Yesterday was supposed to be hot and humid with hazy sunshine
and temps topping out at 97. But in the end, though it was hot
and the temps topped out at 92 here in beautiful Kent Cliffs, the
Heart of the Hudson Highlands, it turned out to be a very nice
day.
But I will tell you where it was too hot last night:
AssemblyIn the cool-blue auditorium of the Putnam Valley high
School before an audience of about 100 people, State Assemblywoman
Sandy Galef and Nassau County Executive Thomas Suozzi brought the "Suozzi
Commission" roadshow into town. The purpose of the dog and
pony show was to explain and present the results of Mr. Suozzi's
public investigation into ways of bringing property taxes under
control in New York State. The Commission met with communities
across New York, accepted hundreds of letters, emails and documents,
and spent a pretty penny seeking input from New Yorkers of all
kinds, stripes and backgrounds. In the end, the commission came
up with the most politically palatable solution:
The Commission recommends a 4% cap on school spending increases
and a variation of the Galef-Little circuit-breaker bill which
amounts to a better targeted reworking of the STAR program. How
those two things bring relief to property owners is unknown since
we start at baseline (what you're paying now) and work upwards
from there. They call this "relief"? Indeed they do and
they're trying to make you believe it but the audience last night
was not buying a word of it. From private citizens to school board
members, speaker after speaker said, No! Only the business interests,
a sponsor of last evening's circus sideshow, thought it a good
idea.
There were other options with the most promising being that we
move to statewide funding of education based on a graduated income
tax. This, as my readers know, is in a bill currently supported
by Kingston Assemblyman Kevin Cahill, a bill originally proposed
by Republican Senator Lavalle of Long Island, Mr. Suozzi's home
region. Anyone who reads News That Matters knows about this bill
which, during my comments last evening I casually referred to as
the Cahill Model. This brought a blank stare from Mr. Suozzi who
asked, 'What is this Cahill model?' and the meeting fell apart...
How could a man and a commission charged with this particular
task fail to have known about and included the Cahill model in
their deliberations?
I'm standing there at the microphone when Mr. Suozzi asked his
question and I'm speechless. I am struck dumb. My tongue clove
to the roof of my mouth and I could not utter a word. I was astonished.
The audience, half of whom said they were there to support the
Cahill model of things went pale. It was a defining moment not
only in the battle to fix this problem, lending credence to the
belief that Albany has no intention of such a thing, but also in
the political career of Mr. Suozzi, a man who desires to be the
Governor of the Empire State. How could he not have known?
The answer is that it is not possible. The answer, once every
other possibility is removed from consideration, is that the Commission
purposefully neglected Cahill during its tenure. In other words,
the Commission intentionally ignored the only sane solution to
this problem in order to maintain the status quo. There were 8
or 9 references to 'the ability to pay' in Mr. Suozzi's presentation
last evening so we must ask why was 'the ability to pay' not part
of the Commission's findings and recommendations?
I know that citizen tax groups across the state and that both
Vic Tiship and myself have personally written the commission suggesting
Cahill as an option. I also know that Vic and I have raised the
awareness of this issue to a degree which has made regional news.
I know that the Putnam County legislature and the towns of Kent
and Putnam Valley have all endorsed the Cahill model. I know other
towns in New York state have done the same and I know Sandy Galef,
who sits on an Assembly committee on property taxes is well aware
of it. So again I must ask: How could the commission claim to not
know?
In a taxpayer-funded newsletter sent to constituents in Sandy's
district this past spring, she asked us which property tax relief
solution we preferred. When referring to the Cahill model she posed
the question in the most negative light stating that your taxes
would have to be raised significantly, and still it came back as
one of the top choices, something she grudgingly admitted to last
night. Even when politicians slam Cahill, the voters still demand
it. How could Mr. Suozzi not know? How could the Commission not
even look into it?
On April 11th 2008, Victor, myself and Richard Lopez, met with
Sandy at her office in Ossining where we talked about this very
thing. At the beginning of the meeting she claimed she had not
read the bill even after receiving reams of information about it
and having included it on one of her polls. By the end of that
meeting she admitted, finally, that she had read the bill but was
concerned about her constituents in Briarcliff, i.e., the rich.
It's not like this was new information to her, but it is more likely
that the desire to pull the wool over our eyes is more important
to the Albany Establishment than repairing genuine problems and
fixing the inner machinations of State government.
In the end it all comes down to this harsh reality: you and I,
the average Joe and Jane Voter, have no say in Albany and Albany
cares not a whit about us. Unless you can afford campaign donations
in the 4 figure range you simply do not exist. Unless you are the
CEO of a Wall Street firm there are no ears in Albany awaiting
your counsel. Unless you are part of the powers-that-be you are
locked out of the process, dog and pony shows, bread and circuses
notwithstanding.
The cost of education is not the problem. Finding funding for
it is not the problem. But paying for it in an equitable and fair
manner, one which would ensure every student in New York state
is guaranteed a good education and one in which the distribution
of that burden is equalized, is the problem and Albany, immune
to public pressure and isolated in their gleaming, lofty towers
rising from the plains of upstate New York, simply does not give
a shit.
THAT'S the news that matters.
JmG