Public Hearing - February 26, 2025

                                                                       1

 1  BEFORE THE NEW YORK STATE SENATE FINANCE
    AND ASSEMBLY WAYS AND MEANS COMMITTEES
 2  ----------------------------------------------------

 3          JOINT LEGISLATIVE HEARING

 4             In the Matter of the
          2025-2026 EXECUTIVE BUDGET ON
 5          ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT/ARTS
    
 6  ----------------------------------------------------

 7                              Hearing Room B 
                                Legislative Office Building
 8                             Albany, New York 
    
 9                              February 26, 2025
                                2:50 p.m.
10  

11  PRESIDING:

12            Senator Liz Krueger
              Chair, Senate Finance Committee
13  
              Assemblyman J. Gary Pretlow
14            Chair, Assembly Ways and Means Committee 
    
15  PRESENT:

16            Senator Thomas F. O'Mara 
              Senate Finance Committee (RM)
17  
              Assemblyman Edward P. Ra 
18            Assembly Ways & Means Committee (RM)
    
19            Senator Sean M. Ryan
              Chair, Senate Committee on Commerce, 
20             Economic Development and Small Business  
    
21            Assemblyman Al Stirpe
              Chair, Assembly Committee on Economic 
22             Development, Job Creation, Commerce 
               and Industry 
23  
              Senator José M. Serrano
24            Chair, Senate Committee on Cultural Affairs,
               Tourism, Arts and Recreation

                                                                   2

 1  2025-2026 Executive Budget
    Economic Development/Arts
 2  2-26-25
    
 3  PRESENT:  (Continued)
    
 4            Senator Jeremy Cooney
              Chair, Senate Subcommittee on Cannabis
 5  
              Assembly Majority Leader Crystal Peoples-Stokes
 6            Chair, Assembly Committee on Cannabis Oversight
    
 7            Assemblywoman Carrie Woerner
              Chair, Assembly Committee on Racing and Wagering 
 8  
              Assemblyman Ron Kim
 9            Chair, Assembly Committee on Tourism, Parks, 
               Arts and Sports Development
10  
              Assemblywoman Marianne Buttenschon
11            Chair, Assembly Committee on Small Business
    
12            Assemblyman Steven Otis
              Chair, Assembly Committee on Science and
13             Technology
    
14            Assemblyman Billy Jones
    
15            Assemblyman Christopher S. Friend
    `
16            Senator George M. Borrello
    
17            Assemblywoman Patricia Fahy
    
18            Assemblywoman Yudelka Tapia
    
19            Assemblyman Edward C. Braunstein 
    
20            Senator Dean Murray
    
21            Assemblywoman Mary Beth Walsh
    
22            Assemblywoman Chantel Jackson
    
23            Assemblywoman Jo Anne Simon
    
24            Assemblyman Tony Simone
    

                                                                   3

 1  2025-2026 Executive Budget
    Economic Development/Arts
 2  2-26-25
    
 3  PRESENT:  (Continued)
    
 4            Senator Andrew Gounardes
    
 5            Assemblywoman Nikki Lucas
    
 6            Assemblyman Alex Bores
    
 7            Assemblyman John Lemondes
    
 8            Assemblywoman Judy Griffin
    
 9            Senator Christopher J. Ryan
    
10            Assemblywoman Larinda C. Hooks
    
11            Assemblywoman Emérita Torres
    
12            Assemblyman Angelo Santabarbara
    
13            Senator Toby Stavisky
    
14            Assemblywoman MaryJane Shimsky
    
15            Assemblyman Scott Bendett
    
16            Senator Stephen T. Chan
    
17            Assemblywoman Rebecca Kassay
    
18            Senator April Baskin
    
19            Assemblywoman Jodi Giglio
    
20            Assemblyman Landon C. Dais
    
21            Assemblywoman Stefani Zinerman
    
22            Senator Steven D. Rhoads
    
23            Assemblywoman Alicia Hyndman
    
24            Senator Jabari Brisport
    

                                                                   4

 1  2025-2026 Executive Budget
    Economic Development/Arts
 2  2-26-25
    
 3                     LIST OF SPEAKERS
    
 4                                      STATEMENT  QUESTIONS
    
 5  Hope Knight
    Commissioner
 6  New York State Department of
    Economic Development
 7  President & CEO 
    Empire State Development                 
 8       -and-
    Felicia A.B. Reid
 9  Acting Executive Director
    New York State Office of 
10   Cannabis Management                   11       28
    
11  Jeanette M. Moy
    Commissioner            
12  NYS Office of General 
     Services (OGS)                          
13       -and-
    Erika Mallin
14  Executive Director
    New York State Council on 
15   the Arts (NYSCA)                     219      239
    
16  Carolina Rodriguez 
    Director, Education Debt
17   Consumer Assistance Program
    Community Service Society
18       -and-
    Marc Alessi
19  Executive Director
    Business Incubator Association
20   of New York State
         -and-
21  Dr. Richard Terry
    Associate Dean of 
22   Academic Affairs
    Lake Erie College of 
23   Osteopathic Medicine
     (LECOM) at Elmira                    305      316
24  

                                                                   5

 1  2025-2026 Executive Budget
    Economic Development/Arts
 2  2-26-25
    
 3                   LIST OF SPEAKERS, Continued 
    
 4                                        STATEMENT  QUESTIONS
    
 5  Santiago Quiñones
    NY Film and Television
 6   Producer
         -and-
 7  Corey Aldrich
    Executive Director
 8  ACE!-Upstate Alliance 
     for the Creative Economy               340       347
 9  
    Jen Swan 
10  President 
    ArtsNYS
11       -and-
    Candace Thompson-Zachery 
12  Co-Executive Director
    Dance/NYC
13       -and-
    Rafael Espinal
14  Executive Director 
    Freelancers Union
15       -and-
    Sarah Calderon
16  Executive Director
    Creatives Rebuild New York
17       -and-
    Rachael Lorimer
18  Artist
    Studio OSYARI
19       -and-
    Gully Stanford
20  New York State Alliance for 
     Arts Education                         367       387
21  

22

23

24


                                                                   6

 1  2025-2026 Executive Budget
    Economic Development/Arts
 2  2-26-25
    
 3                   LIST OF SPEAKERS, Continued 
    
 4                                        STATEMENT  QUESTIONS
    
 5  Ngiste Abebe
    President
 6  New York Medical Cannabis 
     Industry Association
 7       -and-
    Britni Tantalo
 8  President 
    New York Cannabis Retail 
 9   Association
         -and-
10  Joe Calderone
    President 
11  Cannabis Farmers Alliance 
         -and-
12  John Vavalo
    President 
13  Association of NY Cannabis
     Processors                               404       418
14  
    
15  
    
16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24


                                                                   7

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Good afternoon, 

 2           everyone, even though some of us have been 

 3           here for an earlier hearing.  

 4                  Before I start the official second 

 5           hearing, I want to go over some of the rules 

 6           of the road we try to do at the beginning of 

 7           every hearing.

 8                  So, one, there are clocks you can see 

 9           if you're the testifier or if you're the 

10           legislator.  And they might be set to 10, 

11           five or three minutes, depending on who you 

12           are.  They have red, yellow, green.  Green 

13           means you're talking.  Yellow means you're 

14           getting close to the end.  Red is we stop 

15           you.

16                  Now, that means if you're a testifier, 

17           even if your testimony is 50 pages of 

18           wonderful information, which we will all 

19           have -- we already have it online for all 

20           New Yorkers to see on the Senate website and 

21           the Assembly website -- you want to 

22           bullet-point your most important issues.

23                  Second, if you are a legislator asking 

24           the questions, same lights, same time frame.  


                                                                   8

 1           Most of us only have three minutes to ask 

 2           questions.  Rankers get five, chairs get 10, 

 3           at least for the government panels.  But 

 4           again, I always emphasize this.  If you use 

 5           up your complete time asking a question, you 

 6           will not get an answer.  We don't give extra 

 7           time for the people you're asking to answer 

 8           your questions.

 9                  So just know if you use up all your 

10           time on a speech or on a three-minute 

11           question, you will not hear any answers from 

12           our guests.

13                  Okay, with that, I will now 

14           officially, I guess, read my script to open 

15           up the hearing.

16                  Good afternoon.  I'm Senator Liz 

17           Krueger.  I live in this chair, and I'm the 

18           chair of the New York State Senate Finance 

19           Committee and co-chair of today's budget 

20           hearing. 

21                  Today is the 12th of 14 hearings 

22           conducted by the joint fiscal committees of 

23           the Legislature regarding the Governor's 

24           proposed budget for state fiscal year 


                                                                   9

 1           '25-'26.  These hearings are conducted 

 2           pursuant to the New York State Constitution 

 3           and Legislative Law.

 4                  Today the New York State Senate 

 5           Finance Committee and the Assembly Ways and 

 6           Means Committee will hear testimony 

 7           concerning the Governor's proposed budget for 

 8           the New York State Empire State Development 

 9           Corporation, the New York State Office of 

10           Cannabis Management, the New York State 

11           Office of General Services, and the New York 

12           State Council on the Arts.  

13                  Following each testimony there will be 

14           some time for questions from the chairs of 

15           the fiscal committees, the rankers, and other 

16           relevant legislators. 

17                  I would now like to introduce the 

18           Senate members who are here, assuming I have 

19           a list.  No, maybe I don't.  So let's just 

20           take a look.  I see Senator Chris Ryan; I see 

21           Senator Gounardes; Senator Stavisky; 

22           Senator Sean Ryan, our chair; 

23           Senator April Baskin, myself.

24                  I'm going to pass it to the Assembly, 


                                                                   10

 1           and then we'll come back for the Republican 

 2           Senators.

 3                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you, Senator.

 4                  We have our chair of Economic 

 5           Development, Assemblyman Stirpe; we have 

 6           Tourism Chair Assemblyman Kim; Racing Chair 

 7           Assemblywoman Woerner; Small Business Chair 

 8           Assemblywoman Buttenschon; Science and Tech 

 9           Chair Assemblyman Otis.

10                  We also have Assemblymembers Griffin, 

11           Hooks, Simone, Torres, Shimsky, Jackson, 

12           Braunstein and Simon.

13                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And 

14           Senator O'Mara to introduce your members.

15                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Yes, we are joined by 

16           our ranking member on Commerce and Economic 

17           Development, Senator Dean Murray.  We're also 

18           joined by Senator Steve Rhoads and 

19           Senator Steve Chan.

20                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

21                  Assemblymember Ra?

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Good afternoon.

23                  We're joined by our ranker on 

24           Economic Development, Assemblyman Chris 


                                                                   11

 1           Friend, as well as Assemblymembers Giglio, 

 2           Bendett, Lemondes and Walsh.

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 4                  And with that, we're going to turn it 

 5           over to our first panel of Governor's 

 6           representatives.  Let's start with 

 7           Hope Knight, the Department of Economic 

 8           Development and Empire State Development.

 9                  Good afternoon.

10                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Good afternoon, 

11           Chairwoman Krueger, Chairman Pretlow, and 

12           distinguished members of the Legislature.  

13                  I would like to congratulate 

14           Chairman Pretlow on his new leadership role 

15           with Ways and Means, and I'd like to 

16           acknowledge the new Small Business chair, 

17           Assemblywoman Buttenschon.  I'm excited to 

18           work with both of you. 

19                  Senator Ryan and Assemblyman Stirpe, I 

20           look forward to continuing our partnership 

21           this year.  

22                  My name is Hope Knight, and I serve as 

23           the president and CEO of Empire State 

24           Development and as commissioner of the 


                                                                   12

 1           New York State Department of Economic 

 2           Development.  I'm joined today by ESD's chief 

 3           operating officer and executive deputy 

 4           commissioner, Kevin Younis.  

 5                  Thank you for the invitation to 

 6           discuss Governor Kathy Hochul's Executive 

 7           Budget.  The Governor's economic development 

 8           proposals build on the successes we have 

 9           already achieved, in partnership with the 

10           Legislature, to create opportunities for 

11           New Yorkers.  This year's agenda is focused 

12           on several key themes, including supporting 

13           small businesses and entrepreneurs, building 

14           vibrant communities, growing the innovation 

15           economy, reshoring advanced manufacturing, 

16           and attracting investment in emerging and 

17           legacy sectors.  

18                  Today I'm proud to report that we are 

19           seeing strong economic growth across the 

20           state.  New York is ranked a top-five state 

21           in reshoring manufacturing jobs, new business 

22           formations, and growth in the semiconductor 

23           sector and innovation economy.  

24                  Private-sector job creation in 


                                                                   13

 1           New York State is outpacing the national 

 2           rate, and this year's agenda will help us to 

 3           further our progress.  

 4                  And while we face headwinds, this 

 5           year's economic proposals will help us meet 

 6           the moment and continue building a strong and 

 7           resilient 21st-century economy.  

 8                  So much of ESD's work is dedicated to 

 9           small businesses.  In the last year, 

10           78 percent of our awards were to firms with 

11           100 employees or less.  And through the 

12           Governor's Executive Budget, we continue our 

13           commitment.  This year Governor Hochul is 

14           proposing an expansion to the Empire State 

15           Jobs Retention Program to include small 

16           businesses for the first time, and to help 

17           businesses of all sizes and sectors recover 

18           from damage caused by storms and other 

19           disasters.  

20                  To further assist New York's small 

21           businesses and their workers, the Governor 

22           has advanced the CATALIST NY program.  This 

23           new tax credit will go directly to workers 

24           and will increase competitiveness for 


                                                                   14

 1           early-stage innovation businesses looking to 

 2           attract new hires during a critical period of 

 3           growth.  

 4                  Additionally, the Governor's budget 

 5           proposes a historic funding level for the 

 6           Low INterest Capital program, or LINC -- 

 7           formerly known as the Linked Deposit 

 8           Program -- to lower the interest rates for 

 9           small and mid-sized businesses.  Due to 

10           unprecedented demand, this fund is nearly 

11           fully subscribed.  With the highest federal 

12           interest rates in decades, now is the time to 

13           raise the program cap to $1 billion.  

14                  Small businesses are a cornerstone of 

15           our communities, and Governor Hochul has 

16           proposed investments to revitalize and uplift 

17           these communities and encourage people to 

18           work, visit, and live in our downtowns.  The 

19           budget includes continued investments in our 

20           legacy programs, the Downtown Revitalization 

21           Initiative and New York Forward, and proposes 

22           a new $400 million investment in downtown 

23           Albany to help spur new and sustainable 

24           economic development around our 


                                                                   15

 1           State Capitol.  

 2                  Building on last year's Empire AI 

 3           investment, Governor Hochul has proposed 

 4           HARMONY AI to better ensure that the benefits 

 5           of artificial intelligence are available to 

 6           all.  Through this program, small businesses 

 7           across the state will be offered free 

 8           training.  Additionally, it would support 

 9           direct venture capital investments into 

10           overlooked and underrepresented small 

11           business founders, and help to open AI career 

12           pathways to low-income students.  

13                  This budget also advances the 

14           Governor's mission of reshoring manufacturing 

15           jobs to New York, especially in the 

16           semiconductor industry.  Under 

17           Governor Hochul's leadership, New York is 

18           leading America's semiconductor resurgence, 

19           attracting more than $121 billion in new 

20           investments across New York -- more than any 

21           other state in the nation.  

22                  An estimated one in four U.S.-made 

23           chips will be produced within 350 miles of 

24           Central New York.  No other region in the 


                                                                   16

 1           country will account for a greater share of 

 2           domestic production.  

 3                  To keep New York on top, this year's 

 4           budget creates a new tier for semiconductor 

 5           supply chain businesses in the 

 6           performance-based Excelsior Jobs Program.  

 7           The Governor's Executive Budget also advances 

 8           new workforce development and research and 

 9           development initiatives to foster an advanced 

10           manufacturing ecosystem.  

11                  New York State needs a strong supply 

12           of shovel-ready sites to continue its 

13           successful reshoring efforts.  ESD has been 

14           working closely with its local partners to 

15           develop sites through the FAST NY program, 

16           and the Governor's budget proposes another 

17           $100 million in funding.  

18                  But a lack of access to utility and 

19           power infrastructure is one of the biggest 

20           hurdles for business attraction.  To that 

21           end, Governor Hochul has proposed POWER UP, a 

22           new $300 million program to address this 

23           challenge.  Together, these investments will 

24           enable New York to proactively prepare 


                                                                   17

 1           turn-key industrial sites for tomorrow's 

 2           businesses and manufacturers.  

 3                  This year's budget also includes 

 4           proposals to keep New York's economy and 

 5           culture vibrant through bolstering the 

 6           success of the New York Film Production and 

 7           Post-Production tax credit programs.  

 8                  New York is setting the stage by 

 9           creating two first-in-the-nation 

10           initiatives -- one, the Empire State 

11           Independent Production Program to support 

12           independent filmmakers, alongside the 

13           Production Plus Program to incentivize 

14           recurring business and multiple productions. 

15                  These programs will attract new film 

16           projects to the state, generating positive 

17           returns for host communities and to the many 

18           small businesses oriented around filming, 

19           such as the set and costume design, 

20           hospitality, and restaurants.  

21                  I'm excited about the Governor's 

22           economic development agenda, and I'm eager to 

23           continue working with all of you to deliver 

24           results for New Yorkers.  Thank you for the 


                                                                   18

 1           opportunity to speak this afternoon, and I am 

 2           happy to take your questions.

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  (Mic off; 

 4           inaudible.)

 5                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Good 

 6           afternoon, Committee Chairs Senator Krueger 

 7           and Assemblymember Pretlow, and hello to the 

 8           many legislators here, my fellow New Yorkers.  

 9           I want to thank you for the opportunity to 

10           testify this afternoon.  

11                  My name is Felicia A.B. Reid, and I am 

12           the acting executive director of the Office 

13           of Cannabis Management.  I look forward to 

14           sharing OCM's incredible work since I stepped 

15           into this role last June, as well as the work 

16           to come.  

17                  I want to thank Governor Hochul and 

18           the Executive Chamber for their support.  

19           This work and the milestones OCM has reached 

20           so far would be impossible without their 

21           commitment to economic development, public 

22           safety and rule of law, patient care, and a 

23           New York where diversity, equity, and 

24           inclusion are the drivers of positive and 


                                                                   19

 1           lasting change.  

 2                  Today is the first time that OCM has 

 3           appeared for a budget hearing.  And in that, 

 4           I recognize the advocates and legislators who 

 5           fought to bring the Marijuana Regulation and 

 6           Taxation Act to life, and to the 

 7           cannabusinesses across our growing industry 

 8           who are its lifeblood and the MRTA's greatest 

 9           dream. 

10                  I also want to thank everyone at OCM. 

11           It truly takes a village -- and you show up 

12           every day, and sometimes nights and weekends, 

13           to make our shared mission a reality.  

14                  And finally, thank you to the 

15           Cannabis Control Board and Cannabis Advisory 

16           Board, and to Sue Filburn, acting deputy 

17           executive director, and my dear colleagues 

18           across OCM's executive team.  

19                  I came to OCM at a moment of necessary 

20           transition, tasked with strengthening the 

21           agency's infrastructure and enhancing its 

22           operational effectiveness.  I joined OCM 

23           ready to work on day one, thanks to my 

24           experience working with justice-impacted 


                                                                   20

 1           New Yorkers.  Now, having worked with the 

 2           Legislature, appellate court, the Legislative 

 3           Ethics Commission, and the Office of Children 

 4           and Family Services overseeing a statewide 

 5           human services system, I was well prepared. 

 6           But still, it's the time that I spent with 

 7           incarcerated young people and their families 

 8           that really animates the MRTA for me.  

 9                  The MRTA is a landmark piece of 

10           legislation that prioritizes economic 

11           development and demands equity in New York's 

12           cannabis industry.  And I understand what's 

13           at stake -- making equity the engine, not an 

14           afterthought or an aside, in an emerging 

15           market full of big risks and high stakes.  

16                  The thing you learn quickly in 

17           juvenile justice is that the most creative, 

18           perceptive, innovative, and gifted people, 

19           the people with the most to give back to 

20           their communities, are the hundreds of young 

21           people locked behind double fences and 

22           two layers of razor wire.  The elegance of 

23           the MRTA is that it sees and knows the 

24           extraordinary power of the communities I've 


                                                                   21

 1           served for years.  

 2                  And so it is my mission as the head of 

 3           OCM to realize the promise of these 

 4           New Yorkers and their communities, those 

 5           whose dreams have been denied and deferred 

 6           for long enough.  

 7                  As New York's cannabis industry moves 

 8           from a jog to a sprint, OCM's economic 

 9           development and regulatory roles have never 

10           been more crucial.  But before I get to where 

11           the agency is going, let's look at where it 

12           is now.  

13                  By the end of 2024, New York's 

14           adult-use cannabis industry surpassed 

15           $1 billion in sales, while medical sales 

16           captured almost $100 million.  Governor 

17           Hochul's Illicit Cannabis Enforcement 

18           Task Force was instrumental to these 

19           milestones.  Along with our state agency 

20           partners, OCM padlocked over 330 unlawful 

21           stores, saw more than 200 additional 

22           unlicensed operators close on their own, and 

23           seized nearly 7,500 pounds of illicit 

24           cannabis.  


                                                                   22

 1                  And unlike other states, New York 

 2           achieved these economic development and 

 3           revenue milestones while prioritizing small 

 4           and medium-sized local businesses on the 

 5           foundation of social and economic equity.  In 

 6           plain terms, this means that the economic 

 7           powerhouse of New York cannabis is DEIA in 

 8           action.  It is a testament to what we 

 9           accomplish by demanding the diversity and 

10           inclusion of many, not just the most powerful 

11           few.  And what OCM has accomplished is both 

12           internal and external.  

13                  Today OCM is in a much different place 

14           than when I joined last year.  Thanks to 

15           Civil Service's HELPS program, we have hired 

16           nearly 50 new staff, to stand at 215 

17           employees today across offices in Albany, 

18           New York City, and Buffalo.  

19                  To support OCM's continued expansion, 

20           I welcome Governor Hochul's proposed 

21           $5 million to support additional hiring in 

22           licensing, compliance, enforcement, and 

23           legal, and the proposed increase in our 

24           staffing cap from 245 to 274.  


                                                                   23

 1                  Doubling OCM's licensing team has made 

 2           navigating the application process more 

 3           transparent and supported our implementation 

 4           of a single point of contact system for 

 5           application review.  This ensures that each 

 6           applicant has an assigned case manager who 

 7           provides them with regular communication and 

 8           works with them through the entire process.  

 9                  So how does this show up in the 

10           industry?  Let's look at the license approval 

11           rate from January 2024 through the end of May 

12           2024, against June 2024 to today. 

13           Comparatively, OCM has moved almost 

14           193 percent more licenses through to the 

15           Cannabis Control Board for approval, all 

16           while continuing to exceed the MRTA's goal of 

17           50 percent of social and economic equity 

18           operators.  

19                  This means more regulated stores, 

20           cultivators growing and breeding genetics 

21           adapted to New York, additional cannabis 

22           research and development, and greater 

23           resources for medical patients.  

24                  By late summer of last year, OCM 


                                                                   24

 1           coordinated a light-touch needs assessment of 

 2           our people, processes, and technology, 

 3           concretizing what we must build across those 

 4           domains.  I addressed OCM's lack of internal 

 5           accountability processes by installing its 

 6           first office of internal control and audit, 

 7           to reduce agency risk and practice 

 8           vulnerabilities.  

 9                  By winter, OCM brought together its 

10           first customer service team, which will help 

11           the agency, in real time, address issues from 

12           the field.  

13                  And finally, by year's end, OCM 

14           reduced its FOIL backlog by 25 percent.  

15                  This month I announced the launch of 

16           the Trade Practice Bureau, a unit in our 

17           Office of General Counsel, to go after 

18           operators who violate the two-tier market, 

19           undermine the development of local business, 

20           and who disregard New York's cannabis equity 

21           priorities.  The industry has roundly 

22           celebrated this news.  

23                  But meeting the New Yorkers across the 

24           cannabis community has been the highlight of 


                                                                   25

 1           my time at OCM -- whether it's standing in a 

 2           muddy field with cultivators in Hudson Valley 

 3           or in booties at a state-of-the-art 

 4           processing facility in Long Island.  From 

 5           Buffalo to the boroughs, the team and I have 

 6           met with hundreds of New Yorkers, in their 

 7           communities, to hear from them directly about 

 8           their needs in navigating our regulated 

 9           market.  We heard about the things that work 

10           and the things that don't, and we will use 

11           the relationships we build to inform where we 

12           go next.  

13                  My vision for OCM is an agency that 

14           understands the needs of cannabusiness across 

15           the supply chain, protects and educates the 

16           public, knows its obligation to maintain 

17           market integrity, and invests in the growth 

18           and development of staff.  All this while 

19           treating equity not as a word of the day, but 

20           a spirit that gives color, light, and meaning 

21           to all that we do.  

22                  At our recent Cannabis Control Board 

23           meeting, 62 percent of the adult-use licenses 

24           approved were social and economic 


                                                                   26

 1           equity-owned, and 52 percent of those 

 2           licenses were women-owned businesses.  To 

 3           date, 54 percent of licenses across the 

 4           supply network are SEE-owned.  

 5                  And a vision is only as good as the 

 6           ability to make it real, and that ability is 

 7           what I've brought to OCM.  

 8                  Successfully implementing the MRTA 

 9           requires long-term strategic planning and 

10           action.  New York must learn now from lessons 

11           other cannabis jurisdictions only learned in 

12           hindsight.  We must continue to support 

13           operators across the supply chain.  We must 

14           move decisively on matters of climate change 

15           and environmental sustainability.  And we 

16           must pay close attention to the economic 

17           winds that impact our regulated market.  

18                  So what does success look like?  It's 

19           more legal stores in our communities that 

20           sell New York-grown cannabis.  It's a 

21           well-trained cannabis workforce and labor 

22           practices that keep them safe.  

23                  It's patients with greater access to 

24           medication and practitioners who understand 


                                                                   27

 1           the science.  It's families and caregivers 

 2           having the information to have cannabis 

 3           conversations with young people.  

 4                  It's innovation that doesn't happen at 

 5           the expense of the environment.  It's 

 6           even-handed compliance and enforcement 

 7           efforts so that those who follow the rules 

 8           are those most likely to be successful.  

 9                  And it's knowing that to approach a 

10           person, a community, or an industry with 

11           equity is to know deeply, as Audre Lord would 

12           say, that "we do not survive as individuals."  

13           Equity values difference and meets that 

14           difference adaptively, so that we all get 

15           where we need to go, together.  

16                  Thank you, Senator Krueger and 

17           Assemblymember Pretlow, for welcoming OCM to 

18           this budget hearing.  I deeply appreciate the 

19           opportunity to share information and plan 

20           forward for the future of New York cannabis.

21                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you both 

22           very much.

23                  I think we've been joined by several 

24           additional Senators.  I see Senator Cooney, I 


                                                                   28

 1           see Senator Ryan.  Anyone else want to wave 

 2           that they didn't get intro'd?  

 3                  Oh, I'm sorry, Senator Fahy.  We have 

 4           two Senator Ryans.  I see Senator Borrello 

 5           down there waving his hand.  

 6                  Assembly, do you have any more you 

 7           want to introduce before we starting rolling?

 8                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman Lucas 

 9           and Assemblywoman Peoples-Stokes.

10                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And Billy Jones 

11           is down below.  It's always a challenge here.  

12                  Obviously much interest in this panel.  

13           Thank you, everyone.

14                  Our first questioner will be the 

15           chair, Senator Sean Ryan, not to confuse my 

16           Senator Ryans.

17                  SENATOR SEAN RYAN:  (Mic off.)  Now 

18           it's on.

19                  Thank you to all the chairs who have 

20           been doing the hearings for hours and hours, 

21           and my Assembly counterpart, Assemblymember 

22           Al Stirpe.

23                  I want to go into the marijuana phase 

24           first.  But good to see you today, Hope.


                                                                   29

 1                  Just give me a sum-up of -- how long 

 2           have you been in the agency now?

 3                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  About 

 4           nine months.

 5                  SENATOR SEAN RYAN:  I know you've had 

 6           a quick nine months.  How have you been 

 7           improving the licensing and staffing at the 

 8           agency?

 9                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So I'll 

10           answer in two parts.  

11                  As to licensing, I talked a little bit 

12           about this, but we've implemented something 

13           called a single point of contact system.  So 

14           that means -- you know, this is also based on 

15           hearing from folks in our industry.  I've sat 

16           down with so many who have talked about the 

17           communicative challenges with OCM 

18           historically.  

19                  And so that system sort of aims to 

20           make sure that someone is assigned a 

21           caseworker when we get to their application 

22           in the queue, and for that whole process they 

23           have someone who's working with them in 

24           addressing deficiencies, addressing 


                                                                   30

 1           communication issues, getting documents.  And 

 2           then through that process we've been able to 

 3           streamline our licensing.

 4                  As to staffing, just sticking with 

 5           licensing for a second, we've doubled the 

 6           folks in our licensing team, in addition to 

 7           adding across the agency.  So that means 

 8           hires in enforcement, in compliance, in 

 9           legal, and including in our new audit and 

10           quality assurance division.

11                  SENATOR SEAN RYAN:  And what are you 

12           hearing back from the public who interacts 

13           with your agency?

14                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Yeah, the 

15           changes have surely been welcome.  Folks have 

16           said that things are a bit easier.  I know 

17           for folks who are still waiting in other 

18           queues, you know, they haven't yet heard yet.

19                  But we have heard a lot of really 

20           positive feedback from folks around the 

21           communication overall from OCM.

22                  SENATOR SEAN RYAN:  That's fantastic.  

23                  I often measure success of how many 

24           negative phone calls I've been getting, and I 


                                                                   31

 1           have not been getting many negative phone 

 2           calls regarding either illegal dispensaries 

 3           or super-long waits.  So whatever you're 

 4           doing, it's not making my phone ring.

 5                  (Laughter.)

 6                  SENATOR SEAN RYAN:  So thank you.  

 7           Thank you for that.

 8                  And, Commissioner, you know, we did 

 9           hearings a few months ago looking at all the 

10           different programs we have in New York State, 

11           trying to figure out which ones have the best 

12           return on investment.  And I look forward to 

13           continuing to work with ESD as your Database 

14           of Deals is progressing, evolving.  But also 

15           happy that you're able to keep an open 

16           dialogue on some of the programs and, you 

17           know, we're going through your budget 

18           requests.

19                  But as an upstater, I'll have to say 

20           I'm very pleased how you responded to the 

21           City of Albany's proposals about how to 

22           strengthen the city itself.  You know, I 

23           could see my -- I'm not an Albany resident, 

24           but I walk around and I can see with my eyes 


                                                                   32

 1           where capital investment will be a positive 

 2           thing.  

 3                  So I applaud you for taking that step 

 4           to really be responsive to a city in a 

 5           different way than you might have to a 

 6           Rochester or Syracuse or a Buffalo problem.  

 7           So thank you so much.

 8                  Yeah, that's it.  Thank you.

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  All right.

10                  Assembly.

11                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Yes, I'd like to 

12           call as our first speaker the chair of the 

13           Cannabis Oversight Committee, Crystal 

14           Peoples-Stokes, for 10 minutes.

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  Thank 

16           you so much, Mr. Chairman, and I would say 

17           congratulations to both you and the 

18           chairwoman, Senator, for the work that you 

19           have been putting in on these budget 

20           hearings.  It's mammoth.  And I'm really 

21           grateful for what you have been providing for 

22           us all week long, and including last week.

23                  And I want to say welcome to the 

24           Panel A for today.  It's nice to see you.  I 


                                                                   33

 1           saw some of you this morning at breakfast.  I 

 2           hope you enjoyed it, one of my favorite 

 3           restaurants. 

 4                  I do have a couple of questions, 

 5           specifically for the Office of Cannabis 

 6           Management.  

 7                  So last May the Governor's office 

 8           released a report that there was a real 

 9           problem with the rollout of the cannabis 

10           program across the board, and it cited a lot 

11           of mismanagement of the agency and its 

12           resources, including its licensing staff.  

13                  So how many new licensing staff have 

14           you hired since that report was released?

15                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Since 

16           that report, when I started, there were 21.  

17           Today there are about 47.

18                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  There 

19           were 27, so you've hired six?

20                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  No, 

21           there's 47.

22                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  There's 

23           47.

24                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  


                                                                   34

 1           Forty-seven, yes.

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  And so 

 3           as a result of having more licensing staff, 

 4           how many more licenses have you issued?

 5                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Since 

 6           the -- since around June I think we've gotten 

 7           through about, I want to say -- I'd have to 

 8           get the number back to you, but around 200, 

 9           300 plus since -- in that time.

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  Two 

11           hundred plus --

12                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Yes.

13                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  -- in 

14           that time?

15                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Yes.

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  From 

17           May of '24 until now, 200 and some -- my 

18           numbers are not seeing it, but that's good.

19                  I will also ask how many other staff 

20           have you hired to complete the staffing needs 

21           of the agency?

22                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So 

23           overall we've hired around 50-plus in total.  

24           So that's gone to particularly vulnerable -- 


                                                                   35

 1           not vulnerable areas, but issues of high 

 2           priority in compliance, enforcement and 

 3           legal.  Aside from licensing.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  Okay, 

 5           thank you.  On the other side of the staffing 

 6           issue, how many staff people have literally 

 7           left the agency within the last year?

 8                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  In the 

 9           last year?  I'd have to get that number -- 

10           I'd have to get that number for you.

11                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  Okay.

12                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  But what 

13           I can say is that in the last eight to nine 

14           months we've severely dropped our turnover 

15           rate, which for me is important.  Because 

16           it's one thing to hire, but if those folks 

17           leave right away, that's not building 

18           institutional practice.

19                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  So I 

20           know that there's been reports that the chief 

21           medical officer, the general counsel, deputy 

22           chief officer and multiple other staff have 

23           left the agency for whatever reasons.  And 

24           what is the plan or the strategy to replace 


                                                                   36

 1           that talent and that leadership that's 

 2           desperately needed to ensure the 

 3           successfulness of the agency?

 4                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Yeah, so 

 5           I'm incredibly thankful for the time that I 

 6           got to work with some of the folks who left.  

 7           I can tell you across the board that many of 

 8           them left for personal reasons, not 

 9           professional.  Especially, as you know, you 

10           know, Tabatha Robinson out now in Maryland as 

11           my counterpart.  

12                  But currently, we have several 

13           positions out for posting for our executive 

14           office, and we've been interviewing apace.  I 

15           feel like I spend most of my time doing 

16           interviews and sitting down with folks.  So 

17           we're not slowing down on that front, knowing 

18           that we do need that expertise in the agency.

19                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  What's 

20           the structure of your hiring process?  Is 

21           this going through the Office of General 

22           Services, as it was in the past, or is it 

23           going through Civil Service?  How does a 

24           person apply and get through the process of 


                                                                   37

 1           being hired by the Office of Cannabis 

 2           Management?

 3                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Yeah, so 

 4           we will post our positions.  Those -- because 

 5           we're a hosted agency on a couple of 

 6           different fronts, those will go through OGS, 

 7           then come back to us.  We make our selection, 

 8           we make sure those folks are qualified for 

 9           the positions, and then we sit down and we 

10           interview.  

11                  What I will say, you know, cannabis 

12           being cannabis, when we post a position we 

13           get hundreds and hundreds of resumes for just 

14           a single position.  So it's taken a lot to go 

15           through all of those.  But I know I've turned 

16           our executive team and others into reviewing 

17           those resumes, so we're all working 

18           collaboratively.

19                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  So, I'm 

20           sorry, could you specifically say what the 

21           role is for the Office of General Services 

22           and your hiring practice?

23                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Sorry, 

24           say that again?  What --


                                                                   38

 1                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  The 

 2           Office of General Services, what is their 

 3           role in your hiring practice?  Or is there 

 4           one?

 5                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So there 

 6           is.  So resumes, when folks apply, they have 

 7           to go through OGS.  They don't come to us.

 8                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  They 

 9           have to go through OGS before they come to 

10           you.

11                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Yes, 

12           because we're a hosted agency.

13                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  And so 

14           the reason for that process is exactly what?  

15           I'm not sure if I understand why that has to 

16           happen that way.

17                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  It's as a 

18           hosted agency, so they take care of most -- 

19           they take care of a certain portion of our HR 

20           side.  So given that split, that's how our 

21           resumes go through -- that's how resumes go 

22           through that process.

23                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  Okay.  

24           Well, you know, I raise that because a lot of 


                                                                   39

 1           the critique of the former leadership was 

 2           about the lack of hiring staff -- when you 

 3           have to depend on another agency before you 

 4           can even get to hiring staff.  I think it was 

 5           an unfair criticism in a lot of ways.

 6                  And I will be honest, my phone still 

 7           does ring, not just about licensing, because 

 8           this issue is much broader than licenses.  

 9           There are all sorts of calls that we receive.

10                  But I'm going to stick to the 

11           questions I have for you today, and the other 

12           one would be as it relates to the chief 

13           equity officer.  Do you understand that 

14           that's a role that is designed under statute?

15                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  I do.  

16           And when I drafted that job description, I 

17           actually referred to the statute.  

18                  When it breaks it down into three 

19           pieces in terms of what the chief equity 

20           officer must do, that was in the original job 

21           posting because I recognized that -- that 

22           position's for an ombudsman for the office 

23           and the cornerstone, one of the cornerstones 

24           of the agency, so it's incredibly important 


                                                                   40

 1           to honor that legislative spirit.

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  So the 

 3           recent posting for the chief equity officer, 

 4           it doesn't have the tenets of all of the 

 5           statute included in it.  In fact, it omits 

 6           all the statutory responsibility outlined in 

 7           MRTA, the responsibilities that were assigned 

 8           to that position.

 9                  And I just wonder what were the 

10           requirements that were removed, and how will 

11           you fill -- this position fill its 

12           legislative mandate if you've changed it in a 

13           way that is not in line with the statute?

14                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So, 

15           respectfully, I have not changed the 

16           position.  Again, I referenced the statute in 

17           articulating I believe the first three bullet 

18           points on that job posting, because again 

19           they're the most important.

20                  However, the thing that I did notice 

21           when I came to the agency is that there was 

22           no internal practice around DEIA in terms of 

23           operations.  And so noting that -- and I said 

24           this a little bit in my opening, is I like to 


                                                                   41

 1           make sure that there is an internal 

 2           foundation before moving externally, because 

 3           I don't think we could say one thing 

 4           outwardly and do another thing internally.

 5                  And so it's been important to me to 

 6           make sure that that position, because of its 

 7           experience understanding equity and 

 8           diversity, also builds out another side of a 

 9           team -- not taking away from the current 

10           C Team; the current C Team is going to remain 

11           in place to do economic development and 

12           workshop and resource work for our 

13           operators -- but also having a side of the 

14           house that addresses some of the internal 

15           work of an agency that I'm used to across 

16           agencies.

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  Well, 

18           the intent of the legislation literally was 

19           for this to be an oversight opportunity for 

20           the entire agency.  With staff.  And if 

21           you've taken it down to one staff -- one 

22           person without a staff, I'm not so sure how 

23           that can be accomplished in terms of the 

24           oversight aspect of it.


                                                                   42

 1                  But again, I think that should have 

 2           been changed in statute.  And I understand 

 3           that you don't agree with that, so we 

 4           probably will just have to submit some 

 5           legislation to reverse that action.  Because 

 6           I think you do still need the statutorily 

 7           required person to be an equity officer, as 

 8           you manage an initiative that's focused on 

 9           equity.  And I think we will have to go back 

10           to that.

11                  I will just ask one other question, 

12           and that's how you are feeling about the 

13           stability of the market.  How are you feeling 

14           about the stability of the legal market at 

15           this step in the game?

16                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  I think, 

17           you know, to quote one of the staff members, 

18           the industry is in a place where we're 

19           cooking with gas.  

20                  But, you know, understanding that 

21           means that it's flammable, we have to be 

22           incredibly careful around balancing our 

23           supply chain because, again, we've seen 

24           across Michigan, California, other states 


                                                                   43

 1           that have legal schemes, where there's 

 2           oversaturation of licenses, there are 

 3           licenses that are not active.  

 4                  And that is something that in New York 

 5           I don't want to see.  Because aside from the 

 6           fact that's fundamentally waste, that would 

 7           be a real disservice to the goals, the 

 8           economic development goals of the market.

 9                  So I'm sanguine about where the market 

10           is at and where it's going, but I do think we 

11           need to be incredibly vigilant.  That's one 

12           of the reasons that I announced the trade 

13           practice bureau to go after sort of 

14           malpractice in the market, to make sure 

15           there's a fidelity to expectations.

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  Well, I 

17           want to definitely congratulate you and your 

18           board on some of the decisions you recently 

19           made around proximity protection.  

20                  But clearly I think that's an issue 

21           that -- it depends on what location the 

22           proximity protection is needed.  It's not the 

23           same in Ellicottville as it would be, say, in 

24           Harlem.


                                                                   44

 1                  And so I appreciate the way you all 

 2           are beginning to look at that as an issue, 

 3           because it definitely does have an impact on 

 4           existing businesses.

 5                  Lastly I just want to ask a little bit 

 6           about the enforcement of illegal shops.  I'm 

 7           not sure that -- at some point we're going to 

 8           have to figure out how to have law 

 9           enforcement engaged, because the calls that I 

10           get now are not so much about illegal shops 

11           necessarily perhaps in Buffalo, or even in 

12           Rochester, but in New York City there still 

13           is a problem.

14                  And some of the ones that were 

15           actually shut down -- I just heard this 

16           today -- by the former sheriff in New York 

17           City have somehow popped up back open, with a 

18           hemp license.  

19                  And so I think there has to be some 

20           opportunity to look at who has a hemp license 

21           and what are they doing with it that they 

22           shouldn't be doing.  And there also has to be 

23           some opportunity to figure out how we begin 

24           to engage law enforcement in protecting the 


                                                                   45

 1           laws of New York State.  It is illegal to 

 2           sell cannabis if you don't have a license.  

 3           Yet there's still people who think that they 

 4           can do that in this country, and they are 

 5           doing it.

 6                  And so I know we went through quite a 

 7           bit with Senator Krueger and your office and 

 8           the Governor in figuring out how to get 

 9           sheriffs engaged and put the task force 

10           together.  That work temporarily is not 

11           working anymore.  So what's the next step 

12           going to be?

13                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Everyone's afraid 

14           to cut you off, Crystal, but I've been 

15           assigned to do so.

16                  (Laughter.)

17                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  But I promise I 

18           will follow up with my questions on your 

19           train of thinking, so I am going to cut you 

20           off.

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN PEOPLES-STOKES:  Thank 

22           you.

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

24                  And I'm going to hand it over to the 


                                                                   46

 1           chair of our Cannabis Subcommittee, 

 2           Jeremy Cooney.

 3                  SENATOR COONEY:  Thank you, Chair.  

 4           And thank you to this panel for coming 

 5           together.  I appreciate your good work.

 6                  Let me start with cannabis, if I may, 

 7           and then we'll move to ESD as well.  

 8                  First, Director Reid, thank you for 

 9           your leadership.  I know you've had a lot on 

10           your plate since you've taken on this role, 

11           but really pleased to see the progress that 

12           you've made especially with the hiring 

13           numbers that you shared.  Significant.

14                  I too will join the Majority Leader 

15           with my concern about the December queue.  I 

16           know we're working hard to get to it, but 

17           we're still getting phone calls from people 

18           who have been waiting very, very patiently 

19           and who have a lot of money on the line, been 

20           trying to get through this process.  So we 

21           want to see that continue.  But I know that 

22           you're working on that.

23                  Let's start with the retail side and 

24           then we'll move to the supply side.  


                                                                   47

 1                  So on retail, I would agree again with 

 2           the Majority Leader that some of the work 

 3           that's been done through the regulatory side 

 4           with proximity protections is encouraging.  

 5                  However, I think I know, when you set 

 6           this process up, a lot of it was modeled 

 7           after the State Liquor Authority and ABC 

 8           control laws.  And, you know, I think that 

 9           there's some more clarity that you see in 

10           terms of proximity protections for liquor 

11           stores, et cetera.  

12                  And I think we could apply some of 

13           that clarity on the OCM side to cannabis 

14           retail dispensaries.  And I think there's 

15           some uncertainty that even though we've 

16           changed the distances, et cetera, recently, 

17           that there's still some wiggle room there 

18           that investors, that retailers don't feel 

19           secure in their spaces, whether in a more 

20           dense urban area like New York City or up in 

21           upstate New York cities like Rochester and 

22           Buffalo.  So we'll be following up with your 

23           office on that.

24                  Have you heard anything more 


                                                                   48

 1           specifically from retailers since you've done 

 2           these regulatory changes on proximity 

 3           protections, about their ability to kind of 

 4           move forward in the process?  Can you speak 

 5           to that?

 6                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Yeah.  So 

 7           last September, I believe it was, we put out 

 8           the current regs under review for public 

 9           comment.  And pointedly, the brunt of that 

10           public comment was negative on the very 

11           concerns that you raise.  You know, one of 

12           the things that I'm particularly mindful of, 

13           and I know this from SLA, is that businesses 

14           need to know what to expect.  

15                  And the thing that I am also conscious 

16           of is that unlike, you know, the alcohol 

17           market, cannabis is an emerging market.  

18           That's -- the alcohol market is a mature one, 

19           we are an emerging market.  

20                  So even though we have in our 

21           regulations the ability to consider things 

22           like public convenience and advantage, I 

23           think we have to be particularly sensitive to 

24           the fact that we are an emerging market and 


                                                                   49

 1           the proposed regulations that we put out 

 2           there go a long way to try to strengthen 

 3           them.  That is giving local communities the 

 4           ability to advocate and have a bit of process 

 5           in that.  It also gives a little bit of time 

 6           for businesses to start operationalizing 

 7           before there is a consideration of public 

 8           convenience and advantage.

 9                  So I think some of the matters that 

10           we've put in place are responding to the 

11           things that we've heard from sitting down 

12           with the field and with retailers and across 

13           the supply chain that could go a long way to 

14           sort of addressing some of the issues that 

15           exist.

16                  SENATOR COONEY:  Okay.  Well, we'll 

17           follow up with your team afterwards on some 

18           additional feedback that we've received.  But 

19           I appreciate the work that's been started on 

20           proximity protections.

21                  I'm concerned on the supply side.  

22           This is a good problem to have; we're opening 

23           up more stores, there's more opportunities 

24           across the state.  Congratulations on hitting 


                                                                   50

 1           that 1 billion mark -- that's wonderful 

 2           progress.  But we're still hearing directly 

 3           from farmers, we're hearing from processors 

 4           that they're worried about not having enough 

 5           supply to meet the New York demand.

 6                  And obviously some of the things that 

 7           we can't factor in at least right now are the 

 8           federal issues, right?  

 9                  And so if this really is going to be a 

10           New York-based market, how are we going to 

11           meet the supply demands?  Are you opening or 

12           thinking about changing regulations around 

13           growing the canopy, around lighting 

14           requirements, things that may allow 

15           processors and cultivators to, you know, 

16           increase their yield, if you will, so that we 

17           can supply our legal cannabis stores with 

18           New York-made products?  Can you speak to 

19           that a little bit?

20                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Sure.  So 

21           I think the one thing that sort of frames 

22           this is the issue that happened in the market 

23           in 2023 where we had allowed folks to go 

24           first in terms of growing cannabis, and then 


                                                                   51

 1           there ended up being no place for that 

 2           cannabis to go.  And that was incredibly 

 3           difficult for our cultivator community and 

 4           for communities across the state.  

 5                  So one of the things that I'm 

 6           particularly sensitive to, and we at the 

 7           agency are sensitive to, is ensuring that if 

 8           we have something starting at seed, cutting 

 9           our clone, it is getting someplace ultimately 

10           in the market.

11                  One of the things that I think is 

12           incredibly important is paying attention to 

13           balancing, like I said, across the supply 

14           chain.  What I will say is in the last 

15           several months we have put forward -- or, 

16           sorry, the Cannabis Control Board has 

17           approved several cultivation licenses.  But 

18           again, it being largely an outdoor crop, 

19           those plants aren't in the ground yet.

20                  So we'll see what happens this growing 

21           year, because it should be pretty interesting 

22           given the fact that last year was an 

23           incredible growing year.  As someone who 

24           grows myself, it was a great year.  But, you 


                                                                   52

 1           know, every year is different, particularly 

 2           with the climate of New York, and so we want 

 3           to see what happens on the cultivation side 

 4           this upcoming year in terms of yield.

 5                  SENATOR COONEY:  So let's continue to 

 6           monitor that, but I think we should be open 

 7           to -- again, we want to make sure that we're 

 8           not catching ourselves at the end of a 

 9           growing season with too short of a supply to 

10           meet the demand of our retailers.

11                  Can you speak briefly on where we are 

12           in implementing the recommendations that 

13           Commissioner Moy shared earlier this -- or, 

14           sorry, last year?

15                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Sure.  So 

16           it identified several areas.  One was of 

17           course staffing.  And, you know, we've worked 

18           incredibly hard to expand -- hire up, but 

19           also keep our folks.

20                  You know, I've sat down with every 

21           single team, I've gone to lab visits, I sat 

22           down and watched them do input into 

23           licensing, just to understand what it is they 

24           do.  Because I'm not the kind of person who 


                                                                   53

 1           sort of leads from a closed office.  And 

 2           that's been really important for staff.  Also 

 3           having things like town halls.

 4                  Another one of the areas that we 

 5           addressed was the lack of internal 

 6           accountability around audit and compliance.  

 7           Again, I'm used to an agency with a very 

 8           robust audit and compliance component -- 

 9           basically, keeping the agency honest to what 

10           it says it does.  So having put that in place 

11           has been, you know, incredibly important.

12                  Another thing is the communication 

13           piece.  You know, as you might tell, I'm a 

14           bit of a chatty person and I like to sit down 

15           with our communities, sit down with the folks 

16           in the business and hear from them directly 

17           what's working.  I don't like to work off 

18           assumptions and suppositions, I like to hear 

19           directly from folks.

20                  So we've gone and done I believe a 

21           seminar, eight stops at this point, 

22           office-hours tour across the state -- we 

23           started in Geneva, we just had one on 

24           Long Island -- to really hear back from local 


                                                                   54

 1           communities on what's going on, but also 

 2           thinking about the backlog we have in 

 3           communication.  

 4                  I know several legislators had reached 

 5           out over time and had not heard back.  So 

 6           we've been incredibly communicative in 

 7           getting back to folks and following up, 

 8           making sure that, you know, folks know that 

 9           we're listening.  That's incredibly important 

10           to us.

11                  SENATOR COONEY:  Well, I know Tai {ph} 

12           and Nicolette are here, they're doing a great 

13           job at trying to get through as many of those 

14           backlogs as possible.  And I appreciate your 

15           road show coming to Rochester.  That was a 

16           good conversation.

17                  So again, thank you for your 

18           leadership and your work, and I appreciate 

19           all that you're doing.

20                  Let me move quickly to 

21           Commissioner Knight.  

22                  As a former ESD employee, I'm always 

23           impressed by what you're doing and thank you 

24           specifically for your leadership and the 


                                                                   55

 1           Governor's leadership on the Film Tax Credit, 

 2           which of course I support -- I know what a 

 3           difference that makes -- as well as the 

 4           Digital Gaming Tax Credit, which I know we're 

 5           working on some language changes so that we 

 6           can get that money out the door.  Incredibly 

 7           important.  Thank you for that.

 8                  You know, I want to speak briefly on 

 9           Empire AI.  Again, supportive of the 

10           Governor's vision for the expansion.  

11           University of Rochester and Rochester 

12           Institute of Technology are both looking to 

13           join the consortium, so excited to see that 

14           and excited to see the investment continue to 

15           be made across the state.

16                  My question is really around our 

17           favorite topic of MWBEs.  Seen a lot of 

18           progress made in recent years, but I am 

19           concerned about the disparity study.  And I 

20           know that we've been having this conversation 

21           along with my colleague Senator Sanders, who 

22           leads this in our house.

23                  The disparity study I think had a lot 

24           of alarming results.  I just don't think it 


                                                                   56

 1           reflected reality, truthfully, in New York.  

 2                  And my question to you is kind of, are 

 3           we going to go back out to do another 

 4           disparity study?  Are we working to tweak or 

 5           kind of reframe some of those questions so 

 6           that they are made to better reflect I think 

 7           the reality here in New York so that 

 8           New Yorkers can get the benefit of this 

 9           program?

10                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Thank you for 

11           your question.

12                  You know, we released the disparity 

13           study last year and the substance of the 

14           disparity study indicates that there is still 

15           a disparity with respect to utilization of 

16           MWBEs in the public and private marketplace.  

17           And so that study is on firm ground.  We do 

18           not believe that we need to do, you know, 

19           another study or go back and fix that study, 

20           because it's constitutionally sufficient, 

21           based on Supreme Court and federal case law, 

22           that our MWBE, you know, abides by those 

23           guidelines.  

24                  So we want to make sure that we have a 


                                                                   57

 1           study that is unassailable in case we have a 

 2           challenge and we need to have that --

 3                  SENATOR COONEY:  Of course.  And I 

 4           agree with you that I think the process that 

 5           was followed was absolutely correct, on the 

 6           mark.  And I think we can feel very strong in 

 7           our legal assertion that this is a good 

 8           program.

 9                  I just worry that there are 

10           communities that were reflected in the -- or, 

11           sorry, not reflected in that study that do 

12           have the need to be benefiting from this 

13           program.  So we can follow up with your 

14           office on that.  

15                  But thank you for your leadership and 

16           look forward to working with you.

17                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Thank you.

18                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you, Senator 

19           and Commissioner.

20                  Al Stirpe for 10 minutes.  

21           Assemblyman Stirpe for 10 minutes.

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Thank you, Chair.

23                  I guess I'll give Acting Director Reid 

24           time to catch her breath and stuff, and I'll 


                                                                   58

 1           focus on Commissioner Knight.

 2                  Let me ask you about the NY-RUSH 

 3           program, okay?  Last year we appropriated 

 4           $250 million; we're doing the same thing this 

 5           year.  But tell me a little bit about what's 

 6           happened with that $250 million.  How much of 

 7           it's already committed, and what kind of 

 8           projects?

 9                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  You did say the 

10           New York FAST program.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  No, RUSH.

12                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Oh, RUSH.

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  RUSH.

14                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yes.  So we have 

15           been working with many of our partner 

16           agencies that did have property that is 

17           state-owned that needs to be redeployed.

18                  We have not allocated any funding at 

19           this point, but we do have projects that are 

20           in the pipeline that have eligibility for the 

21           funding.  So for example there's a 

22           development for the Beacon Train Station that 

23           the MTA's put out an RFP for, and that RFP 

24           indicates that RUSH funding is available.


                                                                   59

 1                  You know, we're working on a Creedmoor 

 2           redevelopment.  We're looking at RUSH for 

 3           that funding.  And so there are a lot of 

 4           projects in the pipeline that will be 

 5           associated with that.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Okay.  Are we 

 7           prioritizing affordable housing?  And what is 

 8           the criteria for that?

 9                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yeah, so we're 

10           looking at a range of elements.  We're 

11           certainly looking at affordability.  We're 

12           looking at, you know, how difficult it will 

13           be to bring the site online from an 

14           infrastructure perspective.  So we're looking 

15           at a number of factors.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Okay.  Let's talk 

17           a little bit about FAST NY.  Okay?  Again, 

18           we're proposing $100 million for that.

19                  What I've heard from various people 

20           and briefings I've gotten from the executive 

21           branch, that the early sites we worked on 

22           were sites that were much closer to being 

23           shovel-ready, so it didn't cost quite as much 

24           per site.  


                                                                   60

 1                  Now we're going to sites where lots of 

 2           infrastructure has to be laid in there.  And 

 3           is $100 million enough?  And how many sites 

 4           could that possibly help?

 5                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So, you know, we 

 6           know that many of these sites need more 

 7           infrastructure.  We are proposing the 

 8           POWER UP program that will focus on 

 9           connecting these sites to the electrical 

10           grid, and so we think many of these sites 

11           will be paired with POWER UP as well as 

12           FAST NY funding that will get, you know, a 

13           number of sites in place.

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Okay.  Quickly 

15           over to Empire AI Consortium, can you provide 

16           an update of where we are now with that and 

17           maybe share how the existing funding for 

18           Empire AI is leveraged from external sources 

19           such as, you know, educational institutions 

20           or private investors?

21                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Absolutely.

22                  So Empire AI, that project is moving 

23           along very nicely.  The original consortium 

24           members are working through detailed use 


                                                                   61

 1           agreements.  There is now a board of 

 2           directors focused.

 3                  And the consortium was able to get 

 4           some donated equipment, so there's actually 

 5           projects being run now on that donated 

 6           equipment.  Two hundred researchers are 

 7           working on 85 projects.  And the development 

 8           of the facility at the University of Buffalo 

 9           is in progress of planning.  They've hired a 

10           consultant and think they'll be able to have, 

11           you know, designs and able to go into the 

12           ground next year.

13                  The $90 million that has been asked 

14           for, you know, is to advance an additional 

15           phase of this project to provide additional 

16           capacity so that these other academic 

17           institutions can have the ability to be on 

18           the network.

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Okay.  NY 

20           CREATES, you know, the $500 million on the 

21           extreme ultraviolet lithography tool, can you 

22           give me an update on what's happening with 

23           that and what's the tool's current status?

24                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So the 


                                                                   62

 1           construction continues at NY CREATES to be 

 2           able to house the tool.  

 3                  The construction needs to be at a 

 4           place significantly far along to have the 

 5           tool delivered.

 6                  When do we expect the tool?

 7                  ESD CEO YOUNIS:  The tool will be 

 8           delivered next year.

 9                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Okay, so the 

10           tool will be -- the construction will be in a 

11           place where the tool can be delivered next 

12           year.

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Okay.  All right.

14                  Let's talk about some of my favorite 

15           things, the Centers of Excellence and the 

16           CATs.  How often do you publish the 

17           effectiveness evaluations of each center?  Is 

18           that once a year, quarterly?

19                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Well, we do get 

20           reports from these centers.  I'll come back 

21           to you -- I think it's once a year, but I'll 

22           come back to you.  Yeah.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Okay.  You know, 

24           I know that we look at the Centers of 


                                                                   63

 1           Excellence and the CATs and the return on 

 2           investment and we always talk about how 

 3           they're exceptionally far and above anything 

 4           else that we have invested in so far.  

 5                  And I'm just wondering why we never 

 6           add any funding to them, but instead always 

 7           sort of cut back the funding each year and go 

 8           through the fight where the Legislature has 

 9           to add it back in, et cetera.

10                  Isn't there an opportunity at some 

11           point to say that they're successful and we 

12           should really support them so instead of 

13           cutting them, maybe add something to them?

14                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So we're very 

15           proud of our CATs and COEs, and we have a 

16           portfolio of innovation assets in our NYSTAR 

17           division, and they leverage, you know, the 

18           effectiveness of those institutions and 

19           programs.  

20                  So we -- you know, it's not a cut in 

21           the budget, it's just bring it back to what 

22           the Legislature has added last year.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Okay.  Let's talk 

24           a little bit about the new program, CATALIST. 


                                                                   64

 1           I'm having some difficulty feeling that it's 

 2           a program that is somewhat equitable.  I 

 3           mean, you're talking about a certain number 

 4           of employees in each company not paying 

 5           income taxes.  

 6                  And I don't know how the other people 

 7           in the company feel about having to pay 

 8           income taxes when people next to them don't.  

 9           And, you know, competing against other 

10           companies that are starting up also and don't 

11           have that advantage.

12                  Isn't there maybe a better way of 

13           doing this, helping these startups through 

14           some other type of grant program where they 

15           show the potential and we're able to 

16           recognize that and go ahead and provide some 

17           funding?

18                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So, you know, 

19           our innovation companies are very important 

20           to New York.  You know, they grow at a more 

21           rapid rate than other companies.  And we've 

22           seen the level of compensation increase 

23           substantially for high-tech talent.  

24                  And so we believe that by providing 


                                                                   65

 1           this personal income tax exemption these 

 2           companies are going to be able to hire the 

 3           talent that they need.  And we can root them 

 4           here in New York as they grow, instead of 

 5           them moving someplace else.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  All right.  Well, 

 7           we'll see how that ends up.   There are some 

 8           people who think that funding should be used 

 9           in a different way, but okay.

10                  What else?  ON-RAMP.  Can you give me 

11           a little update on ON-RAMP?  Have sites been 

12           selected?  Is anything started?

13                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So our flagship 

14           ON-RAMP Center in Syracuse is in the process 

15           of selecting a site for ON-RAMP.  The three 

16           others -- in the Finger Lakes, Capital Region 

17           and Mohawk Valley -- those projects were just 

18           announced about a month ago.  They will be 

19           working on planning around what types of 

20           training are in most demand in their regions 

21           and will be looking at, you know, selecting 

22           sites to locate those projects.

23                  In the Capital Region the announcement 

24           was in one of the former St. Rose buildings 


                                                                   66

 1           which will house one of the ON-RAMPs.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Okay.  Okay, 

 3           well, thank you very much.

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 5                  Next up is April Baskin, who's 

 6           actually the chair of Procurement, which 

 7           overlaps multiple agencies.

 8                  SENATOR BASKIN:  Thank you, 

 9           Madam Chair.  

10                  Good morning.  Thank you -- or good 

11           afternoon.  It's been a long week.  Thanks 

12           for joining us here today.

13                  Commissioner Hope Knight, good to see 

14           you.  

15                  A question for you surrounding ESD's 

16           investment into the East Side of Buffalo.  

17           ESD's investment into small businesses within 

18           my district was a welcome relief following 

19           the tragedy that we faced with the racist 

20           attack at the Tops Supermarket in Buffalo 

21           years ago.  The Commercial Districts Grant 

22           Program and the East Buffalo Small Business 

23           Working Capital Grant Program planted seeds 

24           of funding in neighborhood commercial 


                                                                   67

 1           districts that had been in decline for 

 2           decades.

 3                  But despite these innovative programs, 

 4           we're still struggling.  I've only been in 

 5           this position as a State Senator for two 

 6           months, but I've continuously heard from my 

 7           constituents:  What are we going to do about 

 8           all of these vacant storefronts?  

 9                  We need the condition of our 

10           communities to be healthy, walkable 

11           communities.  We have a lot of dormant 

12           commercial buildings in business districts 

13           that were once vibrant.  And when we do roll 

14           out these grants from ESD, there are a lot of 

15           barriers and a lot of paperwork and a lot of 

16           waiting for small business owners who are 

17           still struggling from COVID-19 -- and that is 

18           magnified by being in a marginalized business 

19           district -- and who wait months, sometimes 

20           years to figure out, navigate paperwork for a 

21           return of about $7500 to support their 

22           business.

23                  So I'm just interested -- first, 

24           thankful for the initial seed money, but 


                                                                   68

 1           interested to know what other plans are on 

 2           the rise for commercial districts across the 

 3           City of Buffalo but specifically on the 

 4           East Side?

 5                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Thank you for 

 6           your question, Senator.

 7                  You know, I've spent a fair amount of 

 8           time in Buffalo, and on the East Side, and 

 9           have been working with my team and some of 

10           our vendors who are actually working with the 

11           businesses to support them in accessing our 

12           programs.  

13                  We have made some changes to the 

14           program to be more responsive to the 

15           businesses, as well as providing much more 

16           technical support to help them access the 

17           capital.  And, you know, we continue to take 

18           feedback to understand, you know, what are 

19           the things that we can do to make the 

20           programs more accessible to those businesses 

21           on the East Side.

22                  SENATOR BASKIN:  Thank you.  I'm going 

23           to have my office reach out.  I want to know 

24           specifically what changes have been made, and 


                                                                   69

 1           I want to support you guys in communicating 

 2           what changes have been made to our 

 3           entrepreneurial and small business owner 

 4           community.

 5                  And I'd love to continue to work and 

 6           grow these programs -- not just the 

 7           opportunity fiscally, but also just 

 8           residents' ability to be able to quickly 

 9           access this funding is imperative, especially 

10           with what we've faced.

11                  Thank you.  Thanks, Madam Chair.

12                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Thank you.

13                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

14                  Assembly.

15                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblyman Ron 

16           Kim, for 10 minutes.

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN KIM:  Thank you, Chair.

18                  My questions are for President Knight.  

19           Thank you for being here today.

20                  I just wanted to focus my attention on 

21           the tourism economy and the responsibility 

22           that ESDC has to promote tourism in the State 

23           of New York.  Unlike traditional economic 

24           activity where oftentimes our consumer money 


                                                                   70

 1           is extracted out of our communities and 

 2           people spend money on Amazon and some of the 

 3           money leaves, community tourism is one of the 

 4           few places where we attract new money and 

 5           build economic resilience.  And I don't think 

 6           we do enough to really articulate how 

 7           important that is for local communities, 

 8           especially now, to build economic resilience 

 9           from the ground up.

10                  And it's my understanding in the last 

11           couple of years we've seen some record 

12           numbers of money that's been generated in 

13           tourism -- $137 billion in 2023 of economic 

14           impact, $88 billion of direct spending that 

15           year.  That's an 11 percent jump from the 

16           previous year.  

17                  However, when I talk to some of the 

18           art and culture institutions, they're seeing 

19           the reverse.  Coming out of COVID kind of, 

20           you know, in a reverse way in the sense that 

21           there's more local, regional tourists versus 

22           international tourism.  Whereas before COVID, 

23           we've had international tourists coming in 

24           and spending more money locally.


                                                                   71

 1                  And I think that is, despite the money 

 2           being spent, this is an important point for 

 3           me because that's money that's just being 

 4           circulated locally versus new money coming 

 5           in, having a multiplier effect in our 

 6           economy.  And I think this is a time where we 

 7           don't take this for granted but even start 

 8           investing more into our ability to market and 

 9           really promote tourism.

10                  But yet year after year it seems like 

11           our budget is stuck around the same level for 

12           the activity around tourism.  So let me just 

13           begin by clarifying, what is it the 

14           $15 million for Market NY does?  And talk 

15           about the I Love NY program for 2.5 million.  

16           And is it similar?  And what are those two 

17           programs?

18                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Sure.  Tourism 

19           is a very important part of the New York 

20           State economy.  And as you mentioned, we have 

21           our I Love NY program, which focuses on 

22           promoting New York as a destination.  You 

23           know, we work with tour operators, we provide 

24           some media attention for the attractions that 


                                                                   72

 1           we have in New York State.  

 2                  And with our Market NY program, that 

 3           is open to organizations that are promoting, 

 4           you know, local areas within New York.  So we 

 5           provide grants to organizations that are 

 6           promoting their regions.

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN KIM:  Great.  And I guess 

 8           there's 2.45 million by the Executive for 

 9           matching grants for those organizations.  I 

10           mean, those organizations are saying it's not 

11           enough for them.  And they're doing so much 

12           work volunteering their time because they 

13           love their communities and they want to 

14           promote their assets to the world.  

15                  And I just think if you just add a 

16           little bit more, the return is definitely 

17           there.  Just like our former chair has said, 

18           we can do a lot more to support these groups, 

19           to make sure that they can do a better job 

20           promoting their assets.

21                  The 47 million for open business, 

22           Global NY initiatives and trade missions, I 

23           know that there's been some advertising in 

24           places like London, where we see I Love NY 


                                                                   73

 1           signs pop up.  Are there other examples of 

 2           some of the promotional programs in other 

 3           countries that's active right now?

 4                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Well, some of 

 5           the activity that gets funded by the pot that 

 6           you're talking about is related to doing 

 7           foreign missions, having New York State 

 8           businesses market their products and services 

 9           in other markets around the globe.

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN KIM:  I'll close by just 

11           going back to some of the local reasons why I 

12           think tourism is so important.  

13                  I can't verify if this is true or not, 

14           but on social media there's a lot of stuff 

15           floating around and there are tourists from 

16           Asian countries that people are saying on 

17           social media platforms that have been picked 

18           up and harassed by ICE agents.  And these are 

19           people visiting to the city and spending 

20           money.

21                  And when those type of stories get 

22           out, there's a fear among people that they no 

23           longer want to come visit.  And I just -- 

24           again, going back to why we need to increase 


                                                                   74

 1           the funding for this activity, it is to make 

 2           sure to promote New York in a safe way that 

 3           they understand that there's some fake 

 4           stories, there's some real things, but we 

 5           have a handle on it and New York City and 

 6           New York State will continue to -- we'll 

 7           continue to keep them safe when they visit.  

 8                  And those are the type of things that 

 9           we need to really focus on promoting, because 

10           if we take it for granted, I think we'll see 

11           a downward trend, and that's not what we want 

12           for our economy.

13                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Understand.

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN KIM:  Thank you.

15                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

16                  Next we have Senator Borrello.

17                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  Thank you, 

18           Madam Chair.  

19                  Thank you all for being here.  My time 

20           is short, so I'm going to really focus on 

21           Executive Director Reid.  Appreciate you 

22           being here.

23                  I think we all know that this rollout 

24           has been an unmitigated disaster.  Here we 


                                                                   75

 1           are five years later -- four years later, and 

 2           hundreds of millions of dollars, taxpayer 

 3           dollars have been spent.  This office, prior 

 4           to your arrival, was run kind of like the mob 

 5           runs things, you know, so I think it's been 

 6           unfortunate that we saw a lot of wasted time 

 7           and the continued burgeoning of the illegal 

 8           markets.

 9                  But when it comes to the legal shops, 

10           it's my understanding that you're not 

11           enforcing the rules and regulations of 

12           licensed dispensaries that are out of 

13           compliance with your regulations and, rather, 

14           you have basically a trade practices bureau.  

15           Can you explain that, who's going to be 

16           heading that up, the enforcement of things, 

17           and what this trade practices bureau actually 

18           is?

19                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So let me 

20           back up just in terms of what we're doing 

21           around compliance.  Our compliance team was 

22           in place even before I got here, as well as 

23           our enforcement folks.  That's different from 

24           trade practice.  


                                                                   76

 1                  However, with the new trade practice 

 2           bureau, they're going to be going after 

 3           malpractice across our licensees.  That is, 

 4           things like inversion -- that is product 

 5           coming from out of state -- diversion, 

 6           product from in-state going out of state.  

 7           Things like license stacking, undue influence 

 8           in contracting, things like that.  So more 

 9           specifically around the basically business 

10           and trade practices of our operators.  

11                  Now, compliance is a little bit 

12           different.  They handle compliance with our 

13           regs writ large.  And those teams have gone 

14           out -- I can't -- I mean, I actually can tell 

15           you how often.  They've done over 210 

16           inspections in the last year.  They've issued 

17           1,118 findings.  And we've gotten numerous 

18           corrective action plans based on those 

19           compliance actions.  So --

20                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  When you say 

21           corrective action plans, have any licenses 

22           been pulled or, you know, has anybody lost 

23           their license because they've been grossly 

24           out of compliance?


                                                                   77

 1                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  To this 

 2           point, no, and I think that's a good thing.  

 3           Because what we find more often than not is 

 4           folks do want -- they recognize the 

 5           opportunity of cannabis.  They want to 

 6           benefit from that opportunity.  So when we 

 7           highlight things that are going not so well, 

 8           or wrong, they are -- with those plans, they 

 9           are correcting those things.

10                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  Well, a lot of 

11           these things were in place prior to your 

12           arrival.  Can you please tell me what -- you 

13           know, to move things in a new direction, what 

14           your plans have been beyond that you're just 

15           enforcing what was already in place before 

16           your taking this position?

17                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Sure.  So 

18           one of the things that's really interesting 

19           and also really challenging about the 

20           cannabis industry is that what it looks like 

21           today is not what it looks like tomorrow.  

22                  So what it requires is that our 

23           compliance folks are really paying attention 

24           to how business and operators move, and also 


                                                                   78

 1           flagging things that are issues out in our 

 2           landscape. 

 3                  And so, you know, building those 

 4           pieces and processes takes time.  However, 

 5           one of the biggest things around that is the 

 6           building on our hiring.  We need more folks 

 7           on our compliance team to address the myriad 

 8           issues.

 9                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  Thank you for the 

10           very fast answers, because I had so much and 

11           so little time.  Appreciate it.

12                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Assembly.

13                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 

14           Buttenschon for 10 minutes.

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BUTTENSCHON:  Good 

16           afternoon, Chairs.  Thank you.

17                  And Commissioner and Acting Director, 

18           thank you for your leadership.

19                  Commissioner Knight, as we spoke 

20           before, I would like to start with Minority 

21           and Women-Owned Business Enterprises, please.  

22           So I'm still hearing the challenges that 

23           these prospective and those renewing licenses 

24           are hearing for this certification.  Do you 


                                                                   79

 1           feel that you have enough within your 

 2           operational funding to support the staff so 

 3           that our prospective owners, business owners 

 4           as well as those renewing, can take advantage 

 5           of this program?

 6                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So thank you for 

 7           that question.  

 8                  You know, our MWBE program, 

 9           particularly on the certification side, is 

10           running very well.  And, you know, we went 

11           from having a backlog of almost 4,000 

12           applications to getting through that backlog 

13           in the fall of 2023.  We now are able to 

14           process those applications in 60 to 90 days, 

15           when before it was much, much longer -- maybe 

16           three or four times as long.  

17                  And so we are able to get through 

18           those applications.  Because we had so many 

19           applications in the backlog, we had a lot of 

20           denials.  But we've been able to have, you 

21           know, many roundtables and our executive 

22           director's been out in many of the regions, 

23           providing more transparency and visibility 

24           into the process, so that applicants 


                                                                   80

 1           understand, you know, what the confines of 

 2           15A are.

 3                  We have had many fewer denials last 

 4           year.  And, you know, we continue to work 

 5           with the MBEs, as you mentioned, and the 

 6           WBEs, and they have basically the same level 

 7           of approval rate.  So we don't see a 

 8           difference between approvals of MBEs and 

 9           WBEs.

10                  We, you know, continue to have the 

11           support to provide them with greater 

12           utilization.  We work with agencies and 

13           authorities to figure out when there are 

14           going to be contracts, where there will be 

15           accessibility to those contracts.  We 

16           continue to work with them so that 

17           utilization can happen at a greater rate.

18                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BUTTENSCHON:  So you 

19           feel your staffing is appropriate.

20                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yes.

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BUTTENSCHON:  Okay.

22                  And to switch gears, my colleague -- 

23           thank you, Chair Stirpe -- asked many of the 

24           questions.  But with the RUSH funding, as we 


                                                                   81

 1           talk about converting or repurposing state 

 2           property, can you talk to me about what is 

 3           going on with that and success stories that 

 4           you've had with it, what commissioners you're 

 5           working with?

 6                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So we're early 

 7           in the process with effect to using the RUSH 

 8           funding.  But I'll just talk about, you know, 

 9           a couple of examples related to the Prison 

10           Redevelopment Commission.

11                  You know, the Governor put this 

12           together at the end of 2022, how to repurpose 

13           these vacant prisons that had been closed.  

14           And as you know, those prisons are large 

15           footprints, lots of infrastructure.  And in a 

16           couple of cases, the RFPs -- I'll talk about 

17           the Watertown RFP, RUSH funding will be used 

18           for redeveloping that facility.  And so 

19           that's going to be an example where we'll 

20           probably need extensive RUSH funding to 

21           support redevelopment of that facility.

22                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BUTTENSCHON:  So the 

23           reappropriations this year you feel are 

24           sufficient to continue with the works that -- 


                                                                   82

 1           and future projects across the state?

 2                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Absolutely.  

 3           Yes.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BUTTENSCHON:  Okay.  I 

 5           also have to concur with my colleague 

 6           regarding the CATALIST funding.  And I know 

 7           I've spoke to you about this.  I don't 

 8           support this proposal.  I think that each 

 9           region should be able to make the decisions 

10           of what businesses should be supported.  And 

11           having one employee receiving tax credits 

12           versus the other I think doesn't make good 

13           for any of the small businesses that I have 

14           spoke with.

15                  Acting Executive Director Reid, thank 

16           you again for being here.  I do get calls, so 

17           I just wanted to follow up.

18                  From the data that you have within 

19           your office, can you talk about the 

20           approximate time it takes from the 

21           application being brought forward to your 

22           office to the time that it could be approved?

23                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Right.  

24           So we've reduced that timeline extensively to 


                                                                   83

 1           around 67 days.

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BUTTENSCHON:  Okay.

 3                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  And I 

 4           did -- I just want to explain a little bit 

 5           around that.  A lot of it is back-and-forth 

 6           with the applicant -- if they've submitted 

 7           appropriate documentation, if they have to 

 8           cure deficiencies.  And every time there's a 

 9           deficiency, there's a 30-day cure period, so 

10           it can take a little bit of time just working 

11           out with applicants where they're at and what 

12           they need.

13                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BUTTENSCHON:  Okay.  And 

14           to follow up on the Majority Leader's 

15           questions, so what protocols or policies do 

16           you have in place to work with law 

17           enforcement currently?

18                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So most 

19           of our law enforcement engagement is through 

20           our enforcement team.  There are myriad 

21           aspects that we engage on.  

22                  Just one, thinking about the 

23           enforcement side, since the Legislature 

24           granted us the expanded enforcement powers, 


                                                                   84

 1           it's been incredibly helpful to provide 

 2           technical assistance to local law enforcement 

 3           in terms of training, in terms of 

 4           observation, in terms of information sharing.

 5                  We did a training I think even as of 

 6           last Thursday with New York City's Operation 

 7           Padlock to protect around, you know, 

 8           appropriate inspection action.  And so that's 

 9           a role that we play quite strongly.

10                  We also work with other law 

11           enforcement partners, especially our partners 

12           in the Department of Taxation and Finance, on 

13           information sharing around investigations.  

14           An investigation of an unlicensed operator 

15           can lead in many, many directions, and some 

16           of those unlicensed operators are also 

17           engaged in criminal activity.  

18                  But I think the thing that we have to 

19           be mindful of in investigations is ensuring 

20           that we're doing a thorough job and building 

21           our evidence, building our case.  Because 

22           eventually those things may go to a hearing, 

23           and I have no interest in having things 

24           overturned at the state level.  So we want to 


                                                                   85

 1           be really particular in how we do our 

 2           communications and share information with our 

 3           law enforcement partners.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BUTTENSCHON:  And how 

 5           often are those trainings throughout the 

 6           state, in upstate specifically?

 7                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  They're 

 8           across the state.  

 9                  I know there are four jurisdictions 

10           total and the City of Elmira -- four counties 

11           total and the City of Elmira that have stood 

12           up their own law enforcement practices.  And 

13           so we've provided, again, technical 

14           assistance and training to those folks, 

15           because I think there's a bit of trepidation.  

16           I think when it comes to the balance between 

17           what used to be and what is, folks are going 

18           to need education and guidance.  

19                  And, you know, my team is incredible 

20           in terms of the things that they observe and 

21           the way they take intake information and put 

22           that out in a way that can be accessed by 

23           other jurisdictions.

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BUTTENSCHON:  Okay.  And 


                                                                   86

 1           how about our small farms?  Could you tell me 

 2           the policies and protocols you have in place 

 3           to ensure that they're receiving the 

 4           information?

 5                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Yeah.  So 

 6           this sort of loops into the agency's sort of 

 7           restructuring of our communication practices.  

 8                  One of the things we rely on most is 

 9           GOV delivery to share information in realtime 

10           with our cultivators, with our processors, 

11           with folks across the supply chain.  But 

12           another thing that we have is really that 

13           active listening piece and sitting down with 

14           folks.  I'm looking forward, the next couple 

15           of months, to sitting down with the 

16           cultivator community in the Hudson Valley to 

17           talk about the things that are working and 

18           the things that don't, the things that are 

19           painful and the things that are not.

20                  And so, you know, a lot of what we are 

21           thinking about and planning around is due to 

22           those conversations.

23                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BUTTENSCHON:  Okay, and 

24           this question's for both of you.  As the 


                                                                   87

 1           chair of small businesses, what advice could 

 2           you give a small business in the State of 

 3           New York that you could provide guidance 

 4           within the agency that you oversee?

 5                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I'll go.

 6                  So ESD has tremendous resources to be 

 7           able to utilize.  I would start with our 

 8           Entrepreneurial Assistance Centers, who can 

 9           help guide them to many of the resources that 

10           we have so that they can, you know, get 

11           assistance with accessing those varied 

12           resources.

13                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BUTTENSCHON:  Thank you.

14                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Two 

15           parts, if I might.  

16                  One is -- and I mentioned this a 

17           little bit earlier -- don't plan for the 

18           cannabis industry that exists today, plan for 

19           what might exist in one year, five years, 

20           10 years.  And the way to do that is looking 

21           at what's happening in other jurisdictions.

22                  Another thing I would say is, you 

23           know, there's a lot of high hopes in opening 

24           a cannabis business, but it really requires a 


                                                                   88

 1           degree of research and understanding what's 

 2           happening across the supply chain, but also 

 3           understanding larger market factors.

 4                  I think, you know, some of our best 

 5           operators have their ears very close to the 

 6           literal ground around what's happening in new 

 7           technologies coming or challenges that are on 

 8           the horizon.  So it really takes a degree of 

 9           incredible due diligence to sort of keep up 

10           with the pace of business.

11                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BUTTENSCHON:  Thank you.

12                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

13                  Toby Stavisky.

14                  SENATOR STAVISKY:  There we go, sorry.

15                  Commissioner Knight, thank you for 

16           coming.  Let me follow up on the conversation 

17           we had about a week and a half ago.  As you 

18           know, Assemblymember Edward Braunstein and I 

19           represent that part of Eastern Queens that 

20           has the Creedmoor property within our 

21           districts.  

22                  To follow up on that conversation, who 

23           has the final authority to either make 

24           adjustments or to alter or to discuss, but 


                                                                   89

 1           the authority to make changes, minor changes 

 2           or major changes, in the proposal for the 

 3           Creedmoor property?

 4                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So thank you for 

 5           that question.  

 6                  As you know, we've been working 

 7           diligently with the community around getting 

 8           their input with respect to the Creedmoor 

 9           plan.  We continue to have, you know, 

10           sessions and would like to, you know, engage 

11           you and the other electeds in the community 

12           advisory committee process where we will 

13           continue to have dialogue about the plan.

14                  SENATOR STAVISKY:  But my question is 

15           who can speak for the agency?  Is it you?  Is 

16           it somebody on your leadership team?  Whom 

17           should we be in touch with?  Who has the 

18           authority to, you know, discuss with us and 

19           ultimately with a few -- not a large group, 

20           but a group of residents?

21                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  You should be in 

22           touch with me and my leadership team.

23                  SENATOR STAVISKY:  Thank you.  Who?

24                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  My leadership 


                                                                   90

 1           team, Arden Sokolow, who's been leading the 

 2           project.

 3                  SENATOR STAVISKY:  Is there a name in 

 4           particular?

 5                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yes, Arden 

 6           Sokolow.

 7                  SENATOR STAVISKY:  Okay.  And how soon 

 8           can we sit down and talk?

 9                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  We can sit down 

10           next week.

11                  SENATOR STAVISKY:  Good.  Okay, thank 

12           you.

13                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Thank you.

14                  SENATOR STAVISKY:  As you know, the 

15           community feels very strongly about that 

16           issue.  And we want to work together, quite 

17           frankly, if we can.

18                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yes, we want to 

19           work with you.

20                  SENATOR STAVISKY:  Thank you.

21                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 

22           Woerner, for 10 minutes.

23                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  Thank you, 

24           Mr. Chairman.  


                                                                   91

 1                  Thank you all for joining us today.

 2                  So Ms. Knight, I represent a county 

 3           that has recently had a shuttered prison.  

 4           And are there funds allocated in this budget 

 5           to support the replacement of large employers 

 6           in our rural communities when a facility like 

 7           that is shuttered?

 8                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So thank you for 

 9           that question.  I think as you know, we had 

10           been building upon the work of the Prison 

11           Redevelopment Commission and have a team that 

12           works with the community when these prisons 

13           are shuttered and begins to engage them to 

14           figure out what potential uses could be 

15           advanced from an economic development 

16           perspective.

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  So there are 

18           funds that are specifically dedicated to 

19           working with those communities?

20                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  There is not 

21           funds, but we have resources and to the 

22           extent we come up with a plan, I think we can 

23           bring that forward with respect to looking at 

24           developing, you know, whatever it is being 


                                                                   92

 1           proposed.

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  Great, thank 

 3           you very much.

 4                  So changing gears a little bit, the 

 5           MWBE program.  Congratulations on getting the 

 6           backlog down.  That was a huge lift, and your 

 7           team did a fine job in making that happen.

 8                  That said, over the years I have 

 9           certainly had constituents, women who own 

10           businesses, who may have originally been 

11           certified as a woman-owned business, and then 

12           upon recertification are denied.  And 

13           oftentimes these are businesses where their 

14           husband happens to be an employee of the 

15           business.

16                  And so I read with some interest the 

17           article that was recently published that 

18           alleged systemic bias against women-owned 

19           businesses, because it matched what my 

20           experience has been in working with my 

21           constituents.

22                  Now, you said earlier that 

23           minority-owned businesses and women-owned 

24           businesses are denied in equal rates, is what 


                                                                   93

 1           you've experienced or what your data 

 2           suggests.  But that -- it does not really 

 3           match with the lived experience that I have 

 4           seen in my district and that women-owned 

 5           businesses have related to me.

 6                  So I guess my question to you is, what 

 7           are you doing to investigate these claims?  

 8           And how can we be certain going forward that 

 9           every applicant is given a fair hearing?  And 

10           specifically that it is not a disqualifying 

11           characteristic to be married and have your 

12           husband work for you.

13                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So thank you for 

14           that question.  You know, we support our WBEs 

15           very significantly.  You know, with respect 

16           to the article, you know, we have an 

17           investigation, we feel strongly that our MWBE 

18           process and review of applications is done on 

19           a fair and equitable basis.

20                  You know, these applications are 

21           reviewed by many people on a multi-tiered 

22           effect, so it's not one person making the 

23           decision, it is going through a process where 

24           this decision is made.


                                                                   94

 1                  You know, sometimes there are minor 

 2           changes in a business that can provide for, 

 3           you know, a denial.  So for example, if you 

 4           have a change in financial structure or if 

 5           you are doing, you know, a different line of 

 6           work than when you got certified the last 

 7           time, that may be something that we have to 

 8           look at.

 9                  You know, we have to align the 

10           application review with the requirements of 

11           15A.  We take that very seriously, 

12           particularly in this environment where we 

13           could have a legal challenge.  So I can tell 

14           you that we are very focused on, you know, 

15           looking at denials and, when we do have a 

16           denial, we have a strong basis for it.

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  So I can just 

18           tell you that -- and just to give you one 

19           example, that a woman had been in business, 

20           she had to be recertified, she was denied on 

21           recertification because when she wrote the 

22           very first check to get her business 

23           licensed, she happened to write it on her 

24           joint checking account.  And that one check 


                                                                   95

 1           caused her to be denied and lose millions of 

 2           dollars while she had to reapply, having now 

 3           separated all of her funds.  But that one 

 4           check, written just to get a business 

 5           license, was enough on recertification, to 

 6           get her denied.  And I don't think there was 

 7           any statutory change or anything that would 

 8           have suggested that now the rules had shifted 

 9           and this business needed to comply with the 

10           rules.

11                  It's those kinds of stories -- and 

12           that's just one example, but that's those 

13           kinds of stories that we are hearing.  Which 

14           is why the article's allegations really 

15           struck true.

16                  So I would just encourage you to look 

17           deeper at those denials and really understand 

18           what's going on.

19                  Thank you.

20                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Thank you.

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WOERNER:  And I'll yield 

22           back the rest of my time.

23                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Liz?

24                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay, thank you.


                                                                   96

 1                  Next is Ranker Senator Murray.

 2                  SENATOR MURRAY:  Thank you, 

 3           Chairwoman.

 4                  And first let me say to 

 5           Commissioner Knight, welcome.  Thank you for 

 6           being here.  And I appreciate the fact that 

 7           we've seen each other quite a bit in my 

 8           district, and I appreciate that, especially 

 9           with all the help you've given to the 

10           project -- the Station Yards project, the 

11           first phase, now the second phase.  It's been 

12           going great.

13                  I do want to question just one thing.  

14           And I know all of us here are very parochial, 

15           we care about our districts.  And I 

16           appreciate that everyone has pushed up here 

17           for the $355 million to revitalize Albany.  

18           But I happen to have an area in my district, 

19           the Coram and Middle Island area.  

20                  Now, I know Long Island can be the 

21           land of NIMBY a bit, I get it.  But this area 

22           is not.  They -- they want so much.  They 

23           want economic development there desperately.  

24           I'm hoping we can talk offline to see how we 


                                                                   97

 1           can maybe get something similar in our area.  

 2           So if we can talk offline about that, I would 

 3           appreciate it.

 4                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Absolutely.

 5                  SENATOR MURRAY:  Thank you.  And thank 

 6           you for everything you're doing.

 7                  I'd like to switch now to 

 8           Director Reid.  And I wish I had more time, 

 9           because there's so much I want to talk about.  

10           But let me start with the cultivation 

11           licensing.  

12                  In your testimony, and I'm quoting 

13           here, you said "young people locked behind 

14           double fences and two layers of razor wire."  

15           You said the extraordinary power of the 

16           communities you've served for years, and it's 

17           your mission as the head of OCM to realize 

18           the promise of these New Yorkers and their 

19           communities, those whose dreams have been 

20           denied and deferred for long enough.

21                  I know you were talking about 

22           licensing for this.  I want to talk about the 

23           people I represent and their dreams in their 

24           communities.  For example, Blue Point, a 


                                                                   98

 1           small community in my district, a 

 2           neighborhood where right next door someone 

 3           came in, got a cultivation license, big 

 4           greenhouse in the back.  And so many 

 5           complaints of odors and it not being secure 

 6           and things like this.

 7                  So we've reached out to OCM, and we 

 8           talked and we investigated and said, you 

 9           know, how did they go about getting their 

10           license?  "Oh, no, we did every inspection, 

11           we did everything, they meet all the criteria 

12           and that's why we gave them the license."

13                  We found out later that was a lie.  

14           I'm not saying it was misinformation, that 

15           was a lie.  And I say that because the person 

16           we spoke to admitted it.  He admitted it only 

17           after we sent someone there to go on this 

18           property with a camera and take pictures to 

19           show there were no locks, it was not secure, 

20           no lights, no heating in the greenhouse, no 

21           nothing.  No one was around.

22                  The community there dreams of living 

23           in a nice, secure, quiet neighborhood, 

24           law-abiding citizens.  They don't dream of 


                                                                   99

 1           their kids being able to wander on to 

 2           property next door and get marijuana.  Okay?  

 3           That's what could happen.

 4                  They were given a license.  I want to 

 5           know, is there a process in place, in 

 6           writing, where an inspection must be done 

 7           in-person?  Because it was not done.  And the 

 8           man finally admitted it.  Someone from your 

 9           office said, "No, we never did send anybody 

10           to inspect it."  How does that happen?

11                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So I'm 

12           not particularly familiar with this case.  

13                  However, what I can say is for our 

14           licensees, pre-opening, we do pre-operation 

15           inspections.  That's going out and sometimes 

16           those are virtual, sometimes those are 

17           in-person, it really depends on the type of 

18           license.  But we're going and making sure and 

19           checking.

20                  And also we have a practice of 

21           compliance.  That is, we're going on-site to 

22           our operators to ensure that they're 

23           complying with our regulations.  I think 

24           that -- 


                                                                   100

 1                  SENATOR MURRAY:  Is that new?

 2                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  No, 

 3           that's not new.

 4                  SENATOR MURRAY:  Because that didn't 

 5           happen here.  That did not happen.  And that 

 6           was your employee who admitted it did not 

 7           happen.  It was rubber-stamped, fine.  I 

 8           think it was a pinky swear or something, 

 9           because it didn't happen.  No one came to 

10           actually inspect this site.

11                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So I 

12           think this is an opportunity for us to talk 

13           offline, because I'm honestly not familiar 

14           with this particular case.  This might have 

15           been before my time, I'm not sure.

16                  SENATOR MURRAY:  I understand.  And it 

17           might be.  But this has been ongoing for the 

18           past year and a half.  

19                  So I'm going to switch now real quick 

20           to ordering by mail.  And Senator Cooney 

21           brought something up in the discussion 

22           earlier about controls regarding liquor 

23           stores and oversight and all of this.

24                  Now, we now have liquor that can be 


                                                                   101

 1           bought and delivered.  And there are things 

 2           in place to keep those under 21 from getting 

 3           it.  But I don't think those controls are in 

 4           place here.  Ordering by mail, it's happening 

 5           right now.  What are your processes in place 

 6           to make sure kids are not ordering, you know, 

 7           online or something and getting it delivered 

 8           by mail?  What are the processes in place?

 9                  And please don't say it's the same as 

10           liquor, because that doesn't work either.

11                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  No.  So 

12           we don't have a process, at least in the 

13           regulated market, to order by mail.  So if 

14           those orders are occurring, those are 

15           happening with outside operators, unlicensed 

16           operators.  Those are not happening through 

17           our regulated stores.

18                  I can tell you from experience that 

19           the extent to which we have delivery, when 

20           someone comes to a location, they're checking 

21           IDs even if it's on delivery.  They check IDs 

22           in the store, but they're also doing it at 

23           the delivery point.

24                  In terms of youth, you know, I 


                                                                   102

 1           think -- and you mentioned earlier around 

 2           kids wandering on to property and accessing 

 3           cannabis.

 4                  (Time clock sounds.)

 5                  SENATOR MURRAY:  Let's continue the 

 6           conversation offline.

 7                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Yes.

 8                  SENATOR MURRAY:  Yes, please.

 9                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblyman Otis 

10           for 10 minutes.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  Thank you both for 

12           your good work and your testimony.

13                  I really want to talk to Hope Knight 

14           and the good things that go on at Empire 

15           State Development.  I want to focus in on the 

16           ConnectALL office -- which is doing great 

17           work in terms of, for a number of years now, 

18           broadband expansion around the state -- and 

19           congratulate you on the recent announcement 

20           of the Digital Inclusion Grant Capacity 

21           Program that was announced in January and is 

22           on the street right now.  

23                  These programs are so vital towards 

24           solving the digital divide, and they cover 


                                                                   103

 1           many of the categories of chairs you've heard 

 2           from here today, from aging, small business, 

 3           economic development, job training, and then 

 4           libraries -- everything under the sun.  Very 

 5           important -- labor.

 6                  So -- but this sort of the first money 

 7           coming out of ConnectALL to go to actually 

 8           the digital practitioners, the digital local 

 9           programs that are the only ones that 

10           effectively provide that service.  What's the 

11           game plan going forward to find other pots of 

12           money to expand those programs, which really 

13           are the way we deliver these services to the 

14           people that need those programs, the people 

15           excluded from digital literacy?

16                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So, you know, 

17           thank you for your question.  The ConnectALL 

18           team has been working very hard to get, you 

19           know, many of these programs up and going.

20                  This Digital Equity Program that was 

21           released in January, you know, we expect to 

22           do, you know, another round or two of grants 

23           for that funding so we will be able to, you 

24           know, fund more of those organizations.


                                                                   104

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  That's great.  And 

 2           certainly look forward to working with you to 

 3           try and expand that pot.  I mean, sort of the 

 4           need is many times the 15 million.  And one 

 5           of the things in the grant is properly titled 

 6           capacity building, because the programs that 

 7           exist that really have been doing this on 

 8           their own fundraising efforts over the years, 

 9           we need them to grow their capacity.  That's 

10           what this grant does.  Because they want to 

11           reach more people.

12                  And there is sort of a monetary metric 

13           to providing those services.  It's a person, 

14           it's the training, it's a computer, it costs 

15           a certain amount.  And so thank you for the 

16           good work and really the exceptional work of 

17           ConnectALL and the job they did on developing 

18           and drafting the state's digital equity plan, 

19           which is what this program is helping to 

20           fulfill.  So compliments to all.

21                  Let me take you to semiconductors.  

22           And you mentioned in your testimony -- and we 

23           have Chair Stirpe here who's been very much a 

24           part of all of that.  We've had great growth 


                                                                   105

 1           in drawing these businesses to New York.  And 

 2           what's the plan going forward to continue to 

 3           attract this kind of manufacturing to our 

 4           state beyond the great success we've had so 

 5           far?

 6                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yes, so thank 

 7           you for that question.

 8                  As you mentioned, we've had great 

 9           success.  And one of the things we need to do 

10           to help these projects be, you know, more 

11           successful is to create an ecosystem.  So we 

12           need semiconductor supply-chain companies to 

13           locate here in New York.  There are other 

14           projects around the country where these 

15           supply-chain companies could locate to serve 

16           both our New York businesses and, say, Intel 

17           in Ohio.  And so we want to be able to locate 

18           them there.

19                  I'll let Kevin Younis talk a little 

20           bit about our semiconductor supply-chain 

21           enhancement to our Excelsior program.

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  That's great.

23                  ESD CEO YOUNIS:  Thanks, Assemblyman 

24           Otis.


                                                                   106

 1                  One of the things that we really -- to 

 2           attract more manufacturing, success of the 

 3           current projects is key.  So the Governor 

 4           created the GO SEMI office a year and a half 

 5           ago to really support the implementation of 

 6           those projects.  As we think about success, 

 7           supply-chain partners are key to that 

 8           success.  So we have this year proposed the 

 9           creation of like an enhancement in the 

10           Excelsior Jobs Tax Credit around supply-chain 

11           partners.  

12                  And then the other key element is 

13           research and development.  This industry has 

14           an intense dependency on research and 

15           development like very few other industries.  

16           And so we also have proposed an enhancement 

17           coming out of the Excelsior tax credit 

18           program around R&D investment in New York.

19                  And so those are really the goals of 

20           trying to succeed in the investments we've 

21           had.  And those successes we hope will breed 

22           more successes.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  That is great.  You 

24           know, it's a sort of uncertain territory in 


                                                                   107

 1           terms of whether we're going to continue to 

 2           have federal dollars in this space or not.  

 3           Do we have sort of a strategy to keep the 

 4           marketing up to attract these businesses even 

 5           if the federal commitment goes away?  

 6           Although it may not go away; we don't know 

 7           yet.  Too early to tell.

 8                  ESD CEO YOUNIS:  So we're -- I mean, 

 9           at this point we're confident in the 

10           continued federal investments.  These 

11           projects and the reshoring of semiconductors 

12           is really a national security and national 

13           economic issue.

14                  Having said that, again, the Governor 

15           created this office focused around 

16           semiconductors, GO SEMI, and that includes 

17           national and international outreach and 

18           partnerships and further development of the 

19           ecosystem.

20                  So we're -- the Governor's doubling 

21           down on this industry.  It presents a great 

22           opportunity for growing New York's economy.  

23           So we're very focused on it.

24                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  You've done a great 


                                                                   108

 1           job in the fact that we were able to get 

 2           Micron, which was the big fish.  

 3                  But also in the Hudson Valley -- and 

 4           I've been to some of the smaller 

 5           manufacturing facilities that have expanded, 

 6           and so they're expanding because they believe 

 7           that New York is a good place for this.  

 8           They're also expanding, when you speak to the 

 9           folks at these companies, that we have the 

10           trained workforce that they need, and that's 

11           one of the things that helps attract these 

12           businesses here.

13                  So thank you for the good work and the 

14           continued partnership on these issues, and I 

15           yield back the rest of my time.

16                  ESD CEO YOUNIS:  Thank you.

17                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

18                  Senator Pat Fahy.

19                  SENATOR FAHY:  Thank you, Chair.

20                  And thank you, Commissioner and 

21           Director.  My first question is for the 

22           director.

23                  It's refreshing to have you here, 

24           refreshing to see so many changes.  And as 


                                                                   109

 1           Senator Kavanagh {sic} mentioned earlier, 

 2           it's great not to have all the calls we once 

 3           did.

 4                  I'm still down to one call, however.  

 5           In the City of Amsterdam, which was one of 

 6           the first cities to adopt the licensing 

 7           program and has had one of the first cannabis 

 8           shops, it is the second one where they've 

 9           raised serious concerns over an applicant 

10           who, after applying, was still charged and 

11           convicted on illicit marijuana sales.

12                  So there's a serious concern there.  

13           Is there a policy on this?  Because there's 

14           been a lot of back-and-forth, and I have a 

15           very upset new mayor.

16                  (Laughter.)

17                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  I 

18           appreciate that.  I know --

19                  SENATOR FAHY:  Thank you, Director.  I 

20           know you're -- believe me.  And I'm so 

21           relieved and so thrilled to have you here.

22                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Yeah, I 

23           know how much my office has been in contact 

24           with you and the mayor.


                                                                   110

 1                  And so, you know, one of the things 

 2           that at least I'm aware of in terms of that 

 3           matter is what we're looking at upon -- in an 

 4           application process, and doing our background 

 5           checks and doing our vetting and making sure 

 6           that someone is actually eligible to have the 

 7           license, we have the information we have at 

 8           that time.

 9                  Now, if we find out that there is 

10           fraud in the application or that there are 

11           things that then make a person ineligible, 

12           that would be a basis for discipline.

13                  Now, I know there's some question with 

14           this particular applicant as to whether those 

15           criminal issues -- when and whether those 

16           criminal issues occurred.  And so, you know, 

17           again, if we find out that there was fraud in 

18           the application process, that is certainly 

19           grounds for us to --

20                  SENATOR FAHY:  Thank you, Director.  

21           And again, so pleased and refreshing to have 

22           you here.  So if you could just double down 

23           on that one, we'd appreciate it.

24                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Yes, 


                                                                   111

 1           certainly.

 2                  SENATOR FAHY:  Commissioner Knight, 

 3           again, thank you.  Could not be more pleased 

 4           over the $400 million proposal for Albany 

 5           despite the -- and clearly it's popular.  Two 

 6           hundred million of that is for the downtown 

 7           revitalization.  I should note, as you know, 

 8           we've done some amazing work via your office 

 9           in Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse, with Micron 

10           and more.  So we are really pleased to have 

11           this focus, since 63 percent of Albany's 

12           property is tax-exempt.

13                  So on the 200 million, could you just 

14           briefly mention the timeline and what 

15           opportunities there will be for public or 

16           community input on the $200 million 

17           revitalization?  And again, we're really 

18           excited.

19                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So thank you for 

20           that question.  You know, our teams have been 

21           working very closely.  And, you know, we want 

22           to make sure, the Governor wants to make sure 

23           there's extensive public engagement on this 

24           with all the stakeholders.


                                                                   112

 1                  Kevin, can you tell me when the 

 2           consultant's going to be selected?

 3                  ESD CEO YOUNIS:  So we -- we will get 

 4           back to you.

 5                  SENATOR FAHY:  Thank you.  Thank you, 

 6           Chair.  And look forward to working with you.

 7                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblyman Friend, 

 8           five minutes.

 9                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  Thank you, 

10           Chairs.

11                  President Knight, could you give a 

12           little overview of what's happening at 

13           RiverBend -- SolarCity GigaFactory, Tesla?

14                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yes.

15                  So as you know, Tesla's supposed to 

16           provide regular reporting to us, and we just 

17           received the reporting.  It has exceeded its 

18           job commitments by 250 jobs and its 

19           investments by a billion dollars.  So they 

20           have met their commitment, exceeded their 

21           commitment with respect to the investment 

22           that was made.  

23                  But Kevin, you want to talk a little 

24           about the agreement?


                                                                   113

 1                  ESD CEO YOUNIS:  Sure.  

 2                  Assemblymember, we -- as I think you 

 3           know, last year we came to an agreement with 

 4           Tesla to extend their commitment to Buffalo 

 5           for five more years.  In addition, in 

 6           exchange for that, they will be making more 

 7           investments in workforce development with -- 

 8           in partnership with the Northland Workforce 

 9           Development Training Center.  They're now 

10           paying rent to occupy the space.  And they're 

11           doing a great deal of investment around 

12           what's called Dojo, which is their AI 

13           supercomputer, which they've put a 

14           $500 million investment in that facility 

15           around that computer.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  Okay, that's good 

17           to hear.  It's nice to see it's finally 

18           making a rebound, a billion-dollar 

19           investment.  So we're going in the right 

20           direction.

21                  Along that same avenue, with Micron 

22           coming in and down in my neck of the woods, 

23           we have Corning that has a diesel plant that 

24           makes catalytic converters.  Is there 


                                                                   114

 1           anything in the current budget, kind of like 

 2           POWER UP, that would support gas 

 3           infrastructure for companies like Micron or 

 4           Corning, Inc.?

 5                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So, you know, to 

 6           the extent that, you know, a business was 

 7           expanding or, you know, employing more 

 8           people, we can talk and figure out if there 

 9           is a tool that we have at ESD to support the 

10           expansion of the business.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  Okay.  And you've 

12           mentioned the Prison Redevelopment Program a 

13           couple of times.  Outside of RUSH-NY and 

14           housing, are there any other programs or 

15           businesses that are looking to developing at 

16           those prison sites?

17                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So in the case 

18           of Livingston Correctional Facility, that has 

19           been transferred to Livingston's IDA to 

20           develop a business park.  And we have Butler 

21           Correctional Facility, which is going to be 

22           transferred to the IDA for business use.

23                  So to the extent that we can find 

24           those uses, we definitely try to advance 


                                                                   115

 1           those projects.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  Okay.  Because in 

 3           my district we have Southport Correctional, 

 4           which is sitting there.  It's a fabulous 

 5           site, great location.  Be great to see that 

 6           relocated, transferred.

 7                  And I used to represent Schuyler 

 8           County and Monterey Shock.  That's a little 

 9           more distant.  I'm not quite sure what might 

10           go up there.  But again, it would be great to 

11           have that back on the tax rolls.

12                  Are there any monies in the current 

13           budget for advertising any of the economic 

14           development programs?

15                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  We don't do any 

16           advertising of economic development programs.  

17           We have our I Love NY program, which we do 

18           advertising for.

19                  But, you know, with respect to 

20           advertising for our programs, you know, we do 

21           outreach, we provide, you know, fliers and 

22           things to the elected officials and 

23           community-based organizations, chambers of 

24           commerce.  But we don't do any sort of 


                                                                   116

 1           official advertising.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  Okay.  So nothing 

 3           like what was in START-UP NY or --

 4                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  No, nothing like 

 5           that.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  Okay.  Thank you 

 7           so much.

 8                  Acting Director Reid, with the 

 9           cannabis program initially there was going to 

10           be money for research.  Now that we've hit 

11           the $1 billion mark, is there money that's 

12           going to be used for research?  How much is 

13           there, where's it going?

14                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So I 

15           think one of the things that's incredibly 

16           important around cannabis' future is that we 

17           have our cannabis license.  

18                  I'll have to get back on numbers on 

19           how many licenses are out there, but I think 

20           a lot of those exist in our public 

21           partnerships.  

22                  And so I'm hopeful that some of our 

23           monies can be turned towards supporting 

24           research, because one of the things that's a 


                                                                   117

 1           huge issue, as you might know, is that 

 2           because of the federal prohibition, they 

 3           cannot use the money for research as they 

 4           would in other ways.

 5                  And so I'm hopeful that some of our 

 6           efforts can be turned towards supporting 

 7           research across the state.

 8                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  So is that money 

 9           going to have to be done through like a 

10           private corporation?  Can we give it to our 

11           universities to do research?  Or how is that 

12           going to work?

13                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  I 

14           think -- and this is what I've seen in other 

15           states, right?  I think some of the both 

16           profits but also -- what's the word I want -- 

17           for lack of a better word, revenues from 

18           cannabis agencies get turned toward public 

19           institutions for that work.  So thinking 

20           places like SUNY, CUNY, Cornell, things like 

21           that.

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  And I'm going to 

23           be out of time.  But if just to talk about 

24           the enforcement, once they're trained by your 


                                                                   118

 1           enforcement team do the local policy agencies 

 2           have the ability to go out and do their own 

 3           enforcement of illegal shops?

 4                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Can I 

 5           answer that?

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  You can get back 

 7           to me.

 8                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  I'll get 

 9           back to you.

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  Thank you.

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

12                  Next is Senator Rhoads, five-minute 

13           ranker.

14                  SENATOR RHOADS:  Thank you, 

15           Madam Chair.

16                  And Kevin, I'm very happy that you got 

17           a chance to give a full answer.  So good job.

18                  Thank you all for your testimony so 

19           far today.

20                  Commissioner, according to Forbes 

21           magazine, since 2019 New York has been ranked 

22           as the second worst climate for business in 

23           the country because of high taxes and 

24           unsustainable spending.  New York leads the 


                                                                   119

 1           nation in outward migration.  And according 

 2           to the Internal Revenue Service, as of 2023 

 3           New York lost $24.5 billion in adjusted gross 

 4           income to other states, which is a statistic 

 5           that in the intervening two years I am sure 

 6           has only gotten worse.

 7                  One of the best ways to promote 

 8           economic development is to improve New York's 

 9           competitiveness, but our Governor seems 

10           unfortunately to be doing the opposite, 

11           burdening New Yorkers with regressive taxes 

12           like congestion pricing, a 

13           worst-in-the-nation personal income tax, an 

14           uncompetitive corporate tax rate, a remaining 

15           over $6 billion deficit in the Unemployment 

16           Insurance Fund created by New York State 

17           government squandering federal COVID funds 

18           provided for that purpose.

19                  Since 2019, annual state spending has 

20           increased by over $70 billion, a nearly 

21           40 percent increase, not including this 

22           year's proposed budget, where the Governor 

23           has proposed to grow the state budget yet 

24           another $8 billion more without measures to 


                                                                   120

 1           increase revenue.  

 2                  Meaning that New York State is 

 3           forecast to collect more than $8 billion in 

 4           revenue than it needed in fiscal year 

 5           '24-'25.  In other words, we're collecting 8 

 6           billion more than we spent last year.  But 

 7           rather than return that 8 billion to the 

 8           residents and businesses struggling to 

 9           survive and improve our economic 

10           competitiveness and affordability, the 

11           Governor has chosen to jack up spending even 

12           higher.

13                  As the commissioner of the State 

14           Department of Economic Development, do you 

15           agree with that strategy?  And if so, why?

16                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So the state has 

17           done very well with respect to attracting new 

18           business economic development projects as 

19           well as seeing businesses that are here, 

20           already here in New York State, expand.  

21                  The Governor has grown businesses -- 

22           740,000 since she's been in office.  And 

23           we've been able to provide a business 

24           environment that provides for that growth and 


                                                                   121

 1           attracting businesses here.  Our job growth 

 2           rate is higher than the national average.  

 3           And so we've been able to provide significant 

 4           economic development projects and growth 

 5           within the state during this Governor's 

 6           tenure.

 7                  SENATOR RHOADS:  But with many 

 8           businesses citing high taxes, regulations and 

 9           cost of living for leaving New York, do we 

10           know why it is that we're not taking the 

11           extra $8 billion that we're collecting that 

12           we did not need last year and choosing to 

13           spend that money this year in her proposed 

14           budget as opposed to trying to reduce either 

15           personal tax rates, corporate tax rates, 

16           giving businesses and residents the 

17           opportunity to maybe catch their breath?

18                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Well, I know 

19           that the Governor is providing about 

20           $168 million in paying down this year's 

21           unemployment insurance assessment, which, you 

22           know, is something that I've heard businesses 

23           really were looking for.

24                  SENATOR RHOADS:  Okay, but the 


                                                                   122

 1           remaining $7.85 billion, do we know why we're 

 2           spending that as opposed to trying to provide 

 3           relief to businesses and taxpayers?  And 

 4           wouldn't that benefit all New Yorkers?

 5                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Well, you know, 

 6           the programs that we're advancing this year 

 7           in this budget, you know, does substantially 

 8           help businesses, you know, with access to 

 9           capital and support for growth.

10                  SENATOR RHOADS:  Okay.  One in my 

11           remaining 20 seconds.  MWBE.  Right now an 

12           organization, business, will have to apply 

13           for it to be part of their local county MWBE 

14           and file a separate application for the 

15           state, to become state-certified.  Would the 

16           department consider cross-certification 

17           between county and state, and vice versa?

18                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I'll come back 

19           to you on that.

20                  SENATOR RHOADS:  Thanks.

21                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Thank you.

22                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

23                  Assembly.

24                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblyman Simone.


                                                                   123

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN SIMONE:  Good afternoon, 

 2           Commissioner.  This is for Commissioner 

 3           Knight.  I have two questions.

 4                  The first question, the Penn Station 

 5           GPP continues to exist in a zombie state, in 

 6           my opinion and many of my community, where in 

 7           the years it has existed we have this big 

 8           giant patch of dirt on 7th Avenue where the 

 9           Hotel Pennsylvania once stood.  With such 

10           great control over some of the most important 

11           real estate in Midtown and all of New York, 

12           when does ESD expect any movement on these 

13           sites?  Especially when we're having a 

14           housing crisis.

15                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Thank you for 

16           that question.

17                  You know, we continue to work with the 

18           MTA on the MTA plan for Penn Station, which 

19           it's tied to the GPP.  So we continue to work 

20           with them.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN SIMONE:  No, I understand 

22           that.  But the Governor separated the GPP 

23           from the Penn Station expansion plan, and 

24           right now we have this site just sitting 


                                                                   124

 1           there when I think it's a great opportunity 

 2           to create affordable housing, office space, 

 3           parks space.  And we've contacted the 

 4           Governor's office; it's just stalled.  This 

 5           could be a big win for the Governor, a big 

 6           win for New Yorkers.

 7                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Well, we 

 8           continue to talk to the property owners about 

 9           advancing projects with respect to the GPP, 

10           and the GPP governs the ability to create 

11           housing.  And so --

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN SIMONE:  Yes.

13                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yeah.

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN SIMONE:  Well, I hope to 

15           see that happen sooner than later.

16                  And my second question is, when we 

17           were here last year we discussed developing 

18           housing on state-owned sites.  And to the 

19           credit of ESD, you've done a tremendous job 

20           on projects in my district -- in Bayview, 

21           supportive housing, in the Javits Site K, 

22           which I'm very happy about.  And in the 

23           meantime New York City has made major strides 

24           in the City of Yes.


                                                                   125

 1                  What is new in this budget that will 

 2           increase housing supply so we'll become a 

 3           State of Yes when it comes to creating 

 4           affordability and housing?

 5                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  We continue to 

 6           have the RUSH program, which will focus on 

 7           infrastructure for housing projects.  We also 

 8           have a hundred million dollars for 

 9           pro-housing communities that will support 

10           housing growth.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN SIMONE:  And I know it was 

12           asked earlier, how are we measuring 

13           affordability?  I know it's a complex 

14           question which we may have to follow up after 

15           my three minutes.  

16                  But I feel right now the biggest 

17           complaint from my constituents and 

18           New Yorkers is the way we measure AMI 

19           eliminates so many middle-class New Yorkers 

20           from actually obtaining affordable housing 

21           even after we create it.  

22                  Thank you.

23                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Thank you.

24                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.


                                                                   126

 1                  Senator Chris Ryan.

 2                  SENATOR CHRIS RYAN:  Thank you, 

 3           Madam Chair.  

 4                  And thank you.  Two questions for 

 5           Commissioner Knight, and then another 

 6           cannabis question.  

 7                  I want to talk about ConnectALL.  So I 

 8           know that the -- I think there's a five-year 

 9           capital plan, $110 million disbursement, I 

10           think, throughout the ConnectALL program.  I 

11           believe, right, that's the case.  Do we know 

12           what has been disbursed yet or how much -- I 

13           guess not the question, but can we get an 

14           update -- what's been disbursed, who has been 

15           received and where -- like the who, what, 

16           when, where, how and why of the ConnectALL 

17           thus far?

18                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yeah.  So 

19           absolutely.  You know, we've been very 

20           focused on providing visibility and 

21           transparency into the ConnectALL funding.

22                  SENATOR CHRIS RYAN:  Definitely.

23                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  We'll provide a 

24           list to you, but on our website we have all 


                                                                   127

 1           of the grants that have been approved and 

 2           disbursed, and plans for the rest of the 

 3           funding on a forward basis.

 4                  SENATOR CHRIS RYAN:  And the second 

 5           question, the Executive's State of the State 

 6           booklet described a goal of laying 

 7           fiber-optic cable on the Thruway.  Is that -- 

 8           is there funding for that proposal?  Is it 

 9           happening or has it been bid or what is the 

10           status?

11                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So we continue 

12           to work with the Thruway Authority to plan 

13           for this project, which would create more 

14           connectivity along the Thruway.

15                  SENATOR CHRIS RYAN:  But you haven't 

16           bid it yet.

17                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  No, no.  No.

18                  SENATOR CHRIS RYAN:  So -- okay.  Will 

19           there be wage rate standards with that?  

20           Like -- so with the broadband funding, the 

21           state broadband funding, there were wage 

22           rates so that under out of state contracts or 

23           whatever, this can't undercut existing 

24           telecom providers, right.  


                                                                   128

 1                  So will those provisions still -- will 

 2           those provisions pertain to the Thruway build 

 3           as well?

 4                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I have to get 

 5           back to you on that.  Yes.  Yes.

 6                  SENATOR CHRIS RYAN:  Okay.  Thank you.

 7                  Last question -- well, actually I'm 

 8           going to -- so Micron, you don't anticipate 

 9           any problems?  We're not --

10                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  No, we don't 

11           anticipate any problems going forward.  

12           Micron's committed to Central New York.  We 

13           continue to work with them.

14                  SENATOR CHRIS RYAN:  And to myself and 

15           Chairman Stirpe.  

16                  Last question.  So Director Reid, so 

17           what types of education have you -- are you 

18           providing to prevent underage cannabis usage 

19           or sales?

20                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Yeah.  

21           So, you know, with legalization, I think it 

22           requires -- and this is in the statute -- to 

23           engage with young people and families and 

24           caregivers.  I think there's a multifaceted 


                                                                   129

 1           role around here in terms of information for  

 2           parents, caregivers and trusted adults, as 

 3           well as sitting down with young people.  Our 

 4           public health team has had -- I've seen -- 

 5           some of them are on my actual coffee table, 

 6           information and pamphlets for young folks.  

 7           But I also think we have to do a little bit 

 8           more to hear from them.

 9                  So this particular year we're going to 

10           be sitting down with young people across the 

11           state in different communities to hear about 

12           their experiences with cannabis, their 

13           questions.  I actually did this with 

14           Senator Persaud over Caucus Weekend with 

15           young folks.

16                  SENATOR CHRIS RYAN:  And I know that 

17           when I -- I think there is a provider that is 

18           running interduct on the Thruway; I just 

19           don't know if that's part of it.  

20                  So we'll have to talk after.  Thank 

21           you.

22                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

23                  Assembly.

24                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblymember 


                                                                   130

 1           Walsh.

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WALSH:  Thank you very 

 3           much, Chair.  Good afternoon.  

 4                  Commissioner Knight, I wanted to 

 5           follow up on some questioning that you were 

 6           previously asked about MWBE by one of my 

 7           other colleagues, and also that specifically 

 8           that article that just came out three days 

 9           ago in the Times Union.  Very troubling.  It 

10           also definitely reaffirms the experience that 

11           I have also had in my district, particularly 

12           with white women who are legitimately running 

13           legacy businesses -- i.e., businesses that 

14           were maybe from fathers, uncles, brothers and 

15           might even have the name "Sons" or "Brothers" 

16           in the name of the business.  They're getting 

17           turned down.

18                  The experience that I'm hearing about 

19           is really -- the word used in the article was 

20           "degrading."  That is what I have heard from 

21           these women that are legitimately doing this 

22           work.  And the fact that this article talks 

23           about systemic -- systematic denial of female 

24           applicants, specifically white women.  You 


                                                                   131

 1           know, it says here in the article that 

 2           "Empire State Development says it was 

 3           conducting an investigation into the 

 4           allegations."  Is that investigation 

 5           concluded?  And what was the conclusion?

 6                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  That 

 7           investigation has not been concluded, but we 

 8           take this very seriously and are 

 9           investigating this allegation.

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WALSH:  I really hope 

11           so, because if we're going to create a 

12           program to address disparity -- and I read 

13           the disparity study, and it appears that for 

14           non-minority women there continues to be a 

15           disparity -- then we need to create a program 

16           that reflects that it is possible for a woman 

17           who is a business major to run an electrical 

18           company without being an electrician.  It's 

19           possible for a women whose brother operates 

20           heavy equipment to legitimately be running a 

21           business, you know, without actually going 

22           out and driving the front loader.  

23                  You know, it's just -- it's such an 

24           outmoded kind of chauvinistic viewpoint.  I 


                                                                   132

 1           find it personally, just as a woman, very 

 2           insulting.  

 3                  So I really do hope that you'll take a 

 4           look at whether it's this one individual 

 5           who's perhaps trying to weed out -- and I 

 6           understand if there is fraud, we want to 

 7           prevent fraud from happening.  But as the 

 8           article suggested, and as some have 

 9           suggested, perhaps there's been an 

10           overcorrection.

11                  And I guess in my remaining time I 

12           just want to say that I am supportive of a 

13           bill to help recertifications get processed 

14           more smoothly.  If somebody has already been 

15           certified and has gone through all those 

16           hoops and has been certified, I believe that 

17           the burden should be flipped and there should 

18           be a presumption of recertification, not 

19           having them have to start all over again and 

20           go through this period of time.  It's a lot 

21           of money, it's a lot of time, it's a lot of 

22           inconvenience that they really need to put 

23           into running their businesses.

24                  So I really -- I just wanted to put in 


                                                                   133

 1           my two cents.  I'm very concerned.

 2                  Thank you.

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 4                  We have been revisited by 

 5           Senator Gounardes; I hear he's here again.  

 6           Yes.  He was on the list for questions.  Will 

 7           someone let him have their microphone?

 8                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  There we go.  

 9           Thank you, Senator Krueger.  

10                  Hello, everyone.  Commissioner, good 

11           to see you in Red Hook last week.

12                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yes.

13                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  I have two 

14           questions.  The first focuses on an issue of 

15           local concern which ESDC is now involved with 

16           in my district, and that's the redevelopment 

17           of the Brooklyn Marine Terminal project.  

18           That was facilitated with the transfer from 

19           the Port Authority to EDC.  There's obviously 

20           a lot of uncertainty right now with City 

21           Hall.  

22                  But as it relates to ESD's 

23           involvement, what -- what is ESD's 

24           involvement with the redevelopment of this 


                                                                   134

 1           site?  And is this site of interest to the 

 2           state as well as to the city, irrespective?

 3                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Thank you for 

 4           that question. 

 5                  You know, ESD has been working with 

 6           the city on the working group -- as you know, 

 7           we have members of our team on there.  And as 

 8           the city leads this project, you know, we 

 9           continue to support the city in the project.

10                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  And does the state 

11           or does ESD view this project as important to 

12           serve state purposes as well as city 

13           purposes, or solely as a city-only priority?

14                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  No, absolutely.  

15           You know, the state looks to being a part of 

16           the project and supporting, you know, state 

17           objectives as well.

18                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  Great, thank you.

19                  And my second question is, you know, 

20           we spent a lot of money on development 

21           programs, incentive programs, grant programs, 

22           for many, many years -- lots of money, a lot 

23           of it well spent, some of it, you know, we 

24           can argue maybe not as well spent.  I want to 


                                                                   135

 1           get a sense as to looking back on the 

 2           totality of a lot of these economic 

 3           development incentive funds that we've 

 4           allocated, what's the dollar amount of 

 5           unspent funds, cumulatively, that have been 

 6           allocated to ESD that have not been awarded, 

 7           drawn down, maybe a grant recipient didn't 

 8           need the full amount, et cetera?  Do we have 

 9           a sense of that?

10                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I would have to 

11           get back to you, to go through the programs 

12           and do an accounting exactly.

13                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  And does that 

14           money typically stay with ESD?  Does it get 

15           sent back to the General Fund?  Is it still 

16           under ESD's control?

17                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  It depends on 

18           the program.  Sometimes we have grant 

19           programs where we have terminated funds, we 

20           just do another round of grants for the --

21                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  I'd appreciate 

22           some follow-up on that to get a sense as to 

23           what's left.  You know, if grants that we did 

24           in the first couple of rounds of the REDC 


                                                                   136

 1           competitions, if there's still unspent funds 

 2           from that that can be repurposed, reused, 

 3           reinvested, et cetera, given all the 

 4           uncertainty from the federal government right 

 5           now, I think we're looking for every penny we 

 6           can find.  And if, you know -- I think it's 

 7           relevant to the conversations we're having.  

 8           So I appreciate the follow-up on that.

 9                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yes.

10                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  Thank you.

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

12                  Assembly.

13                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 

14           Griffin.

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GRIFFIN:  Thank you, 

16           Chairs.  And thank you to all of you for 

17           being here.

18                  This question goes to 

19           Commissioner Knight.  I appreciate all of 

20           your efforts for the many years you have been 

21           the commissioner.  And I wanted to ask you 

22           about really Long Island.  

23                  I represent AD 21, which is the 

24           southwestern shore of Long Island, and I 


                                                                   137

 1           would love to see some of our New York State 

 2           tourism funds and marketing dollars to be 

 3           like rerouted towards our local 

 4           municipalities and chambers -- not just in my 

 5           district, but I think across Long Island that 

 6           could really help promote our local events, 

 7           promote local business and so forth.  

 8                  And it would be an ideal way to 

 9           attract more visitors, people coming out from 

10           the city, perhaps other states, to 

11           participate and, you know, see what our 

12           villages have to offer.

13                  I know in AD 21 we have very active 

14           chambers and we really have active chambers 

15           across Long Island.  So this would be looked 

16           on as a big bonus.  And I just wondered, are 

17           any of -- like I know there's the I Love NY 

18           program.  Are any programs like that -- is 

19           there any plan to allot money in this way?

20                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So thank you for 

21           your question.  

22                  We've worked with many of the 

23           organizations out on Long Island who are 

24           destination promotion entities, and we have 


                                                                   138

 1           provided some funding for some of those 

 2           organizations and will continue to work with 

 3           them.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GRIFFIN:  Yeah, and -- I 

 5           mean, really I work very closely with my 

 6           local chambers, and they have never mentioned 

 7           receiving any -- any type of grant or money 

 8           in that way.

 9                  It's not exactly -- like it is a 

10           destination, there's a lot of different 

11           activities, it's a short ride from the city, 

12           it's near the beaches.  So there's a lot of 

13           reasons people might like to come out.

14                  And one more question I have is, you 

15           know, ESD, you know, has a lot of 

16           transformative projects.  I really love the 

17           Downtown Revitalization Initiative.  We're 

18           still trying to complete Baldwin.  That's 

19           been going on for a couple of years.  All the 

20           residents are really excited about it.  

21           Valley Stream, another part of my district, 

22           has just applied for one.

23                  So I love those big programs.  But I 

24           also think we need to have, again, in the way 


                                                                   139

 1           of the question just before, some smaller 

 2           programs where we can -- like 80 percent of 

 3           our economic activity is under small 

 4           businesses.  So if we have those 

 5           transformative projects, great.  But I'd love 

 6           to see how we could implement more programs 

 7           to benefit, you know, little things that 

 8           downtowns can do to revitalize their 

 9           downtown.

10                  And one more quick question is I know 

11           the NY Forward mainly is rural and small 

12           communities, but can you be a small community 

13           and receive anything from NY Forward, or do 

14           you have to be rural and small?

15                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  You can be a 

16           small community to access NY Forward.

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GRIFFIN:  Okay, 

18           terrific.  Thank you so much.

19                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

20                  Senator Chan.

21                  SENATOR CHAN:  Good afternoon, 

22           Commissioner.  Thank you for being here.  So 

23           this is for Commissioner Knight.  

24                  So to follow up on Senator Rhoads' 


                                                                   140

 1           question, you know New York is consistently 

 2           rated in many publications and newspapers and 

 3           articles as one of the worst climates to 

 4           conduct business in.  They cite high taxes, 

 5           things like that.

 6                  Texas, on the other hand, is 

 7           consistently rated as one of the best 

 8           climates to conduct business in.  So if I'm 

 9           the CEO of a medium-size or a large company, 

10           what would you tell me about moving my 

11           company to New York State?  What's the 

12           allure?

13                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Thank you for 

14           your question.

15                  You know, we have -- I've had many 

16           conversations with management teams who are 

17           looking at New York and sometimes Texas.  You 

18           know, we have -- I would start with a team 

19           that is able to support a project from, you 

20           know, presenting a proposal to executing the 

21           project.  

22                  There are many benefits of different 

23           kinds of businesses locating in New York.  

24           With manufacturing, there's zero percent tax 


                                                                   141

 1           on those businesses, which is favorable for 

 2           them.  And many of the --

 3                  SENATOR CHAN:  Didn't we offer the 

 4           same thing to Amazon that we once chased 

 5           away?  We did chase away Amazon, right?

 6                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I was not at ESD 

 7           when the Amazon --

 8                  SENATOR CHAN:  I know that.  I'm not 

 9           blaming you.  But do you think it's a good 

10           idea to chase away Amazon and bring in 

11           casinos now?  I mean, I'm talking about 

12           Amazon headquarters, right?  Quality jobs and 

13           a lot of jobs outside the headquarters.  Do 

14           you think that was a good idea to chase away 

15           Amazon like that, only now to talk about 

16           bringing in casinos into New York City?

17                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So we would like 

18           to have, you know, entertainment businesses 

19           here as well, because those kinds of 

20           businesses attract tourists as well as 

21           industrial businesses.  So both types of 

22           businesses.

23                  SENATOR CHAN:  I know what you're 

24           thinking.  You know, you're probably thinking 


                                                                   142

 1           like Las Vegas, you know, the glamour.  And 

 2           I'm thinking more like Aqueduct.  

 3                  But anyway, so can you highlight any 

 4           businesses that you've successfully attracted 

 5           to our state?

 6                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I think, you 

 7           know, the Micron project is, you know, one of 

 8           the --

 9                  SENATOR CHAN:  Was that you?

10                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yes.

11                  SENATOR CHAN:  Okay, great.  And 

12           anything else?

13                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  We have a lot of 

14           businesses that we've attracted in the last 

15           couple of years -- you know, Fairlife, the 

16           Coca-Cola subsidiary, to Webster, New York.  

17           Wells Enterprises in Dunkirk.  It's there, 

18           but it's having a big expansion.  Edwards 

19           Vacuum at the STAMP project.  So a number of 

20           businesses we've attracted here to New York.

21                  SENATOR CHAN:  Okay, that's great to 

22           hear.  Now I'm sure we have a lot more to 

23           talk about.  Thanks.

24                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Okay, thank you.


                                                                   143

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 2                  Assembly.

 3                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblyman 

 4           Lemondes.

 5                  ASSEMBLYMAN LEMONDES:  Thank you, 

 6           Chair.  

 7                  I appreciate the opportunity to 

 8           discuss some of the issues that people in my 

 9           district and New York State care about with 

10           respect to economic development.  

11           Commissioner Knight, thank you for being 

12           here.

13                  My questions are for you.  The first 

14           is with respect to the POWER UP fund, could 

15           you comment on whether or not that power is 

16           reliable or green?

17                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Thank you for 

18           that question.  We are looking to connect 

19           whatever power that is available to attach to 

20           the grid for that specific shovel-ready site.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN LEMONDES:  So the reason I 

22           bring that up is, as you know, most heavy 

23           manufacturing operations require reliable, 

24           uninterruptible power.  They can't power 


                                                                   144

 1           their operations without the risk of great 

 2           loss of money and financial ruin from green 

 3           sources, necessitating fossil-fueled energy, 

 4           or nuclear.

 5                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I do understand 

 6           that we talk to many businesses, particularly 

 7           like you say, these advanced manufacturing 

 8           businesses.  They need stable, reliable power 

 9           to operate their businesses.

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN LEMONDES:  Right.  So I'm 

11           glad to hear that.  I think the CLCPA will 

12           collapse under its own weight, and I'm glad 

13           to hear that we're seeking reliable power for 

14           these businesses that are coming.

15                  Additionally, as some of my colleagues 

16           had mentioned, I looked today:  Small 

17           Business Survey ranks New York State with an 

18           F for business friendliness.  And I just find 

19           it -- I'm hearing one thing from the 

20           panelists, yet I don't understand why 

21           external sources are continuously citing the 

22           business climate here as so counterproductive 

23           that they won't even consider coming here.  

24                  And I want to use the balance of my 


                                                                   145

 1           time to explain the Manufacturing Association 

 2           of Central New York held a legislative 

 3           breakfast.  All of us were in attendance that 

 4           are local to Central New York, Democrats and 

 5           Republicans both.  And the businesses that 

 6           testified that comprised the panel, every one 

 7           of them said they would not grow in New York 

 8           State anymore.  They are seeking external 

 9           opportunities because it is so difficult to 

10           conduct business here, they just can't do it.

11                  And I would cite, as I'm sure you 

12           remember, something near and dear to all of 

13           us, the grocery store chain Wegmans, which is 

14           a bellwether New York business, had put out a 

15           statement I think two years ago -- don't 

16           quote me exactly on the date -- that they 

17           would no longer seek expansion in New York 

18           either.

19                  So I would just ask you to consider 

20           providing metrics on the effectiveness of 

21           what ESD is doing to equalize it.

22                  Thank you.  Thank you, Chair.

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

24                  Senator Tom O'Mara, five-minute 


                                                                   146

 1           ranker.

 2                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Yes, thank you.

 3                  Thank you both for being here today.  

 4                  Director Reid, I have a couple of 

 5           questions for you on the -- some of the 

 6           enforcement provisions.

 7                  Did I hear you right at the beginning, 

 8           you said you had shut down about 300 

 9           unlicensed operators?

10                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Yes.  On 

11           the state side 330, actually.

12                  SENATOR O'MARA:  And does that include 

13           others that have been shut down by local 

14           governments?

15                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  No, that 

16           doesn't include other --

17                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Do you know how many 

18           of those have been closed down?

19                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  I'd have 

20           to get those numbers.  I think my 

21           recollection of data is about a couple of 

22           months old, so I'd have to get an update for 

23           you on that.

24                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Is that about the 


                                                                   147

 1           same?

 2                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  It's 

 3           more, especially if you're looking at 

 4           New York City, because of the density.  There 

 5           have been more down in the city at the very 

 6           least.

 7                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Yeah, because I heard 

 8           estimates all over the place of how many 

 9           there were, and thousands, like upwards of 

10           10,000 around the state.  So 300 doesn't 

11           sound like a lot to me in the grand scheme.

12                  But I know the City of New York has 

13           been doing their own shutdowns.  And other 

14           municipalities, you mentioned Elmira, where I 

15           represent, and you've been helping assist 

16           them in their local law.

17                  Aside from communities that have 

18           enacted local laws, those that haven't 

19           enacted local laws, what are their options in 

20           taking action against unlicensed operators?

21                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Yeah.  

22           So, you know, municipalities of -- I think 

23           it's counties and cities have the ability to 

24           establish their own enforcement procedures.  


                                                                   148

 1           And so if they want, they can start doing 

 2           that, but with consultation with OCM if 

 3           they'd like.

 4                  We've had the ability to look at model 

 5           local laws and model local practices and just 

 6           advise those municipalities if there's 

 7           something stopping them, given the 

 8           enforcement powers that the Legislature 

 9           bestowed last year.

10                  SENATOR O'MARA:  But if you're not a 

11           city or a county, if you're a town or a 

12           village, they have to go through OCM to get 

13           you to take action to shut it down?

14                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  They can 

15           do that, or they can work with their county.  

16           There are several options for those smaller 

17           municipalities.

18                  I also know, having had experience, 

19           you know, working tangential to law 

20           enforcement, that some of them lack a lot of 

21           bandwidth in terms of force power.  So, you 

22           know, they're working with their larger 

23           municipalities to create enforcement actions.

24                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Who would they reach 


                                                                   149

 1           out to in your agency for help?

 2                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Yeah, 

 3           that would be Dan Haughney.  I can give you 

 4           his email.  I think he's in the room.

 5                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Is that who is in 

 6           charge of your compliance as well?

 7                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  No.  He 

 8           is --

 9                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Or there's two 

10           different things, one for unlicensed and one 

11           for licensed compliance?

12                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Well, 

13           it's more -- he's over enforcement and 

14           investigations.  Our compliance is on another 

15           team.  But they work -- I mean, I can't tell 

16           you -- incredibly closely together in terms 

17           of sharing information, which is important 

18           around ensuring that folks are complying with 

19           our regs or where they're not.

20                  SENATOR O'MARA:  So on the license 

21           side compliance, who's in charge of that?

22                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Licensing 

23           right now is a guy named Christian Embler.

24                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Okay.  And what kind 


                                                                   150

 1           of staffing issues do they have with that?  

 2           Because there doesn't seem to be a lot of 

 3           compliance checking.  We heard a few examples 

 4           today.  I mean, are there staffing issues 

 5           there?

 6                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Sorry, 

 7           let me be a little bit more particular.

 8                  So licensing is one thing; compliance 

 9           is another thing.  So Christian's overseeing 

10           licensing right now.  We're bringing on a 

11           head of both licensing and compliance, but 

12           right now that head is a woman named Jennifer 

13           Terrett Blue.

14                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Okay.  It's 

15           confusing.

16                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  I could 

17           give you a little chart just to clarify.

18                  SENATOR O'MARA:  I think that might be 

19           helpful for us in --

20                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Okay.

21                  SENATOR O'MARA:  -- in being able to 

22           know where to actually refer people to.

23                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Sure.

24                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Because we have -- my 


                                                                   151

 1           office deals with applicants trying to get 

 2           licensing, and we're also dealing with 

 3           complaints of unlicensed operators and 

 4           complaints of licensed operators that are 

 5           claimed to not be in compliance.  So it's 

 6           kind of difficult to keep them -- for us to 

 7           know where to send these.

 8                  So if we could get that kind of flow 

 9           chart of who to go to for what, it would be 

10           helpful.

11                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Sure.  We 

12           can certainly give you contact information 

13           for folks in our office.

14                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Thank you.  Thank you 

15           both very much.

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Before we 

17           continue, we're going to take a few minutes' 

18           break.  Let's let the commissioners run 

19           either direction, and then we'll wait for 

20           them to come back.  Thank you.  

21                  (Brief recess taken.)

22                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay, 

23           legislators, back in your seats.  Or at least 

24           be quiet if you're not going to get back in 


                                                                   152

 1           your seats.

 2                  (Off the record.)

 3                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 

 4           Simon.

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  Thank you, 

 6           Mr. Chair.

 7                  I have some questions for you, 

 8           Commissioner Knight.  I know you're 

 9           surprised, aren't you.  So about our favorite 

10           topic, Atlantic Yards in Brooklyn, which has 

11           possibly much to happen there, but not much 

12           has happened for a long time.

13                  So I'm very curious whether ESD has 

14           been presented with a developer to vet for 

15           receiving the railroad rights.  And if so, 

16           are you going to be able to complete a 

17           transfer of those rights before the 

18           affordable housing deadline of May 31st?

19                  And I know there's also talk around 

20           Site 5 happening too, so.

21                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yes, thank you 

22           for that question about Atlantic Yards.

23                  At this time we continue to wait for 

24           the lender to present us with a qualified 


                                                                   153

 1           developer.  We have not had one come forward 

 2           as of this time.  And so, you know, we have 

 3           until the deadline to see if that happens.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  So you haven't 

 5           been formally presented with the developer.

 6                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  That's right.

 7                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  We've heard a 

 8           lot of stories about people coming in.  

 9                  What are you going to do if the 

10           affordable housing deadline passes on 

11           May 31st, on which there are tremendous 

12           liquidated damages that are due?

13                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  There are 

14           liquidated damages that are due, yes. 

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  And do you have 

16           any plans for what to do with that at that 

17           point?  I mean, clearly this is a big issue.

18                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Right.

19                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  It's a lot of 

20           money, number one.  And it's also affordable 

21           housing that we desperately need, but 

22           expensive to build given where it is.

23                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Right.  So we 

24           continue to have dialogue with the lender.  


                                                                   154

 1           Like I said, to the extent that that does not 

 2           come forward, we'll have to enforce what we 

 3           have with respect to our contract.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  So it's your 

 5           intention to enforce the contract.

 6                  Thank you.  I appreciate it very much.

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Was that it, 

 8           Assemblywoman?  You're done?

 9                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  (Inaudible.)

10                  (Laughter; off the record.)

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  I'm 

12           going to take my 10 minutes as chair now.  

13           Thank you.

14                  So my questions are pretty much for 

15           you, Acting Director of OCM.  And there have 

16           been a number of questions asked today, but I 

17           feel like we still need to round this out.  

18           So -- and you've heard quite a few people 

19           having concerns about problems with illegal 

20           stores staying open all over the state, 

21           inspections not being done.  I'm very 

22           concerned about the number of complaints I've 

23           heard about that.  

24                  Despite the fact that we wrote into 


                                                                   155

 1           the legislation a seed-to-sale review 

 2           process, that the contract that was supposed 

 3           to be let to do those kinds of inspections 

 4           and assurances that this is New York State 

 5           product moving into our retail dispensaries 

 6           and it has been tested and safe, that that 

 7           contract has not been let so there's no one 

 8           doing those inspections.  We heard one or two 

 9           examples today.

10                  So help me understand what the process 

11           is now.

12                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So I 

13           think the contract you're referring to is 

14           something that I think might have been in 

15           discussion before my time.  

16                  But in terms of doing compliance 

17           inspections and doing pre-opening 

18           inspections, that is our compliance team.  

19           And I'm very aware of how much they're out 

20           there reviewing locations to ensure that when 

21           they're opening up, they meet our regulations 

22           from the jump.

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  So they are 

24           actually reviewing that every product in 


                                                                   156

 1           those stores is actually correctly New York 

 2           State-tested product labeled correctly, not 

 3           fake product?

 4                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Correct.  

 5           So that's going on the -- I'll break it down.  

 6           So when you're still in the pre-opening 

 7           phase, our compliance folks are doing that 

 8           pre-opening inspection.

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  That's with 

10           pre-opening.  This is post-opening.

11                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Once 

12           you're open for business, those same folks 

13           are going out to those stores and those 

14           locations and taking literally the checklist 

15           that matches one-for-one with the regs and 

16           going through and inspecting.

17                  I've had the opportunity to go on some 

18           of those inspections and see how they do them 

19           and ask questions both of the licensee but 

20           also of our compliance team in terms of how 

21           things are in the field and how things are 

22           changing in the field and how they're 

23           adapting.  So the compliance team is 

24           responsible for both.


                                                                   157

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And how many 

 2           people do we have working on that area?

 3                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  

 4           Compliance, I'd have to get you the number 

 5           back.  I think it's in -- ooh, I don't want 

 6           to guess.  But I'll get you that number back.

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay.  And that's 

 8           their only job.  They're not like 

 9           multitasking with others.

10                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  No, that 

11           is -- anything to do with compliance with our 

12           regulations, that is their job.

13                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay.  The other 

14           concern I get brought to me quite often is 

15           that there's concern that licenses are no 

16           longer being prioritized for people who are 

17           in the CAURD "social equity" category.  Can 

18           you help me understand the process by which 

19           we're determining which licenses are being 

20           approved now in relationship to CAURD versus 

21           non-CAURD?

22                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So the 

23           CAURD program is and has been an incredibly 

24           important program.  We're still moving 


                                                                   158

 1           through those licenses.  I think -- I don't 

 2           know if it was our last meeting or the one in 

 3           January where there were some that we had 

 4           moved forward from the provisional phase to 

 5           the final phase.

 6                  So those CAURD licenses are still 

 7           moving through our process as they're meeting 

 8           eligibility criteria and they're getting 

 9           their location.

10                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Some of the 

11           biggest complaints I actually get right 

12           now -- and I'm New York City-based -- is that 

13           there are too many licenses being somehow 

14           provisionally approved that aren't meeting 

15           the "at least a thousand feet away from each 

16           other" rule.  And I need help understanding 

17           that, because my community boards are very 

18           upset.  I see my New York City people shaking 

19           their heads with me.  

20                  And the concern by also the people who 

21           have opened the stores that if you put too 

22           many stores in the same geographic area, 

23           you're just knocking them out of business 

24           with too much competition.


                                                                   159

 1                  So help me understand what the 

 2           standard is now and why we would be allowing 

 3           stores to open within a thousand feet of each 

 4           other.

 5                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So this 

 6           gets back to the public convenience and 

 7           advantage regulation.  

 8                  So in September I believe it was, the 

 9           board -- and I want to make a distinction 

10           between OCM and the Cannabis Control Board -- 

11           the board elected to go with the regulations 

12           we currently have in place around public 

13           convenience and advantage.  And so we had an 

14           expectation that that would be challenging 

15           for folks.  

16                  However, because our regulations 

17           existed, you know, the board decided at the 

18           time that -- to go forward with reviewing 

19           those applications.

20                  Now, we also put out for public 

21           comment redrafted regulations around public 

22           convenience and advantage.  And they do a few 

23           things.  One is looking at whether an 

24           operator has been in operation for at least 


                                                                   160

 1           nine months before there's a consideration of 

 2           public convenience and advantage.

 3                  The other is a notice criterion.  And 

 4           we've heard that from sitting down with so 

 5           many of our operators, that they had no idea 

 6           this was coming.  So it gives a notice 

 7           opportunity for folks who might be encroached 

 8           upon and allows them to submit testimony and 

 9           evidence saying, you know, why this should 

10           happen or why it shouldn't happen.

11                  It's also limiting some of the scope 

12           around where these public convenience and 

13           advantage waivers can be granted.  

14                  So all that is to say it's building in 

15           some more structure into the process while 

16           also recognizing that we're dealing with an 

17           emerging market and so we don't want to 

18           proceed like we're in a developed market 

19           where public convenience and advantage is a 

20           different calculation at that time.

21                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  So because we're 

22           in an emerging market and we've learned the 

23           lessons, I hope, of many other states that 

24           went too fast and oversupplied the stores or 


                                                                   161

 1           went too slow or ended up with too many 

 2           people growing too much or too little, that 

 3           we're supposed to have learned those lessons.  

 4                  So help me understand, why would 

 5           anybody get a 1,000-foot exemption in the 

 6           City of New York at this moment in history?

 7                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So again, 

 8           that's within the current regulations and 

 9           that is the prerogative of the board to 

10           consider those regulations, whether they want 

11           to pursue and look at public convenience and 

12           advantage.  

13                  But again, since that September 

14           meeting we've not done that.  And while we 

15           have the regulations out for public comment, 

16           we're being very careful around those types 

17           of requests.

18                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  So my other 

19           complaints are that while we have -- I guess 

20           as some of my colleagues pointed out, we have 

21           closed down maybe 600 stores statewide -- I 

22           don't know, and you already said you're not 

23           quite sure between the state, the city and 

24           any localities -- that it's some of the 


                                                                   162

 1           biggest illegal operators that have continued 

 2           to be allowed to stay open, multi-site, big 

 3           out-of-state-funded businesses.  

 4                  Do we need different law so that we 

 5           actually can go after them?  Because I'm 

 6           really concerned a handful of them could 

 7           knock the entire concept of social equity 

 8           small stores, you know, off their ability to 

 9           continue.

10                  Some people have proposed that we 

11           should do asset forfeiture on the largest 

12           illegal stores.  What's your opinion on that?

13                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  I 

14           think -- you know, thinking particularly as 

15           an attorney, there are many avenues to 

16           address practices we don't want.

17                  That said, I think the enforcement 

18           powers that we have and the expanded ones 

19           from last year, we still are working to 

20           maximize the impact of that.  And a lot of 

21           that is also working with local 

22           municipalities to ensure that they have 

23           practices to go after these stores.

24                  So I think there's certainly room for 


                                                                   163

 1           our growth.  There's certainly room to do 

 2           more.  And I just want to make a quick 

 3           correction on the number of stores, at least 

 4           as to the state side.  We've closed over 500.  

 5           I think I said 330 before, but my math was 

 6           wrong.

 7                  But I think there are many 

 8           opportunities to ensure that these operators 

 9           don't think that New York is a place where 

10           it's okay to operate and that it's safe to 

11           operate, because it's not.  And especially 

12           looking at some of the actions we've taken in 

13           the recent past, especially with the support 

14           of the Attorney General, I think also fines 

15           are a huge deal around discouraging some of 

16           this conduct.

17                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I'm not sure, in 

18           fairness.  And I wrote the law, so I could 

19           admit that it's going to -- you know, we're 

20           going to need to be changing it.

21                  So one of my colleagues talked about 

22           deliveries by mail.  And I know the regs.  

23           And you were right in the answer:  That's not 

24           supposed to be happening.  But I also know it 


                                                                   164

 1           is happening.  And if it was coming from out 

 2           of state, that would be one thing, because 

 3           then that wouldn't even be within our 

 4           control.  

 5                  But my understanding is we have some 

 6           large warehouse operators that are doing 

 7           delivery without licenses and delivery 

 8           through the mail.  And I'm just not sure that 

 9           we have the tools yet to actually track these 

10           and shut them down.  So that's why I was 

11           asking do you think we need to change the law 

12           in New York so that there are more tools for 

13           law enforcement to go after the big guys, who 

14           I think feel like, Oh, a fine, that's not 

15           even worth worrying about.

16                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So I 

17           just -- on the mail piece, I know that there 

18           is certainly a federal component there.  We 

19           would have to collaborate with our federal 

20           partners on misuse of the mail.

21                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Well, we're 

22           closing the post office, so I guess that will 

23           be --

24                  (Laughter.)


                                                                   165

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  No, sorry.

 2                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  No 

 3           comment.

 4                  (Laughter.)

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  It will be 

 6           third-party delivery, yes.

 7                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Yeah, I 

 8           think so far as our mails are being used 

 9           inappropriately and in violation of federal 

10           law and expectation, that is something that 

11           we can certainly collaborate with on --

12                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I have to cut you 

13           off because I just looked at the clock.  Did 

14           we really go through 10 minutes?  Oh, my God.

15                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  You have 

16           10 seconds.

17                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay.  So the 

18           cannabis company that DASNY contracted with 

19           that did 24, 25 stores, that all I hear is 

20           disasters -- and then they showed up in my 

21           office the other day and said, We want to do 

22           another 25 stores.  And I said no.

23                  Will you confirm to me that's not 

24           happening?


                                                                   166

 1                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  To my 

 2           knowledge, that's not happening.

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Hope, you're on 

 4           the board.  Is that not happening?

 5                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  To my knowledge, 

 6           it's not happening.

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay.  I ran out 

 8           of time.  Thank you.

 9                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  I hope it's not 

10           happening also.

11                  Assemblywoman Hooks.

12                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN HOOKS:  Hello, thank 

13           you.  Thank you both for being here.

14                  My first question is for 

15           Commissioner Knight.  ESD controls major 

16           economic initiatives.  And District 35, which 

17           encompasses East Elmhurst, Corona, 

18           LeFrak City, isn't seeing direct benefits.  

19           What specific economic development projects 

20           in District 35 have received funding in the 

21           past three years?

22                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Thank you for 

23           that question, Assemblywoman. 

24                  I would have to get a list of those 


                                                                   167

 1           projects.  But we have a number of products 

 2           and services that are available to small 

 3           businesses, and I'm sure some of your small 

 4           businesses have accessed some of our 

 5           programs.

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN HOOKS:  Great.  So we'll 

 7           work together just so we can identify those.

 8                  My other question is what 

 9           accountability measures exist to ensure that 

10           large-scale developments in New York benefit 

11           historically underserved communities?

12                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  You know, thank 

13           you for that question.

14                  I think for the developments that we 

15           undertake at ESD, we always engage in an 

16           extensive stakeholder process so that we 

17           understand what the community, you know, 

18           needs and aspirations are so we can 

19           incorporate that into the planning of those 

20           kinds of developments.

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN HOOKS:  Great, thank 

22           you.  

23                  My next question is for Acting 

24           Director Reid.  First I would like plus-one 


                                                                   168

 1           to Senator Krueger regarding the 

 2           oversaturation of illegal cannabis shops in 

 3           the districts.  In my district alone, we have 

 4           eight in a four-block radius, and it doesn't 

 5           seem like we're getting any reprieve or help 

 6           in shutting them down.  

 7                  So I would like to work closely with 

 8           you, on a side note, just to see what help we 

 9           can get for my district.

10                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Great, 

11           yeah.  I think when it comes to some of what 

12           we are doing -- again, I go back to the fact 

13           that investigations take a bit of work.  And 

14           particularly where those investigations point 

15           toward criminal conduct.  And we've gone into 

16           some unlicensed shops and seen ghost guns, 

17           we've seen cocaine, we've seen all sorts of 

18           things -- mushrooms.  

19                  And so those, under our current laws, 

20           are criminal, and so we have to make sure 

21           we're working with our law enforcement 

22           partners to address the whole of that case, 

23           not just the cannabis piece.

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN HOOKS:  Thank you.


                                                                   169

 1                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblyman Ra.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you.  

 3                  Good afternoon.  Commissioner Knight, 

 4           thank you for the conversation with you and 

 5           your staff a few weeks ago.  It was helpful 

 6           in preparation for the hearing.

 7                  I do want to talk about -- and, you 

 8           know, I've mentioned this is the past -- we 

 9           know that there has been, you know, some 

10           reporting about a lot of our economic 

11           development programs and the impact they have 

12           and whether they deliver the bang for our 

13           buck.  And I know the agency would probably 

14           dispute some of what has been out there.  

15                  But I'm just wondering, does the 

16           agency at this point have standardized 

17           metrics for evaluating these different 

18           programs when we're comparing one to the 

19           other?

20                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yes.  Thank you 

21           for that question about our programs.

22                  So, you know, we take seriously, you 

23           know, reporting about our programs.  We have 

24           a database of economic incentives.  It's one 


                                                                   170

 1           of the most extensive databases in the 

 2           country with respect to economic development 

 3           initiatives.  And so we have a number of 

 4           metrics that are reported on with these 

 5           projects -- you know, economic impact, you 

 6           know, tax impact, number of employees that 

 7           were hired by these projects.  A large 

 8           assortment of metrics associated with those 

 9           projects that are reported.

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  In terms of -- is 

11           there a standardized definition of what we 

12           think of as a job created by a program?  

13           because it seems like some use a head count, 

14           others use full-time equivalents.  

15                  Is there a standardized definition of 

16           when we're looking at how many jobs are 

17           created by a particular program?

18                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  We look at 

19           full-time equivalents.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you.

21                  And is there any targeted rate of 

22           return when we're evaluating a program?

23                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So I think 

24           that's a more complicated question and 


                                                                   171

 1           discussion.  You know, it depends on the type 

 2           of project that we're looking at and what 

 3           we're trying to advance with respect to the 

 4           project.  

 5                  You know, in the context of looking at 

 6           developing an emerging industry, that sort of 

 7           you know, cost per job or investment in the 

 8           project may be much more extensive than, you 

 9           know, a legacy industry.  You know, to the 

10           extent that we are trying to support small 

11           businesses, that may be a different metric.  

12           It depends on what it is we're trying to 

13           advance.

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you.  I do 

15           continue to be concerned with the rate of 

16           return we're getting on some of these 

17           programs.  I think that, you know, as we 

18           talked about a couple of weeks ago, things 

19           like the childcare issue, I think there are 

20           other things we can be doing that would be 

21           very positive for economic development.

22                  But thank you for that.

23                  Acting Director Reid, so you mentioned 

24           DEI but I want to talk about something 


                                                                   172

 1           different:  DRE.  Do we know how many drug 

 2           recognition experts we have in New York State 

 3           at this point as we're into, you know, 

 4           Year 4/5 of the rollout of the adult-use 

 5           cannabis market?

 6                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Yes.  

 7           That's 417.

 8                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Okay.  And I know 

 9           that part of the funding when this bill was 

10           passed was targeting allowing for training 

11           for that.

12                  So how many of those have been trained 

13           through that program as opposed to maybe 

14           where, you know, previously trained before we 

15           started this new program?

16                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  I'm only 

17           aware of the numbers that exist today.  I'm 

18           not sure of anything before -- in a before 

19           time.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Okay.  You talked a 

21           little bit about, you know, some of the 

22           enforcement mechanisms.  Obviously we had 

23           done a number of provisions in last year's 

24           budget.  I will reiterate I know several of 


                                                                   173

 1           my colleagues have talked about it, but we 

 2           still continue to hear of, you know, illegal 

 3           operations and things of that nature.

 4                  So I appreciate your focus on that 

 5           issue because obviously it's 

 6           counterproductive to the program, whether 

 7           it's on the tax side, whether it's on the 

 8           side of making sure that, you know, products 

 9           are pure and safe.  

10                  So I do want to, though, ask when you 

11           have a -- I'm going to run out of time, 

12           but -- you know, a jurisdiction that has not 

13           allowed for shops but that's in very close 

14           proximity to another jurisdiction like I have 

15           in Nassau County -- I'm right near the Queens 

16           border -- how it works in terms of trying to 

17           help local, you know, police in the area that 

18           is not legalized.  I ran out of time, so --

19                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Send the 

20           question; we can talk offline.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you.

22                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblymember 

23           Torres.

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN TORRES:  Hi.  Thank you, 


                                                                   174

 1           Chairs, and thank you, Commissioners.  I look 

 2           forward to working with both of you.  I'm a 

 3           new member from the 85th in the Bronx.

 4                  First I'll ask, for Commissioner Reid, 

 5           just a plus-one on the concerns regarding the 

 6           thousand-feet restriction.  We're having a 

 7           lot of possibilities there in the Bronx.  And 

 8           in particular, also the mobile trucks that 

 9           are selling.

10                  I wonder if there are any particular 

11           regulations and any tracking on those trucks 

12           and where they move.

13                  And then secondly, also concerned 

14           about how the cannabis shops are marketing, 

15           particularly to young people.  I've gotten a 

16           lot of complaints and concerns from 

17           constituents particularly that they're being 

18           marketed like candy.  And I think -- you 

19           know, I'd love to learn more about what kind 

20           of advertising regulations you might have in 

21           place for that.

22                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Yeah.  So 

23           if you don't mind I'll answer the question in 

24           reverse.


                                                                   175

 1                  Marketing to young folks.  So this is 

 2           something we see particularly in the 

 3           unlicensed shops.  I can give you a 

 4           particular example of something packaged to 

 5           look like Sour Patch Kids, that is exactly 

 6           like Sour Patch Kids in our licensed shops.  

 7           Or like a Bazooka or zebra-striped gum, and 

 8           now I'm dating myself.

 9                  But all that is to say is we have a 

10           robust set of regulations around packaging, 

11           labeling, marketing and advertising that 

12           specifically address attractiveness to youth.  

13           And sometimes that's a bit of a squishy 

14           measurement in terms of what's youth-oriented 

15           and what's not.  But looking at our 

16           regulations they are designed so that those 

17           things aren't, you know, from first visual 

18           appeal, appealing to youth.

19                  In terms of I think you said vans, the 

20           enforcement powers that we have are 

21           restricted to brick-and-mortar, so -- but 

22           that doesn't mean that we don't see some of 

23           these other operators.  Because one of the 

24           things that I've said is the black and gray 


                                                                   176

 1           markets are older than all of us in this room 

 2           combined.  And so what we're going to find is 

 3           that they know how to survive.  

 4                  One of the things we have to be 

 5           incredibly attuned to is some of the ways 

 6           that they are shifting, because we are 

 7           bringing force and energy to addressing their 

 8           operations.  But this is something that we 

 9           have seen and are aware of, and -- and, you 

10           know, want to take measures to approach 

11           addressing that with some degree of 

12           consideration.

13                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN TORRES:  Thank you.

14                  Commissioner Knight, two blitz 

15           questions for you.

16                  One, any concerns about what's 

17           happening at the federal level and impacts on 

18           your funding?  

19                  And then, two, I'm really 

20           interested -- I was a former diplomat -- in 

21           the trade missions and how the trade missions 

22           are fitting into the overall goal for 

23           economic development.  Would love to learn 

24           more about that, any way we can get involved, 


                                                                   177

 1           learn more about the trade missions.

 2                  Thanks.  

 3                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So thank you for 

 4           the question about the federal funding.

 5                  You know, many of our programs get 

 6           federal funding as well as state funding.  

 7           And to the extent that the federal funding 

 8           wouldn't be there, there would be an impact.  

 9           We continue to look at, you know, anything 

10           that comes out of Washington every day, but 

11           continue working through our programs and, 

12           you know, as the Governor has told us, to 

13           keep going.

14                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN TORRES:  I'll follow up.

15                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yeah, thank you.

16                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 

17           Jackson.

18                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Thank you, 

19           Chair.

20                  Commissioner Knight, hi.  Good to see 

21           you.  

22                  When people are applying for jobs at 

23           ESD, do you also go through OGS?

24                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  No.


                                                                   178

 1                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  So when 

 2           they're applying, it goes directly through 

 3           your office?

 4                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yes.

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  And people 

 6           that are applying, do they get responses 

 7           back?  The only reason why I'm asking is 

 8           because I have two constituents that have 

 9           applied and they haven't heard anything.  And 

10           I see a lot of job postings for ESD, but I 

11           don't know when the jobs are being fulfilled.

12                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So thank you for 

13           that.

14                  I think, you know -- I'll be in touch 

15           with your office to make sure that we can get 

16           back to those individuals.

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Okay.  

18                  And then for our ED, I just have a 

19           question.  I see here you said 62 percent of 

20           adult-use licenses approved were social and 

21           economically equity owned.  But if you don't 

22           know how many licenses there are, how do we 

23           know it's 62 percent of it?

24                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So the 


                                                                   179

 1           62 percent was licenses approved at our last 

 2           board meeting in February.

 3                  We do know how many licenses there are 

 4           in terms of what's been approved in the past 

 5           and what's been approved since I came on.  

 6           But I can share those numbers with you.

 7                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Can you tell 

 8           me what those are?

 9                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  I can't 

10           tell you the whole breadth, but what I can 

11           tell you is in the last several months -- and 

12           I actually misspoke earlier.  It's not 

13           200 licenses, it's actually over 

14           800 licenses.

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  About 800, 

16           okay.  So then we'll chat about what the 

17           actual number is.

18                  And then when the mayor of New York 

19           City was here I asked him why his sheriff's 

20           office wasn't getting back to OCM about 

21           reporting when they are shutting down illegal 

22           stores and what's being seized as far as cash 

23           and product is concerned.  Have they been 

24           corresponding with your office?


                                                                   180

 1                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So I 

 2           appreciate that question that you asked back 

 3           then because very shortly after, we got the 

 4           information from New York City.

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Okay.  And 

 6           then at some point will we get a report about 

 7           what's happening in New York City?

 8                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Yes, we 

 9           can share.  We can put that together and 

10           share in a way that will be elucidative.

11                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Thank you.

12                  And then why haven't we increased 

13           funding for the Social Equity Fund -- or the 

14           Community Grants Investment Fund, rather?

15                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So the 

16           community grants investment fund is 

17           appropriated up to 10 million.  And so I know 

18           that this particular proposal includes in the 

19           proposal for 5 million.  One of the things 

20           that I am sensitive to particularly as 

21           operations person is that we have to sort of 

22           prove before we expand too rapidly.  So right 

23           now we're in the process of reviewing the 

24           grants that came in for this cycle year and 


                                                                   181

 1           we're hoping to award those in the next I 

 2           think -- by the end of March if not early 

 3           April.  

 4                  But I want to make sure that we have 

 5           our processes and our practices in place if 

 6           we're looking to work with more money in the 

 7           future.

 8                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Okay, thank 

 9           you.

10                  And then, sorry, Commissioner Knight.  

11           The elimination of 365,000 for additional 

12           support for MWBE, I see that in the 

13           Governor's proposal.  Are we okay with that?

14                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Can --

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  The reduction 

16           in the $365,000 in MWBE.

17                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I have to --

18                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  It was allowed 

19           for additional support.  

20                  (Time clock sounds.)

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Well, let's 

22           chat about that.

23                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  We'll get back 

24           to you, yes.


                                                                   182

 1                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Thank you.

 2                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you.

 3                  Assemblyman Bores.

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN BORES:  Thank you, Chair.  

 5                  And thank you both for being here. 

 6                  To start, I have a question for 

 7           Executive Director Reid.  We've heard a lot 

 8           about the thousand-foot rule and also the 

 9           500-foot rule from an existing school or 

10           religious institution.

11                  There's a legal cannabis store in my 

12           district and in the chairwoman's district 

13           called Bliss + Lex, which opened up 200 feet 

14           from a building that is a combined shul and 

15           school.  And we were told that that was fine 

16           because A, you have to -- even though it's 

17           the same block, you have to turn the corner 

18           and so it's not a linear distance; and 

19           that B, it would be banned if it were just a 

20           school or just a religious institution but 

21           because it is both of those things, even 

22           though it's exclusively those two things, 

23           then there's no restriction on it.

24                  Is that from regulation that can be 


                                                                   183

 1           revised?  Or is that statute that the 

 2           Legislature would have to change in that 

 3           interpretation? 

 4                  And actually before that, do you think 

 5           that makes sense?

 6                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  I'm going 

 7           to answer in the reverse.

 8                  ASSEMBLYMAN BORES:  Okay.

 9                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So what 

10           you're talking about is -- well, let me 

11           reduce it to if it's a mixed-use property.  

12           And I get in terms of it being combined, a 

13           house of worship and a school.  But if it's a 

14           mixed-use property, it can be closer than 

15           500 feet.

16                  Now, what's interesting and that's 

17           also in our regs, and I believe it's in 

18           Part 119, is that a municipality can 

19           designate a place a public youth facility.  

20           That includes playgrounds, that includes 

21           parks, that includes places like what you're 

22           talking about.  If they designate that a 

23           public youth facility, then they can have 

24           500 feet from that.  But the municipality has 


                                                                   184

 1           to designate that first.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN BORES:  Okay.  But so is 

 3           that your regulation you can change, or is 

 4           that statute that the Legislature has to 

 5           change?

 6                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  That's in 

 7           regulation.  So we'd have to -- if there was 

 8           a change, we'd have to put that out for 

 9           public comment, we'd have to take -- there's 

10           a process under SAPA.  But that is a 

11           regulation.

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN BORES:  Do you want to 

13           take a stab on if that makes sense?

14                  (Laughter.)

15                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Whether 

16           that makes sense -- I think what we are 

17           particularly concerned about as an economic 

18           development agency is making sure that we are 

19           working municipalities -- insofar as there is 

20           an opportunity for a municipality to take the 

21           initiative to designate something as such, 

22           then I think that allows for, you know, what 

23           you're talking about to be addressed.

24                  ASSEMBLYMAN BORES:  Okay.  


                                                                   185

 1           Commissioner Knight, you're not going to have 

 2           a chance to answer given the time, but I'd 

 3           love if you could follow-up with -- your 

 4           testimony was the first time I heard about 

 5           venture capital investments in -- through 

 6           these small businesses as part of AI.  

 7                  I would love to hear more about that, 

 8           what the plan is on that.  Venture capital, 

 9           nine out of 10 things fail.  I actually think 

10           it's a good thing for government to do, but 

11           it's usually one that's pilloried in the 

12           press and by opposition.

13                  So just what our expectations are, 

14           what the benefits could be.  Would love kind 

15           of a plan on that going forward.

16                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Absolutely.

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN BORES:  Thank you.

18                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblymember 

19           Braunstein.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Thank you.

21                  First for Commissioner Knight, I just 

22           have a comment, following up on what 

23           Senator Stavisky was talking about in regards 

24           to Creedmoor.


                                                                   186

 1                  Yes, ESDC has taken input from the 

 2           community, but ESDC has not responded or 

 3           acted upon that input.  And frankly your 

 4           agency has just ignored the community input.  

 5           I'm talking the community board, the 

 6           Councilmember, the Senator, myself.  And to 

 7           this date, anything we've requested -- 

 8           reasonable requests -- have just been 

 9           ignored.  And it's been disappointing.

10                  For Executive Director Reid, the MRTA 

11           gives a community board the opportunity -- 

12           first notice and then the opportunity to have 

13           a hearing when someone applies for a cannabis 

14           license.  The community board I represent, 

15           Community Board 11 in Queens, approved 

16           several licenses but there was one license 

17           that they unanimously opposed.  And it wasn't 

18           just the community board, it was myself, it 

19           was State Senator Liu, the local 

20           Councilwoman.  

21                  The community board had a hearing, a 

22           hundred residents from the local community 

23           showed up in opposition.  The location is 

24           520 feet away from an elementary school, and 


                                                                   187

 1           it's one storefront in the middle of a 

 2           residential community.  Completely 

 3           inappropriate place for this kind of 

 4           establishment.

 5                  The community came out and voiced 

 6           their opposition.  And like I said, the 

 7           community board has approved several cannabis 

 8           dispensaries including one less than a 

 9           half-mile from the site that they opposed.  

10           in fact, the community board chair went to 

11           the grand opening of that cannabis 

12           dispensary.  

13                  So the only thing I can conclude from 

14           this whole process is that the community 

15           opinion just doesn't matter to OCM.  Is there 

16           any other conclusion to be drawn?  The entire 

17           community opposed this license.  The 

18           applicant didn't show up.  Does it matter 

19           that we speak up, or is it just disregarded?

20                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So this 

21           is one of those opportunities where I'll take 

22           the opportunity to draw a distinction between 

23           OCM the agency and the Cannabis Control 

24           Board.


                                                                   188

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Can I 

 2           interrupt?  I called Tremaine Wright, because 

 3           she's a former member.  I spoke to her, I 

 4           asked her what happened.  She said to me:  We 

 5           get a list of 70 recommendations at a time -- 

 6           you know, give or take -- from OCM.  Up or 

 7           down vote on all of them together 

 8           recommending approval.  She said she never 

 9           saw the letter from me and Senator Liu.  

10                  So it was OCM that recommended for 

11           approval, and then it went to the board.

12                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So again, 

13           our job as the agency is to ensure that folks 

14           are meeting proximity restrictions as well as 

15           eligibility criteria and statute and 

16           regulations.

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  So community 

18           input doesn't matter.

19                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So the 

20           community board opinion -- or the municipal 

21           opinion is what you're talking about, writ 

22           large, it's not dispositive under our statute 

23           or our regs as to what the board decision 

24           would be or the agency recommendation if an 


                                                                   189

 1           applicant is meeting all of the factors of 

 2           eligibility.  So, you know --

 3                  (Time clock sounds.)

 4                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you.  

 5                  Assemblywoman Lucas.

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Good afternoon, 

 7           everyone.

 8                  Commissioner, how many businesses of 

 9           nine or less employees benefit from the 

10           Low Interest Capital program?  As per your 

11           testimony it is designed to lower the 

12           interest rates for small and midsized 

13           businesses.

14                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  I have to get 

15           you the exact number, but thousands of 

16           businesses have benefited from the Low 

17           Interest Capital loan program.

18                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Can we get 

19           specific data?  Would you give it --

20                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Yes.

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Okay, thank you.

22                  And then also -- let me go on to 

23           Ms. Reid because I can't find my other 

24           question for you and the time is ticking.


                                                                   190

 1                  New York legalized recreational 

 2           cannabis in 2021 and pledged to specifically 

 3           ensure that low-income minorities and 

 4           especially those who were previously 

 5           convicted of cannabis-related crimes would 

 6           have assistance in the legal licensing 

 7           process.  Since then, only 22 stores have 

 8           opened and nine of those owners have stated 

 9           that they feel they were pressured into 

10           accepting a debt trap.  I'm not paraphrasing 

11           here; I'm taking this from a New York Times 

12           article that was published this morning:  

13           "How a Plan for Reparations Became a Debt 

14           Trap for Marijuana Retailers."

15                  What reassurances do you have to offer 

16           those currently struggling with these 

17           programs?  Is there a reason why only 22 

18           stores have opened over the course of 

19           four years?  And do you have any sort of 

20           statistics proving success or a foul-up 

21           through those struggles?

22                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So that 

23           entire program is run through DASNY.  So in 

24           terms of the information that you're seeking, 


                                                                   191

 1           I don't have that.  I'm not privy to it, it's 

 2           not shared with me.  But those would be 

 3           questions for DASNY.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Oh, so none of 

 5           these questions you can answer.

 6                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Yeah, I 

 7           don't have insight on where things are at 

 8           with those programs.

 9                  That said, I will say, you know, we 

10           are certainly open to thinking about and 

11           partnering in ways that are useful to some of 

12           these applicants.  Understanding that, again, 

13           having sat down with many of them, that the 

14           program is not working.  So, you know, open 

15           to those conversations, but those are 

16           generally questions for DASNY.

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  And 

18           Commissioner, what efforts have been made to 

19           ensure sufficient representation of 

20           marginalized community members to benefit 

21           from the explosion of jobs related to -- and 

22           related entrepreneur opportunities created by 

23           the semiconductor manufacturing industry?

24                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So thank you for 


                                                                   192

 1           that question.

 2                  (Time clock sounds.)

 3                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you.  

 4                  Assemblywoman Kassay.

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KASSAY:  Thank you, 

 6           Chair.  Thank you, Commissioner and 

 7           Acting Director.

 8                  The first question is for 

 9           Commissioner Knight.  So my district is in 

10           Suffolk County on Long Island, and we have 

11           communities like Coram who have business 

12           thoroughfares that are blighted and they 

13           cannot proceed with the revitalization of 

14           these areas until their sewer capacity is 

15           expanded.

16                  So they have much needed businesses 

17           that want to come in -- childcare, 

18           healthcare, mixed-use developments as well.  

19           And so they're ready, they're cued up to go.  

20                  And so my question is, how much 

21           conversation occurs between your staff and 

22           the staff that determines who gets the grant 

23           monies for sewer buildout when sewers -- you 

24           know, specifically in reference to this, that 


                                                                   193

 1           sewers are the holdup to economic 

 2           development?

 3                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So, you know, 

 4           thank you for that question.

 5                  We know that, you know, sewer 

 6           development, you know, is an issue on 

 7           Long Island.  And, you know, there are times 

 8           when we do have conversations about that 

 9           development as it relates to economic 

10           development.

11                  Sometimes there are resources 

12           available to support mixed-use projects that 

13           can support the infrastructure of these types 

14           of thoroughfares that you're talking about.  

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KASSAY:  Excellent.  

16           I'll definitely follow up with your office, 

17           or if you could follow up with me to let me 

18           know what resources are available currently.  

19           Thank you so much.

20                  And for Acting Director Reid, two 

21           questions.  So my office is actively working 

22           to increase enforcement on these illegal 

23           cannabis shops, or the unlicensed shops, 

24           because we know that they're selling both 


                                                                   194

 1           illegal products and selling to minors.  

 2                  Also, on behalf of one of our school 

 3           superintendents, especially I've been cued in 

 4           to how clever young people have gotten on how 

 5           to get their hands on cannabis products, 

 6           especially by mail.  So I'll "yes and" on the 

 7           mail conversation.  I think it has to do with 

 8           interstate commerce as well.  

 9                  And so I know I'd sent a -- our office 

10           sent a letter to your office earlier this 

11           week.  I do not expect to have had an answer 

12           already by any means, but just hope to hear 

13           your commitment to working on this issue to 

14           make sure that we are seeing that any 

15           cannabis by mail either requires a signature 

16           and is regulated.

17                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Yeah, 

18           again -- you know, and I appreciate the point 

19           in terms of young people.  Having worked with 

20           young people, the question where I always 

21           start is, you know, what's going on in terms 

22           of you pursuing something or another, and 

23           then thinking about how there might be 

24           infrastructural or systemic ways in which 


                                                                   195

 1           youth can access things that they're not 

 2           supposed to.

 3                  Again, when it comes to, you know, 

 4           delivery by mail, that would be with our law 

 5           enforcement partners, and so not particularly 

 6           for New York State or OCM alone.  But again, 

 7           open to having those conversations.

 8                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KASSAY:  Very good.  So 

 9           we look forward to your commitment to all 

10           coming together on that --

11                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Oh, for 

12           sure.

13                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KASSAY:  Thank you so 

14           much.

15                  And also has your office committed to 

16           working with the Attorney General, my 

17           colleagues and I on cracking down on the 

18           selling of illegal cannabis products in these 

19           unregulated packaged for youth or, you know, 

20           unregulated products in general?  Not just 

21           the shops that are selling them but those who 

22           are manufacturing them.  

23                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you, 

24           Assemblywoman.


                                                                   196

 1                  Assemblyman Dais.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN DAIS:  Thank you.

 3                  This is going to be a quick response 

 4           to one of our colleagues here.  It's 

 5           cannabis-related but also economic.  So I 

 6           opened up the first West Coast Special on 

 7           Fifth Avenue, right?  Right down the street 

 8           was the Lord & Taylor's building where Amazon 

 9           bought it for a billion dollars and brought 

10           in 2,000 workers, which didn't take big tax 

11           breaks.

12                  However, the headquarters we did lose 

13           to Virginia has been shuttered and hasn't 

14           been open, so I think we won in that 

15           situation.

16                  In reference to cured {ph} licenses 

17           and the interest rates that they're paying 

18           for the investments through our social equity 

19           program.  Is that program working, or do you 

20           feel that we need to make tweaks to it?

21                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Just to 

22           clarify, what kind of licenses did you say?

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN DAIS:  The cured licenses, 

24           when they're getting --


                                                                   197

 1                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Oh, the 

 2           CAURD licenses.

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN DAIS:  CAURD.  CAURD, I'm 

 4           sorry.

 5                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Oh, I'm 

 6           sorry, okay.

 7                  So in terms of those licenses, again, 

 8           having sat down with those folks, you know, 

 9           they don't feel like they're working.  And I 

10           can only, you know, when someone says what's 

11           happening, you have to believe them.  And so 

12           I think there are opportunities for us to 

13           think about how that program could be 

14           different.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN DAIS:  So was Chicago 

16           Atlantic the right organization to choose 

17           for -- as the funding organization, or who 

18           helped with the Social Equity Fund?

19                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So 

20           that's, again, not a question I can answer.  

21           That's a DASNY question, as they sort of 

22           worked to stand up that fund.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN DAIS:  Are you guys 

24           working with DASNY to solve these issues?


                                                                   198

 1                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  In terms 

 2           of the scope, that's not our wheelhouse in 

 3           terms of how that fund or any fund would 

 4           operate.

 5                  So again, that would be over in the 

 6           DASNY wheelhouse.

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN DAIS:  Can you provide a 

 8           breakdown to your office -- and probably not 

 9           right now, but on how much money has been 

10           spent from the fund into the organizations?

11                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  I can't 

12           do that.  That's also a DASNY -- they keep 

13           all of those accounts relative to the 

14           participation in the fund and the outcomes of 

15           the fund.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN DAIS:  They don't give you 

17           a report so you have an idea?

18                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  No.  We 

19           don't have -- we don't have an agreement to 

20           that.  That's not the OCM role.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN DAIS:  It doesn't have to 

22           be an OCM role, but I would think that there 

23           would be transparency so we have an idea of 

24           how much money is being put within our 


                                                                   199

 1           cannabis program and to see how it's working.

 2                  How are you supposed to manage the 

 3           cannabis program if you don't have an idea of 

 4           the investments that the -- the investments 

 5           that's going into them?  How are you supposed 

 6           to create measures?

 7                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So the 

 8           fund -- the fund is the body that -- the fund 

 9           is the body, along with DASNY, that creates 

10           those metrics and it monitors those programs.

11                  That's not information, like I said, 

12           that ever gets shared with us or that we have 

13           insight to.

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN DAIS:  Okay.  That's very 

15           odd that you're in charge of the cannabis 

16           program and then you can't understand or have 

17           access to what I think would be public 

18           information on the financial impacts of our 

19           organizations within programs underneath your 

20           purview.  

21                  Last, the farmers, agriculture, 

22           cultivation, biomass.  How much is our 

23           biomass right now and how much is actually 

24           getting into the market?


                                                                   200

 1                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  I'd have 

 2           to get back to you on numbers around biomass.  

 3           I've heard various figures, but I'd have to 

 4           really dig into that and get that back to 

 5           you.  But I can do that for you.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN DAIS:  Okay, thank you.

 7                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Just one 

 8           thing, though.  One of the things that we're 

 9           really excited about is our BioTrack rollout, 

10           which allows tracking of product from seed to 

11           sale.

12                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblyman Jones.

13                  (No response.)

14                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 

15           Tapia.

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN TAPIA:  Thank you.  

17           Thank you for all the time that you put in 

18           for this, because, I mean, we have a timer 

19           also.

20                  (Laughter.)

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN TAPIA:  But thank you.  

22           I mean, Commissioner Knight, this question is 

23           for you.  And I will have three questions, 

24           but I don't know if the three minutes are 


                                                                   201

 1           going to last.

 2                  The Governor allocated 250 million to 

 3           redevelop underutilized state-owned 

 4           properties into housing developments.  How 

 5           will the state prioritize which properties 

 6           receive funding?  And what is the process for 

 7           local communities to request for development 

 8           funds for specific sites?

 9                  I have been working with Bronx 

10           Community College, for example, and the 

11           Dormitory Authority owns a site in my 

12           district that we are looking to redevelop 

13           into housing.  So I would love to see some 

14           details about it.

15                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So we look at 

16           these project by project.  There's a 

17           committee of state agencies who are involved 

18           in this and -- you know, the MTA, HCR, ESD.  

19           Check-in about SUNY.  But I'm sure, you know, 

20           we'd be able to access.

21                  And so look forward to talking to you 

22           more about this project.

23                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN TAPIA:  Most definitely.  

24           Most definitely.


                                                                   202

 1                  I also have a question for cannabis.  

 2           My question is regarding cannabis 

 3           enforcement.  I think, I mean OCM alone, with 

 4           the city, has done a wonderful good job of 

 5           shutting down illegal cannabis stores.  But I 

 6           think a lot of this has shifted from stores 

 7           to people legally selling cannabis on the 

 8           street.

 9                  In my district, for example, on Jerome 

10           Avenue in my district, where we have three, 

11           four schools in that street, we have dozens 

12           of individuals selling cannabis on the 

13           street.  How is the state working to address 

14           these street vendors?  Because, I mean, I 

15           have called the police, my precincts, and 

16           they take them away, they cannot do anything, 

17           I think, and -- but they come back three or 

18           four days after, they think that we forget.

19                  So what is there we can do?

20                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So in 

21           terms of our enforcement, those are against 

22           operators.  Again, this is sort of around the 

23           issue of we don't want to get to a place 

24           where we are recriminalizing cannabis, like 


                                                                   203

 1           we've seen and I've personally experienced 

 2           the detriments of that.

 3                  And so, you know, what we do as a 

 4           matter of enforcement, we don't go after 

 5           individuals, we go after businesses.  Now, I 

 6           think, you know, to the extent that there 

 7           might be a role to play in getting those 

 8           folks off the street, I think it requires 

 9           education, I think it --

10                  (Time clock sounds.)

11                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 

12           Shimsky.

13                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SHIMSKY:  Thank you very 

14           much, Mr. Chairman.

15                  Good evening -- yes, unfortunately 

16           it's "good evening," Commissioner.  I promise 

17           to be brief.

18                  Going back to the comments made before 

19           by Chair Woerner and Assemblywoman Walsh 

20           about the MWBE issue, I've been hearing from 

21           a number of women in nontraditional fields 

22           that the process has not been working for 

23           them, that they are treated with a certain 

24           amount of disrespect.  And the reversal rate 


                                                                   204

 1           of these cases suggests that there's a 

 2           problem.

 3                  What that means is they may get their 

 4           status back, but they will have lost business 

 5           opportunities, they will have lost tens of 

 6           thousands of dollars in legal fees to get a 

 7           wrong decision reversed.  

 8                  And I think it's important that we 

 9           look at what the applicable standards are.  

10           And it's been suggested to me by some of 

11           these women who have had to deal with this to 

12           look at the expertise of the people who are 

13           doing the investigating and what skill sets 

14           come up with the right results to make sure 

15           that everybody has them.

16                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So, you know, 

17           thank you for that.

18                  You know, I look forward to working 

19           with you and the Legislature around regs, 

20           because some of this has to do with the 

21           regulations.  So look forward to --

22                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SHIMSKY:  I'll be happy 

23           to work with you on that.

24                  Thank you.


                                                                   205

 1                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 

 2           Zinerman.

 3                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ZINERMAN:  Good 

 4           afternoon.  Thank you, Chair.

 5                  I have one question for you.  

 6                  Hello, Commissioner.  

 7                  But Ms. Reid, how are you?  We have 

 8           not met.  I'm Stefani Zinerman, from the 

 9           56th Assembly District.  I am a member of the 

10           committees on Agriculture and Labor, and I am 

11           the chair of the Subcommittee on Emerging 

12           Workforce.  So I always like to talk about 

13           cannabis because it basically encompasses my 

14           entire world.  Right?

15                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Yes, it 

16           does.

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN ZINERMAN:  So the first 

18           thing I'd like to say is thank you.  I've 

19           read a lot of testimonies and nobody has ever 

20           given me a list of success or what success 

21           should look like.  So thank you for the 

22           guide.

23                  And so I have a couple of questions 

24           for you.  I'm certainly encouraged to hear 


                                                                   206

 1           about the cannabis conversations that you 

 2           have, that you're having across the state.  I 

 3           encourage you to continue those.  I have a 

 4           bill that actually says that we need to do 

 5           more in terms of educating our young people.  

 6           Right?  

 7                  But what does success look like in 

 8           that area?  Because I want those two things 

 9           to be absolutely blended so that young people 

10           and their families are getting the 

11           information that they need.  That is one 

12           question.

13                  I am -- I believe that all legislation 

14           should do no harm.  We should think about 

15           that.  And certainly we have this bill.  But 

16           you've heard from our chairs and some of my 

17           members that the illegal shops are something 

18           that are doing harm in our neighborhoods, and 

19           especially to our young people.  And we've 

20           closed a lot in my neighborhood, absolutely.  

21           But this is my problem:  Landlords in the 

22           State of New York like the cannabis money.  

23           And they are breaking the rules every day by 

24           opening up those shops.


                                                                   207

 1                  So people don't necessarily know that 

 2           when they first approach, you know, a 

 3           landlord -- I'm looking at my time -- a 

 4           landlord and an owner of this business, but 

 5           if you read the regs you know that if the 

 6           person doesn't have a license from you all, 

 7           you can't rent to them.  They can't open it 

 8           up. 

 9                  What are we doing in that area too?  

10           Because that's the -- they close them, but 

11           somebody else will pop up across the street 

12           and they'll open up.  So we've got to address 

13           that issue as well.

14                  And then my last question for you is 

15           about the cannabis workforce and labor 

16           practices.  So I like the whole idea of that.  

17           What does that actually look like, though?  

18           What -- because the industry is so huge.  I 

19           mean, they do everything from security to 

20           HVAC to actually being a grower or a 

21           retailer.  Right?  So what does best 

22           practices look like for you?

23                  And I did want to make the connection 

24           for Black farmers as well.  How many of them 


                                                                   208

 1           are part of the BioTracking system, because 

 2           that's very important.  

 3                  And if I have 10 seconds left, 

 4           Commissioner Knight, I want to talk to you 

 5           about do you support cultural districts, 

 6           cultural art districts?  And if so, if you 

 7           could tell us why.  

 8                  It will have to be at some other time, 

 9           because I only got my questions out.

10                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblyman 

11           Santabarbara.

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN SANTABARBARA:  Thank you, 

13           Mr. Chair.  

14                  Thank you all for being here, and 

15           thank you for your testimony today.  

16                  I just have a couple of questions for 

17           Acting Director Reid on enforcement practices 

18           and oversight.

19                  What is the criteria that your office 

20           uses to determine which businesses to 

21           actually look into?  And how do we prevent 

22           targeting businesses that are doing 

23           legitimate business and not disrupting them?  

24                  And the last question is, are there 


                                                                   209

 1           mechanisms in place to prevent repeated I 

 2           guess investigations or raids on that same 

 3           business when no violations are found?  And 

 4           the reason I'm asking is I do have a business 

 5           in my district, a vape shop, actually.  Every 

 6           so often they'll call and people have gone 

 7           back there just looking for illegal cannabis.  

 8           They don't sell cannabis, but they were 

 9           investigated over a period -- I think in like 

10           10 months it was like three times.

11                  So I just wanted to ask those 

12           questions just for some clarification.

13                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  So on 

14           let's call it triage.  You know, one of the 

15           things that's really important as to 

16           enforcement is the public health and safety 

17           piece.  So if there is an immediate public 

18           health and safety issue, you know, that will 

19           take precedence in terms of particularly 

20           selling to minors or other vulnerable 

21           populations.

22                  But one of the things I will say -- at 

23           least I can talk for the state side of 

24           enforcement -- is that when folks reach out, 


                                                                   210

 1           when folks go through our portal, that 

 2           doesn't go into a void where it dies.  If you 

 3           can imagine, there are thousands of 

 4           complaints that we get in the span of a week, 

 5           and so we have to go through all of those, 

 6           suss out what's legitimate, what's not 

 7           legitimate.

 8                  And as we've done this over time, 

 9           we've gotten much more streamlined, 

10           particularly with our staffing increases, in 

11           going through all of those complaints.

12                  As I mentioned, you know, with some of 

13           those it's relating to larger investigations, 

14           particularly criminal investigations, which 

15           can take a bit of time.  But one of the 

16           things that's incredibly important is that we 

17           are investigating and looping back.  Now, 

18           sometimes we are not able to loop back 

19           particularly to the complainant because 

20           again, with the intricacies of our 

21           investigations, we're just not able to do 

22           that.  And when they're ongoing and they're 

23           long, that could be, you know, many, many 

24           months.


                                                                   211

 1                  In terms of businesses that have been 

 2           investigated before, I know that in the 

 3           cannabis marketplace, you know, there are 

 4           businesses that -- at one point they might be 

 5           compliant, at another point they might not.  

 6           And depending on the level of the lack of 

 7           compliance, sometimes our enforcement folks 

 8           will go out and, you know, investigate that 

 9           business.

10                  So there are some situations like that 

11           that we have to be mindful of and really 

12           vigilant about in terms of how operators one 

13           day could be doing one thing, the next day 

14           doing another thing.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN SANTABARBARA:  Can I 

16           continue this conversation offline about the 

17           particular business?  Maybe we could talk a 

18           little more about the details of it.

19                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Sure, 

20           love to.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN SANTABARBARA:  All right, 

22           thank you.

23                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Thank 

24           you.


                                                                   212

 1                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 

 2           Giglio.

 3                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GIGLIO:  Thank you.

 4                  Commissioner Knight, my questions are 

 5           for you, please.

 6                  So you're doing a great job, and thank 

 7           you for that, because there is a lot of 

 8           economic development happening throughout the 

 9           state.  But my concern is when we get 

10           assigned grant money that we can give out to 

11           different projects, I mean, there's a 

12           recreation trail, a veterans recreation trail 

13           that's still owed $150,000 ten years later. 

14                  And how do we -- what recommendations 

15           can you give so that when we assign grant 

16           money and then it gets a contract number and 

17           sometimes they have to wait for DASNY to do 

18           what they need to do in order to begin the 

19           work -- and that could be years later -- and 

20           then it takes years to get paid, what do you 

21           suggest we do to speed up that process so 

22           that grant money that we promise to our 

23           constituents to great projects, that they 

24           actually get approved and they get the money 


                                                                   213

 1           after the project's completed?

 2                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  Well, you know, 

 3           thank you for that question.

 4                  And, you know, I'd like to learn the 

 5           specific circumstances of --

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GIGLIO:  Yeah, it's 

 7           DASNY.  I don't know if they have too much on 

 8           their plate or what's happening, but there's 

 9           got to be a way to streamline this process.  

10           And I know you can help me come up with the 

11           solution for that, because we really do move 

12           on, like I said.

13                  And then you change legislators and 

14           then the new legislator that comes on doesn't 

15           even have access to the information, DASNY 

16           won't even talk to the new legislator.

17                  COMMISSIONER KNIGHT:  So I will talk 

18           to my colleague at DASNY and we'll have a 

19           conversation with you.

20                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GIGLIO:  Thank you so 

21           much.

22                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I think it's just 

23           me for a three-minute follow-up.

24                  So we have this bizarre 


                                                                   214

 1           cannabis-Atlanta-Chicago deal.  Wasn't done 

 2           by OCM, DASNY's not here in the room.  I'm 

 3           being told that until DASNY is paid back 

 4           $50 million from OCM revenues, you're not 

 5           allowed to spend any additional monies for 

 6           any of the things that we thought you were 

 7           supposed to be spending the money on, such as 

 8           the drug prevention education, support for 

 9           larger investments in social equity grants to 

10           communities.  

11                  Is that our understanding?  Because I 

12           don't see any new money going into any of 

13           those in the state budget, and at least 

14           someone told me they believed it was because 

15           first we have to pay back DASNY the 

16           50 million.

17                  Since that whole fund is a nightmare, 

18           I don't know where we have to pay it back, 

19           "we" being OCM, in the first place.  But I 

20           just looked and the tax revenues from 

21           cannabis this year I think are over 

22           $160 million.  So why wouldn't we still have 

23           more money to start to invest in our 

24           commitments from the law?


                                                                   215

 1                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Yeah, so 

 2           I think when it comes to particularly our 

 3           social and economic equity programs, you 

 4           know, we've been building -- we've been 

 5           continuing the work that started before I got 

 6           there, then expanding around it in terms of 

 7           listening to the communities and hearing what 

 8           would be most useful, would not be useful.

 9                  I could cite, you know, our CAURD and 

10           our academy, our retail accelerator, our 

11           release of a banking directory for 

12           businesses.  So there are avenues in which we 

13           are recognizing that there exists a need and 

14           supporting some of those programs.

15                  Now, when it comes to some of the 

16           budget aspects I do know that, you know, 

17           again, we need to continue to spend what we 

18           already have.  And that's dedicated toward 

19           our social and economic equity programs.  But 

20           when looking at, you know, some of our 

21           statutes, I think we have to have another 

22           conversation around how we're proceeding 

23           around our monies, and I know that's not 

24           final.


                                                                   216

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  So when I looked 

 2           in the budget I saw an additional 5 million 

 3           for the social equity grant.  So you're 

 4           giving out 5 million now, I think.

 5                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Yes, 

 6           we're in the process.

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  But there's no 

 8           growth in it for next year, and there's no 

 9           reference to any other monies going for the 

10           other purposes in the Governor's Executive 

11           Budget.  Is that your understanding?

12                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  Again, 

13           our appropriation is up to 10 million.  And 

14           I've really been clear with our team that we 

15           have to make sure that we do this 5 million 

16           rollout well, because I don't want to get an 

17           increase that -- evidence in our basis that 

18           we haven't been able to responsibly roll out 

19           a current program that we have.

20                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And do you have 

21           any answers from anyone in the Governor's 

22           office or other parts of government of how 

23           we're going to get ourselves out of this 

24           contract and make those businesses whole who 


                                                                   217

 1           went into the Atlantic-Chicago deals?

 2                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  I think, 

 3           you know, when it comes to those folks who 

 4           have participated in the fund, those -- I'll 

 5           follow up with you.

 6                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  This is your 

 7           final sentence before we let you go, so --

 8                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  No, I have one more 

 9           questioner.

10                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Oh, excuse me.  

11                  All right, finish your sentence, 

12           please.

13                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  When it 

14           comes to those programs we have to look at 

15           what works and what doesn't, and insofar as 

16           we've heard that what's happening with the 

17           DASNY fund isn't working, having those 

18           conversations about what could be a program 

19           future.

20                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay.  I can't 

21           ask you any more questions because I've again 

22           maxed out.

23                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblyman Stirpe 

24           for a three-minute follow-up.


                                                                   218

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Thank you.

 2                  First of all, I want to commend you on 

 3           your endurance.  You've done a great job.

 4                  (Laughter.)

 5                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Real quick, and 

 6           it's almost along the same lines, because of 

 7           the situation with the DASNY fund, because of 

 8           the inability to get finance from normal 

 9           means -- banks, credit unions, et cetera -- 

10           for cannabis businesses, some of my 

11           colleagues and I have been advocating for 

12           like a $15 million revolving loan fund for 

13           farmers, cannabis farmers and processors.

14                  Do you think that's a good idea?  

15           Would you be supportive of that?

16                  OCM ACTING EXEC. DIR. REID:  We would 

17           certainly be supportive of something like 

18           that.

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Okay.  I don't 

20           know who would even manage that, if ESD 

21           manages that or OCM, I don't know.  But I 

22           know that they're pretty desperate and they 

23           would appreciate anything to help their 

24           businesses stay afloat.


                                                                   219

 1                  Okay, thank you.

 2                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  All right.  So 

 3           now I'm officially thanking you for your time 

 4           with us today, and we are letting you fly 

 5           away.

 6                  And we are inviting the second panel, 

 7           government panel, to join us at the front.  

 8                  So again, legislators, if you want to 

 9           grab them, only in the hallway.  Do not talk 

10           to them here.  Assemblywoman, wait till they 

11           go to the hallway and then talk.  

12           Assemblywoman, go outside to the hall and 

13           talk to them, please.  

14                  Office of General Services, Jeanette 

15           Moy, and Erika Mallin, New York State Council 

16           on the Arts, to the front.

17                  (Off the record; pause.)

18                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  All right, I'm 

19           going to try to get order back in this room.  

20           Let's see if we can do it.  We're asking 

21           legislators to take their seats in the front.  

22           No, stop hugging.  Stop saying hello.  No 

23           hugging.  Assemblywoman, go sit down.  

24           Yudelka, sit down.  Stop hugging.


                                                                   220

 1                  (Laughter; off the record.)

 2                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  All right, we're 

 3           going to try to get ourselves rolling, 

 4           because I know many people are thinking how 

 5           can it be this late already?  But it is.

 6                  So I'm going to ask the two 

 7           commissioners which one of you would like to 

 8           go first.  Okay, so Jeanette Moy, for those 

 9           in the room in the back, is going first, and 

10           then Commissioner Mallin will go -- excuse 

11           me, Executive Director Mallin will go second.

12                  And it's yours for 10 minutes.

13                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Good evening, 

14           Chairs Krueger and Pretlow, Ranking Members 

15           O'Mara and Ra, Chairs Ryan and Stirpe, 

16           ranking members Murray and Friend, and 

17           distinguished members of the Legislature.  My 

18           name is Jeanette Moy, and I'm the 

19           commissioner of the Office of 

20           General Services for New York State.

21                  Thank you for the opportunity to share 

22           the work that we've accomplished in the last 

23           year and to discuss the impact of 

24           Governor Kathy Hochul's Executive Budget on 


                                                                   221

 1           this agency.

 2                  Governor Hochul's budget proposes 

 3           $1.7 billion for OGS, which will enable our 

 4           1,900 employees to advance her commitment to 

 5           improving government operations and 

 6           delivering exceptional, accessible services 

 7           for New Yorkers.  OGS's services are vast.  

 8           We manage 32 million square feet of 

 9           real estate through state owned and leased 

10           properties.  We provide shared services, 

11           process transactions for 44,000 state 

12           employees, managing 270 million in annual 

13           budget for four client agencies, and 

14           administering human resource functions for 

15           over 2,800 state workers.  We also administer 

16           1,500 centralized contracts with award values 

17           of $34 billion.

18                  We deliver logistical support, 

19           champion resiliency and sustainability, host 

20           well-loved cultural programs and steward 

21           world-class artwork, and create meaningful 

22           opportunities for businesses and the people 

23           of New York through our contracting.  In 

24           times of great flux, with changes in federal 


                                                                   222

 1           policy creating new pressures and operational 

 2           risks for our agency partners, our vendors 

 3           and the supply chains that we rely on, OGS is 

 4           proud to provide steady operational expertise 

 5           and logistic support for New York State.

 6                  OGS's role is to help the state to 

 7           operate efficiently and effectively, while 

 8           also navigating changing market conditions 

 9           and volatility.  We do this by utilizing data 

10           to help the state make informed decisions and 

11           instituting policies, processes and system 

12           changes that enable our agency partners to 

13           function. 

14                  The proposed Executive Budget allows 

15           us to continue this mission as we address our 

16           aging infrastructure across the state, the 

17           Governor is focused on increasing the speed, 

18           equity, and efficiency of capital project 

19           delivery.  This year she has proposed 

20           legislation to enable select state agencies, 

21           including OGS, to use a variety of 

22           alternative project delivery methods.  This 

23           will allow us to be able to select the best 

24           contracting mechanism for a project, to work 


                                                                   223

 1           more collaboratively with our vendors, and to 

 2           ensure that public funds are spent 

 3           efficiently. 

 4                  The Governor has also proposed raising 

 5           and increasing the MWBE discretionary 

 6           purchasing threshold to $1.5 million, in line 

 7           with New York City's, expanding opportunities 

 8           for state agencies who work with MWBE 

 9           vendors.  OGS provides design, construction 

10           and permitting services to 50 state agencies, 

11           and we recently completed the rehabilitation 

12           of the Jamaica Armory and the second phase of 

13           the Adirondack Rail Trail.  

14                  Our current workload includes 

15           $2.1 billion in design development and 

16           another $1.7 billion in active construction 

17           projects like the restoration of the historic 

18           Lexington Avenue Armory and the restoration 

19           of the Jones Beach East Bathhouse.

20                  Each of these projects enhances our 

21           communities, preserves our history, and 

22           improves public spaces for generations to 

23           come.

24                  In support of the Governor's directive 


                                                                   224

 1           to focus on service delivery, this year we 

 2           launched our data analytics office to 

 3           increase transparency to our operations and 

 4           build a culture of data-driven decision 

 5           making.  We firmly believe in the adage you 

 6           cannot manage what you cannot measure, and we 

 7           are incorporating it into our work.  We are 

 8           creating performance dashboards for our 

 9           business services center and design and 

10           construction activities.

11                  Through this proposed budget, OGS will 

12           develop a public dashboard to view progress 

13           on vertical capital construction across the 

14           state.  If you as legislators, or your 

15           constituents have questions around what's 

16           going on with a major public works project 

17           near you, you will be able to access 

18           information on demand.

19                  Our focus on transparency is in line 

20           with the Governor's efforts to ensure that 

21           state government is efficient and expand 

22           services delivered to New Yorkers.  Our 

23           digital team will support the Executive 

24           Chamber's launch of a public dashboard of 


                                                                   225

 1           analytics for the state's digital assets.  We 

 2           are developing a public map of select 

 3           state-owned lands, ensuring that 

 4           underutilized spaces can be put back to 

 5           productive use.

 6                  This year's proposed budget will 

 7           enable us to scale up these existing efforts 

 8           to make government easier to navigate and 

 9           more responsive to the people that we serve.

10                  Announced in the State of the State, 

11           OGS will launch the office of innovation and 

12           efficiency to support efforts to redesign 

13           operations and implement improvements across 

14           the state with centralized projects and 

15           performance management services.  

16                  Our real estate portfolio includes 

17           over 150 state-owned buildings and 

18           structures, most built between 1965 and 1975, 

19           totaling more than 7 billion in assets, 

20           serving 30,000 tenants and hundreds of 

21           thousands of visitors annually, with systems 

22           that are reaching or past the end of their 

23           useful life.  Deferred maintenance has 

24           accumulated, adding complexity and cost to 


                                                                   226

 1           projects.

 2                  Thanks to the Governor and to the 

 3           Legislature, OGS has been able to tackle 

 4           problems that have gone unaddressed for 

 5           decades, prioritizing critical infrastructure 

 6           issues and completing portfolio-wide 

 7           assessments.  By addressing critical building 

 8           systems we can make our spaces more 

 9           affordable and inviting, with an eye towards 

10           flexibility and future needs.

11                  In her State of the State, the 

12           Governor committed $400 million to revitalize 

13           downtown Albany, led by my colleagues at 

14           Empire State Development.  From the center 

15           courtyard and Hawk Street Passage to the 

16           Eastern Approach to The Egg, OGS will ensure 

17           that the Empire State Plaza and the Capitol 

18           complement and integrate those efforts.

19                  As a proud co-lead of the GreenNY 

20           Council, we are proudly laying the foundation 

21           that will help the state meet our climate 

22           goals.  Alongside NYSERDA, we are 

23           implementing first-in-the-nation Clean 

24           Concrete guidance to reduce greenhouse gas 


                                                                   227

 1           emissions in state construction and rolling 

 2           out sustainable design guidelines to ensure 

 3           that agencies are building to the same 

 4           standards as they fulfill their EO22 

 5           requirements.  We are also incorporating 

 6           sustainability into our leasing agreements.

 7                  We have created a dashboard with a map 

 8           of state-owned vehicle charging ports and 

 9           progress on the state's EV conversion.  OGS 

10           began implementing telematics into the state 

11           fleet, gaining greater insights into vehicle 

12           operations that will facilitate our 

13           transition.  We've worked with agencies to 

14           craft their EV transitions, and we will be 

15           holding our third annual EV car show for 

16           fleet managers for the state in May.

17                  To date, OGS's own fleet has 

18           transitioned 24 percent of our light-duty 

19           non-emergency fleet.  

20                  As part of this budget, Governor 

21           Hochul has committed to fully funding the 

22           first phase of the Empire State 

23           decarbonization plan, which upon completion 

24           will result in a reduction of 21 percent in 


                                                                   228

 1           locally produced emissions.  Between the 

 2           first two phases, on-site emissions will be 

 3           reduced by a projected 50 percent over the 

 4           next 10 years, and we will continue studying 

 5           pathways to reach full decarbonization.

 6                  Governor Hochul has allocated funding 

 7           in this budget to expand waste diversion 

 8           efforts at the Empire State Plaza through 

 9           simple interventions like new signage, 

10           strategically placed bins, and waste audits.  

11           We will work with our concourse tenants, all 

12           small Albany-based institutions, to 

13           facilitate pre-consumer food waste 

14           collection, setting a model for substantial 

15           sustainable practices that can be scaled 

16           statewide. 

17                  Last year, across 578,000 

18           transactions, OGS facilitated procurement for 

19           our agency partners.  We provided purchasing 

20           assistance and processed financial and 

21           personnel transactions.  We established a new 

22           contact center that enables all calls to go 

23           to an OGS employee in the first instance, 

24           enabling us to deliver faster service to more 


                                                                   229

 1           customers.  They now have more immediate 

 2           access to the information they seek with less 

 3           wait time.

 4                  We've renewed 33 centralized 

 5           contracts, saving our agency partners 

 6           hundreds of hours of negotiation and 

 7           leveraging collective purchasing power to 

 8           secure the best possible pricing.  We are 

 9           committed to educating users and potential 

10           vendors.  

11                  We participated in dozens of outreach 

12           events, including our own GOVBUY conference, 

13           which connects vendors and procurement 

14           officials.  

15                  Last year we implemented an 

16           eProcurement solution for construction 

17           projects, Bid Express, which has enabled us 

18           to reach new bidders.  

19                  We've completed -- in the lead-up to 

20           our implementation of eProcurement for our 

21           centralized contracts, we've completed a 

22           comprehensive assessment of our processes.  

23           We've also debuted a new online feedback tool 

24           for vendor performance.  We've implemented 


                                                                   230

 1           Docusign for our contracts.  And we will be 

 2           initiating our solicitation for a new 

 3           eProcurement system later this year.

 4                  Now, as a support agency, the 

 5           Executive Budget will enable OGS to deliver 

 6           core services including central printing, 

 7           dock master, emergency management and 

 8           planning, mail and freight services, and 

 9           state and federal surplus property.  The 

10           programs provide essential services to state 

11           entities, to local municipalities, schools, 

12           emergency feeding organizations, and the 

13           public.  

14                  We are piloting two food locker 

15           systems, in Oswego and Cortland counties.  

16           These lockers provide food access in rural 

17           areas by enabling people to obtain food at a 

18           time and location convenient to them.

19                  We also broke ground on a 

20           200,000-square-foot warehouse that will 

21           consolidate the inventory of four warehouses 

22           into one -- a meaningful investment in the 

23           community of Green Island -- while 

24           streamlining our critical warehousing and 


                                                                   231

 1           distribution operations.

 2                  In closing, the Governor's Executive 

 3           Budget will enable OGS to continue addressing 

 4           our aging infrastructure, modernizing and 

 5           innovating our operations, and supporting the 

 6           state's response to the complex challenges 

 7           that are facing us today.  I'm very proud of 

 8           our progress to make New York a healthier, 

 9           stronger, more resilient and more equitable 

10           state.  I look forward to working closely 

11           with all of you to deliver for New Yorkers. 

12                  I thank you for the opportunity to 

13           speak with you this afternoon -- well, this 

14           evening, and I am very happy to answer your 

15           questions.  Thank you.  

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

17                  First up is April Baskin -- no?  Oh, 

18           I'm sorry.  The days are -- I apologize 

19           profusely.  No, no, I apologize.  Clearly a 

20           little more caffeine is required.

21                  Please.

22                  NYSCA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  

23           Chairs Krueger and Pretlow, Chair Serrano, 

24           our new chair, Assemblymember Kim, and 


                                                                   232

 1           distinguished members of the committees, 

 2           thank you for the invitation to be here 

 3           today.  

 4                  It's been a profound honor to serve 

 5           our state and our vibrant arts and culture 

 6           sector in my first year as executive 

 7           director.  

 8                  On behalf of our council, staff and 

 9           the cultural industries of New York, we thank 

10           Governor Hochul and the State Legislature for 

11           your continued investments in the arts.  

12                  Throughout the past year, I have 

13           traveled across nearly every region of the 

14           state, witnessing firsthand the 

15           transformative impact of the arts on our 

16           state.  

17                  From anchors in their communities like 

18           Flushing Town Hall in Queens -- whose arts 

19           programming serves over 45,000 people across 

20           the borough, including senior centers, health 

21           centers, and schools -- to tourism drivers 

22           invigorating the local economy, from the 

23           Corning Museum of Glass, which welcomes over 

24           300,000 visitors each year, to another but 


                                                                   233

 1           smaller city anchor in Rochester, the 

 2           Rochester Contemporary Art Center, which 

 3           welcomes over 14,000 visitors annually -- and 

 4           organizations creating career pathways for 

 5           young artists to work, stay and live in New 

 6           York State like Youth FX right here in 

 7           Albany, a film program that nurtures young 

 8           filmmakers and connects them to jobs in the 

 9           film industry, and Assembly House 150 in 

10           Buffalo, an art and design incubator for 

11           young people that provides 17,000 hours of 

12           training in artisan crafts, from theatrical 

13           set building to historic restoration.  

14                  At every site visit and every 

15           convening, and as these examples show, one 

16           truth is clear:  The arts are not a luxury, 

17           but a necessity.  Organizations and artists 

18           strengthen our communities and contribute 

19           directly to our economy and the well-being of 

20           all New Yorkers.  Your investments make this 

21           possible.  

22                  And NYSCA is a national leader in arts 

23           funding and a driving force behind the 

24           success of New York's creative economy.  


                                                                   234

 1           Through our programs, we meet today's 

 2           challenges in realtime and pave the way for 

 3           growth in our sector.  

 4                  We do this by:  

 5                  General operating support.  Through a 

 6           competitive application and peer review panel 

 7           process, NYSCA is the only statewide provider 

 8           of flexible, core operating funding keeping 

 9           organizations' doors open and thriving.

10                  And increasing access to funds.  This 

11           year alone, we saw a 40 percent surge in 

12           operating support applications, demonstrating 

13           both our outreach success and the urgent need 

14           for continued investment.  

15                  We also, through our programs, are job 

16           creators and we retain artists.  NYSCA 

17           funding is an investment in our workforce 

18           stability, ensuring New York remains a place 

19           where artists can live, work, and contribute.  

20                  And we are advancing tourism and 

21           economic growth.  Our funding seeds new 

22           organizations, expands artistic production, 

23           creates new destinations, and fuels the 

24           broader economy.  


                                                                   235

 1                  And we bring global recognition.  From 

 2           local honors like the Bessie Awards for Dance 

 3           to the Academy Awards, NYSCA grantees are 

 4           shaping culture on every level.  

 5                  And our impact on the ground too is 

 6           far and wide.  Annually, NYSCA grantmaking 

 7           extends to all 10 regions of New York State 

 8           and supports over 3,000 artists and nonprofit 

 9           arts organizations.  Our work ensures that 

10           organizations of all budget sizes thrive, 

11           that support is broad and inclusive.  

12           Annually, NYSCA supports over 500 new artists 

13           across artistic disciplines, and in 2025 over 

14           100 organizations were first-time NYSCA 

15           grantees.  We're very proud of that.  

16                  We are investing in our local 

17           communities.  Our successful Statewide 

18           Community Regrant program expands NYSCA's 

19           reach to the hyperlocal level by empowering 

20           over 1300 artists and organizations.  

21                  And we are helping to develop new 

22           artistic work.  For example, NYSCA invested 

23           $2 million to secure affordable creative 

24           spaces across 61 sites, ensuring that artists 


                                                                   236

 1           have space to create and innovate.  

 2                  And more than ever, NYSCA grantees are 

 3           also playing an outsized role in their 

 4           communities, providing both critical arts 

 5           programming and vital social services from 

 6           childcare to mental health.  For example, 

 7           ARISE, in Central New York, provides visual 

 8           arts and literature programming to 

 9           individuals with disabilities and mental 

10           health diagnoses -- while also running a 

11           mental health clinic and providing direct 

12           care services for seniors.  

13                  The West Falls Center for the Arts in 

14           the Western New York region is a performing 

15           arts center that also offers specialized 

16           music programs for veterans and also helps 

17           veterans to further connect with resources.  

18                  And we are also a driver in capital 

19           funding, which is also critical to our 

20           creative economy.  Since the capital program 

21           began in 2018, NYSCA has awarded over 

22           300 capital project grants to organizations 

23           of all sizes. 

24                  And just in this year alone, we have 


                                                                   237

 1           expanded access to capital dollars to address 

 2           critically needed funding, from design costs 

 3           to facilities improvements.  Our FY 2025 

 4           capital awards will be announced in April, 

 5           and I'm proud to share a few completed 

 6           projects, including the Corning Museum of 

 7           Glass, the Reg Lenna Center for the Arts in 

 8           Jamestown, Western New York -- these are all 

 9           this past year -- historic Saranac Lake in 

10           the North Country, and at the end of the year 

11           we will be opening the Studio Museum in 

12           New York City.  

13                  We know the arts are an economic 

14           powerhouse.  They deliver a robust return on 

15           our investments.  New York's creative economy 

16           contributed over $151 billion back to 

17           New York State, more than retail, 

18           construction, agriculture, or transportation 

19           sectors, while supporting over 460,000 jobs.  

20                  And on a local level, regional studies 

21           from Long Island, Westchester, and Western 

22           New York show that attendees in these regions 

23           on average spent an additional $30 per event 

24           beyond the ticket price, injecting revenue 


                                                                   238

 1           directly into local businesses and 

 2           communities.  

 3                  Looking ahead, our focus is 

 4           strengthening our arts ecosystem.  While the 

 5           arts sector has demonstrated remarkable 

 6           resilience, organizations continue to 

 7           navigate rising costs, revenue fluctuations, 

 8           audience unpredictability, decline in private 

 9           philanthropy, the sunsetting of -- I feel 

10           like this is the plagues here -- a federal 

11           decline in pandemic recovery, and of course 

12           other imminent federal funding issues.  

13                  NYSCA is responding by launching one 

14           of the first stabilization initiatives to 

15           deal with building reserves with 

16           organizations.  This is for their future 

17           sustainability and resilience.  

18                  We are also expanding technical 

19           assistance partnerships to provide targeted 

20           support and capacity-building in areas like 

21           marketing, fundraising, board development, 

22           and more.  

23                  We are introducing the Governor’s 

24           State of the Arts Fellowship and new public 


                                                                   239

 1           art initiatives to elevate creative 

 2           leadership across the state.  

 3                  And we are convening and engaging with 

 4           our field, other funders, and service 

 5           organizations to address emerging challenges 

 6           so that we can continue to be proactive and 

 7           drive innovation in our grantmaking.  

 8                  Through NYSCA grantmaking, we give all 

 9           artists and arts organization the greatest 

10           gifts -- support, space, and freedom to 

11           create.  When we do this -- all of us -- we 

12           make history every day, because when we 

13           invest in the arts, we invest in the future.  

14                  I look forward to working with you to 

15           ensure a thriving, sustainable arts sector 

16           for all New Yorkers.  I now welcome your 

17           questions.

18                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay, thank you.

19                  Okay, and now we'll stay on message 

20           and I will turn it to Chair April Baskin for 

21           10 minutes.

22                  SENATOR BASKIN:  Thank you, 

23           Madam Chair.  

24                  Thank you, ladies, for being here this 


                                                                   240

 1           evening.

 2                  Commissioner Moy, thank you so much 

 3           for meeting with me in my office last week 

 4           and helping us better understand your 

 5           department.  

 6                  The budget includes an Article VII 

 7           that will streamline construction projects by 

 8           allowing for the Construction Manager as 

 9           Constructor, CMc, Contracts Program.  I 

10           understand the major logistical issues that 

11           this procurement strategy will address:  We 

12           don't want construction projects to lag. 

13                  But what impact will this have on the 

14           state's checks and balances on construction 

15           projects, since a CMc process basically 

16           allows for one entity to control the entire 

17           project?

18                  I bring these questions up because I 

19           believe I've experienced a major construction 

20           project having a streamlined procurement 

21           process in the construction of the new 

22           Buffalo Bills Stadium right outside of my 

23           district.  The project received final 

24           approval in May 2023 and, one month later, 


                                                                   241

 1           the general contractor was discussing a plan 

 2           to get a waiver for MWBE requirements.

 3                  We had to, and continue to, fight 

 4           tooth and nail to pressure the Buffalo Bills 

 5           to follow the law to improve their outreach 

 6           and engagement on a project that has 

 7           $850 million of public investment in it.  And 

 8           just this week the Buffalo Bills front office 

 9           declared that they are the only 

10           decisionmakers on the project and that they 

11           do not have to follow what the state or the 

12           county or the public say.

13                  This was not a CMc project per se, but 

14           it exemplifies what can happen when quality 

15           control is reformed in the name of 

16           streamlining projects.  So I caution the 

17           sacrificing of oversight in the name of 

18           efficiency, which CMc may do, because private 

19           companies are not beholden to the public even 

20           if they are significantly funded by public 

21           dollars.

22                  And if we do move forward with the CMc 

23           program in the budget into state business as 

24           well, it must be equitably resourced with 


                                                                   242

 1           pathways for our small businesses and 

 2           emerging businesses to get experience on 

 3           state projects.

 4                  And so, Commissioner, my question for 

 5           you is, what policies are put in place?  Help 

 6           me understand how CMc does not remove 

 7           accountability or oversight from the state 

 8           and give total control to private developers.

 9                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  First off, I 

10           want to thank you for that question, Senator.  

11           I think this is an important conversation 

12           around alternative delivery methods.

13                  CMc, or the Construction Manager as 

14           Constructor, is a different type of 

15           alternative delivery method.  It provides for 

16           a single point of accountability when we have 

17           complex, time-sensitive projects, but does 

18           not remove the state from any aspect of the 

19           work.  Our designers and our engineers will 

20           be a part of the management and the review of 

21           that work, whether it's architectural or 

22           engineering firms.  

23                  For our projects, though, what it 

24           would allow for is the state to have a 


                                                                   243

 1           designer as well as the constructor on board, 

 2           two separate entities.  So it's not one point 

 3           of accountability, it allows for us to have a 

 4           design firm, engineering firm, architectural 

 5           firm who helps us to create the project and 

 6           bring the construction firm earlier into the 

 7           process.

 8                  That allows the state to have control 

 9           over the design and its priorities, as well 

10           as have a designer work in tandem with the 

11           constructor as they're making their design 

12           decisions.  It allows the state to have 

13           better control.

14                  And also I would note that this type 

15           of contract vehicle is one that's not 

16           appropriate for every type of project.  There 

17           are only a handful of projects where it might 

18           make sense for us to leverage a contract 

19           vehicle like this, but it doesn't abdicate 

20           our responsibility as a state entity to be 

21           able to oversee those projects.  The same 

22           types of requirements around PLA and Wicks 

23           Law still are maintained, same types of 

24           control.  


                                                                   244

 1                  But I don't want to conflate this 

 2           across design-build.  It is another 

 3           alternative delivery method.  But again, it 

 4           allows the construction entity to be working 

 5           in tandem and alongside the architectural 

 6           firm.  My team would say that sometimes 

 7           designers and architects may have grandiose 

 8           ideas around what they want to include in a 

 9           design process.  That allows the constructor 

10           to say whether or not it's plausible and 

11           practice.

12                  So it just allows more entities to be 

13           involved to ensure that we have better 

14           controls around complex projects resulting in 

15           fewer change orders and better controls over 

16           the costs themselves.  But this is a vehicle 

17           which would be used for a certain type of 

18           project and would not at all -- I mean, that 

19           the state wouldn't be involved with the 

20           project itself.  

21                  I'm not as familiar with what happened 

22           with the Bills Stadium, but I do know from 

23           our perspective we believe that the state 

24           needs to maintain control of our projects.  


                                                                   245

 1           This particular contract vehicle is an 

 2           opportunity for us to have better control 

 3           over design and construction projects and 

 4           better outcomes.

 5                  SENATOR BASKIN:  Thank you very much.

 6                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 7                  Assembly.

 8                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblyman Stirpe.

 9                  (No response.)

10                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblyman Ron 

11           Kim.

12                  (Discussion off the record.)

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN KIM:  No, but thank you so 

14           much for your testimonies today.  It's good 

15           to see everyone here today.  

16                  And my first questions will be 

17           directed to Executive Director Mallin from 

18           NYSCA.

19                  I think in your testimony you said 

20           some wonderful things, and I think the whole 

21           community behind you would agree with many of 

22           the values that you represent in terms of the 

23           arts community, particularly when you said 

24           something like the arts are not a luxury but 


                                                                   246

 1           a necessity.  

 2                  Especially, you know, when we spend 

 3           hours talking about semiconductors and AI and 

 4           all these, you know, subsidies for major 

 5           corporations, people forget the impact of the 

 6           arts on our economy -- and it's tens and tens 

 7           of billions of dollars.  People come to the 

 8           state, the city, the majority of them are 

 9           attracted to the arts institutions, they 

10           spend locally, they spend in the restaurants, 

11           hotels.

12                  But beyond that, there's also the 

13           workforce -- the artists, the creative 

14           entrepreneurs that often are viewed 

15           systemically, institutionally, as perhaps 

16           less productive because they're not 

17           engineers, they're not making things that you 

18           can sell at market.  But you and I both know 

19           they bring something much more valuable, 

20           which is creating intrinsic purpose and value 

21           to our communities, where we're making 

22           communities whole and giving them purpose.

23                  And I just know that this agency was 

24           created in 1960 -- 


                                                                   247

 1                  NYSCA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  '65.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN KIM:  -- '65.  And it is 

 3           the first agency --

 4                  NYSCA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  I'm 

 5           sorry, 1960, you're right.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN KIM:  1960.  

 7                  -- tasked with subsidizing the arts 

 8           community.  But it's limited in the scope of 

 9           what you can and cannot do, and I think there 

10           needs to be improvement in expanding some of 

11           the scope of how you can support the 

12           workforce and how you can really grow with 

13           the community.

14                  But for now, I just want to start off 

15           by just asking first, How do you think the 

16           arts and cultural organizations have 

17           recovered from the pandemic?  And is the 

18           funding from the state sufficient to offset 

19           the costs related to pandemic recovery for 

20           these organizations?

21                  NYSCA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  I 

22           think there is a lot of bright lights but 

23           also, you know, still dark tunnels that arts 

24           organizations and the whole ecosystem is 


                                                                   248

 1           going through for precisely the things that I 

 2           said in my testimony -- rising costs, 

 3           unpredictable audiences.  Of course we have 

 4           the federal money at hand, that's also a 

 5           question.

 6                  There's just a lot of uncertainty 

 7           still in the -- particularly, obviously, the 

 8           nonprofit world, which is what we deal with.

 9                  So I think those things are true.  

10           Some have rebounded from the pandemic, or 

11           post-pandemic world, whatever we're calling 

12           it.  But some really have not.  And our job 

13           as the single largest, you know, state 

14           funder -- or in many places, particularly 

15           upstate, we are the only public funder or the 

16           biggest public funder.  You know, our work is 

17           cut out for us.  And it's about trying new 

18           models, trying to, you know, encourage 

19           everyone to still be risk-takers and 

20           entrepreneurs, those who work in the arts, 

21           whether a leading organization or an artist 

22           themselves.

23                  So that's the work that we try to 

24           support.


                                                                   249

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN KIM:  In your testimony 

 2           you said that this year alone you saw a 

 3           40 percent surge in applications for 

 4           operating support.  Yet the Executive's 

 5           budget, I don't think it meets all those 

 6           needs from the market.  The All Funds 

 7           appropriation is 72 million.  That includes 

 8           60.7 million in the proposal for 

 9           grant-making.

10                  Do you think that's sufficient to meet 

11           the demands in the large community?

12                  NYSCA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  We 

13           will always work with what the -- whatever 

14           the budget's enacted to serve our mission.  

15           And in fact this year that money that you see 

16           is in our base grant-making is an increase, 

17           and that's the first increase in a decade.

18                  So we will always commit ourselves to 

19           doing -- to serve the industry.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN KIM:  And you also touched 

21           on the process of the re-granting partners 

22           that use a peer review protocol, I guess, to 

23           award the grantees.  

24                  And from the arts community, we've 


                                                                   250

 1           been kind of hearing that in this process 

 2           some of the smaller groups and artists are 

 3           left behind that can't compete or don't have 

 4           the resources to allocate a full-time grant 

 5           writer, don't get as much of this pie as they 

 6           should be getting.

 7                  What can we do to, you know, provide 

 8           some support or communicate better so that 

 9           those artists and organizations that are 

10           smaller in size do have a fair shot at 

11           getting more funding?

12                  NYSCA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  

13           Well, I think obviously by the 40 percent 

14           increase -- and it was a 20 percent increase 

15           overall -- that in some ways, you know, is a 

16           result of our outreach, which includes not 

17           only going around the state and meeting 

18           people where they live and work and speaking 

19           directly to them, but also we hold, you know, 

20           a myriad of office hours and webinars to try 

21           to make, you know, organizations as 

22           competitive as possible in this process.

23                  And in fact the majority of our 

24           grantees are small, are grantees with budgets 


                                                                   251

 1           of under a million dollars.  Those are the 

 2           majority of our grantees.

 3                  But I do want to say again that this 

 4           is a peer-review panel process -- small, big, 

 5           medium, large.  And I feel very strongly 

 6           about us helping these organizations be 

 7           competitive in the process.  And again, 

 8           that's why you see a 40 percent increase, 

 9           obviously based on the need, but because I 

10           think we've opened the door to say, Hey, 

11           there's access here.

12                  And we've talked to advocates as well 

13           and said, Listen, you know, there's room here 

14           for you, come to the table.  And we will do 

15           more of that, we will do more outreach face 

16           to face.

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN KIM:  Thank you for that.

18                  Commissioner Moy, you actually 

19           mentioned in your testimony about the money 

20           that you are implementing to improve the 

21           Empire State Plaza performance arts 

22           corporation, The Egg, as we know it.  I'm a 

23           little unclear.  I mean, I thought that NYSCA 

24           had a part of this, of the 500,000 


                                                                   252

 1           allocation, but OGS is -- it's under OGS?

 2                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  I'm happy to 

 3           help clarify.  

 4                  There is 400 million that was 

 5           allocated in the budget towards downtown 

 6           revitalization, the work that is inclusive of 

 7           the activities in the State Museum, the 

 8           activities for downtown Albany within a mile 

 9           of the Empire State Plaza.  

10                  The work that we're doing at The Egg, 

11           we do work in partnership with our entities 

12           that are here on the Plaza.  The Egg is one 

13           of the buildings that we help to oversee and 

14           to manage.  So there is a specific 

15           construction project for The Egg to do 

16           interior restorations and renovations -- new 

17           seating, new ADA accessibility and compliance 

18           and access for that particular site itself.

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN KIM:  Okay.  So that's 

20           $500,000 for improvement.  There's 1.1 

21           million in funding in the proposal, Executive 

22           proposal, right?

23                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  So -- I'm 

24           sorry?


                                                                   253

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN KIM:  There's 1.1 million 

 2           in funding in the Executive proposal?

 3                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  The Egg 

 4           construction has already been funded and is 

 5           currently underway in terms of construction.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN KIM:  Okay.  All right.

 7                  In terms of public engagement at 

 8           The Egg with cultural programming, is that 

 9           under NYSCA or -- no, it's not, okay.

10                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  The Egg is a 

11           separate organization with separate funding, 

12           and we play a role in terms of stewarding its 

13           properties, but we do not directly manage its 

14           programming.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN KIM:  Okay.  The Artist in 

16           Residence program, is that under OGS?  We 

17           couldn't nail down --

18                  NYSCA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  

19           NYSCA.  

20                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  That is NYSCA, 

21           correct.

22                  NYSCA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  Just 

23           to go back to The Egg, The Egg is a 

24           pass-through.  The money comes as a 


                                                                   254

 1           pass-through through our budget.  But we're 

 2           very happy with the renovation and 

 3           reconstruction.  So Jeanette and I do share 

 4           that happiness.

 5                  But the Artist Fellows Program is a 

 6           Governor initiative.  This is a program that 

 7           has been deemed -- you know, has been 

 8           successful across the country and it puts 

 9           artists in different state agencies to bring 

10           their new perspective, to be able to bridge 

11           divides, and to bring some inspiration and 

12           innovation to a particular problem or issue 

13           or something that the agency wants to 

14           accomplish.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN KIM:  Thank you.

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Next, Chair of 

17           Arts Serrano, Senator Serrano.

18                  SENATOR SERRANO:  Thank you so much, 

19           Senator Krueger.  

20                  And I would like to direct my comments 

21           to NYSCA.  Executive Director Erika Mallin, 

22           so good to see you.  I've always enjoyed our 

23           conversations about the importance of the 

24           arts.  


                                                                   255

 1                  And I also want to say thank you to my 

 2           colleague Assemblymember Ron Kim for his 

 3           tremendous work.  We recently held jointly an 

 4           Arts Day program a couple of weeks ago here 

 5           in Albany, and it was so wonderful to have so 

 6           many arts groups from across the state come 

 7           to Albany to talk about how impactful the 

 8           arts are in different sectors, different 

 9           regions, in all of their lives.

10                  And one of the things I think is so 

11           compelling about the arts and why indeed it 

12           is so important when we think about the 

13           budget and we think about all that's 

14           important here in the State of New York is 

15           what the arts bring.  

16                  We've heard -- Assemblymember Kim 

17           talked a lot about -- a bit about the 

18           economic impact.  We all know that that is a 

19           wise investment in the arts, creates a 

20           tremendous economic impact across the state.  

21           But from an emotional level as well, we have 

22           seen how the arts are the good medicine that 

23           we need right now in an increasingly anxious 

24           world.  The arts and culture are what we need 


                                                                   256

 1           now more than ever before.

 2                  And these are the things that I've 

 3           been seeing as I visit arts groups and speak 

 4           with folks in the field.  They really, truly 

 5           understand their role and how they can, you 

 6           know, sort of be of assistance in 

 7           communities.  I think back to many, many 

 8           years ago in the 1980s, it was the arts and 

 9           culture and artists who were at the forefront 

10           of discussions about social discourse.  The 

11           notion of HIV and AIDS was not something that 

12           was being discussed by the politicians to the 

13           extent that it should have been, yet indeed 

14           it was the artists and the playwrights and 

15           the authors who were bringing this discussion 

16           to the public in a way that we could 

17           understand it, and in a way that is 

18           completely unique to the arts and culture.  

19           It wouldn't stratify us further even on the 

20           most difficult of issues.  It brought us 

21           together in ways that no other thing but the 

22           arts can do.

23                  With that in mind, I think it brings 

24           about a sense of urgency that we support the 


                                                                   257

 1           arts and that we fortify the arts in a way 

 2           that is meaningful, that is lasting.  The 

 3           Assemblymember mentioned arts organizations 

 4           that are still suffering post-pandemic.  The 

 5           ripples from that devastating time continue 

 6           to have a negative impact on the ability for 

 7           institutions and organizations both large and 

 8           small to sustain themselves.

 9                  So I look forward to working with my 

10           colleagues to try to fortify and build upon 

11           the Executive when it comes to funding for 

12           the arts.  My question for you, Executive 

13           Director, is about grants.  And have there 

14           been any changes in the way that NYSCA awards 

15           grants to make it a more efficient process so 

16           that groups can get their funds in a timely 

17           manner?

18                  NYSCA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  I 

19           think before my time, in 2022 we did a -- 

20           NYSCA did a huge grant overhaul that I think 

21           sometimes gets missed.  And that's when we 

22           went into developing general operating 

23           support grants, which is like a golden ticket 

24           for organizations because it allows them to 


                                                                   258

 1           use it where they need it most, whether it's 

 2           for a production or whether it's to fix a 

 3           seat and keep your doors open.

 4                  So that was a huge overhaul that we're 

 5           seeing the benefits of, and in terms of, you 

 6           know, contracts out and getting the money 

 7           out, you know, we have been working closely 

 8           with SFS and others, you know, to ensure that 

 9           grantees are getting their money but also we 

10           work very closely with grantees to make sure 

11           that they're doing their work and signing 

12           their contracts.

13                  So if you know of any grantees who  

14           need -- or haven't signed their contracts yet 

15           for this year, please let us know.  That's an 

16           important step forward to ensuring that we 

17           get their money -- to get their money.  

18                  And, you know, we also in that overall 

19           increased the floor.  So I think it was -- I 

20           don't know, 2500 or 5,000?  (Conferring.)

21                  Great.  So now the floor is 10,000 but 

22           the ceiling is 49,500.  So that means every 

23           institution, whether you're the Met or 

24           whether you're a tiny organization upstate, 


                                                                   259

 1           gets, you know, depending on what you -- has 

 2           the ability to get 49.5.  That is our top  

 3           amount.

 4                  SENATOR SERRANO:  And have you found 

 5           in your discussions -- I know in your 

 6           testimony you said you'd been traveling 

 7           across the state talking with arts groups and 

 8           organizations.  

 9                  Is the greater need on the 

10           programmatic side or on the capital side?  

11           Where do you see the largest need?

12                  NYSCA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  I 

13           think both sides.  Unfortunately, because of 

14           the pandemic you have deferred maintenance, 

15           you know, that is honestly killing so 

16           many particularly -- killing upstate, 

17           particularly, and the majority of our capital 

18           funds do go upstate.  But it's really as 

19           simple as needing a ramp, you know, to comply 

20           with ADA, or they need a new HVAC system.  Or 

21           sometimes the roof is not fixed and they 

22           can't have engagements or they can't have 

23           audiences in.  And that -- I've seen that 

24           over and over again.  And that's, you know, 


                                                                   260

 1           capital funding.

 2                  But they also can't retain, you know, 

 3           staff or hire staff, so that's on the 

 4           operating side.  And so we must also provide 

 5           that.  And it's a tall order, but I think, 

 6           you know, NYSCA again is at the forefront of 

 7           understanding and being proactive, you know, 

 8           right now, in realtime, as to what we can 

 9           help you do.

10                  SENATOR SERRANO:  Well, I know I'm 

11           preaching to the choir.  I do believe that we 

12           need to increase overall funding.  If you 

13           look at what NYSCA funding was maybe 20 years 

14           ago and you account for inflation, I don't 

15           think we're hitting the mark that we should.

16                  I'm grateful that over the last few 

17           cycles, budget cycles, we've seen a marked 

18           improvement in overall arts funding, and I 

19           think that shows I think a deeper 

20           understanding across the state from every 

21           corner -- not a New York City-centric 

22           thing -- that actually the arts are hugely 

23           impactful in every corner of the State of 

24           New York.  


                                                                   261

 1                  So again, I appreciate all of our 

 2           discussions and your work, and looking 

 3           forward to working with my colleagues in 

 4           government to ensure that we have robust arts 

 5           funding.  Thank you.

 6                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblyman Friend, 

 7           five minutes.

 8                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  Thank you, 

 9           Chairs.

10                  For Commissioner Moy, could you give 

11           us an update on where we are with the Empire 

12           State Plaza conversion?

13                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Thank you for 

14           your question.  It's about the Empire State 

15           decarbonization?

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  Yes.

17                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  So we are 

18           excited that in the past year the Governor 

19           has fully funded the first phase of our 

20           decarbonization program.  That addresses 

21           infrastructure needs in the Plaza.  Much of 

22           our infrastructure is past -- is showing its 

23           age, so it's opportunity, as we look to 

24           decarbonize, we are working in partnership 


                                                                   262

 1           with NYPA to design new electric chillers 

 2           which will be implemented for our agency.  

 3           We're also looking to design for heat 

 4           recovery, which is excess heat that's 

 5           generated when we're talking about heating 

 6           and cooling.  It will also give us an 

 7           opportunity to employ that excess heat in the 

 8           Concourse and other locations and better 

 9           understand those costs moving forward.

10                  That's the first phase of work.  NYPA 

11           is our partner through this, so they're doing 

12           the design activities and we'll do the 

13           construction.

14                  The second phase of activity will 

15           happen after the Wadsworth Laboratory is 

16           established at the Harriman Campus.  At that 

17           point in time it will allow us to retrofit 

18           that site, which was not purpose-built 

19           certainly for a laboratory.  It's going to 

20           reduce significantly between those first two 

21           phases, 50 percent, the greenhouse gas 

22           emissions that are produced locally here in 

23           the Sheridan Hollow area in downtown Albany.

24                  The third phase is also in design.  


                                                                   263

 1           It's activities where it's not just OGS who's 

 2           a part of the conversation, it also 

 3           includes -- and so NYPA's having the 

 4           conversations with Albany County and with the 

 5           city.  There are a couple of opportunities 

 6           that we're exploring, which includes 

 7           geothermal.  We have done some test builds, 

 8           but those are sites that are beyond our 

 9           control, as well as the potential reuse of 

10           some of the excess heat that is generated in 

11           wastewater treatment.

12                  So there's a location that is down in 

13           the Port of Albany.  Those are all 

14           conversations where NYPA is starting to have 

15           those talks with the city and the county to 

16           determine what is the right site or multiple 

17           combinations, in order to complete that third 

18           phase of work.

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  I really 

20           appreciate the fact that you're collaborating 

21           with these other entities to do this work.

22                  And what are -- I mean, what's the 

23           time frame for these projects?

24                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  The first phase 


                                                                   264

 1           will be completed in the next five years.  

 2           The second phase will be after the Wadsworth 

 3           Laboratory is established by DASNY at the 

 4           Harriman Campus.  And in terms of the third 

 5           phase, I can give some better timelines once 

 6           we have a better understanding of what is the 

 7           combination of sources that will need to be 

 8           used, whether it will be the wastewater 

 9           center and that partnership or if it will be 

10           around geothermal.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  Okay.  And is the 

12           State Capitol part of the project, too, for 

13           the Empire State Plaza, or is that going to 

14           be a separate project?

15                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  I'm sorry, if 

16           you could repeat the question?

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  The State 

18           Capitol, is that part of the Empire State 

19           Plaza project?

20                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Yes, it is part 

21           of the Plaza, yes.  And the infrastructure 

22           that's supported by the existing 

23           decarbonization plan supports all 90 acres of 

24           space that's in downtown Albany.  So a lot of 


                                                                   265

 1           the infrastructure, whether you're the Alfred 

 2           E. Smith Building, you're right here in the 

 3           LOB, you're in the Capitol or any of the 

 4           sites that are in the Empire State Plaza, 

 5           they are all supported by the same 

 6           infrastructure.

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  And will there be 

 8           extra digging done -- I notice that they were 

 9           talking in the plan about that tunnel for 

10           some of that steam that's being transported 

11           back and forth, isn't that very narrow?  Are 

12           you going to have to put in another tunnel or 

13           something to do that?

14                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  That's part of 

15           the discussion right now.  

16                  I think from a design perspective we 

17           are looking -- we are very much focused on 

18           the electric chillers.  We have just 

19           implemented and installed an electric 

20           chiller.  It means that from a design 

21           perspective we know what it takes, there's 

22           lower risk associated with it.  We feel very 

23           confident in that delivery.  Looking forward 

24           to seeing what that heat recovery chiller 


                                                                   266

 1           will look like and what it will mean for the 

 2           Plaza.

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  Okay.  And with 

 4           your Clean Fleet plan, you've installed a 

 5           number of charging stations now across the 

 6           state.  Are those just all light-duty, or do 

 7           those also have the ability --

 8                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  The charging 

 9           stations can be used light, medium, heavy 

10           duty.  There's Level 2 and Level 3 chargers 

11           that are being installed across the state. 

12                  As part of our work for the EV 

13           transition, we've been focusing on 

14           infrastructure.  Certainly when it comes to 

15           the fleet we want to make sure that charging 

16           equipment is available.  We've been very 

17           successful in some of those installations.  

18                  Some of the data to share, we have 

19           138 charging ports that are now active at 

20           34 facilities.  We have 600 charging ports at 

21           60 sites that are currently in the pipeline.  

22           By putting in that infrastructure, it will 

23           allow for us to have a very smooth transition 

24           as agencies ramp up their purchases for light 


                                                                   267

 1           duty and heavy and medium duty fleet 

 2           vehicles.

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  Okay.  So would 

 4           our schools be able to use these stations 

 5           also?

 6                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  So the primary 

 7           focus of our charge -- that was not a pun -- 

 8           but part of our work at OGS is intended on 

 9           focusing on the state fleet.  So right now 

10           that is my one responsibility, is to make 

11           sure that we can support the fleet statewide.

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  All right.  And 

13           it's great that you've done 24 percent 

14           conversion already.  Thanks.

15                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Yes, thank you.

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

17                  Senator Murray.

18                  SENATOR MURRAY:  Thank you, 

19           Chairwoman.

20                  Thank you all for being here today.

21                  And Commissioner Moy, most of my 

22           questions I think will be to you.

23                  First let me start by saying thank 

24           you, it has been I think almost a full two 


                                                                   268

 1           months and neither escalator has broken down 

 2           yet.  

 3                  (Laughter.)

 4                  SENATOR MURRAY:  So thank you, and I 

 5           will now be blamed if they do, I'm sure, 

 6           because I just jinxed it.

 7                  But you mentioned in your testimony 

 8           here, "Deferred maintenance has accumulated, 

 9           adding complexity and cost to projects."  And 

10           that is the case.  That's the case, I think, 

11           with anything.  With us, if we stay healthy, 

12           we stay out of the ER, you know, and the 

13           costs stay down.

14                  But are you finding that, A, that that 

15           was the case with over the years, that that 

16           has been a problem, a lot of projects pushed 

17           off?  And how did COVID affect that as well?

18                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  That's a great 

19           question.  And so, one, Senator Murray, I 

20           wanted to thank you for that.

21                  Anytime that you have deferred 

22           maintenance, those challenges continue to 

23           exacerbate longstanding issues.  A great 

24           example of that is as we look at the 


                                                                   269

 1           infrastructure here in -- just here in 

 2           Albany.  Costs rise when you ignore issues.  

 3           So you have continued expansion and 

 4           contraction when it comes to weather, you 

 5           have degradation, you have health and safety 

 6           issues.  

 7                  Governor Hochul has funded, in my 

 8           first year here as commissioner, $175 million 

 9           that were put towards critical infrastructure 

10           issues like elevators and escalators and 

11           conveyance systems.  And you're starting to 

12           see that work pay off.  We went right to work 

13           with ensuring that we were addressing some of 

14           those core systems that allows us to fix 

15           those problems and move on to the next set of 

16           problems that may have been ignored over the 

17           years.

18                  SENATOR MURRAY:  And a perfect example 

19           of that is right here in Albany, and I'm 

20           going to talk about the $80 million staircase 

21           at the Capitol.

22                  So in 2014 Governor Cuomo's 

23           administration released a study that said 

24           that fixing those stairs and the whole 


                                                                   270

 1           project would cost $17 million.  We're a 

 2           little over 10 years later, and it's gone up 

 3           exponentially.  But in 2021, in fact, 

 4           Governor Hochul, her administration, when she 

 5           comes in, that cost went up to $41 million.  

 6           Now the costs are at $80 million.  

 7                  Now, to put it in perspective, I did a 

 8           little research here.  Eighty million 

 9           dollars,  it's about $1,038,961 per step.  

10           According to Zillow, the average home value 

11           in New York is $477,333.  Fixing that 

12           staircase would put 168 families in brand-new 

13           homes.

14                  According to Car & Driver magazine, 

15           the Ford F series is the most popular car in 

16           the country.  The Ford F150 average cost, 

17           between 40,000 and 50,000.  I averaged it at 

18           $45,000.  That would put 1,778 Ford F150s on 

19           the road.

20                  I'm doing that just to show, from the 

21           taxpayer perspective, $80 million.  Can you 

22           tell us, was a lot of that from not doing the 

23           necessary maintenance?

24                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  That's a great 


                                                                   271

 1           question.

 2                  So I want to start off, Senator, by 

 3           noting, first of all, that it's not a 

 4           staircase, it's the entire East Side of the 

 5           Capitol.  That includes the entire Eastern 

 6           Approach, it includes the North and South 

 7           Promenades that surround the building.  It 

 8           includes the drainage, which is all in poor 

 9           disrepair.  It includes -- so to calculate 

10           according to a staircase would be missing the 

11           larger problems in the infrastructure itself.  

12                  We have doorways, stairways, and some 

13           of the -- frankly, the rotting that is 

14           happening is quite disconcerting.  Over the 

15           past two years the agency has been monitoring 

16           the tilt of the staircase itself, and it is 

17           beyond a place where we are going to have 

18           gravity take over.

19                  Now, when we first began this project 

20           the standing number was $41 million, which 

21           was an estimate but wasn't involved with a 

22           deep design.  Once the project was actually 

23           green-lit, we brought in engineers and an 

24           architecture firm to review the continued 


                                                                   272

 1           degradation of the site.  A portion of that 

 2           comes from inflation and increased costs.  A 

 3           portion of that comes from the additional 

 4           scope that had to happen in order to address 

 5           drainage issues.

 6                  We also, unfortunately -- and 

 7           fortunately -- this is a historic site by the 

 8           Department of the Interior as well as with 

 9           the state, which means that we have to be 

10           very careful with regard to all the 

11           materials.  So when we're talking about the 

12           granite, every single piece has to be 

13           painstakingly numbered, categorized and then 

14           laid out.  That requires off-site storage.  

15           That requires security to ensure that that 

16           space is actually able to be restored in the 

17           way that it needs to.

18                  But this building and that East Side 

19           of the Capitol has been a problem for almost 

20           as long as it's been around, and has actually 

21           been reported on for the past few decades.

22                  SENATOR MURRAY:  Commissioner, thank 

23           you for that, because again I did that just 

24           to point out the fact that the reporting is 


                                                                   273

 1           making it seem like it's just a staircase.  

 2           And I know it was much more involved, and 

 3           part of the problem is that it was neglected 

 4           for so long.  It wasn't taken care of 

 5           properly. 

 6                  So thank you for clarifying that.  I 

 7           appreciate it.

 8                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Absolutely.  

 9           Thank you, Senator.

10                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 

11           Hooks.

12                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN HOOKS:  Hello.  Good 

13           evening.  I have a question for Ms. Moy.

14                  What infrastructure projects are 

15           planned for District 35, and how will they 

16           enhance local economic development?

17                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Assemblymember, 

18           one, thank you for the question.

19                  Can you clarify for me which 

20           communities you're particularly focused on 

21           for District --

22                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN HOOKS:  East Elmhurst, 

23           Corona, LeFrak City.

24                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  I would have to 


                                                                   274

 1           review some of our construction projects in 

 2           order to get that information back to you.

 3                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN HOOKS:  How is your 

 4           office increasing opportunities for Minority 

 5           and Women-Owned Business Enterprises in state 

 6           contracts within our district?

 7                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  One is I want 

 8           to thank you for that question.  MWBE 

 9           utilization for our agency is actually -- is 

10           something I'm incredibly proud of.  Our 

11           office of business diversity does a 

12           significant amount of outreach.  In fact our 

13           utilization this year is 34.86 percent, or 

14           $170 million.  That is a pretty significant 

15           utilization.

16                  We do a significant amount of matching 

17           between our primes and our MWBE potential 

18           subcontractors.  We find success and believe 

19           success is to see individuals and companies 

20           grow out of the program so they can be 

21           primes.

22                  So there's a lot of work that happens 

23           through our outreach teams.  We attend 

24           business events, we connect individuals.  


                                                                   275

 1           Whether you are a business owner just looking 

 2           for opportunity or you are an individual that 

 3           is looking to be a prime, we make sure that 

 4           the utilization and the supports are right 

 5           there.  

 6                  And if there's anything that you may 

 7           need, Assemblymember, we are happy to do 

 8           events within your district to ensure that 

 9           folks are aware of the contracts that we 

10           provide.

11                  I would also note that by moving 

12           towards some of -- some of our work online, 

13           it has actually lowered some of the barriers 

14           in order to be able to access state 

15           contracts.  And so online discovery means 

16           that smaller companies are able to quickly 

17           find opportunities, they're able to be more 

18           competitive.  The amount of materials they 

19           have to physically produce has reduced, which 

20           also reduces their cost when it comes to 

21           applications.

22                  So there are a number of ways that 

23           we've been involved with supporting the MWBE 

24           community, and I think that outreach 


                                                                   276

 1           hopefully speaks for itself.  But if it isn't 

 2           sufficient within your district, we're more 

 3           than happy to do some outreach with them.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN HOOKS:  Thank you very 

 5           much.

 6                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Absolutely.

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  (Mic off; 

 8           inaudible.)  -- that was an Assemblymember, 

 9           so yes, I'm sorry.  

10                  I'm not taking my whole 10 minutes, 

11           but I'm following up, Commissioner Moy, on 

12           the description of the rebuild of the Plaza.  

13           And you went through a number of answers to 

14           that and how it's in multiple stages, it 

15           would be fairly involved.

16                  But I was walking outside, and there's 

17           all these giant -- it looks like temporary 

18           boilers set up with giant pipes going 

19           everywhere.  Is that part of this project, or 

20           is that something different?

21                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  No, it's 

22           something different.  And you will see them 

23           removed in the very near future.  

24           Unfortunately, we had about a 48-inch pipe 


                                                                   277

 1           burst that took place underground.  

 2           Thankfully it was underneath -- this will 

 3           sound a little detailed, but it was actually 

 4           underneath the Plaza itself.  So it wasn't 

 5           underneath the streetscape and we had a 

 6           significant amount of water that was 

 7           unleashed underground.

 8                  So in order to deal with our heating 

 9           and cooling, we brought in temporary units.  

10           We completed the repairs.  They are all 

11           completed now, which is great, because it is 

12           warming up in the Capital Region, and we 

13           anticipate that as we start to become more 

14           comfortable that we're ready to remove those 

15           products, that they will be removed.

16                  But it was an emergency, which is the 

17           reason why you're seeing all that equipment 

18           around.

19                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Got it.  And does 

20           this reinforce for you why it's important to 

21           do this much larger project -- 

22                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Absolutely.

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  -- or are the two 

24           issues not really correlated at all?


                                                                   278

 1                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  I will say it 

 2           did keep me up at night, and a lot of our 

 3           team members.  It was -- it was a lot of 

 4           incredibly hard work and I really want to 

 5           compliment the team at the Office of General 

 6           Services.  Our facilities groups, our 

 7           procurement teams, our design and 

 8           construction, it was all hands in order to 

 9           address those issues.

10                  As commissioner, walking through this 

11           Plaza, one of the worst things which I would 

12           see fairly frequently is, you know, water 

13           drippage.  And this is part of the problems 

14           that we have in Albany; Albany has a very 

15           high water table.  But the challenges are 

16           incredibly complex, and they have certainly 

17           been neglected.  

18                  So I'm very proud that the Governor 

19           has been investing these funds, and it will 

20           allow all of us I think to sleep a little bit 

21           easier and hopefully retain more of our 

22           staff, who have been working overtime in 

23           order to ensure that the property is well -- 

24           keeps the seat of government functioning in 


                                                                   279

 1           the state.

 2                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And while I'm not 

 3           personally an ice skater, I enjoy looking at 

 4           people ice skating out there.  And I was told 

 5           that that ice skating rink is scheduled to 

 6           close soon.  Is that correlated somehow to 

 7           the cooling problems, or is that just the 

 8           weather?

 9                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  It is 

10           correlated to the weather.  So we like to 

11           keep it open as long as possible, but, you 

12           know, it does start to warm up and it is very 

13           difficult for us to keep that chiller going 

14           that supports the ice skating rink.

15                  But I'm glad you enjoy it; I enjoy it 

16           myself.  And now that I do not have a torn 

17           MCL, I try to get out there.  So hopefully 

18           we'll see some of you as well.

19                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Well, I have a 

20           couple of fabulous ice skating rinks in my 

21           district.  One is at Rockefeller Center.  If 

22           anybody ever wants to go down there and 

23           watch -- and Bryant Park and Central Park.  

24           So I'm big on watching ice skating.


                                                                   280

 1                  So thank you very much.

 2                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Thank you very 

 3           much, Senator.

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Assembly.

 5                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblyman Otis.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  Thank you, 

 7           Commissioner and Executive Director.

 8                  Commissioner Moy -- I'm over here.  

 9           Hi.

10                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Hi.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  So a question for 

12           you first, which is related to all the great 

13           work you do for state agencies on 

14           electrification and EV charging, that whole 

15           world.

16                  Currently to what extent are you also 

17           providing some guidance and assistance to -- 

18           either through NYSERDA or to local 

19           governments and school districts trying to do 

20           those kinds of projects?

21                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Thank you very 

22           much for your question, Assemblymember Otis.

23                  We do provide a significant amount of 

24           services for municipalities and authorized 


                                                                   281

 1           users through our centralized contracts.  You 

 2           have the ability to be able to purchase 

 3           vehicles through the centralized contracts, 

 4           you have the ability to be able to purchase 

 5           EVSE or the charging equipment itself.

 6                  We also have an annual EV car show 

 7           that we do here in Albany that we've opened 

 8           up for anyone who's interested.  It's an 

 9           opportunity for us to destigmatize an EV car, 

10           allow individuals to get to know the 

11           equipment.  

12                  And this year we'll be expanding to 

13           also do some workforce training as well.  

14                  So we're very excited about how that 

15           partnership has progressed.  But as agencies 

16           go through their work -- or any other 

17           municipality or local district -- if they 

18           have questions, our contracts team is ready 

19           and willing to support them.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  That's great.  

21           Thank you so much.

22                  And Director Mallin, a question just 

23           about -- if you could just share for a moment 

24           the importance of NYSCA funding to especially 


                                                                   282

 1           arts organizations and what you've seen in 

 2           terms of your work.  I know just from what I 

 3           see at the local level how important those 

 4           funds are.

 5                  NYSCA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  

 6           Yeah, I think often it's the case with small 

 7           organizations around the state that we may be 

 8           the only major funder in the area, so that's 

 9           number one.

10                  Number two is we give -- you know, 

11           through a competitive process we grant 

12           general operating funds.  So not -- before 

13           the overhaul we were giving to specific 

14           projects, and that's often very hard for 

15           small organizations to, you know, fit into a 

16           project.  Here we're giving general operating 

17           support and saying we believe in you, you do 

18           what you need to do -- is that to pay staff, 

19           is that to put a production, is that to serve 

20           your community.  

21                  And that is the importance of both the 

22           funding and our ability to, you know, get out 

23           there and ensure that people know that we're 

24           here so that they can apply and be 


                                                                   283

 1           competitive to get their grants.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  Great.  Thank you 

 3           both for the great work you do and your teams 

 4           at your agencies.

 5                  NYSCA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  

 6           Thank you.

 7                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Appreciate it.

 8                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 

 9           Shimsky.

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SHIMSKY:  Okay, thank 

11           you very much, Mr. Chairman.  

12                  And thank you to both departments and 

13           the leadership for your testimony.  

14                  I'd like to focus in with 

15           Director Mallin.  I'd like to talk to you a 

16           little bit about the Statewide Community 

17           Regrant Program.  Obviously that's a very 

18           important model for getting grants out the 

19           door to the largest number of entities 

20           possible.  What is the coverage throughout 

21           the state?  How many such participants do we 

22           have actually participating in the regranting 

23           of funds?  I think they're called the 

24           Community Regrant Partners.


                                                                   284

 1                  NYSCA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  

 2           Yeah, this is our SCR program.  It's been 

 3           around for 40 years, and it is a way for us 

 4           to, you know, have organizations on the local 

 5           level regrant out our money to small 

 6           organizations through a competitive process.  

 7           They do the same process that we do.

 8                  And in that way we serve about 

 9           1300 organizations and artists.  And we do 

10           have oversight over what they do.  We have 

11           retreats every year.  We've been surveying 

12           them.  So that's one way that we reach, you 

13           know, a particular population.  

14                  The majority of our grants go to -- 

15           directly to organizations and support for 

16           artists.  But this is a hugely successful 

17           program that is throughout almost all 

18           10 regions.  And, you know, we look forward 

19           to putting out more data and information 

20           about the program because it's very important 

21           that we mine that.

22                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SHIMSKY:  Absolutely.  

23           For years, and back when I was a county 

24           legislator in Westchester, ArtsWestchester 


                                                                   285

 1           did a regrant program as well for our local 

 2           area.  

 3                  I understand that they may -- their 

 4           eligibility may be running out this year.  So 

 5           do we have plans for either of them to 

 6           continue or someone else to do this important 

 7           work in the Hudson Valley?

 8                  NYSCA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  I'm 

 9           not sure what you mean about their 

10           eligibility running out.  They're primarily 

11           funded by the Senate through their finance 

12           grants.  

13                  They were also this year allowed to 

14           apply for general operating support through 

15           us, and I believe ArtsWestchester did receive 

16           general operating support from us.  

17                  So I would have to get back to you 

18           about what you mean.

19                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SHIMSKY:  Yeah, well 

20           basically I'm talking about -- I'm trying to 

21           figure out who is going to be doing the 

22           statewide committee -- community regranting 

23           in the Lower Hudson Valley.

24                  NYSCA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  


                                                                   286

 1           Happy to discuss.

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SHIMSKY:  Thank you.

 3                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 

 4           Lucas.

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Okay, good 

 6           afternoon.  First I just want to first thank 

 7           you, Commissioner, and actually the Governor 

 8           as well for just initially initiating a 

 9           proposal designed to increase the MWBE 

10           discretionary purchasing threshold to 

11           1.5 million, in line with New York City's.  

12                  What are the current numbers for MWBE?  

13           And what creative methods have been put in 

14           place to expand opportunities for state 

15           agencies to work directly with MWBE vendors?

16                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Assemblymember, 

17           thank you for your question.

18                  And we were -- we were happy to see 

19           the proposed raise for the discretionary 

20           purchasing from 750 to 1.5.  I know the 

21           Governor has raised the threshold just 

22           recently.  That 1.5 million is something that 

23           allows vendors to have greater consistency 

24           and understanding when they're applying or 


                                                                   287

 1           trying to be competitive on some of these 

 2           contracts.

 3                  We know that from a vendor perspective 

 4           it can be very confusing when you're applying 

 5           for different government grants.  So when the 

 6           thresholds are consistent, it allows them to 

 7           know when they should be competitive.  

 8                  But of course in partnership with that 

 9           activity, knowing that you can -- that we are 

10           also streamlining processes to ensure the 

11           state agencies are working in partnership and 

12           identifying MWBE entities is important.  Our 

13           agency does have a pretty robust number 

14           relative to MWBEs, as I had shared.  It's 

15           34.86 percent, which is about $170 million.  

16                  We do matching activities, so we work 

17           very closely with MWBE vendors, and we also 

18           connect them with primes.  We had done 

19           Build NY, which was launched about a year and 

20           a half ago.  It allowed for us to give 

21           greater transparency into the activities of 

22           our project portfolio.  It gave a better 

23           sense of what things are in design and 

24           construction, what our anticipated bid dates 


                                                                   288

 1           might be, and allowed for those meetings to 

 2           take place where primes and MWBE vendors can 

 3           also connect.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Could you define 

 5           that, prime contractors?

 6                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Prime 

 7           contractors would be the entity that would be 

 8           responding directly to a bid or a 

 9           procurement.  

10                  Subcontractors may be a mechanism by 

11           which you can start to meet those targets 

12           when it comes to some of the MWBE targets in 

13           our contracts.

14                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  Okay.  And for 

15           the New York State Council on the Arts, do 

16           you use a rubric that prioritizes new 

17           applicants and provides technical assistance 

18           prior to submission for arts grants?  

19                  And also, have you recently 

20           streamlined your application for easy access 

21           and minimum questions to reply to these 

22           grants, in alignment with the national 

23           movement to simplify the grant process?

24                  NYSCA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  (Mic 


                                                                   289

 1           issue.)  Thank you for your question, 

 2           Assemblywoman.

 3                  (Time clock sounds.)

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LUCAS:  It took her 

 5           7 seconds to get the mic on.

 6                  (Laughter.)

 7                  NYSCA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  

 8           We'll have a discussion about that.  I'd be 

 9           happy to.

10                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 

11           Kassay.

12                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KASSAY:  Good evening.  

13           Thank you, Chair.  Thank you for being here. 

14                  Just a -- hopefully a quick question 

15           for Executive Director Mallin.

16                  We have the country's 250th 

17           anniversary coming up next year.  Can you 

18           speak a little bit to the funds that might be 

19           appropriated currently or you're hoping are 

20           appropriated for artistic celebrations of our 

21           country's anniversary?

22                  NYSCA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  I'm 

23           not aware yet of the funds, but I know that 

24           we have been talking with our sister agencies 


                                                                   290

 1           about what they're doing, and there's some 

 2           incredible projects coming up.  And look 

 3           forward to relaying them to you.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KASSAY:  Very good.  

 5           Yeah, there's a lot of wonderful groups that 

 6           are out in Suffolk County.  And we have the 

 7           Culper Spy Ring, which we're very proud of.  

 8           And so if funds are made available to those 

 9           groups, you know, my office would be very 

10           glad to know about it so that I can connect 

11           them and make sure that we're celebrating.  

12           And that goes hand in hand with tourism and 

13           commerce as well.

14                  NYSCA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  I'm 

15           happy to have a conversation about it.

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KASSAY:  Looking forward 

17           to it.  Thank you so much.

18                  NYSCA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  Same 

19           here.

20                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 

21           Jackson.

22                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  All right.  

23           Thank you, Chair.

24                  Commissioner, I'm going to stay 


                                                                   291

 1           focused on this building that we happen to be 

 2           in, and I know that we usually have heating 

 3           and cooling issues in this building.  I was 

 4           told it's because of how we divide up some of 

 5           the rooms -- you know, in offices and things 

 6           like that.

 7                  So I'm just wondering if any of this 

 8           money that we're using to, you know, upgrade 

 9           our systems, is any of that going to be used 

10           towards our heating, cooling, the changing of 

11           the thermostats?

12                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Thank you for 

13           that question, Assemblymember Jackson.

14                  When it comes to the Legislative 

15           Office Building in particular, we work in 

16           very close partnership with the Legislature, 

17           both on the Senate and the Assembly side, to 

18           prioritize projects.

19                  As we get to the third phase of 

20           activities for the decarbonization, all 

21           aspects of building systems will be touched, 

22           which includes, you know, the heating and 

23           cooling.  Certainly as we transition from 

24           steam to hot water or other types of heating 


                                                                   292

 1           and cooling opportunities, it will change how 

 2           the building is laid out and will also 

 3           necessitate changes to the infrastructure as 

 4           well.

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  So you said in 

 6           Phase 3.  What phase are we in?

 7                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  We are in the 

 8           first phase.

 9                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  First phase.  

10           Thank you for that.

11                  And then as far as electric vehicles, 

12           is the -- are all the vehicles electric at 

13           this point?

14                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  No, they are 

15           not all electric.

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  So what 

17           percentage would you say we're at?

18                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  So if you take 

19           a look at our website, we've actually made 

20           public our EV transition plans for light-duty 

21           fleets.  As of the last reporting period, I 

22           believe the baseline was 6 percent -- so I'm 

23           going to double-check my notes.

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  So you can get 


                                                                   293

 1           back to me on that one, because I want to ask 

 2           something else.

 3                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Sure -- 

 4           6.3 percent.

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  6.3 percent.  

 6           Got it.

 7                  As far as the diversion efforts for -- 

 8           I guess dealing with waste, you have here 

 9           "pre-consumer food waste collection."  Is 

10           that composting?

11                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Yes, that is.

12                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Okay.

13                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  So that is 

14           looking at particularly the food vendors that 

15           are in the Plaza.  They're all small Albany 

16           businesses located in the area.  It will 

17           allow for them to identify food scraps in 

18           pre-consumer waste as opposed to 

19           post-consumer, which is whatever might be 

20           generated after you eat your meal.

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Okay.  And 

22           then if someone has a contract with OGS, when 

23           do we cycle out and get a new person to I 

24           guess have that contract?  I'm thinking about 


                                                                   294

 1           like the vending machines.  Do we have the 

 2           same contractor?  I might be getting in 

 3           trouble saying this.

 4                  (Laughter.)

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  But is it the 

 6           same contractor since, you know, the 

 7           beginning of time?  Is there a new process?  

 8           How does that work?

 9                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  We -- most of 

10           our contracts have an expiration period for 

11           our centralized contracts.  It's about five 

12           years.  Agencies or entities may choose to 

13           extend that contract.

14                  All decisions, particularly with 

15           regard to this building, we work in very 

16           close consultation with central staff.  It is 

17           something where it is a very joint 

18           partnership to make sure that we're balancing 

19           the needs of the Legislature as well as our 

20           priorities.

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Thank you.

22                  And then the P3 automated doors, we 

23           need help with those.  I have a stroller, I 

24           don't like pushing the door open.  It's 


                                                                   295

 1           really hard.  So thank you.  P3.

 2                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  We'll follow up 

 3           with you.  Thank you very much.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Thank you.

 5                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblyman Dais.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN DAIS:  Thank you, Chair.

 7                  So Commissioner Moy, how many -- how 

 8           much staff is currently under your purview?

 9                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Assemblymember, 

10           we have 1900 staff.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN DAIS:  1900.  And how many 

12           vacancies do you have?

13                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  I would have to 

14           double-check.  I apologize, I do not recall 

15           offhand.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN DAIS:  No, I'm just -- 

17           because, you know, today the Governor made a 

18           comment that we have 7,000 New York State 

19           jobs.  I know all those aren't under your 

20           umbrella.

21                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  No.  No.

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN DAIS:  But when I do look 

23           at it, when I specifically look at it around 

24           Albany and we see the economic situation 


                                                                   296

 1           here, I'm wondering what are we doing from a 

 2           recruitment standpoint to make sure we're 

 3           hiring local and getting people from our 

 4           socially and economically depressed areas 

 5           into these good-paying jobs?

 6                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  So I want to 

 7           start off with saying that one of our top 

 8           priorities is hiring.  And, you know, we 

 9           certainly have vacancies, particularly when 

10           I'm thinking about the work that happens 

11           within our real estate team in particular, 

12           our utilities team and other areas, we've 

13           been having a lot of conversations that are 

14           successful and fruitful, with the Department 

15           of Budget as well as the Governor's office, 

16           to look at increasing wages, particularly for 

17           some of our hard-to-recruit positions.

18                  We've been working very aggressively 

19           with the Department of Civil Service in order 

20           to push out positions through HELPS.  Our 

21           shared services entity, when it comes to the 

22           business services center, those are all 

23           positions that are really wonderful 

24           opportunities to enter into the state, and 


                                                                   297

 1           I'd like to say a great training ground for 

 2           individuals to be promoted or go into other 

 3           agencies.

 4                  But we are doing a number of outreach 

 5           events -- in fact, there's just one I was 

 6           talking about that's taking place tomorrow.  

 7           So we are speaking very much about 

 8           opportunities here with the state.  And we do 

 9           outreach events significantly.

10                  I will say on a monthly basis I join 

11           our foundations, our -- which is our new hire 

12           orientation, and the numbers have been 

13           ticking up over time, which I'm very proud 

14           of.  We've been able to reduce the number of 

15           vacancies, which has been important for our 

16           agency to maintain our facilities.

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN DAIS:  Thank you.

18                  Ms. Mallin, in reference to the 

19           New York State Council on the Arts, what are 

20           we doing in the Bronx?  Do you know how many 

21           grants are going into the Borough of the 

22           Bronx?  I really want to expand arts in my 

23           district, I think it's important.  Music, 

24           theater, singing -- I want my kids in my 


                                                                   298

 1           community to have more access to things that 

 2           will allow them to explore.

 3                  So what are we doing in the Bronx?

 4                  NYSCA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  I 

 5           think we'll have to get back to you with that 

 6           number.  But I remember thinking that it was 

 7           a very good number this year, a number of 

 8           grants going to the Bronx.  But I will get 

 9           back to you directly, the number and the 

10           amount of money going into your district and 

11           the entire borough.

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN DAIS:  Okay, thank you.

13                  And second, the Metropolitan Opera, 

14           they're having some funding issues.

15                  NYSCA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  

16           Yeah.

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN DAIS:  They do hire a lot 

18           of people within the Lincoln Center area.  

19           What are we -- what's your thoughts on what 

20           are we doing to help them?

21                  NYSCA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  

22           Well, we -- you know, the most we can give 

23           them on a general operating support side is 

24           $49,500.


                                                                   299

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN DAIS:  Oh, wow.

 2                  NYSCA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MALLIN:  So 

 3           that's on the nonprofit.

 4                  And then capital money, they can apply 

 5           for capital.  But I think their biggest 

 6           issues are operating monies.

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN DAIS:  Thank you.

 8                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 

 9           Griffin.

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GRIFFIN:  Thank you, 

11           Chair.  Thank you to all of you for being 

12           here.

13                  Commissioner Moy, I just have a couple 

14           of questions for you.  One is -- the first, 

15           this is pretty easy -- can you describe the 

16           restoration at the Jones Beach East 

17           Bathhouse?  What the project is and, you 

18           know, where -- what the completion date might 

19           be.

20                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Thank you for 

21           that question, Assemblymember.

22                  The Jones Beach East Bathhouse is 

23           actually one of my favorite projects.  It is 

24           one in which we are actively in -- we are 


                                                                   300

 1           going to be awarding if we have not already 

 2           awarded the construction activities. 

 3                  The design work began with the 

 4           Department of Parks, Recreation and Historic 

 5           Preservation.  We picked up those activities 

 6           in partnership then because the scope of the 

 7           project was actually quite large, and it's 

 8           been a great and symbiotic partnership with 

 9           the commissioner pro tempore and Randy 

10           Simons. 

11                  So we look forward to having a 

12           ground-breaking.  It will allow for us to 

13           fully restore the bathhouse.  We'll be 

14           looking at a splash pool, new changing 

15           facilities, ADA-compliant bathrooms.  It's 

16           going to be a really wonderful restoration 

17           for the Jones Beach and the broader Long 

18           Island community.

19                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GRIFFIN:  That sounds 

20           great.  A lot of people in my district use 

21           Jones Beach, it's beautiful, and a lot of 

22           people from the city come out as well.  So 

23           I'm really happy to hear that.

24                  And then the -- it says the Adirondack 


                                                                   301

 1           Rail Trail finished two phases and you're 

 2           beginning the third and the final.  I don't 

 3           know where the -- there's like the Green 

 4           Trail that's going to go on Long Island.  Is 

 5           the Green Trail part of the Appalachian 

 6           Trail, or is that totally something else, the 

 7           Green Trail?

 8                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  So the 

 9           Adirondack Rail Trail is located further up 

10           north; it's Tupper Lake to -- I'm going to -- 

11           I believe Lake Placid.  

12                  There were three phases.  The first 

13           two are completed already; the third phase is 

14           beginning.  It is a former railroad trail 

15           that is now being turned into a gorgeous 

16           facility in which you can do, what is it, you 

17           can walk, you can promenade, you can bike on 

18           it, and also snowmobiling.

19                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GRIFFIN:  Right.  Not to 

20           interrupt, but I know that.  I just wanted to 

21           find out, like -- years ago there was all 

22           that trail work going on in upstate New York, 

23           but the end goal was to bring it out to 

24           Long Island.  And I just wondered, is that 


                                                                   302

 1           part of OGS or is that another department?

 2                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  That would be 

 3           another entity.  So we're doing this 

 4           construction in partnership with DEC and with 

 5           DOT.  So a number of state agencies.  But 

 6           that's not our property directly.  We're 

 7           doing the construction and design on behalf 

 8           of another agency.

 9                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GRIFFIN:  Okay, thanks.

10                  And then the last question is, I know 

11           a lot of constituents and people located in 

12           Nassau County have expressed challenges with 

13           minority and women-owned businesses.  Is 

14           there some contact in Nassau County of 

15           someone from the state that covers 

16           Nassau County that I could send them to or I 

17           could talk to about their issues?

18                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Absolutely.

19                  You can connect to us, we'll connect 

20           you with our IGA team and also, in 

21           partnership with ESD, get you the support you 

22           need.

23                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GRIFFIN:  Okay, thank 

24           you very much.


                                                                   303

 1                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Absolutely, 

 2           Assemblymember.  Thank you.

 3                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you, 

 4           Assemblymember.  Thank you, Commissioner.

 5                  Now, before we let you go, I just have 

 6           one question for you.  It's not really 

 7           budget-related.  But what are those tracks 

 8           that you're installing throughout the 

 9           Legislative Office Building in the hallways 

10           and in the offices?

11                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  You have me 

12           stumped, I'm sorry.  Can you be a little bit 

13           more --

14                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  (Mic off; 

15           inaudible.)

16                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Oh, yes.  There 

17           is a new alarm system that we're building out 

18           on behalf of -- for this building.  So it's 

19           an upgrade --

20                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  It's an alarm 

21           system.

22                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  Yes.

23                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  How long will it 

24           take before it's completed, do you know?


                                                                   304

 1                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  If you give me 

 2           a moment, I can look it up.  But I can 

 3           certainly get you that information around 

 4           that project.

 5                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  I have 10 minutes, 

 6           so you can look it up --

 7                  (Laughter.)

 8                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  All right, here 

 9           we go.  That's pretty funny.

10                  You know what, honestly, I think I'm 

11           going to have to double-check and confirm for 

12           you.  I don't want to say anything incorrect.

13                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  You can get back to 

14           me.

15                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  I will 

16           absolutely get back to you on it.

17                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  I should have asked 

18           you when I spoke to you --

19                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  I should have 

20           been prepared walking in.  I was only looking 

21           at the elevators and the escalators.  But 

22           next time I'll be prepared.

23                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Okay.  Because they 

24           really clash with the paint job in my office, 


                                                                   305

 1           and --

 2                  (Laughter.)

 3                  OGS COMMISSIONER MOY:  I will 

 4           absolutely confirm.  Thank you very much.

 5                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you very 

 6           much.  

 7                  Senator.

 8                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I believe the 

 9           Senate is done, so I want to thank you all 

10           for your participation this evening, and ask 

11           you to excuse yourselves and either go back 

12           to work or escape for the day, whatever works 

13           best for you.

14                  We, however, are not escaping.  We are 

15           continuing with Panel C. 

16                  From now on these are the 

17           nongovernment panels, so everyone gets three 

18           minutes -- three minutes to present, three 

19           minutes to ask questions.  We don't care if 

20           you're a chair or a ranker, we're just all 

21           citizens.  

22                  Panel C:  Community Service Society of 

23           New York; Business Incubator Association of 

24           New York State; Lake Erie College of 


                                                                   306

 1           Osteopathic Medicine.  And that's Panel C.  

 2                  (Pause; off the record.) 

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Now, you've all 

 4           been waiting very patiently all day, thank 

 5           you very much.  And we're going to start by 

 6           you just introducing yourselves, starting 

 7           from the left, so that the people in the 

 8           booth know who is whom.  Okay.

 9                  MS. RODRIGUEZ:  Good evening.  Thank 

10           you for having me here.  Carolina Rodriguez, 

11           from the Community Service Society of 

12           New York.

13                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Great.  Marc?

14                  MR. ALESSI:  Good evening.  Marc 

15           Alessi, the executive director for the 

16           Business Incubator Association for New York 

17           State.

18                  DR. TERRY:  Richard Terry, LECOM 

19           Elmira.

20                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Great, thank you.

21                  Shall we go in that order again and 

22           start with Carolina Rodriguez?  Thank you.

23                  MS. RODRIGUEZ:  Thank you.  Thank you 

24           for the opportunity to provide testimony 


                                                                   307

 1           today.  My name is Carolina Rodriguez, and I 

 2           serve as the director of the Education Debt 

 3           Consumer Assistance Program, EDCAP, at the 

 4           Community Service Society of New York.

 5                  For over 180 years, CSS has been at 

 6           the forefront of advocating for low- and 

 7           moderate-income New Yorkers, and EDCAP 

 8           continues that legacy by ensuring student 

 9           loan borrowers receive the guidance they need 

10           to achieve financial stability.

11                  Since its inception in 2019, EDCAP has 

12           assisted thousands of New Yorkers, addressing 

13           over 328 million in student debt and saving 

14           borrowers, as of this morning, over 

15           38 million.  Through personalized counseling 

16           and our statewide network, we help New 

17           Yorkers stay in their homes, remain in the 

18           workforce, and avoid the devastating 

19           consequences of student debt.  By enabling 

20           borrowers to manage repayment, access 

21           forgiveness and avoid default, we directly 

22           contribute to New York's economy, ensuring 

23           that professionals in healthcare, education 

24           and public service can continue to do their 


                                                                   308

 1           essential work.

 2                  Now, with federal uncertainty looming 

 3           and proposals to dismantle the U.S. 

 4           Department of Education, strip borrower 

 5           protections and eliminate key financial aid 

 6           programs, New York must act.  The risks are 

 7           clear:  Fewer safeguards, mismanaged loans, 

 8           and millions of borrowers left vulnerable to 

 9           confusion, errors and financial distress.  

10                  Without programs like EDCAP, 

11           New Yorkers will be forced to navigate this 

12           crisis alone.  That's why our work has 

13           expanded, and in the fall of 2024 EDCAP began 

14           offering comprehensive financial aid 

15           application assistance, helping people apply 

16           for FAFSA, TAP, Excelsior, and get guidance 

17           on the DREAM Act.

18                  New York's Universal FAFSA policy is a 

19           bold step towards college access, but we must 

20           ensure families can complete the process, 

21           minimize borrowing and avoid financial 

22           pitfalls.  EDCAP bridges the gap.

23                  The demand for our services is 

24           growing.  Eighty-eight percent of our clients 


                                                                   309

 1           carry federal student loans, with an average 

 2           balance of $80,000 -- nearly double the 

 3           national average.  More than half earn under 

 4           60,000, and that is household earnings.  And 

 5           71 percent of our clients are women, with 

 6           Black women bearing the heaviest burden.  

 7                  These numbers tell a story.  Student 

 8           debt isn't just a financial issue, it is an 

 9           economic development issue, a workforce 

10           issue, and a racial and gender equity issue.

11                  New York has led the way in protecting 

12           student loan borrowers, but cannot afford to 

13           step back now.  That is why we urge the 

14           Legislature to fully fund EDCAP at 

15           3.5 million in this budget year.  The 

16           investment is not just about debt relief but 

17           is about economic mobility, workforce 

18           retention, and financial security for 

19           millions of New Yorkers.

20                  Thank you.

21                  MR. ALESSI:  Chairpersons and members 

22           of the committee, thank you for the 

23           opportunity to testify today.

24                  My name is Marc Alessi, and I serve as 


                                                                   310

 1           executive director of the business incubator 

 2           association for New York State, which 

 3           represents 120 business incubators and 

 4           accelerators from across the state, which 

 5           collectively house and mentor over 

 6           3,000 startups every year -- these companies 

 7           that create jobs, drive innovation and fuel 

 8           New York's economic growth.  

 9                  Today I'm here to emphasize the 

10           critical role that incubators play in 

11           New York's economy and to urge support for 

12           funding our statewide incubator ecosystem and 

13           preserving the successful elements of the 

14           now-sunsetting START-UP NY program and 

15           getting rid of the parts of that program that 

16           did not work well as the state transitions to 

17           newer programs.

18                  New York is now a national leader in 

19           innovation, on par with Boston and 

20           Silicon Valley, thanks in part to the strong 

21           network of incubators and accelerators that 

22           the state helped to foster over the past 

23           10 years.  These incubators and accelerators 

24           support high-growth startups.  These 


                                                                   311

 1           companies are the engines of job creation, 

 2           responsible for thousands of new jobs every 

 3           year in fields like AI, biotech, clean tech, 

 4           and advanced manufacturing.

 5                  Business incubators provide essential 

 6           early-stage support -- access to lab space, 

 7           mentorship, funding opportunities, university 

 8           partnerships.  All these things enable 

 9           startups to scale and remain in New York.  

10           Without this infrastructure, many of these 

11           companies would launch elsewhere, taking jobs 

12           and economic growth with them.

13                  To continue this momentum, we are 

14           requesting increased funding for the 

15           10 regional hotspot incubators that the state 

16           launched 10 years ago, and an expansion of 

17           the State Certified Incubator program to 

18           better reflect the rising costs of supporting 

19           New York startups.  

20                  We are requesting $300,000 in annual 

21           funding for statewide support to help 

22           coordinate the 10 regional hotspots, and 

23           we're looking to increase the amount of 

24           certified incubators from 20 to 30 throughout 


                                                                   312

 1           the state.  There are many communities 

 2           without state-certified incubators, and the 

 3           need is growing every year.

 4                  This investment will not only sustain 

 5           but expand New York's leadership in 

 6           innovation and entrepreneurship, ensuring 

 7           that our state remains competitive with other 

 8           top startup ecosystems across the country.  

 9                  One of the most effective startup 

10           recruitment tools -- I'm going to say 

11           something controversial here -- has been the 

12           START-UP NY program.  The program has 

13           supported hundreds of companies, leading to 

14           the creation and retention of nearly 2800 

15           jobs and $1.3 billion in wages and capital 

16           investments in this state.

17                  A 2023 PFM Group report commissioned 

18           by the New York State Department of Taxation 

19           and Finance confirmed that START-UP NY 

20           generates $1.58 in economic activity for 

21           every dollar spent.  

22                  I'll end it there and submit my 

23           written comments.  Thank you.  

24                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Sorry, I have to 


                                                                   313

 1           cut you off.  Next?  Thank you.

 2                  DR. TERRY:  Good evening, 

 3           Chairpersons Krueger and Pretlow, 

 4           Rankers Senator O'Mara, Assemblyman Ra.  

 5                  I'm Dr. Richard Terry.  I'm the lead 

 6           of the LECOM at Elmira Medical School.  We 

 7           have a medical school in Elmira, the first 

 8           and only school in the Southern Tier region 

 9           of New York.  

10                  And I'm here to ask you for support to 

11           create a Center of Excellence in rural health 

12           for underserved areas that we serve in LECOM.

13                  LECOM, as you may know, is the largest 

14           medical school in the country.  We have four 

15           campuses, two in Pennsylvania, one in 

16           Florida, and now one in underserved upstate 

17           New York.  Our purpose, our mission is to 

18           invest in underserved areas to create 

19           healthcare professionals to meet the needs of 

20           rural and underserved New York.  And any of 

21           you who have tried to get a primary care doc, 

22           there aren't any.  We need them, and that's 

23           what we're doing. 

24                  So our approach includes this.  Early 


                                                                   314

 1           acceptance programs from high school to 

 2           medical school.  We also have affiliations 

 3           with 35 colleges to recruit students without 

 4           an MCAT, just to have students from various 

 5           backgrounds have the opportunity to come back 

 6           and potentially practice.  So we have lots of 

 7           pathways to get to address this healthcare.

 8                  In addition, we make primary care 

 9           doctors, 70 percent.  It's unique among 

10           osteopathic schools.  In fact, LECOM 

11           graduates -- is the number-one school that 

12           graduates more primary care docs, family 

13           medicine, peds, OB, than any school in the 

14           country.  Last year 70 percent of the 

15           Elmira grads went into primary care, many to 

16           pediatrics, family medicine and OB.

17                  So there's a problem in New York:  

18           There aren't enough doctors.  Once you get 

19           outside of downstate, there aren't enough 

20           doctors.  There aren't enough primary care, 

21           OBs, emergency room doctors, surgeons.  We 

22           aim to fix that.

23                  So we can do this by creating a 

24           Center of Excellence.  LECOM would leverage 


                                                                   315

 1           our experience, our expertise -- we've done 

 2           this -- create this pipeline, take 

 3           nontraditional students and prepare them for 

 4           practice in the state where we most need 

 5           them.

 6                  So by getting this pipeline we can 

 7           focus on the unique needs of underserved 

 8           New York, rural and urban, I might add -- we 

 9           have the largest clinical footprint of any 

10           medical school in upstate New York, 15 

11           different sites, many in rural areas.

12                  So for these reasons, I ask for 

13           $250,000 to create this Center of Excellence.  

14           What will it do?  Further the curriculum 

15           development, staff it, and ramp up our 

16           student recruitment efforts, our ability to 

17           also develop residencies in underserved 

18           Federally Qualified Health Centers, rural 

19           health centers throughout the state.

20                  We need your support.  We've got to 

21           address this issue, and this is a leverage 

22           point where LECOM and Elmira is prepared to 

23           make a difference.

24                  Thank you.


                                                                   316

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 2                  Any Senators?  Ah, Senator Murray.

 3                  SENATOR MURRAY:  Thank you.  Thank 

 4           you, Chairwoman.  And thank you all for being 

 5           here.

 6                  Marc, this is for you.  So you were 

 7           saying about START-UP NY -- and we have other 

 8           incentive programs and all that, yet with 

 9           that we are still at the bottom of the barrel 

10           when it comes to a business-friendly 

11           environment throughout the country.  And we 

12           have problems here.  It's not 

13           business-friendly.

14                  A, does that make your job more 

15           difficult?  But what is it you're hearing?  

16           What is the biggest impediment that prevents 

17           people -- more entrepreneurs?

18                  MR. ALESSI:  So the remarkable fit for 

19           the START-UP innovation ecosystem is it is a 

20           good fit for New York.  

21                  If you study or hold hearings on 

22           what's going to recruit the high-tech growth 

23           startups, they need to be near innovation 

24           centers.  They need to be in -- you know, 


                                                                   317

 1           Silicon Valley is a very expensive place to 

 2           do business, Boston is a very expensive place 

 3           to do business.  It's -- we've made the 

 4           investments as a state in education, in 

 5           higher education and research.  

 6                  So we're not competing with 

 7           South Carolina on a plastics company, we're 

 8           competing with Silicon Valley on how to, you 

 9           know, grow an innovation company.

10                  So there's two different economic 

11           development models.  There is a traditional 

12           company that could go and get an SBA loan and 

13           will have products within a month or so, and 

14           revenue very quickly.  And then there's the 

15           companies that are fostered in incubators 

16           that take five to 10 years.

17                  And that's any programs like 

18           START-UP NY or even incubation programs, 

19           they're essential because those companies are 

20           so risky -- but they pay huge rewards when 

21           they hit it.  And 80 percent of incubator 

22           companies stay in the community they're 

23           incubated in.

24                  SENATOR MURRAY:  So yesterday was the 


                                                                   318

 1           Higher Education hearing when we had the 

 2           chancellors in, and one of the big things 

 3           that we were talking about was investment in 

 4           research.  And do we do enough as far as 

 5           using them as a way to recruit businesses?

 6                  MR. ALESSI:  So New York State is the 

 7           financial capital of the world and the patent 

 8           capital of the world.  So we are investing in 

 9           research and we're creating technologies.  

10           What we weren't doing 10, 15 years ago is 

11           commercializing them.  We're finally at the 

12           point where that is happening.  And as we 

13           fine-tune some of our programs, we have an 

14           opportunity to surpass the Silicon Valley.

15                  SENATOR MURRAY:  Okay.  Thanks, Marc.

16                  MR. ALESSI:  Thank you.

17                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblyman Stirpe.

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Thank you, Chair.

19                  Marc, you know, there has been a lot 

20           of discussion about the START-UP NY program, 

21           some good, some bad.  It's got a lot of 

22           warts.  If you were going to create a program 

23           to help the startup businesses right now, do 

24           you have any idea what it would look like?  


                                                                   319

 1           You know, how people would be able to access 

 2           funding from it?

 3                  MR. ALESSI:  So, one, there were a lot 

 4           of warts with START-UP NY.  It was a very 

 5           bureaucratic program.  So you started on 

 6           20 college campuses, and there's a list of 

 7           five companies here, three companies there.  

 8           There are two universities that did really 

 9           well all the way up until this year, and that 

10           was -- NYU has close to a hundred companies 

11           in the program, and Buffalo has close to 200 

12           companies in the program.

13                  It took dedicated staff to navigate 

14           through that program.  So simplifying the 

15           bureaucracy of that, not making the companies 

16           move to a college campus, is an important 

17           part of the program.  But when, you know, NYU 

18           felt it was such an important part of their 

19           economic development tools because they're in 

20           combat every day with New Jersey and 

21           Connecticut for some of these biotech 

22           companies, for example.  And one of the 

23           deciding factors oftentimes is those tax 

24           benefits for the employees.  It's easier to 


                                                                   320

 1           recruit talent with some of those benefits.

 2                  And so entrepreneurs look for anything 

 3           that will help de-risk their company, any 

 4           kind of edge that they can get, whether it's 

 5           investment -- so we have investment programs 

 6           here in New York.  The more accessible they 

 7           can be for startup companies will help 

 8           recruit more companies.

 9                  The ability to ramp up and have, you 

10           know, a sense of place and a sense of being 

11           able to get through the obstacles in those 

12           early stages is really important for these 

13           startups.

14                  I would love to see this economic 

15           development tool in some form in the future, 

16           but without, you know, some of the problems 

17           that we had with the program.

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  We've talked 

19           about something like, you know, large 

20           corporations being able to purchase losses 

21           from startups --

22                  MR. ALESSI:  So right now in 

23           New Jersey corporations that are, you know, 

24           well funded and have revenue and are 


                                                                   321

 1           profitable, are able to buy losses from some 

 2           of the startups in New Jersey, and that's a 

 3           benefit to existing corporations but it's 

 4           also a benefit to the startups that, again, 

 5           they might not have revenue and profitability 

 6           for five, 10 years, they get a million 

 7           dollars in investment, it's all going to R&D 

 8           and employee salaries and being able to sell 

 9           their losses would, again, de-risk them.

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Okay, thank you.

11                  MR. ALESSI:  Thank you.

12                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Senator Brisport.

13                  SENATOR BRISPORT:  Thank you.  And 

14           thank you all for testifying.

15                  My questions are for Mr. Alessi.

16                  I represent a district in Central 

17           Brooklyn.  A lot of the hurdles for small 

18           businesses in my district is the cost of 

19           rent, with rents spiking for commercial 

20           properties in my district.  Places that were 

21           maybe asking for a couple of thousand a 

22           decade ago are now asking for five, eight, 

23           10,000 a month.

24                  I was curious, are you hearing similar 


                                                                   322

 1           things?  And if so, what do you think can be 

 2           done?

 3                  MR. ALESSI:  In certain parts of the 

 4           state there are definitely some real estate 

 5           issues in terms of being able to set up shop.  

 6                  But all in all, the cost of getting 

 7           the office space hasn't been as much of an 

 8           issue for some of these companies.  It's the 

 9           cost of getting talent.  And really trying to 

10           preserve their capital as long as they can 

11           until they get to the profitability.

12                  But New York is one of the few places 

13           that you can commercialize a product and the 

14           density of business development opportunities 

15           in New York is a pretty unique place.  San 

16           Francisco has a similar capability for 

17           startups.  There's only a few places where 

18           these startups can succeed.  They will pay a 

19           premium for real estate to be close to that 

20           density.

21                  SENATOR BRISPORT:  Thank you.

22                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

23                  Assembly.

24                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 


                                                                   323

 1           Jackson.

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Thank you, 

 3           Chair.  

 4                  I just want to say to Dr. Terry I 

 5           would like to work with whoever your 

 6           Assemblymember is to make sure that that 

 7           programming happens.  So thank you for coming 

 8           to testify.

 9                  DR. TERRY:  Thank you.

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  For 

11           Ms. Rodriguez, EDCAP, the request is what 

12           again?

13                  MS. RODRIGUEZ:  Three-point-five 

14           million.  Three million should be in the -- 

15           it's in the Executive, and then we're asking 

16           the Legislature for 500,000.

17                  And we operate with a statewide 

18           network.  We have partners out on Long Island 

19           and throughout the state that provide the 

20           in-person direct counseling services.  And as 

21           I mentioned, we've expanded not only to help 

22           student loan borrowers but also those 

23           individuals that are getting into college and 

24           needing to apply for financial aid.  Because 


                                                                   324

 1           oftentimes I was asked, What are you doing to 

 2           prevent the debt from happening in the first 

 3           place?

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  And this is 

 5           free to anyone who seeks services?

 6                  MS. RODRIGUEZ:  Absolutely, statewide.  

 7           anyone can go on our website, EDCAPNY.org, 

 8           and they can schedule a virtual session at 

 9           any point.  

10                  And again, through our network they 

11           can schedule in-person.

12                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  And are you 

13           assisting people right now who are like -- 

14           they're in the repayment phase but, you know, 

15           a lot of the federal stuff is happening --

16                  MS. RODRIGUEZ:  Yes.  My phone is 

17           filled with client messages.

18                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Okay.  I'm 

19           going to call you.

20                  (Laughter.)

21                  MS. RODRIGUEZ:  Please do.

22                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  I have my own 

23           questions.

24                  Okay, and to Mr. Alessi, the 10 extra 


                                                                   325

 1           programs you're looking to increase to, where 

 2           are you looking to have those be located?

 3                  MR. ALESSI:  So it's typically done 

 4           through an RFP process.  So --

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  No, but where?  

 6           Like geographically.

 7                  MR. ALESSI:  Anywhere in the state.  

 8           So right now as communities are looking to 

 9           launch incubators and hopefully get some kind 

10           of state investment in it, there's only 

11           20 opportunities in the state.  And a number 

12           of communities are getting shut out from 

13           that.  So increasing it by 10 and letting 

14           newer communities participate in that process 

15           will enable us to reach entrepreneurs that 

16           are not being reached right now.

17                  But I would just -- from a geographic 

18           standpoint there's in almost every region of 

19           the state.

20                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Right.  So how 

21           do you decide, though?  You said through 

22           RFPs?

23                  MR. ALESSI:  So -- yeah, it will be -- 

24           ESD would decide, through the RFP process.  I 


                                                                   326

 1           just -- I could just see it's a little bit 

 2           like of a Hunger Games.  You know, one area 

 3           of the state loses an incubator for 

 4           another --

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  So why 10 and 

 6           not 20?

 7                  MR. ALESSI:  Incrementally, just 

 8           trying to add to the ecosystem.  So they 

 9           didn't want to advocate for too much and 

10           scare folks.  I think 10 would be a good 

11           place to start.  It would be, you know, a 

12           third increase.

13                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  And what did 

14           you say was the return on the investment?

15                  MR. ALESSI:  The -- all right, so the 

16           return on investment that I mentioned in 

17           terms of the START-UP NY program was $1.58 

18           for every dollar in lost tax revenue.  That 

19           was from the PFM report that was commissioned 

20           by Tax and Finance.

21                  When you're investing in incubation in 

22           general, there is about $37 return for every 

23           dollar invested in incubation.

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Thank you for 


                                                                   327

 1           that.

 2                  MR. ALESSI:  Thank you.

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Senator Tom 

 4           O'Mara.

 5                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Thank you.

 6                  Good evening.  Thank you all for your 

 7           testimony and sticking it out here today.

 8                  Dr. Terry, I want to welcome you, 

 9           being the representative of Elmira being 

10           here, I want to thank you and LECOM for your 

11           strong commitment to the Southern Tier of 

12           New York, particularly in Elmira.  And I can 

13           personally attest to everybody here the great 

14           work that you've done at the college and 

15           helping with providing healthcare and 

16           physicians in particular for rural 

17           healthcare, and your commitment to that and 

18           to serve underserved areas in the state.

19                  Now, your ask here for $250,000 is 

20           very modest, in my opinion.  And I thank you 

21           for that, because I think that certainly 

22           makes an easier lift.

23                  DR. TERRY:  You can do more if you 

24           want to.


                                                                   328

 1                  SENATOR O'MARA:  I would love to do 

 2           more, you know.  I've tried.

 3                  (Laughter.)

 4                  SENATOR O'MARA:  But, you know, LECOM 

 5           is based in Erie, Pennsylvania, and you say 

 6           you have a school in Florida as well -- 

 7           $250,000 in the grant scheme of things here 

 8           is very modest.  

 9                  But what are you going to do with 

10           that, and how's it going to help you prepare 

11           physicians for underserved areas?  And can 

12           you compare what other type of assistance 

13           you've gotten or you get in Pennsylvania and 

14           Florida at your other institutions?

15                  DR. TERRY:  Twenty million from 

16           Pennsylvania, $5 million from Florida.  

17                  What will we do with that money?  

18           We're going to focus on underserved areas of 

19           the state, identify them and recruit students 

20           from there.

21                  The difference about LECOM, it's 

22           workforce development for physicians.  It's a 

23           very different admission process.  I'm trying 

24           to create doctors so we have them out there, 


                                                                   329

 1           because we don't have them.  I'm not trying 

 2           to create academicians or researchers.  Yes, 

 3           I want some of them, but we need more boots 

 4           on the ground right now.  

 5                  As every doctor in their sixties 

 6           retires, we need two to three to replace 

 7           them.  Because they don't do calls like they 

 8           used to, they don't go to the hospital, they 

 9           don't deliver babies.  I'm a family doc.  

10           I've done all of that.  The family doc today, 

11           most of the time they're just in the office.  

12           And good luck trying to get an appointment 

13           with them.

14                  That's what we're trying to do.  So 

15           it's a very different process holistically.  

16           We're recruiting that kid from an underserved 

17           area so she comes to medical school and goes 

18           back and practices there.  Her MCAT could be 

19           a little lower, her GPA may not quite be what 

20           other schools might accept, but we'll get her 

21           there, and she'll be a great doctor.  And 

22           that's what we're doing.

23                  And that's why this model works.  And 

24           that's why a good number of the doctors now 


                                                                   330

 1           in the Southern Tier and upstate New York are 

 2           LECOM graduates.  If you look at the stats, 

 3           it's almost 20 percent -- and we have only 

 4           graduated our first class.  These are from 

 5           our other campuses.

 6                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Well, I've seen it 

 7           firsthand, and I thank you for that 

 8           commitment and it certainly seems to work.  

 9           So --

10                  DR. TERRY:  It does.

11                  SENATOR O'MARA:  -- I'm hopeful we can 

12           get you some assistance for this.

13                  DR. TERRY:  Thank you.

14                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 

15           Kassay.

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KASSAY:  Good evening.  

17           Thank you.

18                  Ms. Carolina, please do reach out to 

19           my office; I'd like to share these resources 

20           for student loan prevention and assistance 

21           with my constituents as well.  

22                  So thank you for being here and 

23           presenting and spreading the knowledge about 

24           that. 


                                                                   331

 1                  Dr. Terry, I'll plus-one on what my 

 2           colleagues are saying.  I'm really glad that 

 3           we stuck it out.  We're definitely going to 

 4           spread -- I can speak for myself, I'll spread 

 5           the word to colleagues, even though I'm on 

 6           the other end of the state.

 7                  You know, we hear about the shortage 

 8           of medical professionals all throughout the 

 9           state and -- you know, from unions and 

10           constituents.  So thank you for doing the 

11           work, and hopefully you could expand the 

12           program in the future.

13                  DR. TERRY:  Thank you.

14                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KASSAY:  Mr. Alessi, I'm 

15           always looking to understand better how our 

16           state spending in turn serves the state, how 

17           it's an investment, so I really appreciate 

18           the statistic that for every dollar the state 

19           puts into these programs, it gets $1.58 back 

20           in economic activity.  So thank you for that.

21                  You know, I'll speak to where you and 

22           I both come from, Suffolk County.  With the 

23           cost of living -- it's high across the state, 

24           but, you know, in Suffolk County we really 


                                                                   332

 1           feel this.  And so we invest so much money 

 2           there in students K-12 education and then, if 

 3           they go off to college, it's really hard to 

 4           attract them back because they are not -- we 

 5           don't have the jobs readily available, there 

 6           isn't this opportunity.

 7                  So with having Stony Brook University 

 8           as well as Brookhaven National Labs, can you 

 9           speak specifically to Suffolk County and how 

10           this START-UP program in the past has helped 

11           and the vision for the future?

12                  MR. ALESSI:  Sure.  Well, this kind of 

13           economic development works best close to that 

14           type of entity, like a Brookhaven National 

15           Lab or a SUNY Stony Brook or higher education 

16           institutions that are creating research that 

17           turns into IP and potentially new products.

18                  And, you know, on Long Island you had 

19           a number of companies that came out of 

20           Cold Spring Harbor Labs or SUNY Stony Brook 

21           that ended up not only at Stony Brook but 

22           Broad Hollow Science Center, and they were in 

23           the -- you know, there was about 20 companies 

24           that were in the START-UP NY program to start 


                                                                   333

 1           with.  

 2                  It was a very bureaucratic program, so 

 3           there's only five companies that remain in 

 4           the program on Long Island that I'm aware of.  

 5           But they're in there because it is a tool for 

 6           those companies to recruit employees from 

 7           other ecosystems as well.

 8                  In terms of incubation on Long Island, 

 9           you have about eight incubators on 

10           Long Island that house upwards of probably 

11           about 120 companies.  And especially in 

12           high-cost-of-living areas, the need to create 

13           high-paying jobs, which these innovation 

14           startups do, is important.  One out of 10 -- 

15           actually, five out of 10, if it's incubated, 

16           of these companies will succeed.

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KASSAY:  Excellent, 

18           thank you.  Look forward to discussing 

19           further.

20                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  We have no more 

21           Senators.  Any other Assemblymembers?

22                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Yes, 

23           Assemblywoman Griffin.

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GRIFFIN:  Thank you, 


                                                                   334

 1           Chair, and thank you for being here this 

 2           evening and sticking it out all day.

 3                  Dr. Terry, I agree with my colleagues, 

 4           it doesn't seem like a whole lot to ask for 

 5           to really be able to serve the medical needs 

 6           of underserved areas and rural areas.

 7                  And Director Rodriguez, I'd love to 

 8           hear more about your programs.

 9                  And Marc, I was particularly 

10           interested -- you hear so many complaints 

11           about companies leaving New York.  And, you 

12           know, there's a never-ending list of 

13           complaints even by some of my colleagues.  

14           And it's so nice to hear someone with an 

15           outlook of how we can turn it around, and how 

16           you can create high-paying jobs and keep 

17           people here in New York.  And keep people 

18           here in expensive areas like Long Island, or 

19           in the city, or in Brooklyn or in the Bronx.

20                  So I really appreciate that.  And I 

21           also think -- I fully support the funding 

22           that you need to build this up and make this 

23           even more successful.

24                  But one thing I wanted to raise.  What 


                                                                   335

 1           is your role -- do you have the role of doing 

 2           the outreach to bring people here or find the 

 3           people here that might be interested in this 

 4           innovative, in this high-tech arena?  Is that 

 5           what your role is in like finding them, 

 6           bringing them or developing that?

 7                  MR. ALESSI:  So as an association, the 

 8           first thing we do is we bring our members 

 9           together and let them share their 

10           commonality.  

11                  Prior to BIANYS existing -- we started 

12           in 2006 -- 15 incubators from around the 

13           state were brought together because they 

14           weren't talking to each other.  And when they 

15           find that commonality then you can start 

16           seeing themes that you -- we could come back 

17           to the Legislature, for example, and saying 

18           this is what we're seeing statewide.  So 

19           that's why the organization was created.

20                  When it comes to recruiting other 

21           entities to New York, we actually do take an 

22           active role as an association to -- we offer 

23           the Soft Landings Program where we advertise 

24           in the international arena that if you're 


                                                                   336

 1           going to come to the U.S. to sell a 

 2           high-technology product or an advanced 

 3           manufacturing product, New York is one of the 

 4           unique places that you could do this because 

 5           of the investments that you've all made in 

 6           things like, you know, COEs and CATs and 

 7           higher education and incubators.

 8                  And from that standpoint, we try to 

 9           advertise the state's assets and introduce 

10           those entities to the appropriate assets.  We 

11           try to find them the right incubator to work 

12           with so they can start selling products here.  

13           We don't try to steal the entire company from 

14           a foreign -- you know, but we try to have 

15           them set up a footprint here in New York 

16           which grows jobs.

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GRIFFIN:  Okay.  Well, 

18           it seems like great work, and I appreciate 

19           that that's been done and you're attracting 

20           such a higher level of business here in our 

21           state.

22                  MR. ALESSI:  Thank you.

23                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblyman Friend.

24                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  Thank you, 


                                                                   337

 1           Chairman.  

 2                  Dr. Terry, thank you for taking the 

 3           time to come up here and talk a little more 

 4           about LECOM.  That has definitely been a 

 5           great addition to the Southern Tier.  We 

 6           constantly see a loss of primary care in our 

 7           region and all across rural upstate New York.

 8                  I know that LECOM prides itself on its 

 9           student-centered curriculum, and it's great 

10           to know that LECOM leads the nation in the 

11           number of graduates that continue to go on 

12           and practice in primary care and in rural 

13           areas.

14                  So maybe you could touch on -- you 

15           mentioned that there are 15 sites that the 

16           residents train at.  If you could maybe talk 

17           a little bit about that or -- you just had a 

18           recent graduating class, and where did they 

19           end up?  How many of them stayed in the 

20           state?

21                  DR. TERRY:  Well, about 55 percent 

22           stayed in New York.  And actually about 13 

23           stayed right in the Southern Tier, which is 

24           an amazing number.  


                                                                   338

 1                  So we're in places like Dunkirk, 

 2           New York, at a federally qualified health 

 3           center.  We're in places in Yonkers and -- 

 4           St. John's Riverside in Yonkers and 

 5           St. John's Episcopal actually down by the 

 6           city, another underserved urban area.

 7                  Predominantly, as an upstate medical 

 8           school, we're in Western New York, the 

 9           Finger Lakes Region, and the Southern Tier.  

10           Our primary affiliates are Rochester 

11           Regional, the largest health system in 

12           upstate New York; Mohawk Valley, in Utica; 

13           and then Arnot Ogden Medical Center right in 

14           Elmira.  

15                  So those are the primary, but we have 

16           a lot of smaller places like Olean, New York.  

17           We rotate students through there as well.  So 

18           we have a lot of rural exposure that they're 

19           able to get.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  That's great to 

21           hear.  

22                  And then on your student-centered 

23           curriculum, that's a little bit different 

24           than other medical schools where you give 


                                                                   339

 1           some different pathways for students to 

 2           graduate.  How do you set that up?

 3                  DR. TERRY:  We have a problem-based 

 4           learning, so it would be a small group, eight 

 5           students small and one-to-eight faculty to 

 6           student ratio, where they learn the basic 

 7           sciences in the context of a case discussion, 

 8           as a doctor thinks, with a differential 

 9           diagnosis.  

10                  It's a very unique approach, but it 

11           better prepares them for the clinical setting 

12           but moreover prepares them very well for 

13           their boards.  Our pass rate was 96 percent, 

14           which is excellent for a new school, 

15           actually well above the national average.  So 

16           it's a very well vetted and well proven 

17           curriculum that we've used for about 25 years 

18           at LECOM.

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN FRIEND:  Well, again, 

20           thank you.  You've done wonders for the 

21           Southern Tier, and I hope that the model 

22           continues to grow throughout New York.

23                  DR. TERRY:  Thank you.

24                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.


                                                                   340

 1                  And I believe that comes to the end of 

 2           questioning for the three of you.  Thank you 

 3           very much --

 4                  PANELISTS:  Thank you.  

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  -- for being with 

 6           us this evening and for staying this late 

 7           with us. 

 8                  I'm going to call up Panel D, and 

 9           we're going to ask people on Panel E to also 

10           head down.

11                  Panel D has lost No. 8, Popular 

12           Democracy; they had to rush to something 

13           else.  So I am just calling up ACE!-Upstate 

14           Alliance for the Creative Economy, and the 

15           New York Film and Television Production 

16           Industry Council.  

17                  (Pause.)

18                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay, if you 

19           would just first introduce yourselves so the 

20           people in the booth behind know who is who 

21           when you go up on screen.

22                  Hi.  There's a sweet spot just above 

23           the "PUSH."  It's a real challenge to master 

24           these.


                                                                   341

 1                  MR. QUIÑONES:  I've got mine up.  I've 

 2           got mine on.

 3                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  You can't tap it, 

 4           just hold it down.

 5                  MR. QUIÑONES:  My name is Santiago 

 6           Quiñones.  It does say that I am with the 

 7           industry council, but I'm not here 

 8           representing the Production Council today, 

 9           I'm just here on my own volition.  I'm a line 

10           producer in New York, executive producer of 

11           television and film.

12                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

13                  MR. QUIÑONES:  And thank you.

14                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And you are?

15                  MR. ALDRICH:  I'll use this one.  So 

16           sorry about that.  It's my first time, I'm 

17           nervous.

18                  My name is Corey Aldrich.  I'm the 

19           current executive director of ACE!-Upstate 

20           Alliance for the Creative Economy, which is 

21           based out of Saratoga Springs, New York, and 

22           represents for- and not-for-profit 

23           stakeholders across the Capital Region.

24                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.


                                                                   342

 1                  And why don't you please start.  Thank 

 2           you.

 3                  MR. QUIÑONES:  Thank you.

 4                  So I'll just -- I'll tell you briefly 

 5           what a line producer does.  I'm sort of the 

 6           guy or the person that hires folks and also 

 7           does the budgeting and that sort of thing.  

 8                  And I've been doing producing in 

 9           New York for a long time.  I've been in the 

10           film industry for a very long time at this 

11           point.  And I have never seen the level or 

12           the lack of production coming to New York as 

13           I've seen in the last -- I would say in the 

14           last year or so, in the last few months.

15                  The last project I did was 

16           Blue Bloods.  We worked -- it was 15 years of 

17           employment for a lot of folks.  We -- I think 

18           about 90 percent of my crew is still calling 

19           me looking for work, about a thousand people 

20           that we hire.  

21                  And I feel, you know, one of -- first 

22           of all, I should have started by thanking you 

23           for this opportunity.  It feels like this is 

24           a great privilege to be able to express this 


                                                                   343

 1           situation that I'm not sure everybody's aware 

 2           of.   

 3                  And I want to leave you with a example 

 4           of something we did with a young man named 

 5           Martin P -- I'm not going to say his last 

 6           name.  His name is Martin.  He was a 

 7           stock boy at a supermarket.  We were filming 

 8           about 10 years ago in a supermarket in 

 9           Brooklyn, and Martin worked so hard that we 

10           hired him as a PA.  And then he worked up the 

11           ranks into the camera department and he 

12           became -- he got into the union, the 

13           Local 600 union, and he's today a 

14           gainfully -- I'm not sure he's gainfully 

15           employed because he's looking for work, but 

16           he's got a pension, he's got retirement, he's 

17           got a high-paying job when he gets the job.  

18           He's got three kids.  

19                  And we're very -- that's just one 

20           example of the kind of jobs that these 

21           incentives have brought.  So I have to thank 

22           you for even having an incentive in New York 

23           State.

24                  And with that, I can open up to some 


                                                                   344

 1           questions.

 2                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  -- use your last 

 3           minute?  Oh, no, you've lost it now.

 4                  MR. QUIÑONES:  I'm okay.  You've been 

 5           here long enough, and I want to thank you for 

 6           that, so --

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  That's okay.  

 8           Thank you.  

 9                  Sir?

10                  MR. ALDRICH:  Okay.  Well, basically, 

11           thank you again for allowing me to be here as 

12           well.  I'm going to leap right into it.

13                  Creative workers are force 

14           multipliers.  Where arts thrive, economic 

15           growth occurs.  There is a reason why real 

16           estate developers chase the hotspot locations 

17           of creative economy workers:  We are where 

18           everyone else wants to be.

19                  Arts and culture add value that is 

20           extended beyond the individual to the 

21           community, and is in fact a sustaining 

22           lifeblood of our economy, mental health and 

23           soul.

24                  I am here to help make the case that 


                                                                   345

 1           New York needs a statewide creative economy 

 2           plan.  And to urge you to allocate resources 

 3           to that end, I'll explore three key areas for 

 4           consideration.

 5                  One, art is work.  In the 

 6           Capital Region we have seen explosive growth 

 7           in that job sector.  From 2013 to 2023, there 

 8           was a 137 percent job growth in the 

 9           independent artists, writers and performers 

10           categories.  The nearest comparative 

11           non-creative economy industry analyzed was 

12           manufacturing coming in at only 11.4 percent.

13                  New York State is a creative economy 

14           leader and needs to have the proper 

15           investment to support this kind of dynamic 

16           growth.  Yet less than 5 percent of the 

17           state's major economic development grants 

18           flow to arts-related projects.  This needs to 

19           change.

20                  Art is also economic development.  

21           Artists and arts-based organizations know how 

22           to leverage resources into real value, 

23           included but not limited to economic value 

24           that impacts beyond themselves.  And I 


                                                                   346

 1           encourage you to look, in the documents I 

 2           provided, to the Saratoga County IDA study 

 3           that showed how SPAC as a single organization 

 4           was creating over $110 million in positive 

 5           economic impact in a single calendar year.

 6                  Arts and artists and the entrepreneurs 

 7           that create them are economic development.  

 8           We need strategic and consistent allocation 

 9           of resources to invest in this important part 

10           of New York's economy and, importantly, 

11           New York's identity as a world-class arts and 

12           cultural hub.

13                  Art is also health.  Countries across 

14           the world are moving to activate use of the 

15           arts to support health and well-being, saving 

16           on runaway healthcare costs and creating 

17           better quality of life, according to a recent 

18           study by the World Bank.

19                  In conclusion, the creative economy 

20           thrives in places with strong arts 

21           infrastructure.  That takes investment.  

22           Analysis shows that the creative economy is a 

23           prudent investment for New York and that we 

24           would be irresponsible not to consider that 


                                                                   347

 1           with a more robust funding and strategic plan 

 2           approach.

 3                  New York needs a statewide creative 

 4           economy plan.  I urge you to allocate 

 5           resources for an intergovernmental effort to 

 6           advance that initiative, and I thank you so 

 7           much.

 8                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  (Mic off; 

 9           inaudible.)  Oh, okay.  Assembly?

10                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Yes, 

11           Assemblyman Stirpe.

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Thank you, Chair.

13                  Santiago, can you talk a little bit -- 

14           I mean, you said you haven't seen I guess a 

15           slowdown like this in a while.  And can you 

16           tell us why you think that's happening?

17                  MR. QUIÑONES:  Sure.  Yes, I'd love 

18           to.  I think the fundamentals of the --

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Can you bring 

20           that a little closer to you?  There you go.

21                  MR. QUIÑONES:  So I think the -- so 

22           the first thing is we have currently a very 

23           good tax incentive, but it's not competitive.  

24                  There are states like Georgia that, 


                                                                   348

 1           you know, are sort of the model of what a 

 2           competitive is.  So for a long time we've got 

 3           a -- New York became a television town, and 

 4           Georgia became the movie town, because 

 5           Georgia had the above-the-line, the actors, 

 6           the writers and that sort of thing.

 7                  The business has changed 

 8           fundamentally.  We now have streamers that 

 9           want to have above-the-line -- you know, like 

10           Sylvester Stallone and big, big names.  And 

11           so in order to afford that, they can't afford 

12           coming to a place like New York which already 

13           has higher -- already has higher rates.

14                  New York's also part of the -- we are 

15           in the majors contract, the union contracts, 

16           where outside of New York places like 

17           Georgia, they're under the area standards 

18           contract.  Those are always 30 percent less 

19           on the wages, so we've got to compete.  So 

20           it's just an urgent -- urgency to get us to a 

21           competitive level.

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Let me ask you, 

23           all things being equal, would somebody pick 

24           New York to come and do their project other 


                                                                   349

 1           than Georgia or New Jersey or Connecticut?

 2                  MR. QUIÑONES:  I'm pretty confident.  

 3           There are many reasons that New York, if all 

 4           things are equal, New York's more efficient 

 5           to shoot in.  We have the best crews in 

 6           New York, we've trained up those crews, we 

 7           have the best locations in New York upstate, 

 8           downstate.  There's no matching New York for 

 9           beauty.  

10                  As far as I'm concerned -- I did 

11           locations in New York for many, many years 

12           and I've traveled all over the world, and I 

13           can tell you with full certainty that 

14           New York is a great place to shoot.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Okay.

16                  Corey, you say we need a statewide 

17           creative plan.  It's hard for us up here, 

18           unless somebody tells us how much is that 

19           gonna cost, that we can, you know, try to put 

20           something together.  And what are the 

21           components of coming up with this plan?

22                  MR. ALDRICH:  Well, I think, you know, 

23           this is a discussion that probably doesn't 

24           get resolved in an immediate conversation as 


                                                                   350

 1           simple as some of these other conversations.

 2                  But I think it's more of a methodology 

 3           that we need to begin to consider on how do 

 4           we wrap our hands around this $1 invested 

 5           yields back $7 to $9, and how can we 

 6           distribute that kind of resource allocation 

 7           equitably across the state?  That needs a 

 8           plan.  

 9                  There are several plans that have come 

10           out recently that give us some metrics, but 

11           do not compile them on a statewide level.

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Okay, thank you.

13                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 

14           Hooks.

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN HOOKS:  Good evening.  

16           And it really is evening.

17                  Okay, I just have a couple of 

18           questions for Santiago.

19                  MR. QUIÑONES:  Yes.

20                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN HOOKS:  How effective 

21           have film tax credits been in keeping 

22           productions in New York?

23                  MR. QUIÑONES:  In the past they've 

24           been very, very effective.  But predominantly 


                                                                   351

 1           for television, not films.  We get bits and 

 2           pieces of films here in New York.

 3                  I think when the upstate tax 

 4           enhancement came in, I think we started to 

 5           get a few more films and a few more 

 6           television shows.

 7                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN HOOKS:  What can the 

 8           state do to better compete with other states 

 9           trying to lure away film production?

10                  MR. QUIÑONES:  I think the core 

11           proposals that Governor Hochul has put 

12           forward would satisfy that requirement.

13                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN HOOKS:  And my last 

14           question is, what workforce development 

15           programs are needed to ensure more local 

16           hiring in the industry?

17                  MR. QUIÑONES:  That's a great 

18           question.  I'm actually involved in a panel 

19           tomorrow with Reel Works.  I think -- I think 

20           the unions in the last couple of years have 

21           been bringing folks in and they have been 

22           cooperating with Reel Works.  

23                  And I think it's a matter of 

24           sustaining the work here.  That I think 


                                                                   352

 1           eventually will then bring people up.  Sort 

 2           of like Martin.  You know, Martin -- Martin's 

 3           a great example of that, and that's why I 

 4           bring him up.

 5                  I feel like I'm a great example of 

 6           that.  I'm a New Yorker through and through, 

 7           born and raised on the Lower East Side.  I 

 8           went to Syracuse, my daughter's at Syracuse.  

 9           I love New York.  And I think I don't want to 

10           go to Los Angeles to work.

11                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN HOOKS:  Thank you.

12                  MR. QUIÑONES:  Thank you.

13                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 

14           Jackson.

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Thank you, 

16           Chair.  

17                  I'm a mom of an artist, so art is 

18           actually work.  And she's on Broadway, so I'm 

19           very happy for that.  

20                  I actually came from a CTE school in 

21           the city before I became a legislator, a 

22           social worker for a CTE school,  and we 

23           taught all the behind the scenes to creating 

24           film.  So I get your work.  I really 


                                                                   353

 1           appreciate it.  And I know how well the 

 2           industry needs good staffing.

 3                  My question is why -- similar to my 

 4           colleague, why -- why are we saying that film 

 5           is not growing here?  Is it because of taxes?  

 6           What's happening?

 7                  MR. QUIÑONES:  I think like -- look, I 

 8           haven't done a study, I just want to be clear 

 9           about that.  I'm a producer in New York.

10                  But what I've seen, in the 20-some-odd 

11           years that I've been doing this, is that the 

12           fundamentals of our business have changed 

13           dramatically, right?  

14                  So streaming, when it was -- when we 

15           were doing television shows here that were on 

16           the air that didn't have stars, that was 

17           cheaper, and below-the-line was covered with 

18           the incentive and all the reasons I brought 

19           up why shooting in New York is great was also 

20           in the equation.

21                  But now that the above-the-line has 

22           gone up in terms of studio spend, they're not 

23           considering New York.  

24                  So I think that that's why this 


                                                                   354

 1           above-the-line enhancement is going to make 

 2           us -- it's going to level the playing field 

 3           with anybody else out there.

 4                  I also think there's a chance with the 

 5           Production Plus to be a leader in the country 

 6           in terms of that sort of thing.

 7                  I hope I answered your question.

 8                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Well, the 

 9           streaming part, are we talking about like a 

10           Netflix-type streaming?

11                  MR. QUIÑONES:  Yeah, Netflix and 

12           Amazon, Apple -- but even Paramount.  They're 

13           all bringing in big names and big talent.  

14           And unfortunately, we need them to have the 

15           jobs.  Otherwise they won't be in New York.  

16                  I'm very clear on that, because 

17           normally this time of year I'm doing multiple 

18           budgets and talking to multiple people about 

19           certain deals, and that's not happening.  And 

20           it's disconcerting.

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Got it.  Thank 

22           you.  Thank you, Chair.

23                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 

24           Griffin.


                                                                   355

 1                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GRIFFIN:  Thank you, 

 2           Chair.

 3                  For Santiago, I find this very 

 4           interesting.  What -- with companies do you 

 5           have -- are there companies that they are -- 

 6           you're doing the work and then they leave?  

 7           Or is it just like a show gets canceled and 

 8           then a new show doesn't crop up?

 9                  MR. QUIÑONES:  It's a tricky question.  

10           I think there's a variation of that.  It's 

11           hard to retain some of the companies here.

12                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GRIFFIN:  Right.

13                  MR. QUIÑONES:  But when the company 

14           goes so it does the work -- I've never been 

15           in a business where -- I used to be in sales, 

16           you know?  And I've never been in a business 

17           where I'm actually in charge of spending and 

18           in charge of writing that check.  Which is a 

19           great privilege, but which is also scary at 

20           times.

21                  But the fact is that that money is 

22           spent.  You know, we spend it at the 

23           steakhouse.  I've said that when Blue Bloods 

24           gets canceled, there's going to be a 


                                                                   356

 1           recession in Greenpoint.  You know?  The 

 2           grocery stores, the hair cutting place, the 

 3           dry cleaners.  The steakhouse that we have 

 4           meetings every week at.  So those kinds of 

 5           things.

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GRIFFIN:  Was 

 7           Blue Bloods the last big show that you were 

 8           involved with?

 9                  MR. QUIÑONES:  Yes.

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GRIFFIN:  And that had a 

11           long run, actually.  I actually liked 

12           Blue Bloods myself.

13                  MR. QUIÑONES:  Mm-hmm.  Thank you.

14                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GRIFFIN:  So but with 

15           the streaming, it's amazing that with all the 

16           streaming, wouldn't there be some shows that 

17           would not be focused on big-name stars, 

18           just -- there just isn't, like they're not 

19           making those types of streaming shows.

20                  MR. QUIÑONES:  Probably in -- I'm 

21           sorry to interrupt.  But, you know, like I 

22           said, I'm not the expert on what the 

23           programming is and also what's in the 

24           development chain.


                                                                   357

 1                  I think that -- yes, you're absolutely 

 2           right, there can be some shows that don't 

 3           require those things, and hopefully we'll get 

 4           back to that because then we'll have more 

 5           shows and it's cheaper, you know.  

 6                  But the thing I'm afraid of is that 

 7           when the work goes away, that crew base also 

 8           gets trained somewhere else.

 9                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GRIFFIN:  Right.

10                  MR. QUIÑONES:  I also know that for 

11           many years -- I worked abroad for seven 

12           years.  I didn't want to work abroad.  It 

13           sounds very glamorous but there used to be a 

14           reason why I would get hired.  It was an 

15           American representing an American company 

16           abroad.  These days they're very comfortable 

17           with the -- whoever they're hiring abroad.  

18           Plus their incentives incentivize them to 

19           hire their -- whoever it is, in Canada or 

20           wherever it is.

21                  So I think that's the real danger 

22           here, is that we're going to lose that crew 

23           base --

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GRIFFIN:  Right.  Right.  


                                                                   358

 1           Which is such a real professional skill base 

 2           here.

 3                  Now, Georgia is a big competitor or 

 4           has taken business away.  What other states 

 5           are --

 6                  MR. QUIÑONES:  New Jersey, 

 7           Massachusetts.  There used to be some in the 

 8           South.  I think Texas has got a new tax 

 9           incentive that's coming -- that's been 

10           enhanced as well.

11                  But those are the big ones.  Georgia 

12           is the model, if I were to model that, yeah.

13                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GRIFFIN:  Right.  And do 

14           you think the proposals that Governor Hochul 

15           has made will change things in a positive 

16           direction?

17                  MR. QUIÑONES:  Absolutely.  I'm pretty 

18           impressed by the fact that a Governor has put 

19           that forward, yeah.

20                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GRIFFIN:  Well, thank 

21           you very much.

22                  MR. QUIÑONES:  Thank you.

23                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  A quick -- just a 

24           quick question.  I'm a little -- I'm a little 


                                                                   359

 1           confused about this above-the-line and 

 2           below-the-line.  You say that above-the-line 

 3           is making it more expensive.  Is that because 

 4           the stars are also producers and, you know, 

 5           it's always your executive producers as well 

 6           as stars so they're getting paid twice and 

 7           one gets the subsidy and one doesn't and 

 8           it --

 9                  MR. QUIÑONES:  I'm not so sure that 

10           that is the game that's being played here, 

11           that somebody's trying to game it that way.  

12           I'm not implying that you're saying that.

13                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  No, because I've 

14           noticed, every show I've watched -- you 

15           brought up Blue Bloods.  You know, Tom 

16           Selleck was the executive producer as well as 

17           the star and that's --

18                  MR. QUIÑONES:  Yes, there's a good 

19           reason for that.  What they want is control 

20           over the creative.  They want control over 

21           the writing and over their own image, you 

22           know, with what's being put forward, they 

23           want control of editing. 

24                  So it's not so much about the money, 


                                                                   360

 1           it's about what kind of control that gives 

 2           you.  And so that's the nature of that piece.  

 3           I can't speak for every show, obviously.  

 4                  But when I say "above the line," I 

 5           mean the writers -- we had all our writers 

 6           that lived here in New York and spent their 

 7           money here and had their kids here and go to 

 8           school here.  Our editors, you know, they 

 9           were all here, post-production, those kinds 

10           of things.

11                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Okay.  Because I 

12           know that they are filming in New York.  I 

13           mean, the filming of Raising Kane or Raising 

14           Kanan or, right outside my office all the 

15           time in Mount Vernon, some serious -- you 

16           know.  

17                  But they really don't do much shopping 

18           in the neighborhood, they bring their own 

19           food truck and they've got a lot of people 

20           cued up in the parking lot, they do their 

21           thing, get in their cars and they leave.

22                  MR. QUIÑONES:  Yeah.  But they 

23           probably spent money at the local church.  I 

24           hope they did a donation, because they should 


                                                                   361

 1           have given a donation --

 2                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Well, the city 

 3           charges them to close the streets, that's 

 4           about it.

 5                  MR. QUIÑONES:  Yeah, but they should 

 6           do a donation.  And if they don't, I'd like 

 7           to call them up.

 8                  (Overtalk.)

 9                  MR. QUIÑONES:  There's police that's 

10           hired.  You know, the local police is hired, 

11           the police chief.  And there's money spread 

12           around.  I'm sure the food -- I'm sure you 

13           hear from the retailers and that sort of 

14           thing and they're complaining, but there's 

15           also loss of business that we'd pay out 

16           whenever we impact a business.

17                  Those things that only get calculated 

18           when anybody considers what kind of money is 

19           being given back.  But things do happen.  I 

20           mean, we spend it.

21                  We also buy fuel in the area when 

22           we're there.  We park, so we pay for parking.  

23           I mean, individual parking, right?  There's 

24           tolls that go to New York State.  And now 


                                                                   362

 1           congestion pricing.  

 2                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  And you're saying 

 3           that the Governor's proposal is something 

 4           that you could live with or it would be --

 5                  MR. QUIÑONES:  I don't want to speak 

 6           for everybody.  I'm impressed by it.  I am 

 7           impressed that it would be a vanguard in the 

 8           industry, and it's -- the Production Plus is 

 9           impressive.

10                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Okay.  And does the 

11           community make any money if the production 

12           only does exteriors?

13                  MR. QUIÑONES:  Yes.

14                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  So they'll do the 

15           exteriors, but they'll do all the filming in 

16           Toronto, but they'll shoot the outside of a 

17           building in New York and call it a New York 

18           scene.

19                  MR. QUIÑONES:  Right.  So that -- that 

20           is --

21                  (Time clock sounds.)

22                  MR. QUIÑONES:  I can get back to you 

23           on that.  I've been here long enough to know 

24           you can say that.


                                                                   363

 1                  (Laughter.)

 2                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you.

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

 4                  All right, with that, we're going to 

 5           thank both gentlemen for staying with us 

 6           through tonight.

 7                  MR. QUIÑONES:  Thank you.  This is a 

 8           great privilege.  This is my first time doing 

 9           it.

10                  MR. ALDRICH:  Thank you so much.

11                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Oh, I'm sorry.  

12                  Assemblywoman Shimsky.

13                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Excuse me, you 

14           don't get away.

15                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Sorry.  Sorry.

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  His fault.

17                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  My fault.

18                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SHIMSKY:  Thank you, 

19           Mr. Chairman.

20                  I wanted to talk to Mr. Quiñones 

21           first.  I represent Yonkers and Hastings, and 

22           we are seeing a lot of expansion in terms of 

23           land use with film and television production.

24                  Is that -- so I assume that we're 


                                                                   364

 1           really an outlier?  Or is there something 

 2           else here that needs to be seen?

 3                  MR. QUIÑONES:  So when you say 

 4           expansion, I think you're talking about 

 5           footprint of studios, right?

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SHIMSKY:  Yes.  Yes.

 7                  MR. QUIÑONES:  Those are private 

 8           investors or supplier speculators who built 

 9           those studios.  But they also rely on the 

10           films to come, and that doesn't always 

11           happen.  

12                  So they've put a great -- you know, 

13           whether it's borrowed money or whatever it 

14           is, they've invested in that.  And we'd like 

15           to see them stay, for sure.  It's a great 

16           thing.  And that's because of the enhancement 

17           that was done for upstate.

18                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SHIMSKY:  Okay.

19                  MR. QUIÑONES:  Right?  So --

20                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SHIMSKY:  Okay.

21                  MR. QUIÑONES:  And thank you for 

22           pronouncing my name correctly.

23                  (Laughter.)

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SHIMSKY:  Also is 


                                                                   365

 1           post-production a big part of the sector in 

 2           New York, or does that work tend to go to 

 3           other places?

 4                  MR. QUIÑONES:  So pre-COVID we saw 

 5           that incentive working the way it should.  

 6           Post-COVID got a little tricky.

 7                  But I know that shows do require their 

 8           folks here -- because when that person works 

 9           in Los Angeles or wherever they may work, we 

10           don't get that money back.  So -- or when I 

11           say "we," I mean the show doesn't get that 

12           money, that tax incentive money back.

13                  So in the case of Blue Bloods, we did 

14           all our post work here, including the 

15           processing of -- the digital processing and 

16           that sort of thing.

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SHIMSKY:  Is there a 

18           chance that with the result of the wildfires 

19           we might see more post-production moving out 

20           here?  I happen to say that because I know a 

21           film editor who lost her house.

22                  MR. QUIÑONES:  No, it's a very, very 

23           sad situation.  I know a lot of people that 

24           have been affected by it.


                                                                   366

 1                  I can't speculate on that.  I do -- 

 2           you know, the work has become more remote and 

 3           off of a laptop more than it ever has been.  

 4           But I think when the work comes here, it 

 5           brings that in with it, because there is an 

 6           incentive, there's a large incentive to 

 7           bring -- to keep post here in New York.  At 

 8           least I've seen it on day-to-day when we were 

 9           doing budgeting.

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SHIMSKY:  Okay.  Thank 

11           you to you.  Thank you, Mr. Aldrich.  You're 

12           doing such wonderful, visionary things by 

13           coming here and making us think about these 

14           things.  And I hope that we'll be able to 

15           continue to move forward, because New York 

16           has always been a great arts place and now we 

17           need to do -- to move into the next century.

18                  MR. QUIÑONES:  Well, I'm pretty 

19           impressed by how late and how hard you all 

20           work, so this is my first time seeing this.  

21           Thank you so much.

22                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SHIMSKY:  Thank you.

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

24                  Now I'm going to excuse you, and I am 


                                                                   367

 1           going to call up Panel E.  We'll see how many 

 2           people are left.  I know by now often people 

 3           have had to leave.

 4                  So I think we are calling 

 5           Rachael Lorimer, Studio OSYARI; 

 6           Rafael Espinal, from Freelancers Union; 

 7           Sarah Calderon, from Creatives Rebuild 

 8           New York; Gully Stanford, the replacement for 

 9           William Jones, New York State Alliance for 

10           Arts Education; Candace Thompson-Zachery, 

11           DanceNYC; and Elizabeth Lane, ArtsNYS.

12                  And we've got a pile of people here, 

13           so maybe they really did all stay.

14                  Good evening.  Okay, six for six.  

15           Very impressive.  Okay, we're going to start 

16           at the right side.  You're just going to say 

17           your name first so the folks who are still up 

18           there in the booth -- they're still alive -- 

19           know what name to put with what picture.

20                  Please.

21                  MS. SWAN:  Good evening.  I am 

22           Jen Swan, and I am with ArtsNYS, in place of 

23           Elizabeth Lane for ArtsNYS.

24                  MS. THOMPSON-ZACHERY:  Candace 


                                                                   368

 1           Thompson-Zachery, DanceNYC, co-executive 

 2           director.

 3                  MR. ESPINAL:  Rafael Espinal, 

 4           president of Freelancers Union, former 

 5           State Assemblymember.

 6                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Right.  I knew he 

 7           looked familiar.

 8                  MS. CALDERONE:  Sarah Calderone, the 

 9           executive director of Creatives Rebuild 

10           New York.

11                  MS. LORIMER:  I'm Rachael Lorimer, I'm 

12           an independent artist and owner of a small 

13           print shop called Studio OSYARI in Troy, 

14           New York.

15                  MR. STANFORD:  Good evening.  Gully 

16           Stanford from Dutchess County, representing 

17           the New York State Alliance for Arts 

18           Education.

19                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

20                  So now we're going to go back to my 

21           right and start there, and you're each going 

22           to go down.  And you press the button until 

23           it turns green; it's a little challenging.

24                  Okay.


                                                                   369

 1                  MS. SWAN:  Good evening, everyone.  I 

 2           am Jen Swan.  I am actually the director of 

 3           Arts Services, Inc., of Western New York, in 

 4           Buffalo, but I'm here tonight representing 

 5           ArtsNYS as the president.

 6                  ArtsNYS wants to thank the Governor, 

 7           the Senate and the Assembly for your ongoing 

 8           leadership and support for the millions of 

 9           artists, designers, and the creative economy 

10           in New York State. 

11                  We urge the Legislature to invest in 

12           the arts and fund NYSCA at $200 million.  

13           This investment supports over 1600 

14           organizations and thousands of artists 

15           through direct NYSCA grants who then fuel 

16           local business spending, drive tourism, and 

17           enhance the quality of life for all 

18           New Yorkers.

19                  We also support NYSCA's Statewide 

20           Community Regrant Program, which was 

21           discussed earlier, which empowers local arts 

22           councils to distribute grants through a local 

23           decision-making process, ensuring that state 

24           arts funding reaches communities in all 


                                                                   370

 1           62 counties, especially to those counties 

 2           that don't receive direct NYSCA support.

 3                  The arts are more than part of 

 4           New York's identity; they're a pillar of our 

 5           economy, delivering a powerful return on 

 6           investment.  And let me give you some 

 7           examples of that.  The arts contribute 

 8           151 billion annually to New York's economy, 

 9           accounting for 7.4 percent of the gross state 

10           product and employing over 461,000 people.

11                  In my region of Western New York 

12           specifically, the nonprofit arts sector 

13           generates $381 million annually and supports 

14           over 8,200 jobs.  This produces $22.5 million 

15           in state tax revenue.  That's more than six 

16           times the amount of what the Western New York 

17           region receives in NYSCA funding.

18                  On the other side of the state, on 

19           Long Island, arts organizations generate 

20           $330 million and return $12.4 million in 

21           state tax revenue -- five times the amount 

22           the region receives from NYSCA.

23                  This investment in NYSCA pays for 

24           itself many times over, not only financial 


                                                                   371

 1           but also through job consideration creation 

 2           and encouraging residents to stay here and 

 3           others to call New York State their new home.  

 4           We talked about this earlier, but when Micron 

 5           chose Central New York for its $100 billion 

 6           semiconductor facility, they cited the 

 7           region's vibrant arts scene as a key factor 

 8           in their decision.

 9                  In every region of the state, artist 

10           populations have been rising, even in regions 

11           where the total population is going down.  

12           The Mohawk Valley artist population has grown 

13           over 49 percent, and in the Capital Region 

14           and in the North Country, by over 41 percent.

15                  In closing, we support the creation of 

16           a creative economy plan in New York State as 

17           well, to explore innovations in culture 

18           funding and assess potential new revenue 

19           streams.  At a time when corporate, federal 

20           and private arts funding is retreating, 

21           New York State must continue to be the 

22           leader.

23                  The Leg has the power to secure 

24           New York's creative future.  By funding NYSCA 


                                                                   372

 1           at 200 million, you will ensure that the arts 

 2           continue to drive economic growth and ensure 

 3           that every New Yorker has access to art.

 4                  Thank you.

 5                  MS. THOMPSON-ZACHERY:  Thank you for 

 6           your time today.  My name -- you already know 

 7           my name.  I work at Dance/NYC, which is a 

 8           service organization for the dance industry 

 9           in the New York City metro area.  

10                  So I'm here to make the case for a 

11           statewide creative economy plan to 

12           strategically build a stronger safety net for 

13           our workers, and to create new revenue 

14           streams for arts and culture, to support the 

15           200 million budget allocation for NYSCA to 

16           support organizations, individuals and 

17           localities, to support arts and dance 

18           education by passing S285/A1502 bills to 

19           ensure that the next generation has access to 

20           dance, music and the arts, and finally to 

21           support Bill A2607 to increase resources for 

22           culturally diverse arts and culture 

23           organizations.

24                  2025 has only intensified challenges 


                                                                   373

 1           for the arts and dance industries, while we 

 2           are still grappling with the pandemic's 

 3           impact on our economic model and on how our 

 4           schools and communities engage with and 

 5           support the arts.  These new challenges 

 6           include a disastrous federal climate and 

 7           rhetoric turned policy that attacks DEI and 

 8           LGBTQIA+ rights and equity-centered 

 9           practices.  And above all, the arts continue 

10           to be infantilized, seen as something extra 

11           rather than essential.

12                  In times of instability we need our 

13           local governments to be leaders, to step up, 

14           to fill gaps and to create solutions that 

15           safeguard us now and against future threats.  

16           The arts, dance and its workers deserve their 

17           due.  What we bring to society has real 

18           value, value that must be backed by dollar 

19           signs.  

20                  Sixty-four percent of New York City 

21           dance workers fund their own work from their 

22           pockets, earning 24 percent below New York 

23           City's living wage; 40 percent of dance 

24           organizations report weak or very weak 


                                                                   374

 1           financial health, while reliance on 

 2           contributed income is rising; 37 percent of 

 3           dance workers lack medical coverage, and 

 4           82 percent are not unionized; and statewide, 

 5           41 percent of artists report that they are 

 6           one medical emergency away from crisis.

 7                  With our workforce being mostly 

 8           freelance, we are particularly vulnerable, 

 9           and New York must meet them where they're at 

10           through strong funding, creative economy 

11           planning, and arts education policy.

12                  There are real solutions to be had for 

13           funding if we look to other jurisdictions.  

14           Minnesota passed a constitutional amendment 

15           creating a 3/8th percent sales tax, 

16           permanently funding its arts and cultural 

17           heritage fund.  A local government in 

18           Northern California is rethinking how to use 

19           publicly owned vacant buildings to regenerate 

20           new revenue for its arts and culture 

21           programs, and New York is not short on 

22           options.  But failing to act means neglecting 

23           a very powerful revenue-generating industry 

24           and its impactful community leaders who are 


                                                                   375

 1           fighting social isolation, fostering social 

 2           and emotional learning, and elevating 

 3           diverse, rich cultures.  

 4                  Thank you.

 5                  MR. ESPINAL:  Good evening, 

 6           Chairpersons Krueger, Pretlow and members of 

 7           the committee.  My name is Rafael Espinal, 

 8           and I am the president of the 

 9           Freelancers Union.  

10                  Thank you for the opportunity to allow 

11           me to speak today on behalf of the union and 

12           the over 150,000 self-employed workers we 

13           represent across the state -- especially the 

14           creative professionals who are the heartbeat 

15           of our state's economy and culture.  From 

16           artists, writers and photographers to 

17           musicians, designers and so many more, these 

18           workers drive billions in revenue and give 

19           New York its unique energy and vibrancy.

20                  Just last August we celebrated a 

21           historic victory with the "Freelance Isn't 

22           Free" Act.  Thanks to the leadership of 

23           Senator Andrew Gounardes and Assemblyman 

24           Harry Bronson, we secured vital protections 


                                                                   376

 1           for freelance creatives, making New York one 

 2           of the first states in the country to 

 3           safeguard workers from nonpayment.  This was 

 4           a huge win, and we should be proud, but we 

 5           all know that that fight doesn't end there.

 6                  Alongside Sarah Calderon and the 

 7           incredible team at Creatives Rebuild 

 8           New York, we are pushing for a statewide 

 9           creative economy plan because too many 

10           creatives are being pushed out of the state, 

11           squeezed by skyrocketing living costs and 

12           unstable income.  

13                  Creative workers, like so many in our 

14           state, are denied the basic protections -- 

15           healthcare, paid leave, retirement savings 

16           should not be viewed as luxuries but as 

17           necessities.  A recent survey from Creatives 

18           Rebuild New York revealed that 41 percent of 

19           artists in New York are just one medical 

20           emergency away from financial ruin.

21                  This isn't just a statistic, it's a 

22           crisis we can no longer ignore.  When I 

23           became president of the Freelancers Union 

24           five years ago, I saw firsthand how fragile 


                                                                   377

 1           our system was, especially when the pandemic 

 2           hit.  It exposed just how vulnerable 

 3           freelancers are without a safety net, but it 

 4           also showed us what's possible.  When we 

 5           advocated for pandemic unemployment 

 6           assistance, we were able to extend benefits 

 7           to independent workers for the first time in 

 8           this state's and country's history.  It 

 9           proved that with the right policies we can 

10           protect workers and lift up the most 

11           vulnerable.

12                  But we need more than just temporary 

13           fixes.  All workers need a system that works 

14           for them no matter where their next job comes 

15           from.  This is why portable benefits are so 

16           critical.  No one should have to worry about 

17           not being able to afford healthcare or paid 

18           time off or how to build retirement savings.  

19           Benefits should follow the worker, not the 

20           job.  

21                  This is about fairness, dignity and 

22           building a system that works for all workers 

23           in New York.  It's a smart American solution 

24           to an urgent problem.  We've made important 


                                                                   378

 1           strides, but the work is far from finished.  

 2           This Legislature has taken significant steps 

 3           to expand benefits for creative workers, but 

 4           we now must complete the job.  

 5                  I urge the Legislature to fund and 

 6           implement a statewide creative economy plan 

 7           that includes portable benefits for all 

 8           New Yorkers -- for all workers in New York.  

 9           Investing in the future of our creative 

10           economy isn't just an economic decision,  

11           it's an investment in the very soul of 

12           New York.

13                  Thank you all.

14                  MS. CALDERON:  Good evening, and thank 

15           you for having us this evening.  

16                  I'll skip some of the data that's 

17           already been repeated over and over again.

18                  Creatives Rebuild New York for the 

19           past three years has provided 2700 artists 

20           with guaranteed income and with jobs.  And 

21           then also did a survey for 13,000 artists, 

22           and that's where a lot of this data is coming 

23           from.

24                  I'll skip to the part about sort of 


                                                                   379

 1           the creative economy plan.  So we believe 

 2           that a statewide creative economy plan can 

 3           help government study new opportunities to 

 4           address the needs of creative organizations, 

 5           businesses and workers, and include concrete, 

 6           coordinated proposals for new investments, 

 7           programs and legislative initiatives.

 8                  New York will not be alone in this 

 9           endeavor.  Washington, Illinois, Delaware, 

10           Massachusetts and California have these 

11           plans.  California passed legislation to 

12           formalize its creative economy planning 

13           process.  Supported by a legislative 

14           appropriation of a million dollars, they have 

15           a working group that's mandated to draw upon 

16           cross-sector expertise, including 

17           representation from county and city 

18           associations, multiple arts disciplines, 

19           higher education institutions, state economic 

20           and workforce development agencies, a 

21           federally recognized Indian tribe, and other 

22           relevant parties.

23                  New York's plan can take a 

24           cross-sector approach, and the plan can 


                                                                   380

 1           identify opportunities to expand benefits and 

 2           labor protections for creative workers, as 

 3           Rafael mentioned; portable benefits pilots; 

 4           new existing ways to use existing economic 

 5           development tools -- so increasing funding 

 6           for economic development projects that 

 7           integrate arts and culture; opportunities to 

 8           build a strong pipeline for creative workers 

 9           to access quality jobs; creating artist 

10           employment programs to address environmental, 

11           health and safety needs in communities; 

12           potential innovations in arts and cultural 

13           funding, as Candace mentioned, creating new 

14           revenue streams for arts and culture and 

15           opportunities to ensure creative New Yorkers 

16           can meet their basic needs; incentivizing the 

17           development of affordable housing in places 

18           in New York with high concentrations of 

19           creative workers.

20                  A statewide creative economy plan 

21           should be supplemented by increased funding 

22           for NYSCA:  A budget of $200 million, which 

23           includes $150 million for programming and 

24           $50 million for capital.


                                                                   381

 1                  These investments will help further 

 2           the activities needed in a statewide creative 

 3           economy plan.  Advancing these policies and 

 4           strategies in an integrated, coordinated way 

 5           is a more cost-efficient approach than 

 6           piecemeal solutions.  

 7                  We are grateful for the organizations 

 8           standing with us today and those that 

 9           provided written testimony, including the 

10           Creative States Coalition, New Yorkers for 

11           Culture and Arts; Entertainment Community 

12           Fund; Black Artists Collective; and 

13           Henry Street Settlement.

14                  Thank you.

15                  MS. LORIMER:  Thank you.  My name is 

16           Rachael Lorimer.  I'm a painter and 

17           printmaker and earned my BFA from the 

18           Cooper Union in 2006.  I'm a homeowner and 

19           small business owner, operating a printmaking 

20           studio in downtown Troy, where I live with my 

21           husband and son.

22                  I'm also here to help make the case 

23           that New York needs a statewide creative 

24           economy plan and urge you to allocate 


                                                                   382

 1           resources to advance this work and to support 

 2           sustainable employment for artists.

 3                  So what do artists even do?  It's a 

 4           big variety.  I am here today as an artist to 

 5           share just one example of what our work can 

 6           entail and look like.  In 2022, CRNY's Artist 

 7           Employment Program established a framework 

 8           for my employment as an artist in a non-arts 

 9           organization, to our mutual benefit.  Our 

10           project also received additional funding from 

11           NYSCA's Statewide Community Regrant Program.

12                  Our community development and arts 

13           partnership addressed housing challenges in 

14           Hillside North, a long disinvested 

15           neighborhood in Troy negatively impacted by 

16           redlining, the continued loss of employment 

17           opportunities, and physical fracturing by the 

18           DOT's development of the Collar City Bridge 

19           in the 1970s.

20                  Our partnership amplified the voices 

21           of Hillside North residents by exploring 

22           their relationship to their homes and 

23           community.  We built trust and engagement 

24           through interviews, with group conversations 


                                                                   383

 1           with neighbors, intergenerational arts 

 2           programming, and over 300 voluntary hours 

 3           from residents of all ages.  We leveraged 

 4           music and art to center community voice as a 

 5           true and valid historical record, and invited 

 6           residents to view themselves as agents of 

 7           change in their neighborhood.

 8                  We curated space for nuanced 

 9           listening, tolerance, and reclaiming 

10           ownership of their neighborhood story and 

11           identity.  This is how you build belonging.

12                  CRNY's Artist Employment Program 

13           provides a glimpse of what could be 

14           accomplished with consistent employment 

15           opportunities and statewide recognition of 

16           our impact as a creative workforce.  It 

17           offers a roadmap for government agencies and 

18           community-based organizations to explore 

19           extended partnership with artists in 

20           addressing shared goals.  

21                  Our creative work is often aligned 

22           with government efforts to address 

23           environmental, health and safety issues in 

24           our communities, particularly gun violence.  


                                                                   384

 1           Artists and culture workers are a grossly 

 2           underutilized workforce.  We interpret and 

 3           evaluate our world in ways that increase 

 4           civic engagement and community investment.

 5                  I urge you to support a statewide 

 6           creative economy plan, including a 

 7           feasibility and benefits analysis of artists 

 8           employment programs.  We're specifically 

 9           trained to create something from nothing, an 

10           incredibly critical skill set in a time of 

11           rapid change.  We encourage you to examine 

12           the ongoing investment and contribution from 

13           artists and our role in sustaining an 

14           economically robust, safe and vibrant 

15           New York.

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

17                  And last but not least.

18                  MR. STANFORD:  Thank you.  Esteemed 

19           chairs, honorable legislators, on behalf of 

20           the New York State Alliance for Arts 

21           Education, we wish to lend our voice to the 

22           chorus you have heard of creative advocates 

23           urging you to support the $200 million 

24           appropriation to the New York State Council 


                                                                   385

 1           on the Arts.  

 2                  We also endorse your embracing the 

 3           proposal to create a cultural economic plan 

 4           for the state.  

 5                  While acknowledging that advocating 

 6           for a state investment in public education 

 7           through the education budget remains our 

 8           priority, as the New York State Alliance for 

 9           Arts Education we appreciate the opportunity 

10           to testify to the immense value that NYSCA 

11           funding brings to key intersections between 

12           the informal world of community artists and 

13           the formal world of lifelong arts education.

14                  Firstly, community collaborations 

15           deliver hundreds of enrichment programs to 

16           millions of lifelong learners in our schools, 

17           colleges and trade schools.  As you know, the 

18           New York Regents are in the process of 

19           adopting new pathways to post-secondary 

20           success, the Portrait of a Graduate whose 

21           success will depend in large part on such 

22           collaborations.

23                  Secondly, as the artistic capital of 

24           the United States, we must sustain a pipeline 


                                                                   386

 1           of talent in every arts discipline to ensure 

 2           the continued health of our creative economy 

 3           and equality of opportunity for all our 

 4           creative learners.  Recent budgets have 

 5           rightfully singled out Broadway and the film  

 6           industry for key support.  But without arts 

 7           education, that pipeline of talent will fail.  

 8           Such talent sparks the intrinsic human link 

 9           to the creative workforce and blossoming 

10           communities which we all celebrate, nurtured 

11           by the grants that your NYSCA appropriations 

12           provide.

13                  As the Governor puts it, "New York's 

14           creative sector is a key driver of economic 

15           growth that employs hundreds of thousands of 

16           New Yorkers."

17                  We're grateful to you and to the 

18           Governor for your efforts to restore and 

19           expand arts funding, including the 

20           implementation of the Arts Pluribus Unum 

21           Fellowship Program; additional staffing, as 

22           the Governor proposes, for NYSCA; and 

23           enactment of the state's first Regions of 

24           Cultural Significance bill.  


                                                                   387

 1                  We join our colleagues in recognizing 

 2           that it is only through strategic 

 3           partnerships between school-based and 

 4           community-based arts programming that 

 5           New York can ensure the ongoing effectiveness 

 6           of the pipeline which grows our own artistic 

 7           talent, trains our desperately needed arts 

 8           teachers, and engenders a cultural literacy 

 9           and primacy for which the Empire State is 

10           known and admired across the globe.

11                  Finally, in the shadow of looming 

12           federal cuts, the arts offer growth, 

13           stability and sanity.  The arts in New York 

14           are the geese that lay the golden eggs.

15                  Thank you.

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

17                  Well, there's no Senators to look for, 

18           so how about Assemblymembers?

19                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblyman Stirpe.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Thank you.

21                  Let me direct this to Sarah.  I know 

22           in the program that, you know, Creatives 

23           Rebuild New York established, you got most of 

24           your money through foundations.  And what 


                                                                   388

 1           you're looking for now, I think, is like more 

 2           of a public/private partnership, where the 

 3           state contributes some, the foundations or 

 4           whoever else will also contribute to that.

 5                  Do you have a budget of how much that 

 6           would all cost?

 7                  MS. CALDERON:  Sure.  CRNY was 

 8           established during the Reimagine New York 

 9           Commission and then funded with a 

10           $125 million investment from the Ford, 

11           Niarchos and Mellon foundations.

12                  And I think for sustainability and 

13           really thinking about how to make this work 

14           stick, right, we demonstrated that guaranteed 

15           income for artists worked, we demonstrated 

16           that artists' employment worked.  

17                  We are looking for a public-private 

18           partnership.  California did invest a million 

19           dollars in their creative economy plan.  But 

20           I think that the state could do something 

21           that's maybe not quite -- you know, we have a 

22           lot of data across the state.  It's a lot 

23           about gathering it and then talking to 

24           appropriate people and thinking about sort of 


                                                                   389

 1           how to roll out that plan.  But I think that 

 2           you could think about something sort of half 

 3           of that.  That might be more appropriate.

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Five hundred 

 5           thousand dollars.

 6                  MS. CALDERON:  Five hundred thousand.

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Okay, thank you.  

 8                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 

 9           Shimsky.

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SHIMSKY:  Thank you very 

11           much.  And thanks to all of you.

12                  My younger child was a dance major.  I 

13           cannot imagine how dancers can go without 

14           health insurance.  

15                  Now, that leads into the whole concept 

16           of portable benefits.  I assume there may be 

17           different models in different locations, but 

18           what are some of the possibilities for 

19           structuring a portable benefits program for a 

20           large number of disparate workers?

21                  MS. CALDERON:  I'll start, and then I 

22           think Rafael knows quite a bit about this 

23           subject as well.

24                  When we had -- when CRNY ran our 


                                                                   390

 1           Artists Employment Program, we had 300 

 2           artists employed; 170 of them were part of a 

 3           portable benefits platform called Tribeworks.  

 4           Tribeworks held the employment, the W-2 

 5           employment, all of the insurance, and 

 6           provided healthcare benefits for small 

 7           organizations that could not do that.  That 

 8           was part of a requirement of the funding.  In 

 9           order to make it happen, we worked with 

10           Tribeworks.

11                  Tribeworks also was able to take 

12           1099 workers and take all of their 1099s from 

13           various jobs and then convert them to W-2 

14           employment and provide benefits as well.  

15                  But then there are other models out 

16           there as well, like Stride Health has been 

17           working with DoorDash and Uber, and they've 

18           been providing what they're also calling 

19           portable benefits, but it doesn't come with 

20           any worker protections.  But it does come 

21           with sort of portable savings accounts that 

22           folks can use for their benefits.

23                  And CRNY in the next -- before June is 

24           doing a sort of small feasibility study of 


                                                                   391

 1           what the options for creative workers could 

 2           be.

 3                  But Rafael?

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SHIMSKY:  You have a 

 5           minute and six seconds.

 6                  MR. ESPINAL:  I think Sarah had a lot 

 7           of great points, especially overseeing them 

 8           on the private side.

 9                  But on the public side, right, 

10           government already has done some of this 

11           work, right?  Here in the State of New York, 

12           we do have a paid leave program in which 

13           independent workers, which includes creatives 

14           and artists, can pay into in order to take 

15           paid family leave to take care of a sick 

16           family member for themselves.

17                  So how do we replicate those models 

18           and expand that to retirement, looking at 

19           healthcare -- of course we have our own 

20           healthcare system that exists, but you can 

21           talk to a lot of artists, healthcare truly is 

22           not affordable for a lot of folks.  We can 

23           look at the unemployment program that I 

24           mentioned earlier, pandemic unemployment 


                                                                   392

 1           assistance, right?  That was a government-led 

 2           program that for the first time freelancers 

 3           and artists were able to tap into 

 4           unemployment insurance.

 5                  So really looking at those models, 

 6           finding a way in which independent workers 

 7           and their clients can pay into so that at the 

 8           end of the day when they need to tap into 

 9           that, they have access to those programs.

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SHIMSKY:  Okay, great.

11                  Six seconds.  Mr. Jones, one day we 

12           are going to have to meet.

13                  (Laughter.)

14                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 

15           Hooks.

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN HOOKS:  Good evening, 

17           everyone.  My questions are for 

18           Rafael Espinal.

19                  One is what legislative changes can 

20           help freelancers get better protections, 

21           especially in creative industries?

22                  MR. ESPINAL:  What legislative 

23           protections?  Well, you know, just last year 

24           we passed the "Freelance isn't Free" Act.  


                                                                   393

 1           That created nonpayment protections for 

 2           independent workers for the first time in the 

 3           State of New York.  And the State of New York 

 4           became one of the first three states in the 

 5           country, just last year, to do that.

 6                  We mentioned earlier portable 

 7           benefits, right?  How do we create paid leave 

 8           or a paid leave model looking at the 

 9           unemployment insurance program and expanding 

10           that to include independent workers.

11                  We look at the retirement, right, the 

12           state passed the Secure Choice Act, I think 

13           that's the name of the program.  Right?  It 

14           does not currently include independent 

15           workers or creatives.  How do we expand that 

16           to include those folks as well?

17                  So as I mentioned, there are a few 

18           models and I'd love to talk more about that 

19           with you, of how we can do that 

20           legislatively.

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN HOOKS:  Great, thank 

22           you.  And the second question, last question, 

23           is what policies can help ensure fair pay and 

24           legal protections for gig workers?


                                                                   394

 1                  MR. ESPINAL:  (Pause.)  It's a very 

 2           tough, complicated question, right?  And, I 

 3           mean, there -- I think that it's become a 

 4           very convoluted conversation because there is 

 5           app-based work.  There are professional 

 6           independent workers who are out there on 

 7           their own, building their client base.  You 

 8           have the creatives who -- dancers and workers 

 9           who are out in their industries securing 

10           jobs, placement for themselves, right.

11                  So I think we have to look at -- and 

12           there's some models that were done in 

13           New York City, right.  If you look at how we 

14           were able to rein in -- when I say "we," I 

15           was in the New York City Council at the 

16           time -- we were able to rein in Uber to pay a 

17           minimum wage for the drivers who they 

18           classified as independent contractors.  

19           Right?

20                  How do we look at those policies and 

21           expand that so that dancers or other creative 

22           workers, when they're putting in their time 

23           at the end of the day they are not being left 

24           in a position where they're earning less than 


                                                                   395

 1           the minimum wage.  Right?  I think that's a 

 2           good start, and then building from there.

 3                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN HOOKS:  Thank you.

 4                  MS. THOMPSON-ZACHERY:  Hi.  Yeah, I 

 5           might also add there's a role for I guess 

 6           like industry advocates like my organization 

 7           to create industry standards.  We do fall 

 8           into this place where because there isn't  

 9           enough general funding in the arts, small 

10           dance organizations and companies can't 

11           afford to pay what a living wage actually 

12           would be to their workers, and so their 

13           workers are basically subsidizing their labor 

14           because of their passion and how much they 

15           believe in the projects.

16                  So it's a tricky situation.  But I 

17           think the other angle that we can look at it 

18           is trying to enforce more of a living wage 

19           across the board, right?  Like the living 

20           wage for New York City right now is $29 an 

21           hour, whereas the minimum wage is nowhere 

22           near that.

23                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you.

24                  Assemblywoman Kassay.


                                                                   396

 1                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KASSAY:  Very good.  

 2           Thank you, Chair.  

 3                  Good evening.  Even in this very late 

 4           hour I was very energized by the melodic and 

 5           poetic testimony of Mr. Jones.  So thank you 

 6           for that.

 7                  Too often we talk about arts in a 

 8           vacuum.  And additionally, as one of my 

 9           colleagues pointed out earlier, there's -- 

10           sometimes the arts are perceived as not 

11           having a valuable product.  They're minimized 

12           in this way.  Not my opinion.  I'm a great 

13           appreciator of the arts as well as a women 

14           with a science background.

15                  So does anyone want to touch upon 

16           New York's efforts to keep the A in STEAM 

17           education?  Let's hear it, Mr. Jones.

18                  MR. STANFORD:  Absolutely, thank you 

19           very much.

20                  Yes, the arts being defined as art, 

21           music, theater, dance and the media arts in 

22           our public education through NYSED, we are 

23           seeing in this new Portrait of a Graduate 

24           from the Regents a coming together of 


                                                                   397

 1           proficiencies and abilities, post-secondary 

 2           readiness.  Because of course the big blame 

 3           on public education is that we're not 

 4           preparing our high school graduates for 

 5           success either in the workforce or as 

 6           entrepreneurs, as has been discussed here 

 7           today, all moving on to post-secondary.  

 8                  So by weaving the creativity into the 

 9           science, technology, engineering and math, we 

10           are seeing some remarkable -- there's a group 

11           that presented here for the work session that 

12           Senator Serrano and Assemblymember Kim did.  

13           They're from Patchogue, in Long Island, and 

14           they do a brilliant job of bringing together 

15           science, education and -- because it's really 

16           about educating the child.  The child is not 

17           divided into 10 subject areas.  The child is 

18           a person, a whole person.  

19                  And we believe -- and the Regents have 

20           actually prioritized arts education, and you 

21           will be seeing a proposal from them to be 

22           able to do a study.  Because what really 

23           concerns us is for our two and a half million 

24           students across the state in 62 counties, 


                                                                   398

 1           there is not a consistent delivery of arts 

 2           education.  Whereas math, yes, absolutely is 

 3           being delivered consistently.

 4                  So you'll be seeing a small proposal 

 5           from them and, as was alluded to earlier, 

 6           you'll be seeing I think from Senator May a 

 7           revival of this codification of the arts into 

 8           the state's legislation identifying the arts 

 9           as key subjects.  But that interaction, 

10           integration is really the -- it's really the 

11           future of a public education.

12                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KASSAY:  Very good.  

13           Thank you so much.  Does anyone else -- we 

14           have 18 seconds.  Anyone want to jump in?

15                  MS. LORIMER:  I'd like to add that 

16           there are certain skills that artists bring 

17           and teach and carry forward.  And as an 

18           educator myself, and also as the mother of a 

19           young son who's STEAM-inclined, there -- they 

20           support each other.

21                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KASSAY:  Thank you very 

22           much.

23                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 

24           Jackson.


                                                                   399

 1                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Thank you, 

 2           Chair.

 3                  I mentioned earlier that my daughter 

 4           is now on Broadway, she's a dancer.  And in 

 5           this space I have to lift up her friend Dana.  

 6           She goes -- on IG, she's known as 

 7           Dana_Lioness.  Also a dancer.  In June 2024 

 8           she posted about having cancer in her soft 

 9           tissues.  And on January 26th of this year 

10           she passed away.  And you can imagine how 

11           hard it was.

12                  The only reason why we found out about 

13           her cancer is because she posted a Go Fund 

14           Me.  And that makes me really sad to know.  

15           And so I'm going to do what it takes to make 

16           sure that artists are taken care of.

17                  But I do want to ask 

18           Ms. Thompson-Zachery, you had mentioned some 

19           bills.  And I just need to catch those bill 

20           numbers.  Can you just say the bills again?

21                  MS. THOMPSON-ZACHERY:  Sure can.  The 

22           first one is S285/A1502, which is --

23                  MR. STANFORD:  And if I may interrupt 

24           for one moment, back in 2023 that was May and 


                                                                   400

 1           Jean-Pierre.  They are poised to be 

 2           introduced; we're just looking for the 

 3           Assembly sponsor.  But it will be Senator May 

 4           again.

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  That's okay, I 

 6           can look it up.

 7                  MR. STANFORD:  We'll get you the 

 8           numbers.

 9                  MS. THOMPSON-ZACHERY:  Perfect.  Thank 

10           you, yes.  Because we believe in the marriage 

11           between dance and education.

12                  And then the last one was A2607.  It's 

13           Cunningham's bill to support resources for 

14           culturally diverse arts and cultural 

15           organizations.

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Thank you.  

17           And Mr. Jones, you had mentioned a 

18           $200 million appropriation, but I didn't 

19           catch what it was for.

20                  MR. STANFORD:  We're just joining the 

21           chorus of those calling for $200 million to 

22           the New York State Council on the Arts.  

23           One hundred fifty million for grant programs 

24           and initiatives -- the Governor has suggested 


                                                                   401

 1           I think $60 million in there.  But 

 2           200 million we believe -- in fact it doesn't 

 3           even match the -- as you heard earlier today, 

 4           it doesn't even match the inflation from the 

 5           time that the State Arts Council was created.

 6                  But 200 million; $150 million for 

 7           grants programs, including sustained 

 8           commitment to regional arts councils for 

 9           regranting through decentralized local 

10           decision making, and $50 million for capital 

11           projects.

12                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Thank you.  

13           It's a drop in the bucket for the 

14           $252 billion budget we're talking about.

15                  Thank you, everyone, for being here.  

16           Thank you.

17                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Well, thank you.  

18           And I want to thank you all for all that you 

19           do.  It's unfortunate that we have so many 

20           shortsighted people, especially those running 

21           our government right now, that don't see the 

22           value in arts.  I mean, arts are a form of 

23           expression.  It goes back to the Neanderthal 

24           ages when it was used as a form of 


                                                                   402

 1           communication.  

 2                  You know, dancing was generally done 

 3           for someone, not with someone.  Dancing with 

 4           man and women, that's a Western thing.  But 

 5           the original dance was a dance for someone, 

 6           to impress them.

 7                  I grew up in the arts, believe it or 

 8           not.  I used to spend the summers with Eric 

 9           Preminger, better known as Eric Lee, Gypsy 

10           Rose Lee's son.  My grandmother was involved, 

11           and she was a costume-maker, and she made 

12           most of Gypsy's costumes.  So I was part of 

13           that.

14                  I have an appreciation for the arts.  

15           I have zero talent.  I can't draw a line 

16           without a ruler.  I can't draw a circle 

17           without a compass.  I can't sing a tune 

18           unless it had handles.  If it did have 

19           handles, I couldn't carry the tune.  But I 

20           try.  You know, my wife, she started with 

21           Susan Batson.  She does singing and dancing 

22           and all that good stuff I can't -- I can't 

23           do, but I appreciate it.

24                  And, you know, we mentioned in this 


                                                                   403

 1           conversation NYSCA.  You know, that was 

 2           formed not to help you but to hurt you.  

 3           because what was happening prior to when, you 

 4           know, the New York State Arts Council being 

 5           created, all of us legislators all had arts 

 6           entities in our districts and we would get 

 7           all kind of money for it.  And the state was 

 8           actually going broke funding the arts.  And 

 9           they got Kitty Carlisle and threw her out 

10           there and started NYSCA, they put in a small 

11           pot of money and they made all you guys fight 

12           over it. 

13                  You know, that's really what happened.  

14           That's the history there.

15                  But we still try to increase the 

16           amount of funding that goes there.  I know 

17           you all appreciate what it is.  And I 

18           appreciate what you do, and keep up the good 

19           work.  Thank you.

20                  PANELISTS:  Thank you.

21                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  I was 

22           staying silent, but I want to tell you how 

23           much I appreciate Gary Pretlow, because he's 

24           a historian of the city.  And every hearing I 


                                                                   404

 1           learn something new from him that I did not 

 2           know, as we just learned right now.  Not that 

 3           he can't do art, but about NYSCA.

 4                  So I want to thank you all for staying 

 5           with us all day and evening.  Appreciate your 

 6           work.  Thank you.

 7                  We're going to call up the last panel.  

 8           And I thought they had all gone, but then 

 9           they magically reappeared.

10                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Could have been out 

11           there smoking a joint.

12                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  They were out 

13           smoking a joint.

14                  (Laughter.)

15                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  But if they 

16           didn't bring enough for everyone, it's not 

17           really --

18                  (Laughter.)

19                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  The Association 

20           of New York Cannabis Processors; the New York 

21           Cannabis Retail Association; the Cannabis 

22           Farmers Alliance; and the New York Medical 

23           Cannabis Industry Association.  

24                  Let's see who wants to show up in the 


                                                                   405

 1           front.

 2                  (Pause; off the record.)

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And let's 

 4           remember it is evening, people.  So do we 

 5           want to start to the right or -- why don't we 

 6           start -- oh, you're each pointing at each 

 7           other.

 8                  Some of you just introduce yourselves 

 9           so the people in the booth know what name to 

10           match with what face.  Please.

11                  MS. ABEBE:  Good evening.  My name is 

12           Ngiste Abebe, and I am speaking on behalf of 

13           the New York Medical Cannabis Industry 

14           Association.  So thank you, Madam Chair and 

15           Chairman Pretlow, for the opportunity to 

16           testify -- 

17                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  No, don't testify 

18           yet.  We're just going to go right down so 

19           they know who you are when you do testify.

20                  MS. ABEBE:  Oh, sorry.  Good to know.

21                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Hi.

22                  MS. TANTALO:  Hi, good evening.  

23           Britni Tantalo, the New York Cannabis Retail 

24           Association.


                                                                   406

 1                  MR. CALDERONE:  Joseph Calderone, the 

 2           Cannabis Farmers Alliance.

 3                  MR. VAVALO:  And I'm John Vavalo, with 

 4           the Association of New York Cannabis 

 5           Processors.

 6                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay.  So now 

 7           would you like to start?

 8                  MS. ABEBE:  I'm happy to, Senator.  

 9           Thank you, Madam Chair and Chairman Pretlow.  

10           I'm happy to be here representing the 

11           New York Medical Cannabis Industry 

12           Association, which represents the medical 

13           cannabis operators or ROs.  

14                  The ROs have been operating for nearly 

15           a decade in New York and remain committed to 

16           providing New Yorkers with high-quality 

17           medicine, despite the challenging environment 

18           we're all operating in at this point in time.

19                  The MRTA wisely strove to expand the 

20           medical program -- at this point we were 

21           hoping to have over 80 dispensaries, and we 

22           have seen some more ROs licensed recently but 

23           not yet operational -- and, critically, to 

24           ensure that the additional dispensaries were 


                                                                   407

 1           in underserved parts of the state.

 2                  However, the dispensary count has 

 3           shrunk to 31.  Eleven medical dispensaries 

 4           have closed in the last 12 months and more 

 5           are likely.  The patient count is down from a 

 6           high of 150,000 to under 100,000.  That's bad 

 7           news for the patients who remain because, 

 8           contrary to popular belief, patients cannot 

 9           just jump to the adult-use program.  

10                  Parents of pediatric patients 

11           suffering from severe epilepsy cannot legally 

12           buy their children adult-use products.  

13           Immunocompromised patients cannot risk some 

14           of the different testing standards in the 

15           adult-use market, and high-CBD formulations 

16           which ROs are required to keep in stock are 

17           nowhere to be found in recreational 

18           dispensaries.

19                  In addition to seeking regulatory 

20           relief from the state the association has, 

21           for the better part of a decade, advanced a 

22           legislative agenda that will broaden access 

23           to and affordability of medical cannabis 

24           products and help patients.  


                                                                   408

 1                  This session, the association is 

 2           seeking a complete repeal of the medical 

 3           excise tax that last year was reduced from 

 4           7 percent to 3 percent; legalization of 

 5           out-of-state reciprocity in New York's 

 6           medical cannabis program; authorizing 

 7           pharmacists to do same-day patient 

 8           certifications; authorization of insurance 

 9           coverage for medical cannabis -- which New 

10           York has remained the leader in trying to get 

11           across the finish line, but we really would 

12           love to see New York be the first state to 

13           get that across the finish line.  

14                  And lastly, something that I know my 

15           other panelists here will be speaking to, is 

16           the right of private action so that private 

17           dispensaries can also assist in the crackdown 

18           on unlicensed dispensaries across the state.

19                  And so, you know, this pro-patient 

20           philosophy has served as the foundation for 

21           our legislative agenda during this session 

22           and the basis of our mission since day one. 

23                  So I want to thank you all for your 

24           time, and I'm happy to answer any questions, 


                                                                   409

 1           though I think we all look forward to 

 2           finishing the due diligence of today's work.

 3                  (Laughter.)

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 5                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you.

 6                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Next?  You have 

 7           to press it to green -- got it.

 8                  MS. TANTALO:  Thank you.  Good 

 9           evening.  My name is Britni Tantalo.  I am 

10           president and cofounder of Flower City 

11           Dispensary, a CAURD dispensary located near 

12           Rochester, New York.  I'm also president and 

13           cofounder of the New York Cannabis Retail 

14           Association that represents over 350 invested 

15           stakeholders statewide.

16                  Thank you for the opportunity to 

17           present testimony today.  On behalf of NYCRA, 

18           I want to thank you for the significant 

19           actions you took in last year's state budget.  

20           However, much work remains to be done.  

21                  NYCRA urges you to consider the 

22           following initiatives that our members feel 

23           are necessary to improve this market.  First, 

24           close down the illegal market.  The New York 


                                                                   410

 1           cannabis market is estimated to be five to 

 2           $7 billion.  Current annual sales are 

 3           approximately 1 billion.  That means anywhere 

 4           from 80 to 85 percent of cannabis sales are 

 5           still occurring in the illegal market.  

 6                  If New York is serious about closing 

 7           these stores, we recommend the Legislature 

 8           consider the following:  

 9                  Increase the budget for OCM 

10           enforcement staff.  The Governor has proposed 

11           expanding OCM staff in her budget.  NYCRA 

12           believes her recommendations should be 

13           doubled.

14                  Consider a limited asset forfeiture 

15           system targeted at the largest illegal 

16           operators.  According to Manhattan 

17           prosecutors, large operators who have the 

18           legal bandwidth and financial resources to 

19           make their closure next to impossible can 

20           only be shut down if they have the ability to 

21           go after their money.  

22                  The money seized should go into a 

23           special revenue account to provide grants to 

24           help social equity cannabis licensees open 


                                                                   411

 1           and sustain their business.

 2                  And lastly, establish a private right 

 3           of action.  OCM and local law enforcement can 

 4           never do this alone.  Individuals who suffer 

 5           financial harm due to illegal operators 

 6           should have the right to seek damages in 

 7           court if they intend to do so.

 8                  NYCRA's next initiative is to reform 

 9           the DASNY Social Equity Fund.  The DASNY fund 

10           has been a failure.  We ask that the 

11           Comptroller audit the DASNY Fund so the 

12           stakeholders and policymakers can assess the 

13           problem and implement needed reforms -- and, 

14           in addition, that the 24 CAURD licensees that 

15           are participating in this fund deserve some 

16           form of relief from these predatory loans.

17                  And finally, I want to draw the 

18           Legislature's attention to two significant 

19           challenges retailers face.  We must establish 

20           proximity protection guardrails.  The 

21           Legislature should consider legislation to 

22           limit the extent to which proximity 

23           protection waivers can be issued, require 

24           that a public process be established to 


                                                                   412

 1           enable licensees and community input, and 

 2           establish an appeal process for adverse 

 3           decisions.  Such provisions currently exist 

 4           in alcohol.

 5                  And second, codify the CAURD program.  

 6           The program has been targeted for illegal 

 7           challenges since inception.  The recent 

 8           lawsuit that has frozen consideration of the 

 9           conditional retail licenses confirms the need 

10           for this action.

11                  Thank you again for the work the 

12           Legislature has done to improve New York's 

13           cannabis market.  I'd be happy to answer any 

14           questions you may have.  Thank you.

15                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

16                  Good evening.  

17                  MR. CALDERONE:  Good evening.  I'm 

18           Joseph Calderone, president of Cannabis 

19           Farmers Alliance and COO of woman-owned 

20           Grateful Valley Farm in Steuben County, and a 

21           member of Farm Bureau.

22                  The -- yeah, entertainment and 

23           cannabis kind of goes together, so I think 

24           it's a nice choice at the end there.


                                                                   413

 1                  So where do I start.  On behalf of 

 2           Cannabis Farmers Alliance, I want to first 

 3           thank you for all of the work that you've 

 4           done last year with the Legislature -- 

 5           repealing the potency tax and passing the 

 6           bills of -- legislative bills of Cannabis 

 7           Growers Showcase and other pivotal actions.  

 8           That's really helped out our farmers.  

 9                  But it's helped out some of our 

10           farmers on the margins.  We're still besieged 

11           by a lot of supply-side issues, inversion 

12           being one of them, of out-of-state product.  

13           And also just the competition from the 

14           Indigenous Nations as well as, you know, just 

15           THCA and the distillate coming across our 

16           state borders.

17                  So in order to try to remedy that and 

18           to bring some integrity to the market, we 

19           suggest in the budget negotiations that the 

20           cost of seed-to-sale be transferred to the 

21           tracking from supply side to the OCM.  

22                  That seed-to-sale is critical for 

23           market integrity.  It should have been 

24           implemented by now; it's been a couple of 


                                                                   414

 1           years.  But the whole market benefits from 

 2           the work requirements of seed-to-sale and -- 

 3           but we do feel that the costs should be 

 4           shared and that that should be implemented by 

 5           the OCM and assumed by the OCM, that that 

 6           responsibility should be assumed by the OCM.

 7                  Secondly, we feel that infrastructure 

 8           is a major issue and access to funds, because 

 9           the banking issues in the industry are such 

10           an issue for our supply side that we would 

11           like to have a $5 million revolving fund 

12           based on DASNY bonds.  

13                  And we are hoping that also we could 

14           have some canopy expansion.  Because right 

15           now our supply side is very limited in their 

16           ability to expand -- their cannabis price is 

17           compressed.  We are going to have to have the 

18           ability to expand our canopy in order to meet 

19           the requirements once seed-to-sale is 

20           implemented.  Because some of that inverted 

21           product is actually going to naturally come 

22           out of the market, and we're going to have to 

23           fill that demand with our supply.

24                  So if you have any questions, let me 


                                                                   415

 1           know.  Thank you.

 2                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 3                  MR. VAVALO:  Thank you so much.  Thank 

 4           you for your time, thank you for your effort.

 5                  We know this has been a daunting few 

 6           years of listening to us and having us come 

 7           back and continually ask for revisement, and 

 8           we do really applaud everything that you've 

 9           all done for us.

10                  The one thing that we've heard over 

11           and over again over the last few years is 

12           unity -- unity within the industry.  We stand 

13           here as the, you know, really the entire 

14           supply chain.  You know, we've got the 

15           growers, we've got the processors and we've 

16           got the retailers.  We have other multiple 

17           organizations with us when we're going to 

18           your offices and visiting and talking about 

19           what we're trying to do.  But the underlying 

20           theme is we are united.

21                  And we know that we've got to get 

22           louder.  That's why we're trying to take 

23           these opportunities to, you know, really 

24           educate and let everybody understand the 


                                                                   416

 1           things that we're facing so we can have a 

 2           more robust marketplace.

 3                  I also want to thank you for fixing 

 4           the potency tax.  The 21 percent to the 

 5           9 percent was a massive lift.  

 6                  We have a bill that's been introduced 

 7           or is going to be introduced that addresses 

 8           that a little bit.  We're asking for 

 9           something that would essentially offset some 

10           of the tax liability on the folks that were 

11           very, very early in that process.  It's up to 

12           $400,000.  It's really just a rebate for some 

13           of the people that were active in 2023, the 

14           very, very early processors.  So we're 

15           excited about that as well.

16                  Most of the other stuff that we're 

17           here, just like our place in the industry, 

18           we're in the middle.  So the processors, the 

19           manufacturers sit between the farmers and we 

20           sit between them and the retail outlets.  And 

21           our job is to, you know, try to make that 

22           seamless transition from raw materials to 

23           finished products.  And so we really want to 

24           support them in everything that they're 


                                                                   417

 1           doing.  

 2                  We need canopy cap increases for the 

 3           farmers.  We definitely need that because if 

 4           they aren't producing enough and they're 

 5           saddled with issues, then we can't survive, 

 6           or we can't actually buy material at the 

 7           right pricing to then turn around and supply 

 8           it to the retail side.

 9                  And their proximity protection, same 

10           thing.  Right?  If they're all battling each 

11           other in very small proximities, we're going 

12           to have real problems.  Like most of those 

13           folks will not make it.  And I just don't 

14           think that we need to -- we've got such a 

15           huge state, we've got ample opportunities for 

16           folks to spread out.  So I think the 

17           proximity protection is very important.

18                  The last one that Joe just mentioned 

19           is enforcement.  We need enforcement across 

20           the entire spectrum.  We need enforcement on 

21           the gray-market stores and kind of what 

22           they're doing.  We've all heard that.  

23                  But we really need enforcement inside 

24           the program as well.  We need -- we need to 


                                                                   418

 1           be regulated, we need to be reviewed, we need 

 2           to be looked at to make sure that all of this 

 3           product is in fact grown by New York farmers.  

 4           Doing a billion dollars was exciting, right?  

 5           We were happy about that.  That's a great 

 6           milestone, we love to talk about it.  But 

 7           there are farmers still sitting on product 

 8           that they grew in 2023, you know.  So a 

 9           billion dollars in product, we really 

10           shouldn't have that.  They should all be out 

11           of material.

12                  And so I believe that the trade 

13           practices group is really going to really 

14           expedite that process.  We're very excited 

15           for that.

16                  So thank you.

17                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

18                  Just quickly, I probably do have many 

19           questions, although I confess we've been here 

20           about 12 hours and I'm nodding a little bit 

21           off.  But I think if you were here earlier, 

22           you heard a lot of the questions that many of 

23           us were trying to raise with OCM and I think 

24           it's very much along the same line as all the 


                                                                   419

 1           issues you raised with us tonight.

 2                  So I look forward to continuing to 

 3           work together in the future.

 4                  MALE PANELIST:  Yes, thank you.

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 6                  Assembly.

 7                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblyman Stirpe.

 8                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Sure.  Let me ask 

 9           you a little bit about the tax credit that 

10           you're proposing.  It's for people who had 

11           been in early when the tax rate was really 

12           high.  

13                  So is it for a defined period of time, 

14           like one year, two years?

15                  MR. VAVALO:  It's a one and done.  So 

16           it's a one-shot deal.  And it is for the hemp 

17           farmers that transitioned into the program 

18           only.

19                  And we have members that certainly 

20           don't qualify for that, they're newer 

21           processors, newer licensees, and obviously 

22           they understand the importance to make sure 

23           that the older members are able to survive 

24           and thrive.


                                                                   420

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  You know, as far 

 2           as the enforcement part, when we were talking 

 3           earlier we talked about online purchasing.  

 4           And that's a little different than going and 

 5           locking up a store.

 6                  How big is that compared to the 

 7           illegal shops that are open?  Do you think 

 8           it's the same, 10 times as much or, you 

 9           know -- anybody?

10                  MS. TANTALO:  To my knowledge, it's 

11           pretty comparable.  You know, what I was told 

12           is if you Google dispensaries it will pull up 

13           a ton of ones that are not legal.  And people 

14           are finding out about this, right, because 

15           you can do delivery.  You know, you can just 

16           have it dropped off.  You know, I heard 

17           conversations about in the mail.  

18                  So I think that people will become 

19           more creative and tactful in how they, you 

20           know, pursue illegal cannabis sales other 

21           than just a storefront.  So I think it's 

22           definitely something we should get in front 

23           of.  It's already occurring, but I can 

24           imagine it will just grow in the online 


                                                                   421

 1           world.

 2                  MR. VAVALO:  The largest concentration 

 3           is on Long Island for sure, because they have 

 4           the moratoriums.  I mean, there's 40 miles of 

 5           Long Island that has no stores because they 

 6           opted out.  And so, you know, that area is 

 7           ripe for it -- high population density, you 

 8           know, and no stores.  So that area is riddled 

 9           with it.

10                  MR. CALDERONE:  There's a California 

11           brand that actually has a store in Brooklyn 

12           that -- called Honey, and they have sold 

13           online across the United States.  And they 

14           also have a license, by the way.

15                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  You said no 

16           license, is that --

17                  MR. CALDERONE:  They have a New York 

18           State license, yeah.  Processor 2, I think.

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  I mean, is this 

20           something you think probably needs assistance 

21           from the federal government too?  I mean, you 

22           know, you've got all these out-of-state 

23           websites.

24                  MR. CALDERONE:  That's if you want the 


                                                                   422

 1           justice department involved in cannabis in 

 2           New York State.

 3                  (Laughter.)

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN STIRPE:  Maybe they need 

 5           to start using, then it'd be better.

 6                  MR. VAVALO:  I would respond to that 

 7           only and say that most of that is still 

 8           occurring here in the state.

 9                  When we talked earlier -- when Britni 

10           mentioned that there is a $10 billion market 

11           of cannabis here, and we did a billion, so -- 

12           you know, I think she said 7 billion is being 

13           done in the gray market.  There is a very 

14           sophisticated system here of cultivators, 

15           processors, manufacturers and retailers that 

16           are not licensed.

17                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblyman Otis.

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  With Mr. Stirpe's 

19           last question about the federal government 

20           helping out on this, I was beginning to think 

21           he was using product.

22                  (Laughter.)

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  But my question is 

24           for Mr. Calderone about the farmers.  


                                                                   423

 1                  And so many of your members, many of 

 2           the farmers had to in a sense grow and then 

 3           eat product like two and a half, three years 

 4           ago.  Could you give a little more detail 

 5           about what happened with those businesses, 

 6           how many survived, how many did not?  And 

 7           does the tax credit thing try and alleviate 

 8           some of that problem for some of those 

 9           individuals, or different issue?  Just share 

10           a little more detail.

11                  MR. CALDERONE:  Everything that the 

12           legislation has done has helped out the 

13           farmers in the last year.  And a tax credit 

14           would also help because there have been a lot 

15           of taxes that have accrued over those two 

16           years.  So that's for sure.

17                  There's some improvement on the 

18           margins, I would say.  But we still have 

19           probably, you know, around 85 percent of our 

20           farmers are either working in the red or, you 

21           know, just barely profitable.  So we'd like 

22           to see that hopefully turn around for those 

23           small and medium-sized businesses.

24                  We haven't been able to do a survey 


                                                                   424

 1           recently.  The survey is over a year old.  

 2           That was in our last testimony last year.

 3                  But they're still struggling.  And 

 4           with the price of distillate dropping because 

 5           of -- you know, from around $6,000 to 

 6           $3,000 because of what we feel is 

 7           out-of-state distillate coming -- you know, 

 8           it's being bought for $650 a liter in another 

 9           state and then being sold and arbitraged in 

10           New York State for $3,000.  The processors 

11           can attest to that.

12                  But that's going to hurt the farmers.  

13           That's going to compress the prices quite a 

14           bit.  So right when we start getting a little 

15           bit of air, you know, and get our head above 

16           water, we're kind of getting like pulled down 

17           again.

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  Thank you very 

19           much.  Thank you for telling the story.

20                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 

21           Hyndman.

22                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN HYNDMAN:  Thank you, 

23           Chair.

24                  Some of my questions were asked, but 


                                                                   425

 1           for the farmers that you said still have 

 2           product from 2023, how much are you talking?  

 3           Is that tonnage or can you estimate?  I mean, 

 4           and how -- excuse me, I don't know.  How long 

 5           is it good for?

 6                  (Laughter.)

 7                  MR. CALDERONE:  There's some formulas 

 8           about THC oxidation and, you know, every 

 9           quarter it might lost a point or something, 

10           of a percentage.  So if you have a 20 percent 

11           biomass, it might lose 1 percent each 

12           quarter.  So it would be like 16 percent at 

13           the end of the year.

14                  But I have no way of knowing how much 

15           is left.  I think most of it is probably 

16           gone, but people are still -- he was just 

17           using an example that there's still some 

18           people that have not been able to get rid of 

19           some of their product from two years ago.

20                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN HYNDMAN:  Okay.

21                  MR. CALDERONE:  But I don't have an 

22           exact number.

23                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN HYNDMAN:  Thank you.

24                  Britni, you said that one of the 


                                                                   426

 1           recommendations is establish proximity 

 2           protection guardrails, limit extent to which 

 3           proximity waivers can be issued, and ask for 

 4           community input.

 5                  Can you talk about that a bit more, 

 6           please?

 7                  MS. TANTALO:  Currently as, you know, 

 8           it had existed there was nothing put in place 

 9           in terms of quantifying or granting these 

10           waivers.

11                  So I'm a CAURD dispensary operator, 

12           I've been open just over 90 days.  This 

13           waiver, if you wanted to open a dispensary 

14           and, you know, break that thousand-foot rule 

15           between us that was there, you could submit 

16           for a waiver.  There's nothing there that 

17           allows me to speak up and say, This could 

18           hurt my business, involve the community 

19           board.  If there, you know, was an adverse 

20           decision to have an appeal, there's no due 

21           process.  It is very arbitrary.  

22                  These waivers have already started to 

23           be issued.  Some of them have received a 

24           70 percent reduction.  You know, that's very 


                                                                   427

 1           significant.  Not a lot of municipalities 

 2           have opted in.

 3                  So now you're talking taking a smaller 

 4           New York cannabis pool and now you're putting 

 5           everybody next to each other.  To me, that's 

 6           a risk of cannibalizing each other.  And it's 

 7           really not necessary, like to John's point, 

 8           when we haven't even really seen the full 

 9           capacity of New York State in cannabis.

10                  I think when you have failures like 

11           that that could occur, it could deter other 

12           municipalities from wanting to opt in, as 

13           well as take investor confidence out the 

14           door.  It reduces the security of their 

15           investment, right, knowing that now somebody 

16           who guaranteed a thousand feet away can come 

17           in 30 feet.

18                  We need money to come into New York 

19           and stay and build this market.  We're 

20           already having trouble having people give us 

21           money just to build our dispensaries.  So 

22           we're trying not to work backwards and 

23           oversaturate but actually let this market 

24           grow naturally.


                                                                   428

 1                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 

 2           Kassay.

 3                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KASSAY:  Thank you, 

 4           Chair.

 5                  Thank you for sticking it out to the 

 6           last panel here.  And I really appreciate 

 7           hearing an entire panel of cannabis industry 

 8           professionals coming and asking for more 

 9           regulation -- not just for the illegal 

10           producers and sellers, but for yourselves.  

11                  I think that's something the 

12           communities really need to hear as well, you 

13           know, to know that you're working with us to 

14           make sure this -- you know, that this product 

15           is going to be legal in New York State, it's 

16           going to be done right, it's going to stay 

17           out of the hands of underage people, the 

18           product is going to be tested, regulated, all 

19           of this.

20                  So Ms. Tantalo listed quite a number 

21           of items for the Legislature to consider in 

22           this session, ways to help clamp down both on 

23           illegal producers and sellers as well as 

24           things to focus on within the industry for 


                                                                   429

 1           greater regulation of those who are playing 

 2           by the rules.

 3                  You want to maybe identify the top one 

 4           or two, either yourself and if your 

 5           colleagues want to chime in?  Because there's 

 6           always lots to focus on, but just as someone 

 7           who's not as knowledgeable about the industry 

 8           as we look at this with our colleagues.

 9                  MS. TANTALO:  I would honestly say the 

10           two most pressing issues is definitely 

11           proximity protection for us retailers.  These 

12           waivers are currently being granted right 

13           now.  So it's something we need to address -- 

14           or have been, I don't know if they continue 

15           to be.

16                  But, you know, we have dispensaries 

17           that are a thousand feet away and now there's 

18           somebody right in between next to a 

19           Trader Joe's in Brooklyn.  So they haven't 

20           even yet to open -- I think one's soft-opened 

21           and one is in buildout.  So imagine the 

22           detriment, and they haven't even actually 

23           became fully operational.  

24                  Second is definitely the illegal 


                                                                   430

 1           market.  I know a lot of work has been done, 

 2           but the reality is they're just opening back 

 3           up.  And it's evolving, right?  It's not just 

 4           mom-and-pop people -- these are people that 

 5           are highly capitalized, that have the money 

 6           and the bandwidth to seek legal help and 

 7           really almost, you know, impossible to close.

 8                  So this is the feedback that we had 

 9           received from the Manhattan prosecutors, and 

10           we really like for you guys to look at the 

11           ability for a limited asset forfeiture for 

12           larger operators to really go after their 

13           money to hurt them or damage them enough to 

14           take us seriously.  Because, again, they're 

15           just reopening and tons of dispensaries 

16           across the state are still being impacted by 

17           the illegal market.

18                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN KASSAY:  That's what I 

19           hear.  And I come from Suffolk County on 

20           Long Island, and we do -- I mean, in any 

21           given village, any given couple of square 

22           miles, you have multiple, multiple shops.  So 

23           we're being very aggressive about trying to 

24           crack down on them locally.


                                                                   431

 1                  So if you have seen any very effective 

 2           methods of doing so, I invite you to reach 

 3           out to our office and help us with that.

 4                  MR. VAVALO:  And also, for the 

 5           retailers, there's no question about 

 6           legislative intent.  It's in the law.  They 

 7           did it right the first time.  They set 

 8           boundaries, and we're not really sure why 

 9           they're going against those boundaries now.

10                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman 

11           Jackson.

12                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Thank you, 

13           Chair.  Good evening, everyone.

14                  Mr. Calderone, you mentioned that the 

15           farmers still have product from 2023, and I 

16           heard my colleague ask this question.  But 

17           does it expire?  Does product expire? 

18                  MR. CALDERONE:  Flower, like something 

19           that someone will have to inhale, will expire 

20           after -- it depends on the curing and the 

21           different growing methods.  Some people can 

22           keep it fresh for -- you know, for years, you 

23           know.  But really most of it after a couple 

24           of years will probably just go to biomass 


                                                                   432

 1           that will be extracted by a processor.

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  And then 

 3           Ms. Britni -- sorry, I don't remember your 

 4           last name -- you had mentioned predatory 

 5           loans.  Are you suggesting that those loans 

 6           came from DASNY?  I just didn't -- I wanted 

 7           to make sure I heard that correctly.

 8                  MS. TANTALO:  Yes.  I think --

 9                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Can you give 

10           me like rates or anything that --

11                  MS. TANTALO:  Sure.  So I know myself, 

12           I would have been interested initially to get 

13           DASNY, because it was intended to be a 

14           built-out dispensary that, you know, favored 

15           us, preferential rates, you know, grants, 

16           et cetera.

17                  Once the implementation actually 

18           occurred, what was discovered is the bids 

19           that were being provided were not what the 

20           numbers ended up being.  So people now have 

21           extremely high debt and at not a decent 

22           interest rate.

23                  And so what does that mean?  It means 

24           failure for them.  It means they can never 


                                                                   433

 1           catch up.  It means it -- you know, already 

 2           have a higher tax rate, right, being legal 

 3           here in New York, just on cannabis alone.  

 4           Now they're sort of chained to this 

 5           dispensary that they owe maybe $2.1 million 

 6           paying 13 percent on.

 7                  So those types of things are just 

 8           really unrealistic.  And a lot of them, 

 9           retailers who have received that money are 

10           failing.  And that's why we asked for reform, 

11           to help them so they can survive.  

12                  Because this is what was presented to 

13           all of us.  Some of us did not take that and 

14           we borrowed from family and friends or took 

15           out mortgages or -- whatever we had to do -- 

16           call their uncle -- to help us build.

17                  But some, you know, individuals early 

18           on did take that, that are part of social 

19           equity and from disenfranchised communities, 

20           and we cannot forget that.  And I think that 

21           we should pay attention to that and help 

22           them.

23                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Thank you.

24                  And then with my last 32 seconds, 


                                                                   434

 1           Ms. Abebe, why wouldn't someone want to 

 2           quantify the whole flower as an improved 

 3           medical cannabis?

 4                  MS. ABEBE:  Sorry, can you repeat the 

 5           question?

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Why wouldn't 

 7           somebody want to codify the whole flower as 

 8           an approved medical cannabis form?  Because 

 9           you said it would lower the cost for 

10           patients.

11                  MS. ABEBE:  Yes.  I think that has 

12           been approved now.  Is this -- I think there 

13           was a slight bureaucratic error and my 2020 

14           testimony got uploaded instead of my current 

15           one, so we provided paper.

16                  Whole flower has been codified.  So 

17           yes.

18                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Thank you.

19                  MS. ABEBE:  Sorry, I was like ooh, we 

20           solved that problem.  

21                  (Overtalk.)

22                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Ms. Abebe, I'll 

23           start with you.  I'll try to be quick.

24                  You do medical marijuana.  Is that 


                                                                   435

 1           cannabis with the THC removed?

 2                  MS. ABEBE:  No, it has THC.  But the 

 3           medical program, because patients have a wide 

 4           variety of needs and cannabinoids, the 

 5           medical program requires that all ROs provide 

 6           high-CBD options:  So like high CBD, low THC; 

 7           1-to-1 CBD to THC; and high-THC options 

 8           across flower -- or flower is a little bit 

 9           trickier because of the growing process.  But 

10           across like edibles, extracts, suppositories, 

11           and a number of other formats that are not 

12           widely popular for recreational consumption.

13                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Okay.  And what is 

14           your ask of us now?

15                  MS. ABEBE:  Our four -- or five asks, 

16           I guess, are reducing or removing the excise 

17           tax from 7 percent -- or it was at 7, you 

18           brought it down to 3 last year, we're asking 

19           for it to be made zero because no other 

20           medicine is taxed in New York State.  You 

21           don't pay a tax on Tylenol or any other 

22           prescription you fill.

23                  Two, also we support the right of 

24           private action.  


                                                                   436

 1                  We also were asking around pharmacist 

 2           certification.  And I think one of the 

 3           biggest lifts that, you know, this body has 

 4           been trying to do for some years now is 

 5           insurance coverage.  Because one of the 

 6           biggest obstacles to access for patients is 

 7           that they have to pay for this entirely out 

 8           of pocket.  And while ROs are striving to 

 9           provide the most cost-effective product they 

10           can, without insurance coverage that will 

11           always remain a barrier.

12                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  It's so expensive.  

13           Thank you.

14                  And Mr. Calderone, you said "ensure 

15           that it's New York-grown."  How can you tell 

16           the difference between Pennsylvania, 

17           California and New York cannabis?

18                  MR. CALDERONE:  Do you want to answer 

19           that?

20                  MR. VAVALO:  I mean, I can.

21                  You know, certainly in the program the 

22           way it has been done to date, there wasn't 

23           indoor product allowed.  Now you can get it 

24           from the ROs, but there's still a very, very 


                                                                   437

 1           limited supply of indoor flower.  When that 

 2           flower comes in from out of state and you 

 3           look at it, if you -- if you're familiar with 

 4           cannabis, you can tell immediately that that 

 5           was grown indoors, under lights, in a 

 6           controlled environment.

 7                  Today the closest thing we have to 

 8           that is a mixed-light greenhouse situation 

 9           where we have lights, minor controlled 

10           atmosphere and environmental conditions, but 

11           it does not meet that same standard as a 

12           purely indoor product.  You can tell 

13           immediately.

14                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  So New York only 

15           grows outdoor product.

16                  MR. VAVALO:  Outdoor and greenhouse, 

17           yup.  And now mixed-light, which is --

18                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  And no other state 

19           does that?

20                  MR. VAVALO:  There are other states 

21           that do that, yes.  Yup.  

22                  And we're just starting to allow lit 

23           indoor facilities -- those are new licensees, 

24           though.  That's just coming online now.


                                                                   438

 1                  MS. ABEBE:  If I could just say one 

 2           thing.  There is something called -- 

 3                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  I only have 

 4           20 seconds, but --

 5                  MS. ABEBE:  -- origin testing that can 

 6           also help confirm beyond what my fellow 

 7           panelist just said.

 8                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  And you know, what 

 9           we tried to do was take away the criminality 

10           of cannabis.  And what's happened now is that 

11           people that are breaking the law they don't 

12           want to arrest because we're going back to 

13           where we were.  And that's where the issue 

14           is, so -- 

15                  You can cut me off.

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  All right, I'm 

17           cutting you off. 

18                  Again, thank you very much and thank 

19           you for staying here so late to finally get a 

20           chance to testify.  And I think this 

21           Legislature's very interested in trying to 

22           address many of the issues that you are 

23           bringing to us.  

24                  So appreciate your time and your work 


                                                                   439

 1           and sticking with us.  Thank you.

 2                  MR. VAVALO:  Thank you very much.

 3                  MS. TANTALO:  Thank you.

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And with that, I 

 5           am officially closing down this hearing.  

 6           Those of us who want to sleep here, we can, 

 7           but we will be back in the morning at 9:30 

 8           for Taxes.  Thank you.  

 9                  (Whereupon, the budget hearing 

10           concluded at 9:37 p.m.)

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