these self-care kind of things.

10      It's very difficult to get the nurses to use the

11      services. I think it's part of the nature of what

12      we do. But I do think more time has to be set

13      aside at the workplace. Because you know, group

14      interaction and interaction with their colleagues

15      that they've been through this together would

16      really be helpful. I mean people do the

17      individual therapy, but we would like to see time

18      set aside out of their workday for this to

19      happen.

20                 SENATOR JORDAN:              I do want to let you

21      know that I did introduce a bill in May and it's

22      Senate Bill 8371 that is modeled after the

23      successful PFC Joseph P. Dwyer peer-to-peer

24      veterans counseling program, but this would be



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2       for our healthcare workers and it's called the

3       Healthcare Worker Peer Support Program. So I am

4       hoping that that gains traction and can help the

5       healthcare workers that have seen the horrors of

6       COVID.

7                    MS. KANE:          Thank you.

8                    MR. SPENCE:           I appreciate it. I hope

9       that, there was not a lot of emphasis in some

10      agencies on the EAP program, that's the state

11      agency, the Employment Assistance Program. And

12      I'm hoping that the state will actually recognize

13      the need for it and fund it. And not just fund

14      it, make sure that management understand that

15      this is something that's necessary and show that

16      it's something and not something that's ancillary

17      and an annoyance, because that's kind of like how

18      it is now. It's almost as if it's an

19      afterthought. And it should not be an

20      afterthought, it should be built in as something

21      that's necessary when it comes to the healthcare

22      workers, given what they've just went through.

23                   SENATOR JORDAN:              Absolutely, I agree,

24      thank you.



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2                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     We have one

3       last member, and it's Brian Manktelow, ranker,

4       five minutes.

5                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MANKTELOW:                      Thank you,

6       chairman. Wayne, I apologize, I had to step away

7       for a few minutes, but I'm back on. I know in our

8       area, I'm a veteran and I know there's a lot of

9       veterans that are members of PEF. Is there

10      anything that we need to be doing for our

11      veterans through this whole COVID situation right

12      now that we're in, this pandemic do you see that

13      we could help our PEF members?

14                 MR. SPENCE:           I don't know if you know

15      that the veterans' home out at Stony Brook took a

16      big hit, it took a big hit. And I think again

17      that the veterans' home that is run by the state

18      again, the agency that's responsible, was asleep

19      at the wheels. And they need to be able to sound

20      the -- it was my members again, who sounded the

21      alarm. And it was part of a conversation and

22      again, when you hear these alarms and no one's

23      listening, what do you do?

24                 There was frustration that there was an



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2       emphasis on nursing homes, but yet, congregate

3       homes similar that was run by the state seemed to

4       have gotten lost in the sauce. So how do we make

5       sure that should this happen again, should there

6       be a second wave, this doesn't happen again? I

7       have not seen anything from the vets' homes

8       management on the stateside to suggest that they

9       are not won't do the same exact thing again.

10                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MANKTELOW:                      Well, I

11      think that's one of the beauties of having the

12      testimonies from everyone. All the members on

13      both sides of the aisle, Senate and Assembly, you

14      know, we've been listening to these. This is my

15      fourth one here in the last week, and I've

16      learned so much about what we're missing and what

17      we didn't do. It's our job as legislators to make

18      sure that we do that moving forward, especially

19      if we do end up getting a second wave. So, Wayne,

20      I will let you know. I will reach out to Stony

21      Brook and talk with them, okay, and see what we

22      need to do from the stateside to make sure that

23      happens.

24                 MR. SPENCE:           Thank you, sir.



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2                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MANKTELOW:                      Pat, is

3       there anything you'd want to add to this before I

4       step off, or are we all set?

5                  MS. KANE:          I think we're all set.

6                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MANKTELOW:                      All right.

7       Thank you so much. Thank you both for being on

8       today and giving us your time, much appreciated.

9                  MS. KANE:          Thank you.

10                 MR. SPENCE:           Thank you. Pat, it was good

11      seeing you.

12                 MS. KANE:          Good seeing you too, Wayne.

13                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you to

14      our panelists, we appreciate your testimony. And

15      now, we'll move on to panel number five out of

16      13.

17                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Panel number five is Ron

18      Busby, president and CEO of the U.S. Black

19      Chambers, Ken Pokalsky vice-president of the

20      Business Council of New York State and Melinda

21      Mack, executive director of the New York

22      Association of Training and Employment

23      Professionals. Welcome to our hearing.

24                 MR. RON BUSBY, PRESIDENT & CEO, U.S.



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2       BLACK CHAMBERS, INC.:              Well, thank you.

3                  SENATOR RAMOS:              And you may begin your

4       testimony.

5                  MR. BUSBY:           I don't know the roll call,

6       but I guess I'll go first.

7                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     It goes Ron,

8       Ken and Melinda, just in that order.

9                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Yes, sorry, yes.

10                 MR. BUSBY:           No problem. I will go.

11      Again, my name is Ron Busby and I am the

12      president of the United States Black Chamber of

13      Commerce, here in Washington D.C. and ally of our

14      co-chair, Mr. Sanders. And I appreciate you

15      having me here to speak this afternoon. We

16      represent approximately 332,000 black-owned

17      businesses and in this moment of time, we as an

18      organization see this as a conversation about

19      black concerns.

20                 If you really look at the pandemic, it

21      was the black community, especially in New York

22      that suffered the most. If you look at the number

23      of deaths from the black community, it doubled

24      that of the number of deaths of the white



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2       community. If you look at the number of

3       unemployed that were laid off or just outsourced,

4       it almost doubled the number of white people as

5       well.

6                    And so for us, the first thing that we

7       have to do is say this is not a diversity and

8       inclusion conversation. This conversation is

9       about black communities, black businesses and

10      black people. So you have to have a specific

11      issue that is going to address specific concerns.

12      And so for us, the first thing we want to do is

13      identify that these firms are particularly black-

14      owned. Right now, there is a lot of conversation

15      about black lives matter and about businesses

16      that are black-owned, about supporting the black

17      community through spending money with black

18      firms.

19                   But, yet, in the State of New York there

20      is really no way of certifying, validating if

21      these firms and businesses are exactly black-

22      owned. And so the first thing that we're asking

23      from the State of New York is to ensure that when

24      you're creating policy that the policy addresses



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2       the businesses and the communities that need it

3       the most. This cannot be a broad brush solution

4       to a specific community and nationality in

5       reference to the issues that we are facing in

6       today's market.

7                   You have seen that we lost 41 percent

8       nationally of black-owned businesses. That

9       represents 441,000 black firms that were closed

10      between the months of February and April. There

11      was a conversation prior to this, that if each

12      black firm in the state of New York could hire

13      one additional black person, there would be no

14      unemployment for black people in the state of New

15      York.

16                  Well, that has changed because we've

17      lost so many black firms in the state that even

18      if the firms that exist were able to hire two

19      employees, we would still not be able to address

20      the unemployment conversation in the state of New

21      York.

22                  Right now, in reference to employees, 14

23      percent of all black employees are in the grocery

24      store, convenience and drugstore, 26 percent of



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2       all your public transportation folk are black,

3       18.2 percent of all your folk that work in your

4       postal services, your warehouse and trucking

5       industries are black, 17.5 percent of the folk

6       that work in healthcare in the state of New York

7       are black.

8                  So from an employment conversation, we

9       also need to look at how do we address black

10      homeowners, because we know that if I'm

11      unemployed the likelihood of me being able to pay

12      my mortgage is going to be challenging. How do we

13      address renters in the State of New York? If I'm

14      unemployed, I can't pay my rent. So those are

15      some of the things that we are looking at, but it

16      starts with being able to validate from our

17      perspective which firms need the help, can get

18      the help and most importantly can identify

19      themselves as who they really are, and that comes

20      through a validation form. I will stop and open

21      it up to questions that you may have.

22                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thanks, Ron.

23      What we're going to do is we're going to receive

24      the other two members' testimony and then we'll



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2       open it up to a potpourri of questions I am sure.

3       Ken?

4                  MR. BUSBY:           Thank you. Thank you.

5                  MR. KEN POKALSKY, VICE PRESIDENT, THE

6       BUSINESS COUNCIL OF NEW YORK STATE, INC.:                         Well,

7       good afternoon everyone. On behalf of the State

8       Business Council, we greatly appreciate the

9       opportunity to talk with you today. I know

10      there's limited time available for all the

11      panelists, we are always available for any

12      questions and conversations after today's hearing

13      as well.

14                 I mean we certainly, we represent about

15      2,400 private sector employers across New York

16      State. We have about, and represent about a

17      million employed New Yorkers. We certainly agree

18      with the tone of today, that we're facing

19      unprecedented challenges and impacts.

20                 We also echo something that Commissioner

21      Reardon said earlier today on the interdependence

22      on employers and employees. We could not agree

23      more. As a general comment, one of the things I

24      would like to say is that I think we all need to



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2       recognize even say if Congress passed the House

3       version, which was a $3 trillion recovery bill,

4       there's simply not enough money available to

5       fully offset the adverse impacts of the COVID

6       pandemic.

7                   We really need economic activity and

8       growth, return to work, job growth all done

9       without losing the focus on health concerns. And

10      I think it's important to recognize that even if

11      New York State and I think we've done better than

12      most states successfully implements public health

13      and employee health mechanisms, full economic

14      recovery in New York State is not a given.

15                  And we know the experience after the

16      last recession. New York State's employment

17      growth had fallen in 2019 below national growth

18      trends and some parts of upstate New York had

19      just barely or not yet recovered jobs lost in the

20      last recession. And my point is that post

21      pandemic recovery is going to be affected by many

22      factors including the state's economic climate,

23      cost structure and regulatory structure. These

24      are factors that have to be kept in mind as well.



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2                  Importantly, we've seen some encouraging

3       job numbers in New York State, 100,000 jobs re-

4       added in May, by June, 300,000 from our April

5       low. So that does reflect the gradual reopening

6       of New York States businesses.

7                  To touch on a couple of the main points

8       of today's hearing on workplace safety, I think

9       from day one of this pandemic, our members had

10      agreed that our economic policies are going to be

11      driven by public health data broadly defined. And

12      the Business Council, myself included, my staff

13      has worked extensively with the Cuomo

14      Administration and our members on the New York

15      Forward reopening protocols, which focused on

16      protections for employees and customers alike,

17      and the various executive orders that went along

18      with that as well.

19                 What we've seen and what limited data

20      we've seen from the state so far, is that COVID

21      cases among essential workers outside the

22      healthcare sector have tended to be lower than

23      the general public caseload. What we've heard

24      from our members the basic protections required



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2       under OSHA and New York Forward protocols have

3       seemed to proven to be generally effective.

4                  The New York Forward protocols provide

5       detailed operational requirements sector

6       specific. They seem to be working. If there are

7       other specific public health or workplace

8       standards that members of the legislature would

9       like to discuss, we're certainly open to those

10      discussions.

11                 On unemployment insurance, a lot is said

12      about the challenges that the department went

13      through, so I will avoid that for now. But the

14      number that was talked about today is really eye-

15      opening. We've, of the $40 billion in UI payments

16      that have been out the door in New York State so

17      far, about 10 billion of that is from New York

18      State UI fund that's 100 percent employer tax

19      funded. And from what we can tell, New York State

20      has taken about a five to $6 billion advance from

21      the feds to pay benefits. That entirety of that

22      amount will be repaid by New York employers over

23      the next several years through increased state

24      and federal unemployment insurance debts. It's a



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2       big number that needs to be looked at.

3                  One of the things, talking about the

4       usefulness, the importance, the critical nature

5       of UI benefits to unemployed workers that might

6       be considered, we would point out that under

7       federal, state and New York City unemployment or

8       personal income tax laws, all unemployment

9       insurance benefits including the temporary

10      benefits under the CARES Act remain subject to

11      New York State, New York City unemployment

12      insurance tax that might be looked at.

13                 And then on the Payroll Protection

14      Program, I think we agree it got off to a rough

15      start. The initial statute was misaligned with

16      small business [unintelligible] [04:31:18]. We

17      think those were eventually addressed and looking

18      at the final report on the program, we do think

19      it has done generally what the program was

20      intended to do. About 80 percent of New York

21      State's small business firms have received loans

22      covering about 75 percent of small business

23      payroll.

24                 Just one more point for the legislature



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2       to consider, something that's being looked at at

3       the federal level, the IRS considers PPP loans to

4       small businesses that are forgiven to be taxable.

5       We believe that at least for non-incorporated

6       businesses, most small business in New York State

7       that's probably likely true under existing New

8       York State tax law, something that we're

9       exploring with the tax department and with our

10      tax attorneys. But it would be I think an

11      unwelcome surprise at the end of this process for

12      small businesses that are just barely hanging on

13      to the benefit of the PPP loans to receive a

14      significant unexpected tax bill next year.

15                 So that's touching on the three major

16      areas of the hearing today, like others, I will

17      be happy to take your questions and comments. I

18      appreciate the opportunity.

19                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thanks, Ken.

20      Melinda, welcome.

21                 MS. MELINDA MACK, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR,

22      NEW YORK ASSOCIATION OF TRAINING AND EMPLOYMENT

23      PROFESSIONALS:         Hi, good afternoon. I also want

24      to sort of extend my thanks for letting me come



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2       today and to speak to you all, but also to the

3       unions who represent some incredible workers

4       across the state. I mean it's hard not to be

5       deeply touched by some of the stories that

6       they've been describing.

7                  So I represent NYATEP, the state's

8       workforce development association. My members

9       serve about 1.2 million New Yorkers each year,

10      getting them educated, trained and employed into

11      good jobs. I wanted to sort of reiterate a couple

12      of the key data points that came out from the

13      commissioner's comments earlier.

14                 Again, I think we're all grappling with

15      these massive unemployment numbers. As of August

16      first, 3.4 million New Yorkers were unemployed

17      and another 1.3 million are receiving

18      unemployment assistance through pandemic UI. I

19      think one of the things to note is around 800,000

20      individuals were receiving UI at the peak, during

21      the last great recession. And so when we think

22      about the lift to get people back to work, it's

23      pretty massive and incredible.

24                 I think as you also know, because I come



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2       to you every year in February or March, talking

3       about this, the labor market has had structural

4       issues, structural problems in it for decades,

5       right. One of the largest issues that we've

6       talked about for a longtime is that the top ten

7       largest occupations, which make up about two

8       million jobs are dominated by low wage work and

9       the majority of the sectors have been impacted by

10      COVID-19. So we're talking about folks in

11      hospitality, tourism, retail sectors that tend to

12      pay below $32,000 a year.

13                 We also know that about 45 percent of

14      New Yorkers, based on the ALICE Report that's put

15      out by the United Way, are working poor. These

16      are folks who are working, doing the right things

17      and are still unable to afford their basic

18      monthly costs like food, childcare,

19      transportation, et cetera.

20                 And lastly, what we know, and again,

21      we've talked about this for decades is when

22      there's an economic downturn, the economy doesn't

23      improve for everybody the same way. In

24      particular, people who have a high school diploma



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2       or less did not recover in the last recession and

3       are very unlikely to see recovery during this

4       recession as well. In New York, that's 42 percent

5       of people, right. That's a lot of people who lack

6       above a high school education.

7                  So before COVID-19, what we heard, the

8       rallying cry, what got people excited, was the

9       concept of the future of work, what the impact

10      would be on jobs and the skills gap. But as was

11      shared earlier by my fellow panelist, we know

12      that the labor market as it has been designed,

13      has not benefited everyone equally. But we also

14      know that the vast majority of New Yorkers who

15      have lost their job are people of color, people

16      in low wage work and individuals who are really

17      having trouble accessing better skills to get a

18      better job.

19                 So I think we have a shot here to do the

20      right thing, right. This is a massive shift in

21      the labor market and we have a chance to make

22      investments where we need to, to really have a

23      meaningful and equitable recovery. So as part of

24      our Investment Skills New York Coalition, our



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2       group that's been together as an alliance, that

3       includes the business community, education,

4       workforce, community college leaders, we're

5       actually in the process of putting together a set

6       of recommendations that will come to you in

7       September.

8                  But I want to caution you that you're

9       going to get lured by the big, shiny solutions.

10      Big ideas, the big ways to get people back to

11      work. There is a workforce system in New York. It

12      works well, it's effective, it gets people into

13      employment but I should note that it's

14      desperately underfunded, has 50 percent less

15      money than it had 10 years ago and year-over-

16      year, we continue to see cuts.

17                 The CARES Act at the federal level

18      provides about a third of what we would need and

19      actually provides about the same amount for the

20      workforce system as we would see under ARA, so

21      the American Recovery Act.

22                 So I say that because as we think about

23      the recommendations, know that these are tried

24      and tested solutions that we just need resources



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2       for. But some also are policy changes that we can

3       make that would have a huge impact.

4                  A couple of the big ideas that I want to

5       share that are sort of circling right now. It's

6       the way that we utilize our economic development

7       power, how we align our incentives for businesses

8       to create quality employment. We also have

9       metrics that are coming out around how we rethink

10      about spending our federal Workforce Innovation

11      and Opportunity Act dollars as well as TANF, our

12      welfare resources, to really make sure that

13      individuals have access to in-depth services for

14      a longer period of time, but also are able to

15      keep their benefits and actually grow their

16      benefits so they can stay employed.

17                 We also have some very specific

18      recommendations that will be coming out around

19      how we actually connect individuals around

20      education and training in the pipeline from K-12

21      through college.

22                 And then finally, this concept of the

23      digital divide. I think what we're finding as we

24      go across the State, people don't have access to



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2       computers they don't have access to software.

3       It's really challenging people's ability to work

4       remotely, to learn remotely and also really

5       increasing the equity gap that we're seeing in

6       our state.

7                  And then finally, as I shared before,

8       the state's workforce system is often seen as an

9       afterthought. This is the system that is meant to

10      educate, train and get people jobs that cannot

11      typically go through the traditional systems. If

12      we don't make investments here, I'm not sure who

13      is going to help people who need skills to get

14      back to work. And really as sort of Ken and Ron

15      have shared, businesses are going to be desperate

16      for workers and we need to sort of do all we can

17      to make sure folks have the supports they need to

18      get employment.

19                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you. I

20      think if you don't mind, the Assembly will start

21      off.

22                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Your turn.

23                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you.

24      Linda, thank you for your comments. It's



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2       interesting, one of the things that these

3       pandemics is that you realize that organizations

4       that maybe not have been funded as much as they

5       should have in the past actually have proven to

6       be even more valuable because of the personal

7       approach, the hands-on approach.

8                  I can tell you in the small business

9       community, the small business development center,

10      which you're aware of, has been a hero to many

11      small businesses who were really lost, and that's

12      not just here in the capital region but

13      throughout the State. I have some questions about

14      PPP and the impact. Ken, I think I'll start with

15      you, obviously. I imagine the majority -- Ken,

16      you may want to, there you go, you unmuted

17      yourself. I imagine when you look at the breadth

18      of the members of the Business Council, what

19      percentage actually availed themselves of the

20      program?

21                 Mr. POKALSKY:             I don't know because we

22      haven't polled them on that. About 80 percent of

23      our members have 100 or fewer employees. If you

24      look at -- the SBA just put out I believe what



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2       they considered a final report on the PPP program

3       phase 1 and 2. And the vast majority of -- they

4       measured their loans by size of loan, not size of

5       employers. The vast majority of the loans issued,

6       I think were under $150,000, aimed -- and so

7       that's the universe of employers that are

8       relatively small.

9                   So the evidence we see of the numbers

10      served, the smaller businesses did take advantage

11      of the PPP. I think that those that didn't fell

12      into two categories, particularly those who only

13      looked at the program when it first came out and

14      saw that just that the numbers just didn't work

15      out, that they, the minimum -- or the minimum

16      amount that had to be paid for wages rather than

17      other business expenses just didn't match. The

18      challenge of repaying the loan and initially was

19      a two-year turnaround. If you failed to meet the

20      headcount and payroll mandates, it just didn't

21      work.

22                  So I think there's a problem on almost

23      every new initiative among the smaller

24      businesses. A lot just didn't know. It didn't



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2       have the wherewithal to access the programs.

3                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Do you think,

4       just talking to members, that a majority use them

5       for what many of us intended them to do, which

6       was the keep our employees working? Were they

7       able to maintain their salaries and keep the

8       majority of the workers? I know, in the end it's

9       part of the reporting system, but that's going to

10      probably take months, if not years, to get the

11      results. I think we're curious to see was it

12      successful in its intended goal.

13                 MR. POKALSKY:             And I don't think anyone

14      knows for certain. I think we just know what the

15      anecdotal evidence is. I think that the majority

16      did use it to maintain payrolls, not necessarily

17      employment, because some of the -- particularly

18      in the hospitality world, people were taking

19      these loans, in New York State under New York

20      State's [unintelligible] [04:41:03]. I know in

21      talking to banks who are now going to be required

22      to service and oversee the loans, there are some

23      infamous cases where individuals certainly used

24      the monies for unintended purposes and those



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2       monies are being recovered.

3                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Let me -- let

4       me jump on because my time is getting tight. Ron,

5       I want to ask you, because I know the U.S. Black

6       Chamber was a strong voice. The first round, a

7       lot of minority businesses were completely,

8       because they do community banking, their banks

9       weren't -- they went back and revisited the

10      program, and I know I talk to my friend Tony

11      Gatti quite regularly from the Upstate Chamber.

12      I'm hoping that we've gotten a greater uptick in

13      what black businesses are left were able to

14      participate.

15                 MR. BUSBY:           So the National Bankers

16      Association, which represents the 19 black-owned

17      banks gave a report. Nationally, there were less

18      than 10,000 black firms that participated in the

19      payroll protection plan from the majority banks.

20      So those firms that did get funds, they got it

21      from CDFIs and local black banks. But I want to

22      say that what we're not interested in is another

23      program called payroll protection plan. Just from

24      the marketing and the title of the program, it



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2       did not do black firms well. We should have been

3       talking about the EIDL loan program, but again it

4       wasn't marketed well. When you talk to a small

5       firm and say a loan program, they're not

6       interested. When you talk to small firm talking

7       about payroll protection, they can't participate.

8       And so from the outskirts, we thought that it was

9       marketed extremely poorly, and for that fact

10      black firms did not participate, did not get a

11      chance to get the funding, and as we go forward,

12      I think you're going to face some of the same

13      types of challenges for black firms in the

14      future.

15                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you.

16      And as we go forward, we're going to go forward

17      with the Senate.

18                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you, John. And

19      thank you to the panelists. I'm actually going to

20      allow our banking committee chair, Senator James

21      Sanders, to ask his questions. He has five

22      minutes.

23                 MR. BUSBY:           Mr. Sanders, you might want

24      to come back and sit down, sir.



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2                   SENATOR SANDERS:              I had to, but you have

3       to unmute and that's, you know, you don't want to

4       know our technical questions. What a great panel

5       that we have put together. I would love to have

6       had time to question each and every one. I may, I

7       will try to, but I'll go straight to Mr. Busby.

8       Mr. Busby, you spoke of policies that impact on

9       blacks and other communities. But let's take it

10      to New York State. Let's keep this where we can

11      do something about it. It's not enough to talk

12      about the world. We can think globally, but we

13      need to act locally.

14                  New York State has a budget of around

15      $179 billion of which zero goes into black,

16      Latinx, Asian or women-owned banks. What would 10

17      percent of that money do if it went through black

18      banks or any of these other banks that I just

19      spoke of?

20                  MR. BUSBY:          It would challenge them.

21      Many of them would not be able to take the

22      funding. Part of what we have asked, we have

23      policies that we're asking for from federal

24      governments. Ee're asking similar requests from



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2       our corporate partners, and part of what we ask

3       them, hey if you're $100 million or about in

4       assets, we want you to take 15 percent of those

5       dollars and place them in the blank banks. We

6       thought that was a great idea, but the challenge

7       is the black banks don't have the liquidity. When

8       we were talking about banking black three, four

9       years ago when we created the Black Bank

10      Initiative, we had folk from New Jersey, Delaware

11      driving to New York to make a deposit. Those

12      banks were suffering. Banks don't make money when

13      you make a deposit. Banks make money when you

14      make a loan, because you have to pay interest

15      back. What we have to do is be creative for

16      black-owned banks so that there's an overarching

17      initiative and an overarching organization that

18      can fund them so that they don't have to have the

19      liquidity to continue to remain and they can get

20      the funding when they need it. You have someone

21      between them and the state to be able to hold the

22      funds.

23                   Many corporations are saying, great, I

24      don't mind taking my money out of J.P. Morgan, B



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2       of A, Wells Fargo, and depositing it, but we have

3       to make it available to the black bank where they

4       can still take a bite at the option. We know that

5       blank banks make 70 percent of their loans to

6       black homeowners and black-owned businesses, so

7       it's a great idea. We've just to have to figure

8       out how to get them the liquidity, so that

9       they're not sitting on those dollars and still

10      being penalized for having more revenue that they

11      can put out.

12                 It's got to be a programmatic approach

13      but I'm sure that Tim Sanders and the other

14      black-owned bankers would love to have that

15      conversation. I know we're discussing it at

16      [unintelligible] [04:46:13].

17                 SENATOR SANDERS:               I believe I may have

18      found the way. the intermediary that your

19      speaking of, sir. It is called a public bank of

20      which I'm working on. If you are not familiar,

21      then I encourage you to become familiar. Mr.

22      Busby I've got around two minutes left, what

23      policy would you want changed in New York that

24      would help black businesses?



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2                  MR. BUSBY:           Great question. For us, we

3       would love to see either someone placed in each

4       mayor's office, either an employee or

5       organization like a chamber of commerce, that was

6       there long-term to ensure that black businesses

7       had a look and an opportunity at the deal flow.

8       If all you're doing is just opening up your

9       contracts and saying, everyone come in and

10      compete, you're not going to have the biggest

11      impact for the communities and the businesses

12      that need it the most.

13                 So, say we have $100 million in

14      contracts that are going to come out. I'm going

15      to place either a chamber of commerce from the

16      black community or an individual that we're

17      hiring that is there to ensure that black

18      businesses have an opportunity. Usually you'll

19      say, we'd love to do business with black folk but

20      we can't find them. No problem. Have someone

21      there that their responsibility is to go find

22      them. And if that means putting two firms, three

23      firms, four firms together to be able to have the

24      size and the scale that you need to be able to



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2       award them that contract, then so be it. We have

3       the flexibility of being able to create that type

4       of partnership that can then fulfill the needs of

5       the contracts there that are being released

6       through the state.

7                  SENATOR SANDERS:               The same question to

8       you, Ms. Mack, what, and if I have time to the

9       other gentleman. What policy do you believe would

10      be useful to help blacks and others, especially

11      blacks perhaps, but and others, in this period?

12                 MS. MACK:          Of course, so I think for me

13      the biggest is around addressing the benefits

14      cliff, right. So if a low wage worker wants to be

15      able to work, they often are having to really

16      figure out some of the assets that they need to

17      be able to be employed. So childcare,

18      transportation, et cetera. And so if there are

19      ways that we can standardized what that benefits

20      cliff looks like statewide, but also make

21      investments in things like employer resource

22      networks or ways that individuals can access

23      assets or not be penalized for working, I think

24      that's sort of what we want to start to see



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2       included. You can't participate in a full-time

3       education and training program if you're on

4       public assistance and work. You end up being

5       penalized again for trying to do the right thing.

6       So I think those are the types of things and

7       flexibilities we're hoping we see during this

8       period.

9                  MR. BUSBY:           Senator Sanders, there is

10      one other idea. That is prompt pay. If you give a

11      contract to a small business owner and he's got

12      to go get a loan to be able to cover your float

13      to make sure that he can make payroll, that puts

14      him at a disadvantage because we know that

15      minority and black-owned firms pay twice the

16      interest rate for a loan, so now they've got to

17      borrow money just to cover your overhead. Pay

18      them on time. Under the Obama Administration,

19      there was a prompt pay program that said they

20      paid within 15 days. A state can implement that

21      without much headache. If I start a job January

22      1st, I invoice you January 15th, I should be able

23      to get paid January 31st to make sure that I am

24      growing my business through the cash flow that I



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2       have and I'm not depending upon lines of credit

3       just to make sure that I can make payroll.

4                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Ron, thank

5       you and speaking of prompt, we're going to move

6       on to our next member, but I love the idea, we

7       love the idea. Harry Bronson.

8                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRONSON:                     Hello, folks.

9       Thank you for being here, and I kind of want to

10      follow up on the discussion that was just being

11      had. I'm a strong believer in antiracism and

12      follow Dr. Ibram Kendi's guidance on that for

13      policymakers. And that is every decision we make

14      should either move us closer to equity or remove

15      barriers to equity.

16                 With that in mind, if we are going to

17      help communities of color impacted by COVID and

18      impacted by previous deals that were not

19      fulfilled, like 40 acres and a mule that were

20      never delivered, we're going to do that through

21      entrepreneurial approaches, we're going to do

22      that by making sure that folks get education and

23      we're going to do that by making sure that folks

24      get the equity that they need. So my question is



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2       to Mr. Busby first and then to Melinda. Ron, to

3       you, in connection with business ownership and

4       being an employer, so you can hire folks, what,

5       if you could come up with three things that we

6       can do today to help black businesses, what would

7       they be? And me Melinda, the same question to you

8       but on the employee side, on the workforce

9       development side, three things that we could do

10      today to help make sure people of color are

11      getting a living wage with benefits. Go ahead,

12      Ron.

13                 MR. BUSBY:           Well, the first thing is

14      you've got to specify that they are a black-owned

15      business. You have got to be able to codify that

16      yes, this is a black firm. It's not a minority

17      firm. It's not a small firm. It's not a woman

18      firm, this is a black firm. If you want to

19      address the concerns of black people, make sure

20      they're black people.

21                 Secondly, as I discussed, the prompt

22      payment I think would definitely improve the

23      conditions for black small businesses. That way

24      they wouldn't have to worry about paying the high



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2       interest rates.

3                  And then third, when you really are

4       starting to look at contracts from the state and

5       local governments, you've got to make sure that

6       you are meeting the numbers. Set a goal. For us,

7       we're saying 15 percent of all new contracts need

8       to be awarded to the communities, local and

9       minority, black communities, brown communities so

10      that that they have an opportunity to not just be

11      involved in the community, but to have

12      sustainability. Those are the taxpayers, those

13      are the folk that hire from within the

14      communities. If you're really looking at

15      unemployment, black firms hire black people.

16      Hispanic firms hire Hispanic people. So you have

17      to make sure that you're investigating in the

18      firms that have the employees from your local

19      communities.

20                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRONSON:                     Thank you,

21      Ron. And from the employee side, Melinda, what

22      training program, what development programs can

23      we have for people of color?

24                 MS. MACK:          Sure. I think one thing I



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2       would sort of mention and to what Ron was just

3       sharing is we also know small businesses often

4       don't have the resources to upscale or hire

5       employees. And so I think we're also looking at

6       ways to increase wage subsidy and transitional

7       jobs to support small businesses to be able to

8       hire people from their local communities.

9                  But my top three, I can probably give

10      you a top 20, right, because so much needs to be

11      done. The biggest really is around eliminating

12      all the issues related to transfer and credit

13      accumulation at SUNY and CUNY, right. When we

14      think about our ability to get people to and

15      through community college, we need to make sure

16      that when they go to BOCES, the credits they get

17      from BOCES transfer into credentials into

18      community college. It's real education. It's

19      important education. It's skill-based education.

20      It needs to actually translate, and not end up

21      costing people additional cash.

22                 I think the second area is we have to

23      address the digital divide. The fact that we

24      cannot get devices, programming and broadband to



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2       every corner of New York State, including

3       communities that you all live in, there are

4       people in your communities who do not have access

5       to broadband, it's going to impact children's

6       ability to get public education this fall. I have

7       three kids at home in the city of Albany school

8       district. We're struggling through it right now,

9       right. It's going to impact workers' ability to

10      work remotely, and if you cannot work remotely,

11      you don't have a job in some instances. Aand it's

12      going to impact people's ability to get education

13      and training to get a good job.

14                 The last thing is we've got to recognize

15      a lot of people who are unemployed are not going

16      back to work. There's not going to be a job for

17      them to go to. And we need to be utilizing this

18      time to address the skills gap so people are able

19      to go back to work in better jobs. We keep

20      talking about folks' wages. We have not equitably

21      invested in the education and job training

22      programs. Many of the labor union based programs

23      do not have enough pipeline to be able to get

24      people into those training programs, the BOCES



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2       programs, the community-based organizations in

3       your communities that do education and job

4       training for really meaningful jobs like

5       carpenters, plumbers, folks who fix your air

6       conditioner. We need to be investing in those

7       types of training pathways as well. So if we did

8       those three things, it would be revolutionary for

9       our state.

10                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you.

11                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER BRONSON:                     Great, thanks.

12      I know Co-Chair McDonald is going to cut me off

13      but I just want to give a shout out in connection

14      with the multi-craft apprenticeship preparation

15      program here in Rochester. That is a direct

16      pipeline of young folks of color getting into the

17      construction trades, which we do a much, much

18      better job of doing. Thank you very much. Thanks

19      for indulging me, co-chair.

20                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     You got it,

21      Harry. And let's bring on ranker Brian Manktelow

22      and that will probably close out our panel.

23                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MANKTELOW:                      Hey, good

24      afternoon. Sorry about that. I was on the phone



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2       and I apologize. Can you hear me now?

3                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     You're good

4       to go, Brian.

5                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MANKTELOW:                      Good. Ron,

6       thank you for being on today. Thank you everyone

7       for being on today. Just a quick question. I live

8       that a rural area just east of Assemblyman

9       Bronson's area between Rochester and Syracuse,

10      very rural, a lot of the agriculture. Would black

11      members, black families, I don't see a lot of

12      black members being -- and black families being

13      involved in agriculture or any of the smaller

14      businesses. What can we do to help promote that?

15      What can we do to get them engaged? How can we

16      engage them to make that happen? I mean, we're

17      here to help one another and we need to help

18      those individuals as well. What can I do from the

19      state side? What can I do from the local side to

20      help make that happen?

21                 MR. BUSBY:           When we first started U.S.

22      Black Chamber, our first advocacy was around the

23      black farmers in Beauford, South Carolina.

24                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MANKTELOW:                      I think I



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2       [unintelligible] [04:56:46].

3                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MANKTELOW:                      And as much

4       as we were very involved, we realized that we

5       lost a ton of our black farmers, not because they

6       weren't good farmers, not because they weren't

7       farming the right products. It was because they

8       checked the wrong box. And that box eliminated

9       them for the opportunity just to get the $60,000

10      that we had been fighting for for years. And so

11      we had to go back to the USDA to get $25,000 to

12      start making small business grants. You've got to

13      take it away from a loan conversation to a grant

14      conversation and make it very specific to new

15      industries and new opportunities.

16                 We're talking now about existing

17      businesses. Understand we lost almost a half a

18      million black firms, so we've got to start

19      talking about what is the next generation of

20      opportunities and firms. There is going to be a

21      great deal of mergers and acquisitions, so we've

22      got to start talking about what is the future and

23      where should we be directing our black businesses

24      to get involved. And so there's not a lot of



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2       conversations going on about labor industries.

3       Everybody is talking about high tech and the gig

4       economy. We've got to go back to what got us the

5       wealth that we had in the previous generations,

6       and a lot of that deals with farmers, farmland,

7       and agriculture.

8                  You'll see a lot of small farms growing

9       up in rural communities, but I have always stated

10      that we need more black farmers to ensure that we

11      have good food, good industries for us to work

12      on, and ultimately that turns into land. And for

13      landownership in our community, that is a

14      priority that we have lost over the last several

15      decades. And so I would love to partner with you

16      on that to talk about the importance of farming,

17      particularly for black farmers.

18                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MANKTELOW:                      All right,

19      well, that would be great, Ron, because I'd love

20      to do that. I will look up your information

21      online and I will shoot you e-mail from my

22      district office and maybe we can chat about that

23      because the opportunities are there. There's jobs

24      in upstate New York. If I was a young person, I'd



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2       be looking at plumbing, I'd be looking at

3       electricians, masons. Nobody wants to do it

4       anymore, and these are going to be the backbone

5       of who we are. You can't have anything else

6       without these individuals, and if we can help

7       grow that and get these individuals involved in

8       my area, right between Syracuse and Rochester,

9       that would be awesome. So Ron, I will shoot you

10      an e-mail and maybe we can chat about that, that

11      would be great.

12                  MR. BUSBY:          Look forward to it. Thank

13      you.

14                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MANKTELOW:                     Thank you,

15      everyone.

16                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                    Okay. I think

17      we still have a, we have a second round for

18      Senator Sanders, it appears, right there, Senator

19      Ramos? Oh, now he's going to go take a walk.

20                  SENATOR SANDERS: I'm trying to unmute.

21                  SENATOR RAMOS:             Where do you go? Oh, he

22      has to get up to unmute himself.

23                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                    Oh, okay.

24                  SENATOR SANDERS:              It's old-fashioned, my



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2       friends. It's old school. It's just to want me to

3       exercise. I was really thrilled by the speakers

4       and to the questions coming at the panelists. The

5       ranker's questions and points were really strong

6       and interesting points. I, of course, want to

7       alert the ranker that there is a history of theft

8       and plunder of why there are so few black

9       farmers, sir, and it would be useful to -- I'd be

10      delighted to share any of the information on that

11      with you. But I also would be delighted to work

12      with the ranker and jump into the conversation

13      with Ron over this because I agree, I had an

14      urban farm in New York City, so, you know, I'm no

15      stranger. But at the same time it is a lot,

16      there's a lot that can be done there.

17                 Here's how I would do it, Mr. Ranker, if

18      I were you, the co-op, the co-op extension

19      movement. Here, we have Cornell and other co-op

20      extension movements. They have a mandate to aid

21      new farmers, but by law we can actually give them

22      an extra mandate to find black farmers and

23      farmers of color and to aid those folks into

24      getting into farming and things of that nature,



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2       so there are things that we can do at a

3       legislative level. I'm interested in being in

4       that conversation, also.

5                  If you are going to take it further,

6       then, you know, you might draw me back to the

7       party of Lincoln. You never know! You never know.

8       We'll wait until after this election.

9                  SENATOR RAMOS:              That's a hard no. It

10      didn't work so well for a few of our colleagues a

11      few years ago, if you recall.

12                 SENATOR SANDERS:               Okay. We'll wait until

13      after this election, and you never know. If it's

14      the party of Lincoln, heck, I'd have been there

15      already. All right, before I get into more

16      trouble, to our chairs I really thank you for the

17      opportunity for the second round.

18                 MR. BUSBY:           Mr. Ranker, I will say that

19      there is a lot of interest in marijuana farming.

20                 SENATOR SANDERS:               Oh, my.

21                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     All right,

22      that's its own hearing. [Laughter] Let's move on

23      to panel number six, and to our panelists on

24      number five, thank you very much. Enjoy the rest



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2       of your day.

3                    MS. MACK:          Thank you.

4                    MR. BUSBY:           Thank you for having us.

5                    MS. MACK:          good to see you all.

6                    ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     We're on

7       panel number six. I'll announce them, I think,

8       because I lost track of who is doing what. United

9       Food and Commercial Workers Union, Robert Newell,

10      the president. He'll be first. Then the New York

11      State Laborers' Union from Amanda Jensen. Then we

12      will have Jared Trujillo from the Association of

13      Legal Aid Attorneys. And from 1199 SEIU, United

14      Healthcare Workers East, Carlos Villalba. So once

15      we have everybody there, I see Amanda. There's

16      Rob Newell.

17                   MR. ROBERT W. NEWELL, JR., PRESIDENT,

18      UNITED FOOD AND COMMERCIAL WORKERS UNION LOCAL

19      1500:     Sorry about that.

20                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Don't be

21      sorry. There's Carlos. Rob, you're going to be

22      first.

23                   MR. NEWELL:           Okay.

24                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Jared? We're



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2       good to go. Rob, you pulled a Sanders on me, you

3       went running away.

4                  MR. NEWELL:           Sorry about that. Sorry

5       about that. Hi. Good morning.

6                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     You have five

7       minutes. Thank you.

8                  Mr. NEWELL:           Good morning and thank you.

9       Good morning, Senator Ramos, and thank you to the

10      rest of the chairs, and all the members of the

11      New York legislature who in attendance. My name

12      is Rob Newell and I currently have privilege of

13      being the president of the UFCW Local 1500.

14      Currently, we represent over 17,000 grocery and

15      pharmacy workers throughout the state.

16                 And unlike many other industries in New

17      York, 95 percent of our members never had to

18      worry about being furloughed or laid off because

19      of the pandemic. Instead our members were

20      immediately forced into the most difficult

21      working conditions our industry has seen in

22      generations. There was overcrowding, intense

23      hoarding, substandard workplace safety

24      precautions, forced overtime, supply chain



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2       failures became the norm for our members.

3                  Conditions like this were never

4       discussed during the orientation. That much I can

5       guarantee you. Unfortunately, the grocery

6       industry was grossly unprepared for the impact

7       the pandemic dropped on it, and originally many

8       employers fought our members on the idea of

9       wearing masks because they were concerned about

10      the way it looked to the public. Additionally,

11      the CDC guidance said it really wouldn't help.

12                 Thankfully we all know better now. Our

13      members were exposed to thousands of impatient

14      and frantic customers per shift, and hundreds of

15      them got sick in the first week or two. Is this

16      how we're supposed to treat our essential

17      workers? Most of them felt more deposable than

18      essential.

19                 Working together with elected officials

20      and some of our union employers, we were able to

21      find ways to make our workplaces safer. Elected

22      officials helped us find PPE and sanitizer at a

23      time when many of our employers didn't even know

24      where to start looking for it. Our staff spent



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2       weeks flooding the stores with what we got and

3       did their best to keep our members calm. Working

4       with our sister UFCW and RWDSU unions, we were

5       able to negotiate hazard pay. We also managed to

6       convince our employers to put up Plexiglas

7       barriers, convince them to put signs and stickers

8       on the floors and walls to remind customers to

9       not only shop safely but continually socially

10      distance. We encouraged them to buy masks and

11      shields in bulk to further protect our members.

12                 Every little bit helped but they were by

13      no means safe. I wish I had the time to tell you

14      about the employers that fought doing any of this

15      but sit back now and take credit for it all. I

16      also wish I could give you list of employers that

17      never did any or most of it. Profits over people

18      even during a pandemic when their volumes up more

19      than 35 percent. Thankfully, the governor took an

20      aggressive posture and started to issue mandates

21      and protocols to further protect the citizens of

22      New York and our essential workers.

23                 Our members appreciated the mandatory

24      mask and crowd control mandates the most. These



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2       are the real keys to ensuring their safety on the

3       job. Unfortunately, mandates can be enforced

4       loosely or just ignored altogether.

5                  I'm sure everyone has seen the recent

6       videos that are popping up all over the country

7       where maskless supermarket customers are

8       challenging and even threatening workers with

9       violence for simply asking them to comply with

10      the mask mandate. Although there may be only a

11      few video examples out there, I can assure you

12      this happens multiple times a day, every day

13      right here in New York.

14                 Many supermarket employers have once

15      again chosen profits over people by choosing to

16      grant their customers access and serve them

17      quickly and quietly rather than refuse them entry

18      at their mostly unmonitored front doors. Anyone

19      can and does walk through the door of a

20      supermarket. What happens next can end in tragedy

21      if this continues to be left unaddressed.

22                 There is no question that it's easier

23      and safer for a manager or a security guard to

24      refuse entry to a customer without a mask than to



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2       try to eject them once they're inside the store.

3       Unfortunately, our members are now stuck in a

4       scenario where there are great mandates without

5       great enforcement. Restricting the number of

6       customers in a store at one time and only serving

7       customers with face coverings is the only way to

8       guarantee our essential members and their

9       families are save. After all they've done, aren't

10      they at least entitled to that much?

11                 Retail companies that didn't financially

12      benefit anywhere near as much as the supermarket

13      and with much lower customer counts, and quite

14      frankly, a lot more to lose have done and

15      continue to do more at their front door than our

16      employers. For our members' sake, this issue

17      needs to change and fast. Any customer that

18      doesn't want to or medically cannot comply with

19      the state mandate to wear a mask has other safe

20      options. They can order their food online and

21      pick it up or have it delivered to their home.

22      Our members don't have that choice. They can't

23      work virtually. They have no other option and

24      they deserve a safe workplace.



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2                    Please help us protect the very same

3       workers that kept their communities fed. Please

4       help them get their hazard pay reinstated. Please

5       help us by enforcing the already excellent

6       mandates issued by our elected officials. This is

7       by no means an allegation that every supermarket

8       operator is the same. As a matter of fact, some

9       have protected their employees quite well.

10      Unfortunately, that number is significantly

11      dwarfed by the number that have not. We cannot

12      stop trying until all retail workers can both go

13      to work and go home safely. Thank you.

14                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thanks, rob.

15      Amanda. We'll do questions after all the

16      panelists have spoken.

17                   MS. AMANDA JENSEN, POLICY AND

18      LEGISLATIVE COORDINATOR, NEW YORK STATE LABORERS'

19      UNION:     Hi, good afternoon. Thank you, committee

20      chairs, members and staff for your time and the

21      invitation to speak on this important topic. My

22      name is Amanda Jensen and I'm the legislative and

23      policy coordinator for New York State LECET, the

24      Laborers' Employers Cooperation and Education



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2       Trust. I'm testifying today on behalf of our over

3       40,000 unionized laborers, 24 local units unions

4       and 1,500 affiliated contractors. New York State

5       LECET aggressively advocates for wage and safety

6       standards for our members, raising the floor for

7       both union and non-union construction workers.

8                  The COVID-19 global pandemic presented

9       unique challenges to our membership, impacting

10      their health and safety, as well as our financial

11      security. Our members were called to serve as

12      essential workers when the majority of New

13      Yorkers worked safely from home. Thousands of

14      laborers across the state put their lives on the

15      line to continue the critical work of building

16      New York. Although we may never know did the

17      total number of members sickened by COVID-19, or

18      the total number of those who contracted the

19      virus on the job, their contribution to the state

20      is to be lauded and never forgotten.

21                 The New York State Laborers worked in

22      coordination with the building trades and

23      affiliated employers in their development of

24      protocols to ensure the safest possible



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2       environment for our members. These protocols

3       include measures to reduce worker density on job

4       sites, the placement of signage promoting social

5       distancing guidelines, face covering

6       requirements, sanitizing stations located on all

7       job sites, and daily health screenings, including

8       temperature checks. These protocols are effective

9       in protecting the health and safety of our

10      membership and stopping the spread of COVID-19.

11                 In addition to the heightened health and

12      safety protocols, New York State Laborers

13      launched a comprehensive education campaign to

14      inform members on how to access unemployment,

15      paid family leave and other state benefits.

16      Detailed instructions were listed in the COVID-19

17      section of our website, and local unions were

18      diligent in providing their members with the

19      needed answers. While COVID-19 brought the state

20      to a sudden and startling halt, our members

21      continue to work at great risk to themselves and

22      their loved ones.

23                 Although a large number of construction

24      projects across the state shut down, projects



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2       deemed essential were permitted to continue

3       without interruption. Our members helped New York

4       stay in motion and their sacrifice should not be

5       forgotten.

6                  In the absence of a federal bailout,

7       critical infrastructure projects including MTA

8       projects and projects funded through localities

9       should not be threatened. Our members are the

10      economic drivers of the state and only stand to

11      benefit from the creation of good jobs through

12      continued investment in infrastructure. Economic

13      resurgence cannot be achieved through austerity

14      budgets.

15                 Members of the Laborers showed up for

16      New York just as they do in every crisis facing

17      our state. Whether by putting their life on the

18      line to build critical infrastructure projects,

19      including working 12-hour shifts to expand

20      hospital and morgue capacity, volunteering in

21      their communities through food donations and

22      other means, or by adhering to the guidelines of

23      New York Pause if their job sites were deemed

24      nonessential. The Laborers put New York first.



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2       Our state can repay their sacrifice by continuing

3       to demand the safest health and safety guidelines

4       for job sites and to remain committed to the

5       creation of great jobs. On behalf of the labors,

6       I thank you again for your attention to this

7       critical issue.

8                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thanks,

9       Amamda. Jared?

10                 MR. JARED TRUJILLO, PRESIDENT,

11      ASSOCIATION FOR LEGAL AID ATTORNEYS, UAW 2325:

12      Good afternoon everyone. Thank you so much for

13      inviting us to speak today. My name is Jared

14      Trujillo. I am the president of UAW Local 2325,

15      the Association of Legal Aid Attorneys. We're a

16      union of about 2,000 social workers, lawyers,

17      paralegals and other legal workers in New York

18      City, Nassau County and Orange County.

19                 Our clients really -- our members, sorry

20      -- really represent low-income New Yorkers on the

21      worst days of their lives. We see people when

22      they're in danger of being evicted. We meet

23      people when they're stuck in a cage and they're

24      afraid of having their liberty taken from them.



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2       We meet children when they are at risk of being

3       put into the foster care system. And despite

4       these really difficult situations, our members

5       are incredibly dedicated to providing the highest

6       quality legal representation to every single

7       person that we represent.

8                  During COVID, our resolve was tested,

9       and we truly stuck to the test. Our work only

10      amplified. Since mid-March, we did about 60,000

11      cases in criminal court. We helped disappeared

12      New Yorkers that were between different police

13      precincts, find their families and find their

14      freedom. We helped children really be able to

15      navigate the tangled labyrinth of the child

16      welfare system. And we did everything that our

17      communities needed from us.

18                 However, during that time, the courts

19      really showed that our clients' lives did not

20      matter, really showed that black and brown low-

21      income New Yorkers lives did not matter in

22      several ways. The biggest way was their glacial

23      move to move to virtual appearances. Because the

24      courts were so slow to move to virtual



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2       appearances, we had over three dozen members

3       contract COVID. Three judges died. Court officers

4       died and so many of our clients contracted COVID.

5       And that not only impacted our clients, but that

6       impacted every single New Yorker that they came

7       into contact with within their communities.

8                  Recently, after the court did move to

9       virtual appearances, they told us that they would

10      work with us, and they'd work the with legal

11      service providers that our members worked for to

12      make sure that returns to court were safe.

13      However, after certain comments were made to the

14      media about the courts being closed, which they

15      never were, leading to more gun violence, they

16      abandoned that plan, and they immediately moved

17      back to in-person appearances.

18                 That is a tremendous issue for our

19      membership. That's a tremendous issue for our

20      clients. And that is a tremendous issue for every

21      single person that our clients end up interacting

22      with in the community. All we wanted from courts

23      was to be able to go in and inspect the

24      buildings, go to make sure that they had proper



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2       filtration systems, make sure that they had the

3       proper grade of MERV systems, make sure that they

4       had Plexiglas for more than just the judges,

5       which is what they do, but also for our clients

6       and also for our members. We wanted to make sure

7       that the actual environment that we were expected

8       to work in, where our members have died and

9       gotten COVID, we just wanted to make sure that

10      was safe, and that's not what we were given.

11                 In addition to the issue with courts,

12      because the bar exam was canceled, so many of our

13      members are really in this limbo phase where

14      they're law graduates but they're not full

15      attorneys, so they don't have the full privileges

16      that full attorneys have. And more importantly

17      because there's a certain provision, sorry, I'm

18      noticing my time is ending, because there's a

19      certain provision for public interest attorneys

20      that lets them practice for a certain amount of

21      time so they can take the bar exam, because that

22      wasn't extended, a lot of our members are really

23      in danger of potentially even losing their jobs.

24                 So, we do have a couple of asks of you



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2        today. We realize that the problem, one of our

3        issues is that we're in a kind of precarious

4        position because it's really difficult for us to

5        pressure OCA in a lot of ways, to actually make

6        sure that the facilities that we're supposed to

7        practice in are safe. So the biggest thing that

8        we can really ask of you is to support us

9        publically. Our union is very good at putting

10       pressure when our clients and our members face

11       unjust, unjust conditions, when ICE was detaining

12       our clients, we walked out of courts to put

13       pressure on ICE. As we do actions, we hope that

14       the legislature continues support us, not only by

15       signing all those letters for us, but also to

16       make sure that our funding remains intact and

17       that we can't be defunded a lot of antiunion

18       voices.

19                 We ask that essential workers are really

20       recognized as essential workers. That includes

21       Senate organizers, that includes lawyers, that

22       includes a lot of other folks. And finally, we

23       ask that the legislature pass the two incredibly

24       important bills for law graduates that haven't



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2        been admitted to the bar yet, one of which was

3        introduced by Assemblywoman Simon last season.

4        Thank you.

5                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you,

6       Jared. We appreciate your comments and your

7       testimony. And last but not least, Carlos from

8       SEIU. How are you?.

9                  MR. CARLOS VILLALBA, CASHIER/MEMBER,

10      1199 SEIU UNITED HEALTHCARE WORKERS EAST:                         Thank

11      you for the invitation. I'm a 1199 SEIU member.

12      I'm part of the pharmacy division, and I work for

13      Rite Aid Pharmacy which is also a retail one. We

14      were lucky in a way, because we have a CEO who

15      has been in the company less than a year. He

16      seems to be very friendly for the employees. She

17      understands and respects the employees and

18      because she have been giving us, uh, if you were

19      paid, they will pay get sick. And she have been

20      able to give us the protections that we need. So

21      on that part there's no complaint with my

22      employers.

23                 But the situation that we have right now

24      is that for example at the beginning, I know that



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2       everybody were focusing in on hospital workers,

3       on nursing home workers, and it's obvious because

4       they confront the COVID-19 epidemic right, it's

5       right in front of their face.

6                  But we got in the beginning in retail,

7       we were very naive, because we thought that,

8       okay, people who are sick are not going to be

9       shopping our stores, they're going to be in the

10      hospital or at home. But it turns out that we

11      were wrong. People can have, be asymptomatic and

12      that's what happened. I work in Midtown

13      Manhattan. That store has like close to 40

14      employees. Out of those 40 employees, 10 of us

15      got sick, one of us passed away because of the

16      complication of corona-19. He was 70 years old.

17      So, and the thing is the PPE was very hard for

18      our company to get. We didn't even have it for

19      sale at the beginning. Now we are in a situation

20      that we have masks for everybody, we have

21      Plexiglas, and we even have masks for customers

22      who doesn't have it.

23                 But this is the thing, is that our

24      policy is that we allow -- we tell customers that



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2       to walk in the store without wearing a mask, we

3       remind them, listen, in order for you to come

4       here to the store, you need to wear a mask, but

5       if don't have one, there's no problem, we can

6       have one for you. But if they refuse, there's no

7       way for to us enforce it, right. And

8       [unintelligible] [05:20:10] and the company tells

9       us not to enforce it, to prevent any conflict

10      with the customer. Some people have even got

11      killed because of that.

12                 What I require is what I, you know, none

13      of that, but sometimes I work at the register,

14      and one of the things, sometimes it's hard to --

15      when the customer comes to my register, sometimes

16      I didn't realize that they don't have a mask

17      right when they're in front of me, and there's no

18      way to keep a six foot distance between me and

19      the customer. And there's always interaction.

20      There's no way around it. Like, is this on sale?

21      Is it buy one, get one free? Why doesn't this

22      coupon work? And it's scary, because we learn

23      that it has nothing -- you can get infected not

24      only because of the droppings, but also the



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2       vapor, the spray, aerosol spray.

3                   And one of my things that I do in my

4       store, since we are retail, what I do is we have

5       a big fan that I put on the floor, turn it on and

6       that way it gives me a little bit of security

7       because like I'm blowing their breath away from

8       my face if they're not wearing a mask. So what I

9       suggest is that the governor, listen, New York

10      State, statewide, is to give fines to customers

11      who walk into retail. That way we don't have to

12      enforce it, because they know that if they don't

13      walk in without a mask, simply on the background

14      we call the cops, they come, and right away they

15      give them a fine, or late. That's the best way.

16                  Right now there's no jobs available

17      anywhere, and the fact that you're not going to

18      be able to be fined $100 or more, if you don't

19      believe that this is real, you're going to wear a

20      mask. That would be a great, great thing to do,

21      okay.

22                  And now when it comes to unemployment,

23      pandemic unemployment, the other thing is that we

24      need the pandemic unemployment, the funding,



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2       because the flu season is coming, right. So, if I

3       sick, right, the test is going to take more than

4       two weeks, and then my employer will not let me

5       come to work. They give us two weeks pandemic

6       unemployment if we test positive, but if we have

7       the flu we're not going to get that. We as a

8       retail, we are minimum wage workers, and we are

9       not going to be able to afford being out if

10      there's no pandemic unemployment.

11                 And do also understand why a lot of

12      businesses, it's hard for them to find workers is

13      because if I work a minimum wage and I get paid

14      more on unemployment, of course I'm not going to

15      come to work because of my family's safety and my

16      own safety. It's not worth it. So there should be

17      new rules or regulation to help that out because

18      what happens in my opinion, see, when people

19      apply for unemployment they get to get regular

20      unemployment and get pandemic unemployment. But

21      the moment that you make more than $440 or work

22      more than four days, you will not get regular

23      unemployment, you not get pandemic unemployment.

24      But if they change the rules to make it if you



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2       work four days or more and also like I said, so

3       you get $700 more per week, you still will get --

4       be allowed to get the pandemic unemployment, and

5       that pandemic unemployment automatically will

6       become partial pay for those people who actually

7       comes out to work. So if I know that I can work

8       40 hours and still get that pandemic

9       unemployment, of course, I'm going to go out and

10      look for a job, because now I'm not only going to

11      be getting paid more as minimum wage but also

12      have the $600 which healthcare workers need and

13      deserve too, because it's risky for nursing home

14      hospital workers to go to work and get paid the

15      same. So that's my thoughts.

16                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you,

17      Carlos, I appreciate your comments. Is that it?

18                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Yes, thank you,

19      assemblyman. I have a few questions and it's

20      really a pleasure to see you all. Obviously, when

21      it comes to grocery store workers, there's been a

22      very huge discrepancy with employers when it

23      comes to hazard pay. I guess what I want to ask,

24      Rob, is do we know that the rate of infection,



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2       even roughly for grocery store workers is? At

3       what point did hazard pay stop for your members?

4       And what can we do to help?

5                  MR. NEWELL:           Our rate of infection was

6       really, really high in the beginning, senator.

7       Thankfully, and I do mean it thankfully, whether

8       it be by the grace of God or by just because we

9       were pretty violently vigilant to ensure that our

10      employers followed the mandates and, quite

11      frankly, we gave out more than 50,000 masks in

12      the first two weeks because our employees, our

13      members, their employees had nothing. We had

14      employers coming to our office to collect

15      sanitizer and collect masks and distribute it in

16      their stores so we could aid in the quick

17      distribution of the PPE.

18                 But we did lose nine members to COVID in

19      the supermarkets, in just our supermarkets.

20      Obviously there's more than one clerk local

21      definitely in the UCFW and RFW in New York State

22      and all of us suffered losses. The most important

23      thing for us right now is just maintaining this

24      low level of infection right now, because it's



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2       one of the last things that they have to worry

3       about. And what we're more trying -- we're just

4       trying to make sure that customers have to abide

5       by the mandates as they were presented. And I

6       forget one of the points that you asked me about.

7                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Well, I was just asking

8       about the hazard pay situation with your

9       employers and what we can do to help.

10                 MR. NEWELL:           The biggest thing with the

11      hazard play, it was all over the lot, right. So

12      we had some employers that didn't want to do

13      anything, they don't feel they had to. A lot of

14      the smaller employers just took it as an

15      opportunity to put a lot of cash in their pocket.

16      In our industry, the opportunity to be cash rich

17      and inventory poor doesn't exist. This was an

18      albatross. It was a pink unicorn with dotted

19      wings, if you will, because it just doesn't ever

20      exist. And the holes in the supply chain created

21      opportunities. So being [unintelligible]

22      [05:26:09] on hazard pay, the majority of our

23      large employers complied and they stopped in the

24      early part of, the earliest part of August.



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2       However, Stop & Shop got off the boat on July 5th

3       and Stop & Shop is by far our biggest employer.

4       And the expression the tail does not wag the dog

5       is not an understatement here. When the big dog

6       on the block gets out of the way, nobody else was

7       lining up to continue to pay, although we did

8       have a number employers that did.

9                   There's been a number of conversations

10      about some type of legislation for essential

11      workers to get some type of pandemic pay or

12      hazard pay or appreciation pay and, quite

13      frankly, none of it seemed to get out of its

14      original conversation. And I respect that

15      businesses need to operate and they need to keep

16      some semblance of payroll control, but no retail

17      worker signed up for this ever. These are not

18      emergency services workers, they're not doctors

19      or --

20                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Sorry, Rob. I have less

21      than two minutes left and I want to squeeze in a

22      few questions about construction for Amanda. I

23      wanted to ask, you know, those construction sites

24      that were deemed essential, how essential were



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2       they? I mean by and large, were they construction

3       sites for luxury developments? Should

4       construction sites have been shut down earlier?

5       As it is, we know many contractors don't

6       necessarily, especially non-union contractors,

7       don't provide their workers with safety

8       equipment. Did we see that trend also when it

9       came to PPE? I know you said your union was

10      really the one who stepped up to provide a lot of

11      workers with what they needed.

12                 MS. JENSEN:           So, yeah, I think

13      initially, there was just a lot of confusion on

14      what should be done, and then initially we were,

15      construction was considered essential just, you

16      know, as just a blanket essential worker and then

17      later it was a project by project basis. I don't

18      want to get into what project -- it was kind of

19      on a project by project basis, what was

20      considered essential. There were some residential

21      projects that probably shouldn't have been

22      included in that, looking back. But on the whole,

23      it was large scale infrastructure projects, road

24      projects, airport projects, like JFK that were



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2       given the green light to go ahead.

3                   In terms of PPE, it was a scramble

4       initially and there was a lot of misinformation

5       about who should be wearing masks and who

6       shouldn't. We made sure to have hand sanitizing

7       stations at every job site. That was something

8       that the union did, our health and safety fund

9       made sure that that happened. We made sure to get

10      out information to our members to use their own

11      masks if it was permissible and they didn't need

12      N95 masks. But it was a scramble to get them the

13      equipment that they needed. We do feel that they

14      were provided that in the end, but initially it

15      was kind of a confusing time. Was there another

16      question that I missed? I'm sorry.

17                  SENATOR RAMOS:             Well, it's okay. We're

18      out of time, and I can come back for a second

19      round after so I'll do that and yield to the

20      Assembly.

21                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                    And we're

22      going to yield back to the Senate.

23                  SENATOR RAMOS:             Okay. Well, in that

24      case, Senator Sanders, got to get up and unmute



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2       yourself.

3                   SENATOR SANDERS:              All right. We're

4       getting there. All the panelists have done a

5       great job, and I am getting a lot of exercise,

6       but all the panelists have done a great job, and

7       I just want to speak on the issue of hazardous

8       duty pay. On a personal level, I think it is

9       incredibly shameful that the idea had been

10      dropped. Our chair, one of our chairs, took this

11      one up, Chair Ramos, of course, took this one up,

12      and I just wanted to echo it and say and well,

13      I'll ask a question.

14                  In light of some of these corporations,

15      food corporations that have had a record, making

16      record profits last year and now this year, when

17      should they have -- this one will go to you, Rob

18      -- when should they have ended the hazard duty

19      pay?

20                  MR. NEWELL:          We didn't really look at it

21      as a profits reward. From our perspective,

22      there's an absolute danger on the job that they

23      didn't have before. We looked for anything from

24      the creation or the development of a vaccine on



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2       the job being a sign that there was no need for

3       hazard pay or, quite frankly, once masks came

4       off. The fact that every one of our workers for

5       every minute of every day has to put on a mask,

6       can't go on the sales floor, can't walk in the

7       building, that's a very different set of job

8       restrictions and it's a very different workplace

9       for them. So that was the opinions of the unions,

10      at least in the RWDSU and especially the UCFW

11      that the when the masks went away, the pay could

12      go as well.

13                 SENATOR SANDERS:               I will be kind to the

14      others and thank you very much, chairs. That idea

15      of loss of hazard pay is ridiculous, shameful.

16      Thank you.

17                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you. We

18      have Jo Anne Simon from the Assembly.

19                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER SIMON:                   Okay. Thank you

20      very much. I want to thank all of the witnesses

21      for your excellent testimony and for everything

22      that you have done and all that you and your

23      members have been through. I did want to just

24      follow up with Mr. Trujillo. I'm sorry if I am



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2       saying your name wrong.

3                  MR. TRUJILLO:             Trujillo.

4                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER SIMON:                   Trujillo. Okay.

5       The issue you brought up with regard to your

6       members who are practicing under this order that

7       allows them to practice for a public interest

8       firm for a period of time, even if they're not

9       licensed. Can you explain, just for the record,

10      specifically how this affects those members and

11      why that's a problem for legal aid as an employer

12      and for the clients, if they are sort of in this

13      part of suspended animation.

14                 MR. TRUJILLO:             Sure. And thank you for

15      bringing it up. So currently, under the judiciary

16      law there is a provision that says if you work

17      for either a legal services organization or if

18      you work for the government, so DAs and child

19      welfare attorneys and other folks, you get to

20      practice under the supervision of an attorney

21      even before you pass the bar. And that stays in

22      place until you fail the bar twice.

23                 We could talk certainly for hours about

24      the racist origins of the bar and how the bar is



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2       more difficult for a lot of particularly like

3       black and brown attorneys to pass, but the

4       reality is, is right now we have about 14 members

5       that fall into this category just from the last

6       time they took the bar, and so these are people

7       that have been practicing law since last October,

8       and because they had that second bar failure, now

9       the judiciary law excludes them from being able

10      to practice.

11                 Because of the pandemic, the bar exam

12      that normally would have been held in July was

13      postponed until at least October and it's not

14      even clear whether those people will be able even

15      to take the bar in October. So right now that

16      means that all of their clients who are already

17      really dealing with the multiple traumas from

18      COVID-19, now also have to have a whole new

19      lawyer, and we're not fungible. We build

20      relationships with clients, and losing out on the

21      person that's so close to your case is a real

22      loss for our clients, but then also our members.

23                 It means that our employers are put into

24      the difficult position of do we keep this person



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2       on even though we don't necessarily get

3       reimbursed by the city or the state or however

4       their line is funded or do we let them go during

5       a pandemic? And that's, of course, something I

6       don't think that anyone wants. These are people

7       that have been practicing under supervision

8       satisfactorily for several months, and there's no

9       reason that they shouldn't still be able to

10      practice just because the bar exam didn't go

11      their way. And in this instance because of COVID,

12      we don't even know when they'll be able to retake

13      the bar.

14                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER SIMON:                   My understanding

15      is that people who fail twice weren't even

16      allowed to take this bar exam in New York, and

17      some of those people tried to take it in a

18      different jurisdiction, just to have a bar exam

19      under their belt, but now all of the

20      jurisdictions are in flux. Is that correct about

21      your members as well?

22                 MR. TRUJILLO:             Exactly, it is. And even

23      for people, it's a really big issue for a lot of

24      our members, especially those with health



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2       conditions. But I'll say really for everyone it's

3       a problem. Practicing, particularly in a public

4       interest firm when you're first starting, it's a

5       lot of work. And, it's, you know, you're

6       representing real people right off the bat. It's

7       not like working in a big firm. And you have just

8       a tremendous amount of pressure on you.

9                  Usually people can take the bar, and I'm

10      talking about that haven't taken the bar yet,

11      usually people can take the bar in July before

12      they're practicing, so it's a summer, and they

13      have a little bit, I don't want to say it's free

14      time, because you're studying all the time, but

15      they have more time to focus on that.

16                 The issue with COVID is that now people

17      are expected to take the bar while carrying a

18      caseload, and it's really just incredibly

19      difficult for people and we really hope that the

20      legislature passes those two incredibly important

21      bills that relate to the bar exam to really

22      recognize that for people.

23                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     So pens are

24      down on this panel. We're going to be moving on,



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2       but we want to thank all of you for your

3       testimony.

4                    SENATOR RAMOS:              No, no, no. I'm so

5       sorry, Assemblyman McDonald.

6                    ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     No? Oh, I'm

7       sorry.

8                    SENATOR RAMOS:              We have one more

9       senator, and he is Mr. James Skoufis.

10                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     How could I

11      forget Mr. Skoufis?

12                   SENATOR RAMOS:              Who has a few questions,

13      five minutes.

14                   SENATOR SKOUFIS:               Now I feel bad keeping

15      everybody. Thanks, and I should be brief. This is

16      for you, Amanda, if you don't mind. I raised this

17      issue with the commissioner earlier today about

18      out-of-state construction workers coming to New

19      York and whether they need to adhere to the

20      quarantine rules that are in effect if they are

21      on this list of states that the governor's put

22      together. Have you worked on this issue at all

23      since I think that list came out or the governor

24      started with this directive about a month ago?



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2       For those construction sites that are not

3       employing local labor, that have out-of-state

4       construction workers, have you engaged on trying

5       to get enforcement at those sites?

6                   MS. JENSEN:           So I can't speak to if

7       we've engaged. I've heard anecdotal evidence from

8       our business managers that this is an issue that

9       exists, that we're concerned about. Obviously,

10      our membership, the majority of them reside in

11      New York State but they've seen non-union job

12      sites where there are out-of-state workers coming

13      in. They're not quarantining. It is an issue that

14      is pervasive, so we're taking a closer look at it

15      for sure.

16                  SENATOR SKOUFIS:               Okay. Well, keep in

17      touch if you'd like to partner on it. Thanks.

18                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD: Okay.

19                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Now we're done.

20                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Now we're

21      done.

22                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you so much to all

23      the panelists, and we are going to be moving on

24      to the next cohort, which is Patricia Smith from



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2       the National Employment Law Project, James

3       Parrott, director for Economic and Fiscal

4       Policies at the Center for New York City Affairs,

5       Nicole Salk, senior staff attorney at Legal

6       Services NYC, and Richard Blum, staff attorney at

7       the Legal Aid Society. So that is actually the

8       order of testimony, so Patricia, if you can kick

9       us off, and Ricky will close us out.

10                 MS. M. PATRICIA SMITH, OF COUNSEL,

11      NATIONAL EMPLOYMENT LAW PROJECT:                      Okay. So thank

12      you for having me testify today. I'm currently of

13      counsel to the National Employment Law Project.

14      In my past, I have been chief of the Labor Bureau

15      in New York State, in the attorney general's

16      office. I was commissioner of labor during the

17      2008-2009 recession and was solicitor of the U.S.

18      Labor Department in the Obama Administration.

19                 And I want to address today two serious

20      problems facing jobless New Yorkers as they

21      attempt to get unemployment insurance benefits

22      during the COVID crisis. The first is New York's

23      outmoded rule that, unlike the rules at almost

24      every other state in the country, disqualifies



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2       from continuing to receive unemployment benefits,

3       many jobless workers who are able to find part-

4       time limited work. Involuntary part-time work is

5       soaring. The number of workers working part-time

6       for economic reasons in the U.S. in July was

7       three times the number it was last year. Tens and

8       thousands of New Yorkers are returning to work

9       but only with limited hours and many fewer hours

10      than they worked before.

11                 Yet, New York is one of the only states

12      in the country that disqualifies workers whose

13      hours have been slashed, if they still work a few

14      hours over four or more days. Under New York's

15      rule for each day in a week that a worker works,

16      even one minute, they lose 25 percent of their

17      weekly unemployment system, and if they work

18      briefly four days a week, they lose all of their

19      unemployment benefits. And while increasing

20      unemployment benefits, I want to say, is a great

21      stimulus and it's also a help for the New York

22      budget, I'd like to point out, because increased

23      benefits, unemployment benefits, are actually

24      taxable in New York.



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2                  New York's partial unemployment method

3       is also a disincentive to return to work. It

4       would be much better to encourage workers to seek

5       out part-time work without jeopardizing all or

6       most of their unemployment benefits. Fixing this

7       problem will likely require the state to borrow

8       more money for the trust fund via federal loan,

9       but it's important to note that it will not

10      impinge upon the state budget. Loans are paid

11      back by employer payroll taxes. Any loans, as the

12      commissioner mentioned earlier this year, any

13      loans are interest-free this year. That

14      provision, as she also mentioned, is likely to

15      continue. Further, repayment of the loans does

16      not begin until the current recession periods

17      end.

18                 When I was commissioner of labor in 2008

19      and 2009, New York borrowed $13.3 billion for the

20      trust fund. All of that money went into the

21      ailing New York economy and all of that money was

22      paid back in better economic times. Moreover,

23      while allowing partial UI will likely result in

24      some additional cost to the trust fund, I believe



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2       those costs will be marginal because the

3       increased costs will be offset by some degree

4       from savings by removing the disincentive for

5       workers to increase their part-time work.

6                  The other thing about New York's partial

7       UI rule is that it's costing New York and the New

8       York economy millions of dollars in 100 percent

9       federally funded UI benefits. These are benefits

10      that would benefit the New York economy, but New

11      Yorkers will not receive unless there is a change

12      to the partial UI rule. That's because all of the

13      100 percent federally funded benefits incorporat

14      by reference New York's rules, including New

15      York's partial UI rules.

16                 The second issue that I would like to

17      address concerns the troubling and legally

18      inaccurate guidance the Department of Labor has

19      issued on return to work and when employers may

20      continue to refuse to return to dangerous jobs

21      and continue to receive unemployment. The

22      Department of Labor has basically said that you

23      must return to work, even if the work is

24      dangerous, but that the only thing -- and you



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2       must you return to work if you want to continue

3       to receive unemployment benefits and that all you

4       can do is file a complaint with the Labor

5       Department. This is out of line with existing New

6       York case law [unintelligible] [05:43:37] that

7       says that if you have health and safety risks on

8       the job, you can refuse to return to that work as

9       unsuitable work and continue to get unemployment

10      insurance benefits.

11                 So I think it's very important that New

12      York both fix their partial UI problem and that

13      they clarify their rules around refusing to

14      return to dangerous jobs.

15                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you, pat. And the

16      next person to testify, Nicole, oh sorry. I'm

17      sorry. James, actually. James Parrott. My

18      apologies.

19                 MR. JAMES A. PARROTT, PHD, DIRECTOR FOR

20      ECONOMIC AND FISCAL POLICIES, CENTER FOR NEW YORK

21      CITY AFFAIRS:        No problem. Good afternoon,

22      distinguished chairs, members of these

23      committees. My name is James Parrott. I'm

24      director of Economic and Fiscal Policies at the



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2       Center for New York City Affairs at The New

3       School.

4                   I've been trying to follow and

5       understand what's going on in the current COVID-

6       19 economy that's affecting the workforce. We've

7       produced three pretty extensive reports on that.

8       The most recent one was released this morning.

9       I'd be happy to send a link around on that. A

10      couple of the highlights from this research, one

11      is that if you wanted to design an event to

12      intensify the extreme income polarization with a

13      dramatic racial dimension, you'd be hard pressed

14      today find something more effective than a COVID-

15      19 pandemic to do that, because it has created

16      such lopsided effects. You have predominantly low

17      wage, persons of color, immigrant workers, young

18      workers, heavily impact by this. And on the other

19      hand those people fortunate enough to be able to

20      work remotely, still have their jobs, their

21      benefits, their businesses are not on the verge

22      of going under, and so on. This is really

23      lopsided.

24                  Secondly, of course, we all understand



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2       the historic proportion of this decline. If you

3       divide the number of people receiving

4       unemployment insurance in New York, 2.8 million,

5       by the size of the state's workforce in February,

6       that would give you an unemployment rate of 28

7       percent, far greater than the, quote, official

8       unemployment rate of close to 16 percent.

9                  I want to focus my remarks today on the

10      partial unemployment insurance issue. Before I

11      get into that, I'd like to underscore the fact

12      that New York's -- once you strip away the

13      federal components of New York's unemployment

14      insurance program, it's pretty mediocre. And I

15      don't think that's anything that we should be

16      proud of. The average benefits in New York State

17      are $386 a week rank 21st among all states, the

18      maximum benefit of $504 rank 20th. Both of those,

19      the average and the maximum, are below all of our

20      five neighboring states.

21                 The U.S. Labor Department notes that a

22      low taxable wage base and in New York, it's

23      $11,400, that's considered well below average, is

24      the main reason that certain states, including



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2       New York, have perennial UI trust fund solvency

3       problems. And any time you have perennial

4       solvency problems, it limits the ability of the

5       state to improve and modernize and extend the

6       economic benefits of unemployment insurance and

7       the protection and safety that it should provide

8       to all workers, particularly low income workers.

9                  The partial unemployment system that

10      Patricia spoke about is particularly problematic.

11      She actually touched upon many of the issues that

12      I wanted to raise, so let me summarize by

13      enumerating what I believe are five compelling

14      arguments in favor of fixing the partial UI

15      problem. Involuntary part-time work is soaring,

16      as she noted. The number of workers working part-

17      time for economic reasons is three times as large

18      today as it was a year ago. Low wage workers who

19      account for the lion's share of affected workers

20      in New York receive very little in regular UI

21      benefits to begin with. The partial UI approach

22      in New York is a flat-out disincentive to work.

23      That's been discussed. Then there's the issue of

24      leveraging federal UI benefits. Again, the less



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2       that's received in New York benefits, the less

3       opportunity to access federal benefits, which

4       have accounted for up until late July, accounted

5       for three out of every four UI dollars paid out

6       in New York. New York, as Patricia noted,

7       desperately needs the additional consumer

8       spending. Our sales tax collections in the month

9       of June, which are a good indicator of the extent

10      of retail sales and consumer activity, were 23

11      percent lower than a year ago. And finally, a

12      fifth argument is that even if fixing the partial

13      benefit problem leads to a slight increase in the

14      amount a state UI trust fund must borrow, federal

15      loans are interest-free and it makes great

16      economic sense to pay better benefits now. And

17      again it's also important to understand that if

18      the UI trust fund borrowing does not impinge on

19      the state budget.

20                 Let me close by noting three related

21      issues. The state law needs to be clarified to

22      allow workers to refuse offers to return to work

23      and retain their UI benefits when they consider

24      that there are justifiable serious health



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2       concerns with returning to work. It's also

3       important to monitor Workers' Comp Board

4       determinations on the ability of workers

5       contracting COVID-19 through their work to

6       receive adequate and timely workers' compensation

7       benefits. And finally, there's the issue that

8       Senator Ramos has championed, the 250,000 or so

9       undocumented workers in New York who have been

10      dislocated by what's gone on were not eligible

11      for UI benefits or any federal economic

12      assistance. Thank you.

13                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Next should

14      be Nicole.

15                 SENATOR RAMOS:              We have Nicole, mm-hmm.

16                 MS. NICOLE SALK, SENIOR STAFF ATTORNEY,

17      LEGAL SERVICES NYC:             Good afternoon and thank you

18      for having us testify today. I'm in great company

19      here with all the folks on this panel, who know a

20      whole lot about unemployment and the effect on

21      the economy. My name is Nicole Salk. I'm a senior

22      staff attorney with the workers' rights and

23      benefits unit of Brooklyn Legal Services, which

24      is part of Legal Services NYC. I'm also a proud



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2       union member of UAW Local 2320. Legal Services

3       NYC, as many of you know, is the largest provider

4       of free civil legal services in the country with

5       600 staff serving over 100,000 low-income New

6       Yorkers annually throughout the five boroughs.

7                  I have been a staff attorney with Legal

8       Services since 1997. For the last 14 years, I

9       have represented workers at unemployment

10      insurance hearings. I am also part of the New

11      York Unemployment Insurance Coalition, UI

12      Coalition which is a group of legal services

13      providers from across New York State who advocate

14      to improve access to unemployment benefits for

15      unemployed New Yorkers.

16                 I'm also counsel on the case of Islam v.

17      Cuomo which was the case where we have been able

18      to get, successfully get, a preliminary

19      injunction against the Department of Labor

20      regarding getting increased unemployment benefits

21      for Uber and Lyft and other app-based drivers. I

22      worked very closely with the New York Taxi

23      Workers Alliance and I assume Zubin Soleimany

24      will be testifying later specifically on some of



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2       the issues in regards to misclassification.

3                  I'm wanting to talk about once again, as

4       many of the other panelists have talked about,

5       partial unemployment. This has been an issue that

6       has been ever since I've been doing unemployment,

7       has been something that's been a disaster for

8       low-wage workers. Since the beginning of the

9       pandemic, members of the UI Coalition have been

10      working diligently to help guide claimants

11      through the difficult and confusing unemployment

12      application process, which has been made nearly

13      impossible to navigate given the large number of

14      workers applying for unemployment.

15                 Under New York's partial UI law,

16      claimants only receive unemployment benefits if

17      they work less than four days a week and receive

18      less than the maximum rate, currently $504. New

19      York's partial UI law reduces the claimant's

20      benefits by 25 percent for every day they work,

21      no matter how few hours they work, no matter how

22      little they earn. Due to the economic downturn,

23      many workers being offered part-time work as has

24      already been talked about.



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2                  New York has the worst partial

3       unemployment system in the entire unemployment

4       insurance -- partial UI laws in the entire

5       country, worse than Mississippi, worse than

6       Alabama. Worst in the country. New York's partial

7       unemployment system disincentivizes work and

8       harms low-wage workers who are disproportionately

9       black and brown. For example, J.B. who was

10      furloughed by both his full-time and part-time

11      employers due to COVID-19, receiving $504 per

12      week in unemployment was called back to work by

13      his second job. He was given a six-hour shift one

14      day a week at the minimum wage of $15. He earned

15      $90 for this work, this one day of work, six

16      hours. However, his benefit rate was reduced by

17      $126. Thus he lost $36 just by going to work on

18      that day. It's pretty outrageous. If he were to

19      work four days six hours a day and earn a total

20      of $360, he would receive no unemployment

21      benefits, losing $144 that week by going to work

22      part-time.

23                 The Assembly and Senate bills, Senator

24      Ramos' bill creates, which is the Assembly Bill



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2       0446 and the Senate Bill 05754, create a partial

3       definite benefited credit or income disregard of

4       50 percent of earnings or $100, whichever is

5       higher. It allows a claimant to work part-time

6       while keeping part or in some cases all of their

7       unemployment benefits.

8                  For example, using the example of J.B.

9       above, he could earn $90 and still keep his full

10      weekly benefit rate. If he earned $360, he could

11      still keep $396 of his unemployment benefits, no

12      matter how many days he worked. This helps both

13      individual workers, mostly low wage workers, many

14      of whom are black and brown, but it also is good

15      for New York as a whole and for the economy, and

16      it's already been discussed by the panelists

17      because, as has been mentioned, the same rules

18      apply to the federal dollars. So we are losing

19      federal unemployment dollars because we have not

20      -- because of our terrible worst in nation

21      partial UI law. I thank you for inviting me to

22      testify on this crucially important issue for New

23      Yorkers.

24                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Okay. Last but certainly



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2       not least, Mr. Richard Blum.

3                  MR. RICHARD BLUM, STAFF ATTORNEY, THE

4       LEGAL AID SOCIETY:            I'm Richard Blum. I'm the

5       staff attorney in the employment law unit of the

6       Legal Aid Society, and I'm also a member of UAW

7       Local 2325, Jared is my friend and union

8       president.

9                  I want to focus on three issues. The

10      first is the need for mandatory enforceable

11      health and safety standards in the workplace.

12      We've now heard quite a lot about this subject

13      from unions in particular, who have the

14      wherewithal and have put tremendous resources

15      into trying to protect their workers. We

16      represent people mostly outside the unionized

17      sectors, people who are more on the margins, more

18      subject to exploitation and abuse in good years.

19      And without mandatory standards, they are

20      incredibly vulnerable.

21                 As President Cilento mentioned, there is

22      a bill that we are working on, the New York Hero

23      bill that would address this. I think it's very

24      telling that the commissioner could only speak



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2       about voluntary resolution where they bring

3       something to an employer's attention and they get

4       them to agree to change, but there are no

5       enforceable mandatory standards, there are no

6       fines at the present. President Cilento is

7       absolutely right that we need steep fines as a

8       deterrent to say to people this is unacceptable,

9       it's bad, it's immoral, it endangers the workers

10      lives, it endangers the lives of their families,

11      their communities, the larger society, it's bad

12      for the economy. It can lead to another lockdown.

13      It doesn't prevent the spread of this horrible

14      disease. And it also is a racial justice issue

15      because the people most affected by these unsafe

16      conditions are mostly black and brown people.

17                  So on every count, this is critically

18      important. I appreciate that the Attorney

19      General's Office, which has been actually doing

20      the fighting over this issue with more

21      recalcitrant employers is calling for exactly

22      this remedy. So I would urge that the legislature

23      move this and move it forward quickly and get it

24      done.



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2                  Second, I want to talk for a minute

3       about unemployment insurance. In my written

4       testimony, I detail a number of the, I would say

5       self-inflicted, wounds of the Labor Department,

6       how it bungled the administration of the

7       unemployment assistance programs during the

8       pandemic. There are a number of good examples

9       there in the written testimony, but I would

10      highlight two.

11                 First of all, just to set the record

12      straight, and I'm sure Zubin will speak about it

13      later, the issue of the gig economy workers has

14      nothing to do with PUA, has nothing to do with

15      the federal rules or the delay in federal rules,

16      nothing whatsoever. New York law is that they are

17      employees, they're supposed to get unemployment

18      insurance. Unemployment insurance has existed for

19      a very long time. The rules are clear. The state

20      simply was not complying with the law and wanted

21      to get these people onto federal benefits and

22      refused to process their unemployment insurance

23      claims. That's why they're the in pickle that

24      they are in. That's why these workers have been



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2       so grievously harmed so that was completely a red

3       herring.

4                  The other point I wanted to get to is

5       one that Trisha raised and that Senator Ramos

6       raised in her questioning, which is that there's

7       been an incredibly misleading guidance to the

8       public about what their rights are to refuse to

9       return to unsafe conditions. The case law is very

10      clear but it obviously needs to be codified in

11      statute. Fortunately, there is a bill that

12      Senator Hoylman and Assemblywoman Jo Anne Simon

13      have co-sponsored that would remedy this problem

14      by clarifying the right to refuse unsafe

15      conditions and that invoke the existing guidances

16      that are now not binding to at least justify the

17      decision not to return to work if those are being

18      violated. So if there are no masks at your

19      workplace, for example, you can say that is not

20      safe, I'm not going to risk my life and I can

21      continue to put food on the table, I don't have

22      to worry about my UI being cut off.

23                 I think it's egregious that the

24      Department of Labor has misled people into not



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2       knowing that that is their right and that they're

3       referring people just to a complaint process that

4       has no enforceability whatsoever.

5                  Obviously, we support strongly the

6       changes in the partial UI rule that all the other

7       speakers have addressed. I think it's been

8       thoroughly addressed. It's in our written

9       testimony. So I'll stand on that.

10                 And the last area I wanted to address

11      was the excluded worker fund that's already been

12      touched on by James Parrott. Senator Ramos has a

13      bill with Carmen De La Rosa in the Assembly that

14      would provide coverage for workers who are

15      excluded from the unemployment system. We've

16      talked a lot about people without work

17      authorization, people who are expressly excluded

18      about but also we have to look at the people who

19      because they don't have access to the labor

20      market for discriminatory reasons, don't qualify

21      for unemployment insurance or any of the federal

22      programs, in particular people who have been

23      recently released from incarceration who have no

24      access to jobs and cannot get the earnings that



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2       they need to qualify for UI, don't have a job to

3       lose due to COVID, so they are left out in the

4       cold. And that bill would remedy that by

5       providing income supports for these people and

6       would address a very serious racial justice issue

7       that we face. Thank you.

8                    SENATOR RAMOS:              All right, well, thank

9       you. John, do we go first? It's hard to keep

10      track.

11                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Yeah, it is

12      hard to keep track, but go ahead, senator.

13                   SENATOR RAMOS:              All right, I appreciate

14      that. And I appreciate the testimonies in this

15      panel because largely we're getting a lot of

16      information that, or at least I was seeking from

17      the DOL commissioner this morning in her

18      testimony, especially as it pertains to why we

19      need to expand partial UI. I'm wondering if, and

20      this can be Richard, I feel like this can be any

21      of you so feel free to jump in. What are some of

22      the other big barriers for our communities to

23      receive unemployment benefits aside from

24      undocumented people? And I really do appreciate



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2       you guys cooperating and collaborating with me

3       and my team on our mark-to-market bill to tax

4       billionaires and fund excluded workers. Carmen

5       and I have been working really hard to get it to

6       the finish line. But what other big barriers are

7       there and some solutions to those challenges in

8       our communities to access unemployment benefits?

9       What else should the Department of Labor be

10      doing?

11                   MR. BLUM:          The language access is a huge

12      issue. Language Line is just not a good solution.

13      It's not adequate. People wind up being

14      disconnected while they're waiting for Language

15      Line to come on and then no one calls them back.

16      Any time we require people to keep calling into

17      the system to get their benefits, it's not going

18      to work. So they have to have much more

19      facilities. It's not news that New York is a

20      polyglot city. That's not something new. And, of

21      course, it's unbelievable that they weren't

22      making services available to people in Spanish. I

23      mean, that's just astonishing. The PUA

24      application originally was not available in



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2       Spanish, only the automated system is available

3       in Spanish, you know, and it's not available to

4       anybody else. So language access is a huge issue.

5                  The other thing is they have to get

6       their forms right. They keep asking wrong

7       questions that lead to automatic denials. They're

8       asking the wrong question in the wrong way.

9                  SENATOR RAMOS:              What's a good example of

10      one of those?

11                 MR. BLUM:          Well, one of them is that

12      they ask people initially, they said are you

13      available to work? Well, of course there's just

14      been a lockdown, so the answer was obviously was

15      no. People said no and then they got denied.

16      Well, the real question is if it were not for

17      COVID-19 would you be able to work? They

18      subsequently changed the question. Another one

19      that they've changed was can you telework? Well,

20      it's not about can you telework, it's has your

21      boss made it available to you as an option full

22      time, right, so people said, yeah, I could

23      telework, yes, if they answer yes or no, yes, I

24      could telework. Denied. They finally changed that



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2       in their twitter feed, right. But they didn't

3       change it on the form. They asked the wrong

4       question on certifications. They said, they told

5       people that if you work at all any time during

6       the week, you're ineligible for that week, and

7       that's the correct answer, which is wrong, and

8       their response to that was, we'll go back and

9       talk to those people. They're creating their own

10      administrative burden, their own inefficiencies

11      and that's just completely inexcusable.

12                 The communication with the public has

13      been reprehensible, they will not answer

14      questions about policy and when they do, as with

15      this return to work thing, it's wrong. But we've

16      sent numerous questions to them about how are you

17      handling this? How are you handling that? And a

18      lot of it was about unemployment insurance, let

19      alone PUA, and they just don't answer the

20      questions. They don't put out the information

21      that people need. Communication is obviously with

22      the agency are --

23                 SENATOR RAMOS:              All right. Thank you,

24      Richard. Sorry to cut off, I have less than two



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2       minutes to ask one more question and I'm possibly

3       Patricia can help me out here. You said there is

4       existing case law that says if you refuse to

5       return to an unsafe workplace, you should qualify

6       for unemployment benefits, but that wasn't the

7       case now during the pandemic. If there's case law

8       the on books, why isn't this the practice? And

9       what can we do about it?

10                 MS. SMITH:           So I think one thing you can

11      do about it is pass Assemblywoman Simon's bill

12      that would clarify that. But I mean, I'm loathe

13      to say this, but I think that some of the answer

14      was answered by the commissioner this morning,

15      where she was saying that if you, you know, uh,

16      you'll get denied for unemployment, but if you

17      are afraid to go in because of the pandemic,

18      you'll get PUA. So it's like, it should be if you

19      qualify for state unemployment benefits, you

20      qualify.

21                 But now because there are certain

22      paneled-related issues, you know, I'm afraid that

23      what people are trying to do is just say okay,

24      there's a different source, so we're going to



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2       deny you and then you're going to apply and then

3       maybe you'll get and it maybe you won't as

4       opposed to just having someone continue on

5       unemployment.

6                  SENATOR RAMOS:              And can you tell me a

7       little bit about the return to work guidance that

8       at first the commissioner didn't remember or seem

9       to remember where it even existed on the website.

10      Why was that return to guide so wrong? What parts

11      of it are misleading and incorrect and unsafe for

12      workers?

13                 MS. SMITH:           It says that if you return

14      to work because you feel that the workplace is

15      unsafe, that you will be denied unemployment

16      benefits, that your recourse is to file a

17      complaint with the Labor Department, with their

18      health and safety and then see if the Labor

19      Department can resolve the issue. In the

20      meantime, if the issue is not resolved and if you

21      haven't returned to work, you also are been have

22      been denied your unemployment benefits.

23                 So there is no, there was no

24      acknowledgment that under the state unemployment



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2       insurance law, there is a right to refuse to

3       return to unsuitable work, and that health and

4       safety, now that doesn't mean that

5       [unintelligible] [06:06:10] person who says I'm

6       afraid to return to work is going to get on

7       unemployment benefits, but if it's adjudicated,

8       that there's a real health and safety risk that

9       you should get your unemployment.

10                 SENATOR RAMOS:              All right. Well, my

11      assistant and I thank you all for your testimony.

12      It's been very insightful.

13                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     And on behalf

14      of the Assembly, we also thank you for your

15      testimony. The calculation of the partial

16      unemployment is a little bit vexing and your

17      input has been helpful. I know we've had success

18      in the past in the Assembly moving that bill, but

19      like anything else everything has to move

20      together, and we're going to make some

21      commitments to do that. So with that we're going

22      to bid you adieu.

23                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Well, actually, sorry,

24      assemblyman. I was actually just notified that



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2       one of my colleagues in the senate raised their

3       hand as we started to say goodbye. And that is

4       state Senator Robert Jackson, Uncle Bob, take it

5       away.

6                   SENATOR JACKSON:               Thank you. Thank you.

7       I was like --

8                   MR. RAMOS:           Uncle Bob.

9                   SENATOR JACKSON:               Hi.

10                  SENATOR RAMOS:              You have a big fan.

11                  SENATOR JACKSON:               I was waving and I'm

12      saying, oh, my gosh and then I was getting ready

13      to try to dial you before we start off. So first

14      let me thank the panel and Patricia, thank you

15      for what you're saying even though, Jim, you

16      reiterated what she said and we need to, we need

17      to put pressure on DOL on that, Jessica, so

18      whatever we're going to do, just add me in

19      because I'm ready to fight on behalf of the

20      people being able to say, listen, I cannot go

21      back here, it's unsafe, you know, I'm

22      jeopardizing my health. And if anything, you can

23      always refuse a direct order if it's a direct

24      threat to your health or safety. I know that.



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2                  But I want to ask about, since we're

3       talking about COVID-19 and workers, Jim, I'm

4       asking you, I saw your op ed or the article in

5       the Daily News the other day. What would be the

6       impact if in fact this coronavirus hits a second

7       wave in New York City? And I not only ask that of

8       you, but I'd ask that of the others,

9       understanding that it's rising up all over the

10      country, and especially with children going back

11      to school.

12                 MR. PARROTT:            Well, we can talk about

13      that for a long time. Not good. The impact would

14      not be good. What we tried to do in the report

15      today was essentially make the case that we're on

16      the verge of experiencing a second wave of the

17      economic impact as the $600 federal supplement

18      goes away. That $600 received by 2.7 million New

19      Yorkers is $1.8 billion a week in spending that

20      had been coming into New York State and New York

21      City. That's going away. Even with that, we had

22      28 percent unemployment in the state, 33 percent

23      unemployment in the city. That amount, $1.8

24      billion is greater than the value of Social



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2       Security received by all New Yorkers. It's

3       greater than an annual amount of workers'

4       compensation pay on a weekly basis. So that's

5       going away. We're on the verge of experiencing

6       heightened economic problems and job

7       displacements just because of that.

8                  SENATOR JACKSON:               And Jim, I only have

9       42 second and I'm asking this for Patricia and

10      others, do you think that we should raise revenue

11      from the wealthiest New Yorkers in order so that

12      we can deal with our economic situation, not only

13      in New York City but if, in fact, there has to be

14      cuts upstate, rural areas as far as education,

15      healthcare agencies and localities will suffer

16      tremendously. And so do you think New York City,

17      one, should borrow and there should be an

18      agreement on that, and number two, about the

19      whole entirety state if we don't raise revenue?

20                 MR. PARROTT:            Just if I can respond to

21      that quickly, so we really need to have another

22      round of federal economic assistance. So we saw

23      today that it might not occur until September,

24      but it has to occur in September, otherwise it's



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2       basically an entire political party waving the

3       white flag. If that doesn't happen in sufficient

4       scale, then rather than New York State or New

5       York City cutting their budgets, it would be

6       better at the state level to raise taxes on the

7       wealthy, at the city level to borrow.

8                  SENATOR JACKSON:               Anyone else? Patricia,

9       you're the former labor commissioner going back.

10      I mean I think devastation will happen if, in

11      fact, the state has to cut across the board with

12      healthcare, with education, municipalities, and

13      agencies, I mean, there will be tens of thousands

14      of layoffs and people are suffering as it is now.

15      That's my --

16                 Ms. SMITH:           Absolutely. And one of the

17      things that I think that we've learned from these

18      panels today is that there are a number of

19      agencies that have been chronically underfunded

20      like the workforce development agencies that we

21      need more than ever, and we need to somehow raise

22      the money to make sure that those agencies are

23      appropriately funded, and more than appropriately

24      funded, appropriately funded for the crisis that



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2       we have now.

3                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                    Thank you.

4       And now, we will move on to Jo Anne Simon in the

5       Assembly.

6                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER SIMON:                  There we go.

7       Thank you. Thanks very much and thank you,

8       several people for the support for the bill that

9       would clarify the people's ability to return to,

10      to not return to work if they're in unsafe

11      conditions. I guess I would like to ask anybody

12      really about a couple things. One is kind of

13      whistle blower protection because if, in fact,

14      you don't go to work because you feel it's

15      unsafe, if you are unable to get something

16      resolved through the Department of Labor, if you

17      use that portal, what rights do you have with

18      regard to blowing the whistle? We are concerned

19      about the fact that 740 needs to be expanded and

20      strengthened. That's one question, because to me

21      they sort of lead one into the other.

22                  And then the other question is it's sort

23      of a combination of standards, but also if you

24      feel the workplace is unsafe, how can a person



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2       who is fearful of going to work because there

3       isn't PPE, but PPE is not mandated, it's not a

4       strict standard, it's kind of guidance, are

5       people going to have difficulty with unemployment

6       if they can't prove that the PPE is required, for

7       example? So it seems to me there's not enough

8       teeth in those requirements and that's what I'd

9       like you to address.

10                 MS. SMITH:           I'd like to talk about 740.

11      I spent 20 years in the Attorney General's

12      Office, and one of the things that we did was

13      where we were in part responsible for enforcing

14      Labor Law 740, and it is the most narrow

15      whistleblower law in the country when it comes to

16      health and safety, which was explained in earlier

17      panels so I won't go over it.

18                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER SIMON:                   Thank you.

19                 MR. BLUM:          We need to amend 740. We

20      also, the New York Hero bill that we talked

21      about, includes anti-retaliation provisions,

22      anti-interference, anti-discrimination provisions

23      and it has some teeth to that, so we don't need

24      to wait until the logjam over 740 gets resolved



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2       to move forward on that.

3                    ASSEMBLY MEMBER SIMON:                   Okay. Thank you.

4                    SENATOR RAMOS:              All right. Thank you,

5       assemblywoman. Up next, we have former

6       assemblywoman and current state Senator Shelley

7       Mayer.

8                    SENATOR MAYER:              Thank you. Thank you,

9       Madam Chair. It's good to see you Patricia, it's

10      wonderful to see you. I have a question for you

11      and I know we're not supposed to be going

12      backwards but this is a legal issue where I

13      really would value your opinion. At the onset of

14      pandemic, when the Department of Labor indicated

15      that PUA would be available, they took a position

16      you had to apply for traditional UI, be denied

17      before you were eligible. Other states took a

18      different position, which was a presumptive

19      eligibility. I argued with the Department of

20      Labor and I think they subsequently were saying

21      that was because of federal regulations. They

22      changed their position.

23                   Do you have a position about whether

24      that period -- and the only reason I'm making a



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2       point of this is because so many of our

3       constituents that were not eligible for

4       traditional UI were frustrated by the length of

5       time it took to get PUA and the poor

6       communication by the Department of Labor about

7       it. I wonder if you had a position about that

8       interpretation of the law.

9                  MS. SMITH:           So, yeah, I do have a

10      position, which is that the department, the U.S.

11      Department of Labor's position was very muddled,

12      so in my opinion you could have on the basis of

13      that opinion, taken a liberal interpretation or a

14      conservative interpretation. And a liberal

15      interpretation was you did not have to apply and

16      get disqualified. Unfortunately, some states took

17      that position. New York did not take that

18      position. But I don't think that it was

19      absolutely required even from the earliest

20      guidance. The earliest guidance was very muddled.

21                 SENATOR MAYER:              Thank you. And, James,

22      I'm so happy you talked about the economic impact

23      of the $600 because in districts like mine that

24      go from the Bronx border to the Connecticut



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2       border, the spending of that $600 has kept parts

3       of our economy afloat that without it, as you

4       point out, would not. So I understand, we may or

5       may not get some substitute or some lesser amount

6       or something else, but from an economic point of

7       view, not for the recipient, but for the economy

8       at large, have you done an analysis beyond your

9       $1.8 billion a week in spending? What will be the

10      long-term impact of not having that additional

11      supplement to UI?

12                 MR. PARROTT:            No. We haven't done that.

13      I mean partly because it's hard to hold

14      everything else constant and then make a

15      projection of what difference one factor will

16      have. But generally, of course, the point is, is

17      that it's the opposite of what we need. There's a

18      lot more, even than what's being talked about in

19      the house bill, the $3 trillion house bill. It's

20      a good start. Obviously, there needs to be a lot

21      of state and local fiscal relief or we're going

22      to see the kind of layoffs and public service

23      cuts that have been talked about, and we know

24      that would be forthcoming in New York.



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2                  I think the, the duration of the

3       elevated levels of unemployment that we're

4       looking at are going to require substantial

5       public service and public works infrastructure

6       jobs programs. It's not just enough to pay people

7       not to work. I mean, it's better than cutting off

8       their unemployment insurance. It would be better

9       to put people back to work. And we're seeing

10      unfortunately, a lot of businesses close down

11      because they can't operate at a fraction of 100

12      percent of normal capacity and business revenues

13      and hold on. Those jobs, we will not get back, so

14      we're going to need to start figuring out how

15      we're going to fill that hole. That's going to

16      take job creation programs on a big scale.

17                 SENATOR MAYER:              Thank you. Thank you

18      very much. Thank you for the panel.

19                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you,

20      and from the Assembly, Robert Smullen.

21                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER SMULLEN:                     All right.

22      I've got video. Chairman, thanks so much for

23      having us here. A couple of the comments from the

24      panelists stirred some thoughts in my mind that I



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2       want to get a little bit more definition on them,

3       particularly from Ms. Smith regarding the

4       scalability of unemployment insurance benefits.

5                  What is the history, briefly, please, of

6       legislation in New York State over the past

7       decade? Now we're here in a crisis and we don't

8       have the scalability which would allow people to

9       get partial benefits, at the same time to get

10      them back to work, and it's very awkward, and

11      there's a federalism problem between the state

12      and federal statutes. What is the brief history

13      of that? Why hasn't that been done before?

14                 MS. SMITH:           Insurance is a program which

15      I believe is totally underappreciated in this

16      country, and so in times of crisis everyone's

17      focused on it and when the crisis passes, we

18      forget about it. So I just want to talk about the

19      fact that New York benefits have gone up very

20      slowly. They've not gone up at all. Twelve years

21      ago when I was commissioner of labor, we were

22      trying to fixed the computer program. We realized

23      that --

24                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER SMULLEN:                     It's not



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2       fixed.

3                    MS. SMITH:           We were trying to fix it. We

4       realized the federal government was not giving us

5       enough administrative money to fix it, so we went

6       to the Assembly, and we got -- and we wanted New

7       York State money, I mean not the Assembly, the

8       legislature -- and we got a little bit of money,

9       not as much as we needed, and so the fixing it

10      has -- and I don't know what's happened recently

11      but I mean it's very slow. So it's going to take

12      money to keep the infrastructure up. This is --

13      the infrastructure problem is not just a New York

14      problem. It's a problem around the country

15      because the federal government has, Democratic

16      and the Republican administrations have simply

17      not invested the in the infrastructure of

18      unemployment insurance.

19                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER SMULLEN:                     I can clearly

20      see that's the case. And the problem there, and

21      as everyone knows, is that money from the federal

22      government, in this case money that's borrowed,

23      has to be paid back. It becomes part of the

24      national debt. And I just want everybody, and not



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2       only my colleagues and the panelists throughout

3       today, that this is not free money. This is money

4       that's been borrowed in the full faith and credit

5       of the United States government that indeed has

6       to be paid back and it becomes part of the debt

7       load that's part of the federal taxation sort of

8       thing. And I know New York is very concerned, as

9       am I, about our resource return from our federal

10      government sort of thing.

11                 But I think this is an issue that New

12      York itself can solve through good solid public

13      policy, having scalable unemployment insurance

14      benefits that are well thought out, well crafted,

15      and I would certainly pledge to work with all my

16      colleagues to get this done, so we don't have

17      this crisis again when there's a severe economic

18      downturn. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. I

19      appreciate the time and thank you to the

20      panelists for your very informative, very

21      knowledgeable and very appropriate testimony.

22      Thank you.

23                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you.

24      Senator, we're good on the Assembly, how about



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2       the senate side?

3                  SENATOR RAMOS:              The Senate's all good

4       here. I think it's time for one of those good

5       union breaks.

6                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Yeah, a

7       little ten-minute tidy.

8                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Stretch it out, guys.

9       See you in ten.

10                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     4:55.

11                 [OFF THE RECORD]

12                 [ON THE RECORD]

13                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Well welcome

14      back, everybody. Panel number eight is seated and

15      ready to go, I believe. So let me introduce them

16      and they can go on with their five minutes of

17      testimony, in this order if possible. Jacalyn

18      Goldzweig Panitz, with the Legal Aid Society of

19      the City of New York, and three workers Julianne

20      Barrington, E. Jeanne Harnois and Gaela Solo.

21      Welcome to all. Here's Jacalyn. Everybody is

22      here, all present and accounted for. Jacalyn, why

23      don't you start us off?

24                 MS. JACALYN GOLDZWEIG PANITZ, PARALEGAL



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2       CASEHANDLER, LEGAL AID SOCIETY OF NEW YORK CITY:

3       Okay. Thanks so much, good afternoon everybody or

4       good evening. Like you said, my name is Jacalyn

5       Goldzweig Panitz. I'm a paralegal at the Legal

6       Aid Society of New York City. Today, I am

7       speaking on behalf the Unemployment Insurance

8       Coalition. I'll be sharing the stories of our

9       clients who couldn't be here today and who have

10      been hurt by New York State's partial

11      unemployment insurance rules. I'm really thrilled

12      to be going after the past panel.

13                 So, the first person I want to talk

14      about is Hava Adams, she's a single mom in

15      Manhattan, a special education provider for

16      preschool and grade age children. She works

17      directly with families on a schedule that's set

18      by the Board of Education usually for an hour a

19      day for four days a week per child, four days

20      throughout the week. A colleague of hers, Sherry

21      Castle, has taught preschoolers with disabilities

22      for 30 years. Special education and early

23      intervention providers can be assigned by the

24      department of education to cases with as little



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2       as 15 minutes of instruction per day, spanning

3       across the week for maybe an hour. The reason is

4       because of the toddlers and little kids can't pay

5       attention for that long. When the pandemic hit

6       and learning went remote, Sherry and Hava's

7       caseloads fell dramatically. Hava's income was

8       immediately halved, and some weeks it's only been

9       20 percent of what she formerly made. So they

10      both, both Sherry and Hava applied for

11      unemployment insurance in March. But they've also

12      continued working four days a week, often with

13      only one billable hour per day.

14                 Through New York State's partial

15      unemployment insurance rules, it's telling

16      providers like Sherry and Hava to either drop

17      their cases, their caseloads with vulnerable

18      kids, so that they are working less than 4 days

19      or miss out on benefits. They told me that's the

20      a choice that a lot of people in their industry

21      have had to make. Sherry and Hava themselves have

22      lost out on thousands of dollars of benefits

23      including the extra $600 a week, and it's worth

24      noting here that it's independent contractors,



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2       their benefits would have been coming from the

3       federal government in the first place through

4       pandemic unemployment assistance, not New York

5       State.

6                    Now, they're behind on bills like rent.

7       Sherry wants elected officials on this panel to

8       think about how we value special education

9       providers and she wonders why educators like her

10      are being overlooked. I also want to pause here

11      and note this field is dominated by working

12      women, a lot of working mothers. And the issue of

13      partial unemployment has been at the center of

14      conversation in the industry.

15                   Another worker I want to highlight today

16      is named J.S. He worked two jobs, one full-time

17      and one part-time. When he lost his full-time

18      position, he kept on working part-time at K-Mart

19      doing the overnight shift, stocking shelves.

20      Because of the current partial unemployment

21      insurance rules, every overnight shift is

22      considered two days of work, reducing his benefit

23      amount in half for every shift he works. An

24      advocate with the Unemployment Insurance



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2       Coalition did the math. For every dollar J.S.

3       earns, he loses out on $3 of unemployment

4       insurance benefits. Working just two shifts a

5       week means losing benefits altogether for the

6       week and it's devastating for low wage workers

7       like him.

8                   And look, this might seem like savings

9       for the state, right, but without access to

10      benefits these workers aren't able to pay their

11      bills, or buy groceries. Take Elaina's story. She

12      worked at a Head Start program in Brooklyn before

13      the pandemic and she had her wages and her hours

14      slashed, slashed in March when learning went

15      remote. She's not eligible for benefits because

16      she's still showing Monday through Friday, though

17      again her hours have been drastically cut.

18                  And in April, she had to apply for SNAP

19      benefits in order to feed other family. As a DACA

20      recipient and a family full of immigrants who had

21      also were laid off or seen their wages slashed.

22      Access to those unemployment benefits would be

23      life changing for the family.

24                  For the sake of time, I want to end the



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2       experience and the story of Bernadette, an

3       elderly woman who lost all of her benefits when

4       she agreed to spend just one hour a day handling

5       garbage for the small apartment building where

6       she lives just for a break on rent. Thank you for

7       the opportunity to share these stories. I'm

8       really excited that there's some workers who are

9       going to follow after me and tell their own

10      stories. I was really encouraged by the comments

11      of all of you legislators in the last panel and I

12      really hope there's fast action on this.

13                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you. I

14      also want to recognize Justin Green-Williams is

15      listed here and also Yamilez Quinones, who I see

16      has company with her as well. But is Julianne

17      Barrington available?

18                 MS. PANITZ:           She is not going to be able

19      to testify.

20                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Okay. Well, I

21      see Jeanne is there. Can you join us?

22                 MS. E. JEANNE HARNOIS, WORKER:                         Hi. My

23      name is Jeanne Harnois and I am here today as an

24      unemployed worker affiliated with Unemployed



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2       Action, a 14,000 member project at the Center for

3       Popular Democracy. I have lived in Washington

4       Heights, Manhattan for over ten years, working as

5       a writer editor and then as a business analyst.

6       Before pandemic hit, I had just been laid off

7       from a two year consulting assignment for Wells

8       Fargo making approximately $100,000 a year. In

9       addition, I worked a freelance editor and writer

10      generating various degrees of income. In prior

11      years I've also supplemented my income especially

12      during periods without full time work by picking

13      up side work, including working as a background

14      actor, being a poll worker, dog walking and

15      picking up holiday retail shifts at stores like

16      Macy's and Barneys.

17                 I'm also honored to represent the

18      following three workers whose written testimony

19      is being submitted. I'm reading directly from

20      their bios. My name is John Smith. I live in

21      Manhattan and for many years I have worked full

22      time in the development department of a

23      university in the city earning a salary of about

24      $90,000 a year. I'm also trained as a social



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2       worker and I supplement my income by working part

3       time as therapist for an organization that

4       provides counseling services.

5                   My name is Abigail P. I grew up in

6       Brooklyn, where I still reside. I'm 26 years old

7       of Asian descent and have a college degree. I

8       started a new full-time job in October 2019 at a

9       cultural institution in New York City and was

10      furloughed six months later in May, during the

11      pandemic.

12                  My name is LRF and I live in Nassau

13      County. Prior to the onset of COVID-19, I held

14      two part-time positions, one as teacher with a

15      local nursery school where I'm still employed

16      Monday through Friday. I also work part time as

17      manager for a pet care company. The onset of

18      pandemic had an immediate effect on my position

19      with the pet care company.

20                  So as you can see, when it comes to our

21      workforce, it's New York, tough enough for you

22      yet? When I was laid off, I became eligible for

23      the maximum New York State amount of $504 hour

24      and then the additional federal amount of $600.



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2       If I do not have taxes withheld, that brings me

3       to just what I was making before I was laid off.

4       And yes, that is relying on not withholding

5       taxes, which means that I'm looking at a massive

6       tax bill next April, but one year's crisis at a

7       time.

8                   What I am facing now is that if I take

9       on additional work, I will lose benefits equal or

10      greater than what I would earn on a supplemental

11      job. Part of the reason for this is that the

12      unemployment insurance system is running on not

13      just outdated computers, but on outdated ideas.

14      The U.S. system assumes that everyone has one

15      steady job, 9:00 to 5:00, Monday through Friday.

16      But the reality is so different.

17                  New York is all about the side hustle. A

18      fair number of people have a regular job and when

19      they're done with that for the day, they go onto

20      a second job or professional passion. As most

21      effective, the UI system would mirror that

22      reality and be a safety net to help people

23      transition into an appropriate full-time job, not

24      penalizing them for attempt to go maximize both



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2       their earnings and professional potential.

3       Flourish or suffer.

4                  When people like John Smith are able to

5       work as therapist, New York is a better place. I

6       knew I was in trouble when the pandemic, hit

7       because of the simple fact that I'm a woman over,

8       not just over 40, but over 50. I am 57. My age is

9       something that I have decidedly kept hidden for

10      the past several years, specifically regarding my

11      work. I'm sharing it with you today because of

12      how important this issue is and to impress on you

13      my sincerity in working towards a solution.

14                 In the past several weeks, I have talked

15      to lot of older workers, who like me, have been

16      dealing with issues surrounding age

17      discrimination and discomfort, the discomfort of

18      other people, specifically hiring managers and

19      co-workers. My fear, shared by other workers that

20      I have talked to is that employers are using the

21      pandemic to favor younger workers who they

22      perceive to be lower risk and who they can pay

23      less too, by the way.

24                 They can turn me down for COVID-related



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2       fears but I can't turn them down. I recently

3       started with the Census. This is by no means an

4       equivalent job to what I had before and certainly

5       doesn't even remotely take advantage of my skills

6       and experience. I have two master's degrees.

7                  Despite precautions, I feel that it is

8       unsafe, as it involves regularly touching high

9       touch surfaces, going to people's homes where

10      they most likely are aren't masked and having

11      five to ten minute conversations with people in

12      their ecosystems over and over again. I have

13      autoimmune issues. And the thought of having to

14      do this petrifies me, especially as without full-

15      time work, I have very sketchy health insurance.

16      That's a hearing for another day.

17                 I have not seen my mother, who lives in

18      congregate care out-of-state and is ill, in

19      several months, but I feel forced into doing this

20      work going into strangers' homes, as if I refuse

21      it, I risk losing my benefits. And then what? I'm

22      single person living alone, It's a real Sophie's

23      choice, my health or roof over my head.

24                 I urge you to stand up for New Yorkers



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2       and support them through this crisis. Through

3       solid leadership, you can take action and get rid

4       of the penalty for part-time work, better

5       reflecting the reality for a significant number

6       of workers in this state. You can also set a firm

7       guideline protecting workers from being forced to

8       accept work that may be unsafe for them or a

9       member of their family during this time. Thank

10      you for the opportunity to talk today.

11                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you,

12      Jeanne and we're just going to work right on the

13      screen from what I see. Gaela, you're up next.

14      Welcome. I hope I said that correctly.

15                 MS. GAELA SOLO, WORKER:                    That's all

16      right. Thank you for having me. Good afternoon

17      everybody. My name is Gaela Solo. I am a young

18      transgender Latina woman and I live in New York

19      City. Up until mid-March 2020, I worked two jobs

20      as a bartender and a server at a bar and

21      restaurant, both located in Midtown, near Times

22      Square. I worked over 40 hours each week and

23      earned between $800 to $1,000 a week. However,

24      when the COVID-19 crisis hit, the restaurant and



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2       bar both shut down and neither has reopened.

3                  I filed for unemployment with the New

4       York State Department of Labor and began

5       receiving unemployment benefits from the state

6       plus the additional $600 a week that the federal

7       government has been providing during the crisis.

8       Together, they replaced my missing income and

9       allowed me to continue paying my rent and my

10      other bills.

11                 In early July, however, I had an

12      opportunity to return to work part-time, not at

13      my old jobs, which were still shut but new job

14      working part-time from home, helping to staff a

15      help line, providing peer support for persons

16      needing assistance during the COVID crisis. I

17      started my new job in early July, after the

18      Fourth of July weekend.

19                 However, the help line job, which paces

20      about $17.25 an hour offers me just 15 to 16

21      hours a week, spread over four days. I

22      appreciated getting back to work and I enjoy the

23      new job and being paid to help others when so

24      many are going through times of personal,



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2       economic and health crisis. But the new job

3       provides less than half the hours that I used to

4       work and pays me only about $260 to $280 a week.

5       I had thought that after taking this part-time

6       job, I would be able to keep receiving some of my

7       unemployment benefits. Although I thought they

8       would go down somewhat, which would make sense,

9       but when I certified for unemployment, on the New

10      York State Department of Labor web the week after

11      I started my new job, I was shocked to learn that

12      my $260 earnings spread over four days made me

13      ineligible to continue receiving any unemployment

14      benefits at all. As a result, in July, I stopped

15      receiving both my New York State unemployment

16      benefits, which had been at the maximum allotted

17      amount of $504 a week and I also stopped

18      receiving the $600 a week additional federal

19      unemployment payment.

20                 Because of losing unemployment, my

21      weekly earnings have been slashed from $1,104 per

22      week to just $260 now. That doesn't come close to

23      enabling me to cover my basic living expenses

24      even after cutting back. My rent alone is $1025 a



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2       month. My other basic expenses like my food, my

3       cell phone, my utilities, my health insurance, my

4       medication and my credit card bills add up to

5       more than $450 a month. My student loans, which

6       will commence after the stop payment period ends

7       on September 30, will add an extra $150 a month.

8                   I was fortunate to have a small amount

9       of emergency savings, so I'm now living off that

10      and my part-time job. But it will not last me

11      that long. And when it's gone, I don't know how

12      I'm going to be keep paying my rent and other

13      expenses.

14                  I know there are many other New Yorkers

15      in the same situation as me, people who lost

16      full-time jobs and have been able to find part-

17      time replacement work, but then lost their

18      unemployment insurance cushion when they accepted

19      the part-time work and are now facing extreme

20      economic crisis.

21                  My understanding is that other states

22      allow unemployed workers who return to work part-

23      time to keep some or all of their unemployment

24      benefits. And that the New York legislature could



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2       change New York's unemployment laws to do the

3       same.

4                   I strongly urge you to do that. If that

5       doesn't happen, I just don't know how I and the

6       thousands of others like me who have returned to

7       part-time work are going to survive the coming

8       months until the economy reopens and we can find

9       full-time jobs that pay our bills. Thank you very

10      much for the opportunity to share my experiences

11      with you today.

12                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you.

13      Thank you very much. And Yamilez, you're next.

14                  MS. YAMILEZ QUINONES, WORKER:                          Can you

15      hear me?

16                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     We can hear

17      you.

18                  MS. QUINONES:             Well, hello may name is

19      Yamilez. I am actually a COVID survivor. I was

20      with it for four weeks. I was pregnant with the

21      little one here, and I was frustrated with the

22      unemployment office. I had to get in touch with

23      them about myself and then it was not getting

24      anywhere. I was getting hung up many times. I was



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2       waiting for more than two hours on the phone. I

3       was getting very frustrated, knowing I didn't

4       know if I was going to survive or not through the

5       situation that I was going through so I decided

6       to get in touch with Senator Skoufis. And he was

7       wonderful and gentleman named Mr. David Ravitz,

8       who was amazing specialist, who because of them I

9       was trying -- they got in touch with unemployment

10      for me. They have, I still have the problem with

11      the issues of my payments. My payments, I'm still

12      waiting on things that have been with since

13      April. And they've been having wrong information.

14      I've been giving them everything they needed and

15      still people that are working for the

16      unemployment office, they need a little bit more

17      training, because they're -- some of them are

18      very rude, disrespectful. They will hang up the

19      phone with you, they get frustrated. They don't

20      know a lot about the base rates and stuff like

21      that, that has happened with my case.

22                 My case has been a very difficult case

23      for Mr. Skoufis. It's been awful. They have had

24      me with different kind of base rates and



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2       different kind of payments. And then they have

3       had me with not paying me the right amount of the

4       unemployment CARE Act, missing CARE Act on it,

5       weeks missing and right now they had to redo my

6       case all over again, so they can get the right

7       base rate and I'm just frustrated with the whole

8       situation with unemployment.

9                  I tried to go and speak to many

10      different people, but every time there's somebody

11      that reaches me it's back to square one. So I'm

12      thankful for Mr. Skoufis anyway, because if it

13      wasn't for him, I wouldn't be able to get in

14      touch with none of these people, you know,

15      actually, grateful to him. And to Mr. Ravitz,

16      because right now my situation is supposed to be

17      clearing up, they did tell me that there's

18      supposed to be in three weeks giving me the

19      amount that is still owed to me. But it should

20      have been a little bit sooner, so they're working

21      that in Mr. Skoufis office to get it before three

22      weeks, because it shouldn't take at that long for

23      the accounting to already give me what is owed to

24      me.



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2                  So being a single mom and a survivor of

3       COVID-19 it's a lot and going through my

4       postpartum depression, trying to deal with that

5       part of what's going on with me, it's a lot

6       tougher when you have somebody that closes the

7       door at you and don't want to help you. And if it

8       wasn't, like I said for Mr. Skoufis, I would have

9       still been struggling having that door closed.

10                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you.

11                 MS. QUINONENS:              So I'm like I think that

12      they should have better training, more people

13      that are caring for other people that are going

14      through difficult situations. I think it should

15      be more appreciative, you know, to understand

16      that not everybody is in a position to be able to

17      pay their bills and to be able to not lose

18      anything that they have, you know, being a mother

19      of four kids. I have a 17-year-old, 11-year-old,

20      a 2-year-old and a newborn. So it's kind of hard.

21      And for me not to receive my payments, it's

22      frustrating because you've got to look on ways to

23      try to survive, to make it for them. It's just,

24      it's hard, and I would like for everybody to



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2       understand, be more understanding, be more

3       helpful, not be judgmental, you know, and not to

4       be hanging up the phone. Just make sure you can

5       get to the bottom to helping that person. And

6       that's something I would like. And that's

7       something that I actually am thankful for Mr.

8       Skoufis, because through him and Mr. Ravitz,

9       they're wonderful people that are helping me

10      through the whole thing to getting to what is

11      needed for me to receive for me and my boys.

12      Because I only have four boys, so that's my major

13      concern.

14                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you.

15      Thank you very much for your testimony, and to

16      actually all the members of the panel. Senator?

17      We'll turn it over to the Senate.

18                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you. Well, as the

19      mother of two boys, I can -- here they are -- I

20      can definitely vouch that it is very hard work,

21      figuring everything out, especially if you're on

22      your own. It has been, sorry my dad just got

23      here. It has been, I think, a very difficult

24      system to navigate for people in general, much



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2       less if you have very few access to resources,

3       and I'm glad Senator Skoufis was able to help you

4       and I know he has a wonderful staff.

5                  I wanted to ask the first panelist,

6       particularly about that New York hustle. I often

7       like to say, especially as chair of labor, that

8       the unemployment rate is actually a very

9       deceiving metric, because especially as we enter

10      the shared economy and now during the pandemic,

11      we realize we depend on a cash economy much more

12      than before. We don't actually calculate how much

13      people have to have one, two, three jobs and then

14      we wonder why parents don't have time for their

15      children, right? So can you speak to a little bit

16      about how the economy has changed in that way?

17      And and where we should be headed?

18                 MS. PANITZ:           Sure. Were you referring to

19      me or Jeanne?

20                 SENATOR RAMOS:              You, yes.

21                 MS. PANITZ:           Okay. Well I mean look, I

22      don't think there -- there are some industries

23      that haven't changed. They just don't fit within

24      the box that unemployment, the Department of



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2       Labor considers when you think about work. But, a

3       lot of people are finding themselves doing the

4       sort of work that consists of two-hour shifts.

5       Some folks are finding themselves doing volunteer

6       work now and are not able to access benefits

7       because they're volunteering. So the Department

8       of Labor doesn't consider them to be ready,

9       willing and able to work.

10                 But I'm just, I'm here only to share the

11      stories of at that were shared with me by the

12      worker clients of the Unemployment Insurance

13      Coalition so I do really want to defer to the

14      workers on this panel to share their experiences.

15                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Okay. Well, for the

16      workers, can you tell me, and you guys obviously

17      touched upon this in your testimony, the

18      friendliness or unfriendliness of the DOL, and I

19      mean user friendly and exactly how long did it

20      take you to navigate the filing process? And was

21      the Department of Labor in any way, shape or

22      form, whether it was through materials online or

23      one of the DOL servers, one of the DOL workers,

24      were they able to give you guidance throughout



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2       the process?

3                  MS. QUINONES:             No. Not with me. There

4       was no guidance for anything that had to do with

5       me. I had to do it on my own, which, you know, I

6       had to go online and figure it out what I had to

7       do and read up on it, because they would tell you

8       one thing to do, and like to claim a weekly and

9       then they'll tell you not to -- when you have to

10      say that you are ineligible to work. And then in

11      the time that it says that you were off for that

12      pandemic that we were not able to work because it

13      was by law that we were not supposed to go to

14      work, and they will tell you, oh you have to say

15      you're not eligible to work or you're eligible to

16      work. They were always giving me wrong

17      information. And every time they gave me wrong

18      information, they decided to give me a penalty.

19      It got to the point they gave me a $2,000 penalty

20      on my case. And I had to reach Mr. Skoufis and

21      Mr. Ravitz investigated on that and they had to

22      actually eliminate it from my account, because

23      due to their mistakes and everything like that,

24      and the wrong information that they were giving



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2       me through the process after I had my son, they

3       were still giving me a hard time and they gave me

4       a $2,000 penalty.

5                  And like I said, a lot of staff members

6       are not very savvy of how get their information

7       across with the person who is applying for the

8       unemployment. So I have tried many different

9       people, even I have people that called me that

10      were working for 18 years that told me them self

11      they didn't know what to do with my case, and

12      trans transfer me to somebody else. And once at

13      the transfer me, I was on hold or two or three

14      hours. And then when they transferred me to that

15      person, they hung up the phone. So then that was

16      back to square one, to talking to Mr. Skoufis'

17      office. So it was, I'm still having a frustration

18      with --

19                 SENATOR RAMOS:              I'm sorry that you had

20      such a difficult time. I mean, but I'm glad your

21      senator was able to step up for you. I mean

22      that's exactly what all of state legislators here

23      are supposed to do.

24                 MS. QUINONES:             Absolutely.



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2                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you. Oh, okay,

3       right on time.

4                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     We shall

5       continue with the senate.

6                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Okay. In that case, I'll

7       actually -- we'll switch over to Senator Skoufis.

8                  SENATOR SKOUFIS:               Thank you. And thanks

9       to all of you for sharing your stories. Quite

10      frankly, I think this is one of the more

11      important panels that we have today, is listening

12      to a handful of the many, many, many thousands of

13      New Yorkers who were just on the receiving end of

14      a lot of pain because the system did not work for

15      them. And Yamilez, thank you for your kind words,

16      it' really unnecessary, we're doing our jobs, as

17      Senator Ramos pointed out, in all of our offices.

18      We're doing our best. And we, my office we helped

19      over 4,000 people with unemployment problems

20      during the pandemic, which, a previously

21      unthinkable volume of people who were reaching

22      out and just having problems.

23                 And when we were going through the list

24      of our constituents who we wanted to have their



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2       story told today in this hearing who had

3       compelling, really awful situations, I don't know

4       if it's a good thing or a bad thing that we chose

5       you, but we felt that you were among if not the

6       most compelling, you had COVID, you were

7       pregnant, you've just had all these enormous

8       difficulties, and we felt that your voice was

9       really important to share.

10                 And I do hope, the Department of Labor

11      commissioner testified earlier this morning. I

12      hope she's listening to your story and the others

13      that were just shared with us, because you're

14      still not resolved. In fact, they tried to

15      penalize you. Not even like work to process your

16      claim, they were actively trying to penalize you.

17      So it's really just outrageous how the system

18      failed so many people, including yourself.

19                 And I guess a couple things. First, if

20      you had a moment with the commissioner, Yamilez,

21      what would you tell her for the next time, right.

22      I mean we're still dealing with your situation

23      and we hope to get that completely resolved very

24      soon, but next time there's an unemployment



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2       crisis, what do you want to tell her now that

3       would encourage her to be better prepared? We've

4       heard, you shared that there needs to be better

5       training. It's, quite frankly, unacceptable that

6       you're passed off from person-to-person. You have

7       to start over and you're hung up on. But if you

8       could tell her one thing that you think would

9       help not just you if you're in this situation

10      again, but all New Yorkers for the next time this

11      happens, what would you tell her?

12                 MS. QUINONES:             I would tell her, you

13      know, to have her group or staff be more prepared

14      to help without being so, some of people were so

15      aggressive. I would tell her if she could have a

16      meeting with her group and make sure that

17      everybody is on the same level of speaking and of

18      helping other people that are going through the

19      same situation that I'm still going through. And

20      that they have the right information and the

21      right equipment to help the person that is really

22      needed to be helped instead of passing them on

23      like there's just a tool.

24                 SENATOR SKOUFIS:               Can you just go into



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2       that a little bit. So when you had someone on the

3       phone, and it sounds like you've gone through

4       this a number of times. You explain your

5       situation, and they just tell you, we don't know

6       how to help you?

7                  MS. QUINONES:             Unfortunately, yes. I

8       have had on my case already ten people working on

9       it. Ten different people have worked on my case

10      and they, same thing. I see that you have so many

11      issues with your unemployment. You have so many

12      different papers that we have sent you. You've

13      got so many different benefit rates. We don't

14      know how to help you so I'm going to transfer you

15      to the other person who can help you. Then

16      they'll transfer me and have me waiting for two

17      hours. And then when they get me to that person

18      and they tell me --

19                 SENATOR SKOUFIS:               And who -- sorry to

20      interrupt you. And so who are they transferring

21      you to that they think could help you? Is it --

22      it's not just presumably, another regular

23      representative who's picking up these calls, are

24      they transferring you to a supervisor? Who do



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2       they think is able to help you that they cannot?

3                  Ms. QUINONES:             Well, in one of my cases

4       I was transferred to a lady named Sherry that was

5       with 18 years experience and when they

6       transferred it to her, she was stunned how my

7       case was out of order and she was like I'm really

8       sorry. I haven't in 18 years, she said, I have

9       never seen a case so terrible as yours, so I'm

10      really not able to help you. I need more help

11      with your case and she transferred me and then

12      there goes the line and they hung up me. So I was

13      going back to square one.

14                 SENATOR SKOUFIS:               Yeah. I'm sorry that

15      you're still going through this. I know my time

16      is up. And I'm committed and I know my team is

17      committed to seeing you through to the end of

18      this process.

19                 MS. QUINONES:             Of course.

20                 SENATOR SKOUFIS:               And, we're going to

21      get this straightened out soon. But thank you for

22      being here and sharing your story.

23                 MS. QUINONES:             Absolutely. I thank you

24      very much for the opportunity that you guys have



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2       gave me to speak on behalf of all the problems

3       that I'm having in this situation. Because maybe

4       somebody out here is having the same problem and

5       they don't how to go about to get the help and

6       knowing a person like me can go ahead and find

7       different ways to get the help and hopefully can

8       get to somebody that will help them and do the

9       same thing I'm doing, going step by step and go

10      through the letters to get the adequate help that

11      they need.

12                   SENATOR SKOUFIS:               Absolutely. Thank you

13      again.

14                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you.

15      From the Assembly, it would be Marianne

16      Buttenschon.

17                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER BUTTENSCHON:                           I just

18      have to unmuate.

19                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     We have to

20      figure out a code word for unmuting. I haven't

21      figured one out yet, but go ahead.

22                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER BUTTENSCHON:                           Thank you

23      very much for all of you being here today.

24      Listening to what you've gone through, it's



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2       unacceptable. And I just want to thank you for

3       staying steadfast and continuing to be supportive

4       within our community. And I will work with my

5       colleagues to ensure that someone that is willing

6       to continue to work and needs that extra benefit

7       that it comes to you. So I'm just saying thank

8       you for all you're doing and what a beautiful

9       baby.

10                   MS. QUINONES:             Thank you. Thank you very

11      much, ma'am.

12                   SENATOR RAMOS:              On our end, to close, we

13      have Senator Robert Jackson.

14                   SENATOR JACKSON:               Let's see. Hi,

15      everyone. Hello, everyone. Well first, let me

16      thank all of the panelists for staying the

17      course, even though all of you are in your homes

18      but you've been our guest on this Zoom call,

19      waiting for your opportunity to be heard. And let

20      me just say to all of you, from all of us

21      panelists and the chairs of the various

22      committees, the co-chairs, we hear you loud and

23      clear.

24                   And we have to find a way, when we get



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2       back up in Albany or even after this, to

3       introduce legislation to deal with the situation

4       with part-timers, Jessica and other co-chairs, it

5       has to be done, as per the previous panel talked

6       about, the former commissioner for labor and

7       others. It's just, it causes people to -- people

8       want to work, but if in fact they're going to be

9       losing benefits that they absolutely need, it

10      causes people to say, why should I talk a part-

11      time job if I'm going to lose the majority of the

12      benefits from unemployment that I need to

13      survive?

14                 So we're going to find a way. I do thank

15      all of you because it was good hearing your

16      individual testimonies, as to what your situation

17      is, especially for us because we listen to the

18      commissioner and other people, from the attorneys

19      and other people that are negatively impacted,

20      obviously from an organizational point of view,

21      but to hear it from you directly, each and every

22      one of you, and one of them was my constituent. I

23      think that was -- one of them.

24                 SENATOR RAMOS:              I think it was Gaela,



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2       right? Was it Gaela who was your constituent?

3                   SENATOR JACKSON:               The woman with the red

4       hair.

5                   SENATOR RAMOS:              Oh.

6                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Jeanne.

7                   SENATOR JACKSON:               Jeanne. She said she

8       lives in Washington Heights and that's my

9       district.

10                  MS. HARNOIS:            Yeah, I voted for you,

11      don't worry.

12                  SENATOR JACKSON:               Thank you.

13                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Well, you get

14      an extra minute now.

15                  SENATOR JACKSON:               You laid out what

16      you're trying to do to survive and how many

17      opportunities it takes and how you have to be on

18      your P's and Q's. And that's important and we

19      need to, as legislators need to make it easier

20      for people to get what they're entitled to. And

21      so I thank all of you and thank the chairs for

22      having this hearing. I'm still in there listening

23      to what everyone has to say. Thank you.

24                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Okay.



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2                  SENATOR RAMOS:              All right, well I think

3       that closes us out for this panel. Thank you so

4       much to everyone who testified, for believe it or

5       not, our ninth panel today, we have four people

6       testifying. Sorry, three people testifying, I was

7       actually just notified. We have Zubin Soleimany

8       general counsel for the New York Taxi Workers

9       Alliance. We have we have Rafael Espinal,

10      executive director of the Freelancers Union, and

11      we have Stephanie Freed, who is a worker and co-

12      founder of ExtendPUA.Org. Thank you guys for

13      joining us, that will actually be the order of

14      testimony and Zubin, if we can start with you,

15      you have five minutes on the clock to tell us all

16      about your story. Thank you.

17                 MR. ZUBIN SOLEIMANY, GENERAL COUNSEL,

18      NEW YORK TAXI WORKERS ALLIANCE:                     Thank you so

19      much, Chair Ramos and to your assistants and

20      Chair McDonald. So, my name is Zubin Soleimany.

21      I'm the general counsel for the New York Taxi

22      Workers Alliance. We're a 23,000 strong union of

23      professional drivers in New York City. That's

24      yellow cab drivers and about half of our members



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2       now drive for Uber and Lyft. And they have since

3       their entry into the marketplace but especially

4       during the pandemic, been feeling the disastrous

5       consequences of employment misclassification and

6       especially in the unemployment context.

7                  The pandemic has really exposed the

8       inhumanity of that situation, but it's also

9       exposed the ways -- the lack of willingness on

10      the part of the DOL and the current

11      administration to meaningfully address that

12      misclassification.

13                 I feel like I need to start out by

14      setting the record straight. I think there was

15      some inaccurate testimony earlier about the legal

16      framework and the status of drivers in the state.

17      There is a final decision issued by the

18      Unemployment Insurance Appeal Board in 2018 that

19      says Uber drivers and all similarly employed are

20      employees for UI purposes in New York State. Uber

21      did not appeal that decision and it's final. The

22      Court of Appeals decision in Postmates further

23      solidifies that decision.

24                 We entered this pandemic knowing the



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2       status of these workers and yet knowing that,

3       these folks still face unconscionable delays. The

4       idea of whether they're supposed to get PUA or

5       UI, it's not an academic question. It has serious

6       consequences for workers and for their lives. Our

7       members found themselves waiting for three or

8       four months to get any benefits. And that delay

9       is baked into the process that has occurred

10      because the companies aren't complying with the

11      UI law, and the DOL isn't making them comply. So,

12      one problem is the delay.

13                 The second problem is the benefit rate

14      itself, is that folks still have not, five months

15      into the pandemic, received the full amount of

16      benefits that they're entitled to. And the

17      problem there is because for when the DOL looks

18      at somebody and says they're self-employed and

19      puts them into PUA, they're getting a lesser

20      benefit rate based on their net income. They're

21      not getting the full rate they're entitled to

22      under the statute from the New York labor law

23      based on their gross income.

24                 So we filed a lawsuit in federal court



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2       and we won a preliminary injunction. And one of

3       the things that that injunction did is it sets

4       forth a time frame for the DOL to pay out the

5       full amount of benefits and still that may not

6       happen for a lot of people until six months after

7       they apply. And we're grateful for that decision.

8       We hope that there will be some justice. But that

9       can't be the way the system works.

10                 And basically this failure is coming

11      from two things in terms of how the DOL is

12      processing these clients. The first thing is that

13      they -- there's this decision on the books, and

14      they simply aren't following it. This decision

15      was won but it changed nothing about how cases

16      were handled going forward. So take the example,

17      of a Postmates worker. There's a Court of Appeals

18      decision saying those Postmates workers are

19      employees.

20                 The DOL's position has essentially been

21      well, we handle every single case on a case-by-

22      basis. So you may win your case at the court of

23      appeals, become unemployed later and then it's a

24      whole new case and they go back to square one.



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2       This creates a delay because the DOL will then

3       ask again, as though they've never heard anything

4       about your job, send questionnaires to you, send

5       questionnaires to the employer, to ask about your

6       job to figure out if you're an employee or not.

7                    The second thing is that they have not

8       used their power to collect wage data from the

9       employers, and this is really the nut of the

10      delay, is you have a decision on the books, you

11      found them to be an employer. That gives you that

12      power to get that wage data. And it's when you

13      get that in your computers that if somebody can

14      apply and get their benefits in two or three

15      weeks.

16                   Yes, there are a lot of delays, there

17      are a lot of problems that we couldn't have

18      foreseen with the pandemic, but there are 40,000

19      Uber drivers who filed for unemployment, and

20      there is nothing that should have delayed those

21      applications if that data were in the computer.

22                   The DOL is claiming that they don't have

23      the power to get that data. I don't believe

24      that's correct. The New York labor law says you



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2       request data from an employer, and if they don't

3       provide it, that can be a misdemeanor. That seems

4       like a pretty strong power to be able to get

5       thank. If that's not clear, if it's not

6       completely clear and there's room for dissembling

7       around this notion, then perhaps that's an area

8       that's ripe for legislative change in terms of

9       really, really absolutely mandating that

10      reporting, because without it, what workers have

11      to do is submit their own records, and what we're

12      dealing with right now is Uber and Lyft drivers

13      sending in literally 200, 300 pages of earnings

14      data to the DOL, facts, the secured messages,

15      mail because the companies haven't done that.

16                 It puts that burden and extreme time

17      crunch not only on the workers but also on the

18      DOL, who while they're supposed to be handling

19      this unprecedented number of cases, are now

20      dealing with hundreds of pages of wage data

21      simply because they can't force or are unwilling

22      to force the companies to comply with the law.

23                 I know my time is up. I do just want to

24      say, because I think it's very important that



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2       while these delays are horrible and they're

3       unconscionable, thankfully folks are getting some

4       benefits. I feel that it's really important to

5       address the needs of undocumented workers, and I

6       want to state our wholehearted support for the

7       Excluded Worker Bailout Act. Folks who are

8       working, contributing to the economy deserve some

9       level of protection right now.

10                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you

11      very much, Zubin. We will now move to on to

12      Rafael.

13                 MR. RAFAEL ESPINAL, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR,

14      FREELANCERS UNION:            Good evening, everyone. It's

15      a pleasure, as a former New York State assembly

16      member, it's really an honor to be back and

17      speaking to you all. But I'm really here to talk

18      on behalf of our members. We represent over

19      500,000 freelancers across the country, over

20      200,000 that are based here in New York City, and

21      what I'm about to say, I don't think captures

22      what we heard firsthand from the previous two

23      panels.

24                 I think you heard it directly from those



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2       workers of how they've been impacted, how the

3       system was working against their favor, and also

4       how the lawyers and the groups like Legal

5       Services of New York City were working to be able

6       to help those people get back on track.

7                  So I'm here today to really talk about

8       the union and the work we've done until the past

9       few months and ways I think that we can move

10      forward in providing immediate support to ensure

11      that the freelancers have the relief they need.

12                 And the members we represent are an

13      incredibly diverse mix of people. They include

14      domestic workers, drivers, writers, graphic

15      designers, through media workers and night life

16      entertainers who are currently united by a common

17      struggle.And that is they're all out of work and

18      currently trying to find and qualify for any

19      assistance, grants or loans that exist.

20                 At the height of the pandemic, an

21      internal survey that we'd done found that over 80

22      percent of our members have lost work and over 90

23      percent expected to lose their sources of income

24      throughout the year. To give a sense of how many



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2       freelancers have been negatively impacted and the

3       effect on the state's economy, I would like to

4       note that in a recent study commissioned by the

5       mayor's office [unintelligible] [07:07:19]

6       entertainment and the Freelancer's Union, it

7       found that in New York City alone, 1.3 million

8       residents have performed freelance work in 2019,

9       making up 34 percent of the city's workforce with

10      an estimated annual economic impact of $31.4

11      billion in earnings.

12                 Freelance workers choose to freelance

13      because they believe it provides them with a

14      greater opportunity for upward mobility and

15      appropriate pay for their skills, compared to

16      tradition a employment. Also allowing full-time

17      workers the opportunity to make a side income, a

18      side hustle, like my parents did, who were SEIU

19      union members and freelanced on the weekends,

20      giving them power over their financial

21      circumstances.

22                 I would like to add that given the

23      number of freelancers in our state and the

24      positives of freelance work for individuals,



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2       there is still a great sense in the community

3       that the government has a long way to go in

4       recognizing their importance to our local economy

5       and to the survival of our big cities.

6                  Before the pandemic, freelancers were

7       facing challenges that have led to the crisis

8       that we're in today like the rising cost of

9       health care premiums, the realities of not being

10      paid on time or at all, and the unpredictable

11      nature of their work combined with the lack of a

12      social safety net.

13                 Historically, disasters and economic

14      downturns have shown to be a time in which

15      traditional employees who have been laid off

16      begin to think about how to take control of their

17      finances. They often ponder how can they create

18      their own work with professional skills that they

19      possess. For example, after the 2008 recession,

20      the number of freelancers increased by 12 percent

21      and we expect to see a similar trend once this

22      pandemic is over.

23                 So I mention this to press on the point

24      that now is the time for a comprehensive approach



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2       to support the independent workforce. This

3       pandemic has made it clear that in order for our

4       economy to avoid collapse, every worker whether

5       union, independent or undocumented in every

6       sector needs to be supported. With over 80

7       percent of freelancers reported to be out of work

8       object, it's improbable to ignore the need for

9       creating a larger and permanent social safety

10      net.

11                 Early on, I was proud is to work with

12      Senator Chuck Schumer in reviewing language for

13      PUA and as we know that program was very

14      essential providing independent workers with

15      unemployment insurance and the social safety net

16      they needed to get through this pandemic. But

17      reality is that now the $600 benefits has

18      expired, even though we saw a downward trend of

19      members calling for financial assistance, we're

20      now seeing an uptick again of concern because of

21      the fact they will no longer get that $600

22      padding that helped them deal with the daily cost

23      of living in our city.

24                 And our most recently inquiry, just to



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2       give you an example came from a single mother of

3       two children, who back in December was proud to

4       get her own apartment but is now months behind on

5       rent and considering living in her car and

6       applying for food and financial assistance to

7       allow her to save money. That is a clear example

8       of why freelancers like every unemployed New

9       Yorker will benefit from real financial relief

10      and support through these times.

11                 So through member feedback, the union

12      has identified a few issues that I believe will

13      have a significant impact in further supporting

14      free lancers through the crisis. PUA and UI has

15      had issues with recognizing mixed earners--

16      through the crisis. We have freelancers who file

17      with both 1099s and W-2s. What the Department of

18      Labor has doing is only recognizing their W-2s,

19      where freelancers have most likely gotten the

20      least amount of income throughout the year and

21      end up getting the smallest amount of

22      unemployment benefits, of the $182 a week,

23      cheating them over the possibility of getting the

24      $504 award.



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2                  We've been working with Legal Services

3       of New York City, for example, they've been

4       helping them with the appeal process and then

5       after appealing the Department of Labor came back

6       to recognize their full wages. But I think that

7       the department has to go back retroactively, look

8       at all the applications and make sure that

9       everyone's income was accounted at the end of the

10      day.

11                 The second important piece I think that

12      the state should take on Freelance Isn't Free Act

13      which we passed in New York City. We've heard

14      from a lot of our members who had issues getting

15      paid. They were not getting paid through the

16      pandemic and the pandemic was being as an excuse

17      cheating them out of their wages. If the state

18      implements this, we'll have coverage and better

19      wage protection across the entire state, not only

20      in the five boroughs. The state must also explore

21      extending PUA extra $600 compensation. States

22      like California are looking at the idea that if

23      the federal government is not able to put forward

24      the extra money, of how the state can take that



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2       on.

3                  And, of course, we believe in canceling

4       rent and mortgage payments because people are

5       behind on their rents, on their mortgages and are

6       facing evictions and having to go to shelters.

7                  And last but not least, I just wanted to

8       extend my support for the Fund Excluded Workers

9       campaign. We as a union also represent

10      undocumented and [unintelligible] [07:12:06]

11      members that are in desperate need of support and

12      they have zero lifelines, so it's important that

13      the state looks at how they can get behind the

14      campaign and make sure those workers do not fall

15      through the cracks.

16                 In closing, your support of freelancers

17      is very important. Thank you all and I look

18      forward to working with you all the next few

19      months to ensure that our freelancers are be

20      properly represented moving forward. Thank you.

21                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MAGNARELLI:                       Thanks

22      Rafael.

23                 MR. SOLEIMANY:              My apologies, folks, I

24      am running out of child care in five minutes, so



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2       I will need to run, my apologies, unless you have

3       any questions, I'll have to go take care of my

4       little guy.

5                    SENATOR RAMOS:              Does anybody have any

6       specific questions for Zubin? Otherwise, I think

7       we're good. Thank you for your testimony and

8       thank you for your work for excluded workers.

9                    MR. SOLEIMANY:              All right, thank you,

10      senator.

11                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you,

12      Zubin.

13                   SENATOR RAMOS:              Talk to you soon. Yeah.

14                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Stephanie,

15      you're on.

16                   MS. STEPHANIE FREED, WORKER/CO-FOUNDER,

17      EXTENDPUA.ORG:           Hello. Thank you for having me

18      here today. My name is Stephanie Freed and I live

19      in Inwood, Manhattan and I am pandemic

20      unemployed. I have been a gainfully employed

21      freelancer behind the scenes the in entertainment

22      and live events industry for ten years and I'm

23      member of IATSE. My industry, which accounts for

24      almost 500,000 jobs in New York State alone, is



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2       not likely to return to work until well in 2021.

3       Many of us aren't sure how we survive until then.

4       Personally, now that the $600 benefit has expired

5       I receive a quarter of my usual income in UI,

6       $1,764 a month which is the New York State max.

7       My rent, health insurance and utilities add up to

8       $2,300 a month, so I am losing my apartment.

9                  While I am grateful New York State has

10      provided some rent relief, I and many like me do

11      not qualify. Rent relief needs to be expanded to

12      keep people in their homes. Friends and

13      colleagues are leaving New York City left and

14      right, threatening the entertainment industry's

15      ability to bounce back. In an attempt to make

16      rent, I've been looking for small copywriting

17      projects. The partial UI makes this not feasible.

18      An hour of work for $20 costs me $126 of my UI.

19                 I need to take small projects in

20      addition to UI to even attempt to pay my bills,

21      but with the partial UI rule it's impossible.

22      Desperation around UI is rampant.

23                 So a colleague and I created

24      ExtendPUA.org to provide everyone in need of



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2       pandemic assistance with resources to make their

3       demands heard. We're a grassroots organization by

4       unemployed, for the unemployed created in New

5       York. As part of our work, I have heard from

6       thousands of people who are struggling. Here are

7       three stories from New Yorkers.

8                  Donna Reggio is a speech pathologist

9       from Calverton. She has spent 36 years building a

10      private practice for preschool age children, 16

11      of her 18 students are moving on to kindergarten

12      and the pandemic prevented all evaluations for

13      incoming preschoolers. She has seen her typical

14      work week of 35 to 40 sessions drop to just five.

15      However, due to educational mandates, these three

16      sessions must be spread out over three separate

17      days. Two-and-a-half hours of week in a work

18      eliminates 75 percent of her UI benefits, her

19      benefits dropped to $60. Donna told me could I

20      have no choice looking long range, I'm almost 60

21      and I cannot find another career.

22                 Richard Heisel has worked as a cook over

23      12 years at the same restaurant in Rochester. He

24      was furloughed from his job at the beginning of



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2       the pandemic. His wages were effectively replaced

3       by UI and the FPUA. Richard has now gone back to

4       work. His scheduled hours have gone from 60 per

5       week to 20, but spread across four days. This has

6       disqualified Richard from any UI benefits under

7       the partial UI rule, leaving him with one-third

8       of his previous wages. Richard told us he has

9       never struggled like he is now.

10                 Lisa a western New York resident works

11      as a server at a chain restaurant. She's not

12      comfortable returning to work, but did so when

13      asked to five weeks ago, because refusing would

14      kick her off of UI and cost her the job. She's

15      uncomfortable because the precautions seem mainly

16      for the customer's benefit and not the employee's

17      benefit. With restaurants at 50 percent capacity,

18      she last seen her weekly shifts reduced from five

19      to only two. Her UI benefit has shrunk to less

20      than $90 a week. See she now relies on that

21      benefit and nine to ten hours of tips at a 50

22      percent capacity restaurant to provide for

23      herself and her four-year-old daughter. Lisa told

24      me, I know many service people who this is



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2       affecting way worse than me so I am speaking for

3       them as well.

4                  These are just three of the stories

5       [unintelligible] [07:16:21] Partial UI rules

6       punish exactly what the thousands of unemployed

7       people I have talked to want to do, go back to

8       work whatever way they can and make enough money

9       to survive. I was asked to speak about partial UI

10      but I would be misrepresenting my organization to

11      only speak about that here today.

12                 ExtendPUA.Org represents a large group

13      of unemployment workers. When 12 percent of the

14      state and 20 percent of New York City's workforce

15      is unemployed, we must enact comprehensive

16      response until the pandemic is ended and it is

17      safe for us to go back to work. This includes

18      expansive and inclusive rent and healthcare

19      relief, as well as food assistance. Two million

20      people in New York City alone are estimated to be

21      food insecure because of this pandemic.

22                 A concern I was hearing just yesterday

23      was that even though New York State expanded SNAP

24      benefits, many families were kicked off when they



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2       were receiving the $600 and now they are not

3       receiving SNAP or the $600. Rent relief is being

4       offered based on income requirements prior to

5       March 1st, which thankfully helps families who

6       are already at a disadvantage. However, it does

7       not help those who may have been middle income

8       prior to the pandemic. The assumption may be that

9       the middle class doesn't need the assistance. We

10      are actually feeling a different kind of hit, in

11      that we have lost all of our income and our bills

12      remain higher than the max UI coverage and

13      there's no further assistance provided.

14                 We also need to take care of our

15      immigrant community who are left out of UI and

16      pandemic relief completely. We also voice support

17      for Fund Excluded Workers. Lastly, I want to urge

18      the New York State Senate to not take action on

19      with that they can surrounding the issues workers

20      are facing in this pandemic but to also join and

21      help us citizens who are putting pressure on the

22      federal government to pass a comprehensive relief

23      bill with urgency. We need your voices too.

24                 Us unemployed at ExtendPUA.Org would be



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2       more than happy to continue to provide voices of

3       unemployed folks for the Senate as necessary.

4       Thank you for allow us to share our stories here

5       today.

6                    ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Stephanie,

7       thank you, Rafael, thank you. Before I forget,

8       because I should have done this four or five

9       panels ago, our colleague from the Assembly, Yuh-

10      line Niou has joined us as well and we want to

11      thank her, and my mea culpa, because every time I

12      went to do that, I got caught up in the testimony

13      before, so with that we turn it back to you,

14      Senator Ramos.

15                   SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you, John. So I

16      have a few questions. Thank you so much for your

17      testimonies. I'm going to start with you, Raaf.

18      You mentioned in your testimony how you would

19      like to see the Freelance Isn't Free Act

20      implemented at the state level and I don't think

21      many people who are watching at home understand

22      what that means, what that is. Needless to say,

23      that freelancers have been having issues getting

24      paid before the pandemic, when folks, customers



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2       don't necessarily pay their bill or pay it on

3       time in a respectful manner of the person's work.

4                  Can you tell us with that that would

5       look like, and especially I guess you can put

6       your old assembly hat back on, too, and tell us

7       what you envision at the state level.

8                  MR. ESPINAL:            Yeah. Well, in New York

9       City, actually when I was on the city council, we

10      passed a bill, and in the bill, the Department of

11      Consumer Affairs and Workers Protection plays a

12      vital role in foreseeing these [unintelligible]

13      [07:19:33] and making sure that freelances who

14      have clients that are not paying at the end of

15      the day end up getting paid for the work that

16      they have performed.

17                 So on the state level, I would just

18      imagine the Department of Labor being that

19      enforcement agency or any similar agency that can

20      play that role and that when they receive a

21      complaint from a freelancer about a contract that

22      they've signed, the client or the company that

23      they have not been paid, that the state will step

24      in and play that enforcement role of making sure



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2       that the client is making that payment on time or

3       just at all in general.

4                  In New York City, there's also a fine

5       attached to it. It's about $250 to $500. If the

6       client doesn't pay within a 30-day period, they

7       can face those fines. Also, if the city finds

8       that there's a huge clusters of problems with

9       this one client or one company, then the city can

10      intervene and play a role in filing a class

11      action lawsuit against that company. And I think

12      it's important because we have seen, through the

13      pandemic multibillion dollars companies like

14      Equinox, for example, writing letters to their

15      freelance workers telling them that they can't be

16      paid for their work because of the pandemic, and

17      it's when you have multibillion dollars companies

18      taking these sort of actions, I think it's clear

19      that there has to be some sort of mechanism in

20      place on a state level to ensure that all workers

21      are protected across New York.

22                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you. And now this

23      may go for any of you. We've actually seen, of

24      course, with the pandemic more the proliferation



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2       of working from home, and/or working remotely

3       which of course most, if not all freelancers

4       often do. How has the work culture changed, if at

5       all? Are we seeing more work being outsourced to

6       freelancers here in New York? I thought I had

7       heard in California that was the case briefly.

8       And are people falling behind on those payments,

9       on those receipts more often now?

10                 MR. ESPINAL:            Yeah, so I mentioned in my

11      testimony that in the previous recession in 2008,

12      there was actually an increase in the amount of

13      people is that decided to freelance, and it

14      increased by 12 percent over the years. We expect

15      the same thing to happen after this pandemic as

16      well. And I think that when you have small

17      businesses and companies that are struggling

18      financially or looking at ways on how they can

19      reboot their business, it makes sense for them

20      and it's easier for them to get someone on a

21      contract to bring their skills onboard to get

22      their companies back up and running, especially

23      after the shutdowns.

24                 So I believe I think New York is going



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2       to see a big reliance on the freelance workforce

3       to help jump start the economy, which is why I

4       also mentioned that it's important that now,

5       given this moment, it's important that we look at

6       what laws are being discussed, have been

7       discussed in the past, what sort of benefits can

8       be created moving forward to ensure that

9       freelance workers who we're seeing a larger

10      increase of [unintelligible] [07:23:04 ] doing,

11      have the protections and social safety net they

12      need to succeed.

13                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you. Now, I think

14      we lost Stephanie. I actually had a question for

15      her. But briefly, in the few seconds that are

16      left since PUA does directly affect your

17      membership as well, Rafael, can you talk about

18      why it's so important that we extend it, that we

19      are fighting for these federal benefits, and what

20      kind of a role we should be playing. Oh, there

21      she is, what kind of a role we should be playing

22      here to help.

23                 MR. ESPINAL:            I'm sure Stephanie will

24      eloquently answer that question, but, you know,



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2       just freelancers like every other worker, they're

3       out of work, there is limited opportunities,

4       they're spend depending on PUA to give them the

5       funding they need to deal with the cost of

6       living. As I mentioned, once the independent

7       contractors were able to get through DOL, we

8       began to see less phone calls from our members

9       who were in dire financial straits because they

10      were getting a funding stream to help them deal

11      with the cost of living.

12                 And now I think there's again, there's a

13      feeling, there's a lot of anxiety in the air

14      given that the President decided to move forward

15      with an executive order instead of seeing

16      Congress expand and extend PUA, the $600

17      financial compensation, because there's also a

18      question whether the executive order captures

19      independent contractors moving forward. There's a

20      concern that it's only going to apply to

21      traditional workforce.

22                 So in order to, I think to prevent a

23      huge, a bigger financial crisis, the state has to

24      have a backup plan, a plan B for what we're going



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2       to do if the federal government fails to act

3       moving forward.

4                  SENATOR RAMOS:              All right. Thank you.

5       I'm out of time. Assemblyman McDonald, do you

6       have anyone?

7                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     I think we're

8       okay. I think it's Senator Jackson's turn.

9                  SENATOR JACKSON:               Well, thank you.

10      Hello, everyone. So hey, co-chairs let me thank

11      you. And I mean, I'm glad that I'm still on this

12      and listening to all of the people that are being

13      impacted. Rafael, thank you, representing the

14      freelance unions and and Stephanie, if you're not

15      aware, I represent you. You live in Inwood. I

16      represent all of Inwood, and I am going to go to

17      the website ExtendPUA.Org and check it out and be

18      in contact with you. But I want to thank all of

19      you.

20                 It's important that we hear from you

21      about the situations that each and every one of

22      you face, and as legislators, I think that we

23      have a mandate, co-chairs, in order to fix the

24      unemployment work situation. So let's get busy.



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2       Thank you.

3                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Okay. I think

4       that's it for our panel. Thank you very much.

5       Rafael, it's good to see you. I know we only

6       overlapped for a year, but once a member, always

7       a member, as you know. And we will move on to our

8       next panel, which is panel number ten. And with

9       us on panel number ten will be only one witness.

10      His name is Richard Winsten with State and

11      Broadway. And we're looking for him to show up. I

12      see him showing up on the big screen right now.

13      Richard.

14                  MR. RICHARD WINSTEN, STATE AND BROADWAY,

15      INC.:    Hello, can you hear me?

16                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     You've got

17      five minutes, go at it.

18                  MR. WINSTEN:            Well, thank you very much.

19      Thank you for inviting me to testify. I'm very

20      honored. I'm with the firm of State and Broadway.

21      I bring greetings from my colleagues, Jackie

22      Williams and Larry Sherer. We represent an

23      enormous number of unions from every sector of

24      industry and government in New York State, as



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2       also many not-for-profits that are supportive of

3       unions and that support unions as well.

4                  Jumping right in, our clients, union

5       clients and these not-for-profits are extremely

6       concerned, if not terrified about the effects of

7       the collapse of the economy and the collapse of

8       state revenue on their ability to provide

9       service. The first quarter fiscal report came out

10      today, underscores this collapse. We believe that

11      for instance New York City Committee on

12      Occupational Safety and Health, which is the

13      preeminent safety and health organization in New

14      York City and provides crucial advice to unions,

15      workers during this pandemic, their services are

16      needed more than ever.

17                 The Consortium for Education, the

18      preeminent worker training and placement

19      organization in the city, worker training and

20      placement as a result of the pandemic and the

21      collapse and everything, the services are going

22      to be needed more than ever. So we strongly

23      advocate for the federal aid for state and local

24      governments, and we're also a very strong



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2       advocate for increasing state revenue, and there

3       are a number of great proposals for increasing

4       taxes on the wealthy and a broad support from the

5       people I represent.

6                  I'm not going to go into great detail on

7       a lot of the issues that have been covered

8       already by other panelists. One of the issues

9       that all of my clients are concerned about is the

10      workers' comp presumption for COVID. I represent

11      local 237 of the teamsters. All of their 17,000

12      workers for the city of New York are essential

13      workers, have been on the job. They represent a

14      large number of school safety agents who are

15      peace officers. We've had at least nine deaths

16      from COVID from these peace officers, so workers'

17      comp presumption is very, very important.

18                 I've been observing the comp system

19      since I started lobbying New York State

20      government in 1978. I can tell you it is

21      extremely difficult to win a comp case if the

22      condition is not classified as an occupational

23      disease, which creates a presumption, and COVID

24      has not been added to the list of occupational



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2       diseases, so we need the legislation make the

3       presumption. I know Senator Ramos and Assembly

4       Member Simotas have a bill, and we're strongly

5       supportive, and we follow the lead and work with

6       the [unintelligible] [07:29:44] AFL-CIO on this

7       issue.

8                    There's also been a lot of talk about

9       the so-called state HEROES Act. All of my

10      clients, NYCOSH, the unions, all of them believe

11      very, very strongly that we need an airborne

12      pathogen standard that can be enforced. And we

13      believe that the legislature should take a look

14      at creating or mandating the state labor

15      commissioner to create such a standard. The OSHA

16      law federally does not prohibit it and there's

17      federal case law that allows it, and it's time

18      for something to be done on an enforceable

19      standard.

20                   One of my clients is Rural & Migrant

21      Ministries. They represent farm workers. They're

22      extremely concerned about the spread of COVID in

23      very cramped farm worker housing, and we're

24      hoping that working with the legislature, we can



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2       create some protections and some solutions for

3       that.

4                   Another client is a communications

5       worker, Local 1180. They represent city workers.

6       They're concerned that their members are not

7       getting correct information about the interplay

8       between the federal and state paid leave benefits

9       and their city benefits. That's an issue that's a

10      problem. Many of their members have been

11      teleworking from home, very, very effectively.

12      They're concerned that they not be brought back

13      too soon and have their health jeopardized and

14      they would like the union to be more involved

15      when they are brought back, in the conditions

16      under which they are brought back.

17                  Finally, we represent an employer, a

18      small to medium size employer called Carmel

19      Livery Service. This is a livery company based

20      the in Bronx. And when the livery industry

21      collapsed with the shutdown, they kept employees

22      on as long as they could, but they eventually had

23      to lay off 40 percent of their employees. They

24      kept the rest on, hoping that things might get



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2       better. The ones that were kept on were enrolled

3       in the state shared work program, which is run

4       very with very, very well by the State Labor

5       Department and I think there was testimony that I

6       think there are 80,000 some odd workers now

7       enrolled in shared work, which allows a

8       combination of work and wages and unemployment

9       insurance benefits. Carmel was told by somebody

10      on the staff at state labor --

11                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Wrap up,

12      buddy.

13                   MR. WINSTEN:            -- that a laid off worker

14      could not be re-hired and qualify for the shared

15      work program. I think the statute can be read

16      differently, but I would urge you to take a look

17      at this, and if necessary change the statute to

18      allow these workers to be re-hired by an employer

19      like Carmel and participate in shared work. It

20      saves the state money on unemployment insurance,

21      and it allows them to earn a wage plus

22      unemployment that's equal to their pre-pandemic

23      wage.

24                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Richard,



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2       thank you for your testimony. Your time has

3       expired.

4                  MR. WINSTEN:            Thank you, I'm done. Thank

5       you very much.

6                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     And we

7       appreciate the diversity of your representation

8       because it remind us of the diversity of

9       individuals impacted so negatively. Senator, I

10      don't see any questions on the assembly side at

11      this point.

12                 SENATOR RAMOS:              We don't seem to have

13      any hands up on our side, either, so I'll also

14      thank Richard for his testimony and for his

15      partnership, because we worked very closely

16      together last year to pass the Farm Worker Fair

17      Labor Practices Act, and obviously we have a lot

18      more work to do to together, so Richard thank you

19      for standing up for a variety of workers today.

20                 MR. WINSTEN:            Well, thank you for all

21      the hard work you've done legislatively, thank

22      goodness, during this pandemic in providing

23      service to beleaguered constituents. Thank you

24      very, very much.



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2                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you, Richard. Talk

3       to you soon.

4                  MR. WINSTEN:            Thank you.

5                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Okay. So next

6       up is panel number 11. Senator, well, I've got

7       the list right here, I'll take it, I'm sorry.

8                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Okay.

9                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Make the Road

10      New York, we have Deborah Axt, the co-executive

11      director. We have Carlyn Cowen, the chief policy

12      and public affairs officer from the Chinese

13      American Planning Council and from the New

14      Immigrant Community Empowerment organization, we

15      have Diane Moreno who is the program director.

16      So, Deborah, we will start off with you. Go right

17      ahead. Welcome.

18                 MS. DEBORAH AXT, CO-EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR,

19      MAKE THE ROAD NEW YORK:               Thank you so much. Thank

20      you to the chairs for convening this critical

21      conversation and to all of you for digging in for

22      so many hours in today's absolutely crucial

23      issues. I'm here testifying on behalf of Make t

24      the Road New York's 25,000 members who are black



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2       and brown community folks living in many of the

3       earliest epicenter communities in this pandemic,

4       Queens, New York City, Long Island and hard hit

5       communities in Westchester in particular.

6                  The work that our members are doing puts

7       them in the position of essential jobs, so folks

8       are dealing with the absolute lack of clear,

9       mandated safeguards. We absolutely call on the

10      legislature to enact the HEROES Act, and those

11      kind of protections. And we have seen that

12      workers who dare speak up and ask for times to

13      sanitize have repeatedly been harassed and even

14      fired to silence them. Some of the most powerful

15      corporations on earth, Amazon in particular, has

16      become notorious for this kind of behavior to

17      shut down workers in standing up for their

18      rights.

19                 And one of the things that we're seeing

20      and is cause for great dismay is that the

21      overburdened Department of Labor is really unable

22      to step in and provide protection. Of course,

23      there's missing standards. And even preexisting

24      protections, like wage theft protections are



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2       going substantially almost completely unenforced

3       at this moment in time. And so workers who are

4       facing wage theft, exploitation and danger on the

5       job just have to accept it, especially given the

6       other key issue that I want to talk about, which

7       you have heard many folks mention today, which is

8       the issue of excluded workers.

9                  Make the Road released a report in May

10      called "Excluded in the Epicenter", studying the

11      lives of over 230 black and brown immigrant New

12      Yorkers and our follow-up report following that

13      same population was released earlier this week.

14      And we have discovered horrifying levels of

15      unemployment and income crisis in undocumented

16      communities, and black and brown communities in

17      general, 92 percent of respondents reported that

18      they or another earner in their household had

19      lost their job as a result of the crisis. In May

20      only five percent had received unemployment

21      benefits. There's some improvement in that number

22      among folks who do have the necessary immigration

23      status. But 98 percent of our unemployed,

24      undocumented immigrant survey respondents have



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2       not received a single penny in federal or state

3       economic assistance.

4                  And this is because of what you've heard

5       mentioned time and time out today especially, is

6       that folks, regardless of how many citizen

7       children are in that household, regardless of how

8       many years they've been paying into and having

9       their employers pay into the unemployment system

10      to create that safety net for others, are

11      absolutely blocked from accessing a penny if they

12      lack work authorization. And let's be real, we

13      all know the racist immigration laws that block

14      folks from being able to access work

15      authorization, right.

16                 Or if you are recently incarcerated and

17      are getting out of immigrant detention or out of

18      jail or prison into the pandemic and have

19      virtually no hope of getting employment or if you

20      are an undocumented immigrant who

21      [unintelligible] [07:38:00] a breadwinner spouse

22      and [unintelligible] [07:38:03] sustain the

23      family, though your breadwinner spouse has passed

24      away from COVID.



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2                  So the experience of our members has

3       been on the one hand being told you're essential,

4       we need you, we need you delivering the food to

5       our families, we need you staffing the

6       warehouses, we need you cleaning the hospitals,

7       and on the other hand, if they're not able to

8       work or the bottom faults of their part of the

9       economy, you are totally disposable. And folks

10      are I would say growing in the intensity of

11      desperation in their neighborhoods.

12                 It is really hard to convey to people

13      who are not in these communities or not connected

14      on a day-to-day basis. There's now an intense

15      competition to be able to access the recyclables

16      that incredibly poor and homeless folks gather in

17      order to make pennies, and that's growing in

18      intensity. That competition in the streets of

19      Queens is horrific, because folks do not have any

20      source of income.

21                 And we know, thanks to Senator Ramos and

22      Assembly Member De La Rosa, that there is a

23      solution that has been designed for our state,

24      right. We have within reach legislation that



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2       would design a mark-to-market billionaire tax in

3       order to fully fund an excluded worker fund that

4       would give all of the undocumented workers and

5       recently incarcerated folks in need access to an

6       unemployment-like benefit, disaster emergency

7       income replacement at a flat rate, a monthly

8       benefit. It's a simplified version of

9       unemployment, a simplified version to make it

10      administrable. It would be fully funded, even in

11      the first year by the mark-to-market billionaire

12      tax. So there's no reason not to move that

13      forward immediately.

14                 And frankly we cannot wait for Congress

15      to act. I understand we absolutely need federal

16      dollars, and Congress should act and they need to

17      send those federal dollars, but not a single

18      proposal that has any viability at the

19      congressional level would address any of the need

20      that we have for emergency income to these

21      families who are excluded from unemployment and

22      other stimulus benefits at the federal level.

23                 So we need to ask you all to act now. We

24      cannot wait for a governor. We cannot wait for



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2       Congress. We need to move forward. The income

3       crisis is growing. The desperation and the need

4       is growing. This is a humanitarian disaster that

5       we cannot allow to happen on our watch. Thank you

6       all so much for all of your work. I know how hard

7       you're working around the clock, and we really

8       appreciate your support.

9                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you,

10      Deborah. Carlyn.

11                 MS. CARLYN COWEN, CHIEF POLICY AND

12      PUBLIC AFFAIRS OFFICER, CHINESE-AMERICAN PLANNING

13      COUNCIL:     Carlyn.

14                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Carlyn, I'm

15      sorry. Welcome aboard.

16                 MS. COWEN:           That's okay. It's a

17      difficult name. Good evening and thank you so

18      much for the opportunity to testify tonight. My

19      name is Carlyn Cowen. My pronouns are they/them

20      or she/her and I'm the chief policy and public

21      affairs officer of the Chinese-American Planning

22      Council, CPC. CPC is the nation's largest Asian-

23      American social services agency serving 60,000

24      Asian-American, immigrant and low-income New



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2       Yorkers throughout all five boroughs as well as

3       some in Long Island and Westchester.

4                  During the pandemic, CPC has been

5       working with our community members from all over

6       facing all sorts of issues, and I want to uplift

7       a lot of the issues that we've heard in today's

8       hearing, but also share what we've been seeing

9       with our communities.

10                 I want to talk about two different types

11      of workers today. Our frontline human services

12      workers who are essential and our excluded

13      workers, who are often also essential. Human

14      services workers are at the frontline of the

15      pandemic. We have been delivering food and

16      medications. We have been helping people navigate

17      unemployment and rent and avoiding eviction. We

18      have been helping young people navigate remote

19      learning and providing home care to people in

20      their homes.

21                 Yet at the same time these essential

22      human services workers deemed essential by the

23      state and paid for through state contracts and

24      state funding, have been facing a complete lack



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2       of person protective equipment and the supplies

3       that we need to do our work safely. At CPC, we

4       employed over 5,000 staff and have had to resort

5       over the last several months, of seeking

6       donations for masks and sanitizer and trying to

7       cobble together to keep our staff safe as they

8       interact with our community members and support

9       our community members.

10                 At the same time, these workers are

11      often paid minimum wage, and human services

12      workers are by vast majority women, women of

13      color and immigrant workers. And so we are being

14      put at the frontlines and being told that we have

15      to do this work for minimum wage.

16                 And at the same time as our services are

17      increasing, we're seeing huge -- the demand for

18      our services is increasing, we're seeing huge

19      cuts to our services through state programs and

20      we're being forced to lay off workers, then who

21      are facing their own challenges with

22      unemployment.

23                 That brings me to the other category of

24      workers, which as we've just had to lay off 100



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2       staff at CPC alone, workers that are being

3       excluded from our economy and from state support.

4       All of the stories that you've heard today are

5       stories that we have heard from our community

6       members or our staff. And we're seeing the

7       communities of color are by far being hit the

8       hardest. In the Asian-American community,

9       unemployment rose 6,900 percent over April, and

10      we know that that traces back partially to early

11      discrimination faced within the Asian-American

12      community causing massive job loss. But

13      communities of color across the board are being

14      hit hard.

15                  In our own community at CPC, 50 percent

16      have our community members have lost jobs or

17      income and report not knowing how they're going

18      pay for rent, groceries or medication. In one of

19      or preschool families, 24 children in 24 families

20      in a four week span, 20 of those families lost

21      their jobs and income and less than half them

22      qualified for any sort of federal or state aid.

23      They are now going on month five of being

24      completely left out by the state and federal



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2       government.

3                  We have community members that cannot

4       afford rent, cannot afford food, cannot afford

5       medication. We have young people that are

6       rationing food for their family members while

7       their parents are out seeking whatever work they

8       can. And we have had young people sharing

9       suicidal thoughts with our staff because they

10      don't know how their families are going to afford

11      to eat or how they're going to afford to bury

12      their parents who have died from COVID-19.

13                 I recently testified at the hearing of

14      disproportionate impact of COVID-19 on

15      communities of color in April, and we shared a

16      number of recommendations there, and I'm sad to

17      say that the recommendations that I'm going to

18      share today are the exact same because we haven't

19      seen a lot of these changes happening yet.

20                 We still have community members that are

21      waiting for state aid and now have months of rent

22      and other expenses piling up. We need to

23      establish an excluded workers fund, we need to

24      ensure hazard pay and wages for our frontline



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2       workers that are just struggling to get by and

3       finding extra jobs where they can. All of the

4       things that we've heard mentioned today are

5       urgently needed and were urgently needed in March

6       for our workers.

7                  But it doesn't just stop there because

8       we have to look more, broadly housing. We have to

9       cancel rent and mortgages and support our small

10      businesses that struggling. Healthcare,

11      protecting Medicaid and passing the New York

12      Health Act, because yes, healthcare pertains to

13      the workforce during mass unemployment where so

14      many of our community members are losing health

15      care. And most importantly, raising revenues and

16      making sure that the billionaires that have

17      earned billions and billions of dollars during

18      this pandemic are not getting away with this

19      while our community members are the ones that are

20      suffering.

21                 Thank you so much for the opportunity to

22      testify today, and I'm happy to answer any

23      questions you might have.

24                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you.



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2       And finally, Diana, Diana Moreno, welcome.

3                  MS. DIANA MORENO, PROGRAMS DIRECTOR, NEW

4       IMMIGRANT COMMUNITY EMPOWERMENT:                      Thank you so

5       much for having me. Hi, my name is Diana Moreno.

6       I am the program director at New Immigrant

7       Community Empowerment and I would really like to

8       thank Senator Ramos and everybody present for

9       giving us the opportunity to represent some of

10      the workers who have long been excluded from our

11      economy, from the benefits even though they pay

12      taxes into our system and especially now during

13      the pandemic have been some of the hardest hit,

14      not just in a health crisis but in an economic

15      crisis that has left many of them homeless and

16      struggling to put food on the table.

17                 As one of the strange silver linings of

18      this, of this pandemic, has been actually to

19      expand our work and our reach of New Immigrant

20      Community Empowerment from a place that was

21      centered in central Queens, which as Senator

22      Ramos very well knew, was at the center of the

23      epidemic back in March and April, two, actually

24      opening up two more centers in Brooklyn and in



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2       the Bronx because we saw the need of the

3       community for disaster relief.

4                  We became from an immigrant rights and

5       worker centered organization focused on helping

6       educate folks around their rights, helping

7       educate folks around safety and health training,

8       to a disaster relief organization helping people

9       put food on the table, and we continue to do that

10      to this day.

11                 Unfortunately, our center has also

12      really -- we have been witness to those advancing

13      needs of a population that was already on the

14      edge long before this pandemic. These are day

15      laborers that every single day have to go out to

16      a street corner to look for work and they might

17      be in the most precarious conditions to be able

18      to maybe be offered, to get into a van for maybe

19      what's $80 a day for a hard day's work, that they

20      may or may not get at the end of the day.

21                 These are workers who face really high

22      incidents of injury and death on the job,

23      including two workers that we've recently mourned

24      at a rally a couple of weeks ago, which Senator



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2       Ramos attended, two workers that died due to

3       unsafe conditions, one in Queens and one in

4       Manhattan, both of them immigrant Latinos, who

5       again due to the lack of regulations and the lack

6       of employer oversights that care more about

7       profit than human life are no longer with us.

8                  Unfortunately, this population also has

9       faced some of the worst outcomes as far as the

10      illness rates, contagion rates and the death

11      rates of this particular pandemic, which made us

12      do, as a staff at New Immigrant Community

13      Empowerment do something that we never thought we

14      would be doing, which is reaching out to

15      consulates from Latin America to help people

16      repatriate bodies, repatriate remains. This is

17      something that has truly changed our organization

18      from within, and I really hope that the stories

19      of our members reach you all, to understand that

20      the safety net was no longer there, and this

21      particular population that was already on the

22      edge of the cliff has fallen off the cliff. And

23      we need immediate emergency assistance in order

24      to the ever growing generational issues that are



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2       going to happen if we do nothing for these

3       workers.

4                  One of the those issues is, of course,

5       even the mental health crisis that is tied to

6       this, to this overall health crisis in which we

7       see when we survey our members, that 15 to 20

8       percent are having deep depression, anxiety, and

9       even suicidal ideation, as was mentioned by one

10      of our former colleagues.

11                 Something else that we really care

12      deeply about is the fact that as unemployment has

13      grown within this sector, other of our members

14      who may have worked in restaurants, who may have

15      worked in salons, who may have worked cleaning

16      homes, et cetera, they are out of work while most

17      of our members who work in construction are just

18      starting to enter back into the economy.

19                 However, that labor pool of unemployed

20      people that are now trying to enter into

21      construction, what that creates is a really

22      unfortunate, exploitive conditions, in which

23      people were unfortunately take the lowest wage

24      that they can get, they will not ask questions.



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2       If there is no social distancing say, or no PPE,

3       they will go with it because they need the money.

4                  And without those federal regulations --

5       excuse me, those state regulations and those

6       strong laws that present of these sorts of

7       exploitations from happening, our communities are

8       going to continue to be injured and to die on the

9       job.

10                 I'm here in support of an essential

11      workers bailout. I'm here in support of Carlos'

12      Law which would allow for workers to actually be

13      safe and secure and for the fine for their deaths

14      to be more than $10,000, which is the current

15      fine ever whenever an employer is found negligent

16      of a dying worker, and I'm here in support of the

17      SWEAT bill which would allow for our workers to

18      ensure that they have a recourse against wage

19      theft. I really appreciate your time. Thank you

20      so much.

21                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Well, thank you guys so

22      much. I have to say that working with all of you

23      throughout all of this has been quite an

24      experience, and I'm sorry that I'm getting



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2       emotional. The truth is that we all know that

3       what we're seeing on our streets is very hard,

4       that there really is a population here in New

5       York that is much worse off than many, than most

6       in our state. And thanks again for working with

7       me, especially on the excluded workers bill, to

8       make sure that we're providing them with some

9       compensation as the taxpayers that undocumented

10      people are, oftentimes paying more taxes than

11      billionaires themselves in this state.

12                 Can Deb perhaps and Carlyn and Diana can

13      chime in at any point. Can we talk about how it

14      is that people are surviving? They can't work,

15      right. If they worked in restaurants in Midtown,

16      those closed. They don't qualify for unemployment

17      benefits. They don't qualify for PUA or anything

18      like that. How are people feeding their families

19      and making rent and paying for their needs?

20                 MS. AXT:         I mean, in our membership, it

21      varies. The answer is they're not. They're

22      obviously barely surviving, people are waiting in

23      incredibly long lines to get food. It is possible

24      to access some kind of food, but it's not enough.



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2       It's certainly not enough for substantial

3       families. There's no way to get diapers. There's

4       no way to get clothing for your kids, much less

5       enable your children to be remote learning for

6       school. People have managed to get small sums of

7       money from organizations like ours and others

8       that are testifying here, who have scraped

9       together money from donors and foundations. And,

10      of course, there was a city fund that did give

11      out some funds, right, a few hundred dollars to

12      help with food. It's to help with basic survival.

13                 But as soon as the moratorium is lifted,

14      okay, people's debts are building up and the

15      landlords are starting to harass more and more,

16      and have already convinced many people to give up

17      on their homes. And as soon as the moratorium is

18      lifted, people will be facing massive debt that

19      there's no way to get out from under.

20                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Diana, can you add? I

21      know you guys also put together a pantry like

22      Make the Road and like our office and so many

23      other places where we've had to step up in that

24      way.



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2                  MS. MORENO:           Yeah. So, this kind of goes

3       back to a point that I touched on during my

4       testimony which is that folks are finding what

5       they can, and that means that there's people that

6       are switching industries, that means that there

7       are people that are working for less, that means

8       that there are people that are working six hours

9       a week if we can, right, and obviously that's not

10      enough to meet the needs of a family,

11      [unintelligible] [07:54:52] does not meet the

12      needs of even an individual, which is why we have

13      a lot of stories from members who have gone

14      through, you know, the unemployment un week one

15      in March to not being able to pay rent to now

16      living in a shelter.

17                 And these are the same numbers that are

18      showing up three times a week to volunteer with

19      our organization to provide food for others. And

20      so it is incredibly heartening and inspiring for

21      me to be able to share their stories with you.

22      However, it is my duty to really communicate the

23      dire situation in which they find themselves

24      because it is through community organizations



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2       like ours, like Make the Road and through offices

3       like Senator Ramos and others that folks are able

4       to eat, however, we know that this is going to

5       take a long -- this is going to be a long

6       recovery ad how sustainable is it for folks who

7       depend on any sort of services?

8                  SENATOR RAMOS:              I want to squeeze in one

9       question, which is kind of a non-sequitur for

10      Carlyn, only because I know CPC is such a big

11      umbrella organization and I think among them is

12      APA, right, which is in my district?

13                 MS. COWEN:           We work closely.

14                 SENATOR RAMOS:              You work closely. It's

15      kind of a switch in topics, but we've seen a lot

16      of small businesses also be hurt by SLA fines as

17      of late, particularly in the Asian and Latinx

18      communities which, of course, oftentimes are the

19      bigger employers for our people, right. Can you

20      tell us a little bit -- are you guys working at

21      all in that, with that issue? Have you been?

22                 MS. COWEN:           We've had a lot of community

23      members that have had this issue, and I think

24      that it's one of many issues that our small



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2       businesses are facing, and I think that

3       particularly for immigrant run and limited

4       English proficient small business owners, they

5       are facing so many burdens right now because they

6       have been left out of the PPP program, while I

7       think someone said earlier organizations like

8       shake shack get it, they are trying to navigate

9       ever changing guidance, fines, guidelines,

10      updates, from a bunch of different city and state

11      agencies, all in language that is not their home

12      language. And then they're being faced with

13      increasing fines and having to put out costs just

14      to get by that they don't have the money for. And

15      so it's been a huge problem. We're seeing

16      businesses close. It means that more families are

17      going hungry.

18                 SENATOR RAMOS:              All right. Well, thank

19      you. And thank you, I know Diana brought up

20      mental health, which is a huge issue. I mean

21      we're going through a collective traumatic

22      moment, but it only adds onto, you know, the

23      rhetoric and the hate that's coming from the

24      White House and unfortunately this is an issue



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2       that I think we need to start talking more about

3       is our mental health during and as a result of

4       this pandemic. I'm out of time, so I'll pass it

5       on to the Assembly.

6                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you,

7       senator and thank you to the panelists as well.

8       First up from the assembly will be our co-chair

9       of banking, Tom Abinanti.

10                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER ABINANTI:                     I want to

11      thank you all. I want to thank you all for giving

12      us a picture of what's really going on, on the

13      street. And it is sad that so many people are

14      hurting so badly. I want to go off on one issue,

15      though, and I'm particularly choosing this group

16      because you guys, particularly Make the Road have

17      been a leader in proposing some things that I

18      think really need to be detailed, and if not on

19      this call, offline.

20                 I want to understand the proposal for

21      cancellation rent. It's very easy to say that,

22      and we understand why so many people need help,

23      but once you get away from New York City with the

24      big landlords and maybe not even having to leave



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2       New York City, you find that a lot of the

3       landlords are people who own a two or three

4       family building. Many of them are immigrants who

5       have scraped together a little bit of money, you

6       know, buy a three-family house. They live in it.

7       Their kids live in it with them. And then the

8       kids get married and move out and so they rent

9       the apartment. And so an across the board no rent

10      doesn't work.

11                  How do we fashion something that

12      actually helps the tenants and doesn't

13      unintentionally hurt so many of the people who

14      really need that income because that's what

15      they're using to get by. They may have a store

16      down on the first floor and they may be the store

17      that's being closed that you're talking about,

18      and now they need the rent from the other

19      apartment just to pay the mortgage or just to buy

20      food themselves. How do we fashion this? Is there

21      a proposal out there that somehow makes all this

22      work?

23                  MS. AXT:         There are a number of

24      proposals, and I'm happy had to follow up on all



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2       of the details, but we are certainly not

3       proposing a mandate that just says landlords

4       cannot charge rent, right. That is absolutely not

5       acceptable and not the way that we should be

6       going about this. We absolutely agree. And a huge

7       risk here frankly, is that the same thing we're

8       seeing with the death of Main Street, which we

9       certainly hope will not be permanent, right, it

10      could happen in housing as well, right. We don't

11      need to see immigrant and other small homeowners

12      and small business owners be put out of business

13      while giant corporations and private equities

14      swoop in to profiteer off of the ruins.

15                 So our approach on canceling rent and

16      our approach on funding excluded workers is

17      really fundamentally the same. On one day two

18      weeks ago Jeff Bezos made $13 billion. On that

19      one day, he made more money than he and his

20      grandchildren and great-grandchildren could ever

21      hope to earn. It is disgusting. We live in a

22      state that says that is okay while our members

23      are going without a single penny to live on,

24      while our members, who are working in his



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2       warehouses and our members who are bicycling food

3       to us 13 and 14 hours a day with just plastic

4       bags covering their hands and home-fashioned

5       masks to protect them, that is disgusting! We

6       cannot say that this is the state we want to live

7       in. So it's all about recapturing that wealth.

8                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER ABINANTI:                     I would

9       disagree with you. Why are we not talking about

10      increasing the minimum wage? I have never heard

11      anybody talk about that.

12                 MS. AXT:         I mean, that should absolutely

13      be a part of all of this, right. Unfortunately,

14      the 65 percent of our members who are still

15      unemployed, like that's not going to be an

16      immediate solution, so we're definitely in crisis

17      intention mode, of course, in terms of re-

18      stabilizing our communities and allowing people

19      to survive the next few months. But definitely,

20      we're with you on all of those broader solutions.

21                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER ABINANTI:                     Okay. I look

22      in order to having the conversation, because I

23      don't want to do more damage to the people who

24      need help by, like you said, just canceling the



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2       rent. I really want to have this conversation

3       because if we're going to move forward, we've got

4       to come up with a solution that works for

5       everybody.

6                   MS. AXT:        Definitely. I'll send you

7       follow-up info [unintelligible] [08:02:29].

8                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER ABINANTI:

9       [unintelligible] [08:02:28] what needs to be

10      portrayed in this hearing. Thank you very much.

11                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                    Okay, back to

12      the Senate.

13                  SENATOR RAMOS:             Up next we have Senator

14      Jackson.

15                  SENATOR JACKSON:              Hi, everyone. First

16      let me thank the three of you for coming in and

17      obviously I'm just listening to your detailed

18      situation that our people are in, and it's

19      devastating. The one thing really caught me is

20      Carlyn, when you said the percentage was 800 and

21      what, 80 or something like that?

22                  MS. COWAN:          For the unemployment

23      increase?

24                  SENATOR JACKSON:              Yeah.



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2                    MS. COWAN:           900 percent increase in a

3       month.

4                    SENATOR JACKSON:               Oh, my God. I mean,

5       900 percent. It's just insane to even think

6       about, that people are, you know, being laid off

7       and struggling, and in fact I was being at one

8       hearing and they were talking about the food

9       distribution lines and how many meals are given

10      out in Chinatown area, over 10,000 per day or

11      something like that. And I mean compared to, you

12      know, like 1,000. It's just unimaginable that

13      we're in such dire situations, and that's why we

14      have to take corrective action ourselves if the

15      federal government is not going to do it.

16                   We just have to. I mean, and in anyone

17      if anyone does believe the situation, they should

18      hear all three of your testimonies and then they

19      will know. And if they can't feel that in their

20      heart, let me tell you, if they can't feel that

21      in their heart, something's wrong. And those are

22      the individuals that we must gets out of office,

23      because they basically have I guess a brick wall

24      in front of them that can't see it, can't hear



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2       it, and can't feel it.

3                  And I'm glad that I was able to stay for

4       the entire duration and to hear all of what you

5       had to say, and obviously Jessica and some of us,

6       as you know, we did a fast for 24 hours and we

7       slept on the sidewalk, but that's no comparison

8       to the people that are struggling, struggling

9       every day just to try to make ends meet, to have

10      a decent meal. But let me thank you. You're doing

11      God's work on behalf of the people of our great

12      city and state. Thank you.

13                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you,

14      senator. From the Assembly we will go to my

15      colleague, Yuh-Line Niou.

16                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER YUH-LINE NIOU:                         Hi.

17      Sorry about popping on and off. I couldn't figure

18      it out for a second. But I just wanted to say

19      thank you to everyone for testifying and, Deb, I

20      know that workers here in Chinatown too, our

21      [unintelligible] [08:05:48] workers are exactly

22      the same situation that you're describing, and I

23      just want to say thank you for your testimony.

24                 And I also wanted to thank our chairs



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2       today because they're asking all the right

3       questions, and so many moments where I was like,

4       I need to ask this, and they asked it already.

5                  So I just want to touch on a couple of

6       things today. I know that you were just talking,

7       so Chair Abinanti has mentioned minimum wage

8       increases, and then Carlyn you had talked about

9       how 900 percent increase in unemployment. I mean

10      minimum wage increases are great, but if you

11      don't have a job, you know, the wages aren't

12      going to be there and it won't help and that's

13      why we need to talk about canceling rent and we

14      need to talk about all of these things.

15                 But I just wanted to say that the state

16      made huge cuts to our social services. And I

17      wanted to ask you what are some of the impacts to

18      the workers, to our social workers, et cetera, to

19      folks who are in our 501(C)3s who are actually

20      doing the actual footwork. And then on the flip

21      side what is happening to folks on the ground due

22      to these cuts? Like what is happening to the

23      folks that you're working with?

24                 MS. COWAN:           Yeah. So just quickly, the



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2       stat about Asian-American unemployment increase

3       is actually 6,900 percent. Like that is the scale

4       of the crisis that we are talking about. And

5       that's why yes, like we do need to increase

6       minimum wage. We needed to continue increasing

7       minimum wage for a long time, but that's not

8       going to be nearly enough when people that are

9       earning minimum wage are months behind on bills

10      and many, many more people are unemployed.

11                 We need to stop talking about handling

12      this crisis in this measure or that measure. It

13      needs to be this and that and that. It needs to

14      be increasing the minimum wage and an excluded

15      workers fund and canceling rent and mortgages and

16      supporting small landlords and the New York

17      Health Act and all of these other things, because

18      otherwise we are just going to be stuck in

19      perpetual relief and we're never actually going

20      to get to the recovery phase of this crisis.

21                 People are struggling too much and we

22      are in too deep, and we see that in the social

23      services sector every day. We deliver over 1,000

24      meals a day, and on top that of we distributed



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2       over 100,000 pounds of food, and people are still

3       going hungry every day. We are helping people try

4       to avoid eviction. We're helping people figure

5       out school and jobs and benefits and try to keep

6       people from getting deported, and all of this is

7       happening at the same time as like cuts are

8       happening to our programs.

9                  And our contracts don't fort PPE or

10      supplies, our contracts aren't flexible enough to

11      actually manage a crisis. They are so rigid that

12      we have to figure out how to manage a crisis

13      around them. And what this means is like staff

14      are spending time instead of meeting people's

15      material needs, trying to get PPE, trying to get

16      it to be allowable within their contract, and

17      we're also losing staff. And if that continues

18      happening, not only is the scale of this crisis

19      going to grow, as more and more social service

20      workers end up in the unemployed pool, but we're

21      also not going to have the community-based

22      organizations that have been at the frontlines of

23      this crisis the whole time because we're not

24      going to be able to make it through.



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2                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     All right,

3       good.

4                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER NIOU:                   Thank you so

5       much, Carlyn.

6                   MS. MORENO:           If I could just add to that

7       very quickly. We just had this fight in New York

8       City, right. Like we had to march and demand and

9       ask that these frontline organizations that are

10      the only ones that are able to reach invisiblized

11      populations that are very difficult to, you know,

12      due to language barriers, due to not

13      understanding the system, [unintelligible]

14      [08:09:32], that we stayed alive and afloat,

15      right. We have to fight for our own existence in

16      order to fight for the lives of our members.

17                  And that is such an unfortunate and

18      ironic twist considering the high needs of our

19      members in this moment. And that's something that

20      I would like to just spend my day serving our

21      members and helping them thrive, not just survive

22      and because there's a reason why even prior to

23      the pandemic, this population was on the edge.

24                  As undocumented workers in an anti-



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2       immigrant, incredibly anti-immigrant political

3       climate, with a healthcare system that does not

4       meet most of their needs. There is layer upon

5       layer. I just want to reiterate what Carlyn said

6       in terms of like the solution, the actual

7       recovery is not just one policy, right.

8                  I do believe that an excluded workers

9       fund is a fantastic way to start because it will

10      address that inequity, that generational inequity

11      of billionnaires who pay no taxes to a population

12      that is barely surviving that pays taxes into the

13      system and is [unintelligible] [08:10:50] --

14                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you,

15      Diana, thank you very much Yuh-Line. Thank you,

16      as well.

17                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER NIOU:                   Well, thank you

18      and I want --

19                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Senator,

20      back, back to you.

21                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Thank you. Up next, we

22      have state Senator Gustavo Rivera, who we haven't

23      heard from today.

24                 SENATOR GUSTAVO RIVERA:                    Although I've



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2       been in meetings up and down.

3                   SENATOR RAMOS:              You have, you have.

4                   SENATOR RIVERA:              But I've been here for

5       most of the thing.

6                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Yes, you

7       have.

8                     SENATOR RIVERA:              A quick thing, it is

9       very important, I'm very disappointed that -- I'm

10      thankful for the assembly members in the minority

11      who are still here. Thank you. I'm quite

12      disappointed that there are no minority members

13      from the Senate right now here. I'm not going to

14      -- you've already been thanked enough. I'm going

15      to do something different. I'm not going to

16      devil's advocate. I'm going to play the devil.

17      Any of you. We can't -- you're talking about

18      taxing -- we can't tax our way out of this,

19      right. Does anybody have a response? We can't tax

20      our way out of this.

21                  MS. AXT:         That's completely ridiculous,

22      of course.

23                  SENATOR RIVERA:              What do you mean?

24                  MS. AXT:         Austerity politics have



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2       already decimated the Department of Labor that's

3       now supposed to be supporting unemployed workers

4       across the board. It's already decimated our

5       enforcement to support our workers in low wage

6       jobs who are being exploited, even before COVID,

7       right. So we have basically decimated the support

8       systems that we now need and that are not

9       available to us.

10                 And now we're allowing the argument that

11      they're going to be cut further so our folks

12      cannot survive. The amassing of wealth, this idea

13      that billionaires will somehow --

14                 SENATOR RIVERA:              But they'll leave.

15      They'll leave!

16                 MS. AXT:         I recommend that everyone go

17      look at the little things on the internet that

18      demonstrate how much a billion dollars really is.

19      Taxing billionaires' increase in wealth by eight

20      percent, right, which is what Senator Ramos and

21      Assembly Member De La Rosa's tax would do, eight

22      percent on just the gains in wealth based on

23      their assets, right, they won't even feel it.

24                 SENATOR RIVERA:              But they'll leave. I



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2       mean they've left before. Won't they leave? Okay.

3       You know what? Moving on, moving on. You're

4       talking about other places.

5                   MS. AXT:         Right, The evidence is that

6       they don't leave. The evidence is that they don't

7       leave. They won't even feel this.

8                   SENATOR RIVERA:              Let's move on, let's

9       move on. Listen. This housing thing, you're

10      talking about the housing. That's problem solved.

11      Didn't we solve that problem? We, it's an

12      executive order. It's solved, right? It's solved.

13      Oh, so it's solved? Nobody wants to respond to

14      that?

15                  MS. AXT:         The which issue?

16                  SENATOR RIVERA:              The housing issue.

17      There is an executive order which actually makes

18      sure that you can't get evicted, so the problem

19      is solved, right?

20                  MS. MORENO:           I would point to the gap

21      between law and enforcement, and I would point to

22      the fact that many folks, especially in New York

23      City, that participate in underground economy

24      because they are undocumented because they're in



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2       an informal work situation, they're also

3       participating in an informal living situation in

4       which they don't know their rights, they don't

5       understand how those laws apply to them and if

6       they do. So, whether our governor has an

7       executive order, that makes no difference in

8       their lived reality. That makes no difference in

9       the fact that they're out of their home and all

10      their stuff is sitting outside of their home and

11      their stuff is lost, right.

12                 SENATOR RIVERA:              Devil mask off. Cancel

13      rent. Tax billionaires, tax millionaires. Let's

14      do this. They're not going to leave, they're not

15      go anywhere. Let's do this. We can't tax our with

16      a out of it? How about we lessen the blow on the

17      people that are really hurting right now, it's

18      completely crazy and ridiculous. Governor Cuomo,

19      it is you, sir. You got your people watching

20      still? It is you, sir. You are getting people to

21      kicked out of their homes. You are making sure

22      that billionaires and millionaires are treated

23      completely different than the people who these

24      folks represent. Shame on you, sir. Devil mask



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2       on. Oh, but they'll leave. I'm done.

3                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you,

4       senator. And we will move on. A little bit more

5       passion next time would be appreciated. If we can

6       move on to our colleague Assembly Member Carmen

7       De La Rosa who will be finishing out the

8       Assembly's comments this evening.

9                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER DE LA ROSA:                       It's always

10      hard to follow Gustavo Rivera and his devil and

11      saints masks but I will do my best. First of all,

12      I want to thank the panel for your testimony.

13      We've been working really, really hard to bring

14      to light the narratives of the people that you

15      all work every single day to represent. And I

16      just want us to, for our colleagues who may be

17      watching, who do not share a part New York City,

18      but have a vested interest in ensuring that the

19      solutions that we're proposing here understand

20      that it benefits the constituencies that they

21      also represent. Can we talk a little bit about

22      the tax and the solutions that have been

23      presented and how they will help those

24      constituents who live outside of New York City as



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2       well?

3                   And I also want to dig a little deeper

4       into the impact, as it has been felt by the

5       families that you represent. What percentage of

6       the families that you represent have lost loved

7       ones in this time, and what does that mean for

8       access to healthcare? What does that mean for

9       staying in their homes? What does that mean as

10      families get ready to go back to school? How can

11      we kind of put all of this in a context where

12      people understand that New York State has the

13      ability and the authority to get this done, and

14      why this is a critical moment for us to do it.

15                  MS. COWAN:           I mean, I think the key

16      thing here is that this is a statewide issue and,

17      yes, it looks different downstate than upstate,

18      but New Yorkers across the state are facing the

19      same problems of mass unemployment, lack of

20      healthcare and inability to meet basics needs.

21      And we actually saw that the first city that has

22      made any moves towards anything like cancelling

23      rent is Utica, an upstate city, because they were

24      seeing the urgent needs of their community



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2       members.

3                  And so this isn't just something that's

4       a downstate issue. It's something that we see

5       that is completely across the board, and we know

6       that New York has the ability to do things like

7       raise revenue. There's so many bill that are

8       already existing that with literally the flick of

9       a pen, we could completely change how we are

10      handling this crisis from just kind of creating

11      little band-aids here and there when like what we

12      really need to be doing is actually dealing with

13      this like the gigantic flood it is and is going

14      to continue being as measures like the eviction

15      moratorium expire.

16                 As we're facing the end of that, as

17      we're facing going back to school, as we're

18      facing into the winter, this crisis is only going

19      to grow and the measures that New York State

20      already has that we just have to pass are the

21      things that are actually going to begin to

22      address this.

23                 MS. AXT:         Yeah, I would just add a quick

24      glance at a little bit of data. The fiscal policy



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2       institute did a geographic breakdown of the

3       exploited worker bailout fund and where it would

4       impact different regions. And like $380 million

5       in investment would go to Long Island, $450

6       million to Hudson Valley, $260 million to

7       northern and western New York, so it's definitely

8       not just a New York City issue, right, and those

9       are obviously the concentration of folks who are

10      excluded from these benefits are also creating

11      real crises and economic crises for the

12      communities in all of those geographies. That

13      needs to be addressed as well as the humanitarian

14      aspect, of course, that we've been talking about.

15                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Well, that

16      concludes our commentary for this panel. I just

17      want to take a moment of personal privilege as

18      well. Many of you know I'm an upstate member. So

19      these issues are in our area, but they're not as

20      predominant as they are in the city. But I have

21      to tell you, listening to your passion, to your

22      comments, it reinforces why we need to work

23      collectively to put some changes into effect. At

24      the end of the day, regardless of what your



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2       thoughts are, when people are being treated

3       unfairly, we need to level the playing field,

4       plain and simple. So, thank you I sound like Dick

5       Gottfried the other night. Here we are into our

6       tenth hour of testimony and the best is just

7       starting right towards the end. And senator, I

8       turn over the next panel to you.

9                  SENATOR RAMOS:              Actually --

10                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Oh, I'm

11      sorry. Senate.

12                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Sorry, yes, we have one

13      more questioner, and that is state Senator James

14      Skoufis.

15                 SENATOR SKOUFIS:               Thank you. And I

16      apologize for jumping in here at the end and

17      keeping you. But thanks for your testimony. I do

18      want to echo a little bit of what John McDonald

19      just said and that is those are outside the city,

20      certainly we hear this perspective but I think

21      not nearly as much as some of our colleagues in

22      the five boroughs, and to hear it amplified by

23      all of you I think is valuable for us outside of

24      New York City. So I do appreciate it.



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2                    Certainly you talked a lot about issues

3       and proposals that are pending that are in the

4       legislature. One of the most imminent of which is

5       this issue of revenue, I'll say as a marginal

6       member, I support raising revenue from those who

7       can afford to sacrifice, as many others have

8       including those families that you represent.

9                    But I do want to hone in a little bit,

10      Deborah, on something you opened with and

11      something you touched on again maybe just in the

12      last or second to last set of questions, and that

13      is that we could talk about these things that are

14      pending but there are some issues right now that

15      the Department of Labor and others can help you

16      all with without us passing any legislation,

17      right.

18                   And that is it sounds like there is a

19      significant issue with, for example, lack of

20      enforcement of wage theft. You mentioned that,

21      and I think one or two other items that, quite

22      frankly, it requires no new legislation, nothing

23      new from the governor, no new directives. That is

24      law as we speak on August 13th.



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2                  And so I guess if you can hone in a

3       little bit on let's say, for example, that wage

4       theft issue, is the enforcement worse than it was

5       pre-pandemic or has it always been this bad and I

6       it's sort of status quo and par for the course? I

7       would like to offer to you as chair of

8       investigations my office and I, however we can be

9       helpful, but something that again doesn't require

10      legislative action like this, if I can get

11      endangered and be supportive and perhaps push

12      DOL, whether it's in my district or statewide or

13      whatever it might be, I really hate to hear

14      something like that happen. So if you can

15      elaborate a little bit, please.

16                 MS. AXT:         Thank you so much. That's a

17      really important question. The answer is the

18      Department of Labor, before COVID needed to

19      quadruple its size to get back to the 1960s

20      staffing capacity that it had, right. So it has

21      basically been decimated in its ability to

22      enforce labor law over the course of recent

23      decade. As a result, the DOL for many years now

24      doesn't even attempt to investigate the full six



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2       years of back wages that workers who have their

3       wages stolen are entitled to. It only tries to

4       investigate three years. So that's just one

5       example of the ways that they have just kind of

6       thrown up their hands. And I think it's largely

7       because of staffing and an unwillingness by this

8       administration to be honest about the fact that

9       there's not really an intention to enforce our

10      workers rights laws.

11                 It has, I would say wage theft

12      enforcement from what I can understand from our

13      attorneys, and we usually are handling several

14      hundred wage theft cases at any point in time,

15      has come to a screeching halt, so cases are not

16      moving at all at this moment.

17                 SENATOR SKOUFIS:               So it's worse now than

18      it was six months ago?

19                 MS. AXT:         Yes.

20                 SENATOR SKOUFIS:               To be clear. Okay, got

21      it. I'd love to continue this offline if you're

22      interested.

23                 MS. AXT:         Yes, absolutely.

24                 SENATOR RAMOS:              If I may, I'd like to



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2       add, Senator Skoufis, that this is why we

3       recently passed the SWEAT bill.

4                   SENATOR SKOUFIS:               Oh, I'm well aware,

5       yeah.

6                   SENATOR RAMOS:              Yeah, you may recall

7       that the governor vetoed it last year, but the

8       attorney general's office today came out in

9       support of during their testimony so we're hoping

10      that it gets signed this year. I mean it would

11      actually -- and people don't realize this -- it

12      would actually hopefully solve the issue that we

13      have where wage theft happens in New York tote

14      tune of $1 billion every year, according to the

15      U.S. Department of labor.

16                  SENATOR SKOUFIS:               Yeah, Deborah and

17      whoever else, if you want to reach out and

18      perhaps with some ideas where we can collaborate

19      again if you're interested, I'll look out for

20      that, thanks.

21                  MS. AXK:         Well we thank you, senator.

22                  SENATOR RAMOS:              I can reach out with a

23      bucket slip for my excluded workers bill, James.

24      All right. Assemblyman McDonald, do we have the



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2       next panel?

3                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     We do have

4       the next panel. This will be panel number 12. And

5       joining us tonight will be Charlene Obernauer,

6       the executive director of NYCOSH, Rebecca Miller

7       who is deputy legislative and political director

8       for CWA, and Maritza Silva Farrell, the executive

9       director of Alliance for a Greater New York,

10      ALIGN as they call it. So Charlene, you'll be

11      first, Rebecca you'll be second, and Maritza,

12      you'll be third.

13                 MS. CHARLENE OBERNAUER, EXECUTIVE

14      DIRECTOR, NEW YORK COMMITTEE FOR OCCUPATIONAL

15      SAFETY AND HEALTH:            Great. Can you all hear me?

16                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Go ahead,

17      Charlene. We're good to go.

18                 MS. OBERNAUER:              Okay. Great. So thanks

19      to everyone, to our senators and assembly members

20      and, of course, to our chairs for truly listening

21      to every testimony today. I've been listening to

22      and it's been amazing to hear how many questions

23      and how engaged everyone is, especially as we get

24      into the 7:00 o'clock hour, so thank you so much.



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2       Today in New York State, as many other people

3       have testified, workers are in crisis. Workers

4       are facing record numbers of unemployment and

5       workers are facing unprecedented health and

6       safety risks on the job. Essential workers have

7       been exposed to COVID-19 hazards since the crisis

8       emerged in New York State and many have gotten

9       sick. And the exact number, we don't really know

10      because there's not really tracking on this data.

11      But some workers have not quite chosen to go back

12      to work but gone to work out of necessity because

13      they don't really have any other choice. And in

14      doing so, they're exposing themselves and their

15      families to health hazards.

16                 And one of the questions that came up,

17      and as I said I've been listening all day as

18      well, is about the question of OSHA and whether

19      or not OSHA is effective enough to be able to

20      deal with the safety and health problems that

21      workers are facing on the job. And from our

22      perspective, the agency is asleep at the wheel.

23      They've issued guidance but there's no

24      enforceable standards whatsoever.



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2                  And the standards that they do have not

3       related to COVID but their already existing

4       standards, they're also not enforcing and they're

5       not doing inspections. I was disappointed to see

6       that OSHA was not on the panel of speakers today

7       because I think it would be really important to

8       hear from them and to hear how they are

9       approaching inspection in New York State. And so

10      I'm going to give a couple of examples of why I

11      have issues with OSHA's enforcement. So, for

12      example, OSHA's inspection rate was higher before

13      coronavirus was declares a national emergency, so

14      the number of OSHA citations fell by over 17,000

15      between January 1, and May 22, 2020 when we

16      compared it to the same period in 2019.

17                 And even though OSHA's investigators are

18      decreasing, workers complaints continue to rise.

19      For example, and this isn't a New York State

20      example, but it's an example of what's happening

21      all over the country. This was from a local news

22      report that I pulled when I was writing this

23      testimony, on April 1st, a worker at Maid-Rite

24      Specialty Food meat packing plant in Dunmore,



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2       Pennsylvania filed a complaint with OSHA and the

3       worker listed a number of COVID-related safety

4       issues and went on to say half the plant is out

5       sick, they hired more people and they're not

6       taking care of the problem, I'm scared to go to

7       work every day. I'm risking my live, right. So

8       the person states clearly I'm risking my life.

9       And OSHA didn't inspect the facility. They did

10      not inspect the facility. They took, the related

11      the worker's concern to Maid-Rite, to the company

12      itself and OSHA took no further action.

13                 This is just an example of how OSHA is

14      responding when workers are saying that my life

15      is in danger and I don't know what to do. But of

16      course, this isn't about OSHA, right. This is

17      about New York State and what New York State can

18      do to improve worker safety.

19                 So, first, and I know Ricky spoke about

20      this earlier, but NYCOSH is joining its

21      colleagues in labor and the community to call on

22      New York State to pass legislation, New York

23      HERO, which would create enforceable standards to

24      protect workers from COVID-19. This would include



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2       protocols on testing, face masks, PPE, social

3       distancing, hand hygiene, disinfection and

4       engineering control.

5                  And I understand that some people may

6       think this is not necessary, we heard from people

7       earlier who said that OSHA is sufficient, which I

8       could give hours and hours of testimony on why

9       OSHA is not sufficient. But who do workers call

10      when they experience health and safety violations

11      on the job? We train 15,000 workers a year, and

12      when workers ask me, who do I call, they can't

13      call federal OSHA because no one's going to come.

14      And when we train workers who ask these

15      questions, we honestly and truthfully don't know

16      where to send them because the guidance put forth

17      is not enforceable.

18                 Strong penalties and enforcement

19      mechanisms would lead to increased compliance and

20      lower COVID transmission rates. So, again, we

21      don't know where to send workers, we don't see

22      that they actually have a place to go. And

23      workers are scared and they're afraid for their

24      lives, they're afraid for the lives of their



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2       families.

3                   The last thing I'll say is, speaking to

4       the previous panel, I earlier mentioned when

5       workers don't have economic stability they'll

6       ultimately work in jobs that will exploit them

7       and put them in unsafe working conditions. And we

8       believe like Deb Axt from Make the Road testified

9       and Diana from NICE testified, that one solution

10      to protect undocumented workers who have been

11      excluded from federal aid is to support the

12      Excluded Workers Bailout Act, and that's

13      something that we feel is important to protect

14      health and safety. Because like I said, if

15      workers, out of economic necessity, have to work,

16      they're not going to feel protected. And I will

17      say anyone who's spoken to workers who have to go

18      to work, mostly undocumented workers right now,

19      you will hear testimony after testimony of

20      workers who are just not safe on the job. Their

21      employers are not doing enough to protect them.

22      And they're scared. They're scared to go to work

23      feel they have to go to work because they can't

24      makes ends meet.



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2                  So anything that the legislature can do

3       to make it easier on folks so they can make the

4       decision to potentially not go to an unsafe work

5       that might make them sick or make their family

6       members sick, that would be really necessary. So

7       that's it for me. Thanks to the Senate and

8       Assembly for having me here. I appreciate the

9       opportunity.

10                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you,

11      Charlene. Rebecca?

12                 MS. REBECCA MILLER, DEPUTY LEGISLATIVE &

13      POLITICAL DIRECTOR, COMMUNICATION WORKERS OF

14      AMERICA DISTRICT 1:             Good evening. My name is Bec

15      Miller, I'm the New York State deputy legislative

16      and political director for the Communications

17      Workers of America District 1. I just want to

18      thank all of you so much, as we get to the 7:00

19      p.m. time, thank you so much for your engagement

20      for your time here and for the opportunity to

21      testify today at this important hearing. CWA

22      District 1 represents thousands of essential

23      workers who have been on the frontlines of the

24      COVID-19 crisis in New York, including healthcare



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2       workers, telecommunication workers, New York City

3       traffic agents and supervisors, board of election

4       employees and all types of public servants in

5       city and state government.

6                  Sadly, we've lost quite a few members to

7       COVID-19. Our members face extraordinary

8       challenges and dangers going to work since the

9       beginning of the pandemic. Luckily, they've had a

10      union and CWA has been able to win better

11      protections including extended paid leave, hazard

12      pay, safety accommodations for many of our

13      members. However, tens of thousands of essential

14      workers have no union to fight for them.

15                 Throughout this crisis, we've seen an

16      outpouring of support for essential workers, but

17      we need to turn the support and gratitude into

18      bold, legislative change that meaningfully

19      protects workers on the job and improves the

20      lives of workers across New York State.

21                 This testimony will touch on a few ways

22      we can do that. The first I'd like to say is

23      supporting New York HERO. So, as we reopen, we

24      urgently need enforceable and health and safety



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2       protections for all workers. I think we've heard

3       that over and over today. So New York State must

4       pass the New York HERO Act soon to be filed by

5       Senator Gianaris and Assembly Member Karines

6       Reyes.

7                    We have stories upon stories of workers

8       who are afraid to go to work, laughed at for

9       requesting PPE, lied to about the level of

10      disinfection even after numerous confirmed cases

11      in their workplace threatened with retaliation

12      when they were speaking out. While the union has

13      been able to resolve many of these issues, we

14      know that most don't have a union in New York

15      State. And nobody should have to face these

16      workplace conditions.

17                   This legislation would require all

18      employers to adopt enforceable health and safety

19      standards to protect workers from exposure to the

20      spread of COVID. A critical piece of this is

21      worker health and safety committees. In a time

22      where our labor agencies, as we just heard from

23      Deb Axt in a conversation in the previous panel,

24      at a time where we lack the resources to fully



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2       investigate and enforce health and safety laws,

3       worker health and safety committees are a

4       critical tool. Workers are the best, they're in

5       the best position to determine whether a

6       workplace is safe or not. And if a workplace

7       isn't save, they now have legally protected tool

8       to work their employers to address these concerns

9       if this bill passes. OSHA has even lifted these

10      up as central to maintaining workplace health and

11      safety. It's not a new concept, 14 states have

12      it.

13                 Lastly on this topic, while I want to

14      say we desperately need this COVID-19 specific

15      infectious disease standard, we should look

16      towards next session and create a general

17      airborne infectious disease standard to make sure

18      that we're prepared for whatever's to come in the

19      future.

20                 The next topic I'd like to talk about is

21      revenue, impending layoffs and cuts to necessary

22      programs and services. While we know that we need

23      assistance from the federal government, our state

24      was in dire fiscal concerns prior to the



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2       pandemic. Our state must raise revenue by asking

3       the wealthiest among us to pay their fair share.

4       This allows us to prevent cuts and invest in the

5       health and future of our state and fund excluded

6       workers.

7                  There are a slate of bills, I don't need

8       to tell all of you. Ultra millionaires, tax

9       billionaires, tax [unintelligible] [08:34:26]

10      there's a lot of options that we must support and

11      pass. This is life or death. And this has

12      actually been particularly playing out already in

13      the lives of the 15,000 health care workers that

14      we represent. The financial toll of COVID on

15      hospitals has been devastating. So in order to

16      cut costs, they're cutting staffing. What this

17      means is the concern of safe staffing, which our

18      members have been dealing with for decades and

19      which was exacerbated during the COVID crisis is

20      now to an untenable level. We have a workforce

21      exhausted, traumatized and now they're being

22      forced to continue taking care of more patients

23      than they should by health and safety standards

24      and also for their own health.



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2                  So we need to do right by the healthcare

3       heroes that we talk and that we clap for at 7:00

4       p.m., we need to do right by them. We need to do

5       right by those in nursing homes and other health

6       care facilities, we need to mandate safe staffing

7       and the only way to do this is to raise revenue

8       and fully staff our hospitals.

9                  One other issue I'd like to talk about

10      is with board of election. CWA represents Board

11      of Election Workers Locacl 1183 and they

12      conducted a primary during a pandemic. This took

13      an extraordinary toll. As of the last count,

14      three of our members in this bargaining unit have

15      died, several have been on ventilator and more

16      than a dozen diagnosed with the disease and under

17      quarantine.

18                 While CWA strongly supports measures to

19      make voting easier and more accessible and safe,

20      we also need to make sure that when this happens

21      that we don't leave the workers who are doing

22      that work behind. During the primary, more than

23      ten times the number of absentee ballots were

24      received than in recent elections, but the BOE



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2       did not have ten times more staff, copy machines

3       or the space to do social distancing. So as we

4       move forward with implementing necessary election

5       reforms, let's make sure that we also don't

6       forget the workers who are implementing them. And

7       with that, I will conclude with zero seconds

8       left. Thank you so much for all your time.

9                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you.

10      Maritza, bring it home.

11                  MS. MARITZA SILVA-FARRELL, EXECUTIVE

12      DIRECTOR, ALIGN: THE ALLIANCE FOR A GREATER NEW

13      YORK:    Thank you so much again. My appreciation

14      to all of you for staying here until 7:00

15      o'clock, we're going to have dinner together.

16      Thank you so, so much for all the work that you

17      all are doing. So my name is Maritza Silva-

18      Farrell. I am the executive director of ALIGN,

19      the Alliance for a Greater New York. We are an

20      organization that builds longstanding alliance of

21      community and labor and environmental justice

22      organizations.

23                  Since the beginning of the pandemic,

24      ALIGN has built the Essential Workers Table. My



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2       colleagues have mentioned about this coalition.

3       This is a statewide coalition composed of 87

4       labor unions, work organizations and other worker

5       advocates to advance the rights of workers during

6       the COVID-19 crisis.

7                  To date, even months into a deadly

8       pandemic, there are few enforceable occupational

9       safety and health standard at the federal level

10      or in New York to adequately protect frontline

11      workers from infection, as my colleagues also

12      have mentioned. Racial and gender injustice are

13      at the heart of the lack of protections since the

14      beginning of this pandemic.

15                 Essential workers didn't stop working

16      under unsafe conditions at the height of the

17      crisis. And there are disproportionately black

18      and Latinx workers who are least likely to work

19      in jobs that allow them to work safely from home.

20                 New York State can fix this injustice by

21      enacting immediate and effective legislation to

22      protect workers. New York HEROES was mentioned

23      and that's what we're asking for. The stakes are

24      too high for inaction. And we must mitigate the



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2       devastating consequences that this disease will

3       continue to have in our communities. As we heard

4       today from many panelists, COVID continues to

5       spread around the nation and New York must

6       prepare for a second wave.

7                  Effective legislation will require

8       employers to adopt key health and safety

9       standards that cover all workers in our state,

10      including face masks and PPE requirements, social

11      distancing and hand hygiene policies, and these

12      infection protocols. In addition, these standards

13      must enforceable with clear consequences and

14      penalties for employers who fail to comply with

15      the law.

16                 Furthermore, we believe that workers are

17      experts in their own workplace and can play a key

18      role in ensuring safety measures are followed by

19      their employers. Through worker committees,

20      workers will be empowered to raise concerns and

21      report violations as Becca just mentioned.

22      Workers will be empowered and also I think, I

23      believe that the legislation will allow for us to

24      provide strong anti-retaliation protections for



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2       workers who blow the whistle. We heard some of

3       the comments earlier today as well and I'd like

4       to make sure that happen happens.

5                  I want to take a few moments to share

6       what workers themselves are experiencing on the

7       ground and emphasize the urgent need for action

8       now. One private sanitation worker, Anthony Pena

9       remembers a time when his coworker was forced to

10      come to work despite him telling his employer by

11      his compromised immune system. That coworker

12      contracted COVID and died. And even after his

13      tragedy, Mr. Pena states that there is still no

14      safety measures in place and the truck and

15      offices are still not properly cleaned and

16      sanitized.

17                 Evelyn Brown works at an assisted living

18      facility and she contracted COVID twice and each

19      time she feared of how her three-year-old

20      daughter will be cared for. She worked without

21      protective equipment and sometimes had to bring

22      her own mask to work or wear garbage bags due to

23      lack of gowns. The facility did not do deep

24      cleaning and often ran out of soap. At Mrs.



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2       Brown's facility, approximately 40 residents have

3       died from COVID-19. More than 30 caregivers have

4       tested positive and one housekeeper has died.

5                  I also want to be clear that this is not

6       just a workers' right issue. Workers infections

7       lead to community spread and the lack of

8       enforceable standards in workplaces exacerbates

9       these public health emergencies. An outbreak,

10      there's an example of an outbreak at Chaplain

11      Valley Specialty, an apple manufacturing company

12      in Oswego was linked to other clusters of

13      positive COVID-19 cases in neighboring counties.

14      I know the outbreak at Green Empire Farms yield

15      390 positive cases and was at one point the

16      largest COVID-19 outbreak in upstate New York.

17      Both of these instances could have been

18      prevented.

19                 So just guidelines are not enough to

20      protect workers. The COVID-19 crisis is shining a

21      light on the unsafe and abusive conditions

22      workers have had to endure simply to support

23      themselves and their families. For years,

24      [unintelligible] [08:41:15] obsession with



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2       efficiency have led to injury and even death. And

3       now these employees are forced to work shoulder

4       to shoulder with colleagues who may be infected

5       with deadly virus.

6                  New York cannot rely on these businesses

7       to oversee themselves. Many businesses will not

8       change their behavior unless there are

9       consequences for their decisions. This pandemic

10      is no exception. We cannot risk anymore lives in

11      the interest of justice and protecting the public

12      health. ALIGN and the New York Essential Workers

13      call for immediate legislative action on this

14      matter. We thank Senators Gianaris and Assembly

15      Members Reyes for all the efforts that they're

16      doing right now.

17                 Additionally, I would like emphasize the

18      importance of protecting essential workers and

19      families that are excluded from current income

20      relief.

21                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     We need to

22      bring it home, okay?

23                 MS. SILVA-FARRELL:                Yeah, I will say a

24      couple things. Albany must step in to create an



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2       excluded worker fund that would provide a flat

3       rate emergency income benefit to major groups of

4       workers who were mentioned earlier in the

5       testimonies of my colleagues. That is how we will

6       do right for the hard working people of New York.

7       Thank you so much for the time and I appreciate

8       the extra time you have given me.

9                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you.

10      Senator, there is no assembly members ready to

11      speak, so to the Senate.

12                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Well, we do have Senator

13      Skoufis with a few questions. Senator?

14                 SENATOR SKOUFIS:               Thank you. And you

15      said that as if you were upset with me for

16      getting [unintelligible] [08:42:51].

17                 SENATOR RAMOS:              I am never upset with

18      you. I am never upset with you, just pointing out

19      you have been the consistent question asker.

20                 SENATOR SKOUFIS:               Okay. The record shall

21      reflect.

22                 SENATOR RAMOS:              That you're the

23      consistent question asker of every panel, which

24      is appreciated. And I'm just still waiting for



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2       you to sign that [unintelligible] [08:43:05]

3       slip. Love you, ask your questions.

4                  SENATOR SKOUFIS:               Okay. This question is

5       for Becca. And I asked this of a previous panel

6       with NYSNA and PEF. Obviously, CWA is very

7       interested in safe staffing. The long, overdue

8       safe staffing study is supposed to be released

9       tomorrow. I'm wondering what sort of engagement

10      CWA had with the Department of Health? Did they

11      do outreach? Were they bringing you to the table?

12      Also, what do you expect tomorrow, if you have

13      any sense of what this study might look like? And

14      connect it to all that. Can you speak to how much

15      of a priority, now we're on the other side of

16      this pandemic, we're not completely through it,

17      we're on the other side. Over the past five

18      months looking back, how much of a priority is

19      this getting safe staffing across the finish line

20      ahead of the next pandemic or ahead of the next

21      second wave? Is this the top priority? Is this

22      top three for your members in terms of things

23      that we could do as a legislature that would have

24      the greatest impact in protecting the public's



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2       health the next time we have to go through this.

3       I know there are a few questions sort of packed

4       into all of that.

5                  MS. MILLER:           Yeah, I will do my best to

6       answer all of them. I would say certainly safe

7       staffing. We've been fight for safe staffing for

8       decades. It is consistently a labor, it's number

9       one labor concern among our healthcare workers

10      and it is absolutely a top priority. I think,

11      listen, study after study for decades past by

12      research institutions has shown safe staffing

13      saves lives. And we have seen that time and time

14      again. And COVID hit and it was proven yet even

15      to the nth degree.

16                 So I think the importance of safe

17      staffing cannot be minimized. However, I would

18      also say our hospitals are in a dire financial

19      situation as so many institutions and businesses

20      are. So it can't, we can't talk about safe

21      staffing without talking about revenue. We need

22      to raise revenue. We need to fully fund our

23      hospitals. We've been expressing such gratitude

24      towards our healthcare workers, yet our



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2       healthcare workers are still working in terrible

3       conditions. The number of COVID patients have

4       gone down, but the patients that they're seeing

5       is still very high and above state's

6       recommendation.

7                  So safe staffing is definitely a top

8       priority. It is an essential thing for the health

9       and safety of our state and for the people of New

10      York but also for the health care workers who

11      staff our healthcare facilities and in that

12      conversation, we must explore raising revenue.

13      The money is there, we need to put it towards the

14      things that are critical.

15                 SENATOR SKOUFIS:               Any expectation as to

16      what's coming tomorrow?

17                 MS. MILLER:           Yes, I forgot about that

18      one.

19                 SENATOR SKOUFIS:               That's okay.

20                 MS. MILLER:           Yes. We, you know, we

21      absolutely participated in the DOH's process. I

22      have no idea what will come out tomorrow. We've

23      been waiting patiently for the last eight months.

24      This study was due in December of 2019. We are



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2       excited to see what it says tomorrow. However, I

3       would say that it would be surprising to me if

4       they found anything other than what we've seen

5       time and time again, safe staffing saves lives.

6       We need it.

7                  SENATOR SKOUFIS:               I guess we'll find out

8       soon enough. Thank you.

9                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Okay.

10      Anything, anybody else? Oh, yes, Senate.

11                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Oh, Senator Jackson.

12                 SENATOR JACKSON:               Thank you. Let me

13      thank you for coming. If we were up in Albany or

14      New York City, you would be in the hearing room

15      you would have to wait. But all of you are either

16      in your office or in your homes and that's a good

17      thing. But I just have one question. And, Becca,

18      you talked about it raising revenue, I would

19      assume that your union is for us raising revenues

20      on the wealthiest New Yorkers. And I ask that

21      question of all the speakers, whether or not your

22      organization that you're with or union, are you

23      ready to help us raise revenue from the

24      wealthiest New Yorkers?



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2                  MS. MILLER:           Yeah, absolutely. Our union

3       has been actively in this fight for many years.

4       It is something our members feel very strongly

5       about. We understand that we cannot have the

6       society we all deserve to live in without an

7       equal revenue raising scheme. We need to tax

8       those among us who have profited the most and who

9       are the wealthiest and we need to make sure that

10      we have all the revenue we need to support the

11      public programs and services that we all rely on,

12      that make us a healthier stronger state, so 100

13      percent CWA is there.

14                 SENATOR JACKSON:               Maritza? Your

15      organization.

16                 MS. SILVA-FARRELL:                Yes, at ALIGN, I

17      think we are fully committed to this. This is a

18      fight we have had similar to CWA, like for a

19      really long time. There is a time in which we can

20      actually generate revenues by getting

21      billionaires to actually pay for their fair

22      share, the time is now, so we're fully at ALILGN

23      in support of this.

24                 SENATOR JACKSON:               Charlene, if you know



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2       and can speak for the organization.

3                  MS. OBERNAUER:              Yes, 100 percent.

4                  SENATOR JACKSON:               Okay. I just want to

5       know. As you know, a lot of people cannot

6       necessarily speak for the organization, and I

7       just wanted to know what the organizations,

8       especially when we move towards, as you know,

9       approximately two weeks ago, our leaders, both

10      the Senate and the Assembly leaders basically

11      came together and said that we should be looking

12      at raising revenues in order to make sure that we

13      address all the concerns that the panelists have

14      brought up as far as safe staffing, as far as

15      funding, the agencies' funding, healthcare

16      funding, education and this is not only for New

17      York City, this is for everywhere, small rural

18      areas, suburban areas.

19                 It's very important that we maintain the

20      quality of life that all of us are used to and

21      those that are suffering the most, we need to

22      make sure that they can survive this pandemic

23      with us. So I thank you. Thank you, co-chairs.

24                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Jo Anne Simon



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2       from the Assembly.

3                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER SIMON:                   Thank you. Thank

4       you very much. Thank you all for your testimony.

5       It's just been terrific and we've learned so much

6       throughout the day from all of the witnesses and

7       you've been just great. I did want to ask a

8       question of Ms. Obernauer about OSHA and that is

9       that cited a statistic about a reduction in

10      enforce I believe by 17,000 and what I didn't

11      quite get was since when, if you could clarify

12      that statistic because I'm not make sure got all

13      of it. It's quite astounding to me that there has

14      been that much of a drop off in OSHA enforcement

15      over the years. I'm curious if you could tell me

16      more about that.

17                 MS. OBERNAUER:              Sure. So, the statistic

18      is that the number of OSHA citations that took

19      place between January 1st and May 22nd of 2020

20      was 17,000 less or 17,000 fewer when compared to

21      the same period in 2019.

22                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER SIMON:                   That's

23      incredible.

24                 MS. OBERNAUER:              Yeah.



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2                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER SIMON:                   What, do you

3       attribute that to something in particular? It's

4       not like it's -- we still have the same

5       administration, in Washington? Is it because of a

6       reduction in their own capacity during that time?

7       Do you have any particular rationale for why you

8       think that may have occurred?

9                  MS. OBERNAUER:              I think that they, like

10      many other agencies, like many other

11      organizations, started to do work from home and

12      stopped actually going out in the field and doing

13      inspections. So instead of what you would think

14      is that they would be out there on the

15      frontlines, they'd be doing inspections wherever

16      inspections were needed. But in this case, it

17      seems like the inspections actually slowed down

18      significantly.

19                 And we've been analyzing OSHA's response

20      to this pandemic since it started and one of the

21      most shocking things is just the number of

22      citations they even have issued When Scalia

23      testified in front of the U.S. Senate, he

24      indicated that there -- this was in June, that



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2       they had only issued one fine to employers.

3                  So their approach is very much trying to

4       work with employers and kind of handhold them

5       into following guidance, instead of actually

6       following what the standard should actually be.

7       And one really great read that I want to

8       recommend is President Trumka of the National

9       AFL-CIO wrote a letter to Scalia of OSHA and they

10      actually had a correspondence, which is public.

11      And it's really astounding just to see the

12      different perspectives. You know, on the one

13      side, President Trumka is saying that that

14      enforcement has not been there, that it has just

15      been totally weakened and OSHA is AWOL. And the

16      other side, the head of OSHA essentially saying

17      we rely on employers to follow the guidance, and

18      that's really been the MO of this administration.

19                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER SIMON:                   Okay. Thank you

20      very much. I appreciate it.

21                 MS. OBERNAUER:              Thank you.

22                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Senator, do

23      you have any other members?

24                 SENATOR RAMOS:              I don't. I don't have



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2       any other members with questions. Do you?

3                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     I do not. I

4       want to thank our panelists. I want to mention

5       one thing, personal privilege, Becca, you had

6       mentioned about safe staffing but also the fact

7       that our hospital are really under resourced as

8       well. And the two need to work together. And as

9       you might have heard from a few of our

10      colleagues, there's plenty of suggestions of how

11      we can raise revenue, which you all support.

12                 But there's also a recognition that we

13      need to keep in mind and I've been very clear on

14      this. For decades the federal government has

15      refused to reimburse for its Medicare rates to

16      hospitals appropriately. Whereas this state

17      contributes billions and billions of dollars to

18      the U.S. economy through our federal taxes, we

19      get peanuts when this comes to medical services.

20      And that needs to be a larger part of this

21      discussion as well. So to all of you, we thank

22      you for your contribution.

23                 Unfortunately you're panel 12, you're

24      not lucky number 13, which is our finishing panel



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2       this evening. We will now seat our last two

3       speakers for the evening. No pressure. From the

4       New York Civil Liberties Union, legislative

5       attorney Lisa Zucker, and from the New York

6       Chapter of the National Employment Lawyers

7       Association, Margaret McIntyre. Lisa, you have

8       the privilege of kicking us off or kicking this

9       off and then Margaret has the privilege of

10      closing it out.

11                 MS. LISA ZUCKER, LEGISLATIVE ATTORNEY,

12      NEW YORK CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION:                     Okay.

13                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Go ahead.

14                 MS. ZUCKER:           Great. Thank you, all, so

15      much. Good evening. I certainly never put good

16      morning or good afternoon in my remarks, I knew

17      it would be late. Thank you all for staying so

18      late and for all your questioning and interest in

19      this issue. My name is Lisa Zucker. I'm

20      legislative attorney with the New York Civil

21      Liberties Union, the NYCLU is the state affiliate

22      of the ACLU. We are a not-for-profit, nonpartisan

23      organization with eight offices throughout the

24      state and over 180,000 members and supporters.



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2                  As the last panel I will try to limit my

3       -- I will limit my remarks to what has not been

4       said already today. Believe it or not, there are

5       a couple of things that I would like to address.

6       One is the special needs of the agricultural

7       workforce and two is the need to strengthen and

8       expand emergency COVID paid sick leave.

9                  But before I begin, I want to echo what

10      Maritza said on the last panel. Although today's

11      hearing is entitled the impact of COVID on the

12      workforce, we are talking about so much more here

13      than workers' rights. For every worker who toils

14      in an environment where the risk of COVID is

15      high, the impact on family members, friends,

16      separate community risks that same infection. No

17      one wants to go back to the dark days of April,

18      but that is what we risk if we do not

19      sufficiently protect our workers.

20                 So, on to the special needs of

21      agricultural workforce, there are an estimated

22      80,000 to 100,000 farm workers in New York who

23      produce over $5 billion of revenue for our state

24      annually. The first reported infections among New



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2       York farm workers began in April. The worst

3       outbreak so far was in May, when 171 workers at

4       the Green Empire Farms in Oneida became infected

5       with the virus. Since then, we have been seen

6       more outbreaks across the state. In late June,

7       there was another outbreak in an Oswego county

8       apple processer infected 82 of 179 workers.

9                  In May of this year the governor issued

10      guidance documents for the prevention and

11      response of COVID-19 on farms. While helpful, as

12      others have said today, we need more than

13      guidance. We need a legal obligation. We need

14      enforcement mechanisms. We need penalties and

15      teeth, really, to make the bad -- not all

16      employers are bad. The ones who follow the law --

17      follow the guidance, are not the one we're

18      talking about. We're talking about the ones who

19      aren't. That why we have laws most of the time.

20                 We also need enforceable regulations for

21      all employer-operated housing. This is a huge

22      issue in the farm worker community. Too many

23      farmers live in cramped, unsanitary housing with

24      little or no ability to social distance. In fact,



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2       the Empire Farm outbreak was traced not to the

3       workplace but to the way that the workers, the

4       farm workers lived, many of whom lived in

5       employer housing.

6                  Last year, this body led by Senator

7       Ramos, passed the historic Farm Labor Fair Labor

8       Practices Act, which does include a section on

9       housing and expands DOH's authority over the

10      certification and licensing of farm labor camps.

11      That provision takes effect in January. In

12      addition, there is, there may be some confusion

13      about whether the new provision applies to all

14      farm labor camps or just those that house migrant

15      workers. We need to clarify and fix that.

16                 We also need to enact stronger

17      quarantine and isolation requirements. Because

18      farm workers are considered essential workers,

19      they're permitted to work if they test positive

20      and they remain asymptomatic. But they have to

21      quarantine when they're not working. If you're

22      working on a farm, in employer housing and you're

23      quarantining with all the other workers there,

24      you are spreading that infection.



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2                  Another issue that is unique for farm

3       workers is there are 8,000 H2A visa holders,

4       workers who are coming into our state as we

5       speak. This is the high season for farm workers.

6       These people are coming from states that have

7       high infection rates. There need to be quarantine

8       and isolation enforcement. We have heard stories

9       where all the workers are just put together in

10      one house when they all are not part of the same

11      unit and they're just infecting each other and

12      then they're going out into the workforce and

13      they're infecting their co-workers.

14                 I'm running out of time. I do want to

15      address for two seconds expanded paid sick and

16      family leave. Governor Cuomo in March signed the

17      emergency legislation. We need what was done for

18      health workers, I believe Senator Ramos asked the

19      commissioner this question, if DOL could do for

20      all workers what they did for health workers,

21      which is to ensure a doctor's note is sufficient

22      for an order of quarantine and isolation, that

23      workers would be entitled to more than one paid

24      sick leave period and we need to clarify that



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2       paid sick leave is an emergency sick leave, is in

3       addition to our new permanent paid sick leave

4       that is going to go in effect September 30th. I

5       yield the floor, but I'm happy to answer

6       questions. Thank you.

7                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     We appreciate

8       your comments. Thank you. Margaret?

9                  MS. MARGARET MCINTYRE, ATTORNEY AT LAW,

10      NATIONAL EMPLOYMENT LAWYERS ASSOCIATION, NEW YORK

11      CHAPTER:     Good evening. My name is Margaret

12      McIntyre. I'm a member of the legislative

13      committee of NELA New York, which is the New York

14      affiliate of the National Employment Lawyers

15      Association. And we are a group of attorneys who

16      represent employees who have been denied their

17      rights. We deeply appreciate the work of all of

18      you to put this hearing together and to include

19      our perspective here.

20                 And I'm going to try to not repeat

21      things said, too. But, because I am glad that

22      labor law sections 740 has come up today, but it

23      is impossible to talk about the health and safety

24      issues in the workplace during COVID without



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2       addressing the fact that under New York law, it

3       is legal for an employer to fire workers who

4       complain about what they believe to be dangerous

5       and unsafe working conditions. It is legal for,

6       at a hospital to fire janitors who raise concerns

7       about lack of gloves and masks. It is legal to

8       fire retail workers who complain they are at risk

9       because they lack plastic barricades or other

10      PPE. It is legal to fire factory workers who

11      complain that they are working side by side in

12      what they believe to be inadequately sanitized

13      facilities or a lack of social distancing.

14                 And this is because of New York's

15      whistleblower law, Labor Law 740. 740 only

16      protects people who complain about conduct that

17      is both an actual violation of a specific law,

18      rule or regulation and the contact also has been

19      to be a substantial threat to public health and

20      safety. So, the law as it exists today fails to

21      protect most workers.

22                 And, you know, the country's response to

23      the pandemic has led to a lot of confusion and

24      constantly changing information about what kind



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2       of workplace is safe. And, as we've heard today,

3       there are too few requirements that workplaces be

4       kept safe, too many options for employees who are

5       not working in safe environments. So, basically

6       in New York State, if a worker raises a concern

7       about a safety issue that is not actually a

8       provable violation of a law and her boss doesn't

9       like that, she's subject to termination. Workers

10      who speak up can get fired. Workers who don't

11      speak up are left to work in potentially

12      dangerous situations.

13                   So, and because of the weak

14      whistleblower law that we have, even essential

15      workers, the ones, people that all of us depend

16      upon are put in a double bind. Speak up and risk

17      getting fired or remain silent and risk illness

18      or death not only for themselves but for their

19      families, their communities, our communities, all

20      of us.

21                   And as usual, the situation

22      disproportionately affects low wage workers who

23      are disproportionately people of color. And the

24      more financially insecure a worker is, the



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2       tighter the squeeze she's in when the workplace

3       is unsafe. And I mean, it's just not tenable. It

4       was bad enough before COVID, but it's not tenable

5       with COVID.

6                  Workers, all workers must have the right

7       to speak out if they believe their workplaces to

8       be unsafe and COVID presents a very real and

9       serious threat to public safety and health, but

10      it's a little trickier right now about whether

11      there's any law, rule or regulation that's

12      violated by these unsafe conditions and that's

13      what has to change.

14                 Since I have just a few more seconds, I

15      would say first of all, amending section 740 of

16      labor law would not cost the budget anything. So

17      that's something to be considered. And it's just

18      about, if nothing else, these people who have

19      gone through so much suffering over the last few

20      months, unemployment, sickness or maybe they've

21      managed to avoid sickness, but they finally get

22      back to work, but they can't say anything about

23      an unsafe place or they could risk being fired?

24      We need to give employees more power in this



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2       regard.

3                  And I'm glad SWEAT came up in the last

4       couple of panels. That's also very important. If

5       workers have the ability to file a wage lien when

6       they're not paid, they would have much better

7       chance of collecting on unpaid judgments for wage

8       and hour violations. Thanks.

9                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you to

10      our final two panelists for the evening. I'm

11      looking to see if we have any comments on the

12      Assembly. I do see one, if you don't mind,

13      senator, if the Assembly goes first.

14                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Go ahead.

15                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     All right. Jo

16      Anne Simon. Hmm, I wonder what she's going to

17      talk about?

18                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER SIMON:                   Gee, maybe

19      expanding 740? And whistleblower protections. I

20      did want to thank you, Margaret, for speaking

21      about that. You know you brought up the laws and

22      rules and regulations issue and whether or not

23      that could be proven under the current 740. I

24      have a concern that the guidelines are so



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2       amorphous that establishing whether someone would

3       -- whether a workplace is violating the rules

4       might not be as clear as it needs to be, even

5       with an expanded 740.

6                  Do you have any suggestions as to how we

7       might remedy that? A number of witnesses have

8       called for establishing very specific standards,

9       going through it industry by industry, for

10      example, and working between the Department of

11      Labor and Department of Health. Is that something

12      that you would endorse? Do you have any other

13      approaches or proposals for that?

14                 MS. MCINTYRE:             Well, you know, I can't

15      speak to specific rules or bills, pending bills

16      that NELA supports in terms of the safety

17      regulations. But I do want to emphasize this,

18      that probably the most important change to

19      section 740 is eliminating this requirement that

20      some kind of conduct be both illegal and a threat

21      to public health or safety. Now, if it were just

22      the -- if the "and" were just changed to "or"

23      then people, and if this had, you know, if we had

24      this now, then people who are speaking out now or



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2       have been speaking out over the last few months

3       and having no recourse, that wouldn't be

4       happening because the way the bills that are

5       pending are proposing to change section 740 is to

6       eliminate that conjunctive requirement and make

7       it so an employee is protected if he or she has a

8       reasonable good faith belief that the employer's

9       activity is either illegal or poses a substantial

10      threat to public health or safety. So it's that

11      "and" that has to go.

12                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER SIMON:                   Thank you. I

13      appreciate that.

14                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Senate?

15                  SENATOR RAMOS:              I don't believe that we

16      have anybody. I don't believe we have anybody

17      else.

18                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     We do.

19                  SENATOR RAMOS:              You do? Go right ahead.

20                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Yes, we do,

21      from the other side of the aisle, our Ranker

22      Brian Manktelow. Brian?

23                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MANKTELOW:                      Can you hear

24      me okay?



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2                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Yes we can.

3                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MANKTELOW:                      Thank you.

4       Lisa, if you have a a few moments I would like to

5       talk to you about the farm workers. My district

6       covers Wayne County, Cayuga County, and Oswego

7       County, the county where the apple packing plant

8       was. In Wayne County, just to give you a

9       positive, myself and Senator Helming met with

10      Wayne County apple producers, the Department of

11      Health, other key individuals in the county who

12      were very proactive about two months ago, knowing

13      that Wayne County is the largest apple producing

14      county in the state, third largest in the country

15      knowing how many workers would be coming in.

16                 So I had a chance to go out to the labor

17      camp, go through the labor camps with the

18      Department of Health, be there with the farmers,

19      coming up with a plan, looking at where they're

20      staying. And I believe that the farmers that we

21      met with and are in Wayne County are doing

22      everything they possibly can. I know that we've

23      talked about 14-day quarantine once they get

24      here, the workers, temperatures, masks and



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2       talking about where are we going to put a worker

3       if they do get COVID, so, just a positive thing.

4                  We are in this area pushing it very hard

5       because the safety of the workers are so

6       important, not only to them, but also for the

7       making sure that the apples get harvested,

8       because we have six or seven weeks to make that

9       happen. So we are being very proactive there. And

10      I want to assure that we're doing everything we

11      can to make everything safe for everyone.

12                 SENATOR RAMOS:              All right.

13                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Okay.

14                 SENATOR RAMOS:              We thank everyone for

15      coming.

16                 MS. ZUCKER:           I just wanted to say thank

17      you. Thank you, assembly member ranker. I

18      appreciate that you're doing everything that you

19      can and I'm sure that the workers are going to be

20      much safer for it. We just, you know, we think

21      that if we just have the chance for DOH to be a

22      little more proactive when we're licensing or

23      certifying, maybe these issues won't arise or

24      maybe won't arise in the future. But thank you



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2       for taking care of that and taking care of your

3       workers and your constituents.

4                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MANKTELOW:                      Yeah, I feel

5       pretty good working with DOH on this and the

6       direction we're going. So we are very, very

7       proactive. Thank you, though.

8                  SENATOR RAMOS:              All right.

9                  ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     I doesn't

10      look like there's any other questions. Senator,

11      I'll start with you with closing comments.

12                 SENATOR RAMOS:              Well, no, I just want to

13      thank you, first, John. You've been a great

14      partner throughout the day. Thank you so much for

15      working in lockstep with me on this. And of

16      course, Senator Skoufis and Sanders who helped

17      co-chair today's hearing. I want to thank all of

18      the folks who testified very bravely, especially

19      the workers. It's been quite difficult to hear

20      all of these stories of struggle and hardship,

21      but it's necessary to share those stories so that

22      as state legislators, we can come up with

23      possible solutions and push for the needs and

24      resources that we need at the state level.



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2                  I do want to remind everybody that we've

3       lost more than 20,000 people in New York State to

4       the coronavirus. That is many times over from the

5       number of people that we lost in 9/11

6       unfortunately, and we have seen how hard the

7       fight for the Zadroga Act to protect our first

8       responders has been. We need to learn that lesson

9       and ensure that this does not become a similar

10      situation or worse. I want to make sure that

11      we're taking today's testimonies to heart and

12      putting them into action, into progressive

13      legislation that will protect our workers today

14      and forever more.

15                 So thank you all for participating today

16      and I look forward to working very closely with

17      you all.

18                 ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     And on behalf

19      of the Assembly, senator, it's been a pleasure to

20      work with you and your colleagues. We have had a

21      lot of great, meaningful, thoughtful testimony

22      today. Sometimes, it might have been seemed

23      repetitive, but the reality is it put a different

24      picture on the issue, because I think we tend to



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2       sometimes compartmentalize and there's many more

3       individuals involved. I want to thank our ranker

4       of banking, Tom Abinanti, who joined us today

5       well and Brian Manktelow, thank you. We've spent

6       believe it or not, 41 hours together in the last

7       three hearings and you've been a real trooper

8       through this. And of course, Jim, it's always

9       good to see you. I want to thank my colleagues in

10      the assembly that are still participating on both

11      sides of the aisle. It's great they have been so

12      committed.

13                 And I want to mention something I

14      mentioned about ten hours ago that I think needs

15      to be reinforced. Although, sometimes the

16      questions may have been a little bit limited,

17      understand that there's dozens and dozens of

18      staff, hard-working staff, who deserve a great

19      shout out today, who have been taking copious

20      notes. And I know I've already been sharing

21      messages with the respective chairs on ideas and

22      thoughts on what we need to do.

23                 So with that, we want to bid you adieu.

24      Thank you for tuning in to the New York State



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2       legislature Zoom channel and with that, we'll say

3       good night.

4                   SENATOR RAMOS:              Yes, good night, and

5       thank you to the central staff at the Senate and

6       the Assembly, thank you very much.

7                   ASSEMBLY MEMBER MCDONALD:                     Thank you.

8                   SENATOR JACKSON:               Thank you, everyone.

9                   SENATOR RAMOS:              Good-bye.

10                  (The public hearing concluded at 8:15

11      p.m.)

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                 CERTIFICATE OF ACCURACY



I, Ryan Manaloto, certify that the foregoing

transcript of Joint Public Hearing on the Impact of

COVID-19 in the Workforce on August 13, 2020 was

prepared using the required transcription equipment

and is a true and accurate record of the

proceedings.



 Certified By



 ________________________________________



 Date: August 28, 2020




GENEVAWORLDWIDE, INC

256 West 38th Street - 10th Floor

New York, NY 10018




                       Geneva Worldwide, Inc.
       256 West 38 t h Street, 10 t h Floor, New York, NY 10018