Categories
Politics

These lobbyists are speaking to subsequent NY governor

New York Lieutenant Governor Kathy Hochul speaks during a press conference the day after Governor Andrew Cuomo announced his resignation on August 11, 2021 at the New York State Capitol in Albany, New York.

Cindy Schultz | Reuters

Kathy Hochul won’t become New York’s governor for about two weeks, but some lobbyists have already had a leg in the race to influence her.

Hochul, who was elected Vice Governor of the state in 2014, has already dealt with several lobbyists from various industries this year.

She will replace Governor Andrew Cuomo after he announced on Tuesday that he would resign in two weeks after the attorney general presented a report saying he sexually molested 11 women. Cuomo, who continues to deny wrongdoing, was investigated for several months before quitting.

“I’m sure you have sought Kathy Hochul’s favor in the Albany lobbying world, starting with the cascade of allegations earlier this year,” a longtime Democratic insider with ties to the government told CNBC. “I bet that was when your phone went down because Albany lobbyists know when a major change is imminent.” This person declined to be called to speak freely.

On Wednesday, Hochul said that she had already been in contact with the heads of state of the legislature as well as the heads of companies and trade unions. She also vowed to clean up the toxic work environment that Cuomo was accused of overseeing.

Hochul, who will be the state’s first female governor, had heard from some of the state’s top funders prior to Cuomo’s resignation.

Some of the lobbyists who were in contact with her had ties to Cuomo’s late father, former Governor Mario Cuomo; former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani and former Governor David Paterson.

CNBC policy

Read more about CNBC’s political coverage:

Andrew Cuomo’s connections with lobbyists include Giorgio DeRosa, the father of Cuomo’s longtime associate Melissa DeRosa. DeRosa and his team temporarily deployed Hochul employees for a large number of customers.

A spokesman for DeRosa’s company Bolton-St. Johns said her team looks forward to working with Hochul and the next New York City Mayor, who is slated to be Democratic nominee Eric Adams.

Here are the lobbying shops that were in contact with Hochul this year.

Kasirer

A lobbying disclosure report shows that the Kasirer law firm, together with state lawmakers, spoke directly to Hochul between May and June. The effort went to Columbia Care Inc., a cannabis product pharmacy with locations in New York.

According to the report, the focus for Kasirer was on “building relationships with regard to cannabis legislation”. Cuomo signed a bill in March that would legalize recreational marijuana use in the Empire State. Hochul will now be responsible for the future implementation of the directive.

One of the lobbyists listed in the report who campaigned for Hochul is Suri Kasirer, the company’s founder and president. Kasirer was part of the senior staff of Governor Mario Cuomo. Crain’s has named Kasirer “New York City’s Most Successful Lobbyist”.

Kasirer’s website lists numerous corporate clients, including Wall Street firms like Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley; Real estate giants like RXR, Brookfield, Tishman and Brodsky, and media companies like Comcast and NBCUniversal, parent companies of CNBC.

The company did not respond to requests for comment.

Sheridan Hohman & Associates

Sheridan Hohman & Associates, a lobbying shop run by Tim Sheridan and Katie Hohman, reached out to Hochul this summer.

Sheridan was the director of government affairs under Mario Cuomo. Between May and June, they campaigned on behalf of Hochul and other state officials for the New York Association of Training & Employment Professionals, a nonprofit that focuses on human resource development in the state.

According to the lobbying report, their efforts focused on “government funding” for a “human resource development initiative”.

The company did not respond to a request for comment.

Shenker Russo & Clark

Shenker Russo & Clark, an Albany company that represented the Greater New York Automobile Dealers Association, championed Hochul, according to a disclosure report.

Theresa Russo is the company’s CEO. Russo, co-managing director Doug Clark, and other office executives are featured in the lobbying report showing their recent collaboration with Hochul. Russo once worked for Giuliani and Paterson.

Russo and Clark emailed CNBC to say they have known Hochul since their time in Congress and look forward to working on behalf of their clients with the new government.

“She has always been a person of great integrity and intelligence – qualities that will serve her well at the beginning of this new chapter,” said Russo and Clark in a joint statement. “We have spoken to her as lieutenant governor on behalf of clients and have always appreciated her willingness to listen to all sides of a problem.”

Dickinson & Avella

Dickinson & Avella, another Albany store that has a number of corporate clients, also championed Hochul.

The lobbying took place between May and June for Silvercup Services, which shares the same address as Silvercup Studios, one of the largest film and television production studios in New York City. Projects filmed at Silvercup Studios include Spike Lee’s “Do the Right Thing” and the hit HBO series “Succession” and “The Sopranos”.

Michael Avella and Christina Dickinson, both partners in the firm, are featured in the lobbying report. It is said that they agreed directly with Hochul on a government bill on a film tax credit.

The company’s officials did not respond to requests for comments.

A Hochul representative did not respond to a request for comment prior to publication.

Categories
Politics

Why Are We All Speaking About U.F.O.s Proper Now?

When spooky things appear in the sky, witnesses have often been reluctant to report them for fear of mockery by others, especially in the halls of government.

These days, fewer people are laughing.

Unidentified flying objects, or unidentified aerial phenomena as the government calls them, have been taken more seriously by U.S. officials in recent years, starting in 2007 with a small, secretly funded program that investigated reports of military encounters.

The program, whose existence was first reported by The New York Times in December 2017, was revived by the Defense Department last summer as the Unidentified Aerial Phenomena Task Force. The department said the task force’s mission was to “detect, analyze and catalog” sightings of strange objects in the sky “that could potentially pose a threat to U.S. national security.” Service members were newly encouraged to speak up if they saw something, with the idea being that removing the stigma behind reporting something weird would provide authorities with a better idea of what’s out there.

Then, late last year, President Donald J. Trump signed a $2.3 trillion appropriations package that included a provision inserted by lawmakers: They asked the secretary of defense and director of national intelligence to submit an unclassified report on what the government knows about U.F.O.s. That report is due this month.

With the public asking more questions about U.F.O.s, more officials appear willing to answer them.

“There are a lot more sightings than have been made public,” John Ratcliffe, the former director of national intelligence, told Fox News in March. Quite a few of them, he said, “are difficult to explain.”

John Brennan, the former director of the C.I.A., said in a podcast last year that some of the unexplained sightings might be “some type of phenomenon that is the result of something that we don’t yet understand and that could involve some type of activity that some might say constitutes a different form of life.”

The lead-up to the report’s expected release has seen quite a bit of mainstream media attention in recent weeks, including a 13,000-word article in The New Yorker in April, and a segment on CBS’s “60 Minutes.”

Even former President Barack Obama, in an appearance last month on “The Late Late Show With James Corden,” admitted there were “objects in the skies that we don’t know exactly what they are.” (President Biden deflected a question about U.F.O.s a few days later.)

The first thing to know is that “U.F.O.” doesn’t automatically mean “alien.” As its name indicates, U.F.O. refers to any aerial phenomenon with no immediate explanation. Though reported sightings take place frequently around the world, the vast majority of them turn out to be things like stars, satellites, planes, drones, weather balloons, birds or bats.

The modern history of U.F.O. sightings is generally considered to have started on June 24, 1947, when Kenneth Arnold, a private pilot from Idaho, reported seeing nine circular objects traveling at supersonic speeds near Mount Rainier. Newspapers described them as “flying saucers,” a term that captured the popular imagination. Though Mr. Arnold appeared to be a credible witness, government officials were skeptical.

Nonetheless, the government began a classified study, called Project Sign, out of concern that such objects could be advanced Soviet weapons. That was followed by Project Blue Book, which reviewed about 12,000 cases from 1952 to 1969, 701 of which could not be explained. It ended with a report saying U.F.O.s were not worth further study. As far as is publicly known, there were no more official government efforts to study U.F.O.s until the one established in 2007, called the Advanced Aerospace Threat Identification Program.

Sightings of unidentified objects in the United States have risen during the coronavirus pandemic, as people spending long days at home turned to sky gazing. Reports increased about 15 percent last year to more than 7,200, according to the National U.F.O. Reporting Center. As in other years, almost all of them had earthly explanations, the center said.

In November 2004, two Navy fighter jets from the U.S.S. Nimitz were off the coast of San Diego when they encountered a whitish, oval-shaped craft of similar size hovering above the sea, which was churning in an unusual way. As one of the jets began a circular descent to get a closer look, the object — which had no wings or obvious means of propulsion — ascended toward it, then zipped away.

“It accelerated like nothing I’ve ever seen,” Cmdr. David Fravor, one of the pilots, told The Times in 2017.

Commander Fravor told a fellow pilot that night that he had no idea what he had seen: “It had no plumes, wings or rotors and outran our F-18s.”

But, he added, “I want to fly one.”

Other cases include a spinning disk that was seen hovering above O’Hare Airport in Chicago in 2006, and two “sunlight-colored” objects reported by a professional pilot in England in 2007, as The New Yorker reported.

A video of the Nimitz incident, along with two from 2015, was officially released by the Defense Department last year. More recently, the department confirmed that video and images leaked to a documentary filmmaker had been taken by Navy personnel in 2019 and were being investigated by the task force.

It may not say much.

According to the provision in the appropriations package, the report should include a detailed analysis of U.F.O. data held by the task force and other government bodies. The report is also supposed to flag any unidentified aerial phenomena that could be considered threats to national security, including whether they “may be attributed to one or more foreign adversaries.” In addition, it must provide “a detailed description of an interagency process” for collecting and analyzing U.F.O. reports in the future, as well as recommendations for improving and funding data collection and research.

Although the report is to be made public, it may also come with a classified annex.

Calls for transparency are growing in Washington, including from a bipartisan political action committee that was launched last month.

One key backer of U.F.O. research efforts has been Harry Reid, the former Democratic senator from Nevada, who as Senate majority leader secured $22 million in funding to create the 2007 program.

In an essay for The Times this month, Mr. Reid said he had been interested in U.F.O.s since attending a conference in 1996 (to the consternation of his staff, who told him to “stay the hell away” from the topic). He said the program was necessary because “an unofficial taboo regarding the frank discussion of encounters could harm our national security and stymie opportunities for technical advancement.”

There is support for U.F.O. research among current senators as well, including Marco Rubio, Republican of Florida, who added the language to the appropriations package requesting the government report.

Mr. Rubio told “60 Minutes” that there should be a process by which reports of U.F.O.s are “cataloged and constantly analyzed, until we get some answers.”

“Maybe it has a simple answer,” he said on the program. “Maybe it doesn’t.”

Categories
Business

A 3rd of Basecamp’s staff resign after a ban on speaking politics.

About a third of Basecamp employees said they were stepping down after the company that makes productivity software announced new guidelines banning discussions in the workplace about politics.

Jason Fried, CEO of Basecamp, explained the guidelines in a blog post on Monday, describing “social and political discussions” about corporate messaging tools as a “major distraction”. He wrote that the company also prohibits committees, cutting benefits such as a fitness allowance (giving employees cash value) and stopping “dwelling on previous decisions and thinking about them.”

Basecamp had 57 employees, including Mr Fried when the announcement was made, according to a staff list on its website. Since then, at least 20 of them have publicly announced that they want to resign or have already resigned, according to a New York Times tally. Basecamp did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Mr Fried and David Hansson, two of Basecamp’s founders, have published several books on work culture, and news about their latest management philosophy has received a mixture of applause and criticism on social media.

After the Platformer newsletter published details of a dispute within the company that contributed to the decision to ban political talks, Hansson wrote in another blog post that Basecamp employees who disagreed with the founders would receive a severance payment of up to six Month salary offered me choice.

“We are committed to a deeply controversial stance,” wrote Hansson, Basecamp’s chief technology officer. “Some employees are relieved, others are angry, and that describes the public debate about it pretty well.”

Coinbase, a start-up that enables people to buy and sell cryptocurrencies, announced a similar ban last year, with a similar offer to provide severance pay to employees who disagreed. The company said 60 of its employees had resigned, about 5 percent of its workforce.

Categories
Entertainment

‘Items of a Girl’ Has Midwives Speaking About That Start Scene

In the movies, childbirth is usually an emergency. It starts with the woman’s water breaking at the worst possible moment. She hardly seems to be in labor, and yet the traffic jam takes her to the hospital. There she gets angry and the pain is her husband’s fault. She yells at him, maybe even injures him, and orders him to have a vasectomy. Then she asks for an epidural, but for some reason she can’t have it. After four minutes of intense screaming, she passed what looks like the baby tanner.

The recent Netflix film, Pieces of a Woman, with an Oscar-nominated performance by Vanessa Kirby, attempts to undermine that narrative with a naturalistic birth scene that takes up almost a quarter of the film. The extended sequence, which ultimately has a tragic outcome, got midwives talking, especially because film and television can greatly affect the expectations of couples who have never had a baby. In a handful of interviews across the country, midwives hailed naturalistic childbirth as a new frontier in screen display, though they argued that some details were inconsistent with a fully empowered experience.

As the work scene begins, Martha (Kirby) leans against a stove and her contractions intensify. Her partner Sean, played by Shia LaBeouf, rushes around her and asks repeatedly if she wants water. They eventually move into the living room, where he cradles them on his lap. “I think I might throw up,” she says, burping and choking.

Hannah Epstein, a midwifery nurse in San Francisco, said she was impressed with the scene, which many other films leave out: “You never see work, only birth.” She said that some patients fear they don’t know when they will Are in labor, and others think that the labor is absolutely rushing. “Pieces of a Woman” helped correct these misunderstandings. “It was a good illustration of that uncomfortable, gross feeling at the beginning of labor,” she said, noting that nausea and vomiting are also very common during labor.

Categories
Health

Mother and father, Cease Speaking In regards to the ‘Misplaced Yr’

“They had a sense of resilience and ‘grit’, even prepandemic which I think served them well,” she said. “I see an ability to pan.”

In Dr. Luther’s research actually regressed reports of loneliness for seventh and eighth grade students between spring 2020 and spring 2021 – a reflection of how she suspects how alienating and lonely middle school is for many of them in “normal” times. (“The loners, the introverts, the kids who weren’t popular – they’re fine, thank you,” she said.)

Other new data suggests that the youngest teens may have got through the pandemic year with slightly less wear and tear than older teens. In the fall of 2020, a research team led by psychologist Angela L. Duckworth of the University of Pennsylvania surveyed more than 6,500 high school students in a large, demographically diverse school district where families could choose whether their children would attend remotely or in school Person.

They found that students who attended school from a distance, regardless of gender, race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status, exhibited significantly lower social, emotional, and academic wellbeing – with the exception of ninth graders, whose level remained roughly the same. (And who for most of the 20th century were considered to be in the same developmental category as seventh and eighth grade students, teaching in middle schools.)

Overall, according to Dr. Steinberg, the youth who fared best during the pandemic were more likely to be the ones who were able to keep in touch with their friends. And for many middle school students, that means having parents willing to relax their usual rules on social media and screen time.

“Social media mitigates some of the effects of isolation,” he said.

This message, often echoed by experts and educators, should provide some relief to the many parents who feel guilty about the screen time they have given their children over the past year.

Rabiah Harris, a Washington public middle school science teacher, holds a PhD in education that, as the mother of a nearly 12-year-old, allows her to take a philosophical viewpoint.

Categories
Politics

What a ‘Speaking Filibuster’ Would possibly Imply for the Senate

“I don’t think you need to eliminate the filibuster. You have to do it like it used to be when I was in the Senate for the first time, “the president said in an interview with ABC News. “You had to get up and command the floor, and you had to keep talking.”

The president’s comments came after a Democratic senator who opposed ending the filibuster, Joe Manchin III of West Virginia, told an interviewer that he was open to making the process “a little more painful.”

The tactic that Mr. Biden was referring to, and sometimes referred to as the talking filibuster, is the kind used in the movie “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, ”in which the title character portrayed by James Stewart takes a stand against corruption by preaching in the Senate until he faints.

In the real chamber, where behind-the-scenes proceedings are often blocked by bureaucracy, filibusters can stir up the public drama.

They can be political when Senator Bernie Sanders, the independent Vermonter who negotiates with the Democrats, spent eight hours ranting against tax breaks for the richest Americans in 2010. And they can be disrespectful when Senator Alfonse D’Amato, Republican of New York, sang a song by Gene Autry during a 15-hour speech in 1992 to prevent a typewriter company from moving hundreds of jobs to Mexico.

Before the civil war, the filibuster was used to protect the interests of the slave states. And throughout the 20th century, Southern Conservative Democrats repeatedly used filibusters to block civil rights legislation, including a law against lynching.

Since then, senators from both parties have used marathon speeches to challenge majority rule on issues such as gun control, judicial nominations, and health care.

But colorful marathon speeches are becoming increasingly rare. The Senate began changing the rules in the 1970s when Senators feared speaking filibusters would poorly reflect the Senate and endanger the health of older members. The mere threat posed by a filibuster is enough today: Senators can prevent controversial measures from reaching the bottom by privately registering their objections.

An early practitioner of the dramatic filibuster was Huey Long, the Louisiana Democrat who fought against the terms of Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal.

In a 1935 speech that lasted more than 15 hours, Long read from the Constitution and shared recipes for fried oysters and pot liqueur. He was thwarted by a four o’clock toilet break. (To hold the ground you have to be present on the ground.)

When Mr. Sanders protested in 2010 with a filibuster against the Obama administration’s plan to continue George W. Bush’s tax policy, his monologue lasted eight hours. Mr. Sanders, fueled by oatmeal and coffee, felt his legs cramp and his speech grow hoarse.

“I was afraid that after two or three hours I would have nothing more to say or would be tired or have to go to the bathroom,” he said afterwards. “But I was happy.”

One of the most memorable performances in the last decade came in 2013 from Senator Ted Cruz, Republican of Texas. It was a procedural tactic and technically not a filibuster, but it might hint at things to do with so many presidential aspirants in the chamber.

To circumvent the Affordable Care Act, Mr. Cruz spent 21 hours beating up politicians in “cheap suits” and “bad hairstyles”, praising the hamburgers at White Castle, and even reading some of his daughters favorite stories, including “Greens Eggs “and ham” by Dr. Seuss.

That same year, Kentucky Republican Senator Rand Paul used a real filibuster to delay the appointment of John O. Brennan to head the Central Intelligence Agency. Mr Paul said his ultimate goal is to get the Obama administration to say it will not use drone strikes against American citizens on US soil.

After 13 hours he released the floor. “I’ve found filibustering has some limitations,” he said, “and I’ll have one of them to deal with in a few minutes here.”

Critics of the filibuster note that its primary use was to hinder advances in civil rights for blacks. Last year, former President Barack Obama called the tactic a “Jim Crow relic” when he delivered a laudatory speech for John Lewis, the Georgia congressman and civil rights pioneer who died in July.

The South Democrats used the filibuster to block or delay anti-lynch measures in the 1930s. The law outlawed discrimination in the workplace in the 1940s and 1960s and other civil rights laws in the 1950s and 1960s.

“The struggles over filibuster reform for much of the 20th century were closely linked to civil rights implications,” said Sarah A. Binder, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and professor of political science at George Washington University.

The record holder for the longest solo filibuster remains Strom Thurmond, the segregationist Senator from South Carolina, who gave a more than 24-hour speech in 1957 and ate a sip of orange juice, pieces of hamburger and pieces of pumpernickel.

Thurmond and other Southern Democrats failed in their attempt to block the bill, but used their clout on other occasions to halt other civil rights changes. Despite a 14-hour filibuster from Senator Robert C. Byrd, Democrat of West Virginia, President Lyndon Johnson won a civil rights bill through bipartisan help in 1964. Mr. Thurmond became a Republican, but Mr. Byrd remained a Democrat and served 51 years.

His successor, Mr. Manchin, counted Byrd as a mentor and said he would do his best to follow in his footsteps and uphold Senate traditions. Today, as a centrist democrat, he exercises an overly great influence in an evenly divided chamber, which makes his position on filibuster rules critical.

The filibuster wasn’t something the founding fathers of the United States envisioned.

In the late 18th century, both the Senate and the House had rules that allowed the majority of their members to break off debates and bring actions to a vote. In an attempt in 1806 to clean up its rulebook, the Senate scrapped this ruling.

The filibuster was an unexpected result of that procedural change, said Professor Binder.

In 1917, amid bitter debates over US participation in World War I, the Senate passed the cloture rule, which allowed two-thirds of Senators to close the debates and put a measure to a vote.

The Senate made other changes in the 1970s, including reducing the super-majority requirement from 67 to 60 votes and allowing more than one pending bill at the same time. The changes allowed the Senate to move on to other areas of business, while the theoretical debates about blocked items continued indefinitely and speaking filibusters were essentially obsolete – with the exception of dramatic effects.

At the time, the Democrats had a dominant majority, but margins have narrowed and the Republicans have taken control for an extended period of time.

In 2013, Senate Democrats had the upper hand at 53-45, ending the minority party’s ability to filibust most presidential candidates after years of frustrating Republicans blocking Mr. Obama’s election to federal courts and cabinet posts. They left the filibuster untouched for Supreme Court candidates.

Then they lost control of the Senate. Four years later, when the Republicans held both the presidency and the Senate, they voted to lower the threshold for advancing Supreme Court nominations from 60 votes to a simple majority.

But the super-major rule remained unchanged for the legislature, to the disappointment of President Donald Trump, who unsuccessfully used Kentucky Senator Mitch McConnell to use his majority leader power to scrap the filibuster.

In the early months of Mr Biden’s administration, Republicans have not yet used the rules to block his laws, but battles are on the way. Some Democrats argue that filibuster reform is the only way to overcome the united republican opposition to pass a suffrage bill or laws to strengthen labor rights or reform immigration policies.

Mr McConnell, who tried in January and failed to get the Democrats to pledge to leave the filibuster alone, dramatically defended the status quo on Tuesday, warning of a “scorched earth” response if the Democrats did should dare to “break the Senate”. ”

Categories
Business

Monetary Assist: Grades, Advantage and Speaking to Youngsters About Paying for School

If you raise your eyebrows now, admins will feel for you. They also dislike the equity impact of Earnings Aid, even when affluent families receiving $ 20,000 off in many schools can help subsidize low-income families.

However, these enrollment managers also wonder why you are so shocked that they seek Earning Aid in the first place. After all, it’s terribly difficult to fundamentally change the character of a college – its location, the permanent faculty, the types of students who come year after year, what the brand stands for in the entry-level employment market, and 22-year-old law students.

But price? Administrators can change that in no time.

“I get impatient with people who think it’s an easy decision or that schools that do much more merit than we do are somehow morally corrupt,” said Brian Rosenberg, former president of Macalester College in St. Paul, Minn I try to keep their schools open. “

In fact, it’s just a business or something.

“The better the student – and this includes both curriculum choices and grades – the more money will be required to change a student’s choice of enrollment,” said Robert Massa, a longtime administrator of admissions, financial assistance and Communications when he was working at Drew University in New Jersey before becoming a consultant.

But when I pointed out to Mr Massa that it was obvious that students should know how this works – so that they can take harder grades and aim for better grades if they so choose – he winced a little. “Take a heavy load because you want to,” he said. “Not because you think I want you to.”

If this all sounds pretty stressful, know that the experts in the field haven’t quite figured out what they’re going to say to their own children, either. Maureen McRae Goldberg is the former financial assistance director at Occidental College and now has a similar role at Santa Barbara City College. She seemed both resigned and annoyed when I asked what she would say to her daughter when the time comes.

Would it be ridiculous to explain that her high school achievement could be worth a six-figure discount? Is it even fair to bring it up when many schools – especially private colleges – fail to reveal which brand a teenager needs to hit to get any earnings support at all?

“I’m afraid so,” she said. “These are the same questions I’ve been asking for 20 years, and in my naivete I thought we’d fixed some of them now.”