Regular Session - February 13, 1996

                                                                 
1276

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         8                       ALBANY, NEW YORK

         9                       February 13, 1996

        10                          3:05 p.m.

        11

        12

        13                       REGULAR SESSION

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        15

        16

        17       LT. GOVERNOR BETSY McCAUGHEY ROSS, President

        18       STEPHEN F. SLOAN, Secretary

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1277

         1                      P R O C E E D I N G S

         2                      THE PRESIDENT:  The Senate will

         3       come to order.  Would you please rise and repeat

         4       with me the Pledge of Allegiance.

         5                      (The assemblage repeated the

         6       Pledge of Allegiance to the Flag.)

         7                      The invocation today will be

         8       given by the Reverend Peter Young of the Blessed

         9       Sacrament Church in Bolton Landing.

        10                      Reverend Young.

        11                      REVEREND PETER YOUNG:  Let us

        12       pray.  May all of the Senators, we pray, help to

        13       empower those who have no hope.  We pray this

        14       legislative body will improve our conscious

        15       effort to renew the quality of life that we talk

        16       about.  We ask You this in Your name.  Amen.

        17                      THE PRESIDENT:  The reading of

        18       the Journal, please.

        19                      THE SECRETARY:  In Senate,

        20       Monday, February 12th.  The Senate met pursuant

        21       to adjournment.  The prayer by the Reverend Jim

        22       Lee, minister of the Unity East Church Center,

        23       Brooklyn.  The Journal of Friday, February 9th,











                                                             
1278

         1       was read and approved.  On motion, the Senate

         2       adjourned.

         3                      THE PRESIDENT:  Without

         4       objection, the Journal stands approved as read.

         5                      Presentation of petitions.

         6                      Messages from the Assembly.

         7                      Messages from the Governor.

         8                      Reports of standing committees.

         9                      The Secretary will read.

        10                      THE PRESIDENT:  Senator Padavan,

        11       from the Committee on Cities, offers up the

        12       following bills directly for third reading:

        13                      4746-A, with amendments, by

        14       Senator Saland, an act in relation to

        15       authorizing the city of Beacon, county of

        16       Dutchess, to opt out of the provisions of

        17       Chapter 602;

        18                      Senate Print 5928, by Senator

        19       Leibell, an act to amend the Real Property Tax

        20       Law, in relation to local tax exemption.

        21                      Senator Cook, from the Committee

        22       on Education, offers up the following bills:

        23                      449, by Senator Maltese, an act











                                                             
1279

         1       to amend the Education Law, in relation to

         2       instruction in the display, use and proper

         3       respect for the Flag;

         4                      5209, by Senator Volker, an act

         5       to amend the Education Law, in relation to the

         6       appointment of a superintendent;

         7                      5752, by Senator Rath, an act to

         8       legalize, ratify and confirm the acts and

         9       proceedings of the Board of Education of the

        10       Pavilion Central School District;

        11                      5967, by Senator Levy, an act to

        12       amend Chapter 145 of the Laws of 1995, relating

        13       to addressing the situation in the Roosevelt

        14       Union Free School District;

        15                      5994, by Senator Hoblock, an act

        16       to amend the Education Law and the Public

        17       Authorities Law, in relation to Dormitory

        18       Authority financing.

        19                      Senator Rath, from the Committee

        20       on Local Governments, offers up the following

        21       bills:

        22                      Senate Print 291, by Senator

        23       Cook, an act to amend the Real Property Tax Law,











                                                             
1280

         1       in relation to statements of taxes;

         2                      992-A, by Senator Present, an act

         3       to amend the General Municipal Law, in relation

         4       to authorizing the designation of rural economic

         5       development zones;

         6                      234, by Senator LaValle, Senate

         7       Print 1099, an act to amend the General

         8       Municipal Law, in relation to granting

         9       additional points in a service award program;

        10                      1266, by Senator Hannon, an act

        11       authorizing the county of Nassau to accept an

        12       application for real property tax exemption;

        13                      1368, by Senator LaValle, an act

        14       to amend the Town Law, in relation to expending

        15       from fire district revenues amount appropriated;

        16                      1535, by Senator Rath, an act to

        17       amend the General Municipal Law, in relation to

        18       authorizing fees and charges for emergency

        19       services;

        20                      2... 1578-B, by Senator Larkin,

        21       an act to amend the Real Property Tax Law, in

        22       relation to certain state lands in Orange

        23       County;











                                                             
1281

         1                      3384, by Senator Leibell, an act

         2       to amend the General Municipal Law, in relation

         3       to participation in certain health insurance

         4       plans;

         5                      4581, by Senator Hoblock, an act

         6       to amend the General Municipal Law, in relation

         7       to payment of disability benefits.

         8                      Senator Saland, from the

         9       Committee on Children and Families, offers up

        10       the following bills:

        11                      Senate Print 2111, an act to

        12       amend the Executive Law and the Family Court

        13       Act, in relation to support of children;

        14                      2478, by Senator Skelos, an act

        15       to amend the Family Court Act and the Criminal

        16       Procedure Law, in relation to the age of child

        17       witnesses;

        18                      2614, by Senator Leibell, an act

        19       to amend the Executive Law, in relation to

        20       providing and maintaining alarms;

        21                      3561, Senator Saland, an act to

        22       amend the Family Court Act, in relation to

        23       expanding the jurisdiction of the Family Court;











                                                             
1282

         1                      4031, by Senator Saland, an act

         2       to amend the Executive Law, in relation to

         3       youths who are absent without leave from

         4       aftercare programs;

         5                      4886, by Senator Rath, an act to

         6       amend the Family Court Act, in relation to the

         7       age of runaway children.

         8                      Senator Marcellino, from the

         9       Committee on Environmental Conservation, offers

        10       up the following bills:

        11                      1355-C, by Senator Sears, an act

        12       to amend the Environmental Conservation Law, in

        13       relation to prohibiting the feeding of deer;

        14                      3921, by Senator Sears, an act to

        15       amend the Environmental Conservation Law, in

        16       relation to increasing civil penalties;

        17                      4529-C, by Senator Marcellino, an

        18       act to amend the Environmental Conservation Law,

        19       in relation to the harvest and shipment of

        20       shellfish;

        21                      5830, by Senator Johnson, an act

        22       to amend the Environmental Conservation Law, in

        23       relation to permitting certain additional











                                                             
1283

         1       persons to obtain commercial lobster permits.

         2                      All bills directly for third

         3       reading.

         4                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Without

         5       objection, all bills directly to third reading.

         6                      Reports of select committees.

         7                      Communications and reports from

         8       state officers.

         9                      Motions and resolutions.

        10                      Senator Hoblock.

        11                      SENATOR HOBLOCK:  Madam

        12       President, there's a resolution at the desk.

        13       Would you kindly have it read in its entirety.

        14                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Please

        15       read the resolution in its entirety.

        16                      THE SECRETARY:  By Senator

        17       Hoblock, Legislative Resolution commending

        18       Eamonn McGirr for his outstanding initiative in

        19       raising funds for the Cerebral Palsy Center for

        20       the Disabled.

        21                      WHEREAS, weave a garland of

        22       trussed vines ribboned in the emerald hued

        23       shamrocks of early spring and let us, the











                                                             
1284

         1       elected representatives of the people of the

         2       state of New York, let us join with Eamonn

         3       McGirr; let us sing a "Soldier's Song";

         4                      A native of County Derry, in the

         5       North of Ireland, Eamonn McGirr will be honored

         6       at the Annual St. Patrick's Dinner of the

         7       American-Irish Legislators' Society at the New

         8       Scotland Avenue Armory;

         9                      Eamonn will be honored for his

        10       11-day marathon of non-stop singing which

        11       shattered the Guiness Book of World Records for

        12       endurance singing;

        13                      Eamonn McGirr undertook this

        14       enormous feat in order to raise funds for the

        15       Cerebral Palsy Center;

        16                      This legislative body wishes also

        17       to commend Eamonn's wife, Mary, again a native

        18       of County Derry, for her support and

        19       perseverance; it further desires to send its

        20       consummate love to Mareena, the daughter of

        21       Eamonn and Mary and a victim of cerebral palsy;

        22                      While teaching advanced math and

        23       calculus in Belfast, Eamonn McGirr formed the











                                                             
1285

         1       folk group The Go-Lucky Four.  They enjoyed

         2       enormous success in Ireland, going to the top of

         3       the charts with "Up Went Nelson";

         4                      Seven years ago, the McGirrs

         5       became citizens of this nation;

         6                      Eamonn McGirr so clearly

         7       personifies the finest traditions and principles

         8       of the Irish heritage with humor, grace and

         9       compelling dignity;

        10                      Eamonn McGirr did so courageously

        11       labor to secure funding for the victims of

        12       cerebral palsy.  Eamonn sang non-stop for 11

        13       days and 20 minutes;

        14                      This legislative body is greatly

        15       honored to commend an Irish-American and his

        16       lovely family for their consummate concern for

        17       others;

        18                      Through his heroic commitment to

        19       those who suffer from the dreaded disease of

        20       cerebral palsy, Eamonn McGirr has so unselfishly

        21       advanced that spirit of united purpose and

        22       shared concern which is the unalterable

        23       manifestation of our American experience;











                                                             
1286

         1                      NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED,

         2       that this legislative body pause in its

         3       deliberations and most joyously commend Eamonn

         4       McGirr for his outstanding initiative in raising

         5       funds for the Cerebral Palsy Center for the

         6       Disabled, fully confident that Eamonn's feat

         7       mirrors that legacy of valor and love for others

         8       which constitutes the Irish-American heritage;

         9       and

        10                      BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that

        11       copies of this resolution, suitably engrossed,

        12       be transmitted to Eamonn McGirr, Loudon House,

        13       Loudonville, New York and to the Honorable

        14       Richard J. Keane, President of the American

        15       Irish Legislators' Society, Albany, New York.

        16                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Senator

        17       Hoblock.

        18                      SENATOR HOBLOCK:  Madam

        19       President, we are privileged and honored to have

        20       joined with us today Eamonn McGirr, his wife

        21       Mary and his daughter Mareena.

        22                      Eamonn is being honored today,

        23       not just for the outstanding record-breaking











                                                             
1287

         1       achievement of singing non-stop for 11 days, but

         2       for the initiative he showed and the dedication

         3       with which he set about his task to raise funds

         4       for the Center for the Disabled and all members

         5       of the disabled community.

         6                      Mr. McGirr has set an example on

         7       how one man can make a difference.  We all want

         8       to do something to help.  We all want to show

         9       that we care, but Eamonn has proven it can be

        10       done, and I'm sure he has inspired many others

        11       to record-breaking heights.  Eamonn has

        12       performed an outstanding and amazing feat of

        13       endurance and courage, but he has also performed

        14       an amazing feat of kindness.

        15                      On behalf of the New York State

        16       Senate, I would like to extend our sincere

        17       appreciation and gratitude.  We are proud to

        18       have a record breaker in our midst and

        19       privileged to have such a generous and caring

        20       individual living among us.

        21                      Congratulations, Eamonn.

        22                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  The

        23       question is on the resolution.  All in favor











                                                             
1288

         1       signify by saying aye.

         2                      (Response of "Aye".)

         3                      Opposed, nay.

         4                      (There was no response.)

         5                      The resolution is adopted.

         6                      Congratulations and thank you,

         7       Mr. McGirr, for your unselfish commitment

         8       through the years.  We all applaud your efforts

         9       and applaud you.

        10                      (Applause)

        11                      Senator Skelos.

        12                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Madam President,

        13       at this time may we please adopt the Resolution

        14       Calendar.

        15                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  All those

        16       in favor of adopting the Resolution Calendar

        17       signify by saying aye.

        18                      (Response of "Aye".)

        19                      Opposed, nay.

        20                      (There was no response.)

        21                      The Resolution Calendar is

        22       adopted.

        23                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Madam President,











                                                             
1289

         1       there will be an immediate meeting of the Crime

         2       Victims, Crime and Corrections Committee in the

         3       Majority Conference Room, Room 332 of the

         4       Capitol.

         5                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Crime

         6       Victims conference, Room 333 of the Capitol.

         7                      Senator Skelos, are you ready for

         8       the calendar?

         9                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Yes.  If we

        10       could take up the non-controversial calendar.

        11                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  The Clerk

        12       shall read -- the Secretary shall read.

        13                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar 117, by

        14       Senator Padavan, Senate Print 667-A, an act to

        15       amend the Penal Law, in relation to making

        16       citizenship document fraud in the first degree

        17       and second degree Class D and E felonies.

        18                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Read the

        19       last section.

        20                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 2.  This

        21       act shall take effect on the first day of

        22       November.

        23                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Call the











                                                             
1290

         1       roll.

         2                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

         3                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 47.

         4                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  The bill

         5       is passed.

         6                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar 158, by

         7       Senator Velella, Senate Print 2872, an act -

         8                      SENATOR GOLD:  Lay it aside.

         9                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Lay it

        10       aside.

        11                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar 160, by

        12       Senator Padavan, Senate Print 3380-A, an act to

        13       amend the State Finance Law, the General

        14       Municipal Law, the Personal Property Law, Public

        15       Authorities Law and the Administrative Code of

        16       the city of New York, in relation to authorizing

        17       agreements with financing agencies.

        18                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Read the

        19       last section.

        20                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 15.  This

        21       act shall take effect immediately.

        22                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Call the

        23       roll.











                                                             
1291

         1                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

         2                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 49.

         3                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  The bill

         4       is passed.

         5                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar 192, by

         6       Senator Bruno, Senate Print 5804, an act to

         7       amend the Highway Law, in relation to

         8       designating a portion of the state highway

         9       system as "The General Philip Schuyler

        10       Commemorative Highway."

        11                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Read the

        12       last section.

        13                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 3.  This

        14       act shall take effect immediately.

        15                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Call the

        16       roll.

        17                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

        18                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 49.

        19                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  The bill

        20       is passed.

        21                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar 193, by

        22       Senator Hannon, Senate Print 1265, an act to

        23       amend the Environmental Conservation Law, in











                                                             
1292

         1       relation to providing hunting and fishing

         2       licenses to disabled veterans free of charge.

         3                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Read the

         4       last section.

         5                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 2.  This

         6       act shall take effect immediately.

         7                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Call the

         8       roll.

         9                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

        10                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 49.

        11                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  The bill

        12       is passed.

        13                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar 194, by

        14       Senator Sears, Senate Print 1739, an act to

        15       amend the Vehicle and Traffic Law, in relation

        16       to eliminating the annual service charge imposed

        17       on distinctive license plates.

        18                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Read the

        19       last section.

        20                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 2.  This

        21       act shall take effect on the 90th day.

        22                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Call the

        23       roll.











                                                             
1293

         1                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

         2                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 49.

         3                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  The bill

         4       is passed.

         5                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar 195, by

         6       Senator Hoblock, Senate Print 3407, an act to

         7       amend the Military Law, in relation to providing

         8       legal authority for obtaining background checks

         9       on individuals.

        10                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Read the

        11       last section.

        12                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 2.  This

        13       act shall take effect immediately.

        14                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Call the

        15       roll.

        16                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

        17                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 49.

        18                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  The bill

        19       is passed.

        20                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar 197, by

        21       Senator Hoblock, Senate Print 3559-A, an act to

        22       amend the Vehicle and Traffic Law, in relation

        23       to special distinctive license plates.











                                                             
1294

         1                      SENATOR STACHOWSKI:  Lay it

         2       aside.

         3                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Lay the

         4       bill aside.

         5                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar 198, by

         6       Senator Hoblock, Senate Print 3659-A, an act to

         7       amend the Military Law, in relation to

         8       authorizing the Governor to present the

         9       conspicuous service cross to certain persons who

        10       are missing in action.

        11                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Read the

        12       last section.

        13                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 2.  This

        14       act shall take effect immediately.

        15                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Call the

        16       roll.

        17                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

        18                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 49.

        19                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  The bill

        20       is passed.

        21                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar 199, by

        22       Senator Cook, Senate Print 3961-A, an act to

        23       amend the Insurance Law, in relation to motor











                                                             
1295

         1       vehicle insurance coverage.

         2                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Read the

         3       last section.

         4                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 2.  This

         5       act shall take effect on the 90th day.

         6                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Call the

         7       roll.

         8                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

         9                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 49.

        10                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  The bill

        11       is passed.

        12                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar 200, by

        13       Senator Hoblock, Senate Print 5835, an act to

        14       amend the Executive Law, in relation to

        15       requiring that county directors of veterans'

        16       service agencies be veterans.

        17                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Read the

        18       last section.

        19                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 2.  This

        20       act shall take effect immediately.

        21                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Call the

        22       roll.

        23                      (The Secretary called the roll.)











                                                             
1296

         1                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 49.

         2                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  The bill

         3       is passed.

         4                      Senator Skelos, that completes

         5       the reading of the non-controversial calendar.

         6                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Madam President,

         7       we'll take up the controversial calendar, and I

         8       believe Senator Velella is on his way into the

         9       chambers.

        10                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  There he

        11       is as we speak.

        12                      SENATOR SKELOS:  As I speak.

        13                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  As we

        14       speak.  The Secretary will read.

        15                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

        16       158, by Senator Velella, Senate Print 2872, an

        17       act to amend the General City Law and the Penal

        18       Law, in relation to creating the crimes of

        19       urinating and begging in public.

        20                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:

        21       Explanation has been requested.

        22                      Senator Velella.

        23                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Yes.  This bill











                                                             
1297

         1       is a simple bill.  It has three provisions in

         2       it.  One, it allows local governments to adopt a

         3       local ordinance refrain -- restraining people

         4       from sitting or lying down in a public walkway

         5       in commercial zones that they designate as

         6       commercial zones.

         7                      Two, it provides for a crime in

         8       the criminal statutes of the state for urinating

         9       or defecating in public on the public streets,

        10       and it provides for a crime of aggressive

        11       begging on the streets of -- local streets in

        12       the cities.  It would be a Class B misdemeanor

        13       for aggressive begging.

        14                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Senator

        15       Paterson.

        16                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Thank you,

        17       Madam President.

        18                      If Senator Velella would yield

        19       for a question.

        20                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Senator,

        21       will you yield?

        22                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Certainly.

        23                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  The











                                                             
1298

         1       Senator yields.

         2                      Senator Paterson.

         3                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Senator, we

         4       have a menacing bill on the books right now,

         5       Penal Law Section 120.25.  We have fraudulent

         6       accosting, which is Section 165.3.  We have

         7       disorderly conduct, Section 220.25 and also we

         8       have Section 225 which relates to harassment.

         9       So my question to you is, with all of this law

        10       that we have made on this subject, do you not

        11       feel that the police have the facility to

        12       conduct these types of examinations and make

        13       arrests when necessary as it stands on the books

        14       right now?

        15                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Obviously,

        16       Senator, my answer would have to be no,

        17       otherwise I wouldn't have put the bill in.  I

        18       think that the crime of aggressive begging would

        19       be another tool in the arsenal of the police

        20       officer to fight these quality of life crimes on

        21       the streets of our cities.

        22                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Senator

        23       Paterson.











                                                             
1299

         1                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Senator Gold

         2       wanted to know if this bill has the death

         3       penalty in it.

         4                      SENATOR VELELLA:  No, no,

         5       Senator.  There's no such -- it's only a B

         6       misdemeanor.  That wouldn't carry that harsh a

         7       penalty.

         8                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Okay.

         9       Senator, if you would continue to yield.

        10                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Senator

        11       Velella, do you yield?

        12                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Yes.

        13                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Yes.

        14                      SENATOR PATERSON:  You also have

        15       in the bill a section that requires the designa

        16       tion of 15 percent of the county as areas for

        17       which there would be sort of an enterprise zone

        18       whereby between the hours of 7:00 a.m. and 9:00

        19       p.m., during the business hours, individuals

        20       would be kept out of these particular areas.

        21       They wouldn't be allowed to sit or lie down in

        22       these particular areas, and you do -- you are

        23       specific about certain exceptions, such as a











                                                             
1300

         1       parade or something for which whoever is

         2       conducting it has secured a legal permit, but my

         3       question relates to those public gatherings

         4       where there is no permit, perhaps the police

         5       aren't taking action, a public demonstration, a

         6       political rally, anyone sitting in those

         7       particular areas under your bill, as I see it,

         8       would make themselves eligible for arrest under

         9       this statute.  I would suggest -- and I just

        10       wanted to hear your reaction -- that perhaps the

        11       bill needs to be more specific on this point.

        12                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Senator

        13       Velella.

        14                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Senator, I just

        15       reread it because I thought perhaps I misread

        16       it.  We don't require people to apply for

        17       permits to do certain things in commercial zones

        18       which are socially acceptable.  We say that you

        19       can't lie in doorways.  You can't lay on the

        20       sidewalks -- in doorways or on the sidewalks of

        21       these commercial zones, and we provide for

        22       exemptions from that, such as medical emergency,

        23       disabled persons using wheelchairs, crutches or











                                                             
1301

         1       other assisted devices.  Operating or

         2       patronizing a commercial establishment on a

         3       sidewalk pursuant to a valid permit -- that

         4       would be if you're a vendor on that particular

         5       street -- that would require a permit, or a

         6       street fair or parade.  Sitting on a chair or

         7       bench supplied by a public agency or abutting

         8       property would not be -- require a permit.

         9       Sitting on a sidewalk or a bus stop or other

        10       transportation site would not require one.

        11       Sitting on the sidewalk while engaged in

        12       artistic activity would not require a permit.

        13       The normal social things that people accept to

        14       be seen on the streets of any city or any

        15       locality would be exempt from this.  People

        16       sleeping and lying about the streets and

        17       blocking pedestrian traffic would not be allowed

        18       under this.  That is the purpose of the bill.

        19                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Senator

        20       Paterson.

        21                      SENATOR PATERSON:  My apologies,

        22       Madam President.  I don't think that I was clear

        23       enough in my question.  I wasn't saying that the











                                                             
1302

         1       individual needed the permit.  I was saying if

         2       there was a type of a public demonstration for

         3       which there was no permit, then at that point

         4       the sitting or lying on the street would not be

         5       a -- what would be considered a social act under

         6       the legislation, but what I'm actually

         7       suggesting is that the individual who -- who is

         8       sitting, let's say watching a demonstration or

         9       some sort of political rally, would think that

        10       there was a permit and since there was not, it

        11       would be a way that they might get arrested and,

        12       of course, in these types of situations where

        13       there is not always a permit, I thought that the

        14       individual, without real knowledge that they

        15       were breaking the law, would become likely to be

        16       arrested where they otherwise wouldn't be, and

        17       so what I was suggesting, if Senator Velella

        18       would care to comment on what I'm saying as I

        19       presented it now, what about the situation where

        20       there isn't a license but it is a public

        21       gathering and a person is sitting on the ground

        22       watching it or lying on a bench watching the

        23       proceedings?











                                                             
1303

         1                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Well, first of

         2       all, we're talking about a civil penalty here,

         3       so they're not going to cart people off to

         4       jail.  That's one thing.  The second thing is -

         5       and I hate to say this again for the second time

         6       in two days, but we have to also assume that

         7       some people have common sense in this state,

         8       including police officers, and when someone is

         9       approached on the street and said -- and a

        10       police officer says, "You're in the way.  You're

        11       blocking pedestrian traffic.  If you don't move,

        12       I'm going to issue you a violation", I would

        13       think that that person would move along as I

        14       would, I'm sure as you would, if directed by a

        15       police officer because I'm obstructing

        16       pedestrian traffic and interfering with a

        17       commercial enterprise.  I think it's

        18       unreasonable to assume that a police officer is

        19       going to swoop down on people, issue a summons

        20       at random and threaten to lock them up for not

        21       obeying a direct order from a police officer.

        22                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Senator

        23       Paterson.











                                                             
1304

         1                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Thank you very

         2       much, Senator Velella.

         3                      Madam President, on the bill.

         4                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  On the

         5       bill, Senator Paterson.

         6                      SENATOR PATERSON:  We certainly

         7       do assume that people are exercising common

         8       sense, but when they're not exercising common

         9       sense, that does not necessarily make them so

        10       civilly liable for the mistakes that they make.

        11                      In this bill, what we think is

        12       that there is a sense of unusual punishment for

        13       what may at times be actions that people are

        14       taking that are, maybe not preferred by society

        15       but are certainly not crimes or certainly not

        16       civil penalties.

        17                      In this legislation, there is

        18       certainly a protection against what is really a

        19       sort of form of public lewdness that has to be

        20       protected.  At the same time, the homeless who,

        21       for no reason or fault of their own, find

        22       themselves in the position that they are in, are

        23       often victimized by this kind of a process where











                                                             
1305

         1       their alternatives and their options are

         2       limited.

         3                      Thank you, Madam President.

         4                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Thank

         5       you, Senator Paterson.

         6                      Senator Onorato.

         7                      SENATOR ONORATO:  Senator

         8       Velella, would you yield to a question, please?

         9                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Yes, Senator

        10       Onorato.

        11                      SENATOR ONORATO:  I brought up in

        12       committee the person that I was concerned about

        13       urinating.  You know, it's a common practice for

        14       mothers wheeling their little children, when

        15       they get caught in a certain situation that they

        16       let them go on a curb or against the tree when

        17       they're out in public.  Now, what's the

        18       protection to stop them from arresting the

        19       mother, and who gets the fine for urinating in

        20       the street, the mother or the infant?

        21                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Senator, I

        22       would assume, first of all, that you would be

        23       quite upset if that mother let that happen in











                                                             
1306

         1       front of your house on your curb, or in front of

         2       your tree -- on the tree in front of your house,

         3       just as I would be upset.  I don't know that

         4       it's a common practice.  If there is an

         5       emergency situation, again, that might be an

         6       emergency where a police officer would use

         7       discretion, but certainly I don't think the

         8       policy of this state should be to allow mothers

         9       to let their children defecate and urinate on

        10       the public streets.  Pigs do that, not people.

        11                      SENATOR ONORATO:  But does your

        12       bill -

        13                      SENATOR VELELLA:  We charge a dog

        14       $100 for the problem of defecating on the

        15       streets if the owner is caught.  We're only

        16       charging $50 for the mother now.  We're giving

        17       them a bargain.

        18                      SENATOR ONORATO:  What happens -

        19       is there anything specific in here where the

        20       child is the one doing the urinating?

        21                      SENATOR VELELLA:  The mother

        22       would be responsible for that, I would think.

        23                      SENATOR ONORATO:  What if the











                                                             
1307

         1       child is by itself -

         2                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Well, if the

         3       child -

         4                      SENATOR ONORATO:  -- playing

         5       outside on the street?

         6                      SENATOR VELELLA:  If the child is

         7       by itself -

         8                      SENATOR ONORATO:  Playing -

         9                      SENATOR VELELLA: -- I would

        10       assume they may have reached an age of reason

        11       and the police officer would either direct them

        12       to go home and take care of their personal

        13       problem or bring them home.  I would think

        14       that's the reasonable thing to do.  I don't

        15       think you would have to cite a minor.  That

        16       might be some type of an exception that you'd

        17       want to do.  I don't think they're legally

        18       responsible for breaking that law or violating

        19       the law.

        20                      SENATOR ONORATO:  Is there a

        21       discretion -

        22                      SENATOR VELELLA:  The bill that's

        23       there, the parent ought to pay a fine for that.











                                                             
1308

         1                      SENATOR ONORATO:  But is there a

         2       discretion for a two- or three-year-old child

         3       who's outside playing?

         4                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Well, there is

         5       -- what happens if a two-year-old child or a

         6       three-year-old child commits a more serious

         7       crime?  We don't indict them and prosecute

         8       them.  There is a legal -- a legal age of reason

         9       for which people are held responsible for their

        10       acts.  Obviously if they're teenagers, we have a

        11       little bit of a higher degree.  If they're

        12       adults, it's a higher degree.  If they're

        13       infants under the age of, let's say seven, which

        14       is generally accepted as an age of reason,

        15       they're really reprimanded and perhaps if this

        16       becomes a pattern of conduct, there might be

        17       some referral to a Person in Need of Supervision

        18       citation or some kind of counseling for people

        19       who like to go to the bathroom in public.

        20                      SENATOR ONORATO:  Thank you.

        21                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Senator

        22       Montgomery, did you wish to speak?

        23                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Yes.  Thank











                                                             
1309

         1       you, Madam President.

         2                      I don't have any questions for

         3       Senator Velella, but I just would like to remind

         4       the Senator that while I understand the intent

         5       of the legislation, certainly I would not like

         6       to have people urinating and defecating in my

         7       front yard or in the -- rather, in the -- my

         8       front yard is a parking lot, unfortunately, but

         9       be that as it may, I don't want them urinating

        10       and defecating there either, so -- but I want to

        11       call your attention that we have attempted to

        12       resolve issues such as this at other times and

        13       they haven't seemed to work.

        14                      We have criminalized the use of

        15       needles -- the use and possession of hypodermic

        16       needles as a means, hopefully, of curbing the

        17       use of intravenous drugs and, of course, it has

        18       not worked.  We have criminalized drugs.  There

        19       have been movements to decriminalize drugs, at

        20       least marijuana.  We have decriminalized them to

        21       the extent that we have people serving long

        22       terms in prisons for possessing small amounts of

        23       drugs and it still hasn't worked.  We have











                                                             
1310

         1       criminalized mothers of -- whose babies test

         2       positive for drugs when they're born, and now

         3       we're criminalizing begging, and my suggestion

         4       to you is that we are looking to resolve an

         5       issue by addressing the symptom of a much deeper

         6       and larger social issue, and I don't think that

         7       it's going to work, number one, and number two,

         8       I just think that it is the wrong approach to

         9       look at ways of keeping people from begging by

        10       creating jobs, hopefully, and maybe some of

        11       those people really aren't in any position to

        12       work, but I don't think you're going to resolve

        13       it by making criminals of them, and certainly

        14       those people who don't have a home, who are

        15       homeless and they sleep on the streets, and they

        16       sleep in alleyways, and they sleep in subway

        17       tunnels and they sleep on subways, they are a

        18       menace to all of us in society.  They are a

        19       horrible menace, and it is a terrible statement

        20       about what we have come to in our cities and

        21       towns across the state and across the country,

        22       but making criminals of them, I don't think is

        23       going to solve the problem.  We have a much











                                                             
1311

         1       greater social question, social economic

         2       question to address and that in and of itself, I

         3       believe, Senator Velella and my colleagues, is

         4       where we should be looking and not to make

         5       criminals of people who are already down and

         6       out.

         7                      So, Madam Chair, I will be voting

         8       against this, Madam President, and I hope that

         9       my other colleagues will also vote against it

        10       because Senator Velella is doing the wrong thing

        11       for the right reason.

        12                      Thank you.

        13                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Would Senator

        14       Montgomery yield to a question?

        15                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Senator

        16       Montgomery, will you yield to Senator Velella?

        17                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Sure.

        18                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  The

        19       Senator yields.

        20                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Senator, is it

        21       your opinion that when we decriminalized the

        22       marijuana laws of this state that we have solved

        23       the problem by decriminalizing them, or do you











                                                             
1312

         1       think that's still a serious problem in this

         2       state, drug abuse?

         3                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Senator

         4       Velella, I believe that it is a major problem

         5       for us that we have created a very major

         6       criminalization for people who possess small

         7       amounts of marijuana, yes, small amounts of

         8       drugs of all sorts, and we now have our prisons

         9       full of people serving long-term sentences for

        10       this kind of crime that is a non-violent crime,

        11       while other people are serving shorter terms for

        12       more serious crimes and they get out and -- on

        13       early parole and what have you.

        14                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Would the

        15       Senator yield to another question?

        16                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Senator,

        17       will you yield for another question?

        18                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Senator, it's

        19       your opinion that we have helped solve the

        20       problem of marijuana and illegal use of

        21       marijuana by decriminalizing the possession of

        22       marijuana -

        23                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  I think -











                                                             
1313

         1                      SENATOR VELELLA:  -- if that was

         2       the right way to go and that that has helped

         3       solve the problem?

         4                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Senator

         5       Velella, I think that in terms of decriminal

         6       izing marijuana, when you take out the tremen

         7       dous economic incentive, it is -- it makes a big

         8       difference.  Yes, I think it makes a big

         9       difference.  Decriminalizing, taking it out of

        10       the criminal code and making it an offense that

        11       is against the person but that is not a criminal

        12       offense, yes, I think that -

        13                      SENATOR VELELLA:  This makes it,

        14       in effect, a violation.

        15                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  You have now

        16       made begging -

        17                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Begging is

        18       different.  We were talking about the

        19       defecating, I thought you were mentioning.

        20                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  I'm talking

        21       about your bill.  Your bill includes defecation,

        22       urination, begging, sleeping on the sidewalks in

        23       certain areas.











                                                             
1314

         1                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Senator, each

         2       of those categories has a different penalty to

         3       it.  It's separated.

         4                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY: I under

         5       stand.  I understand.

         6                      SENATOR VELELLA:  So the

         7       aggressive begging, yes, it would be a crime,

         8       but I thought -- aggressive begging would be a

         9       crime in the sense of a misdemeanor.  I thought

        10       that you were talking about the defecating

        11       portion.

        12                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  I'm talking

        13       about the begging.  We're criminalizing

        14       begging.  You're criminalizing begging in the

        15       bill.  That's what I -

        16                      SENATOR VELELLA:  If I can,

        17       Senator -

        18                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  That's what

        19       -- how I understand the legislation.

        20                      SENATOR VELELLA:  -- what I'm

        21       doing is making it against the law to intimidate

        22       people and beg with the anticipation that they

        23       will receive bodily harm if they don't











                                                             
1315

         1       participate in your attempt to solicit money

         2       from them.  When you place another person in

         3       fear of physical injury or injury to themselves

         4       by the process of begging, you ought to be

         5       punished for that.  That's my contention and

         6       that means Penal Law violation, second time,

         7       crime.  Maybe you think that we ought to try to

         8       do it another way.  I would be happy to look at

         9       it.

        10                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Madam

        11       President.

        12                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Senator

        13       Montgomery.

        14                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  I reiterate

        15       that we are now placing a criminal offense for

        16       begging, and we know that people who don't need

        17       to beg, don't beg and people who are begging are

        18       doing it for some reason, and I would say that

        19       it's certainly not addressing the reason that

        20       they're begging, to arrest them and criminalize

        21       them, give them a criminal offense and -- with

        22       the assumption that a number of these criminal

        23       offenses will add up to having a higher offense











                                                             
1316

         1       and eventually could end them up in an already

         2       over-burdened penal system, and I don't think we

         3       -- we want to do that.  I certainly don't -- I

         4       don't think that Senator Velella intends to do

         5       that, and so I think while we don't want to see

         6       people begging, we certainly don't want to begin

         7       to fill our prisons up with beggars who have

         8       been arrested because they had no other means

         9       except they had to beg for their -- their -

        10       their food and whatever else.

        11                      Thank you.

        12                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Thank

        13       you, Senator Montgomery.

        14                      The next Senator, Senator Waldon.

        15                      SENATOR WALDON:  Thank you very

        16       much, Madam President.

        17                      Would the good Senator Velella

        18       yield to a question?

        19                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Yes.

        20                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Senator

        21       Velella will yield.

        22                      SENATOR WALDON:  Senator, I

        23       noticed the 15 percent of the sidewalk of the











                                                             
1317

         1       city in question portion of your bill, and if I

         2       understood what you're proposing correctly, that

         3       could be selectively any 15 percent in the city

         4       in question, is that correct?

         5                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Yes.  It would

         6       be targeted by the city as to the purpose of the

         7       bill to prevent people from lying in doorways or

         8       lying on streets in commercial areas.  The local

         9       municipality would designate which of those

        10       areas to be considered and post proper signage.

        11                      SENATOR WALDON:  Is it -- if I

        12       may continue, Madam President.  Would the

        13       gentleman continue to yield?

        14                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Senator,

        15       do you continue to yield?  The Senator

        16       continues.

        17                      SENATOR WALDON:  Thank you very

        18       much, Madam President.

        19                      Senator, would this designated

        20       area be limited only to the business district?

        21                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Well, the

        22       city -

        23                      SENATOR WALDON:  The commercial











                                                             
1318

         1       zone?

         2                      SENATOR VELELLA:  The city would

         3       create those zones that they felt, that of all

         4       the streets that the city may have, 15 percent

         5       of them may be designated or less for zones in

         6       which they don't want people sleeping, laying

         7       about the streets because they are commercial

         8       zones.  They would have the discretion to

         9       designate them as such.

        10                      SENATOR WALDON:  Madam President.

        11                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Senator

        12       Velella, do you continue to yield?

        13                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Yes.

        14                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Yes.

        15                      SENATOR WALDON:  Senator, I thank

        16       you for your explanation but I'm still troubled

        17       in this sense.  I don't see anything in the bill

        18       which says that the city cannot be arbitrary.

        19                      For example, in New York City,

        20       there's Bedford-Stuyvesant, there's South Bronx,

        21       there's Harlem, there's Chinatown, there's

        22       Little Italy, there's Jamaica, there's nothing

        23       in your bill which says that the City cannot











                                                             
1319

         1       arbitrarily restrict the areas in those

         2       communities which are very similar to the

         3       community I serve and I represent, meaning a

         4       significant portion of my community is Afro

         5       American, although the district is about 50/50,

         6       but this law, if it becomes law, would permit

         7       the City to say, "Ah-ha!  Just the sidewalks on

         8       Jamaica Avenue."  Is that not true?

         9                      SENATOR VELELLA:  No, Senator,

        10       that's not true, and the reason it's not true is

        11       because we are not passing this bill in a

        12       vacuum.  This bill goes into the statutes along

        13       with all the other statutes of this state, along

        14       with the federal Constitution, along with the

        15       state Constitution, and under the federal

        16       Constitution and our state Constitution and

        17       under the laws that we provide in this state,

        18       under civil procedures and court actions, you

        19       cannot act arbitrarily and capriciously if you

        20       are a government agency.  You cannot just act by

        21       whim, and you can be -- and that can be enforced

        22       in the courts.  Certainly, the City would have

        23       to exercise some type of discretion and some











                                                             
1320

         1       type of reasonableness in this, as is required

         2       by the statutes and the Constitutions.  It's not

         3       being passed in a vacuum.

         4                      SENATOR WALDON:  Would the

         5       gentleman continue to yield, Madam President?

         6                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Senator

         7       Velella, do you continue?

         8                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Certainly.

         9                      SENATOR WALDON:  Senator, it is

        10       not my purpose to be contentious.  I don't think

        11       contentiousness accomplishes much, but there's a

        12       thing called an Article 78 proceeding, and there

        13       are courts and we can go into court.

        14                      I respectfully submit to you that

        15       your bill might be resolved in regard to my

        16       question with a court action but on its face

        17       with the words which are here, there's nothing

        18       which says we proscribe arbitrary designation of

        19       the sidewalks in question.  I don't see that,

        20       but I want to ask you a second question not

        21       related to that.

        22                      The people who are being policed

        23       by this bill, as you have written it, have you











                                                             
1321

         1       any data as to what communities they will come

         2       from?  By that, I mean, are they from the OMRDD

         3       facilities, those who have transgressed in the

         4       manner which inspired you -- in a manner which

         5       inspired you to write this?  Are they those who

         6       are now no longer in the OMH facilities and are

         7       out in the streets?  Are the people the

         8       Vietnamese veterans who are wandering our

         9       streets aimlessly?  Who are the people who you

        10       anticipate will be arrested as a result if this

        11       becomes law?

        12                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Well, I don't

        13       really anticipate that people will be arrested.

        14       It provides for issuance of a summons in

        15       violation and then only on second offense for it

        16       to be a misdemeanor, which could be arrested or

        17       could get a desk appearance ticket.  So I don't

        18       expect police to be coming down, handcuffing

        19       people and dragging them off in a paddy wagon to

        20       the police station to be processed within the

        21       criminal justice system.

        22                      However, I don't know how you

        23       would find out who are the slobs that defecate











                                                             
1322

         1       and urinate on the public streets of this city.

         2       I don't know how you define who might be someone

         3       who lies down in the doorways, where they come

         4       from, how they've come to living -- how they've

         5       come to assuming these anti-social behaviors, I

         6       don't know how you would find those out.  All I

         7       know is there is a problem in the City.  There's

         8       a problem in big urban areas and this bill helps

         9       to address that, people defecating in the

        10       streets, people urinating in the streets, people

        11       lying in doorways and interrupting the

        12       commercial flow of business and also people

        13       aggressively begging and putting people in fear

        14       of imminent bodily harm.

        15                      Also, Senator, while I'm up and I

        16       have an opportunity to respond, there is

        17       criteria established, as I was reading, as to

        18       what zones must be designated as being

        19       commercial areas, and that would be within my

        20       bill as it designs which areas that would be

        21       defined for the purposes of being patronized by

        22       persons working or residing in a city or

        23       visitors for purposes of obtaining food or











                                                             
1323

         1       temporary lodging or engaging in recreational,

         2       shopping, educational and cultural activities.

         3       That would be the criteria for which a

         4       municipality would have to establish a

         5       commercial zone.  So they could not arbitrarily

         6       and capriciously -- they'd act by the confines

         7       of the statute.

         8                      SENATOR WALDON:  Thank you very

         9       much, Senator, for that explanation.  If the

        10       gentleman would continue to yield, Madam

        11       President.

        12                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Senator

        13       Velella, will you yield?

        14                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Yes.

        15                      SENATOR WALDON:  Senator, I went

        16       all the way to line 39 on page 3 looking for a

        17       section that would deal with more porta-potties.

        18                      SENATOR VELELLA:  I'm sorry,

        19       what?

        20                      SENATOR WALDON:  More portable

        21       potties in the City.

        22                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Portable -

        23       portable -











                                                             
1324

         1                      SENATOR WALDON:  Portable

         2       potties.

         3                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Portable

         4       potties?

         5                      SENATOR WALDON:  Yes.

         6       Porta-johns, public toilets.

         7                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Oh, okay.

         8                      SENATOR WALDON:  I don't know if

         9       you travel in Europe, but I have often, and

        10       there are everywhere and in each city, public

        11       toilets.  So this is not a problem in many of

        12       our sister cities across Europe.  Wouldn't it

        13       have been something smart -- well, let me take

        14       that back.  Would it not have been something you

        15       may have considered making a provision that we

        16       would have public toilets everywhere throughout

        17       the cities of this state as opposed to proposing

        18       that we lock people up who, in a moment of need,

        19       resort to using the streets to defecate and

        20       urinate?

        21                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Senator, you

        22       don't know how many times in my life I have

        23       wished that we had those facilities available on











                                                             
1325

         1       the public streets of our cities.  Many, many

         2       times in my life have I wished for those

         3       facilities.  However, I think we have a cost

         4       factor at a time when we have a budget problem,

         5       and certainly I would be happy to see that.  We

         6       did some experimenting in the city of New York

         7       with public toilets and, as you know, they were

         8       put on the streets and they were vandalized,

         9       wrecked and destroyed.  I don't know that it

        10       would work.  We tried to do it.  The City tried

        11       to do it.  Unfortunately, whether it be the

        12       tourists that visit our cities or some of the

        13       residents of our city, somebody likes to destroy

        14       these things and not allow the public conven

        15       ience to be had by all of us.  So I don't think

        16       it would be a very worthwhile endeavor to spend

        17       the taxpayers' money on it.

        18                      Unfortunately, our people don't

        19       behave, whether they're tourists or not, like

        20       the people who do behave in those countries that

        21       you might have had the opportunity to visit.

        22                      SENATOR WALDON:  Would the

        23       gentleman continue to yield, Madam President?











                                                             
1326

         1                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Senator

         2       Velella, will you yield?

         3                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Yes.

         4                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Yes.

         5                      SENATOR WALDON:  Senator Velella,

         6       do you know anyone who's a diabetic?

         7                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Sure.

         8                      SENATOR WALDON:  Do you know

         9       anyone who has what's characterized as a

        10       prostate condition, not necessarily cancerous,

        11       but a prostate condition which may create

        12       problems in terms of a need to urinate without

        13       warning?

        14                      SENATOR VELELLA:  I assume so,

        15       yeah.

        16                      SENATOR WALDON:  Is there any

        17       provision in your bill for someone who's a law

        18       abiding, decent, upstanding citizen who has an

        19       attack -- permit me to use that phrase -- as a

        20       result of diabetes or as a result of a prostate

        21       condition and has no place to go to the bathroom

        22       but in the street or to urinate on himself or

        23       herself?  Is there any proviso in your bill that











                                                             
1327

         1       people who have a medical condition and may even

         2       have their bracelet on that, when the police see

         3       that bracelet, they are eliminated from consid

         4       eration for the desk appearance ticket and/or

         5       the violation?  By the way, my understanding of

         6       the law, just as an aside, is a desk experience

         7       is an arrest.

         8                      SENATOR VELELLA:  A what?

         9                      SENATOR WALDON:  An arrest, for

        10       the edification of my colleagues, but what

        11       happens if somebody who's a diabetic, who has a

        12       prostate condition and cannot control the urge

        13       to urinate and uses the street?

        14                      SENATOR VELELLA:  That special

        15       provision wouldn't be necessary here because

        16       they might -- if they explain to an officer who

        17       confronted them and said, "You are breaking the

        18       law" and issued that citation, they might

        19       receive the citation, although I'd like to think

        20       not.  I believe you're a former officer.  You

        21       certainly would not have issued a summons under

        22       those conditions if you saw a bracelet, it was

        23       an emergency, but there is a system of judicial











                                                             
1328

         1       judgments that are made on these types of

         2       things, and that would be a perfectly valid

         3       defense and a perfectly legitimate thing to

         4       point out to a judge if you're cited for this,

         5       and it might be an inconvenience to go to court,

         6       yes, I agree, but the inconvenience is a lot

         7       more to the people who have to walk down the

         8       streets and see this type of activity by people,

         9       and you can go to the judge and explain, "I am a

        10       diabetic.  I have this condition.  It was an

        11       emergency", and I'm sure the judge, in all

        12       likelihood, would find you not guilty.  If he

        13       found you guilty, it's a $50 fine.  I think you

        14       could appeal it and win.

        15                      SENATOR WALDON:  Thank you very

        16       much, Senator.

        17                      If I may, Madam President, on the

        18       bill.

        19                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  On the

        20       question -- or on the bill.

        21                      SENATOR WALDON:  On this

        22       proposal, I must absolutely and unequivocally

        23       agree with the learned Senator from Kings











                                                             
1329

         1       County, the Honorable Velmanette Montgomery.  I

         2       think this is too far-reaching.  I think we're

         3       punishing too many people who are unnecessarily

         4       going to be caught up in this net of punitive

         5       ness.  Most of the people who will be wandering

         6       aimlessly on the streets who do not have a

         7       bathroom available to themselves will be our

         8       homeless population.  It will be men and women

         9       who are out of the mental institutions, out of

        10       the OMRDD institutions, who are veterans who are

        11       suffering from some kind of Agent Orange

        12       disability or whatever, but people who are not

        13       capable of taking care of themselves, and I

        14       think it is a waste of our priorities to want to

        15       punish them and put them in jail, as

        16       characterized by Senator Velmanette Montgomery,

        17       and I'm also troubled by the 15 percent despite

        18       what the bill says as proposed.  I believe it

        19       will be selectively enforced in terms of certain

        20       areas will have their sidewalks designated as

        21       non-usable versus other areas, and I also am

        22       very sensitive to the fact that someone who has

        23       an illness -- it should not be the purpose of











                                                             
1330

         1       our government for someone who has an illness to

         2       punish that person in an emergency situation.

         3                      For all of these reasons, I

         4       believe this fails on its face in terms of being

         5       the proper approach to dealing with these

         6       situations by the people of the state of New

         7       York and we, acting as their legislative voice,

         8       are really speaking untimely and out of turn.

         9                      I will vote in the no on this

        10       bill, Madam President.

        11                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Thank

        12       you, Senator.

        13                      The next speaker, Senator Gold.

        14                      SENATOR GOLD:  Thank you, Madam

        15       President.

        16                      I'm not so sure Senator Waldon

        17       was correct when he said that enforcement of

        18       this will be selective.  I think enforcement

        19       will be mostly people of color, as you would

        20       say.  I don't know how selective -- I think

        21       that's unquestionably what would happen in our

        22       city, and it's an easy collar.  You know, this

        23       -- maybe you can look at this as a pro-police











                                                             
1331

         1       bill.  It's a cold night and the cop wants to

         2       get off the streets and pick up a guy, say he's

         3       begging, bring him into the precinct, do the

         4       paperwork and they're both out of the cold, but

         5       really this is an issue of perspective, and this

         6       is what bothers me so much today.

         7                      You know, is the pen heavy?

         8       Well, the pen is heavy compared to a grain of

         9       sand but not compared to a chair.  It's

        10       perspective, and all day today there have been

        11       people flooding the Legislative Office Building

        12       and coming in to talk to us because they're

        13       concerned about the homeless.  They're concerned

        14       about the helpless.  They're concerned about

        15       what this budget is going to do to our streets

        16       in terms of placing more and more homeless.

        17       They're concerned about whether or not people

        18       are going to be emptied out of mental

        19       institutions and places of care, and I'm sure as

        20       they come into the balcony, as they hear what

        21       we're talking about today, they must think we've

        22       all gone "bazonkers" because the only thing

        23       we're doing today to deal with people who are











                                                             
1332

         1       homeless or people who are helpless or people

         2       that are in trouble is to talk about the -

         3       whether or not somebody some place is going to

         4       do one of these little things that Senator

         5       Velella talks about, and I think that the

         6       perspective on what we're doing here is

         7       incredible.

         8                      I mean, I really would rather be

         9       in a Conference Committee or some place talking

        10       about how we can make the budget humane, and if

        11       this is supposed to be the Republican answer to

        12       how you make society humane, I'm not surprised

        13       because I've seen you people do it before, but I

        14       think you pick too easy an enemy.  I think

        15       you're bullies.  I really do.  I think you're

        16       bullies.  You never take on the big guy.  You

        17       always look, read a poll and see who people may

        18       be against today, but on the other hand, I see

        19       where you're coming from, Senator Velella.

        20                      After all, you have a guy out

        21       there and you say to yourself, "When he got up

        22       this morning, he had a choice and he stood there

        23       and he said, 'Well, today I either want to be a











                                                             
1333

         1       bank president or I want to lie in a street and

         2       beg', and if he chose to beg, we ought to arrest

         3       him", and that other guy over there who could

         4       have been at some big Wall Street firm trading

         5       stocks, instead of that he went behind a

         6       building and didn't hide himself enough, but he

         7       urinated.  He made a choice, an intelligent

         8       choice.  Society gave him that choice.  So I

         9       understand the philosophy of your bill.

        10                      I think it's incredible.  I think

        11       it's incredible.  Senator Velella, what you're

        12       talking about are things which do not make all

        13       of us smile.  It is not pleasant walking down a

        14       street and seeing any of these things happen.

        15       It is not pleasant walking down a street and

        16       having a human beg money, but it's interesting

        17       because your answer to the question is not to

        18       help the person at this juncture at any rate -

        19       and I don't mean you personally.  You're a good

        20       person, but this budget doesn't say, "What can

        21       we do to stop the person from having to degrade

        22       himself or herself and beg in the streets."  You

        23       don't ask that, but you say, "Get it out of the











                                                             
1334

         1       way."

         2                      You know, there's a lot of people

         3       in society -- and they're good people, good

         4       people -- who give to charity and they give

         5       generously, but in the deep recesses of their

         6       mind, they're giving to charity so they don't

         7       have to see the human suffering, and when they

         8       walk down the street and see the human

         9       suffering, they are annoyed because they say, "I

        10       don't understand it.  I gave money so that I

        11       would not have to walk down the street and see

        12       the human suffering."  So now they get mad about

        13       that, and basically that's the philosophy of

        14       this bill even though, Senator Velella, I will

        15       admit in public you're a good person and I don't

        16       think you're an evil or vicious person, but

        17       that's what happens here.  We're saying that

        18       there is human suffering out there and rather

        19       than at this point in time to spend all of our

        20       energies getting a good budget, a humane budget,

        21       a budget which offers opportunity, we've got to

        22       get some of this suffering out of the vision of

        23       our sight.











                                                             
1335

         1                      The bill doesn't say you

         2       shouldn't urinate.  It says, "Don't urinate so

         3       people can see you", you know, and "Don't beg

         4       too hard because people will see you."  So the

         5       bill tries to cover up human misery.  That's all

         6       it really does, and in that way, I cannot

         7       condone that particular approach to what are

         8       very serious problems.

         9                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Is

        10       Senator Markowitz in the room?  He was our last

        11       speaker.

        12                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Would Senator

        13       Gold yield, if I can, to a question?

        14                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Senator

        15       Gold, would you yield for a question?

        16                      SENATOR GOLD:  Yes.

        17                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Senator, that

        18       was an excellent speech and I agree 100 percent

        19       with everything you said, but does it make a

        20       difference that this bill does not punish the

        21       begging?  It punishes the aggressive begging, of

        22       putting an innocent citizen in fear of being

        23       harmed or some bodily injury coming to them if











                                                             
1336

         1       they don't respond to the person's request for

         2       money.  It talks about placing someone in fear

         3       of being injured when you beg.  If you want to

         4       ask somebody, "Can I have a dime -- a dime -- a

         5       half a dollar for a cup of coffee", certainly

         6       that's not going to be punished, but if you

         7       intimidate them and place them in fear of bodily

         8       harm to themselves, I think it's proper to

         9       punish them.

        10                      SENATOR GOLD:  Well, having asked

        11       me to yield, I'll respond this way:  I would

        12       first of all adopt the comments of Senator

        13       Paterson because Senator Paterson addressed it.

        14       There are things which are already crimes and if

        15       we've done our job, we don't have to be ashamed

        16       of it.  We've done our job and we've protected

        17       the public.

        18                      All I'm saying, Senator, is that

        19       you have a wonderful intellect and a good

        20       capacity to work, and I'd like to see that

        21       directed in other ways.  I don't think that

        22       whether this bill passes or not, we are going to

        23       change one thing out on the streets.  If the











                                                             
1337

         1       cops want to enforce aggressive begging, as you

         2       say today, I think Senator Paterson pointed out,

         3       they have the tools, and if the cops aren't

         4       going to do it, then this bill isn't going to

         5       make them do it.  So I don't know whether it's

         6       really accomplishing anything other than, in my

         7       opinion, taking our time and energy away from

         8       solving what I think is the real problem.

         9                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Senator

        10       Markowitz.

        11                      SENATOR MARKOWITZ:  Thank you

        12       very much.

        13                      This issue is a difficult one.

        14       I'm sure you understand that, Senator Velella,

        15       because I wish -- I wish it wasn't even

        16       necessary that we even have to bring it to the

        17       chamber because I'm sure you know that, for most

        18       of us growing up in Brooklyn or anywhere in the

        19       City or state, the idea of defecating in public,

        20       the idea of -- the idea of urinating, the idea

        21       of spitting on our sidewalks was something that

        22       none of us, almost all of us never dreamt of

        23       doing and, unfortunately, in these days, somehow











                                                             
1338

         1       public respect for themselves, among some of the

         2       public, has decreased dramatically.

         3                      This is not the final bill that

         4       will ultimately be approved by the state

         5       Assembly and on to the Governor, I'm sure, and

         6       I'm sure that my colleagues have raised

         7       important differences, Senator Velella,

         8       important concerns that they have safeguarding

         9       those that are -- that have real problems

        10       psychologically, that have problems of health,

        11       but overall -- some months ago at my district

        12       office on Flatbush Avenue, a woman, perhaps in

        13       her late 40s, early 50s with her son, perhaps in

        14       his early teens decided to urinate in front of

        15       my office -- I hope it's not a reflection of how

        16       they felt their Senator was, and as I came into

        17       the office that morning, I asked the woman, I

        18       said, "Excuse me.  What is -- what is this young

        19       man doing in front of my office", and she

        20       responded in a very rational way.  "You can see

        21       for yourself, Mister."  So I did, indeed, see

        22       for myself and I mentioned to her, I said,

        23       "Listen.   This is ridiculous.  Certainly there











                                                             
1339

         1       are enough bathrooms around that it's not

         2       necessary for your son to urinate in front of my

         3       office", and her response was "He had to go."

         4       So all I thought about, after she looked at me

         5       like I was the crazy one and she was the sane

         6       one that, unfortunately -- unfortunately, we

         7       shouldn't have to, in legislation, present role

         8       models.  We shouldn't have to have -- have to be

         9       forced to teach people respect for themselves

        10       because we're not talking only public respect.

        11                      Anybody that urinates in the

        12       streets or spits on the sidewalk has no respect

        13       for themselves, let alone any one of us, and so

        14       perhaps maybe after this legislation is

        15       modified, Senator Velella, perhaps we can pass

        16       something that will encourage people to bring

        17       out the best in people, to make them understand

        18       that this type of behavior is anti-social for

        19       themselves, their families and the community

        20       that I know they want to live in, and I still

        21       believe that they want to live in a decent and

        22       clean community.

        23                      So like last year, I will support











                                                             
1340

         1       the legislation this year.

         2                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Read the

         3       last section.

         4                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 7.  This

         5       act shall take effect on the first day of

         6       November.

         7                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Call the

         8       roll.

         9                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

        10                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Senator

        11       Dollinger.

        12                      SENATOR DOLLINGER:  Just to

        13       explain my vote, Madam President.

        14                      I will be supporting this

        15       legislation.  I'm going to vote in the

        16       affirmative, but as big a crime as this may -

        17       this law may attempt to make aggressive begging

        18       and lying on the sidewalk, urinating or

        19       defecating in public, it seems to me the greater

        20       crime may be what we do later this year when we

        21       might pass a budget that will put more homeless

        22       people on the street, have more people lying on

        23       our sidewalks, having more people using curbs as











                                                             
1341

         1       public facilities and aggressively begging for

         2       food and sustenance.  That will be the great

         3       crime.

         4                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Announce

         5       the vote.

         6                      THE SECRETARY:  Those recorded in

         7       the negative on Calendar Number 158, Senators

         8       Abate, Connor, Gold, Leichter, Mendez,

         9       Montgomery, Padavan -- Paterson, Santiago, Smith

        10       and Waldon.  Ayes 42, nays 10.

        11                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  The bill

        12       is passed.

        13                      Senator Skelos.

        14                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Madam President,

        15       now that we've finished that riveting and

        16       heavy-duty debate, could we take up Calendar

        17       Number 197.

        18                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  The Clerk

        19       shall read -- the Secretary shall read.

        20                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

        21       197, by Senator Hoblock, Senate Print 3559-A, an

        22       act to amend the Vehicle and Traffic Law, in

        23       relation to special license plates.











                                                             
1342

         1                      SENATOR STACHOWSKI:  Madam

         2       President, I just have one question for the

         3       sponsor, if he wouldn't mind yielding.

         4                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  A

         5       question from Senator Stachowski.  Would you

         6       yield, Senator Hoblock?

         7                      SENATOR HOBLOCK:  Yes.

         8                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  The

         9       Senator yields.

        10                      SENATOR STACHOWSKI:  The only

        11       reason I asked for a question at all was because

        12       I noticed earlier in the calendar we passed a

        13       bill that took away the fee on the Purple Heart

        14       license plates, and I'm just curious if we can

        15       anticipate in a couple of years -- because it

        16       was only a couple years ago that we passed the

        17       Purple Heart license plates -- that we can

        18       anticipate eliminating the fee on all of these

        19       special plates, because normally what happens is

        20       you do the plate for someone and then after they

        21       start getting it, they say, "How come I have to

        22       pay for this plate", and now I notice today

        23       we're eliminating Purple Hearts.  That's the











                                                             
1343

         1       question.

         2                      SENATOR HOBLOCK:  Well, I guess

         3       my intention or desire would be not to have the

         4       fee.  I don't think we can do it right now.  We

         5       don't know what the numbers are.  The bill that

         6       was entertained by the Veterans Committee which

         7       was Senator Sears' bill on the Purple Hearts, we

         8       felt it was appropriate, not only because there

         9       might be a minimum number but recognize that

        10       those who first bled for our country deserve

        11       that recognition.  Quite frankly, I don't think

        12       New York State has done enough for veterans.  I

        13       think it's a small recognition, but until we can

        14       understand what the fiscal impact would be as to

        15       how many would apply, we chose not to ask for a

        16       waiver.

        17                      SENATOR STACHOWSKI:  If Senator

        18       Hoblock would yield for a question.

        19                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Senator

        20       Hoblock, will you yield?

        21                      SENATOR HOBLOCK:  Sure.

        22                      SENATOR STACHOWSKI:  Senator,

        23       maybe we could use the license plating of











                                                             
1344

         1       veterans to get a number and a count for that

         2       missing number and count that we need to ID

         3       veterans for the Korean and Vietnam buyouts,

         4       that if they could get that benefit that all the

         5       World War II veterans got that so many of them

         6       have been coming to our various offices about

         7       all these years and asking for.

         8                      SENATOR HOBLOCK:  I totally agree

         9       with you.  I would ask that you help me.  I have

        10       been trying to get the Comptroller of the state

        11       of New York's assistance in this matter since

        12       January of 1995 and he has steadfastly refused

        13       to cooperate in this endeavor.  It seems to me

        14       in this advanced age of technology, it shouldn't

        15       be very difficult to push a couple of buttons on

        16       a computer and come up with this information

        17       but, unfortunately, we're not getting the

        18       assistance that we need, and to put in the bill

        19       that has been vetoed by the previous Governor on

        20       numerous occasions, we're working on that bill,

        21       and I would hope that you would assist us

        22       because in the relatively near future, we're

        23       going to have an ID for veterans in this state,











                                                             
1345

         1       something that has been lacking now for many,

         2       many years.

         3                      SENATOR STACHOWSKI:  Thank you.

         4                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Thank

         5       you, Senator Hoblock.

         6                      Read the last section.

         7                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 2.  This

         8       act shall take effect on the first day of April.

         9                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Call the

        10       roll.

        11                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

        12                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 53.

        13                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  The bill

        14       is passed.

        15                      Senator Skelos, that completes

        16       the controversial reading of the calendar.

        17                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Madam President,

        18       if we could return to reports of standing

        19       committees for the report from the Crime Victims

        20       Committee.

        21                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  The

        22       Secretary will read.

        23                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Nozzolio,











                                                             
1346

         1       from the Committee on Crime Victims, Crime and

         2       Correction reports the following bills:

         3                      Senate Print 408, by Senator

         4       Skelos, an act to amend the Correction Law and

         5       County Law, in relation to maintenance of

         6       prisoners;

         7                      1740, by Senator Skelos, an act

         8       to amend the Executive Law and the Penal Law, in

         9       relation to payment of fee by persons sentenced

        10       to probation;

        11                      2110, by Senator Saland, an act

        12       to amend the Executive Law and the Social

        13       Services Law, in relation to making reports for

        14       child abuse;

        15                      2244, by Senator Nozzolio, an act

        16       to amend the Correction Law, in relation to

        17       limiting time allowances for good behavior for

        18       sexual offender;

        19                      2337-C, by Senator Skelos, an act

        20       to amend the Correction Law and the Criminal

        21       Procedure Law, in relation to notification

        22       concerning release of escaped inmates;

        23                      2818, by Senator Nozzolio, an act











                                                             
1347

         1       to amend the Correction Law, in relation to

         2       charging taxes on sales to commissaries and

         3       canteens;

         4                      5951, by Senator Nozzolio, an act

         5       to amend the Penal Law, in relation to

         6       establishing the crime of aggravated assault.

         7                      All bills directly for third

         8       reading.

         9                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Without

        10       objection, all bills directly to third reading.

        11                      Senator Skelos.

        12                      SENATOR SKELOS:  There being no

        13       further business -- there being no further

        14       business, I move we adjourn until Wednesday,

        15       February 14th, 1996 at 11:00 a.m. sharp.

        16                      ACTING PRESIDENT RATH:  Without

        17       objection, the Senate stands adjourned until

        18       Wednesday, February 14th at 11:00 a.m. sharp.

        19                      (Whereupon, at 4:07 p.m., the

        20       Senate adjourned.)

        21

        22

        23