Regular Session - April 8, 1998

                                                                2441

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        8                      ALBANY, NEW YORK

        9                       April 8, 1998

       10                          3:00 p.m.

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       13                      REGULAR SESSION

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       15

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       17        SENATOR RAYMOND A. MEIER, Acting President

       18        STEVEN M. BOGGESS, Secretary

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                                                            2442

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

        2                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

        3        Senate will come to order.  I'd ask everyone

        4        present to please rise for the Pledge of

        5        Allegiance.

        6                      (The assemblage repeated the

        7        Pledge of Allegiance to the Flag.)

        8                      In the absence of clergy, I'd ask

        9        that everyone bow their heads a moment of

       10        silence.

       11                      (A moment of silence was

       12        observed.)

       13                      The reading of the Journal.

       14                      THE SECRETARY:  In Senate,

       15        Tuesday, April 7th.  The Senate met pursuant to

       16        adjournment.  The Journal of Monday, April 6th,

       17        was read and approved.  Upon motion, the Senate

       18        adjourned.

       19                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Without

       20        objection, the Journal stands approved as read.

       21                      Presentation of petitions.

       22                      Messages from the Assembly.

       23                      Messages from the Governor.

       24                      Reports of standing committees.

       25                      The Secretary will read.







                                                            2443

        1                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Larkin,

        2        from the Committee on Racing, Gaming and

        3        Wagering, reports:

        4                      Senate Print 6373-B, by Senator

        5        Larkin, an act to amend the Racing, Pari-mutuel

        6        Wagering and Breeding Law.

        7                      Senator Maltese, from the

        8        Committee on Elections, reports:

        9                      Senate Print 560, by Senator

       10        Goodman, an act to amend the Election Law;

       11                      4511-B, by Senator Present, an act

       12        to amend the Election Law;

       13                      4883, by Senator Maltese, an act

       14        to amend the Election Law.

       15                      Senator Marchi, from the Committee

       16        on Corporations, Authorities and Commissions,

       17        reports:

       18                      Senate Print 2849, by Senator

       19        Marchi, an act to amend the Not-for-Profit

       20        Corporation Law;

       21                      3674-A, by Senator Leibell, an act

       22        to amend the Public Authorities Law;

       23                      4085, by Senator Marchi, an act to

       24        repeal Section 630 of the Business Corporation

       25        Law; and







                                                            2444

        1                      5732, by Senator Marchi, an act to

        2        amend Chapter 393 of the Laws of 1994.

        3                      All bills directly for third

        4        reading.

        5                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Without

        6        objection, all bills directly to third reading.

        7                      Reports of select committees.

        8                      Communications and reports from

        9        state officers.

       10                      Motions and resolutions.

       11                      Senator Farley.

       12                      SENATOR FARLEY:  Thank you, Mr.

       13        President.

       14                      On behalf of Senator Johnson, on

       15        page 10, I offer the following amendments to

       16        Calendar 256, Senate Print 2550-C, and I ask
that

       17        that bill retain its place.

       18                      On behalf of Senator Nozzolio, on

       19        page 33 (23), I offer the following amendments
to

       20        Calendar 535, Senate Print 474-B, and I ask that

       21        that bill retain its place.

       22                      Mr. President, on page 29, I offer

       23        the following amendments to Calendar 597, Senate

       24        Print 2318, and I ask that that bill retain its

       25        place on the Third Reading Calendar.  That's







                                                            2445

        1        Senator Maltese's bill.

        2                      On behalf of Senator Marchi, on

        3        page -- I offer the following amendments to

        4        Calendar 603, Senate Print 4085, and I ask that

        5        that bill retain its place.

        6                      On behalf of Senator Marchi, I

        7        offer the following amendments to Senate Print

        8        5732, and I ask that that bill retain its place.

        9                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

       10        amendments are received and so ordered.

       11                      The Secretary will read the

       12        substitution.

       13                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Farley

       14        moves to discharge from the Committee on Local

       15        Government Assembly Print 3758-A and substitute

       16        it for the identical Senate Bill 2339-A.

       17                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

       18        substitution is ordered.

       19                      Senator Skelos.

       20                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President, if

       21        we could take up the non-controversial calendar.

       22                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

       23        Secretary will read the non-controversial

       24        calendar.

       25                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number







                                                            2446

        1        98, by Senator Volker, Senate Print 3456-A, an

        2        act to enact the Criminal Procedure Law Reform

        3        Act of 1998.

        4                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Lay it aside.

        5                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Lay the

        6        bill aside.

        7                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

        8        187, by member of the Assembly Brodsky -

        9                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Lay it aside for

       10        the day.

       11                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Lay the

       12        bill aside for the day.

       13                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

       14        364, by Senator Nozzolio, Senate Print 4084-A,
an

       15        act to amend the Civil Practice Law and Rules.

       16                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Lay it aside.

       17                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Lay it

       18        aside.

       19                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

       20        387, by Senator Cook, Senate Print 366, an act
to

       21        amend the Education Law, in relation to defining

       22        non-residents of a district.

       23                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the

       24        last -

       25                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Lay it aside.







                                                            2447

        1                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Lay the

        2        bill aside.

        3                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

        4        418, by Senator Maziarz, Senate Print 5231, an

        5        act to amend the Highway Law and the

        6        Environmental Conservation Law.

        7                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the

        8        last section.

        9                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 4.  This

       10        act shall take effect immediately.

       11                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Call the

       12        roll.

       13                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

       14                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 43.

       15                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The bill

       16        is passed.

       17                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

       18        419, by Senator Holland, Senate Print 6069, an

       19        act to amend the Vehicle and Traffic Law, in

       20        relation to providing.

       21                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Lay it aside,

       22        please.

       23                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Lay the

       24        bill aside.

       25                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number







                                                            2448

        1        450, by Senator Present, Senate 764, an act to

        2        amend the State Administrative Procedure Act.

        3                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the

        4        last section.

        5                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 6.  This

        6        act shall take effect on the 180th day.

        7                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Call the

        8        roll.

        9                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

       10                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 45.

       11                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The bill

       12        is passed.

       13                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

       14        462, by Senator Velella, Senate Print 2334-A, an

       15        act to amend the Penal Law, in relation to the

       16        crime of criminal mischief.

       17                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the

       18        last section.

       19                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 2.  This

       20        act shall take effect on the first day of

       21        November.

       22                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Call the

       23        roll.

       24                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

       25                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 45.







                                                            2449

        1                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The bill

        2        is passed.

        3                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

        4        466, by Senator Nozzolio, Senate Print 4917, an

        5        act to amend the Civil Practice Law and Rules
and

        6        Court of Claims Act.

        7                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the

        8        last section.

        9                      SENATOR GOLD:  Lay it aside.

       10                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Lay the

       11        bill aside.

       12                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

       13        497, by Senator Kuhl, Senate Print 6018, an act

       14        to amend the Agriculture and Markets Law.

       15                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the

       16        last section.

       17                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 2.  This

       18        act shall take effect immediately.

       19                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Call the

       20        roll.

       21                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

       22                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 47.

       23                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The bill

       24        is passed.

       25                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number







                                                            2450

        1        507, by Senator Skelos, Senate Print 3410-A, an

        2        act to amend the Correction Law and the County

        3        Law.

        4                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Lay it aside.

        5                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Lay the

        6        bill aside.

        7                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

        8        508, by Senator Skelos, Senate Print 5259, an
act

        9        to amend the Correction Law, in relation to

       10        requiring.

       11                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the

       12        last section.

       13                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 2.  This

       14        act shall take effect immediately.

       15                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Call the

       16        roll.

       17                      SENATOR LEICHTER:  Lay it aside.

       18                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Lay the

       19        bill aside, please.

       20                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

       21        528, by Senator Johnson, Senate Print 6833, an

       22        act to amend the Environmental Conservation Law,

       23        in relation to winter flounder regulations.

       24                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the

       25        last section.







                                                            2451

        1                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 3.  This

        2        act shall take effect immediately.

        3                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Call the

        4        roll.

        5                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

        6                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 47.

        7                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The bill

        8        is passed.

        9                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

       10        560, by Senator Larkin, Senate Print 1346, an
act

       11        to amend the Vehicle and Traffic Law, in
relation

       12        to authorizing the city of Newburgh.

       13                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the

       14        last section -- Senator Skelos, there's a home

       15        rule message at the desk on this.  Read the last

       16        section.

       17                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 2.  This

       18        act shall take effect immediately.

       19                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Call the

       20        roll.

       21                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

       22                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 47.

       23                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The bill

       24        is passed.

       25                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number







                                                            2452

        1        561, by Senator Present, Senate Print 1891, an

        2        act to amend the Highway Law, in relation to

        3        distribution and payment.

        4                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the

        5        last section.

        6                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 3.  This

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

        8                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Call the

        9        roll.

       10                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

       11                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 48.

       12                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The bill

       13        is passed.

       14                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

       15        562, by Senator LaValle, Senate Print 2467-A, an

       16        act in relation to the Long Island Suburban

       17        Highway Improvement Program.

       18                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Lay that aside.

       19                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Lay the

       20        bill aside.

       21                      Senator Skelos, that completes the

       22        reading of the non-controversial calendar.

       23                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President, on

       24        the controversial calendar, would you please
call

       25        up Senator Holland's bill, Calendar Number 419.







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        1                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

        2        Secretary will read Calendar 419.

        3                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

        4        419, by Senator Holland, Senate Print 6069, an

        5        act to amend the Vehicle and Traffic Law, in

        6        relation to providing.

        7                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Explanation.

        8                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

        9        Holland, an explanation has been requested of

       10        Calendar 419.

       11                      SENATOR HOLLAND:  Mr. President,

       12        all this bill does is set up manufacturer's

       13        plates for -- license plates for any
organization

       14        that manufactures ten or more vehicles a year.

       15        It's just like dealer plates or transporter

       16        plates.

       17                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       18        Paterson.

       19                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Mr. President,

       20        if Senator Holland would yield for a question.

       21                      SENATOR HOLLAND:  Yes.

       22                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

       23        Senator yields.

       24                      SENATOR PATERSON:  My question is

       25        pretty basic.  I'm just a little unclear on what







                                                            2454

        1        the actual need for the legislation is.

        2                      SENATOR HOLLAND:  It is so that

        3        the manufacturers can move the cars around the

        4        roads.  They're still charging for the plates,

        5        Senator.  They will be $25 each, but it's done
in

        6        all other -- most other states and it is not
done

        7        in New York and it simply gives them the ability

        8        to buy a license plate and move their vehicles

        9        around the road.

       10                      SENATOR PATERSON:  So this is

       11        similar to dealer plates?

       12                      SENATOR HOLLAND:  Same as dealer

       13        plates, yes, sir.

       14                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Okay.  Just one

       15        last question, Senator.  Do you have any idea
why

       16        we for such a long period of time have not had

       17        this in New York State?

       18                      SENATOR HOLLAND:  I do not know,

       19        sir, but Mercedes is moving into my district and

       20        they've requested it and it sounds like a good

       21        idea to me.

       22                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Okay.  Thank

       23        you very much, Senator.

       24                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the

       25        last section.







                                                            2455

        1                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 2.  This

        2        act shall take effect on the 90th day.

        3                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Call the

        4        roll.

        5                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

        6                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

        7        Montgomery.

        8                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Yes.  Mr.

        9        President, I'm not going to oppose Senator

       10        Holland's bill, even though we're not -- our

       11        Deputy Minority Leader had some questions about

       12        it, but I do just want to say, Senator Holland,

       13        that I'm very happy to know that you are taking

       14        such an interest in issues related to traffic

       15        because, as you know, I live in a district where

       16        we have lots of traffic problems and some of

       17        those traffic problems are related to students,

       18        and I have some students in my -- in the -- who

       19        are visiting us today who are looking at this

       20        chamber and trying to figure out what it is we
do

       21        here, and I just want them to know that Senators

       22        like you, Senator Holland, even though you

       23        represent Orange County, you care about problems

       24        in Kings County, and so that's what this bill

       25        represents, and I just wanted to be able to
stand







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        1        up and say to you that those young people who
are

        2        here visiting with their counselors and their

        3        teachers from School District 13 who are here to

        4        find out just what we do with our time when
we're

        5        in Albany, they will now understand and know
that

        6        one of the important things that happens here is

        7        that Senators like you, Senator Holland, are

        8        working on their behalf as all of us are in

        9        trying to make this a better world and a better

       10        life for young people in our state.  So I thank

       11        you.

       12                      Thank you, Mr. President.

       13                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       14        Montgomery will be recorded in the affirmative.

       15                      The Secretary will read the

       16        results.

       17                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 50.

       18                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The bill

       19        is passed.

       20                      Senator Skelos.

       21                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President,

       22        there will be a meeting of the Social Services

       23        Committee in the Majority Conference Room.

       24                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Meeting

       25        of the Social Services Committee in the Majority







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        1        Conference Room.

        2                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Continue now on

        3        the controversial calendar, regular order.

        4                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

        5        Secretary will read the controversial calendar
in

        6        regular order.

        7                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

        8        98, by Senator Volker, Senate Print 3456-A, an

        9        act to enact the Criminal Procedure Law Reform

       10        Act of 1998.

       11                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       12        Volker, an explanation has been requested of

       13        Calendar Number 190 -- I'm sorry -- 98.

       14                      SENATOR VOLKER:  Okay.  This is a

       15        bill that's passed this house several times

       16        before.  It's essentially the same bill,
although

       17        there's been some modifications in the last year

       18        to take care of some technical procedures.  It's

       19        known as the Criminal Procedure Reform Act of

       20        1998.  The Criminal Procedure Reform Act of 1997

       21        that was virtually the same bill, passed this

       22        house by a vote of 49 to 10.

       23                      The bill basically -- the bill

       24        basically deals with a series of cases that have

       25        come before primarily the Court of Appeals in







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        1        changes in procedure.

        2                      Let me just outline several of

        3        those.  I think most the people in this house
are

        4        very familiar with them.  One of the -- one of

        5        the changes that this bill would deal with would

        6        be the so-called Rangel case which deals with
the

        7        failure to produce pretrial statements.

        8                      In the issue of prejudice, what

        9        happened in the case was that a murder case, I

       10        believe it was, was thrown out because there was

       11        a pretrial statement that the district attorney

       12        at the time prior to the case was not aware of

       13        and became aware of during the trial and, in

       14        fact, one case -- another case after the trial
in

       15        the attorney -- the defense attorney used it as

       16        an appeal and was able to have the conviction

       17        thrown out on the basis of the fact that the

       18        district attorney did not produce or did not

       19        inform the attorney for the defense in time,
even

       20        though the attorney for the defense was aware of

       21        the statement.

       22                      What this bill would do is, in

       23        effect, say that you would use a standard that

       24        would say that as soon as was possible, that the

       25        prosecution would provide the ability to the







                                                            2459

        1        defense attorney to review the statements and if

        2        the statement was not produced, then there would

        3        be a question of whether any actual harm was
done

        4        to the defendant.

        5                      The second piece that's involved

        6        here relates to the issue of the defendant's

        7        right to be at all proceedings of a trial.  We
do

        8        not change that in this bill at all except that

        9        what has happened on several occasions, a

       10        defendant who had the right to be at provisions

       11        of the trial in one case at a time when two

       12        jurors were dismissed and was not available, he

       13        was not there at that time and after the trial

       14        was over, the defense attorney raised the

       15        objection that the defendant was not present
even

       16        though he had not objected during the trial,
even

       17        though the defendant would have had the right to

       18        have been there, the case was thrown out on the

       19        basis that the defendant was not given his right

       20        to be there at all parts of the trial.

       21                      But this provision says that the

       22        defendant certainly has the right to do so.  If

       23        he objects, then the case goes on and it keeps

       24        him from being there, then he has certainly an

       25        objection but if he doesn't object, he can't







                                                            2460

        1        later come back and say that he was denied his

        2        right to be present at all proceedings in the

        3        trial.

        4                      There's a number of other

        5        provisions here.  One relates to identification.

        6        For some years police officers have had

        7        difficulty where cases have gone on for many

        8        years and a previous identification is not

        9        allowed at the trial and the person who is
trying

       10        to do the identifying cannot identify that
person

       11        because of time or change in the person's

       12        perspective, and so forth, and the result is
that

       13        a number of cases have been thrown out.  This

       14        would allow previous identifications to be

       15        entered into a trial, even though the defendant

       16        can object and bring up many kinds of
objections.

       17                      So those are the prime changes

       18        that are suggested by this bill.  As I say, this

       19        bill passed 49 to 10 last year and I think 48 to

       20        something the year before and that's the bill.

       21                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the

       22        last section.

       23                      Senator Paterson.

       24                      SENATOR PATERSON:  I'm sorry, Mr.

       25        President.







                                                            2461

        1                      I have a few questions, if Senator

        2        Volker would yield.

        3                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

        4        Senator yields.

        5                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Thank you.

        6                      Senator Volker, when I listened to

        7        your interpretation of the Rangel decision, I

        8        would be persuaded to have a pretty fair

        9        understanding of why this bill would be on the

       10        calendar today because the lack of knowledge on

       11        the part of the prosecutor would certainly seem

       12        to indicate that it would be unfair to go back

       13        into the trial or even after the trial and hold

       14        the prosecutor culpable for information that was

       15        never in the possession of the office at that

       16        particular time, but I thought that the general

       17        spirit of the Rangel decision, even if some of

       18        the facts in that case might certainly challenge

       19        what would be our sense of fairness, that the

       20        spirit of the decision was to even the playing

       21        field and to make sure that evidence was

       22        transmitted to all parties equally, and so with

       23        respect to, perhaps not the facts of the Rangel

       24        decision but the real dicta from that particular

       25        case, I'm wondering would that not be a basis
for







                                                            2462

        1        continuing the Rangel doctrine as it stands now

        2        to make sure that prior statements are made

        3        available, that, in other words, to pass this

        4        particular bill would actually reverse the case

        5        and we would have exceptions far more
devastating

        6        than, perhaps the Rangel case.

        7                      SENATOR VOLKER:  Senator, I think

        8        my argument on that would be -- and we've looked

        9        into this -- I don't think this totally reverses

       10        the Rangel case and I don't think it necessarily

       11        should.

       12                      The concept that statements should

       13        be made available to the defense as soon as

       14        possible and that any evidence that is useful
the

       15        defense should be provided, I don't think this

       16        would outlaw that.

       17                      I think what it does is I think it

       18        is an attempt to avoid the technical nature of

       19        the Rangel case when there is no showing that -

       20        particularly where there is no showing of any

       21        error that is -- and not a deliberate error or a

       22        deliberate negligence by the prosecutor.

       23                      I think what this bill represents

       24        is an attempt to continue the spirit of the

       25        Rangel case, but I think bring some fairness on







                                                            2463

        1        both sides into the system which I think is

        2        something, I think we both are looking for.

        3                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

        4        Paterson.

        5                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Mr. President,

        6        if Senator Volker would continue to yield.

        7                      SENATOR VOLKER:  Certainly.

        8                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

        9        Senator yields.

       10                      SENATOR PATERSON:  I agree with

       11        you, Senator Volker.  I think we are in the end

       12        looking for the same fairness and the fairness

       13        should be on both sides.  I would agree with you

       14        about that.

       15                      My concern is that passing this

       16        legislation would, in a sense, create the

       17        opposite, that the murkiness that would be

       18        established by leaving it to court determination

       19        or just the decision of a particular judge in

       20        each individual case would create a situation

       21        where it's not clear what the necessity would

       22        actually be to provide prior statements to the -

       23        to opposite counsel, and what I'm saying is that

       24        at least with the Rangel rule, we do have the

       25        bright line test that when properly administered







                                                            2464

        1        does create a very clear sense of what the

        2        responsibilities of all the parties are.

        3                      To pass this legislation, I'm

        4        fearful -- and I'll give you certainly the
chance

        5        to convince me -- that we wouldn't have a single

        6        standard.  We wouldn't be able to really be
clear

        7        on what -- at what point the Rangel protection
is

        8        exhausted and -

        9                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       10        Paterson, could you suspend for a minute,

       11        please.  Could we have some order in the
chamber,

       12        please.

       13                      Sorry, Senator Paterson.  Please

       14        go ahead.

       15                      SENATOR PATERSON:  That's all

       16        right, Mr. President.  I really don't blame them

       17        because I haven't been really, really clear with

       18        this question.  Perhaps Senator Volker can
ferret

       19        through this discussion to get to the main point

       20        of it, but I guess what I'm really asking
Senator

       21        Volker is, would this take the bright line test

       22        out and would that cause greater discrepancy

       23        rather than clear it up?

       24                      SENATOR VOLKER:  Senator, I don't

       25        think that would be true.  I think the problem







                                                            2465

        1        with the Rangel rule, I think it -- I guess it

        2        certainly set up a bright line, all right.

        3        According to some of the best legal scholars in

        4        this state -- I don't profess to be one of them,

        5        by the way.  I know you are, but I am not --
this

        6        rule actually goes beyond any other state or

        7        federal statute that anybody's aware of because

        8        it in a sense sets up such a potentially rigid

        9        test that virtually any kind of statement that

       10        turns up in the hands of a defendant after a
case

       11        or even during the case that the D.A. -- that
the

       12        district attorney, the prosecutor could be

       13        inferred somehow to be -- should have shown -

       14        could, in effect, be used to throw the case out.

       15                      I would like to think that what

       16        we're doing here -- and I think we are -- is

       17        going back to pretty well the standard the way
it

       18        appeared to be before, and that is that the

       19        prosecutor still has the obligation to provide

       20        information to the defense, and I happen to

       21        believe that that's the way it should be,

       22        whenever practicable, that is, whenever it's

       23        possible to do so, but in certain cases, it

       24        doesn't seem as if we should be looking to find
a

       25        way somehow to sort of stick the prosecutor with







                                                            2466

        1        a line that is almost impossible for him to

        2        follow.

        3                      I would agree with you that you

        4        could argue that this may create some more
cases,

        5        but I think what it will do is in many ways it

        6        will clear away some of the things that have
been

        7        incurring because what judges have been doing is

        8        chipping away at the Rangel case because it

        9        seemed as if the line was too rigid on the

       10        defense side and what we've had, I think, is a

       11        lot of confusion since then.  I think this bill

       12        attempts to create -- to clear up some of that

       13        confusion since that case.

       14                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       15        Paterson.

       16                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Mr. President,

       17        I want to thank Senator Volker for his responses

       18        and respond to the bill.

       19                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       20        Paterson on the bill.

       21                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Mr. President,

       22        I think Senator Volker's point is well taken,

       23        that if there is a thumb impinging upon the

       24        scales of justice that tilts the opportunity in

       25        favor of the defense, then it would be important







                                                            2467

        1        to establish some kind of fairness in the

        2        proceeding, but I would caution that one of the

        3        reasons that the Rangel rule really came into

        4        existence is that there were so many times when

        5        this type of information was not provided, when

        6        this type of information was not even believed
to

        7        be necessary, that it really created what was at

        8        that time and could very well exist right now

        9        probably a desire on the prosecution's part,

       10        perhaps not to comply with what would be the
most

       11        desired situation where the information would be

       12        transferred to opposing counsel, but what I
think

       13        is most important about the Rangel rule is that

       14        there is a bright line test, that there is a
very

       15        strict, if you would -- and I understand Senator

       16        Volker's concern about it, but it is a well

       17        defined rule that places on all of the parties
in

       18        a criminal proceeding certain duties and

       19        responsibilities which we not only respect but
we

       20        definitely would want to have in this kind of a

       21        situation that involves a case that reflects on

       22        someone's life or someone being brought into the

       23        criminal justice system.

       24                      It's my belief that the rule as it

       25        stands right now is effective, that it has
evened







                                                            2468

        1        the responsibilities and has provided a greater

        2        opportunity for both sides to present their
cases

        3        with full knowledge and full awareness.

        4                      I understand Senator Volker's

        5        point that to use the term "could have known" or

        6        "should have known" not only for a prosecutor

        7        but for any arm of criminal justice is somewhat

        8        misleading and at the least it creates an onus
of

        9        responsibility that often cannot be fulfilled
and

       10        to that respect, I don't think that the rules

       11        should actually apply, but to go to this extent

       12        which I believe would restore some of the

       13        obfuscating situations that existed previously

       14        would be going too far, and for that reason I'm

       15        looking to vote against the bill, Mr. President.

       16                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the

       17        last section.

       18                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 10.  This

       19        act shall take effect immediately.

       20                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Call the

       21        roll.

       22                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

       23                      THE SECRETARY:  Those recorded in

       24        the negative on Calendar Number 98 are Senators

       25        Connor, Leichter, Markowitz, Montgomery,







                                                            2469

        1        Paterson, Rosado, Sampson, Santiago, Seabrook,

        2        Smith, Stavisky and Waldon.  Also, Senator

        3        Mendez.  Ayes 47, nays 13.  Also, Senator Gold.

        4        Ayes 46, nays 14.

        5                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The bill

        6        is passed.

        7                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

        8        364, by Senator Nozzolio, Senate Print 4084-A,
an

        9        act to amend the Civil Practice Law and Rules,
in

       10        relation to establishing a complete bar to

       11        recovery by persons injured.

       12                      SENATOR WALDON:  Explanation.

       13                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       14        Nozzolio, an explanation has been requested by

       15        Senator Waldon.

       16                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Mr. President,

       17        my colleagues, Senator Waldon, as we debated
this

       18        bill last year, it has not changed.  It enacts

       19        the Crime Victims Protection Act which amends
the

       20        Civil Practice Law and Rules to establish -- in

       21        relation to establishing and eliminating a

       22        complete bar from recovery by persons injured

       23        while committing a crime.  We believe that that

       24        bar to prevent those who have committed a crime

       25        on an individual's property, then the ridiculous







                                                            2470

        1        absurd result occurring during the commission of

        2        that crime, an individual, the perpetrator of

        3        that crime is injured and then sues for
recovery,

        4        the homeowner or property owner because of some

        5        -- because of that injury, this action -- this

        6        measure would establish that complete bar to

        7        recovery to persons injured while committing a

        8        crime.

        9                      SENATOR WALDON:  Mr. President,

       10        would the gentleman yield to a question or two?

       11                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Does the

       12        Senator yield to a question?

       13                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Yes, Mr.

       14        President.

       15                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

       16        Senator yields.

       17                      SENATOR WALDON:  Senator Nozzolio,

       18        do you recall the Rodney King case?

       19                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Yes, Mr.

       20        President, I recall the Rodney King case.

       21                      SENATOR WALDON:  If I recall that

       22        case, there were 87 blows rendered to Rodney
King

       23        in approximately 54 seconds.  The blows were so

       24        severe that they turned his cheek bones into

       25        powder and caused grave injuries to him and he







                                                            2471

        1        was guilty of driving while intoxicated but the

        2        officers were found -- excuse me -- found to be

        3        acting beyond the pale of acceptable behavior.

        4                      If such a situation were to occur

        5        in New York and if this proposal became law,

        6        someone suffering the injuries under the

        7        circumstances as Rodney King suffered his

        8        injuries would have no recourse to sue the
police

        9        involved; is that not correct?

       10                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Mr. President,

       11        I couldn't hear the question.  Would Senator

       12        Waldon be so kind as to repeat it.

       13                      SENATOR WALDON:  Absolutely, Mr.

       14        President.  Rodney King was brutalized by the
law

       15        enforcement authorities in California.  His

       16        injuries were quite severe.  If your proposal

       17        became law and a similar situation occurred in

       18        this great state of New York, would not the

       19        person suffering as did Rodney King be precluded

       20        from bringing an action against the police who

       21        acted far beyond their parameters?

       22                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Mr. President,

       23        absolutely not.  This would not bar Rodney King

       24        from seeking his damages.  That -- certainly we

       25        hope that type of case does not occur in New
York







                                                            2472

        1        or any place else for that matter.

        2                      The peace officers in question,

        3        Senator Waldon, were not the victims of a crime

        4        perpetrated by Rodney King, that Rodney King

        5        himself was a victim of a crime, that we're

        6        talking about civil litigation here.  No, I
don't

        7        believe that this matter would appropriately bar

        8        -- would in any way bar the recovery -

        9        appropriate recovery in the hypothetical you

       10        mentioned.

       11                      SENATOR WALDON:  Would the

       12        gentleman yield again, Mr. President?

       13                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Does the

       14        gentleman continue to yield for a question?

       15                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Yes, Mr.

       16        President.

       17                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

       18        Senator yields.

       19                      Senator Waldon.

       20                      SENATOR WALDON:  Thank you, Mr.

       21        President.

       22                      Senator Nozzolio, would someone

       23        who's suffering from or has suffered from an

       24        illegal choke hold by a police officer be

       25        precluded under your proposal from bringing an







                                                            2473

        1        action?

        2                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Mr. President,

        3        I stand by my previous answer, that whatever

        4        hypothetical Senator Waldon would like to engage

        5        in this afternoon regarding police officers and

        6        the perpetrators of crime, we'll have the same

        7        response that was given in his hypothetical

        8        relative to Rodney King.

        9                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       10        Waldon.

       11                      SENATOR WALDON:  Mr. President,

       12        would the gentleman yield again?

       13                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Will the

       14        gentleman yield for another question?

       15                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Mr. President,

       16        I would be happy to yield to Senator Waldon's

       17        question.

       18                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

       19        Senator yields happily, Senator Waldon.

       20                      SENATOR WALDON:  Thank you, Mr.

       21        President.

       22                      Let's put a different twist on

       23        this.  Someone is committing a crime.  They are

       24        fleeing from the scene of the crime.  Elsewhere

       25        someone is robbing a bank.  The bank robbers get







                                                            2474

        1        into their car and they're driving away from the

        2        scene of the bank robbery.  A kid who snatched a

        3        pocketbook, the first person that I spoke about,

        4        is running across the street.  As he crosses the

        5        intersection, the thieves or robbers from the

        6        bank run him down causing grave and serious

        7        injury.  Would he be precluded from suing or his

        8        family be precluded from suing under your

        9        proposal?

       10                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Mr. President,

       11        as you and I went to law school together, the

       12        great Syracuse University College of Law, we
were

       13        confronted with hypothetical upon hypothetical

       14        upon hypothetical.

       15                      Mr. President, I can't recall

       16        since those days in law school receiving as

       17        extensive a hypothetical as one presented by

       18        Senator Waldon this afternoon.

       19                      Having said that, if I followed

       20        your hypothetical correct -- your series of

       21        hypotheticals correctly, Senator, I would have
to

       22        say that no, it was a separate intervening

       23        action, that the bank robbers who happened to be

       24        poor drivers in running over the purse snatcher

       25        would not be barred -- the purse snatcher would







                                                            2475

        1        not be barred for recovery against the bank

        2        robbers.

        3                      I very much appreciate the mental

        4        exercises of going through these hypotheticals,

        5        Senator, and I very much congratulate you on
your

        6        creation.  They are creative, extensive and

        7        frankly, though, I must tell you, Senator,

        8        they're going to yield the same answer, that if

        9        this measure -- let me just -- to try foursquare

       10        this measure -- this measure is designed,

       11        Senator, to prevent those perpetrators of a
crime

       12        from going directly against the victims that
they

       13        are perpetrating that crime upon and suing them

       14        for something like having a broken floor board
or

       15        not having a railing on the staircase and as
they

       16        exited they tripped down the staircase and

       17        decided they would sue the victim of the crime,

       18        adding certainly tremendous insult and agony to

       19        this already heinous act against them.

       20                      Unfortunately, Senator, real world

       21        hypotheticals occur -- real world situations

       22        occur in these cases and not that yours isn't a

       23        real world.  I respect what you're saying, but

       24        we're looking at civil actions against the
direct

       25        victims of the crime and that's the focus of
this







                                                            2476

        1        legislation.  It's not to prevent anyone from

        2        suing a police agency if their conduct was
beyond

        3        appropriate.  It does not prevent that type of

        4        recovery whatsoever.  It focuses only on civil

        5        actions against the individuals who were the

        6        direct victims of the perpetrated crime.

        7                      SENATOR WALDON:  Mr. President, on

        8        the bill.

        9                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       10        Waldon on the bill.

       11                      SENATOR WALDON:  I guess we've

       12        reached that stage of the year where we look for

       13        levity in what we do and perhaps that was the

       14        driving force to our exchange.  However, I

       15        thought that I was being serious in terms of the

       16        approach vis-a-vis the questions simply because

       17        these are serious issues that you are
addressing.

       18                      I think there's enough law on our

       19        books now to allow people to take care of

       20        business and to sue or be sued, and I think it's

       21        a stretch to do what you're doing.

       22                      Sometimes you come up with great

       23        ideas, Senator Nozzolio.  This time, I think
this

       24        is not one of your great ideas, and so I would

       25        encourage my colleagues to recognize that the







                                                            2477

        1        laws on our books now are sufficient and we need

        2        not go into this murky area.

        3                      Thank you, Mr. President.

        4                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

        5        Gold.

        6                      SENATOR GOLD:  Will the gentleman

        7        from Cornell yield to a question?

        8                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Even

        9        though I'm in the Chair, I take a matter of

       10        personal exception to that.

       11                      Go ahead.

       12                      SENATOR GOLD:  Senator, you just

       13        said one thing to Senator Waldon which I don't

       14        see in the bill.  The bill says that if there's

       15        an injury during the crime or in flight, there's

       16        nothing that I see in the bill at all that says

       17        that the defendant in the civil case has to be

       18        the victim.  I don't see that.  If it's there,

       19        maybe you can just show it to me you, but I
don't

       20        see it in the bill at all.

       21                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  We're barring

       22        -- Mr. President, through you.  We're barring

       23        recoveries for those -- for the claimants who

       24        perpetrate actions constituting a crime,

       25        Senator.







                                                            2478

        1                      SENATOR GOLD:  No, Senator.  I'm

        2        not telling you I'm for or against the bill.  I

        3        just wanted to clarify something because you
said

        4        to Senator Waldon, if I understood you a moment

        5        ago, that this did not protect the agency, if it

        6        was a police officer, it didn't protect this or

        7        that, that it was only dealing with the original

        8        crime victim, and I don't see anything in the

        9        bill that limits that.

       10                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Senator, again,

       11        I was dealing with Senator Waldon's

       12        hypotheticals, that I contend that this measure

       13        bars claimants to sue the victims resulting -

       14        actions resulting from their crime.  This did
not

       15        bar victims of crime like Rodney King from suing

       16        against perpetrators of the crime, in that case

       17        would be the police officers themselves,
battery,

       18        unlawful detention, unreasonable force.  Those

       19        kinds of actions against Rodney King would not
be

       20        barred by Rodney King.  The police officers
would

       21        not be able to sue Rodney King, I think under

       22        this circumstance, because they would be the

       23        perpetrators of the crime in that instance.

       24                      SENATOR GOLD:  If the gentleman

       25        would yield to one more question.







                                                            2479

        1                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

        2        Gold.

        3                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Yes.

        4                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

        5        Senator continues to yield.

        6                      Senator Gold.

        7                      SENATOR GOLD:  As I understand

        8        your bill -- and maybe you could answer this
kind

        9        of yes or no -- it involves a situation where

       10        somebody gets hurt and if I'm reading the

       11        language properly, during the commission of a

       12        crime or it involves somebody that gets hurt in

       13        fleeing or trying to escape from a situation. 
In

       14        the Rodney King case, I don't think he was

       15        involved in a crime to begin with, but assuming

       16        that somebody actually committed a crime,

       17        burglarized a house and was now being taken into

       18        custody by police and was not trying to escape

       19        and the police used improper holds or whatever,

       20        the way I read your bill, you could still have a

       21        lawsuit.  The crime has ended.  He's no longer
in

       22        the commission of a crime and there's no escape.

       23                      So the way I read it, if there is

       24        police brutality or whatever in arresting the

       25        person, I read it that your bill would, in fact,







                                                            2480

        1        allow that person to bring that action.  Am I

        2        correct?

        3                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Senator Gold, I

        4        believe that we had this discussion last year,

        5        that I believe that there would be an
intervening

        6        factor.

        7                      SENATOR GOLD:  There would be a

        8        what?

        9                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  You would have

       10        two separate consecutive events that would, in

       11        fact, determine that we now are in a different

       12        ball game, a different set of facts, a different

       13        -- in effect, the first crime would have ended.

       14        The creation of a second crime against the

       15        perpetrator of the first crime would cut and
that

       16        cut would, in effect, create a new fact pattern,

       17        a new victim and that new victim would certainly

       18        be able to sue against the perpetrators of the

       19        second crime.

       20                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the

       21        last section.

       22                      Senator Leichter.

       23                      SENATOR LEICHTER:  Would Senator

       24        Nozzolio yield, please?

       25                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator,







                                                            2481

        1        will you yield to a question from Senator

        2        Leichter?

        3                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Yes, Mr.

        4        President.

        5                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

        6        Senator yields.

        7                      SENATOR LEICHTER:  Yeah.  Senator,

        8        presently it's case law in the state of New York

        9        that if a homeowner or somebody else, shop owner

       10        puts in his store a device or mechanism where if

       11        somebody breaks in he has a gun that

       12        automatically will fire at a person who, let's

       13        say goes through a window and the courts have

       14        held that that's unreasonable use of force. 
Now,

       15        your bill, as I read it -- and please correct me

       16        if I'm wrong -- would it not overrule that whole

       17        line of cases?

       18                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Mr. President,

       19        in response to Senator Leichter's question, it's

       20        the same question, Franz, that Senator Gold

       21        asked.  I think that you, in effect, have an

       22        intervening crime.  Excessive force in itself is

       23        a crime, that that excessive force would be the

       24        excessive force used by the property owner and

       25        that that, in effect, becomes a new victim.  The







                                                            2482

        1        victim in itself because of the excessive force

        2        definition is the perpetrator of the crime even

        3        though he entered the scene, all of a sudden the

        4        circumstances -- the tables must turn because
the

        5        homeowner becomes the perpetrator of a crime in
a

        6        sense by definition, Franz, using excessive

        7        force.

        8                      So, Senator Leichter, I think

        9        that, again that intervening set of
circumstances

       10        would have shifted the claimant, shifted the

       11        victim and the criminal conduct would, in
effect,

       12        would be of the homeowner, but we're trying not

       13        to get -- in that circumstance you reference, I

       14        think is certainly a valid concern, but I
believe

       15        by simple definition of excessive force, the

       16        homeowner is forbidden from using that excessive

       17        force, as you well indicate, and that that then

       18        turns the individual into, in effect, a crime

       19        victim.

       20                      Now, what we're trying to prevent

       21        are those instances where the homeowner is not

       22        using excessive force, where he simply may have
a

       23        loose board on his porch or has maybe a rug in

       24        the wrong place that the criminal ended up

       25        slipping and falling on and injuring himself and







                                                            2483

        1        then suing the property owner which does occur
in

        2        this state.  It occurs in a number of cases
where

        3        we believe that that certainly should be barred,

        4        and that's why this legislation is necessary,

        5        appropriate.

        6                      SENATOR LEICHTER:  Mr. President,

        7        if Senator Nozzolio will continue to yield,

        8        please.

        9                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Yes, Mr.

       10        President.

       11                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

       12        Senator continues to yield.

       13                      SENATOR LEICHTER:  Senator, I

       14        don't think that Senator Gold or Senator Waldon

       15        or I have any problem with the examples you give

       16        where you would like to provide protection

       17        against what we would see as a frivolous or

       18        unjustified civil action.  The concern we have
is

       19        that the bill is so broadly written that, for

       20        instance, in the example that I gave of where

       21        there is this trap which causes grievous injury

       22        which is all out of proportion to the crime

       23        that's being committed, that your bill would not

       24        allow the -- that teenager who climbed through a

       25        window, he's now paralyzed for the rest of his







                                                            2484

        1        life.  Even if the homeowner could be convicted

        2        and maybe he could be convicted of a crime but
as

        3        far as that teenager suing the homeowner in
civil

        4        -- for civil action -- that's, of course, what

        5        your bill deals with -- I think the language of

        6        it makes it fairly clear that that could not

        7        happen.

        8                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Senator, I

        9        believe that that intervening circumstance of

       10        criminality with the use of excessive force
would

       11        not bar that individual, as you indicate.  I

       12        appreciate your suggestions and thank you very

       13        much for making them.

       14                      SENATOR LEICHTER:  Well, let me

       15        just -- if you would be so kind.  Just ask this

       16        other question.

       17                      Senator, isn't it -- what you're

       18        doing then, if you -- if you put up the defense

       19        of intervening force, that all that's going to

       20        happen is that in instances, for instance, where

       21        you have in mind the instance that occurred, of

       22        course, in the New York subway with Getz, and so

       23        on, all that the criminal who committed the
crime

       24        -- and admittedly that's what -- well, I guess

       25        there may have been some question in the Getz







                                                            2485

        1        case but, assuming a crime had been committed,

        2        now the criminal after assaulting somebody in
the

        3        subway runs away and somebody pulls out a gun -

        4        the victim pulls out a gun, he's not in any

        5        danger anymore and he shoots this person in the

        6        back.  You're saying, well, he's not committed a

        7        crime.  Therefore, there is an intervening cause

        8        and, therefore, my law doesn't apply, in spite
of

        9        the fact that it doesn't really say so, but if

       10        that's the -- if that's the defense that

       11        somebody's going to use, then people are just

       12        always going to say, well, there was an

       13        intervening cause.  They used excessive force

       14        and, frankly, then your bill is not going to

       15        achieve the goal that it has.

       16                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  On the

       17        contrary, Senator.  I think it will achieve the

       18        goal that we're setting out to achieve, which is

       19        to prevent those who are committing crimes from

       20        profiting from those crimes and becoming, in

       21        effect, the crime victim losing twice. 
Certainly

       22        he loses because he was the victim of a crime
and

       23        secondly he loses because he was a victim of a

       24        civil litigation, a civil lawsuit that, in

       25        effect, held him liable because he didn't have







                                                            2486

        1        his porch boards tightened down enough.  That's

        2        what we're trying to rectify here, Senator, and
I

        3        believe that this bill does it.

        4                      The other hypotheticals you

        5        mentioned certainly are legitimate -- legitimate

        6        concerns, but I believe that the intervening

        7        criminality that you're throwing into these

        8        hypotheticals turns the table and we're talking

        9        then about the entity that was the object of a

       10        claimant's criminal conduct.  In effect, then we

       11        have another criminality thrown in here and

       12        that's what we're trying to bar the innocent

       13        victim from being sued by the perpetrator of a

       14        crime.

       15                      The hypotheticals you've thrown in

       16        here have shown that once in a while maybe

       17        victims aren't innocent and that's -- certainly
I

       18        believe does happen from time to time in rare

       19        occurrences and when it does happen, this

       20        legislation certainly would bar the appropriate

       21        crime perpetrators from litigation and protect

       22        those who are innocent victims from being sued.

       23                      SENATOR LEICHTER:  Mr. President,

       24        just on the bill.

       25                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator







                                                            2487

        1        Leichter on the bill.

        2                      SENATOR LEICHTER:  I think we have

        3        a situation here that, unfortunately, occurs too

        4        frequently and one that Senator Gold,

        5        particularly over the years has, I think very

        6        eloquently spoken about, and that is that a bill

        7        which is certainly well intended and deals with
a

        8        problem that we have but is written in such a
way

        9        that it provides a result which defies either

       10        common logic or in this instance, I think is

       11        against good public policy.

       12                      Now, I guess you can get up at

       13        meetings and campaign rallies and say, I put in
a

       14        bill so that criminals aren't going to be
allowed

       15        to sue, and so on, that sounds great, but when

       16        you take a look really at what the bill does, it

       17        accomplishes things that are totally different

       18        and if Senator Nozzolio's explanation, well, if

       19        there's an intervening cause can be accepted,

       20        then I think he reads the very purpose of the

       21        bill out because that criminal who's now suing
is

       22        always going to say whether there was an

       23        intervening cause.

       24                      All I think that we're saying here

       25        is that you could draft a bill a little bit more







                                                            2488

        1        carefully drafted, more focused, more directed,

        2        Senator, and I think that you would really

        3        accomplish something because we agree with you

        4        that the burglar who goes in and slips on a rug

        5        should not be allowed to sue the homeowner for

        6        damages.  It goes without saying.  I think the

        7        Getz case is one that I think we would all agree

        8        upon, but I think that your bill as drafted is

        9        going to have situations where that teenager who

       10        climbs who through his neighbor's window because

       11        he wants to steal a bottle of whiskey or

       12        something and then gets shot and paralyzed for

       13        life is going to be precluded for suing in other

       14        instances of that sort and that shouldn't
happen,

       15        and the truth of the matter is you can put out a

       16        bill like this and you can pass it in the Senate

       17        because I assume your colleagues, with all due

       18        respect, will vote for anything that you -- that

       19        has your name on it, I mean, but what have you

       20        accomplished?

       21                      I guess you could bring it back

       22        year after year after year and we'll have the

       23        same debate.  Hopefully I won't be here to do
it,

       24        but in any event, I really think, Senator, that

       25        good intentions but a bill that's not artfully







                                                            2489

        1        drafted.

        2                      SENATOR GOLD:  Mr. President.

        3                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  I'm

        4        sorry.  Senator Balboni.

        5                      SENATOR BALBONI:  Mr. President,

        6        it is a pleasure to rise on the floor for the

        7        first time to be able to speak on a bill that I

        8        have waited for seven whole years to come to the

        9        floor of some Legislature because Lord knows it

       10        never happens in the state Assembly and this is

       11        one of these great bills that we can finally get

       12        up and talk about common sense.

       13                      There are three ironies inherent

       14        in this entire issue.  First off is that this

       15        whole situation, the ability of an individual
who

       16        committed a crime and then sue is really a

       17        function of a glitch.

       18                      In 1975, this Legislature codified

       19        the new comparative negligence standard.  We
left

       20        the contributory negligence standard which had

       21        inherent in the Section 411 the assumption of

       22        risk doctrine, probably the most common sense

       23        doctrine we've ever had in our body of law, that

       24        is, if you commit an act and you knew the risks

       25        inherent in that act and you were injured, tough







                                                            2490

        1        luck.  You're out of the ball game.

        2                      In addition to which, the

        3        arguments that -- and I -- surprising to most

        4        people, I have a bill too on this issue.  I

        5        approach it from a slightly different issue and

        6        hopefully maybe we'll even get a chance to

        7        discuss that particular measure at a later time,

        8        but we have had -- we have had a lot of

        9        discussion regarding some of the issues that
were

       10        brought here today and what always surprises me

       11        is you never get into the true elements.

       12                      I have tried these cases.  I have

       13        stood in court in Nassau County as a deputy

       14        county attorney and have defended the county

       15        against an individual who has been shot while

       16        going after a police officer with a knife.  Now

       17        -- by the way, subsequently convicted of

       18        menacing and harassment with the knife and third

       19        degree assault as a plea.

       20                      I've seen the cost encumbered by

       21        the municipality who has to defend these
lawsuits

       22        year after year after year, and I have also been

       23        involved with the arguments of, well, what about

       24        police brutality?

       25                      I have defended police officers,







                                                            2491

        1        and if you ask any officer what is the true

        2        deterrent?  The true deterrent is not a civil

        3        lawsuit against the individual officer because

        4        those lawsuits are nine times out of ten done as

        5        a response to that superior; in other words, the

        6        municipality defends the police officer.  The

        7        police officer is rarely on the hook

        8        individually.  So there is really no deterrent

        9        effect.  What's the deterrent effect?

       10                      A 1983 civil rights action for

       11        denial of constitutional rights or a criminal

       12        action, an indictment in prosecution.  Those are

       13        the real deterrents for police brutality.  To

       14        take away the right in the state to sue is not

       15        taking away any deterrent and what is the real

       16        irony of this type of statute is that this has

       17        been the case law of this state since 1982.  The

       18        Court of Appeals in probably Judge Wachtler's

       19        best decision, Barker versus Kalish, came out

       20        with a clear enunciation, that if you commit a

       21        felony -- if you commit a crime and you were

       22        injured during the course and commission thereof

       23        -- and that's the key phrase -- then you are not

       24        able to sue, and what is ironic is that 1997 -

       25        in December of 1997, Manning versus Brown, the







                                                            2492

        1        Court of Appeals again affirmed Barker versus

        2        Kalish.  So this has been our case law; this has

        3        been our common law and it stems back, by the

        4        way, to the 1890s in a case called Riggs versus

        5        Palmer where the Court of Appeals spoke on this

        6        issue for the very first time.

        7                      So there has been a very

        8        consistent thread through our common law, that

        9        it's high time we codify.  This bill is a common

       10        sense bill.  This bill is something that is

       11        overdue.  I may have a different way of doing it

       12        but frankly the intent is the same.  It's a good

       13        bill.

       14                      Thank you.

       15                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       16        Gold.

       17                      SENATOR GOLD:  Mr. President, it's

       18        a delight to listen to Senator Balboni and

       19        everybody now sees the brilliance that I have

       20        known was there for years but, Senator Balboni,
I

       21        have listened to your cases.  The problem is in

       22        the case of the Senate versus the Assembly, this

       23        ain't going to become a law in its present law.

       24        That's what we have been talking about.

       25                      What we're talking about is not a







                                                            2493

        1        situation where a police officer is attacked by

        2        someone with a knife and the guy gets shot and
we

        3        all say, you know, you took that risk.  What

        4        about the case where someone comes at a police

        5        officer with a knife and they knock the knife

        6        away and the guy's having cuffs put on him and

        7        then they shoot him?  Well, we say this law as

        8        it's proposed doesn't make enough of a

        9        distinction.  That's all we're talking about.

       10                      The concern I have, Senator

       11        Nozzolio, is that you said a lot of things in

       12        explaining the bill which some of us might be

       13        able to live with, but if you take a look at the

       14        cases, judges who are very well meaning and one

       15        of them in this very field, by the way, who I

       16        know, a Cornell graduate, good lawyer, he said

       17        that he read the legislative intent but he

       18        couldn't do his decision on that basis because
he

       19        had to make his decision based upon the way he

       20        read the plain English of the law.

       21                      Now, I asked you a question before

       22        and I gave you a situation where a crime had

       23        ended and somebody was injured and you said,

       24        there's an intervening act.  There's no

       25        intervening act.  The crime ended.  So under
your







                                                            2494

        1        bill I'm not really worried about it.

        2                      The problem is when you talked to

        3        Senator Leichter and the example that he gave
was

        4        given to me earlier by my intern Russell
Fredico,

        5        who was very upset with me earlier today because

        6        I didn't want to yield right away to his

        7        arguments which were very excellent, but when
you

        8        were answering Senator Leichter, the second
crime

        9        isn't an intervening effect that stops the first

       10        crime.  You have two crimes going on together.

       11        If two people are shooting at each other and

       12        nobody's got a license for the gun, you got two

       13        people committing a crime.  One crime doesn't

       14        stop another crime and that, therefore, the

       15        answers you gave to Senator Leichter just don't

       16        fit what your bill is all about, and the problem

       17        of the person who falls on a porch committing a

       18        crime and sues the owner, Senator, as has

       19        happened with the partial birth apportion bill

       20        and all of that, your side comes to us with

       21        slogans.  You don't come to us with well drawn

       22        legislation, and what I'm suggesting to you,

       23        Senator, is that if you reread this debate -- I

       24        mean today you're going to pass the bill because

       25        that's what you fellows all do.  No matter
what's







                                                            2495

        1        said on the floor, you pass the bill.  Hopefully

        2        those of you with, you know, a little more

        3        legislative real zeal bring it back a week later

        4        and amend it and, Senator, what I'm saying to
you

        5        is if you read this debate today, you, Senator

        6        Nozzolio, have the basis of a bill which a lot
of

        7        people could support and want to support.  Not

        8        only that, having the bill is irrelevant. 
Having

        9        the law would be very significant, and it could

       10        also be very helpful to the people of the

       11        state.

       12                      So we're only saying make a

       13        distinction between ordinary negligence.  Make a

       14        distinction between gross negligence.  Perhaps

       15        there ought to be a distinction for intentional

       16        tort, intentional wrongdoing, intentional

       17        excesses, and then we've got a bill which

       18        everybody's going to be proud of and you will be

       19        the driving force behind that and as a fellow

       20        alumnus I'll be very proud of you for it, but

       21        muscling it through the Senate and not having it

       22        become a law really doesn't accomplish much.

       23                      So I want to thank Russell for

       24        pointing it out to me earlier and, Senator

       25        Leichter, I appreciate your debate today and,







                                                            2496

        1        Senator Waldon, you certainly did clarify the

        2        issues.

        3                      SENATOR LEICHTER:  Mr. President.

        4                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

        5        Leichter.

        6                      SENATOR LEICHTER:  Mr. President,

        7        would Senator Balboni yield, please?

        8                      SENATOR BALBONI:  Of course.

        9                      SENATOR LEICHTER:  Senator, you're

       10        new to our chamber, so I'm not going to take you

       11        to task for it, but we have traditions here and

       12        we're not used to the citation of cases.  The

       13        next thing you're going to cite statutes.  We

       14        like to be more general in a description.

       15                      No, obviously that was a joke and

       16        what I really meant to do was to compliment you

       17        and how well prepared you were and you certainly

       18        threw some helpful light on the -- on the

       19        situation and it shows how fortunate we are

       20        really to have you on this side of the Capitol

       21        than on the other side where you were and on
this

       22        side of the aisle almost but, Senator, if as you

       23        say -- and I'm sure you're correct.  You cited

       24        the Baker case and others, so that we really

       25        codified those extreme examples of a criminal







                                                            2497

        1        who's injured in the course of perpetrating a

        2        crime and then suing the victim.  So what I

        3        understand from you is that the situation that

        4        Senator Nozzolio wants to take care of is
already

        5        really taken care of by the case law and our

        6        concern is that now he's gone beyond this and

        7        he's written out of the case law those instances

        8        where somebody has, in the example I gave, sets

        9        up a trap in his house which causes grievous

       10        injury to somebody who brakes into the house.

       11                      So what's really the purpose and

       12        aim of passing this bill?  You say it's high
time

       13        we codify it.  Why do we have to codify it and
if

       14        so why in this form?

       15                      SENATOR BALBONI:  Mr. President,

       16        if I may respond.  If the Senator would check

       17        CPLR 32.12 and you take a look at the provisions

       18        relating to the motion for summary judgment,
most

       19        courts are loath to rule on a motion for summary

       20        judgment without a statutory element.  In other

       21        words, the case law, the Parker versus Kalish

       22        does not permit most courts, as it has not in my

       23        personal experience, to grant summary judgment
on

       24        a motion for 32.12 at the outset of the case.

       25        Codifying this case would allow the court to
come







                                                            2498

        1        in and say, you're right.  The assumption of
risk

        2        doctrine provides that you don't have a case.

        3        Therefore, we can address this at the outset,

        4        therefore, saving municipalities, insurance

        5        companies, all sorts of entities, the defense -

        6        the cost of defense and frankly taking it out at

        7        the hands of the jury because we shouldn't be

        8        putting these questions before a jury because
you

        9        can cite any type of case that would have an

       10        emotional appeal but the fact of the matter is

       11        this used to be the law in the state of New

       12        York.  When we had the contributory negligence,

       13        when we had the former 1411 statute before in

       14        1975, this was our law, and I think you would be

       15        hard pressed to point to examples where people

       16        were shut out who committed a criminal act and

       17        were not able to sue.  It was only because we
did

       18        it as a glitch, as I started out.  We did not

       19        excise the felonious plaintiff from the scheme

       20        that we set up in 1975 that we even have this

       21        problem.

       22                      So that is why you need to codify

       23        Barker, codify Manning and make it applicable to

       24        a 32.12 motion at the outset in the threshold of

       25        a civil action.







                                                            2499

        1                      SENATOR LEICHTER:  Mr. President,

        2        if Senator -

        3                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

        4        Leichter, if you've already spoken twice on this

        5        measure, you wish unanimous consent?

        6                      SENATOR LEICHTER:  No.  I had the

        7        floor.

        8                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  I

        9        apologize, Senator Leichter.  Of course, you're

       10        right.  You did have the floor.

       11                      SENATOR LEICHTER:  I would -

       12        Senator, I would just say my experience as far
as

       13        summary judgment is concerned, courts pay a lot

       14        more attention and will follow the Court of

       15        Appeals precedent a lot more than they will one

       16        of our statutes, but I understand what you're

       17        saying and you obviously have a great deal of

       18        knowledge in this area which is helpful.  I
think

       19        the answer may be that we ought to have a

       20        statute, but I think that it's got to be more

       21        carefully drawn and more targeted than I think

       22        the bill that's before us.

       23                      SENATOR BALBONI:  Mr. President,

       24        one last comment.  Then perhaps I might appeal
to

       25        a reading of Justice Brandeis' quote in the







                                                            2500

        1        Olmstead Supreme Court case, where he talked

        2        about the codification of the mores of society,

        3        where to lend our justice system to the aid and

        4        assistance of someone who's chosen to break the

        5        law, step out of the bounds of society, in fact,

        6        has a deleterious effect on the observance and

        7        the credence given to all laws.

        8                      So if you would like to take it to

        9        a higher plane, I would recommend you and refer

       10        you to Justice Brandeis' comments.  By the way,

       11        all cites are available to you after for free. 
I

       12        won't charge you anything.

       13                      Thank you, Mr. President.

       14                      SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Mr.

       15        President.

       16                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       17        Paterson.

       18                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Mr. President,

       19        would Senator Balboni -

       20                      SENATOR BALBONI:  Of course.

       21                      SENATOR PATERSON:  -- be able to

       22        pause from his reflections and yield for a

       23        question?

       24                      SENATOR BALBONI:  Yes, of course.

       25        Mr. President, this is why I was told not to







                                                            2501

        1        stand up.

        2                      SENATOR MARCELLINO:  That's the

        3        reason I stood up, Mr. President.

        4                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The Chair

        5        would note that autographed copies of the Law

        6        Review article will be available immediately.

        7                      (Laughter.)

        8                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Mr. President,

        9        Senator Balboni, looking at the -- not

       10        withstanding Judge Brandeis' comments, looking
at

       11        the whole circumstance with which we would be

       12        codifying what would be case law, you don't
think

       13        that it would be somewhat vague due to the

       14        broadness of the way it is presented in this

       15        bill?  And maybe what I really want to ask you

       16        is, what is it that you are actually suggesting?

       17        Since we're on the same subject, I don't think
it

       18        would be rude and not germane to the topic, what

       19        would be the way that you would suggest it be

       20        codified?

       21                      SENATOR BALBONI:  Actually, I'm

       22        sorry, Senator.  I don't have my particular

       23        measure before me now and I don't recall -

       24                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Senator, why

       25        would you need that?







                                                            2502

        1                      SENATOR BALBONI:  -- the specifics

        2        of that bill, but I'll tell you what, if you
wait

        3        here, I'll go get a copy and I'll come back and

        4        we can talk about it over a cup of coffee.  What

        5        do you say?

        6                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Okay.  That's

        7        good.  Finally, by the way, Senator, it was one

        8        thing -- it was one thing to talk about the

        9        Kalish case but Riggs versus Palmer, I think
that

       10        was before the turn of the century.

       11                      SENATOR BALBONI:  Yes, it was.

       12                      SENATOR PATERSON:  And not

       13        remembering very much about it, what I guess I'm

       14        asking is would the case law as standard as it

       15        was in 1975 when we changed from what is now the

       16        -- when we changed to what is now the

       17        comparative negligence statute, are you saying
it

       18        was the omission of the Legislature in 1975 that

       19        moved us away from 1411, or are you saying that

       20        this is something that we did knowingly at that

       21        time but because of subsequent cases need to

       22        return to the system as it was before then?

       23                      SENATOR BALBONI:  Actually, I

       24        fault the judicial conference in their initial

       25        recommendation pre-'75 for the changes that we







                                                            2503

        1        made in the CPLR for not including this carve

        2        out.

        3                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Okay.  Thank

        4        you very much, Senator.

        5                      SENATOR BALBONI:  Thank you, Mr.

        6        President.

        7                      SENATOR PATERSON:  It's certainly

        8        been an education for all of us, and I think
that

        9        with certainly the issue of individuals who are

       10        in violation of the law and according them

       11        special rights certainly challenges, I guess

       12        the morality, or as Senator Balboni quoted

       13        Justice Brandeis, really what is the fabric of

       14        our society and yet there are a lot of laws that

       15        are certainly not used very much or are not

       16        particularly in vogue or perhaps we haven't gone

       17        back and eliminated them from statute, that
would

       18        actually qualify individuals to be in the

       19        position of not being able to recover under this

       20        and that was really all that I think Senator

       21        Leichter and Senator Gold and earlier Senator

       22        Waldon were trying to get at that with some

       23        specificity perhaps we have had situations that

       24        could be addressed by some piece of legislation.

       25                      It was just that in the one case







                                                            2504

        1        where there was a recovery and it was seemed to

        2        be egregious, I believe that was the Cummings

        3        case, we didn't want to be legislating against

        4        the exception.  We wanted to put something forth

        5        that would make sure that, although we don't
want

        6        to give any special rights to individuals who
are

        7        perpetrators at the time they were injured, at

        8        the same time we don't want to almost encourage

        9        any kind of excessive force to those who then

       10        under the protection of citing the criminality
of

       11        the injured party would then be excused or in
any

       12        way not held responsible for their actions.

       13                      SENATOR ONORATO:  Mr. President.

       14        Mr. President.

       15                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       16        Onorato.

       17                      SENATOR ONORATO:  I've heard a

       18        wonderful debate here today.  I've learned a lot

       19        about CPLR 14 and 76.  I would like to take at

       20        this time a high point of privilege to read the

       21        last section.

       22                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the

       23        last section.

       24                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 2.  This

       25        act shall take effect immediately.







                                                            2505

        1                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Call the

        2        roll.

        3                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

        4                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

        5        Waldon to explain his vote.

        6                      SENATOR WALDON:  Thank you very

        7        much, Mr. President.

        8                      I won't be long.  I read the

        9        proposal by Senator Nozzolio again because in
the

       10        debate I was confused and baffled by some of his

       11        responses.  He kept speaking of intervening

       12        forces, but if we look at line 5, it reads, and
I

       13        quote, "In the event that the personal injury or

       14        injury to property occurred while the claimant

       15        was engaged in conduct constituting a crime as

       16        defined in Subdivision (6)", et cetera, et

       17        cetera, "or immediate flight therefrom" and then

       18        we go down a little farther -- or further, as
you

       19        will, and it reads, line 10 -- no, line 9, "the

       20        culpable conduct attributable to the claimant,

       21        including contributory negligence or assumption

       22        of this, shall bar recovery from the person or

       23        other entity who is the object of the claimant's

       24        criminal conduct."

       25                      I didn't see anything which really







                                                            2506

        1        spoke to responses that the esteemed Senator was

        2        giving us.  So I cannot support what he's

        3        proposing.  I found it rather confusing, and I

        4        would like to at some later point really

        5        understand where all of those intervening forces

        6        came from.

        7                      I vote in the negative.

        8                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

        9        Waldon in the negative.  Announce the results.

       10                      THE SECRETARY:  Those recorded in

       11        the negative on Calendar Number 364 are Senators

       12        Gold, Leichter, Mendez, Montgomery, Paterson,

       13        Rosado, Sampson, Santiago, Seabrook, Smith and

       14        Waldon.  Ayes 50, nays 11.

       15                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The bill

       16        is passed.

       17                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

       18        387, by Senator Cook, Senate Print 366, an act
to

       19        amend the Education Law, in relation to defining

       20        non-residents of a district.

       21                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Explanation.

       22                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       23        Cook, an explanation has been requested of

       24        Calendar Number 387.

       25                      SENATOR COOK:  Mr. President, I







                                                            2507

        1        would be glad to give an explanation.  I think
we

        2        had one yesterday and I think we really laid the

        3        bill aside to give Senator Lachman an
opportunity

        4        to make some comments.  If he has questions that

        5        he would like to ask, I would certainly respond

        6        to them, but I think he may have some things he

        7        would like to say.

        8                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

        9        Lachman.

       10                      SENATOR LACHMAN:  Yes.  I do have

       11        some questions and I appreciate your willingness

       12        to respond to them, but I would be remiss,

       13        Senator Cook, if I did not acknowledge my

       14        thankfulness to you for laying the bill aside

       15        yesterday.  I had to take a couple of hours from

       16        deliberations in the chamber to attend a funeral

       17        in New York City that I would much rather not

       18        have gone to if possible, and I think your

       19        thoughtfulness, Senator Cook, in laying the bill

       20        aside, is indicative of a graciousness and an

       21        overall thoughtfulness that will be missed when

       22        you retire from this chamber because you are an

       23        outstanding Chairman of the Education Committee

       24        and basically, as they say in French, a real

       25        mensch as well.







                                                            2508

        1                      Now to the questions and forgive

        2        me if you have to repeat any answers when I was

        3        not here yesterday.  In this particular

        4        situation, approximately how many children are

        5        involved?

        6                      SENATOR COOK:  Mr. President, let

        7        me indicate that there is, in fact, a situation

        8        that I have in mind, but I think in fairness we

        9        ought to indicate that the bill does have

       10        statewide implications.  It is possible that it

       11        will apply to other situations because there is
a

       12        local option involved here.  So we need to get

       13        that out on the table that it is not specific to

       14        this situation, but in the case which really

       15        brought this bill out here before us, there are

       16        about 30 children.  The number changes slightly

       17        from time to time because it is a -- often sort

       18        of a transient population but 30 is the

       19        approximate number.

       20                      SENATOR LACHMAN:  Senator Cook, do

       21        you know of any precedent in this -- Mr.

       22        Chairman, may I continue?  Do you know of any

       23        precedent in your county or in the state of New

       24        York where the parents of public school children

       25        have to pay for their education even though







                                                            2509

        1        they're residing in buildings which are tax

        2        exempt, thereby denying the resident status and

        3        charging their children to attend a public
school

        4        in the state of New York?

        5                      SENATOR COOK:  Mr. President,

        6        there are situations in which people choose to

        7        send their children to schools that are in some

        8        district other than the one in which they
reside,

        9        in which they pay tuition but, of course, under

       10        present law, it is not legal to charge tuition

       11        for anyone who resides within the school

       12        district.

       13                      SENATOR LACHMAN:  So -- may I

       14        continue, Mr. President?

       15                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       16        Lachman.

       17                      SENATOR LACHMAN:  So what you're

       18        basically saying, Senator Cook, is that this
will

       19        have a precedent setting motive that could
change

       20        the entire Education Law in the state of New
York

       21        if we adopt this measure today and if school

       22        systems decide to follow suit?

       23                      SENATOR COOK:  Mr. President, the

       24        education system at the local level, except in

       25        the city of New York, in large measure, is







                                                            2510

        1        supported by property tax.  A tax is levied upon

        2        all properties but it is levied upon the

        3        residential properties as well and, therefore,

        4        whether the person is an actual owner of the

        5        property or whether the person is a tenant of
the

        6        property, some portion of their income or some

        7        portion of their rent goes to support the public

        8        education system.

        9                      What we have here is people who,

       10        in effect, evade paying anything and in this
case

       11        are costing the district something like a
quarter

       12        of $1 million that has to be picked up by those

       13        other homeowners whose children are attending
the

       14        public schools and they have to pay not only the

       15        cost for their own children but for these 30 who

       16        are residing in the tax exempt property.  So,

       17        yes, indeed, it is changing -- changing the

       18        premise upon which some of education is funded.

       19                      SENATOR LACHMAN:  I'll discuss, if

       20        I may later on the bill the issue of the tax

       21        exemption and the real property tax, but one
more

       22        question before I make a statement on the bill.

       23                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       24        Cook, do you continue to yield?

       25                      SENATOR COOK:  Yes.







                                                            2511

        1                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

        2        Senator yields.

        3                      SENATOR LACHMAN:  Obviously a bill

        4        such as this has to be very carefully crafted in

        5        terms of its constitutionality and you have

        6        obviously studied the constitutionality of this

        7        bill.  You do feel, Senator, that this bill is

        8        constitutional?

        9                      SENATOR COOK:  We feel that it is

       10        constitutional.  The issue was discussed briefly

       11        yesterday as to why rather than doing it in this

       12        manner we don't have a payment in lieu of taxes

       13        on the property itself, and the issue was that

       14        you cannot force a payment in lieu of taxes

       15        because the property itself is constitutionally

       16        protected.

       17                      However, we don't feel that there

       18        is a constitutional prohibition against
requiring

       19        that the individual in this case contributes

       20        toward the cost.

       21                      SENATOR LACHMAN:  Before I discuss

       22        the bill, I would differ with you on the

       23        constitutionality issue.  I think that the bill

       24        is unconstitutional and sets into motion a

       25        precedent that would be deleterious, not only to







                                                            2512

        1        the state but to your district, Senator Cook.

        2                      Now, on the bill, Mr. President.

        3                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

        4        Lachman on the bill.

        5                      SENATOR LACHMAN:  I understand,

        6        Senator Cook, your frustrations and your great

        7        concern for the people who live in South

        8        Fallsburg in Sullivan County because this bill,

        9        as I believe I intimated last year, is even more

       10        complex than perhaps most of the Senators in
this

       11        chamber realize.

       12                      It not only touches upon basic

       13        constitutional rights and the history of the

       14        public school system, but it impacts on
religious

       15        groups.

       16                      Now, there is a particular

       17        religious group from which these 30 children are

       18        part of, I believe, and this group has been

       19        written about in various publications, including

       20        the New Yorker, Time magazine and, I believe,
The

       21        Village Voice.

       22                      We are discussing a group known as

       23        Syda, S-y-d-a, or Syda Yoga Dam, which is a

       24        multi-million dollar complex in South Fallsburg

       25        in Senator Cook's district, and there are
ashrams







                                                            2513

        1        now in many locations in his district, three

        2        major -- or former hotels, I believe Brickman's,

        3        Gilbert's and the Windsor, and there could be as

        4        many as 3,000 people at a particular ashram.

        5                      Now, very briefly, Mr. President,

        6        the founder of Syda Yoga Dam or home of Syda

        7        Yoga, as it's known, was a man named by Swami

        8        Muktando, who died in October of 1992.  He came

        9        to America in 1970 and founded this group.

       10        According to his will, he was supposed to be

       11        succeeded by a sister and a brother whose names

       12        are Gurumayi and Nityananda.

       13                      Now, there was a violent split

       14        between these siblings and the sister came out
on

       15        top and the brother took a faction of the group

       16        out of the group -- the larger group now

       17        controlled by the sister.  Both sides have

       18        accused the other side of using brainwashing,

       19        sexual and physical abuse of women and children

       20        and the focusing of veneration upon an
individual

       21        rather than a deity.

       22                      Parts of both sides as well as

       23        outsiders, according to the New Yorker article,

       24        have even called this group a destructive cult

       25        and not a religion, and that becomes a major







                                                            2514

        1        issue, Senator, because if it is accurate, this

        2        group might not have the tax exemption which you

        3        believe hurts your county.

        4                      Now, whether these allegations are

        5        accurate or not, there is a basic issue which

        6        rides above it and which we now must discuss.

        7        The issue is basically a tax problem and not an

        8        education problem.  The issue is the growing
real

        9        property tax that is exempt.  The issue is not

       10        about children and children, therefore, should

       11        not be punished for what is basically a tax

       12        problem which could or should be changed.

       13                      All children in the United States

       14        have a right to a free public education

       15        regardless of tax issues.  I'm informed that

       16        approximately 76 percent of the real property in

       17        Albany is tax exempt.  Should we deny a free

       18        public education to those children?

       19                      This is a huge problem but not

       20        only for you district, Senator Cook, for all

       21        districts in the state of New York.  We do have
a

       22        problem but it is not a problem of closing a

       23        public school door to a child; it is a problem

       24        based upon real property tax because of the

       25        growth in property tax exemption.







                                                            2515

        1                      This is part of the reason why I

        2        think, quite clearly, that this bill is

        3        unconstitutional.  It is very well-intentioned

        4        and it attempts to address a particular problem

        5        and it's author is a very distinguished
gentleman

        6        of this chamber but, again, I would like to urge

        7        every member of this chamber, including the

        8        author of this bill, not to punish children
whose

        9        parents are part of a cult group and who are in

       10        the greatest of need of the open dialogue, the

       11        free discussion, the diversity of this state's

       12        outstanding public schools.

       13                      Ladies and gentlemen, these

       14        children are in desperate need of a free public

       15        education which can open their minds that might

       16        have been closed by others.  Please, let us not

       17        deny these children the open dialogue and the

       18        free discussion of the great public school

       19        systems of the state of New York.

       20                      Thank you.

       21                      SENATOR OPPENHEIMER:  Mr.

       22        President.

       23                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       24        Oppenheimer.

       25                      SENATOR OPPENHEIMER:  If Senator







                                                            2516

        1        Cook would just yield for some -

        2                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

        3        Senator will yield.

        4                      SENATOR OPPENHEIMER: -- smaller

        5        questions.  I'm just trying to understand how

        6        this would be interpreted, this bill.

        7                      Specifically, what would happen

        8        with children in group homes?  Would they be

        9        required to pay tuition because the group homes

       10        are tax exempt?

       11                      SENATOR COOK:  Mr. President, if

       12        there were a group home -- if the school
district

       13        were to decide that they were going to charge

       14        tuition, in fact, the agency or -- the public

       15        agency that is the -- in locus parentis of

       16        that child, would become responsible for the

       17        tuition.

       18                      SENATOR OPPENHEIMER:  It would be

       19        an enormous burden to agencies who are already

       20        very overburdened.

       21                      SENATOR COOK:  Well, yeah.  I

       22        would indicate, Senator, that some cases are

       23        where those agencies are the state of New York

       24        and the local school districts are picking up

       25        some very, very hefty cost for kids that are in







                                                            2517

        1        great need of very expensive education and
nobody

        2        pays to support that -- those educational costs

        3        of those kids either.  So that's another

        4        problem.

        5                      SENATOR OPPENHEIMER:  That is an

        6        enormously complex problem.

        7                      One other question.

        8                      SENATOR COOK:  Yes.

        9                      SENATOR OPPENHEIMER:  If the

       10        property, let's say a religious institute, rents

       11        out the property and then there is a renter who

       12        moves into that building, would the renter then

       13        be responsible for the tuition of a child?

       14                      SENATOR COOK:  Mr. President, if a

       15        property is rented, then it becomes a commercial

       16        property and it loses it's tax exemption.  So,

       17        therefore, it wouldn't be liable, no.

       18                      SENATOR OPPENHEIMER:  That,

       19        unfortunately, is not true.  We know of many

       20        religious institutions where there is money
being

       21        earned in the buildings and they are still tax

       22        exempt but, you're right, technically yes, it is

       23        a rental property.

       24                      Thank you.

       25                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator







                                                            2518

        1        Paterson.

        2                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Thank you, Mr.

        3        President.

        4                      If Senator Cook would yield for a

        5        question.

        6                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

        7        Senator yields.

        8                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Senator, I

        9        think you've -- are aware of the feelings of the

       10        two previous Senators about the need for public

       11        education of students and particularly where we

       12        may have these types of situations where we are

       13        somewhat worried about the individual's ability

       14        to hear more than just what might be an

       15        environment filled with perhaps what we might

       16        consider to be some narrowed points of view.  It

       17        would seem it would even be a greater necessity

       18        to have the operation of a public school

       19        education, but I do understand the concern that

       20        you relayed earlier about not only what was
going

       21        on in your district but what could be a
statewide

       22        problem, but what I would suggest to you is that

       23        even if this was just something going on just in

       24        your district, perhaps we're looking at this

       25        problem the wrong way.  Perhaps what we're doing







                                                            2519

        1        is visiting the problems that we had with the

        2        parents on the children who desperately need a

        3        public education.

        4                      So my suggestion, which I would

        5        just like to hear some feedback from you, what
if

        6        we were to send up what would be termed tax

        7        incremental financing districts where these

        8        particular districts, once proceeds were

        9        diminished below what would be a numerical
amount

       10        that we would set up, that these districts would

       11        qualify for the state coming in much as we have

       12        done in the STAR program and paying to make sure

       13        that the local property taxes, or at least the

       14        local governments, get their money from the

       15        property taxes.

       16                      Then, if that were the case,

       17        districts such as yours where there might be

       18        large portions of land that are tax exempt,
would

       19        be compensated for the amount of money that we

       20        would spend and yet at the same time the young

       21        children would still receive a public education,

       22        which I think we would all want.

       23                      This is something that we have

       24        done in other areas.  We have done in situations

       25        where we thought this was a special need and we







                                                            2520

        1        could do it in a particular area because of the

        2        overabundance of tax exempt property in that

        3        particular area, as may exist in your district

        4        and some areas around the state.

        5                      SENATOR COOK:  Mr. President.

        6                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

        7        Cook.

        8                      SENATOR COOK:  We do have

        9        examples, in fact -- in particular, where the

       10        federal government has a great deal of exempt

       11        property within a school district.  They pay an

       12        impact aid -- I'm not sure -- an impact amount.

       13        I'm not sure what that is, how it's defined.  So

       14        the local school district has to pay for those

       15        students who live on that property, which is

       16        indeed a tax problem, though what you describe
is

       17        that you have religious properties now.  They're

       18        owned by a variety of people.  In that
particular

       19        county, there are numerous of these old hotels

       20        that are owned by non-profit organizations,

       21        really religious organizations.

       22                      I will say, to their credit, that

       23        most of these organizations have their own

       24        schools.  They run their own -- well, in most

       25        cases their own yeshivas to which their own







                                                            2521

        1        students -- which their own students attend and

        2        they don't send these students to the public

        3        schools, so there's no cost imposed upon the

        4        district.

        5                      The situation that you describe,

        6        however, would be that if you had a certain

        7        percentage of these religious properties that

        8        were tax exempt, the state of New York would

        9        somehow then have to come in and pay the impact

       10        aid.

       11                      I think if the property were state

       12        of New York property and we were sending
students

       13        to the public school, that would be one thing. 
I

       14        think it becomes more difficult if the tax
exempt

       15        properties are owned by religious groups and the

       16        state ends up paying the impact.  That becomes -

       17        that becomes a difficult problem, I think

       18        structurally to do.

       19                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Thank you very

       20        much, Senator Cook.

       21                      Mr. President, on the bill.

       22                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       23        Paterson on the bill.

       24                      SENATOR PATERSON:  I suggested

       25        that as a remedy to the situation for Senator







                                                            2522

        1        Cook because I preferred that even though the

        2        state would be coming in, and in many respects

        3        making the local area whole with no real

        4        obligation or necessity, but I just prefer that

        5        to the value of charging tuition to cause a

        6        hardship perhaps on families or if you have park

        7        rangers living on tax exempt property or you
find

        8        the local minister living on tax exempt property

        9        and there's an agreement that the ministers
would

       10        come to these churches and quite often they are

       11        of meager means and they would actually qualify

       12        to actually have to pay tuition here.

       13                      Senator Oppenheimer cited the

       14        possibility of the group homes.  There are a

       15        number of different ways in which tax exempt

       16        properties is used by those who really couldn't

       17        afford to pay a tuition for public school, and
it

       18        would really defeat the whole purpose of the

       19        public school credo in the first place.

       20                      So I thought that perhaps a state

       21        involvement in perhaps wresting some of that
cost

       22        away from the local government of the local

       23        county would be an answer.  Otherwise, I'm
really

       24        just, by my own belief, restricted from voting

       25        for this bill because to me this would undermine







                                                            2523

        1        the whole concept of public education and in

        2        spite of the fact that there are some owner tax

        3        exempt property who may even be taking advantage

        4        of it, the fact remains that for all citizens
and

        5        when we look at the state in the entirety, we

        6        would hope that there would be public school

        7        education for any student that needed it.

        8                      SENATOR OPPENHEIMER:  Mr.

        9        President.

       10                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       11        Oppenheimer.

       12                      SENATOR OPPENHEIMER:  I have one

       13        last question, if the sponsor will yield.

       14                      It would seem to me that a

       15        minister, a member of the clergy, living in the

       16        parsonage next to the church, if that minister

       17        had children, he would also have to pay, or she

       18        would have to pay, for the children to go to the

       19        public school.

       20                      SENATOR COOK:  Mr. President.

       21                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       22        Cook.

       23                      SENATOR COOK:  You're correct,

       24        Senator, that if that school district were to

       25        charge tuition, they would, in fact, have to







                                                            2524

        1        charge it to everyone.  They could not simply

        2        charge it to one organization or another.

        3                      I must say, as a Protestant who is

        4        in the situation you talk about, I'm not opposed

        5        to having my pastors being required to pay

        6        tuition to send their kids to public schools.

        7        I'm not sure why they shouldn't participate in

        8        the cost of supporting the school system just

        9        like everybody else does, but that's -- that

       10        would be a local option.

       11                      SENATOR OPPENHEIMER:  On the

       12        bill.  I think that considering what we pay -

       13        I'm on the bill now.  Considering what we pay
our

       14        ministers to do the difficult work that they do

       15        do, I feel that they should not be paying to

       16        educate their children in the public system.

       17                      I'll be voting against this bill.

       18                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the

       19        last section.

       20                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 2.  This

       21        act shall take effect on the first day of

       22        September.

       23                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Call the

       24        roll.

       25                      (The Secretary called the roll.)







                                                            2525

        1                      THE SECRETARY:  Those recorded in

        2        the negative on Calendar Number 387 are Senators

        3        Breslin, Connor, Gentile, Kruger, Lachman,

        4        Markowitz, Montgomery, Onorato, Oppenheimer,

        5        Padavan, Paterson, Rosado, Sampson, Santiago,

        6        Seabrook, Smith, Stavisky and Waldon.  Also,

        7        Senator Leichter.  Also, Senator Gonzalez. 
Also,

        8        Senator Mendez.  Ayes 40, nays 21.

        9                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The bill

       10        is passed.

       11                      Senator Skelos.

       12                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President,

       13        there will be an immediate meeting of the

       14        Committee on Finance in the Majority Conference

       15        Room.

       16                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  There

       17        will be an immediate meeting of the Committee on

       18        Finance in the Majority Conference Room.

       19                      Senator Skelos.

       20                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President, if

       21        we could return to reports of standing

       22        committees, I believe there's a report of the

       23        Social Service Committee at the desk.  I ask
that

       24        it be read.

       25                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Reports







                                                            2526

        1        of standing committees.

        2                      The Secretary will read.

        3                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Holland,

        4        from the Committee on Social Services, reports:

        5                      Senate Print 5741, by the

        6        Committee on Rules, an act to amend the Social

        7        Services Law, directly for third reading.

        8                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Without

        9        objection, third reading.

       10                      SENATOR SKELOS:  If we could take

       11        up Calendar Number 466 by Senator Nozzolio.

       12                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

       13        Secretary will read Calendar 466.

       14                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

       15        466, by Senator Nozzolio, Senate Print 4917, an

       16        act to amend the Civil Practice Law and Rules
and

       17        the Court of Claims Act.

       18                      SENATOR OPPENHEIMER:  Explanation.

       19                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       20        Nozzolio, an explanation has been requested of

       21        Calendar 466.

       22                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Thank you, Mr.

       23        President.

       24                      Who asked for the explanation?

       25                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator







                                                            2527

        1        Oppenheimer requested the explanation, Senator.

        2                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Thank you, Mr.

        3        President.

        4                      Mr. President, my colleagues, this

        5        bill amends the Civil Practice Law and Rules and

        6        the Court of Claims Act in relation to prisoner

        7        litigation reform.  What we are establishing is
a

        8        -- permitting a partial filing fee for inmates

        9        within the Court of Claims and New York State

       10        Supreme Court, that this filing fee would be a

       11        refundable $50 filing fee for the Court of
Claims

       12        and it would not apply to any claimant filing a

       13        claim for the appropriation of real or personal

       14        property or any interest thereon.

       15                      The refundable filing fee is also

       16        subject to a waiver that the court could

       17        determine that certain inmates the Supreme Court

       18        approves their application would have a reduced

       19        filing fee.  If the inmate wins the litigation
in

       20        the Court of Claims, the filing fee is

       21        refundable.

       22                      SENATOR WALDON:  Mr. President.

       23                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       24        Waldon.

       25                      SENATOR WALDON:  Would the







                                                            2528

        1        gentleman yield to a question?

        2                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Does the

        3        Senator yield to a question from Senator Waldon?

        4                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Yes, Mr.

        5        President.

        6                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

        7        Senator yields, Senator Waldon.

        8                      SENATOR WALDON:  Thank you, Mr.

        9        President.

       10                      Senator Nozzolio, is the reason

       11        you're making this proposal that there has been
a

       12        tremendous increase in lawsuits by prisoners?

       13                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Mr. President,

       14        in response to Senator Waldon's question, let me

       15        state that in the last 20 years, the number of

       16        inmate lawsuits has risen from 63 to almost

       17        7,000, that primarily, however, we're finding

       18        that a small number of inmates is filing an

       19        inordinate amount of lawsuits.  The top ten

       20        filers in this state, those top -- those

       21        prisoners that are filing the most litigation,

       22        that virtually 12 percent of the entire -- 12 to

       23        15 percent of all inmate litigation is filed by

       24        10 litigants.

       25                      So what we look to seek is simply







                                                            2529

        1        a reduction in the sport of inmate litigation,

        2        those inmates using the courts more as a sport

        3        than as a true redress of grievance.

        4                      We're also asking, Senator, in

        5        this measure to have inmates just as every other

        6        citizen to exhaust any administrative remedies

        7        that they may have available first prior to
going

        8        to the litigation route.

        9                      SENATOR WALDON:  Would the

       10        gentleman yield to another question?

       11                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Would the

       12        gentleman yield for another question from
Senator

       13        Waldon?

       14                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Yes, Mr.

       15        President.

       16                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

       17        sponsor yields, Senator Waldon.

       18                      SENATOR WALDON:  Senator, in that

       19        period of time when the suits by number have

       20        actually increased sufficiently to give us the

       21        number that you just shared with us, what has
the

       22        increase in the prison population been?

       23                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Senator, today

       24        there are about 70,000 inmates in our prison

       25        system.  I really couldn't tell you what the







                                                            2530

        1        number was in 1978.  So I'm sure, though, that

        2        the inmate population has increased
significantly

        3        in that 20-year period.

        4                      SENATOR WALDON:  Would the

        5        gentleman yield again?

        6                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Do you

        7        continue to yield for another question?

        8                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Yes, Mr.

        9        President.

       10                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

       11        sponsor yields, Senator Waldon.

       12                      SENATOR WALDON:  Before I ask a

       13        question this time, Senator, my information

       14        indicates that there were approximately 21,000
in

       15        our prison system 15 years ago, but the question

       16        is, in your capacity as the chairman of our

       17        distinguished Corrections Committee and in your

       18        many years of having this to be the area where

       19        you have generated and involved your energies
and

       20        involved yourself and developed what might be

       21        characterized as an expertise, have you not

       22        noticed that oftentimes the prisoner's

       23        litigation, these suits brought by prisoners are

       24        actually correcting some of the ills existing in

       25        our criminal justice as well as our correctional







                                                            2531

        1        system?

        2                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Yes, Mr.

        3        President, certainly that there are instances

        4        throughout our state's history where particular

        5        grievances brought by inmates have proved to be

        6        extremely valid and that those required redress.

        7        The Senator's point is well taken.  There are

        8        those items of litigation but, Senator, what

        9        we're trying to do is to place some reasonable

       10        ness to this standard that we now have such a

       11        large number of losses, particularly again by
ten

       12        of the filers in the situation.  We're saying

       13        let's at the very least place a modicum of cost

       14        to the filing of this litigation, that it's only

       15        fair and right that your constituents, if they,

       16        in addressing the courts, Senator, wish to

       17        address the civil courts, that they would have

       18        to, as you well know, pay a filing fee.

       19                      One last point, if I may.  The

       20        federal government in the federal courts
requires

       21        inmates to present a modest filing fee and this

       22        legislation that we have before us was modeled

       23        after the request and requirement of the federal

       24        government to have such a fee.

       25                      SENATOR WALDON:  Mr. President, on







                                                            2532

        1        the bill.

        2                      Thank you very much, Senator

        3        Nozzolio.

        4                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

        5        Waldon on the bill.

        6                      SENATOR WALDON:  Thank you, Mr.

        7        President.  Thank you, Senator Nozzolio.

        8                      I think that we should not

        9        unnecessarily demonize those who are imprisoned.

       10        Even if we accepted the premise that all who are

       11        there belong to be there -- which I don't
accept,

       12        but for discussion sake I present to you -- they

       13        still have a right under our jurisprudence
system

       14        to be able to sue when they feel that they are

       15        being abused, maligned, ill-treated.

       16                      This is a nation which has

       17        emblazoned upon the doors of the Supreme Court

       18        equal justice under law, but if we're going to
be

       19        unduly punitive towards those who happen to be

       20        prisoners, we certainly can't have a level

       21        playing field.  We certainly can't have equality

       22        under the law.

       23                      The fact of the matter is that

       24        prison litigation per capita is dramatically

       25        down.  The increase in the number of prisoners







                                                            2533

        1        maybe has caused a greater number of suits to be

        2        filed than 15, 16, 20 years ago but on a per

        3        capita basis, the litigation is down and by a

        4        great, great number.

        5                      Furthermore and lastly, if some

        6        corrections result from these suits which make

        7        the system better, which improve the quality of

        8        life of the correction officers, the prisoners,

        9        the wardens, which allow for justice to be
better

       10        served, then I see no need to unnecessarily

       11        punish those who are not making even the minimum

       12        wage in what they do in terms of their work

       13        situations in prisons.

       14                      So I think this is overbearing.  I

       15        think it's unnecessary.  I think we do ourselves

       16        a disservice to implement legislation of this

       17        nature despite its inspiration, meaning the

       18        federal level, and so I encourage my colleagues

       19        to do the right thing and to vote against this

       20        proposal.

       21                      Thank you very much, Mr.

       22        President.

       23                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the

       24        last section.

       25                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 4.  This







                                                            2534

        1        act shall take effect on the first day of

        2        January.

        3                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Call the

        4        roll.

        5                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

        6                      THE SECRETARY:  Those recorded in

        7        the negative on Calendar Number 466 are Senators

        8        Connor, Paterson, Sampson, Stavisky and Waldon.

        9        Also, Senator Smith.  Ayes 55, nays 6.

       10                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The bill

       11        is passed.

       12                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

       13        507, by Senator Skelos, Senate Print 3410-A, an

       14        act to amend the Correction Law and the County

       15        Law, in relation to maintenance of prisoners.

       16                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Explanation.

       17                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       18        Skelos, an explanation has been requested.

       19                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President, I

       20        know on the last bill that some of the members
on

       21        the other side of the aisle are in the Finance

       22        Committee meeting and they'll probably want to

       23        record negatives.  So we'll accomplish that when

       24        they come back.

       25                      This legislation which has passed







                                                            2535

        1        on various occasions amends the Correction Law

        2        and the County Law to provide that a prisoner
who

        3        has been found to be non-indigent may be -- and

        4        that's at the county option -- may be required
to

        5        reimburse a county jail or city jail expenses

        6        incurred during his or her term of imprisonment.

        7        The factors that would have to be considered

        8        would be the financial resources of the

        9        individual, health, age and other relevant

       10        factors.

       11                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       12        Paterson.

       13                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Thank you, Mr.

       14        President.

       15                      If Senator Skelos would yield for

       16        just a question.

       17                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Yes.

       18                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

       19        Senator yields to a question.

       20                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Senator, did

       21        you have any idea how much the -- do you have
any

       22        idea how much it would cost to locate and pursue

       23        those who would be non-indigent in order to

       24        accomplish what this bill designates?

       25                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President, if







                                                            2536

        1        I could answer that.  I'm using Nassau County as

        2        an example where, of course, $153 a day per

        3        inmate.  I think the county or the city of New

        4        York -- again, it's at their local option.  So
if

        5        they feel it would be counterproductive to start

        6        this type of program, they do not have to, but I

        7        think the county or the city would use their
good

        8        judgment in going after people, for example,
like

        9        in my county several years ago, Joey Buttofucco.

       10        We were giving him medical care, capping his

       11        teeth, doing everything that good hard-working

       12        people have to pay for and yet the county was

       13        paying for this type of treatment.  This is the

       14        type of individual that I think it's fair for
the

       15        county or the city, if they opt into it, to go

       16        after and seek reimbursement.

       17                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       18        Paterson.

       19                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Thank you, Mr.

       20        President.

       21                      If Senator Skelos would continue

       22        to yield.

       23                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Yes, Mr.

       24        President.

       25                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The







                                                            2537

        1        Senator continues to yield.

        2                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Senator,

        3        divorcing from the issue of just who would be

        4        indigent and who would not be, my question
really

        5        is what the -- we know what the cost is that the

        6        county accrues for keeping these prisoners in

        7        prison.  My question is what would be the cost
of

        8        locating or designating which individuals are

        9        indigent and which are not?  In other words,
what

       10        would be the procedure?

       11                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Just to answer

       12        that, I think the county or the city, which
would

       13        be the petitioner to seek reimbursement, it's

       14        really a judgment call on their part as to

       15        whether they feel it would be worthwhile to go

       16        after an individual and seek reimbursement.

       17                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Okay.  Thank

       18        you, Senator.

       19                      Mr. President, on the bill.

       20                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       21        Paterson on the bill.

       22                      SENATOR PATERSON:  We're just not

       23        convinced at this point that the amount of money

       24        it would cost to research and investigate who is

       25        actually eligible, we trust that the county
would







                                                            2538

        1        make a good judgment as to obviously there would

        2        be some defendants that would be -- it would be

        3        clear that they are indigent and we think that

        4        the judgment on the part of the county would be

        5        fine, but what we're also saying is that just
the

        6        cost of proving who would actually be eligible

        7        would be an issue of cost and -- although
Senator

        8        Skelos is right, there are many of those

        9        defendants.  He cited one who obviously could

       10        have paid for his residence since he paid for it

       11        in other places from time to time.  It's clear

       12        that there would have been no problem getting
him

       13        to pay but what we're really trying to do is to

       14        figure out whether what we could get back would

       15        be equal to what would be paid out, and that's

       16        something that perhaps with a little further

       17        research we would be convinced, but at this
point

       18        it would seem that I don't know that even the

       19        value of savings to the county would necessarily

       20        be realized by passing this bill.

       21                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the

       22        last section.

       23                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 7.  This

       24        act shall take effect immediately.

       25                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Call the







                                                            2539

        1        roll.

        2                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

        3                      THE SECRETARY:  Those recorded in

        4        the negative on Calendar Number 507 are Senators

        5        Connor, Kruger, Markowitz, Paterson, Sampson,

        6        Seabrook, Smith, Stavisky and Waldon.  Ayes 52,

        7        nays 9.

        8                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The bill

        9        is passed.

       10                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

       11        508, by Senator Skelos, Senate Print 5259, an
act

       12        to amend the Correction Law, in relation to

       13        requiring inmates to make medical co-payments.

       14                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       15        Skelos, an explanation has been requested by

       16        Senator Waldon.

       17                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Yes, Mr.

       18        President.  This state Commission on Corrections

       19        departmental bill would authorize an inmate

       20        medical co-payment for certain medical and
dental

       21        services provided by local correctional

       22        facilities.  The co-pay would be $2 per inmate,

       23        inmate-initiated medical or dental service.  An

       24        inmate shall not be denied care because of lack

       25        of funds and there shall be no charge for
routine







                                                            2540

        1        services provided at the time of admission to
the

        2        facility, emergency services, continuing care

        3        visits necessary for follow-up treatments,

        4        infirmary care, chronic care or mental health

        5        services.

        6                      SENATOR WALDON:  Mr. President.

        7                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

        8        Waldon.

        9                      SENATOR WALDON:  Thanks to Senator

       10        Skelos for his -

       11                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       12        Waldon, so the stenographer can hear you, could

       13        you stand -

       14                      SENATOR WALDON:  Oh, I'm so

       15        sorry.

       16                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  -- so our

       17        new microphones -

       18                      SENATOR WALDON:  One becomes

       19        convinced that one's voice travels everywhere. 
I

       20        recognize that I'm human too.

       21                      Thank you very much, Senator

       22        Skelos, for your explanation.  If I may, Mr.

       23        President, on the bill.

       24                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       25        Waldon on the bill.







                                                            2541

        1                      SENATOR WALDON:  I think the same

        2        concerns raised by our esteemed leader, David

        3        Paterson, are appropriate and applicable here.

        4        For a $2 per person co-pay just to plug the

        5        computer in is probably going to cost us about

        6        $3.  I don't see the need to do that.  I think

        7        it's being penny-wise and pound-foolish.  I
think

        8        that what happens here is that we overwork the

        9        system where that energy could be better
utilized

       10        elsewhere.

       11                      So I think it's a redundancy to do

       12        this kind of thing.  If they had the true
ability

       13        to pay and if we could extract 25, $30 per and
it

       14        were appropriate and there were no reservations

       15        within the community of prisoners or those who

       16        support prisoners, politically it might fly, but

       17        as it stands now, I don't see any reason for us

       18        to do it.  I think it's going to prove to be

       19        wasteful in terms of the energy of the

       20        Corrections Department and all of those who are

       21        working here so well and it just doesn't make
any

       22        sense.  So I encourage my colleagues to vote no

       23        on this issue.

       24                      Thank you, Mr. President.

       25                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the







                                                            2542

        1        last section.

        2                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 2.  This

        3        act shall take effect immediately.

        4                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Call the

        5        roll.

        6                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

        7                      THE SECRETARY:  Those recorded in

        8        the negative on Calendar Number 508 are Senators

        9        Montgomery, Paterson, Stavisky and Waldon.  Ayes

       10        57, nays 4.

       11                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The bill

       12        is passed.

       13                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

       14        562, by Senator LaValle, Senate Print 2467-A, an

       15        act in relation to the Long Island Suburban

       16        Highway Improvement Program.

       17                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the

       18        last section.

       19                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 3.  This

       20        act shall take effect immediately.

       21                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       22        Paterson.

       23                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Mr. President.

       24                      SENATOR SKELOS:  If we could just

       25        lay that bill aside temporarily.  I believe







                                                            2543

        1        Senator LaValle is in the Finance Committee and
I

        2        believe Senator Oppenheimer has some questions.

        3        So we'll just lay that bill aside temporarily.

        4                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Withdraw

        5        the roll call.  Lay the bill aside.

        6                      SENATOR SKELOS:  If we could just

        7        stand at ease.

        8                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

        9        Senate will stand at ease.

       10                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Do we have a

       11        privileged resolution?  If we could have the

       12        title read.

       13                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

       14        Secretary will read the title.

       15                      THE SECRETARY:  By Senator

       16        Leibell, Legislative Resolution honoring the

       17        Reverend and Mrs. Mervyn L. David for 22 years
of

       18        dedicated service to the congregation at Mt.

       19        Lebanon Baptist Church, Peekskill, New York.

       20                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  All those

       21        in favor of the resolution signify by saying
aye.

       22                      (Response of "Aye".)

       23                      Opposed, nay.

       24                      (There was no response.)

       25                      The resolution is carried.







                                                            2544

        1                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President,

        2        would you please recognize Senator Montgomery.

        3                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

        4        Montgomery.

        5                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Thank you,

        6        Mr. President.

        7                      I would like unanimous consent to

        8        be recorded in the negative on Calendars 507 and

        9        466.

       10                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Without

       11        objection, Senator Montgomery will be recorded
in

       12        the negative on Calendars Number 507 and 466.

       13                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Thank you.

       14                      SENATOR SKELOS:  If we could stand

       15        at ease.

       16                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

       17        Senate will stand at ease.

       18                      (Whereupon, the Senate stood at

       19        ease 5:07 p.m. until 5:43 p.m.)

       20                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       21        Skelos.

       22                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President,

       23        there will be an immediate conference of the

       24        Majority in the Majority Conference Room.

       25                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Immediate







                                                            2545

        1        conference of the Majority in the Majority

        2        Conference Room.

        3                      Senator Paterson.

        4                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Mr. President,

        5        there will be an immediate meeting of the

        6        Minority and since the Majority Conference Room

        7        is being used, we'll use the Minority Conference

        8        Room.

        9                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Immediate

       10        meeting of the Minority Conference in the

       11        Minority Conference Room.

       12                      SENATOR SKELOS:  We'll be

       13        returning with the Minority, as discussed at

       14        6:00 p.m., at which time we'll take up, I
believe

       15        the Finance Committee report and we'll stand at

       16        ease until 6:00 p.m.

       17                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

       18        Senate will stand at ease until 6:00 p.m.

       19                      (Whereupon, the Senate stood at

       20        ease from 5:45 p.m. until 6:50 p.m.)

       21                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       22        Skelos.

       23                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President, if

       24        we could return to report of standing
committees,

       25        I believe there's a report of the Finance







                                                            2546

        1        Committee at the desk.  I ask that it be read.

        2                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

        3        report of standing committees.

        4                      The Secretary will read.

        5                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Stafford,

        6        from the Committee on Finance, reports the

        7        following bill restored to third reading:

        8                      Budget Bill, Senate Bill Number

        9        6102-D, an act making appropriations for the

       10        support of government.

       11                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       12        Gold, why do you rise?

       13                      SENATOR GOLD:  After this, I would

       14        like to be recognized.

       15                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  So

       16        ordered.

       17                      Senator Gold.

       18                      SENATOR GOLD:  Mr. President, I'm

       19        sorry, but I was at the Finance Committee
meeting

       20        when we voted on Calendar Number 466, Senate
Bill

       21        4917, and I would ask unanimous consent to be

       22        recorded in the negative.

       23                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Without

       24        objection, Senator Gold will be recorded in the

       25        negative on Calendar 466.







                                                            2547

        1                      Senator Skelos.

        2                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President, if

        3        we could take up Senate 6102-D.

        4                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

        5        Secretary will read.

        6                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

        7        435, Budget Bill, Senate Print 6102-D, an act

        8        making appropriations for the support of

        9        government.

       10                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Is there a

       11        message of necessity at the desk?

       12                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Yes,

       13        there is.

       14                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Move to accept.

       15                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

       16        motion is to accept the message of necessity.

       17        All those in favor signify by saying aye.

       18                      (Response of "Aye".)

       19                      Opposed, nay.

       20                      (There was no response.)

       21                      The message is accepted.

       22                      Read the last section.

       23                      SENATOR GOLD:  Mr. President.

       24                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       25        Gold.







                                                            2548

        1                      SENATOR GOLD:  Mr. President, I

        2        would like to thank Senator Stafford at the

        3        committee meeting, he was very gracious and

        4        allowed for a lot of questions to be answered.

        5        His distinguished counsel who was answering the

        6        questions, I don't see, but if she wants to
leave

        7        the Majority and work for me, I can only offer

        8        her -- I know it's below what she's getting now

        9        but maybe 3- or 400,000 a week because that's

       10        what she's worth, but I don't see her, but I
want

       11        to thank him.  He answered most of my questions

       12        at the meeting and, therefore, I can at this

       13        point feel comfortable in voting on the bill.

       14                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the

       15        last section.

       16                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 2.  This

       17        act shall take effect immediately.

       18                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Call the

       19        roll.

       20                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

       21                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 61.

       22                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The bill

       23        is passed.

       24                      SENATOR LEICHTER:  Mr. President.

       25                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator







                                                            2549

        1        Leichter.

        2                      SENATOR LEICHTER:  May I have

        3        unanimous consent to be recorded in the negative

        4        on Calendar 466, 507 and 508, please.

        5                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  I want to

        6        make sure I've got that correctly, Senator.  You

        7        said 466, 507, 508.

        8                      SENATOR LEICHTER:  Right.  Those

        9        passed while we were in Finance.

       10                      Thank you.

       11                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Without

       12        objection, Senator Leichter will be recorded in

       13        the negative on Calendar Numbers 508, 507 and

       14        466.

       15                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President.

       16                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       17        Skelos.

       18                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Would you please

       19        call up Calendar Number 562 by Senator LaValle.

       20                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

       21        Secretary will read Calendar 562.

       22                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

       23        562, by Senator LaValle, Senate Print 2467-A, an

       24        act in relation to the Long Island Suburban

       25        Highway Improvement Program.







                                                            2550

        1                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the

        2        last section.

        3                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 3.  This

        4        act shall take effect immediately.

        5                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Call the

        6        roll.

        7                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

        8                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 61.

        9                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The bill

       10        is passed.

       11                      Senator Skelos.

       12                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President,

       13        would you call up Senate 5741, which was
reported

       14        earlier today from the Social Service Committee.

       15                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

       16        Secretary will read Senate 5741.

       17                      THE SECRETARY:  Calendar Number

       18        609, Senate Print 5741, by the Committee on

       19        Rules, an act to amend the Social Services Law.

       20                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the

       21        last section.

       22                      SENATOR LEICHTER:  Explanation.

       23                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       24        Maltese, an explanation has been requested by

       25        Senator Leichter.







                                                            2551

        1                      SENATOR MALTESE:  Mr. President,

        2        this is a bill that would amend the Social

        3        Services Law in relation to medical assistance

        4        exclusion.  This would prohibit the use of

        5        taxpayers' dollars for the purpose of performing

        6        abortions.

        7                      Expenditures of these monies

        8        should be directed toward the goal of producing

        9        healthy birth outcomes, as is indicated in the

       10        expenditure of funds in this year and in prior

       11        years for projects like the New York State's

       12        Maternity and Early Childhood Foundation, which

       13        provides for healthy babies.  It positively

       14        addresses the needs of mothers, many of them

       15        poor, single adolescents, and their families,

       16        services such as home visits, child care

       17        instruction, prenatal care, counseling.

       18        Emergency resources like food, diapers and

       19        formula are provided through these grants. 
These

       20        are viable alternatives to abortion.  These are

       21        real choices for women.

       22                      I wanted to spend a moment to

       23        commend the Majority Leader, to commend Governor

       24        Pataki who has indicated that he would sign this

       25        particular -- a portion of that funding bill for







                                                            2552

        1        early maternal -- maternity and early childhood.

        2        Speaker Silver and especially Assemblyman Denis

        3        Butler, who have placed in all -- counting the

        4        Assembly, the Senate and the Governor -- over

        5        $1 million in the budget last year and have

        6        already indicated that they will spend a similar

        7        or larger amount this year.

        8                      This particular bill that I am

        9        discussing now would, instead of spending that

       10        money in saving lives and protecting pregnant

       11        women, would use taxpayers' dollars for

       12        abortions.

       13                      This amends the Social Services

       14        section of Section 365-A and adds a new

       15        subdivision and would prohibit abortion and

       16        abortion-related services from the list of

       17        benefits.

       18                      As in the past all these many

       19        years, there would be exclusions for medical

       20        necessity to preserve the life of the mother or

       21        the pregnancy as a result of rape or incest and

       22        the incident is reported to a valid law

       23        enforcement agency for investigation.

       24                      This is the self-same debate that

       25        we have had so many years.  There's so many







                                                            2553

        1        things that have been said that do not need at

        2        this moment to be re-said, but I would like to

        3        simply comment on the fact that there are

        4        heartening signs on the situation of abortion

        5        vis-a-vis New York State.

        6                      In 1995, the last year we had

        7        figures available, the abortion -- total

        8        abortions performed in New York State went down

        9        to 134,405.  Of that number, approximately
50,000

       10        were Medicaid funded.  That brings up the amount

       11        that we would save, which would be in the area
of

       12        around 26- to $30 million.

       13                      The reason that I particularly

       14        point out the figure of 134,000, that is the

       15        lowest number of abortions performed in New York

       16        State in almost 20 years, and that is the

       17        explanation of the bill.

       18                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the

       19        last section.

       20                      SENATOR GOODMAN:  Mr. President.

       21                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  I'm

       22        sorry.  Senator Goodman.

       23                      SENATOR GOODMAN:  Mr. President,

       24        each year when this comes up, we have extended

       25        debates, so I'll try to keep my remarks as brief







                                                            2554

        1        as possible, but I cannot let this occasion pass

        2        without spreading on the record briefly my deep

        3        concern with the implications of this

        4        legislation.

        5                      First of all, let's note that

        6        although this house will undoubtedly pass it

        7        since the votes are here to do, it will not

        8        become law because the Assembly has consistently

        9        blocked it and I say thank goodness that it has.

       10                      In 1973, the U.S. Supreme Court in

       11        Rowe v. Wade guaranteed women the right to
choose

       12        abortion, period.  It did not make that right

       13        dependent upon age, marital status or ability to

       14        pay, but since 1976 with the passage of the Hyde

       15        Amendment, Congress has severely restricted

       16        federal funding for low income women's

       17        abortions.

       18                      Make no mistake about it, this

       19        bill targets one segment of our population and

       20        that is the women who are least able to afford
to

       21        pay for their abortions.  This attacks the poor

       22        woman's right to choose.  There is no question

       23        that a poor women does not have sufficient funds

       24        available to her with which to seek an abortion

       25        and the notion that she has free choice under







                                                            2555

        1        this existing arrangement if the bill were to

        2        pass is an absolutely fatuous concept.

        3                      Mr. President, let me just say to

        4        you that the implications of this economically

        5        for the state could be disastrous.  The unwanted

        6        births that could occur as a result of poor
women

        7        being unable to seek abortions and obtain them

        8        would result in spreading upon the public rolls

        9        thousands and thousands of babies who instead of

       10        being in a position to have been prevented due
to

       11        timely action prior to the quickening of the

       12        fetus, it would be placed in society in such

       13        fashion as to make it impossible for us to do

       14        anything other than to support them at a minimum

       15        rate of $4,000 a year.  This contrasted to the

       16        very modest investment in the early abortion

       17        which would not in any way imply the taking of a

       18        life, the fetus had not reached quickening.

       19                      Mr. President, the benefits of New

       20        York's decision to legalize abortion and funded

       21        under Medicaid were immediate.  In the first two

       22        years after legislation the annual rate of

       23        abortion rate-related deaths in the state fell

       24        over 50 percent.  As the procedure became both

       25        legally and financially accessible to women of







                                                            2556

        1        all socioeconomic backgrounds, deaths from

        2        abortion complications became almost unheard of.

        3        In states where public funds do not cover the

        4        costs of abortion, 23 percent of Medicaid

        5        eligible women are forced to carry unwanted

        6        pregnancies to term because they cannot afford

        7        the procedure and 22 percent of Medicaid
eligible

        8        women who have second trimester abortions are

        9        forced to undergo these later riskier procedures

       10        because of their need to raise the necessary

       11        money.  New York State legislators have long

       12        understood that it is not the function of

       13        government to control people's reproductive

       14        choices.

       15                      And let me stress in conclusion,

       16        those of us who take this view are not pro

       17        abortion but we are very strongly in favor of
the

       18        notion that a woman has the right to free choice

       19        with respect to this matter and that any attempt

       20        to prevent that free choice due to economic

       21        circumstances would be cruel and unusual

       22        punishment, economically counterproductive for

       23        the state and a long step backward in the role

       24        which New York has always played as the leader
in

       25        giving women the right to choose for themselves







                                                            2557

        1        in consultation with their husbands and their

        2        clergymen and their doctors.

        3                      For this reason, I urge the house

        4        to consider the possibility once and for all of

        5        putting this away by voting in the negative on

        6        this very ill-advised bill.

        7                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

        8        Farley.

        9                      SENATOR FARLEY:  Thank you, Mr.

       10        President.

       11                      I rise in support of this, as I

       12        always have, for the 22 years I have been here

       13        and this bill generally passes, almost always

       14        passes the Senate.

       15                      You know, abortion is a very

       16        personal and a private decision and
incidentally,

       17        what this does is put us in step with the rest
of

       18        the nation, the preponderance of states.  I
think

       19        there's only ten or twelve states that do not

       20        have this provision that they'll only pay for

       21        elective abortions where the life or health of

       22        the mother and rape and incest.

       23                      Let me just say this:  I think

       24        it's terribly important that there's a number of

       25        people that vote for this that consider







                                                            2558

        1        themselves pro-choice, including the Governor
who

        2        voted for this bill.  It's a reasonable bill.

        3        You know, and at least this house has an

        4        opportunity to vote on it.  They won't even let

        5        it on the floor in the other house and, of

        6        course, I think it's a tragedy that the other -

        7        which I don't even think is a pro-life or

        8        pro-choice situation, late-term, partial birth

        9        abortion bill, that doesn't even come up in the

       10        other house because I think it would pass in a

       11        heartbeat if it ever got on the floor, but let
me

       12        say this:  This is a reasonable piece of

       13        legislation.  It is legislation that brings us
in

       14        conformity with the rest of the nation and its

       15        time has come and generally speaking, what we're

       16        talking about, we cannot outlaw abortion

       17        regardless of how some people feel.  We can't do

       18        it.  The Supreme Court has spoken, but we can

       19        limit how much we use taxpayers' money for this

       20        and that's in essence what this legislation
does.

       21                      It also has a good facet to it

       22        that we're trying to do something for young

       23        mothers, and so forth, to allow them to -- and I

       24        commend Senator Maltese and Assemblyman Butler

       25        for what they're trying to do with that, but I







                                                            2559

        1        urge the passage of this legislation.

        2                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

        3        Oppenheimer.

        4                      SENATOR OPPENHEIMER:  Well, I

        5        don't agree with my colleague who just spoke

        6        earlier.  We -- Senator Farley -- because we are

        7        not the only state to have Medicaid funding for

        8        abortion.  There are 13 other states who spend

        9        money for poor people, poor women to have

       10        abortions, and I would not like to think that
the

       11        only people who can exercise their
constitutional

       12        guarantee to choice would be middle income or

       13        well to do women.  Surely we should offer it to

       14        all women who need these -- this service.

       15                      Since 1970, New York, in our

       16        state, we have had the right -- the right to

       17        choose has never hinged upon the ability of a

       18        woman to pay.  New York has never turned its
back

       19        on low income women who need access to free

       20        reproductive health services.  Instead we fairly

       21        and we impartially provided equal access to

       22        either maternity care or abortion through

       23        Medicaid.

       24                      All women, regardless of their

       25        race, age or income should have access to safe







                                                            2560

        1        legal abortion services.  Medicaid funding of

        2        abortion ensures that all these women,
regardless

        3        of how poor or rich they are, will be able to

        4        exercise their constitutional rights.

        5                      A constitutional right to abortion

        6        and reproductive freedom is of no practical
value

        7        if a person does not have the ability and the

        8        money to exercise that constitutional right.

        9        Removing Medicaid funding of abortion is

       10        tantamount to a constitutional amendment which

       11        would outlaw abortion for any woman who is poor.

       12                      By funding child birth for the

       13        Medicaid dependent woman and not the abortion

       14        alternative, the government is actually
providing

       15        biased and coercive reproductive health care and

       16        making it virtually impossible for millions of

       17        women to choose abortion.

       18                      Cutting Medicaid funding for

       19        abortions would force millions of women to bring

       20        unwanted pregnancies to term, would lead women
to

       21        risk their lives through self-induced abortions

       22        or seek unsafe back alley abortionists in

       23        desperation, and we know that many thousands of

       24        women lost their lives in those back alleys
prior

       25        to Rowe v. Wade.







                                                            2561

        1                      Low income women are more

        2        vulnerable to health complications and death
when

        3        pregnant because many receive less consistent or

        4        absolutely no preventive and prenatal health

        5        care.  Enabling women to choose if and when to

        6        bear children has had a significant impact and a

        7        positive impact on their lives as well as the

        8        health and welfare of their families and,
indeed,

        9        of society generally.

       10                      We should be very proud that New

       11        York State has refused to turn its back on the

       12        pregnant poor and that we have been voting down

       13        every effort to defund Medicaid abortions.

       14                      Medicaid provides fair and

       15        impartial coverage for both maternity care and

       16        medically necessary abortions.  This policy
gives

       17        all women an equal choice regardless of income,

       18        and I strongly urge all legislators to support

       19        the continuation of this long-standing and

       20        enlightened policy.

       21                      If we here feel that we want to

       22        decrease poor women's abortions and we want to

       23        offer prenatal and pregnancy prevention care to

       24        poor women, we can use our vastly increased

       25        revenues this year, using just a very small







                                                            2562

        1        percentage of our increased revenues and we can

        2        dramatically increase preventive, voluntary

        3        family planning services throughout our state.

        4        We could ensure that all teenagers and all poor

        5        or near poor women can plan and space their

        6        pregnancies, make the most of job training and

        7        placement programs to become financially

        8        independent and have healthy children when they

        9        are ready.  California is already covering
family

       10        planning for all poor and near poor woman -

       11        women and all at-risk adolescents.  If we want
to

       12        make a positive contribution in this area, we

       13        ought to be following the lead of California.

       14                      I'll be voting no on this.

       15                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the

       16        last section.

       17                      Senator Montgomery.

       18                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  Yes.  Mr.

       19        President, I too would like to go on record

       20        joining my colleagues who are speaking against

       21        this legislation.

       22                      As we know, the one most important

       23        factor that determines whether or not a woman

       24        will be -- will live most of her life in poverty

       25        is whether or not she has the ability to control







                                                            2563

        1        her child bearing, the number of children and/or

        2        very often when those children are born, and in

        3        this country, we know and especially in our
state

        4        that there is a tremendous problem especially
for

        5        low income women because they very often at an

        6        early enough point in their lives don't have

        7        access to sex education.  They do not have
access

        8        to condoms or information about how to use

        9        condoms or how to influence their mates to use

       10        condoms.  They very often do not have access to

       11        primary health care and certainly we do not have

       12        access to school-based health clinics, not
nearly

       13        enough so that young women at a point in their

       14        lives when it would make the most difference for

       15        them to have all of these things available, they

       16        do not have it, and now we come with this

       17        legislation which presents one additional

       18        obstacle so women will have less and less

       19        opportunity to make the choice for themselves

       20        and, therefore, will be more and more likely,

       21        especially poor women will be more and more

       22        likely to live in total abject poverty, and so

       23        since we do not -- we have not addressed some of

       24        the critical underpinnings as it relates to

       25        women's ability to make a choice, I think that
it







                                                            2564

        1        is criminal to say to those women, particularly

        2        the poor women that you now will not have access

        3        to this particular reproductive choice, nor will

        4        you have any information, nor will you have

        5        appropriate health care, nor will we provide

        6        adequate school-based health clinics, sex

        7        education, and so forth, and so on.

        8                      So I'm going to be voting against

        9        this legislation because I think this is really

       10        -- it's -- it is an anti-women's legislation but

       11        more specifically it is particularly anti-poor

       12        women.

       13                      So I'm voting against it, Mr.

       14        President.

       15                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       16        Paterson.

       17                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Thank you, Mr.

       18        President.

       19                      Certainly all of us can understand

       20        that we're talking about an issue whose root

       21        manifests a lot of deep personal and spiritual

       22        concerns, and I certainly can understand the

       23        feelings of those who don't agree with the law
as

       24        it stands on the books right now and perhaps the

       25        law that they feel they are responding to is one







                                                            2565

        1        that commands that in any way the current
Supreme

        2        Court decision of Rowe v. Wade be undercut or in

        3        any way diminished or in any way truncated is
the

        4        best fashion, and so by introducing this piece
of

        5        legislation, certainly its passage would do
that.

        6                      It would limit the number of

        7        abortions that would become available in this

        8        particular state, but unfortunately it would be

        9        done in a disproportionate way that would affect

       10        those who are least able to afford the

       11        procedure.  It is a serious procedure.  No doubt

       12        everyone, regardless of their own personal point

       13        of view, agrees with that and, therefore, as

       14        serious as it is, it would qualify those who are

       15        afflicted for the same kinds of protections in

       16        terms of Medicaid funding, in terms of any kind

       17        of assistance that they might receive just as
any

       18        other procedure of like fashion would be.

       19                      The legislation would, in that

       20        respect, create a divide, in many respects based

       21        on class against the haves versus the have-nots,

       22        in many respects the have-lesses.  Even though
it

       23        would accomplish the goal of trying to diminish

       24        the strength and what would be the spirit of the

       25        commanding law in this country right now, the







                                                            2566

        1        fact is that if there's a desire to change that

        2        law, then perhaps energies should be directed in

        3        that fashion.

        4                      I would oppose that.  I believe in

        5        a woman's right to choice, but what I would say

        6        even more than that is whatever our opinion is

        7        about that issue, the fact is that this

        8        legislation creates a secondary test whereby it

        9        would be a financial circumstance that would

       10        really determine who would be eligible and who

       11        would not be.

       12                      There are many different feelings

       13        about morality in this chamber but we all have
to

       14        understand that the awareness of time has a way

       15        of impinging on the concept of morality.  Those

       16        who might feel that they are against this kind
of

       17        process may have at times been put in a position

       18        in their lives where they actually had to

       19        reconsider that.

       20                      The point is that those who would

       21        come to that conclusion should have every bit as

       22        much of a right as anyone else and it should not

       23        be barred by any economic -- any cost or any

       24        financial limitation that would be provided such

       25        as set forth in this legislation.







                                                            2567

        1                      For that reason, even before we

        2        even consider the right to choice itself, this

        3        piece of legislation must be defeated.

        4                      This piece of legislation would

        5        really create a cast system in those who would
be

        6        seeking an abortion in this state and would

        7        probably create further divides among people in

        8        this state and would really mean that the law

        9        applies only if you can afford it, and I don't

       10        think that would be a good measure or a good

       11        example to be setting in any respect.

       12                      For that reason, Mr. President, I

       13        don't oppose this legislation and would like to

       14        notify the members that I would like to ask for
a

       15        slow roll call on this vote.

       16                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       17        Waldon.

       18                      SENATOR WALDON:  Thank you very

       19        much, Mr. President.

       20                      I'll be brief.  My colleagues on

       21        this side of the aisle have spoken so eloquently

       22        to this issue, further putting out for our

       23        consideration the fact that it is about a
woman's

       24        choice.  It is about, as Senator Paterson

       25        characterized, perhaps a cast system if we were







                                                            2568

        1        to accept this, but I think it's a bit more

        2        pointed than that.

        3                      The people who have the least

        4        wherewithall to pay for these abortions look

        5        mostly like Senator Montgomery, myself, Senator

        6        Seabrook, Senator Sampson, Senator Mendez and

        7        others who happen to be from the inner cities of

        8        this great state for the most part and who
happen

        9        to be very, very poor.

       10                      We can't educate them properly, it

       11        seems.  We can't stop the jails from bursting at

       12        the seams with people of color and now we're

       13        going to further burden them by saying even if

       14        you want to take care of business, control the

       15        production of children so that you will be

       16        allowed as a family to do better, it ain't going

       17        to happen.

       18                      I know that Senator Maltese is a

       19        good guy.  He and I hang out a lot together.  We

       20        have loads and loads of conversations.  I have

       21        great respect for him and know that he's all

       22        right, but I think what he's proposing, if it

       23        were to become law, would have a disparate
impact

       24        on people of color and, therefore, without

       25        intent, would be somehow racist in its







                                                            2569

        1        actualization.

        2                      And so I encourage us to recognize

        3        that that is also a component of this proposal

        4        and for that and a whole host of other reasons
we

        5        should defeat it.  I'll be voting in the

        6        negative.

        7                      Thank you, Mr. President.

        8                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

        9        Mendez.

       10                      SENATOR MENDEZ:  Mr. President, I

       11        also rise in opposition to this bill.  The issue

       12        of abortion has been, in my view, the most

       13        difficult one that anybody in this chamber could

       14        possibly consider, that one and the death

       15        penalty, but this one even more so because it

       16        affects enormously the life of women.

       17                      I hope that there is -- that we

       18        can see the day where not one single woman would

       19        have to go through the situation of having an

       20        abortion.  I personally believe it is killing a

       21        life, but on the other hand, I -- and I am a

       22        Catholic.  I, my own personal views and as a

       23        Catholic, I as an individual must try to save my

       24        own soul and being a Catholic and having my own

       25        beliefs do not mean that I have to impose them
on







                                                            2570

        1        other women in the country, especially when the

        2        law of the land is that a woman has the total

        3        right to decide whether or not she should have
an

        4        abortion.

        5                      I personally feel sorry for the

        6        women who must go -- decide to go through that

        7        procedure because in the final analysis, as a

        8        believer, myself I feel that after everything -

        9        after the one up there sends for us, we will
have

       10        to explain what we did and didn't do in the time

       11        that was allotted to us while living in this -

       12        being alive.

       13                      The second issue, Mr. President,

       14        the second issue that we first took in this bill

       15        preventing women to have an abortion through

       16        Medicaid, that is adding insult to injury.

       17                      Why?  We know that in New York

       18        State and in New York City the Medicaid program

       19        that was designed by the federal government in

       20        1964 to provide access to primary health care to

       21        the working poor and the poor, we know that in

       22        New York City and in New York State it is

       23        precisely the working poor and the poor, the

       24        population that was intended to be helped with

       25        that -- without ever offending are being







                                                            2571

        1        excluded.

        2                      In New York City the only working

        3        poor who have access to primary health care are,

        4        in fact, those working poor who work with

        5        corporations such as Con Edison, AT&T, as well
as

        6        being members of unions.  The rest of the
working

        7        poor who work in small businesses, because
health

        8        insurance is so expensive, when they get sick,

        9        they go to an emergency room in their hospital

       10        and after they wait six or seven hours, that

       11        hospital bills the state of New York for over

       12        $1,000.

       13                      So this specific group of women

       14        who are poor are going then once more to be

       15        excluded -- excluded when they make a choice to

       16        have -- to undergo that horrible procedure.

       17                      So it is in my mind not allowing

       18        the women who are poor to have the choice of

       19        having an abortion would not only be paid by

       20        Medicare is excluding them totally from a health

       21        program that was precisely created to help them.

       22                      So it's a situation of

       23        discrimination in terms of economics and that,
in

       24        itself, again, is in my view unconscionable.

       25                      So, Mr. President, there is no way







                                                            2572

        1        that I could possibly support this bill.  I will

        2        be voting in the negative, and again, I feel

        3        horribly sorry for the woman who has to go

        4        through an abortion but she must have the right

        5        to choose what to do.  She must have her own

        6        reproductive freedom.

        7                      Thank you.

        8                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Read the

        9        last section.

       10                      THE SECRETARY:  Section 2.  This

       11        act shall take effect immediately.

       12                      SENATOR LEICHTER:  Slow roll

       13        call.

       14                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

       15        Secretary will call the slow roll call.

       16                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Abate.

       17                      (There was no response.)

       18                      Senator Alesi.

       19                      (There was no response.)

       20                      Senator Balboni.

       21                      SENATOR BALBONI:  Aye.

       22                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Breslin.

       23                      (Negative indication.)

       24                      Senator Bruno.

       25                      (Affirmative indication.)







                                                            2573

        1                      Senator Connor.

        2                      (Negative indication.)

        3                      Senator Cook.

        4                      SENATOR COOK:  No.

        5                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator

        6        DeFrancisco.

        7                      SENATOR DeFRANCISCO:  Yes.

        8                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Dollinger.

        9                      (There was no response.)

       10                      Senator Farley.

       11                      SENATOR FARLEY:  Aye.

       12                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Fuschillo.

       13                      SENATOR FUSCHILLO:  Aye.

       14                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Gentile.

       15                      SENATOR GENTILE:  No.

       16                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Gold.

       17                      (There was no response.)

       18                      Senator Gonzalez.

       19                      (There was no response.)

       20                      Senator Goodman.

       21                      SENATOR GOODMAN:  No.

       22                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Hannon.

       23                      SENATOR HANNON:  Yes.

       24                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Hoffmann.

       25                      SENATOR HOFFMANN:  No.







                                                            2574

        1                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Holland.

        2                      SENATOR HOLLAND:  Yes.

        3                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Johnson.

        4                      SENATOR JOHNSON:  Aye.

        5                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Kruger.

        6                      SENATOR KRUGER:  No.

        7                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Kuhl.

        8                      SENATOR KUHL:  Yes.

        9                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Lachman.

       10                      SENATOR LACHMAN:  No.

       11                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Lack.

       12                      SENATOR LACK:  Aye.

       13                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Larkin.

       14                      SENATOR LARKIN:  Yes.

       15                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator LaValle.

       16                      SENATOR LAVALLE:  Aye.

       17                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Leibell.

       18                      SENATOR LEIBELL:  Aye.

       19                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Leichter.

       20                      SENATOR LEICHTER:  No.

       21                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Libous.

       22                      SENATOR LIBOUS:  Aye.

       23                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Maltese.

       24                      SENATOR MALTESE:  Aye.

       25                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator







                                                            2575

        1        Marcellino.

        2                      SENATOR MARCELLINO:  Aye.

        3                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Marchi.

        4                      SENATOR MARCHI:  Mr. President, if

        5        I may briefly.

        6                      I've raised this consideration

        7        many times before and I'm going to vote yes on
it

        8        because I feel that it's symbolic.  I just don't

        9        feel -- I feel that the practice is wrong.  On

       10        the other hand, it's tied to -- it's tied to tax

       11        dollars and that is not the way to approach it.

       12                      I think Senator Paterson came

       13        close to that.  It's tied to what's appropriated

       14        and doesn't go directly to the question of what

       15        happens to that baby under any circumstance.

       16        We're not speaking about abortion.  We're

       17        speaking about confining the limits of it to

       18        those who must have it through taxpayer dollars.

       19                      That, I think many of us have very

       20        deep reservations about that baby.  That baby

       21        certainly can't speak for itself and for

       22        thousands of years in every known civilization,

       23        it was just a practice that was shunned and

       24        anybody who went to law school at the time I
did,

       25        you know, it was a crime at that time, but --
and







                                                            2576

        1        certainly the circumstances are very compelling,

        2        probably more compelling with poor people than
it

        3        is with anybody else, but I still think this is

        4        the only way which we can continue to manifest a

        5        deep concern over the feeling that prompts -

        6        that urges and reinforces our problems with the

        7        whole abortion issue.

        8                      So I'm going to vote aye, but I -

        9        I just wish we could have attacked this more

       10        frontally.  At one time I even said, well,

       11        suppose it was only members of the Senate.  I

       12        don't know.  It must have been many years ago. 
I

       13        believe you spoke on that one too for public

       14        employees or something, you know, who were who

       15        are all insured.  That's another thing.  People

       16        are insured and these insurance laws are passed

       17        by us which provide for it.

       18                      So we don't attack that.  I mean,

       19        it's -- you know, the only slender read that

       20        addresses this problem is the question of who

       21        pays for it.

       22                      Well, I'll vote aye as a symbolic

       23        identification with my deep concern with the

       24        abortion issue because I don't think what we
have

       25        now is acceptable.  On the other hand,







                                                            2577

        1        alternatives are presently lacking.

        2                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Markowitz.

        3                      SENATOR MARKOWITZ:  No.

        4                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Maziarz.

        5                      SENATOR MAZIARZ:  Yes.

        6                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Meier.

        7                      SENATOR MEIER:  Yes.

        8                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Mendez.

        9                      SENATOR MENDEZ:  No.

       10                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator

       11        Montgomery.

       12                      SENATOR MONTGOMERY:  No.

       13                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Nanula.

       14                      (Negative indication.)

       15                      Senator Nozzolio.

       16                      SENATOR NOZZOLIO:  Aye.

       17                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Onorato.

       18                      (Affirmative indication.)

       19                      Senator Oppenheimer.

       20                      SENATOR OPPENHEIMER:  No.

       21                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Padavan.

       22                      SENATOR PADAVAN:  Yes.

       23                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Paterson.

       24                      SENATOR PATERSON:  No.

       25                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Present.







                                                            2578

        1                      SENATOR PRESENT:  No.

        2                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Rath.

        3                      SENATOR RATH:  Aye.

        4                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Rosado.

        5                      SENATOR ROSADO:  Yes.

        6                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Saland.

        7                      SENATOR SALAND:  Aye.

        8                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Sampson.

        9                      SENATOR SAMPSON:  No.

       10                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Santiago.

       11                      (There was no response.)

       12                      Senator Seabrook.

       13                      SENATOR SEABROOK:  No.

       14                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Seward.

       15                      SENATOR SEWARD:  No.

       16                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Skelos.

       17                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Yes.

       18                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Smith.

       19                      SENATOR SMITH:  No.

       20                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Spano.

       21                      SENATOR SPANO:  No.

       22                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator

       23        Stachowski.

       24                      SENATOR STACHOWSKI:  Yes.

       25                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Stafford.







                                                            2579

        1                      SENATOR STAFFORD:  Aye.

        2                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Stavisky.

        3                      SENATOR STAVISKY:  No.

        4                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Trunzo.

        5                      SENATOR TRUNZO:  Yes.

        6                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Velella.

        7                      SENATOR VELELLA:  Yes.

        8                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Volker.

        9                      SENATOR VOLKER:  Yes.

       10                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Waldon.

       11                      (Negative indication.)

       12                      Senator Wright.

       13                      SENATOR WRIGHT:  Aye.

       14                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Call the

       15        absentees.

       16                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Abate.

       17                      (There was no response.)

       18                      Senator Dollinger.

       19                      (There was no response.)

       20                      Senator Gold.

       21                      (There was no response.)

       22                      Senator Gonzalez.

       23                      SENATOR GONZALEZ:  No.

       24                      THE SECRETARY:  Senator Santiago.

       25                      (There was no response.)







                                                            2580

        1                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Announce

        2        the results.

        3                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 33, nays 24.

        4                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The bill

        5        is passed.

        6                      Senator Balboni.

        7                      SENATOR BALBONI:  The house will

        8        stand at ease temporarily, please.

        9                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

       10        Senate will stand at ease temporarily.

       11                      (Whereupon, the Senate stood at

       12        ease 7:31 p.m. until 7:35 p.m.)

       13                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President.

       14                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       15        Skelos.

       16                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Senator Leichter

       17        has a motion to discharge which he has assured
me

       18        will be done expeditiously and to the members of

       19        the Majority, after we adjourn, there will be a

       20        Majority Conference.

       21                      Senator Leichter.

       22                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       23        Leichter.

       24                      SENATOR LEICHTER:  Yes.  Thank you

       25        very much, Senator Skelos, and I also thank you







                                                            2581

        1        and the Majority for allowing me to put this
over

        2        from yesterday to today and the reason that I

        3        will be brief aside from the late hour is that

        4        this bill is so compelling and so clear it

        5        doesn't need a lengthy explanation.

        6                      Mr. President, I guess is the bill

        7        properly before the house?

        8                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Not yet,

        9        Senator Leichter.  What's the number?

       10                      SENATOR LEICHTER:  This is Senate

       11        2981-A.

       12                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

       13        Secretary will read.

       14                      THE SECRETARY:  By Senator

       15        Leichter, Senate Print 2981-A, an act to amend

       16        the Environmental Conservation Law.

       17                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       18        Leichter.

       19                      SENATOR LEICHTER:  Mr. President,

       20        thank you.

       21                      I waive the reading and I ask an

       22        opportunity to explain and speak in support of

       23        the motion to discharge.

       24                      This is the Private Environmental

       25        Law Enforcement Act we headed before.  What it







                                                            2582

        1        seeks to do is to empower the citizens of this

        2        state to bring private actions to enforce the

        3        environmental laws of the state of New York.

        4                      It's a right that exists

        5        nationwide.  It's a right that's been granted by

        6        Congress to the people of the United States.

        7        It's a right that exists in many states because

        8        it recognizes the interest that each and
everyone

        9        has, all of the citizens of this state in having

       10        a clean environment, and we appreciate and

       11        understand that the government by itself is not

       12        in a position to enforce the laws.  It's not in
a

       13        position to bring all the suits that need to be

       14        brought, and so what this bill will do and

       15        achieve is to stop pollution, by catching more

       16        polluters, compliments government's enforcement

       17        efforts, create more disincentives to pollute,

       18        improves environmental standards and prevents

       19        environmental degradation.  It's an important

       20        right that every citizen should have.  We ought

       21        to pass this bill.

       22                      Mr. President, I urge all of the

       23        members to support this motion.

       24                      Thank you.

       25                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The







                                                            2583

        1        question is on the motion to discharge.  All

        2        those in favor signify by saying aye.

        3                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Party vote in

        4        the affirmative.

        5                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Party vote in the

        6        negative.

        7                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Call the

        8        roll.

        9                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

       10                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 26, nays 35.

       11        Party vote.

       12                      SENATOR OPPENHEIMER:  May I

       13        explain my vote?

       14                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       15        Oppenheimer to explain her vote.

       16                      SENATOR OPPENHEIMER:  Is that

       17        possible?  I thank you very much, Mr. President.

       18                      There are some common

       19        misconceptions that I just wanted to very
briefly

       20        clear up.  One is that there are going to be
tons

       21        of frivolous suits and all I can tell you is
that

       22        this has simply not happened.  It's not been

       23        documented.

       24                      Between 1981 and 1987, 75 of the

       25        total 78 citizen suits that were brought in New







                                                            2584

        1        York under federal law were disposed of in the

        2        plaintiff's favor, which means that they were

        3        valid cases and even in the three that were

        4        tossed out, they weren't tossed out because they

        5        were frivolous.

        6                      There's another misconception that

        7        citizen suits are anti-farmer and in all the

        8        states that have citizen suit provisions

        9        applicable to farmers, there is not one reported

       10        case of a suit filed against a farmer, including

       11        those northeast states with similar patterns of

       12        development and demographics to us.  So that is

       13        another false statement.

       14                      And I just want to say that 32

       15        other states have this provision for citizen

       16        suits and it's worked terrifically well and it's

       17        been in federal statute forever, for many, many

       18        years.

       19                      So there's no earthly reason why

       20        we don't have it in New York State.

       21                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Results, please.

       22                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Announce

       23        the results.

       24                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 26, nays 35.

       25        Party vote.







                                                            2585

        1                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

        2        motion is defeated.

        3                      Senator Skelos.

        4                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Mr. President, we

        5        have one more motion.

        6                      Would you recognize Senator

        7        Gentile, please.

        8                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

        9        Gentile.

       10                      SENATOR GENTILE:  Thank you, Mr.

       11        President.

       12                      I believe there's a motion at the

       13        desk.

       14                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

       15        Secretary will read.

       16                      THE SECRETARY:  By Senator

       17        Gentile, Senate Print 1462-B, an act to amend
the

       18        Tax Law.

       19                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Senator

       20        Gentile.

       21                      SENATOR GENTILE:  I would ask that

       22        the reading be waived and I be allowed to

       23        explain.

       24                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

       25        reading will be waived and you may proceed to







                                                            2586

        1        explain.

        2                      SENATOR GENTILE:  Thank you.

        3                      Despite the late hour, Mr.

        4        President, this motion to discharge contains
some

        5        good news and that good news is that in the past

        6        week the budget committees had recommended that

        7        the repeal of the sales tax on clothing also

        8        include footwear in this year's budget and my

        9        motion deals with the Bill 1462-B, which is my

       10        bill, to repeal the sales tax on clothing and

       11        footwear up to $500.

       12                      While I applaud the budget

       13        committees for getting on board with this issue

       14        of including shoes and increasing that
exemption,

       15        it's really not enough.  It's really not enough

       16        especially when we consider that states like

       17        Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New

       18        Jersey, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island all have

       19        significant sales tax exemptions or no sales tax

       20        at all, and that certainly puts our state at an

       21        economic disadvantage, and I must say that this

       22        effort has taken a bipartisan track.

       23                      This effort for the sales -

       24        repeals of the sales tax on clothing and
footwear

       25        is supported by the Republican Governor to the







                                                            2587

        1        Republican mayor of New York City, to even this

        2        esteemed leader, Majority Leader in this house,

        3        Senator Bruno who has indicated that he has a

        4        priority to cut taxes that create the -- create

        5        the most jobs the fastest and that Senator Bruno

        6        believes that as a principle, sales tax on

        7        clothing and shoes is wrong, but that's good to

        8        hear given the fact that sales tax on clothing

        9        and shoes is highly regressive.  It is, I agree,

       10        with Senator Bruno, the wrong tax.  To tax

       11        necessities is wrong.  It's wrong for budget

       12        draft consumers and it's wrong for trying to

       13        boost our economy.

       14                      So I applaud Senator Bruno for

       15        that position.  Indeed, I have thousands of

       16        signatures in my hometown of Brooklyn and my

       17        hometown of Staten Island attesting to the fact

       18        that the people of this state want this repeal
of

       19        this sales tax up to $500 and to include shoes.

       20                      If the experimental weeks of the

       21        repeal of the sales tax has taught us anything,

       22        Mr. President, it has taught us that lower taxes

       23        can spur economic activity.

       24                      Indeed, the Department of Taxation

       25        and Finance has reported that in the September







                                                            2588

        1        and January one-week experiments, 92 percent of

        2        the retailers experienced increases in clothing

        3        and footwear sales and 63 percent of consumers

        4        stated that the exemption affected their

        5        purchases.  Those are outstanding -- outstanding

        6        numbers.  How anyone can impose the repeal of
the

        7        sales tax on clothing and footwear based on
those

        8        numbers, it's hard to believe.

        9                      Another economic reality about

       10        this bill, Mr. President, is that with the sales

       11        tax in place, less retail activity means fewer

       12        jobs.  People spend less and we lose jobs as a

       13        result.

       14                      Right now New York City, for

       15        example, loses more than $700 million in
economic

       16        activity to New Jersey.  That translates into a

       17        loss of almost 20,000 new jobs for New York City

       18        residents.

       19                      Increased activity brings jobs.

       20        We have that surplus to spend here.  The

       21        Governor, for example, had created a $100
million

       22        pool for unspecified tax cuts.  The New York

       23        State Economic Development Corporation estimates

       24        that the tax eliminating the sales tax on

       25        clothing and footwear would bring the City $1.4







                                                            2589

        1        billion in new economic activity and nearly

        2        20,000 new jobs and create enough new revenue

        3        from other sales corporate and income taxes to

        4        recover almost 40 percent of the forgone sales

        5        tax revenue.  Almost 40 percent will be
recovered

        6        in new economic activity and call it my

        7        conservative view, Mr. President, but my

        8        conservative view says that for the other
revenue

        9        that is not created -- that is not recovered
from

       10        the economic activity, creating jobs in the free

       11        market is a better jobs program and a better use

       12        for those tax dollars than giving those tax

       13        dollars to the government to spend.  That's my

       14        conservative view and that is something -- that

       15        is why I think this is important to put forth in

       16        this house today.

       17                      In fact, I think it's so important

       18        that I took great note in noting that just

       19        yesterday several of my Republican colleagues

       20        also have introduced a similar legislation in

       21        this house yesterday led by, I believe Senator

       22        Maltese.

       23                      So it is clear that there's great

       24        bipartisan support with the mayor of New York

       25        City, the Governor, members of this house. 
There







                                                            2590

        1        should be no reason why we can't take a

        2        bipartisan approach and to discharge this bill

        3        from committee.  It's good enough for a one-week

        4        exemption.  It should be good enough for a

        5        52-week exemption.

        6                      Mr. President, I ask these

        7        members, especially those who support the other

        8        bill, that this is the bill we can move forward

        9        with.

       10                      Thank you, Mr. President.

       11                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

       12        question is on the motion to discharge.  All

       13        those in favor signify by saying aye.

       14                      SENATOR PATERSON:  Party vote in

       15        the affirmative.

       16                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Party vote in the

       17        negative.

       18                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  Call the

       19        roll.

       20                      (The Secretary called the roll.)

       21                      THE SECRETARY:  Ayes 26, nays 35.

       22        Party vote.

       23                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  The

       24        motion is defeated.

       25                      Senator Skelos.







                                                            2591

        1                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Is there any

        2        housekeeping at the desk?

        3                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  There is

        4        no housekeeping at the desk.

        5                      SENATOR SKELOS:  Just a reminder

        6        to the members of the Majority that there will
be

        7        an immediate conference in the Majority

        8        Conference Room and there being no further

        9        business, I move we adjourn until tomorrow,
April

       10        9th, at 12:00 noon.

       11                      ACTING PRESIDENT MEIER:  On

       12        motion, the Senate stands adjourned until

       13        Thursday, April 9th, at 12:00 noon.

       14                      (Whereupon, at 7:42 p.m., the

       15        Senate adjourned.)

       16

       17

       18

       19

       20

       21

       22

       23

       24

       25