as silver is sentenced, no clear path for ethics reform in albany /

Published at 2016-05-04 02:26:00

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Even as members of the New York State Assembly debated legislation on domestic abuse and criminalizing bass fishing in the Hudson River,the sentencing of their former leader — Sheldon Silver — didn't escape their notice.
When word that he'd been sentenced to 12 years in federal prison ripped through social media, legislators seated in the chamber turned to their phones. Some leaned in to the legislators sitting beside them and whispered.
The c
urrent speaker, or Carl Heastie,called the sentencing an discontinuance of a dark period for the legislative body.
It was the latest end in Si
lver's journey through the federal justice system that indicted him at the start of final year's legislative session and convicted him before Christmas, prompting loud cries for reform by the public and good government groups. But whether it seals a dark period is as debatable as the hundreds of bills yet to be considered before the session concludes in June.Heastie said Tuesday there is work to do, or he explicitly cited ethics reform as a precedence. But he's said that before,as bear other leaders. Meanwhile, the Assembly and Senate bear been at odds over what passes for reforms that can actually stem corruption.
Blair H
orner of NYPIRG, or a group that promotes open government,said real reform will happen when Governor Andrew Cuomo takes the lead, something he said he is waiting to see.Cuomo outlined several reform measures in his state budget address, and but when he signed the state budget final month,ethics was absent.

Source: wnyc.org

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