Regular Session - April 15, 1997

                                                                 
2924

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         8                       ALBANY, NEW YORK

         9                         April 15, 1997

        10                          3:05 p.m.

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        12

        13                       REGULAR SESSION

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        17       LT. GOVERNOR BETSY McCAUGHEY ROSS, President

        18       STEPHEN F. SLOAN, Secretary

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

         2                      THE PRESIDENT:  The Senate will

         3       come to order.  Would everyone please rise and

         4       join with me in the Pledge of Allegiance.

         5                      (The assemblage repeated the

         6       Pledge of Allegiance to the Flag.)

         7                      May we bow our heads in a moment

         8       of silence.

         9                      (A moment of silence was

        10       observed.)

        11                      The reading of the Journal,

        12       please.

        13                      THE SECRETARY:  In Senate,

        14       Monday, April 14th.  The Senate met pursuant to

        15       adjournment.  The Journal of Sunday, April 13th,

        16       was read and approved.  On motion, the Senate

        17       adjourned.

        18                      THE PRESIDENT:  Without

        19       objection, the Journal stands approved as read.

        20                      Presentation of petitions.

        21                      Messages from the Assembly.

        22                      Messages from the Governor.

        23                      Reports of standing committees.

        24                      The Secretary will read.

        25                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Stafford,







                                                             
2926

         1       from the Committee on Finance, offers up the

         2       following nominations:  Member of the Workers'

         3       Compensation Board:  Robert J. Madigan, Jr., of

         4       Binghamton.

         5                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Madam President,

         6       move the nomination.

         7                      Would you please recognize

         8       Senator Libous.

         9                      THE PRESIDENT:  Senator Libous.

        10                      SENATOR LIBOUS:  Thank you, Mr.

        11       President.

        12                      I want to rise today, Madam

        13       President, to support the nomination of Bob

        14       Madigan to the Workers' Compensation Board.

        15                      Bob and his wife Jill are with us

        16       today up in the gallery, and I would like to say

        17       that I've known Bob Madigan for a number of

        18       years and his family and our family have been

        19       friends.

        20                      As a matter of fact, his father

        21       who is also a very distinguished attorney in our

        22       community for a number of years and my uncle

        23       were friends and fishing mates when my uncle was

        24       mayor of the city of Binghamton and also an

        25       advisor and counsel to him, and I had first met







                                                             
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         1       Bob a number of years ago.

         2                      Today Bob is before us.  He was

         3       moved from Finance to be a member of this board

         4       and he's a graduate from Albany Law School and

         5       works as a partner in the firm of Madigan &

         6       Madigan but he's really more than just a

         7       lawyer.  He brings a fair and balanced

         8       background to the board.  He served both

         9       Democrat and Republican mayors as chairman of

        10       the Binghamton Civil Service Commission and

        11       earned the respect of all those who served

        12       before him.  He also brings a sensitive

        13       background to the board.

        14                      He's been a member of labor

        15       unions like the Painters and Iron Workers and

        16       he's also represented individual claimants

        17       before the Workers' Compensation Board.

        18                      I'm completely convinced that Bob

        19       Madigan will do a great job working with

        20       Chairman Snashall.  I can tell you that his

        21       commitment, dedication and respect that he has

        22       in our local community will be a tremendous

        23       asset to him as he serves on this board.

        24                      Mr. President, I am so very proud

        25       today to second the nomination of Bob Madigan.







                                                             
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         1                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Is there

         2       any other Senator wishing to speak on the

         3       nomination?

         4                      Senator Stachowski.

         5                      SENATOR STACHOWSKI:  Mr.

         6       President, I too would like to rise and

         7       congratulate -- second the nomination of Mr.

         8       Madigan and congratulate him on his appointment,

         9       congratulate the Governor on a fine selection.

        10                      Senator Libous had brought Mr.

        11       Madigan to my office as the ranking member of

        12       the Labor Committee before we had the meeting

        13       and we got to chat a little bit and seemed like

        14       a very nice gentleman and then we found out that

        15       all the mayors in Binghamton had supported him,

        16       both Democrats and Republicans, and everything

        17       was going smoothly and I got this strange letter

        18       from Bob Bergen, and I was worried then because

        19       Bob Bergen was wholeheartedly supporting him and

        20       that made me concerned because Bob Bergen has

        21       always been our advisor on our side and I was

        22       wondering why he was supporting this man.  So

        23       Bob called Manny and he called Marty and he had

        24       so many nice things to say that I had to get up

        25       and say that we on this side also are glad to







                                                             
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         1       have the opportunity to second the nomination

         2       and we think that he will be a great addition

         3       and we wish him well in his future.

         4                      Thank you.

         5                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Is there

         6       any other Senator wishing to speak on the

         7       nomination?

         8                      (There was no response.)

         9                      Hearing none, the question is on

        10       the nomination of Robert J. Madigan, Jr. of

        11       Binghamton, New York to become a member of the

        12       Workers' Compensation Board.  All those in favor

        13       of the nomination signify by saying aye.

        14                      (Response of "Aye".)

        15                      Opposed, nay.

        16                      (There was no response.)

        17                      The nominee is unanimously

        18       confirmed.

        19                      We're very pleased to have Mr.

        20       Madigan and his wife Jill with us today.

        21       They're seated in the balcony to the members'

        22       left.  Congratulations.  Good luck.  Godspeed.

        23                      (Applause)

        24                      The Secretary will read.

        25                      THE SECRETARY:  Member of the







                                                             
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         1       state Board of Real Property Services:  John M.

         2       Bacheller, of Latham.

         3                      SENATOR JOHNSON:  Mr. President.

         4                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Senator

         5       Johnson, on the nomination.

         6                      SENATOR JOHNSON:  Move the

         7       nomination.

         8                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

         9       question is on the nomination of John Bacheller

        10       of Latham, New York to become a member of the

        11       state Board of Real Property Services.  All

        12       those in favor of the nomination signify by

        13       saying aye.

        14                      (Response of "Aye".)

        15                      Opposed, nay.

        16                      (There was no response.)

        17                      The nominee confirmed.

        18                      The Secretary will continue to

        19       read.

        20                      THE SECRETARY:  Members of the

        21       New York State Bridge Authority:  Edmund A.

        22       Fares, of Monroe, Morton Marshak, of Monroe.

        23                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Senator

        24       Johnson.

        25                      SENATOR JOHNSON:  Mr. President,







                                                             
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         1       move the nominations.

         2                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

         3       question is on the nomination of Edmund Fares

         4       and Morton Marshak to become members of the New

         5       York Bridge Authority.  All those in favor of

         6       the nominees signify by saying aye.

         7                      (Response of "Aye".)

         8                      Opposed, nay.

         9                      (There was no response.)

        10                      The nominees are confirmed.

        11                      The Secretary will read the

        12       report of the Finance Committee.

        13                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Stafford,

        14       from the Committee on Finance, reports the

        15       following bill for third reading:

        16                      By Senator Trunzo, Senate Print

        17       4421, an act to provide a retirement incentive

        18       for certain public employees.

        19                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Without

        20       objection, the bill is ordered directly to third

        21       reading.

        22                      Reports of select committees.

        23                      Communications and reports from

        24       state officers.

        25                      Motions and resolutions.







                                                             
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         1                      Senator Skelos.

         2                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President,

         3       at this time may we please adopt the Resolution

         4       Calendar with the exception of Resolutions 983

         5       and 985.

         6                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

         7       motion is to adopt the Resolution Calendar with

         8       the exception of Resolutions Number 983 and

         9       985.  All those in favor of adopting the

        10       Resolution Calendar signify by saying aye.

        11                      (Response of "Aye".)

        12                      Opposed, nay.

        13                      (There was no response.)

        14                      The Resolution Calendar is

        15       adopted.

        16                      Senator Skelos.

        17                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President,

        18       may we please take up Privileged Resolution 983

        19       sponsored by Senator Connor.  May we please have

        20       it read in its entirety and move for its

        21       immediate adoption.

        22                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

        23       Secretary will read the privileged resolution by

        24       Senator Connor in its entirety.

        25                      THE SECRETARY:  By Senator







                                                             
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         1       Connor, Legislative Resolution proclaiming April

         2       15th, 1997 as United States Naval Armed Guard

         3       Day in New York State;

         4                      WHEREAS, it is the sense of this

         5       legislative body to commend those men and women

         6       from the state of New York whose focus and

         7       intent have made a substantial impact on the

         8       quality of life in this state and for our

         9       country; and

        10                      WHEREAS, attendant to such

        11       concern and in full accord with its long

        12       standing traditions, it is the sense of this

        13       legislative body to join together on April 15th,

        14       1997 for a very special kind of commemoration.

        15                      It was 56 years ago this day that

        16       the members of the United States Naval Armed

        17       Guard served so valiantly and honorably during

        18       World War II to protect this country's freedom

        19       and, in full accord of the dangers ahead,

        20       voluntarily served to preserve our nation's

        21       interests.

        22                      On April 15th, 1941, the members

        23       of the United States Naval Armed Guard began

        24       preliminary training as gun crews to serve

        25       aboard merchant ships, known as the "other







                                                             
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         1       Navy".  The Naval Armed Guard crews manned the

         2       guns of merchant ships in order to safely

         3       deliver soldiers and supplies to Europe and the

         4       Pacific.

         5                      Of the many accounts history may

         6       disclose, the epic of the Battle of the Atlantic

         7       is a little known legend, evincing true heroism,

         8       sacrifice and cruelty by an unforgiving sea and

         9       of the ruthless loss of lives from enemy

        10       torpedoes, gun fire and bombs.

        11                      The Naval Armed Guards sailed the

        12       globe aboard the slow-moving merchant ships

        13       backed with explosives or on tankers with their

        14       unstable cargos of aviation fuel with minimal

        15       and often antiquated firepower, our crews were

        16       pitted against the superior gunfire of surface

        17       submarines, hostile vessels and attacking

        18       aircraft.

        19                      In this particular battle, one in

        20       nine of all merchant ships were lost, resulting

        21       in the death of 11,810 aboard.  The fortunate

        22       were forced to abandon flaming and sinking ships

        23       in the sub-freezing temperatures of the Arctic,

        24       struggling for survival in open lifeboats as

        25       they floated amidst the ice floe.







                                                             
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         1                      Official accounts of this great

         2       tragedy are only now coming to the forefront of

         3       Navy chronicles, detailing the feats, suffering

         4       and gallantry achieved against overwhelming

         5       odds.  The state of New York honorably salutes

         6       our 746 surviving residents; now, therefore, be

         7       it

         8                      RESOLVED, that this legislative

         9       body pause in its deliberations to proclaim

        10       April 15th, 1997 as United States Naval Armed

        11       Guard Day as a tribute to the members of the

        12       United States Navy who served as gun crews

        13       aboard merchant ships during World War II; and

        14       be it further

        15                      RESOLVED, that copies of this

        16       resolution, suitably engrossed, be transmitted

        17       to Mr. Charles A. Lloyd, National Chairman and

        18       Secretary, United States Navy Armed Guard World

        19       War II veterans, Mr. Henry M. Carringi,

        20       Chairman, New York State Chapter, U.S. Navy

        21       Armed Guard and Mr. Lyle E. Dupra, historian,

        22       U.S. Army -- U.S. Navy Armed Guard World War II

        23       veterans.

        24                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Senator

        25       Connor, on the resolution.







                                                             
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         1                      SENATOR CONNOR:  Thank you, Mr.

         2       President.

         3                      Let me say I invite all the

         4       members of the Senate to co-sponsor this

         5       resolution, recognizing these genuine heroes.

         6                      The U.S. Naval Armed Guard was

         7       perhaps a little known or a little recognized

         8       years later, a component of the heroic effort to

         9       win freedom -- to preserve freedom and win World

        10       War II.

        11                      The total number of personnel who

        12       served in the naval -- Navy Armed Guard was

        13       144,970.  They served on 6,230 different

        14       merchant ships, serving in theatres in Normandy,

        15       the South Pacific, the Mediterranean the North

        16       Atlantic, the Indian Oceans and in frigid

        17       Murmansk.

        18                      The number of members of the Navy

        19       Armed Guards killed was 1,810.  Of the surviving

        20       members, 740 we know of live in New York.  The

        21       average age of the survivors is a youthful 74.

        22       The original guard bases included, I'm proud to

        23       say, Brooklyn, New York, Treasure Island,

        24       California and New Orleans, Louisiana.  They

        25       were the three bases.  710 ships on which the







                                                             
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         1       Navy Armed Guard served were sunk.  That's one

         2       in nine and 58,186 commendations were earned by

         3       members of the U.S. Navy Armed Guard.

         4                      Mr. President, these indeed were

         5       heroes of our century.  These indeed were people

         6       who served, who sacrificed, who fought, some of

         7       whom died, that we can all enjoy the freedoms

         8       that we have in this great country today.

         9                      We are certainly honored that in

        10       attendance here today, we have veterans of the

        11       U.S. Navy Armed Guard, Mr. Lyle Dupra, Mr. Henry

        12       Carringi, Mr. Jimmy Whitbeck, Mr. Arnold Leo and

        13       Mr. Bob Weaver, and I would ask you, Mr.

        14       President, after we adopt this resolution, if

        15       you would recognize these gentlemen who are

        16       present here today.

        17                      Thank you, Mr. President.

        18                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Is there

        19       any other Senator wishing to speak on the

        20       resolution?

        21                      Senator Dollinger.

        22                      SENATOR DOLLINGER:  Thank you,

        23       Mr. President.

        24                      I rise today in support of this

        25       resolution to thank our Leader for bringing it







                                                             
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         1       to the floor.  The celebration of the Armed

         2       National Guard or the Navy Armed Guard is really

         3       a celebration of men who gave a tremendous

         4       contribution in the Second World War.

         5                      I have had the opportunity to, in

         6       the preparation of the history of this

         7       organization, hear a lot of the stories that

         8       these men were involved in the Second World

         9       War.  Wonderful stories and stories of courage,

        10       stories of heroism, stories that really are at

        11       the foundation of what it means to be an

        12       American and, Lyle, I know the book is going to

        13       be out shortly.  I congratulate you on it.  It's

        14       really been a tremendous effort.

        15                      This is a wonderful history,

        16       something that we shouldn't forget and I, again,

        17       commend Senator Connor for bringing it to the

        18       floor.

        19                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Is there

        20       any other Senator wishing to speak on the

        21       resolution?

        22                      (There was no response.)

        23                      Would those Senators who wish to

        24       be added as co-sponsors of the resolution raise

        25       their hands.







                                                             
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         1                      Senator Skelos, I see most of the

         2       members would like to.  Should we take the

         3       opposite tack and approach -

         4                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President,

         5       why don't we put everybody on the resolution and

         6       if somebody wishes not to co-sponsor the

         7       resolution, they should let the desk know.

         8                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  I'll

         9       direct the Secretary to add all the members as

        10       co-sponsors of the resolution except for those

        11       people who indicate to the desk that they do not

        12       wish to be co-sponsors of the resolution.

        13                      The question is on Resolution

        14       Number 983 by Senator Connor.  All those in

        15       favor of the resolution signify by saying aye.

        16                      (Response of "Aye".)

        17                      Opposed, nay.

        18                      (There was no response.)

        19                      The resolution is unanimously

        20       adopted.

        21                      As Senator Connor indicated,

        22       there are several members of the Army -- Armed

        23       Guard with us.  I would like them to rise and be

        24       recognized by the body.

        25                      (Applause)







                                                             
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         1                      Gentlemen, thank you for joining

         2       us today.  Enjoy your stay in Albany.

         3                      Senator Skelos.

         4                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President,

         5       may we please take up Privileged Resolution 985

         6       sponsored by Senator Marcellino.  May we please

         7       have it read in its entirety and move for its

         8       immediate adoption.

         9                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

        10       Secretary will read Resolution Number 985, by

        11       Senator Marcellino, in its entirety.

        12                      THE SECRETARY:  By Senator

        13       Marcellino, Legislative Resolution commemorating

        14       the 27th Anniversary of Earth Day, April 22nd,

        15       1997;

        16                      WHEREAS, it is the sense of this

        17       legislative body to recognize and pay tribute to

        18       those organizations dedicating their purposeful

        19       work to increasing public awareness of and

        20       appreciation for the natural resources of New

        21       York, recognizing the role all citizens have in

        22       protecting the environment and the quality of

        23       life in this Empire State.

        24                      On April 22nd, 1970,

        25       approximately 25 million Americans participated







                                                             
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         1       in the first Earth Day demonstration to express

         2       their concerns over the environment and the fate

         3       of the planet.

         4                      In the 27 years that have passed

         5       since the original Earth Day, the planet has

         6       been subjected to the continuing burdens of

         7       world population growth, increasing commercial

         8       and residential development, ocean pollution,

         9       increasing stores of toxic and nuclear waste and

        10       other similar assaults which have exacerbated

        11       the growing dangers of global climate change,

        12       ozone depletion, toxic poisoning, deforestation

        13       and mass species extinctions.

        14                      Following the first Earth Day and

        15       the demonstrations of concern of over 20 million

        16       Americans, a collective national action has

        17       resulted in the passage of sweeping new laws to

        18       protect the invaluable resources of air, land

        19       and water.

        20                      April 22nd, 1997 marks the 27th

        21       Anniversary of Earth Day, a day set aside to

        22       celebrate the beauty and bounty of our

        23       environment and to revitalize the efforts

        24       required to protect and maintain respect for the

        25       environment and its resources.







                                                             
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         1                      Earth Day 1997 activities and

         2       events will educate all citizens on the

         3       importance of acting in an environmentally

         4       sensitive fashion by recycling, conserving

         5       energy and water, using efficient transportation

         6       and adopting sound life styles.

         7                      Earth Day 1997 activities and

         8       events will educate all citizens on the

         9       importance of supporting the passage of

        10       legislation that will help protect the

        11       environment and will highlight the importance of

        12       a heightened awareness of environmental concerns

        13       amongst our state leaders;

        14                      WHEREAS, the goal of Earth Day

        15       1997 is not to plan only one day of events and

        16       activities but to continue worldwide efforts to

        17       protect all aspects of the environment; now,

        18       therefore be it

        19                      RESOLVED, that this legislative

        20       body pause in its deliberations to commemorate

        21       the 27th Anniversary of Earth Day on April 22nd,

        22       1997.

        23                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The Chair

        24       recognizes Senator Marcellino on the resolution.

        25                      SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Thank you,







                                                             
2943

         1       Mr. President.

         2                      I rise to offer this amendment to

         3       everyone in the chamber who wishes to be a

         4       co-sponsor on it.  Perhaps we could follow the

         5       same procedures as the last one and put everyone

         6       on it unless they so ask not to be.

         7                      Mr. Chairman, I think most of us

         8       can remember way back when talking about the

         9       environment was something done by very few

        10       people, if anyone at all.  Most people didn't

        11       consider it or were certainly unconcerned about

        12       it.  Most municipalities, most governments never

        13       thought about it.  These days, however, there's

        14       a total distinction and totally different

        15       attitude.

        16                      We celebrate Earth Day but the

        17       key to the celebration is that it should not be

        18       only one day a year.  We should practice the

        19       policies of protecting and preserving our

        20       environment, our natural resources 365 days a

        21       year forever.

        22                      Our earth is a limited resource.

        23       We have only one planet on which to exist and if

        24       we don't take care of that planet now, it won't

        25       be here for our children and our grandchildren,







                                                             
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         1       and I think it is most imperative that we follow

         2       those procedures and practices that continue the

         3       educational process in all of our schools at

         4       whatever level, to teach our citizens and our

         5       young children and our adults whatever and

         6       wherever they may be, that protection of our

         7       environment is nothing to be ashamed of.  It's

         8       something to be proud of and something to stand

         9       up for whenever possible.

        10                      So, Mr. Chairman, this resolution

        11       I'm proud to sponsor, and I appreciate your

        12       consideration in allowing me to speak.

        13                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Is there

        14       any other Senator wishing to speak on the

        15       resolution?

        16                      (There was no response.)

        17                      Would the members who would like

        18       to be co-sponsors please raise their hands.

        19                      Senator Skelos, I see most

        20       everybody in the chamber.  Would you like to

        21       have everybody put on?

        22                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President,

        23       with the consent of the Minority, we'll put

        24       everybody on.  Anybody that does not wish to

        25       sponsor the resolution, they should indicate at







                                                             
2945

         1       the desk.

         2                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

         3       Secretary will put all of the members as

         4       co-sponsors on the resolution except those who

         5       indicate to the desk that they don't wish to be

         6       a sponsor of Resolution Number 985 by Senator

         7       Marcellino.

         8                      The question is on the

         9       resolution.  All those in favor signify by

        10       saying aye.

        11                      (Response of "Aye".)

        12                      Opposed, nay.

        13                      (There was no response.)

        14                      The resolution is adopted.

        15                      Senator Skelos.

        16                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President, I

        17       believe resolution 934 is at the desk sponsored

        18       by Senator Maziarz.  May we please have the

        19       title read and then recognize Senator Maziarz.

        20                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

        21       Secretary will read the title to Resolution

        22       Number 934 which was previously adopted.

        23                      THE SECRETARY:  By Senator

        24       Maziarz, Legislative Resolution honoring Ryan

        25       Rimmer of Charles A. Upson Elementary School







                                                             
2946

         1       upon the occasion of his designation as the New

         2       York State's First Place Winner in the U.S.

         3       Savings Bonds 1997 National Student Poster

         4       Contest.

         5                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Senator

         6       Maziarz.

         7                      SENATOR MAZIARZ:  Thank you very

         8       much, Mr. President.

         9                      Mr. President, each year the

        10       Department of the Treasury, the United States

        11       Savings Bond Division annually conducts a

        12       National Student Poster Contest to increase

        13       public awareness of the advantages of U.S.

        14       savings bonds and to promote the ethic of saving

        15       among our nation's youth.

        16                      Each year thousands of young

        17       students across the country take part in this

        18       poster contest, Mr. President, and there is

        19       always a winner from each state which the

        20       posters are sent to Washington, D.C. and they

        21       are competing for a $5,000 savings bond

        22       annually.

        23                      Mr. President, I am extremely

        24       proud this year to introduce to my colleagues

        25       here on the Senate floor the first place







                                                             
2947

         1       winner.

         2                      Lockport, New York, Mr.

         3       President, is a small city of about a population

         4       of 30,000.  It's located in the northwestern

         5       corner of New York State, and I very often on

         6       the floor of this chamber, Mr. President, hear

         7       accolades about heroes and winners from the five

         8       boroughs of the city of New York and I hear

         9       accolades about winners from Long Island, all

        10       well deserved, Mr. President, but, Mr.

        11       President, a young man by the name of Ryan

        12       Rimmer who attends Charles Upson School in

        13       Lockport, New York, won first place in the New

        14       York State poster contest and as the first place

        15       winner, Mr. President, is going to receive a

        16       savings bond in the amount of $1,000 and we are

        17       also going to recognize the second and third

        18       place winners who hail from, you guessed it,

        19       Long Island and Brooklyn, Mr. President.

        20                      Now, it is not very often that

        21       Lockport beats Brooklyn and Long Island and, as

        22       I told Ryan and his parents earlier, it is not

        23       very often in this city that Lockport wins out

        24       over Long Island or the city of New York.

        25                      And so, therefore, Mr. President,







                                                             
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         1       I am extremely proud and I am joined by

         2       Assemblyman David Seaman from the 139th Assembly

         3       District representing Lockport to congratulate

         4       the first place winner of the savings bond

         5       national poster contest, Mr. Ryan Rimmer, who

         6       joins us in the gallery with his parents.

         7                      Ryan, why don't you stand up

         8       there with your mom and dad.  Congratulations.

         9                      (Applause)

        10                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Senator

        11       Skelos.

        12                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Can we adopt the

        13       resolution.

        14                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

        15       resolution was previously adopted on April 8th.

        16                      SENATOR SKELOS:  There's another

        17       privileged resolution at the desk that I've

        18       sponsored, 935, if we could have the title read,

        19       please.

        20                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

        21       Secretary will read the title of Resolution

        22       Number 935 which was previously adopted on April

        23       8th.

        24                      THE SECRETARY:  By Senator

        25       Skelos, Legislative Resolution honoring David







                                                             
2949

         1       Spinks of Lindell School upon the occasion of

         2       his designation as New York State's Second Place

         3       Winner in the U.S. Savings Bonds 1997 National

         4       Student Poster Contest.

         5                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President.

         6                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Senator

         7       Skelos.

         8                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Would it be

         9       appropriate at this time to reconsider the vote

        10       by which Senator Maziarz' bill -- resolution

        11       passed?

        12                      I do want to congratulate all the

        13       winners because these young men have achieved

        14       something, whether it's first, second or third

        15       place and certainly all the individuals

        16       throughout the state -- I understand 24,000

        17       young students participated in this program, and

        18       I'm very proud of David Spinks, a fourth grader

        19       from my district, the Lindell School in Long

        20       Beach, for having come in second place.  He's

        21       here with his family, individuals from the

        22       Lindell School.  He's won a $500 bond and he

        23       indicated to me before that he was buying dinner

        24       tonight, right, David?

        25                      No, I don't think so.  That's







                                                             
2950

         1       going to go to his college education but, David,

         2       we're very proud of you for your accomplishments

         3       and congratulations, and I know we're going to

         4       see a lot more from you in the future.

         5                      Congratulations, David.

         6                      (Applause)

         7                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Senator

         8       Skelos.

         9                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President, I

        10       believe Resolution 941 is at the desk sponsored

        11       by Senator Gentile.  May we please have the

        12       title read.

        13                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

        14       Secretary will read the title to Resolution

        15       Number 941, by Senator Gentile, which was

        16       previously adopted on April 8th.

        17                      THE SECRETARY:  By Senator

        18       Gentile, Legislative Resolution honoring Joseph

        19       Lew of Intermediate School 239, the Mark Twain

        20       School, upon the occasion of his designation as

        21       New York State's Third Place Winner in the U.S.

        22       Savings Bonds 1997 National Student Poster

        23       Contest.

        24                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The Chair

        25       recognizes Senator Gentile to speak to the







                                                             
2951

         1       resolution.

         2                      SENATOR GENTILE:  Thank you, Mr.

         3       President.

         4                      I too want to be the first to

         5       congratulate all the winners, especially Senator

         6       Maziarz and, Senator, I must say, you did -

         7       your student did take first place this year but

         8       I am told -- I am told from the art teacher at

         9       Mark Twain Intermediate School that Joseph Lew

        10       is one of a long list of Brooklynites that have

        11       won in this contest consistently over the

        12       years.  So we did take third place this year and

        13       Joseph is here.

        14                      So, Joseph, you continue the

        15       great tradition of Brooklynites.  So we are very

        16       proud of you.  You not only make Brooklyn

        17       proud.  You make your school proud, your

        18       principal, your teacher, your parents and you

        19       make me proud.  You're the winner of a $250 bond

        20       and you did a great poster and we're very, very

        21       proud of you.

        22                      So I think you're here with your

        23       parents.  So if you'll stand up, we will

        24       congratulate you also.  Congratulations.

        25                      (Applause)







                                                             
2952

         1                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Senator

         2       Skelos.

         3                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President,

         4       there will be an immediate meeting of the Crime

         5       Victims Committee in Room 332 of the Capitol.

         6                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  There

         7       will be an immediate meeting of the Crime

         8       Victims Committee, immediate meeting of the

         9       Crime Victims Committee in the Majority

        10       Conference Room, Room 332.

        11                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President,

        12       at this time if we could take up the non- -

        13                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Senator

        14       Skelos, we have a couple of motions, if we could

        15       do that.

        16                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Fine.  Go back

        17       to motions.

        18                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Senator

        19       Trunzo.

        20                      SENATOR TRUNZO:  Mr. President, I

        21       offer the following amendment to Calendar Number

        22       592, Senate Print 4421, and ask that the said

        23       bill retain its place on the Third Reading

        24       Calendar.

        25                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The







                                                             
2953

         1       amendments to Calendar Number 592 are received

         2       and adopted.  The bill will retain its place on

         3       the Third Reading Calendar.

         4                      Senator Lack.

         5                      SENATOR LACK:  Mr. President, on

         6       behalf of Senator Saland, I wish to call up

         7       Print Number 816, recalled from the Assembly,

         8       now at the desk.

         9                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

        10       Secretary will read.

        11                      THE SECRETARY:  By Senator

        12       Saland, Senate Print 816, an act to amend the

        13       Penal Law.

        14                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Senator

        15       Lack.

        16                      SENATOR LACK:  Thank you, Mr.

        17       President.

        18                      I move to reconsider the vote by

        19       which this bill was passed.

        20                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

        21       Secretary will call the roll.

        22                      (The Secretary called the roll on

        23       reconsideration.)

        24                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 56.

        25                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Senator







                                                             
2954

         1       Lack.

         2                      SENATOR LACK:  I would like to

         3       offer up the following amendments.

         4                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

         5       amendments are received and adopted.

         6                      SENATOR LACK:  Mr. President.

         7                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Senator

         8       Lack.

         9                      SENATOR LACK:  I wish to call up

        10       my bill, Print Number 3511, recalled from the

        11       Assembly, which is now at the desk.

        12                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

        13       Secretary will read.

        14                      THE SECRETARY:  By Senator Lack,

        15       Senate Print 3511, an act authorizing the State

        16       University of New York.

        17                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Senator

        18       Lack.

        19                      SENATOR LACK:  Thank you, Mr.

        20       President.

        21                      I move to reconsider the vote by

        22       which this bill was passed.

        23                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

        24       Secretary will call the roll on

        25       reconsideration.







                                                             
2955

         1                      (The Secretary called the roll on

         2       reconsideration.)

         3                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 56.

         4                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Senator

         5       Lack.

         6                      SENATOR LACK:  I offer up the

         7       following amendments, Mr. President.

         8                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

         9       amendments are received and adopted.

        10                      The chair recognizes Senator

        11       Marcellino.

        12                      SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Thank you,

        13       Mr. President.

        14                      On behalf of Senator Marchi, on

        15       page number 21, I offer the following amendments

        16       to Calendar Number 484, Senate Print Number

        17       3691, and ask that said bill retain its place on

        18       the Third Reading Calendar.

        19                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

        20       amendments to Calendar Number 484 are received

        21       and adopted and the bill will retain its place

        22       on the Third Reading Calendar.

        23                      Senator Marcellino.

        24                      SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Mr.

        25       President, on behalf of Senator Skelos, I wish







                                                             
2956

         1       to call up his bill, Print Number 179, recalled

         2       from the Assembly, which is now at the desk.

         3                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

         4       Secretary will read.

         5                      THE SECRETARY:  By Senator

         6       Skelos, Senate Print 179, an act to authorize

         7       the payment of transportation aid.

         8                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Senator

         9       Marcellino.

        10                      SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Mr.

        11       President, I now move to reconsider the vote by

        12       which this bill was passed.

        13                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

        14       motion is to reconsider the vote by which the

        15       bill passed the house.

        16                      The Secretary will call the roll

        17       on reconsideration.

        18                      (The Secretary called the roll on

        19       reconsideration.)

        20                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 56.

        21                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Senator

        22       Marcellino.

        23                      SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Mr.

        24       President, I now offer the following amendments.

        25                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The







                                                             
2957

         1       amendments are received and adopted.

         2                      Senator Skelos, we have a couple

         3       substitutions that we would like to read at this

         4       time.

         5                      The Secretary will read the

         6       substitutions.

         7                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Spano

         8       moves to discharge from the Committee on Civil

         9       Service and Pensions Assembly Bill Number 2958

        10       and substitute it for the identical Senate Bill

        11       Third Reading 336.

        12                      Senator Maziarz moves to

        13       discharge from the Committee on Crime Victims,

        14       Crime and Correction Assembly Bill Number 60 and

        15       substitute it for the identical Senate Bill

        16       Third Reading 472.

        17                      Senator LaValle moves to

        18       discharge from the Committee on Local Government

        19       Assembly Bill Number 5360 and substitute it for

        20       the identical Senate Bill Third Reading 524.

        21                      Senator Marchi moves to discharge

        22       from the Committee on Corporations, Authorities

        23       and Commissions Assembly Bill Number 4052 and

        24       substitute it for the identical Senate Bill

        25       Third Reading 484.







                                                             
2958

         1                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

         2       substitutions are ordered.

         3                      That brings us to the calendar,

         4       Senator Skelos.

         5                      SENATOR SKELOS:  If we could take

         6       up the non-controversial calendar at this time,

         7       Mr. President.

         8                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

         9       Secretary will read the non-controversial

        10       calendar.

        11                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

        12       378, by Senator Nozzolio, Senate Print 387, an

        13       act to amend the Executive Law, in relation to

        14       making available to their victims the proceeds

        15       of civil recoveries attained by prisoners.

        16                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Lay it aside.

        17                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Lay the

        18       bill aside.

        19                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

        20       407, by Senator Leibell, Senate Print 3304,

        21       concurrent resolution of the Senate and

        22       Assembly, proposing an amendment to Section 1,

        23       Article VI of the Constitution.

        24                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

        25       Secretary will read the last -- excuse me.  The







                                                             
2959

         1       Secretary will call the roll on the resolution.

         2                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

         3                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 57.

         4                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

         5       resolution is adopted.

         6                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

         7       444, by Senator Holland, Senate Print 1957, an

         8       act to amend the Penal Law, in relation to

         9       fixing sentences for persons committing crimes

        10       while on parole.

        11                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

        12       Secretary will read the last section.

        13                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 6.  This

        14       act shall take effect on the first day of

        15       November.

        16                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Call the

        17       roll.

        18                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

        19                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 57.

        20                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The bill

        21       is passed.

        22                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

        23       445, by Senator Kuhl, Senate Print 1977, an act

        24       to amend the Penal Law, in relation to criminal

        25       possession of a weapon in the third degree.







                                                             
2960

         1                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Lay it aside.

         2                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Lay the

         3       bill aside.

         4                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

         5       471, by Senator Johnson, Senate Print 246, an

         6       act to amend the Executive Law, the Civil

         7       Practice Law and Rules and the Tax Law, in

         8       relation to personal injury awards.

         9                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

        10       Secretary will read the last section.

        11                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 4.  This

        12       act shall take effect on the first day of

        13       January.

        14                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Call the

        15       roll.

        16                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

        17                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 57.

        18                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The bill

        19       is passed.

        20                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

        21       473, by Senator Volker, Senate Print 1587, an

        22       act to amend the Executive Law, in relation to

        23       the written statement of the crime victim in

        24       making the parole release decision.

        25                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The







                                                             
2961

         1       Secretary will read the last section.

         2                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 2.  This

         3       act shall take effect on the first day of

         4       January.

         5                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Call the

         6       roll.

         7                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

         8                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 57.

         9                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The bill

        10       is passed.

        11                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

        12       486, by Senator Skelos, Senate Print 331, an act

        13       to amend the Executive Law, the Tax Law and the

        14       State Finance Law, in relation to missing

        15       children.

        16                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

        17       Secretary will read the last section.

        18                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 5.  This

        19       act shall take effect on the first day of

        20       November.

        21                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Call the

        22       roll.

        23                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

        24                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 57.

        25                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The bill







                                                             
2962

         1       is passed.

         2                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

         3       523, by Senator LaValle, Senate Print 3135, an

         4       act to amend the General Municipal Law, in

         5       relation to point systems for service award

         6       programs.

         7                      SENATOR GOLD:  Lay it aside.

         8                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Lay the

         9       bill aside.

        10                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

        11       527, by Senator Rath, Senate Print 3640, an act

        12       to amend the General Municipal Law, in relation

        13       to procedures for the issuance of administrative

        14       search warrants.

        15                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

        16       Secretary will read the last section.

        17                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 2.  This

        18       act shall take effect immediately.

        19                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Call the

        20       roll.

        21                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

        22                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Senator

        23       Paterson, why do you rise?

        24                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Mr. President,

        25       has Calendar Number 444 left the house at this







                                                             
2963

         1       point?  We're on the vote.  Let me wait until

         2       after the vote, Mr. President.

         3                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Record

         4       the negatives.  Announce the results.

         5                      THE SECRETARY:  In relation to

         6       Calendar Number 527, ayes 56, nays 1, Senator

         7       Cook recorded in the negative.

         8                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The bill

         9       is passed.

        10                      Senator Paterson.

        11                      SENATOR PATERSON:  My apology,

        12       Mr. President.

        13                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  No

        14       problem.

        15                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Relating to

        16       Calendar Number 444, I want to know if it's

        17       still in the house.

        18                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  444, I'm

        19       informed by the Secretary, has left the house.

        20                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Thank you, Mr.

        21       President.

        22                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

        23       Secretary will continue to read the

        24       non-controversial calendar.

        25                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number







                                                             
2964

         1       533, by Senator Levy, Senate Print 75, an act to

         2       amend the Public Authorities Law and the

         3       Railroad Law, in relation to operating a self

         4       propelled railroad passenger car or locomotive

         5       while under the influence.

         6                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

         7       Secretary will read the last section.

         8                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 5.  This

         9       act shall take effect on the first day of

        10       November.

        11                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Call the

        12       roll.

        13                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

        14                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 57.

        15                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The bill

        16       is passed.

        17                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

        18       550, by Senator Rath, Senate Print 3671, an act

        19       to amend the Vehicle and Traffic Law, in

        20       relation to mandatory suspension of licenses.

        21                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

        22       Secretary will read the last section.

        23                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 2.  This

        24       act shall take effect on the first day of

        25       November.







                                                             
2965

         1                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Call the

         2       roll.

         3                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

         4                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 57.

         5                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The bill

         6       is passed.

         7                      Senator Skelos, that completes

         8       the reading of the non-controversial calendar.

         9                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President,

        10       if we could take up the controversial calendar.

        11                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  The

        12       Secretary will read the controversial calendar,

        13       beginning on page 15, Calendar Number 378, by

        14       Senator Nozzolio.

        15                      SENATOR WALDON:  Explanation.

        16                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Senator

        17       Montgomery, why do you rise?

        18                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Mr.

        19       President, before we take up the next calendar,

        20       I would like unanimous consent to be recorded in

        21       the negative on Calendar 444.

        22                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Without

        23       objection.

        24                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Thank you.

        25                      ACTING PRESIDENT KUHL:  Hearing







                                                             
2966

         1       no objection, Senator Montgomery will be

         2       recorded in the negative on Calendar Number 444.

         3                      The Secretary will read the

         4       controversial calendar.

         5                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

         6       378, by Senator Nozzolio, Senate Print 387, an

         7       act to amend the Executive Law, in relation to

         8       making available to their victims the proceeds

         9       of civil recoveries obtained by prisoners.

        10                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

        11       Senator Skelos.

        12                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Read the last

        13       section.

        14                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:  Read

        15       the last section.

        16                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Explanation.

        17                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Could we lay

        18       that aside temporarily.  I believe Senator

        19       Nozzolio is chairing a committee meeting.  If we

        20       could take up Calendar Number 445.

        21                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:  The

        22       Secretary will read.

        23                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

        24       445, by Senator Kuhl, Senate Print 1977, an act

        25       to amend the Penal Law, in relation to criminal







                                                             
2967

         1       possession of a weapon in the third degree.

         2                      SENATOR WALDON:  Explanation.

         3                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

         4       Senator Kuhl, an explanation has been requested

         5       of Calendar Number 445 by Senator Waldon.

         6                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Lay that aside

         7       temporarily.

         8                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:  The

         9       bill is laid aside temporarily.

        10                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President.

        11                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

        12       Senator Skelos.

        13                      SENATOR SKELOS:  May we take up

        14       Senator LaValle's bill, Calendar Number 523.

        15                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

        16       Calendar Number 523.

        17                      The Secretary will read.

        18                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

        19       523, by Senator LaValle, Senate Print 3135, an

        20       act to amend the General Municipal Law, in

        21       relation to point systems for service award

        22       programs.

        23                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

        24       Senator Stavisky, why do you rise?

        25                      SENATOR STAVISKY:  Will the







                                                             
2968

         1       sponsor of the legislation yield for a question

         2       or two?

         3                      SENATOR LAVALLE:  Yes.

         4                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

         5       Senator LaValle, will you yield to Senator

         6       Stavisky for a question?

         7                      SENATOR LAVALLE:  I would be

         8       delighted to.

         9                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

        10       Senator Stavisky.

        11                      SENATOR STAVISKY:  Senator

        12       LaValle, what are the service award benefits?

        13                      SENATOR LAVALLE:  Pardon me?

        14                      SENATOR STAVISKY:  What are the

        15       service award program benefits?

        16                      SENATOR LAVALLE:  Service award

        17       benefits are each person, depending -- each

        18       volunteer fireman, depending on the length of

        19       service, receives a benefit based on, for want

        20       of a better term, pension for the length of

        21       service.

        22                      You see, Senator Stavisky, a

        23       number of years ago we had a very, very

        24       difficult time both retaining and attracting

        25       members of the volunteer fire service which we







                                                             
2969

         1       are dependent upon.  Volunteer members save our

         2       taxpayers somewhere in excess of $1 billion a

         3       year because of their service and so we

         4       established in this body -- and you were a

         5       member of this body and voted for the service

         6       award system -- that allows members who

         7       accumulate 50 points a year, depending on how

         8       many fires they attend, training sessions and

         9       other criteria, attendance in parades, et

        10       cetera, to receive recognition or credit for

        11       that year of service.  The fire district can

        12       choose -- what they do is they take out a policy

        13       for their members and so at the end of a number

        14       of years, they can, upon retirement from the

        15       volunteer fire service, receive a monthly

        16       benefit.  That benefit depends on years of

        17       service by the individual, the points that they

        18       have accumulated and the kind of policy that the

        19       fire district has taken out.

        20                      SENATOR STAVISKY:  Senator

        21       LaValle, does the volunteer fire organization,

        22       in some cases, provide volunteer ambulance

        23       rescue service?

        24                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

        25       Senator LaValle, would you yield for a question







                                                             
2970

         1       from Senator Stavisky?

         2                      SENATOR LAVALLE:  Senator

         3       Stavisky, in the suburban and rural areas, there

         4       is a patchwork of how we address the ambulance

         5       delivery system.  In some cases, it is done by

         6       volunteer fire departments and in some

         7       communities, we have set up by statute volunteer

         8       ambulance districts that are very much like and

         9       parallel volunteer fire districts and we also

        10       have a system of service awards for our

        11       ambulance districts in the same way that we had

        12       established in law for the volunteer fire

        13       service awards.

        14                      So the answer is, yes, for some

        15       fire districts, if they choose to continue that

        16       service.

        17                      SENATOR STAVISKY:  Senator

        18       LaValle.

        19                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

        20       Senator Stavisky.

        21                      SENATOR STAVISKY:  I am not

        22       opposed to your legislation.  I simply wish to

        23       ask why are the volunteer ambulance corps in the

        24       city of New York not covered by a similar

        25       service award program that would enable the







                                                             
2971

         1       volunteer ambulance corps members in the city of

         2       New York and in other districts to be eligible

         3       for the kind of benefits that you have here in

         4       your legislation?

         5                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

         6       Senator LaValle, do you yield for a question?

         7                      SENATOR LAVALLE:  Yes, I will.

         8                      Senator, the bill that we have

         9       before us deals with the fire districts.  It

        10       does not deal with the -- as I had indicated to

        11       you, we have two different systems that are

        12       parallel in suburban and rural areas.

        13                      The city of New York has a paid

        14       fire system and so today what we're dealing with

        15       here in the bill before us deals with volunteer

        16       fire personnel and does not deal exclusively

        17       with ambulance personnel.

        18                      Now, my answer to you, Senator,

        19       is that if you have -- and I am not aware, but

        20       if you do have volunteer ambulance people, then

        21       I would say you might look at similar laws that

        22       we have sponsored for suburban and rural areas,

        23       you might look at that and see whether you would

        24       want to follow the same route for the city of

        25       New York.







                                                             
2972

         1                      SENATOR STAVISKY:  Thank you,

         2       Senator LaValle.  On the bill.

         3                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

         4       Senator Stavisky, on the bill.

         5                      SENATOR STAVISKY:  Mr. President,

         6       there is such a bill in this house.  It is

         7       Senate 4311, which I have sponsored and it

         8       provides the same benefits to the volunteer

         9       ambulance service people that this bill provides

        10       for the volunteer firefighters.  Their functions

        11       are identical, and I would ask you, Senator,

        12       would you be willing to amend your bill to

        13       include the volunteer ambulance corps which are

        14       districts that are represented by Senator

        15       Maltese, Senator Padavan and members of the

        16       Minority in this house and which would provide

        17       the same benefits?  Would you be willing to

        18       consider an amendment to your bill to grant to

        19       the volunteer firefighters outside of the rural

        20       and suburban areas that are covered by your

        21       piece of legislation; would you be willing to

        22       consider and recommend the adoption of a similar

        23       bill for the benefit of the volunteer ambulance

        24       corps?

        25                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:







                                                             
2973

         1       Senator LaValle, would you yield for a question

         2       from Senator Stavisky?

         3                      SENATOR LAVALLE:  Senator, your

         4       question was would I amend this bill?  What I am

         5       saying to you in my remarks is that this bill

         6       is, if we make an analogy, an apple.  The bill

         7       you're talking about is an orange and so we're

         8       not talking about like matters here.  This is an

         9       entirely different bill.

        10                      If you look at this bill,

        11       Senator, this bill merely says that a fire

        12       district that has already voted for -- by

        13       referendum of the people of the fire district to

        14       institute and constitute a service award system

        15       that they do not every time they change the

        16       nature of the point system in how you arrive at

        17       your 50 points.  That means that maybe they have

        18       changed attending a parade as being two points.

        19       They now change that to be one point, that they

        20       now do not have to go back and hold a referendum

        21       again with the voters of the fire district and

        22       it merely says that as long as the Board of Fire

        23       Commissioners or the village or the municipality

        24       that is the sponsor of the service award system,

        25       that they -- as long as they vote by 60 percent







                                                             
2974

         1       of the board, that they can change the point

         2       system.  That's all we're doing, Senator.

         3                      We're not doing what you're

         4       trying to do by your legislation and the answer,

         5       I think you know, is that if you have a bill in,

         6       that just as I, with this bill, I went before

         7       the Committee, requested it out.  There was a

         8       discussion of the bill.  Here it is on the floor

         9       and we're discussing it again even though the

        10       discussion is about apples and oranges.

        11                      SENATOR STAVISKY:  Senator

        12       LaValle, we're not talking about apples and

        13       oranges.

        14                      SENATOR LAVALLE:  Yes, we are,

        15       Senator.

        16                      SENATOR STAVISKY:  We're not

        17       talking about grapefruit.  We're not talking

        18       about bananas.

        19                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

        20       Senator Stavisky, are you asking Senator LaValle

        21       to yield for a question or are you speaking on

        22       the bill?

        23                      SENATOR STAVISKY:  No.  I'm

        24       through with Senator LaValle and I hope he's

        25       through with me.  What I'm saying, in effect,







                                                             
2975

         1       is -

         2                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

         3       Senator Stavisky, on the bill.

         4                      SENATOR STAVISKY:  -- that there

         5       is no major distinction between a body of

         6       volunteers performing ambulance rescue missions

         7       in one part of the state versus a body of

         8       volunteers in another part of the state, and I

         9       do not wish to see you do a disservice to the

        10       members from the city of New York, including, I

        11       believe Senator Maltese and Senator Padavan, in

        12       finding that there is no right on the part of

        13       the volunteer ambulance corps in the city of New

        14       York to be treated in the same manner as your

        15       bill and the existing law provides.

        16                      I want equity.  I want

        17       comparability of benefits.  Yes, there is an

        18       emergency medical service but there are places

        19       in New York City where constituents will die

        20       were it not for the presence of a volunteer

        21       ambulance corps to provide emergency rescue

        22       services, the same emergency rescue services

        23       that are rendered by the volunteer firefighters

        24       of the state.

        25                      I am not going to oppose your







                                                             
2976

         1       bill.  I am simply asking for comparable

         2       consideration for our constituents who are

         3       donating their time, their energy, their effort

         4       without any monetary compensation in New York

         5       City under the aegis of a volunteer ambulance

         6       service.

         7                      So I'm going to vote for your

         8       bill, but I want to point out that there ought

         9       to be some comparability in the benefits that

        10       are available for the volunteer ambulance corps.

        11                      I see Senator Marchi nodding in

        12       agreement.  I think he has in his district

        13       volunteer ambulance corps that render this

        14       life-saving service in Staten Island, and I

        15       believe that there ought to be comparability.  I

        16       have no pride of authorship, Senator LaValle.

        17       It may be a LaValle bill.  It could be a Marchi

        18       bill, so long as the benefits are extended to

        19       the volunteer ambulance corps in the city of New

        20       York and that's the point of my questioning.

        21       It's not apples and oranges.  It's not bananas

        22       and pears.  It's equity.

        23                      Thank you.

        24                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

        25       Senator Oppenheimer, Senator Volker was -







                                                             
2977

         1                      SENATOR VOLKER:  Go ahead.

         2                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

         3       Senator Oppenheimer.

         4                      SENATOR OPPENHEIMER:  Well, I

         5       agree with both sides today.

         6                      Let me say that we are having

         7       problems attracting volunteers to -- I'm now

         8       speaking in my other hat many years ago of being

         9       a mayor and we were having difficulty attracting

        10       volunteers to our fire department and our

        11       rescue.

        12                      Anything that we can do that

        13       makes additional benefits like the service award

        14       is something that will be very important to

        15       those communities that rely on the volunteer

        16       services for both fire and ambulance.

        17                      In answer to Leonard's question

        18       about was it within the fire department?  We in

        19       my community had a rescue squad.  Rescue was

        20       part of our fire department.  However, we found

        21       it difficult to keep our rescue fully staffed as

        22       we -- they also had to qualify as firefighters

        23       and many of the women who are interested in

        24       rescue to work on the ambulance corps could not

        25       -- did not want to participate in the fire







                                                             
2978

         1       training part of it and they did not want to be

         2       firemen.

         3                      Therefore, our community went to

         4       a VAC, volunteer ambulance corps, and I would be

         5       happy to see these kind of additional benefits

         6       for people who volunteer at unbelievable hours

         7       of the night and day for the volunteer ambulance

         8       corps, and if I could structure a bill with

         9       Senator Stavisky or with Senator LaValle, I

        10       would be happy to do so because I think we

        11       really have to recognize the contribution of

        12       these volunteers who get nothing back in return

        13       except for doing good for their community.

        14                      Thank you.

        15                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

        16       Senator Volker.

        17                      SENATOR VOLKER:  Mr. President, I

        18       just want to clarify something and, Senator

        19       LaValle, it's not just his legislation because I

        20       know a little bit about the -- you could not

        21       possibly do what Senator -- what was asked here

        22       to do to combine.  It really is apples and

        23       oranges.  In fact, probably you should be asking

        24       the city of New York to do this.

        25                      These ambulance districts and







                                                             
2979

         1       fire districts are creatures of the state of New

         2       York.  We created them by legislation, most of

         3       them.  The decision, however, to do things like

         4       service points, and so forth, has been at the

         5       local level.  The problem in the city of New

         6       York is that your people are not -- at least not

         7       by the state of New York.  They may be by some

         8       city ordinance or something -- they're not

         9       created by anything in the state of New York.

        10                      Therefore, for the state of New

        11       York to make a declaration that we're allowing

        12       service points for ambulance corps and volunteer

        13       firemen in the city of New York, I think is

        14       constitutionally not possible.  I think you

        15       should be -- it seems to me -- it would seem to

        16       me that you should be going to the city of New

        17       York since, as far as I know, these ambulance

        18       corps, and so forth, if they're regulated at all

        19       would be regulated under city statutes and not

        20       under the state of New York.

        21                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

        22       Senator Stavisky.

        23                      SENATOR STAVISKY:  Senator

        24       LaValle -- Senator Volker, I want to mention the

        25       fact that both houses of the Legislature did







                                                             
2980

         1       recognize volunteer ambulance corps by statute.

         2       One of these recognitions is known as the Good

         3       Samaritan Law, which I sponsored when I was a

         4       member of the Assembly and it provided, at the

         5       request of the then Governor Rockefeller, for

         6       certain training, certain hours of training that

         7       would be available in the event that the

         8       volunteer ambulance corps desired to be exempt

         9       from punitive action during the time that the

        10       volunteers were responding to an emergency.

        11                      Yes, we have recognized them in

        12       the city of New York and elsewhere.  Yes, we

        13       should have comparability.  Yes, I think that

        14       this is a fine concept.  I have not criticized

        15       it, except to mention the glaring omission.

        16                      So if we have a statute called

        17       the Good Samaritan Law that applies specifically

        18       to the volunteer ambulance services and it was

        19       approved by both houses, signed into law by

        20       Governor Rockefeller, I think that that should

        21       answer the question.

        22                      We are not asking for a special

        23       benefit.  We are asking for fairness and equity,

        24       and that's all I wanted to say on this issue.

        25                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:  Thank







                                                             
2981

         1       you, Senator Stavisky.

         2                      SENATOR COOK:  Mr. President.

         3                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

         4       Senator Cook.

         5                      SENATOR COOK:  Mr. President,

         6       there probably isn't a lot of purpose in having

         7       this go on but, Senator Stavisky, you appreciate

         8       that the way a service award program is

         9       developed is that the sponsoring organization,

        10       that is, the fire district buys a policy which

        11       gives the awards.

        12                      In the city of New York,

        13       therefore, I think what Senator Volker was

        14       trying to say would be incumbent presumably upon

        15       the city of New York, in some manner, to first

        16       say we are prepared to buy this kind of policy

        17       for volunteer ambulance personnel who are in the

        18       city and then there might be some manner in

        19       which they could be engrossed into the system,

        20       but the point is that there has to be a

        21       sponsoring governmental entity in order to have

        22       the program in the first place and that doesn't

        23       exist so far as I know in the city of New York.

        24                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:  Read

        25       the last section.







                                                             
2982

         1                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 2.  This

         2       act shall take effect immediately.

         3                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:  Call

         4       the roll.

         5                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

         6                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 59.

         7                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:  The

         8       bill is passed.

         9                      Senator Skelos.

        10                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President,

        11       would you take up Calendar Number 445, by

        12       Senator Kuhl.

        13                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:  The

        14       Secretary will read.

        15                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

        16       445, by Senator Kuhl, Senate Print 1977, an act

        17       to amend the Penal Law, in relation to criminal

        18       possession of a weapon in the third degree.

        19                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

        20       Senator Kuhl, an explanation has been requested

        21       of Calendar Number 445 by Senator Waldon.

        22                      Senator Kuhl.

        23                      SENATOR KUHL:  Mr. President, I

        24       would be happy to explain the bill.  This is a

        25       bill that increases the severity of criminal







                                                             
2983

         1       possession of a weapon by a convicted felon.

         2                      Currently in the state of New

         3       York, the law exists that says that if a

         4       convicted felon is caught possessing a rifle or

         5       a shotgun, then that person is guilty of a Class

         6       A misdemeanor.

         7                      This bill would provide for an

         8       increased penalty for a second conviction, much

         9       like the driving while intoxicated laws.  We

        10       give people a break the first time and as they

        11       continue to convict or possess certain things

        12       and break the law, we make the penalties more

        13       severe.

        14                      This particular proposal would,

        15       on the second conviction of possession of a

        16       rifle or a shotgun, change that Class A

        17       misdemeanor crime to a Class D felony which

        18       carries with it an indeterminate sentence up to

        19       seven years in the state penitentiary.

        20                      SENATOR WALDON:  Would the

        21       gentleman yield to a question or two, Mr.

        22       President?

        23                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

        24       Senator Kuhl, would you yield to a question or

        25       two from Senator Waldon?







                                                             
2984

         1                      SENATOR KUHL:  I would be happy

         2       to.

         3                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

         4       Senator Waldon.

         5                      SENATOR WALDON:  Thank you, Mr.

         6       President.

         7                      Senator Kuhl, is there a

         8       requirement in upstate New York if someone

         9       purchases a rifle or shotgun to register same

        10       similar to the requirement in the city of New

        11       York?

        12                      SENATOR KUHL:  A shotgun or a

        13       rifle?  No.  Licensing in upstate New York

        14       outside of the city is only required for

        15       handguns at this current time, Senator Waldon.

        16                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

        17       Senator Waldon.

        18                      SENATOR WALDON:  Would the

        19       gentleman yield again, Mr. President?

        20                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

        21       Senator Kuhl, would you yield for a question

        22       from Senator Waldon?

        23                      SENATOR KUHL:  Certainly.

        24                      SENATOR WALDON:  Does a person

        25       who desires to purchase a rifle or shotgun have







                                                             
2985

         1       to apply in any form or fashion for a license to

         2       possess same?

         3                      SENATOR KUHL:  No.

         4                      SENATOR WALDON:  Mr. President,

         5       would the gentleman continue to yield?

         6                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

         7       Senator Kuhl, would you continue to yield for a

         8       question from Senator Waldon?

         9                      SENATOR KUHL:  Yes, Mr.

        10       President.

        11                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

        12       Senator Waldon.

        13                      SENATOR WALDON:  To your

        14       knowledge, Senator Kuhl, is there any

        15       restriction for those who wish to hunt in terms

        16       of making application for licenses to hunt in

        17       upstate New York if they have been convicted of

        18       a felony and are, in fact, out many, many years

        19       but not to the concluding year; for example, if

        20       they still owed time to the state in regard to

        21       parole two or three years, is there any

        22       restriction on those persons applying for a

        23       license to hunt?

        24                      SENATOR KUHL:  For a license to

        25       hunt, I believe they forfeit that when they're







                                                             
2986

         1       convicted of a felony, Senator Waldon, but

         2       that's not -- that particular area is not one of

         3       my expertise.  So I say that not absolutely

         4       certain, but I believe they forfeit the civil

         5       rights upon the conviction of a felony and that

         6       would preclude them from a hunting license.

         7                      SENATOR WALDON:  Mr. President,

         8       one more question, if I may.

         9                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

        10       Senator Kuhl, would you yield to one more

        11       question from Senator Waldon?

        12                      SENATOR KUHL:  Certainly.

        13                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

        14       Senator Waldon.

        15                      SENATOR WALDON:  Creating a

        16       hypothetical, Senator Kuhl -- because I don't

        17       know the answer to the question as well and if

        18       someone in the chamber does know, if they would

        19       edify Senator Kuhl and I, I would be greatly

        20       appreciative, but creating a hypothetical

        21       situation, someone committed a crime, was

        22       convicted, served his time, is out on parole,

        23       has not made application for any release from

        24       that obligation and he and his friends decide to

        25       go hunting in upstate New York.  He purchases







                                                             
2987

         1       lawfully a rifle or shotgun to go hunting and

         2       is, in fact, on his way to hunt, is stopped

         3       inadvertently by a state trooper and the trooper

         4       sees the rifle and somehow makes -- a shotgun

         5       and makes a connection from personal knowledge

         6       that this person is, in fact, someone who owes

         7       time to the state and arrests him for that

         8       crime.

         9                      In the bill that we passed

        10       earlier in committee to report out from Senator

        11       Rath which -- maybe it was here.  I'm confused

        12       about it -- which would allow the maximum -

        13       require that the maximum time be served, would

        14       that not negatively impact this person who

        15       otherwise is leading a lawful existence?

        16                      SENATOR KUHL:  Senator Waldon,

        17       perhaps you overlooked what I said, that this

        18       bill only deals with a second conviction for

        19       possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.

        20       So whether or not that circumstance -- that

        21       hypothetical that you have outlined -- and I had

        22       a hard time listening -- hearing it, I should

        23       say, but the noise in the chamber, so I may have

        24       not heard all the detail, but what I'm saying is

        25       there currently is law in this state that







                                                             
2988

         1       provides that if, in fact, a convicted felon is

         2       found in his possession to have a rifle or a

         3       shotgun, then they are guilty of a crime, a

         4       crime which is a Class A misdemeanor for which

         5       they can be sentenced, as you know, to a penal

         6       institution, county jail for up to a year.  This

         7       particular proposal would say if you are

         8       convicted of possession a second time within a

         9       ten-year period, then, in fact, you would not be

        10       guilty of a Class A misdemeanor but you would be

        11       guilty of a Class D felony.

        12                      SENATOR WALDON:  Thank you very

        13       much, Senator Kuhl.

        14                      On the bill, Mr. President.

        15                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

        16       Senator Waldon, on the bill.

        17                      SENATOR WALDON:  I'm not sure if

        18       I am even happy with the misdemeanor penalty

        19       because I believe in that mix of people who

        20       would love to hunt in this state and who are

        21       otherwise law-abiding citizens, the mere

        22       possession of a rifle or shotgun should burden

        23       someone with up to one year in prison, but the

        24       proposal that Senator Kuhl has presented to us

        25       for consideration does not say if the person is







                                                             
2989

         1       using the rifle or shotgun to commit a crime and

         2       under the scenario I shared with you, I believe

         3       it's within the realm of possibility that a

         4       person could inadvertently come into contact

         5       with law enforcement personnel and, in fact, be

         6       arrested and, in fact, be found guilty of mere

         7       possession and then owe the state seven years.

         8                      In my world, that doesn't make

         9       any kind of sense.  It really doesn't make any

        10       kind of sense.  The person has paid his dues, is

        11       now on parole, happens to go hunting -- or

        12       whatever the situation is -- with some friends

        13       and inadvertently runs into the law, I think

        14       that's a mistake.  I think it's overly broad and

        15       far, far too punitive, and I would encourage us

        16       to reconsider our votes on this issue because

        17       bills like this, we cavalierly vote yes for and

        18       have done so, even myself, over the years

        19       because we don't really look at the human side

        20       of what's being proposed.

        21                      Why are we looking to just hold

        22       everybody in terms of rights to do things that

        23       are of no danger or threat to the rest of

        24       society?  The mere possession of the rifle is

        25       not a threat to society.  You've heard many







                                                             
2990

         1       times, I'm sure in TV shows or movies that it's

         2       not -- and even here on this floor, some of my

         3       colleagues have said it is not the gun that

         4       kills.  It is the man holding the gun that

         5       kills.  So why would a rifle being held by

         6       someone in these circumstances or a shotgun be

         7       the kind of threat which would warrant seven

         8       years?

         9                      I suggest it is not, and I would

        10       encourage all of us to do as I'm going to do and

        11       vote no on this proposal.

        12                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

        13       Senator Montgomery.

        14                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Yes, Mr.

        15       President.

        16                      Would the sponsor yield for a

        17       question of clarification?

        18                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

        19       Senator Kuhl, would you yield for a question

        20       from Senator Montgomery?

        21                      SENATOR KUHL:  I would be happy

        22       to.

        23                      ACTING PRESIDENT MAZIARZ:

        24       Senator Montgomery.

        25                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Yes.  Thank







                                                             
2991

         1       you, Senator Kuhl.

         2                      I note in the bill that was

         3       passed by this house, Senate Bill 444 sponsored

         4       by Senator Holland, would require that anyone

         5       who committed a felony while on parole -- and

         6       I'm not sure what the felony is.  I'm not an

         7       attorney and I don't see the class of felony

         8       defined in the bill, but it says anyone who

         9       commits a felony while on parole will have to

        10       serve their original sentence and their original

        11       maximum sentence and the first -- on the first

        12       sentence "and the minimum on any subsequent

        13       sentence", and your legislation says

        14       essentially, as I understand it, that a person

        15       who is -- who is convicted on this criminal

        16       possession of a rifle would be -- receive a

        17       felony-- fourth degree felony, a Class D felony,

        18       which means that putting these two bills

        19       together, you now have a situation where a

        20       person who possesses a rifle, even if it's for

        21       hunting or other recreational purposes, would

        22       fall into the category of both your legislation

        23       as well as Senator Holland's bill which precedes

        24       it.

        25                      SENATOR KUHL:  Senator, would you







                                                             
2992

         1       like me to comment on that?  I think there's one

         2       thing that you're missing.  If, in fact -- let's

         3       take the scenario that Senator Holland's bill

         4       deals with.  If, in fact, you have someone who

         5       is on parole, which means they have been

         6       convicted of a crime, probably a felony, and

         7       then if they are then convicted -- found to

         8       violate that parole, then they're going to serve

         9       their full maximum sentence, is that correct?

        10       That's the way you understand the bill?  All

        11       right.

        12                      Now, if that individual, after

        13       having served that sentence, goes out and is

        14       found to be in possession of a firearm, there is

        15       a provision -- if you note in the language of

        16       the bill, it talks about -- at least the

        17       proposal deals with a person who has previously

        18       been convicted of a violation of this section

        19       which means that there is another precedent to

        20       getting to having this particular proposal

        21       influence that person's life.

        22                      So, if an individual who was

        23       convicted of a felony, who's now violated

        24       parole, gone out and served their entire

        25       sentence, now comes out and decides to go







                                                             
2993

         1       hunting, knowing that they're a felon, they lost

         2       all their civil rights, number one, they don't

         3       have a license so that they're violating the

         4       gaming laws already.  They also are violating a

         5       provision of this section which says that they

         6       are not to have in their possession a rifle or a

         7       shotgun.  If they are found to have that

         8       possession of a rifle or shotgun, they are now

         9       then going to be convicted of a misdemeanor.

        10       This proposal that I have doesn't even touch

        11       them yet.

        12                      So now they're learning that, in

        13       fact, they are a felon.  They've had their

        14       lesson.  They're being convicted of a

        15       misdemeanor.  Now they're going to, under

        16       Senator Holland's proposal, as I understand it,

        17       serve the minimum of whatever that sentence is,

        18       which would be up to a year in jail, okay?  If

        19       it's an indeterminate sentence, it's generally

        20       one-third of what that maximum penalty is, four

        21       months.

        22                      Now they have been told simply

        23       because they have been convicted, either they

        24       sat through a jury trial or whatever, or else

        25       they pled, understanding what they have done.







                                                             
2994

         1       Now, for them to get to having an impact -

         2       having their lives being impacted by this

         3       proposal, they then for a second time would have

         4       to decide, I'm going hunting again, forget the

         5       fact that I don't have a license, I haven't

         6       gotten a certificate of disability -- relief so

         7       that I can do that application.  Now they're

         8       going to do the same thing over again.

         9                      Now, this proposal says if they

        10       are found to have a rifle or a shotgun in their

        11       possession, that they are, in fact, going to be

        12       convicted of a Class D felony which then would

        13       subject them to up to two and one-third to seven

        14       years in the state penitentiary.

        15                      So an individual under the prior

        16       proposal that we adopted, Senator Holland's

        17       proposal, would have to go through an

        18       intermediary step, which I perceive to be a

        19       learning step.  It's much like, as I said to

        20       Senator Waldon in explaining the bill, I

        21       associate this to dealing with subsequent

        22       offenses for people who have already committed

        23       the same crime.  No, no.  You did this wrong

        24       once.  Now, if you do it wrong again, we're

        25       going to make the penalty more severe.







                                                             
2995

         1                      As I said, I equate this to the

         2       DWI legislation where we say that, Fine.  If

         3       you're convicted once, it's going to be a

         4       misdemeanor.  You're going to have your license

         5       revoked.  You're going to be sentenced up to six

         6       months in jail and your license is going to be

         7       revoked for six months.  The second time we make

         8       it a felony.

         9                      So this is, I think, consistent

        10       with that type of legislation and it sends a

        11       signal that we don't want violent felons, people

        12       convicted of felonies, walking around with

        13       firearms that they can kill people with.

        14                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Thank you,

        15       Senator Kuhl.

        16                      SENATOR WALDON:  Senator

        17       Marcellino, would Senator Montgomery yield for a

        18       question?

        19                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  I will

        20       yield.

        21                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:

        22       Senator Montgomery.

        23                      SENATOR WALDON:  Senator, there

        24       is new language this year, and I want to ask you

        25       to look at it because I want to ask you a







                                                             
2996

         1       question.  This bill, line five, he commits a

         2       crime of criminal possession of a weapon and has

         3       previously been convicted of violating such

         4       subdivision within the preceding ten years.

         5                      Are you aware that that can mean

         6       that he had possession of a weapon crime as his

         7       conviction in the previous ten years? Are you

         8       sensitive to that?

         9                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:

        10       Senator Waldon, if you're reading and being

        11       sensitive to the record, would you please cite

        12       where you're reading from, so that the

        13       stenographer can get it?

        14                      SENATOR WALDON:  I'm reading from

        15       the bill, Senator -- Mr. President.  I'm sorry

        16       for that.  I'm reading from the bill and I'm

        17       reading from line three through line six of the

        18       bill.

        19                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:

        20       Thank you, Senator.

        21                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  I have read

        22       it, yes.

        23                      SENATOR WALDON:  If I may direct

        24       to the learned lady a question or two.

        25                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:  Do







                                                             
2997

         1       you continue to yield?

         2                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Yes.

         3                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:  She

         4       continues to yield.

         5                      SENATOR WALDON:  Senator

         6       Montgomery, if you understand that the first

         7       conviction is for a weapons felony then you

         8       understand that someone under the scenario I

         9       discussed earlier, and I believe the scenario

        10       you were trying to raise with Senator Kuhl would

        11       merely have to have in his or her possession a

        12       rifle or shotgun and if discovered to have same

        13       by the police would actually trigger all of the

        14       things you were talking about in connection with

        15       Senator Holland's bill? Are you clear on that?

        16                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Yes.

        17                      SENATOR WALDON:  Thank you very

        18       much, Senator Montgomery.  Thank you, Mr.

        19       President.

        20                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Mr.

        21       President, just briefly on the bill.

        22                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:

        23       Senator Montgomery, on the bill.

        24                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  I just want

        25       to remind my colleagues that when I look at







                                                             
2998

         1       Senate Bill 444, I don't -- indeed I believe

         2       that these two pieces of legislation are very

         3       closely connected and we already have on the

         4       books a law which requires that the judge

         5       sentence to state prison any person convicted on

         6       the second felony, so that what we seem to be

         7       looking at here are attempts to extend that

         8       particular law rather than giving more

         9       discretion at the level of the courts to tighten

        10       it so that not only does the second felony law

        11       continue, but it is indeed strengthened by

        12       virtue of Senator Holland's bill, to say that

        13       that person now must serve in addition to the

        14       maximum of the original sentence, must now serve

        15       any additional minimum sentence on any

        16       subsequent violation, and since the large

        17       majority of the inmates now in state prison are

        18       there because of drug-related arrests for which

        19       we have no alternatives in terms of treatment

        20       and diversion, it occurs to me that the results

        21       of these two bills, if they were passed, would

        22       be that we're looking at a major problem of

        23       overcrowding in the prison system without really

        24       addressing either the problem of crime on the

        25       streets or addressing the problem of







                                                             
2999

         1       rehabilitation through the appropriate

         2       intervention of inmates who are already there in

         3       prison.

         4                      So, Mr. President, I'm going to

         5       oppose -- I voted no on Calendar Number 444

         6       because I believe that it is an unnecessary

         7       bill.  It does not address the problem of crime,

         8       and I think that it's only going to exacerbate

         9       our already overcrowded system, and I'm going to

        10       also oppose 445 because I think that this is

        11       just essentially an addendum to 444 and again, I

        12       don't think despite I believe Senator Kuhl has

        13       every intention of trying to address crime, I

        14       certainly, based on my experiences in my

        15       district and with the criminal justice system as

        16       I know it, this does not help to reduce crime in

        17       the streets of the borough and the district I

        18       represent.

        19                      Thank you.

        20                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:  Any

        21       other Senator wish to be heard?

        22                      Read the last section.

        23                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 2.  This

        24       act shall take effect on the 1st day of

        25       November.







                                                             
3000

         1                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:

         2       Call the roll.

         3                      (The Secretary called the roll. )

         4                      THE SECRETARY:  Those recorded in

         5       the negative on Calendar Number 445 are Senators

         6       Montgomery, Sampson and Waldon. Ayes 56, nays 3.

         7                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:  The

         8       bill is passed.

         9                      Senator Volker, we have one more

        10       bill left, Senate Bill Number 3 -- Calendar

        11       Number 378, Senate 387.  Can we call that now?

        12                      SENATOR VOLKER:  Go ahead.

        13                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:

        14       Secretary will read.

        15                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

        16       378, by Senator Nozzolio, Senate Print Number

        17       387, an act to amend the Executive Law, in

        18       relation to making available to their victims

        19       the proceeds of civil recoveries obtained by

        20       prisoners.

        21                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:

        22       Read the last section.

        23                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Explanation.

        24                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:

        25       Senator Nozzolio, an explanation has been called







                                                             
3001

         1       for.

         2                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Mr. President,

         3       my colleagues, today this Senate recognized and

         4       honored crime victims and crime victims' rights

         5       in measures previously passed sponsored by

         6       Senator Leibell, Johnson and Senator Volker.

         7                      Before I begin explanation of

         8       this bill, I'd like to indulge the house in just

         9       a moment in praising the courage of many of the

        10       crime victims across our state, and this house

        11       is blessed today because it is graced by a

        12       visitor who is himself just this last year

        13       within the last few months literally the victim

        14       of a very, very serious crime.

        15                      Seated in the gallery is a young

        16       man by the name of Nathan Downes.  Nathan is a

        17       young man from Rochester, really a man that the

        18       community of Rochester has been proud of, an

        19       Eagle Scout, one who has performed very

        20       admirably in -- throughout his very young life.

        21       On his way home from school this year Nathan was

        22       accosted by an attacker younger than he, an

        23       attacker who tried to rob him at gunpoint.

        24                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:

        25       Senator Nozzolio, can you hold on for a minute.







                                                             
3002

         1       Will the members, please, if you have conversa

         2       tions, take them out of the chamber.  Staff,

         3       take your seats so we can hear the Senator

         4       speak.

         5                      Senator?

         6                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Thank you, Mr.

         7       President.

         8                      On his way home from school,

         9       Nathan was accosted and robbed at gunpoint.

        10       Fortunately for he and for all of us, the wound,

        11       less than an inch from his heart, was one that

        12       because of good care and strong body, Nathan

        13       recovered from after some very, very serious

        14       convalescence.

        15                      Nathan Downes is a man of

        16       courage, is one that as we talk about crime

        17       victims, we need not talk about them in the

        18       abstract.  The tragedy that occurred to this

        19       young man is a tragedy that we all regret.  But

        20       it's a tragedy that we must work hard to prevent

        21       never happens again, and we must do all possible

        22       to pass legislation in this house and in this

        23       Legislature that does as much as possible to

        24       prevent this type of action from occurring

        25       again.







                                                             
3003

         1                      We must also seek legislation

         2       that ensures justice to crime victims regardless

         3       of what their injury occurs, that the measures

         4       before us today take great steps in ensuring

         5       that the victims of crime have their day in

         6       court, that the victims' rights are recognized,

         7       that the victims have an opportunity to present

         8       their case before tribunals and that the victims

         9       are considered when there's the issue of

        10       compensation that needs to be provided.

        11                      The Crime Victims Board, as we

        12       all know, is very, very shortchanged in its

        13       ability to give victims of crime monetary

        14       compensation.  There have been measures passed

        15       in this house, passed just recently in a

        16       non-partisan, bipartisan fashion, that provide

        17       the victims of crimes "Son of Sam" protections,

        18       building upon what this Legislature had done

        19       over the last decade in ensuring that those who

        20       commit crime are not allowed to profit from

        21       their crime.  That's the measure that we have

        22       before us today, builds upon the "Son of Sam"

        23       protections that those who are committing very

        24       serious crimes are not sent to prison and then

        25       allowed to profit from those crimes.







                                                             
3004

         1                      What the measure before us does

         2       as we get to its explanation, is to provide

         3       those who sue in civil court litigation while

         4       they are in prison the proceeds of their

         5       recovery to be dedicated to the Crime Victims

         6       Compensation Fund so that, if they were sent to

         7       prison for any other action similar to their

         8       reason for incarceration and wrote a book, that

         9       book fee would be given to the Crime Victims

        10       Compensation Fund as is the law of the state.

        11                      But what this measure does -

        12       excuse me.  What this measure does is provide

        13       equity so that when an individual, criminal,

        14       sues the taxpayers of this state that the

        15       recovery from that lawsuit, if any, be dedicated

        16       to those victims of crime throughout the state.

        17                      Thank you, Mr. President.

        18                      SENATOR WALDON:  Will the

        19       gentleman yield to a question or two?

        20                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:

        21       Senator Nozzolio, do you yield to Senator

        22       Waldon?  Senator Waldon, he yields to you.

        23                      SENATOR WALDON:  Thank you very

        24       much, Mr. President. I apologize for that side

        25       bar, Senator Nozzolio.







                                                             
3005

         1                      Can you give us an example,

         2       Senator Nozzolio, of two or three types of

         3       crimes that would qualify for the victim to

         4       recover from someone who sues later while

         5       incarcerated?

         6                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Certainly, Mr.

         7       President.  Rape, robbery, murder, those types

         8       of crimes sending an individual to prison would

         9       surely qualify.

        10                      SENATOR WALDON:  Would burglary

        11       qualify under your scenario?

        12                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Yes.

        13                      SENATOR WALDON:  Would embezzle

        14       ment of a major nature qualify?

        15                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Just to make

        16       it clear -- easier for you, Senator, Mr.

        17       President, the bill allows recovery for any

        18       felony or misdemeanor defined in the Penal Law.

        19                      SENATOR WALDON:  Any and all.

        20                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  That's

        21       correct.  So anyone, just to further explain, if

        22       someone is incarcerated for a misdemeanor, which

        23       is unlikely in this state, that that would still

        24       provide the ability to then pursue civil

        25       litigation during that period of time, would be







                                                             
3006

         1       able to recover any funds received from

         2       subsequent litigation.

         3                      SENATOR WALDON:  Would the

         4       gentleman continue to yield?

         5                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:  Do

         6       you continue to yield, Senator?

         7                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Yes, Mr.

         8       President.

         9                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:  He

        10       yields.

        11                      SENATOR WALDON:  To your

        12       knowledge, under current law, Senator Nozzolio,

        13       are there any exceptions whereby the victim

        14       could not recover for any monies inuring to the

        15       benefit of the person incarcerated while

        16       incarcerated?

        17                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  I'm not aware

        18       of any, Mr. President.

        19                      SENATOR WALDON:  May I continue,

        20       Mr. President, if the gentleman continues to

        21       yield?

        22                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:  You

        23       continue to yield, Senator?

        24                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  I'm sorry.  I

        25       did not hear the question, Senator.







                                                             
3007

         1                      SENATOR WALDON:  I didn't pose

         2       it.

         3                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:  He

         4       was asking if you continue to yield.

         5                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Yes, Mr.

         6       President.

         7                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:  He

         8       continues, Senator.

         9                      SENATOR WALDON:  Thank you very

        10       much, Mr. President, and thank you, Senator, for

        11       your patience.

        12                      May I create a hypothetical and

        13       ask you to give me your thoughts on the

        14       hypothetical. Somebody commits a crime major

        15       felony, but not a violent felony, but someone

        16       suffered a loss as a result of that, pecuniary

        17       loss.  This person is in jail and has need of an

        18       operation while incarcerated, not in jail but in

        19       prison, and most regrettably, a doctor commits

        20       gross negligence during the operation, and

        21       causes irreparable harm of a permanent and

        22       lasting nature to the person, and the person

        23       sues and recovers, and let's create for my

        24       hypothetical that the person recovers a million

        25       dollars.  The crime which was committed by this







                                                             
3008

         1       person may have caused damage in a financial

         2       sense to the victim of only $500,000.

         3                      Are you saying to us that, under

         4       your proposal that, one, the $500,000 would be

         5       recoverable and, two, the remaining $500,000

         6       would go to the Crime Victims Board?

         7                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Mr. President,

         8       the measure is designed to provide justice to

         9       those that need to be compensated for injuries

        10       received as a result of a crime.  The bill

        11       models the federal Prisoners' Litigation Reform

        12       Act of 1995, which requires reasonable efforts

        13       be made to notify crime victims that monetary

        14       damages are about to be paid to an inmate.

        15                      In this case that Senator Walton

        16        -- Waldon presents -- pardon me, Senator -

        17       Senator Al -

        18                      SENATOR WALDON:  Which I like.

        19                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  As Senator

        20       Waldon presents, that what the measure does in

        21       this hypothetical would delay that medical

        22       malpractice recovery for 60 days.  Creates -

        23       creating a three-year statute of limitations so

        24       that the crime victim would have to have -- to

        25       sue the previously indigent, assuming the







                                                             
3009

         1       prisoner was an indigent, could get no recovery

         2       from him.

         3                      Now, you have the crime victim

         4       had an opportunity over a three-year period to

         5       attach those additional benefits that the -

         6       were brought about from the malpractice case.

         7       The same would be true if it was an inmate

         8       winning the lottery or sometimes even medical

         9       malpractice cases are described, an inmate

        10       winning some major inheritance.

        11                      Those types of circumstances

        12       would now be akin to an inmate winning a civil

        13       litigation.

        14                      SENATOR WALDON:  Last question,

        15       if I -- or last two- or three-part question.

        16                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:

        17       Senator, do you continue to yield, to the last

        18       two or three questions?

        19                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Yes, Mr.

        20       President.

        21                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:  He

        22       yields, Senator.

        23                      SENATOR WALDON:  Senator

        24       Nozzolio, suppose -- suppose this person who

        25       moved to recover the judgment -- strike that.







                                                             
3010

         1       The person recovers $500,000 within the time

         2       frame scheduled here in your proposal, and the

         3       remaining $500,000 is there.  What happens to

         4       that remaining 500,000? I wasn't clear on your

         5       previous response.

         6                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  That the crime

         7       victim shall have the right to bring a civil

         8       action in court of competent jurisdiction to

         9       recover money, so that the right of a victim to

        10       bring a civil action for right of recovery, Mr.

        11       President, is provided for in this legislation,

        12       that if -- that that recovery could be obtained

        13       from the medical malpractice judgment obtained

        14       by the criminal, the prisoner, so this just

        15       simply allows the victims to seek out those

        16       potentially significant awards from previously

        17       indigent -- previously indigent prisoners.

        18                      SENATOR WALDON:  Mr. President, I

        19       apologize to my colleagues because obviously I

        20       wasn't clear in my question.  What I thought I

        21       had said, and I apologize to you, Senator

        22       Nozzolio, was that the victim recovered the

        23       $500,000 which was originally lost and there is

        24       a remaining amount of $500,000.  What would

        25       happen with that? He's already brought a suit







                                                             
3011

         1       and he's recovered his 500,000, the victim, and

         2       there's a remainder of 500,000.  What happens to

         3       that?

         4                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Still the

         5       courts of equity would be able to now, if this

         6       measure was passed into law, provide that victim

         7       with a three-year statute of limitations window

         8       that says that that victim can continue to

         9       fulfill, or I guess in your hypothetical you'd

        10       have to say whether or not the victim was

        11       foreclosed.  Was there a final judgment, was it

        12       a judgment that he just simply had a final

        13       judgment, but only a 50 percent recovery, that a

        14       court of equity then would be -- because of this

        15       law that we are debating today, would be able to

        16       allow a crime victim a three-year window to say

        17       to that window, your previously indigent

        18       prisoner is now -- has a largesse of $500,000 of

        19       which you could fulfill your judgment by going

        20       after.

        21                      A court of equity then could

        22       decide justice in this situation and say, Is

        23       this a situation that should be compensated?

        24       Simply now we have -- we don't have that type of

        25       opportunity for victims to be able to go into







                                                             
3012

         1       court.  They are foreclosed.  This opens the

         2       door for potential recovery.

         3                      SENATOR WALDON:  Again, I

         4       apologize, Mr. President, but I won't belabor

         5       that and I'll explain that piece momentarily in

         6       regard to the $500,000 remaining, but last

         7       question, if I may, Mr. President, to Senator

         8       Nozzolio and I appreciate your patience,

         9       Senator.

        10                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:

        11       Senator, you continue to yield?

        12                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Yes.

        13                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:  He

        14       yields, Senator.

        15                      SENATOR WALDON:  Senator, I grew

        16       up in Brooklyn and in Brooklyn we knew that if

        17       someone was going to benefit from what we might

        18       do and leave no benefit for us, then we just

        19       wouldn't do it, so if I had an opportunity to

        20       sue and have a recovery as the prisoner, even

        21       for a medical malpractice situation, but I knew

        22       that if I sued every penny of it was going to

        23       someone else, I might not bring the suit.

        24                      So my question is, do you think

        25       that there will be a great motivation for those







                                                             
3013

         1       who you are incarcerated to sue a municipality

         2       or the state of New York to recover knowing that

         3       the money is all going to someone else?

         4                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Mr. President,

         5       I'd like to say I've never thought of that, but

         6       frankly, it's obvious.  Yes, take away the

         7       monetary award, the monetary motivation out of

         8       bringing this type of litigation, and I think

         9       that you'd have some -- some very thoughtful

        10       processes before the dice was rolled although

        11       you could say the same thing about an individual

        12       who may not want to work because they don't want

        13       to have to have their wages garnished by their

        14       child support obligations.

        15                      That type of logic is -- I'm

        16       sure, governs some people's conduct, but I think

        17       here what we're trying to do above all the

        18       speculation and above all the hypotheticals,

        19       Senator, is to establish a process so that if

        20       there is a successful prisoner litigation, that

        21       the victim of the crime is thought of first, not

        22       last, that the victim of the crime has an

        23       opportunity to pursue monetary compensation, to

        24       be righted.

        25                      I don't care about the inmate or







                                                             
3014

         1       the prisoner who is there for a very serious

         2       offense.  I care about the victim who was given

         3       that offense in the first place, and that's

         4       really what I'd like the focus of this to be

         5       about.  It's what the focus is about, that if it

         6       has a secondary benefit of retarding the gross

         7       amount of prison litigation that we see in this

         8       state every year, terrific, but our primary

         9       motivation is to compensate those victims who

        10       heretofore are being left out in the cold, and

        11       let me just provide you, not with a hypothetical

        12       in answering your question, provide you with a

        13       hypothetical that's a very real circumstance and

        14       that's a situation, of an inmate named Joey

        15       Lawrence who was a convicted rapist, who was a

        16       rapist in New York City who was sent to prison

        17       and then received a $157,000 award by the

        18       courts, I should say by the federal District

        19       Courts of the Southern District.  That $157,000

        20       judgment, not one penny went to the victim of

        21       that serious and heinous crime. That's wrong,

        22       and that's the wrong that we're trying to

        23       prevent.

        24                      SENATOR WALDON:  Mr. President,

        25       if I may.  Thank you very much, Senator







                                                             
3015

         1       Nozzolio. On the bill.

         2                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:

         3       Senator Waldon, on the bill.

         4                      SENATOR WALDON:  Senator

         5       Nozzolio, I tried to elicit a response and it

         6       probably was the manner in which I posed the

         7       question that did not elicit the response I had

         8       hoped for.  I thought I had said that, if

         9       there's a $500,000 final judgment, final

        10       judgment, what would happen to the remaining

        11       $500,000 if there's a final judgment and the

        12       court has said that's it, Plaintiff, that's it,

        13       you got your money, then what happens to the

        14       remaining $500,000? I wanted to know, would it

        15       go to the Crime Victims Board or could the

        16       prisoner keep the money?

        17                      The thing that I found troubling

        18       in what you said, though, in all of this, was

        19       when you said you don't care about the

        20       prisoners. Your concern is only about the

        21       victims.  I'm concerned about the victims and

        22       the prisons, and I think that's what all of us

        23       should be about, because the prisoners are

        24       people from our community who've made for

        25       whatever reason, some bad judgments.  80 percent







                                                             
3016

         1       of them in our prisons, the first mistake they

         2       made was to do drugs or to get drunk, and while

         3       in this euphoric state they went out and did

         4       something which caused them to run afoul of the

         5       law which resulted in their being in the

         6       criminal justice system.

         7                      But they come home.  They

         8       eventually come home, and that's where this

         9       state has failed most miserably in the sense

        10       that we do not have an attitude which says let's

        11       do something to create people who will have

        12       served their time, they have dealt with their

        13       drug problem, they have dealt with their

        14       alcoholism problem.  We have some support

        15       services of whatever psychological,

        16       sociological, method applied to them and they

        17       come back better than when they left.

        18                      I go into the prisons. Perhaps

        19       you do as well, Senator Nozzolio.  You have a

        20       great reputation in terms of dealing with

        21       criminal justice issues, and I respect that.

        22       But I go into the prisons, and I see stacked

        23       like cordwood, like cordwood, young black and

        24       Latino men.  I've even been to the female

        25       prisons, and I think it's a mistake to allow







                                                             
3017

         1       70,000 people to fester and to fester and to

         2       fester, and then to return them to a society

         3       where we live in our communities and the

         4       festering which has occurred over those many

         5       years erupts in additional violence and havoc

         6       and pain and suffering for the community.

         7                      So my real concern is not with

         8       what you propose today.  I feel for the

         9       prisoner. I feel for the victim.  I feel more

        10       for the victim than the prisoner in the sense

        11       that it is unfair for someone to be violated

        12       when they've done nothing to cause or precipi

        13       tate that violation.  However, I feel that we

        14       are remiss as a government because we are

        15       creating our own downfall by not recognizing

        16       that, despite the fact that these people have

        17       run afoul of the law, we do nothing to preclude

        18       the second time, the third time, the fourth

        19       time.

        20                      When I have conversations with

        21       these young men in the prisons, many of them say

        22       they're going to be badder when they get out

        23       than they were when they got in.  They've

        24       learned to be cleverer as a criminal which is a

        25       mistake.  You don't learn to be cleverer.  You







                                                             
3018

         1       just learn a faster way to get back into

         2       prison.

         3                      But I think we ought to begin to

         4       focus on something that's called rehabilitation,

         5       something that's called true treatment for the

         6       drug problem, something that's called true

         7       sensitivity to the English as a second language

         8       needs or whatever other needs of the prisoners

         9       are because if we don't focus on it while

        10       they're in prison, then our lives when they're

        11       outside of prison will be just as miserable as

        12       they are now and I believe more miserable as we

        13       come to the turn of the century.

        14                      I would recommend everybody who

        15       has sensitivity for both sides, the victim and

        16       the prisoner, to recognize this is not going to

        17       help us and vote it down.

        18                      I thank you very much, Mr.

        19       President.  I appreciate your patience, Senator

        20       Nozzolio.

        21                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:  The

        22       Chair thanks his colleague from western Long

        23       Island.

        24                      Senator Abate.

        25                      SENATOR ABATE:  Would Senator







                                                             
3019

         1       Nozzolio yield to a question?

         2                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:

         3       Senator, do you yield to a question?

         4                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Yes, Mr.

         5       President.

         6                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO: He

         7       yields, Senator.

         8                      SENATOR ABATE:  Senator, we have

         9       had discussions.  I support this bill, but I'd

        10       like some clarification around the bill.

        11                      It's my reading of the bill that

        12       this is not a confiscation bill, that if the

        13       proceeds that the prisoner gets are frozen and

        14       no crime victim comes forward the money is not

        15       taken from the prisoner; is that correct?

        16                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Correct,

        17       Senator.  The process, and just let me respond

        18       to what that process is for a second.  It's a

        19       freezing for 60 days, of those awards, and a

        20       notice during that period of time to the crime

        21       victim that an award was received, a three-year

        22       statute of limitations window allowing the

        23       victim to pursue in the courts of equity

        24       compensation for their damages.

        25                      SENATOR ABATE:  And so if no







                                                             
3020

         1       crime victim comes forward or no crime victim

         2       gets a judgment, let's say it's a frivolous

         3       action, the prisoner is allowed to keep all of

         4       their monies that they recover?

         5                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  That's

         6       correct.

         7                      SENATOR ABATE:  Would the Senator

         8       yield to just one more question?

         9                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Yes, Mr.

        10       President.

        11                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:  He

        12       yields.

        13                      SENATOR ABATE:  And the example

        14       around, if a prisoner recovers a million dollars

        15       for instance, that does not mean that the

        16       million dollars will be handed over to a crime

        17       victim, because doesn't the crime victim have to

        18       first of all file, win a civil action, have

        19       damages assessed and awarded in the amount of $1

        20       million.  They might be successful in civil

        21       litigation and win $50,000. That's all they

        22       would have a right to is the amount of the award

        23       rendered by that court.  They would not be able

        24       to obtain monies from the prisoner beyond the

        25       amount litigated and awarded to the victim in a







                                                             
3021

         1       court of law.

         2                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Mr. President,

         3       Senator Abate is correct that this provides a

         4       process. It provides certain provisional

         5       remedies, but the bottom line is that any

         6       decision in terms of amount of award to the

         7       crime victim is one that must be decided on its

         8       merits.

         9                      SENATOR ABATE:  Thank you.

        10                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Thank you.

        11                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:

        12       Senator Dollinger.

        13                      SENATOR DOLLINGER:  Thank you,

        14       Mr. President.

        15                      I'm going to vote in favor of

        16       this bill, but I really would like to make just

        17       two brief points.  First of all -

        18                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:

        19       Senator Dollinger, you speaking on the bill?

        20                      SENATOR DOLLINGER:  I am, Mr.

        21       President.

        22                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:

        23       Senator Dollinger, on the bill.

        24                      SENATOR DOLLINGER:  First of all,

        25       I thought that the point that Senator Waldon







                                                             
3022

         1       made should not be lost and, Senator Waldon, I

         2       don't know what this means but I saw "Tiger"

         3       Woods do it this week end, you go like this.

         4                      I think that's one of the best

         5       questions, one of the most interesting points

         6       we've made about any bill we've done in this

         7       chamber. What Senator Waldon said is, if what we

         8       do is give a disincentive to the prisoner to

         9       bring the action because he's not going to get

        10       the money, then the prisoner won't bring the

        11       action in the first place, so the victim won't

        12       get anything, the prisoner won't get anything,

        13       and what's unfortunate then, Senator, the

        14       consequence of that will be that the deterrent

        15       impact of prisoner litigation especially with

        16       respect to personal injuries will be lost and

        17       unfortunately our prisons and the workshops in

        18       our prisons and the care of our prisoners,

        19       suddenly they will no longer have to fear for

        20       prisoners' lawsuits based on personal injuries

        21       or I assume, and I haven't asked Senator

        22       Nozzolio this question, but I assume this also

        23       applies in cases of civil rights deprivation.

        24       If a prisoner's civil rights are violated in the

        25       course of a prison as unfortunately occasionally







                                                             
3023

         1       happens even in the best of prison systems, that

         2       those inmates won't bring those actions because

         3       they know they won't get any proceeds.

         4                      As a consequence, the deterrent

         5       impact of civil litigation, which has had some

         6       beneficial impacts in this state in improving

         7       the quality of our prisons may be lost

         8       completely, and I just worry about that.  Again,

         9       I commend Senator Waldon for thinking that

        10       through, because it seems to me that's something

        11       we should be aware of as we pass this bill.

        12                      The second thought is even

        13       simpler.  I appreciate Senator Nozzolio bringing

        14       up Nathan's name.  Nathan is a crime victim.  As

        15       my understanding is, he was accosted, as Senator

        16       Nozzolio properly pointed out, by two or three

        17       much younger kids who happened to have in their

        18       hands a gun, and it seems to me that the one

        19       lesson that we should learn about that is that

        20       the one way to make fewer victims is to have

        21       fewer guns out on our streets.

        22                      One of the things that I've

        23       brought to this chamber before, things like ban

        24       on assault weapons, there are other bills

        25       languishing in committees in this chamber that







                                                             
3024

         1       would decrease the amount of guns. There is a

         2       Gun Safety Act, all kinds of things that would

         3       decrease the amount of weapons that could end up

         4       in the hands of 12- and 13-year-olds that 18

         5       year-olds walking home from school wouldn't have

         6       to become victims, and I would suggest that it's

         7       very simple.

         8                      There are victims' rights, there

         9       are gun owners' rights, and it seems to me that

        10       sometimes we pay lots of attention to victims'

        11       rights. We pay lots of attention to gun owners'

        12       rights, and unfortunately the consequence of

        13       paying too much attention to the latter is we

        14       have too many of the former, and I would just

        15       counsel everyone in this chamber that there is

        16       some linkage there.  It's demonstrated in the

        17       example that Senator Nozzolio brought up.

        18                      One way to go about making fewer

        19       victims would be to finally let's deal sensibly

        20       with the problem of too many guns.

        21                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:

        22       Read the last section.

        23                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 2. This

        24       act shall take effect on the 1st day of

        25       November.







                                                             
3025

         1                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:

         2       Call the roll.

         3                      (The Secretary called the roll. )

         4                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 57, nays 2,

         5       Senators Sampson and Waldon recorded in the

         6       negative.

         7                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:  The

         8       bill is passed.

         9                      Senator Volker, that completes

        10       the controversial calendar.

        11                      SENATOR VOLKER:  Is there any

        12       housekeeping at the desk?

        13                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:  I

        14       believe the house is clean, sir.

        15                      SENATOR VOLKER:  I'm glad you

        16       clean it up real well.  Very good.

        17                      There being no further business,

        18       I -

        19                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:

        20       Senator Oppenheimer, I'm sorry.  Why do you

        21       rise?

        22                      SENATOR OPPENHEIMER:  Thank you,

        23       Mr. President.

        24                      There was a bill that, if I had

        25       been in the chamber, this was several days ago,







                                                             
3026

         1       I would have been recorded as no, and that bill

         2       was S. 548, Calendar Number 387.  I would like

         3       the record just to show that, if I had been in

         4       the chamber that day, I would have voted no.

         5                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:  The

         6       record will so show.

         7                      SENATOR OPPENHEIMER:  Thank you

         8       so much.

         9                      SENATOR VOLKER:  Anybody else?

        10       No?

        11                      There being no further business,

        12       I move we adjourn until Wednesday, April 16th,

        13       at 11:00 a.m.

        14                      ACTING PRESIDENT MARCELLINO:  The

        15       Senate stands adjourned until Wednesday, April

        16       16th at 11:00 a.m. sharp.

        17                      (Whereupon at 4:54 p.m., the

        18       Senate adjourned. )

        19

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        24

        25