|

PUBLISHED
BY MOSHOLU
PRESERVATION
CORPORATION
| Vol.
17, No. 20 |
Oct.
7 - 20, 2004 |



Editorial
Reform in Albany
Who knew it was possible? State legislators are actually talking about reforming the
Byzantine ways of the state Capitol.
Reform has been forced onto the table by a number of factors. The Brennan Center at NYU
recently released an exhaustive study of the state legislature that rated it the worst in the
country in terms of how it operates and its chronic inability to get things done. Three
incumbents actually lost their seats in the primary election last month, the most rare of
rarities. And 20 years of late budgets and unresolved issues like creating a fairer education
funding system and reforming the Rockefeller drug laws are just the latest illustration of an
arthritic legislature incapable of doing its job.
Proposals from the Brennan report are making their way into campaigns for the state
legislature this fall. Seventeen members of the Assembly, including Jeffrey Dinowitz and
Jeffrey Klein, have co-sponsored a resolution that calls for changing procedures that
actually discourage the participation of members in the legislative process. They include:
giving each committee the power, which currently resides with the speaker, to hire and fire
its own staff, thereby making staff less beholden to leadership and more responsive to
committee chairs and the needs of their policy area; making attendance at committee
hearings mandatory; and requiring all floor votes to be "slow roll-call votes," which means
that members' votes would be counted only when members are present in the chamber and
personally indicate whether they wish to vote "aye" or "nay." Unbelievably, members do
not have to be present to vote under the current rules. If they are not present, they can allow
the speaker to count them as a vote in favor of the legislation in question.
These aren't radical ideas. They are the most basic foundation for a functioning legislature.
We urge all of our local representatives in Albany to support this resolution and we will be
following the progress of these and other measures to reform the legislature.
Public Service TV
For two hours every weekday and even more on Mondays, Gary Axelbank finds a gazillion
ways to talk about what he loves best: all things Bronx.
His remarkable cable TV shows, BronxTalk AM and PrimeTime, which respectively
celebrate their fifth and 10th anniversaries this month, are a kind of perpetual town hall
where Bronx citizens can come to promote their cause, raise issues, take issue and come
together. By presenting the views of so many different people, organizations and
communities, the shows weave together the fabric of a borough of more than 60
neighborhoods and even more nationalities.
Axelbank and BronxTalk also provide essential context, analysis and even investigation to
critical issues facing Bronxites. It also provides an entry point for citizens that too often find
themselves shut out from participating in media.
More people should know about this resource. We encourage BronxNet officials to spread
the word about BronxTalk so that more of the borough's citizens find this treasure toward
the end of their cable dial.
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