The New York State Senate spent $332,419 over a six-month period on offices vacated by two senators who had resigned, according to data posted today on SeeThroughNY.net, the Empire Center’s transparency website.

The data for April 1 through Sept. 30, 2014 indicate that 16 paid staffers remained on the former payrolls of Senators Charles Fuschillo (R-Merrick) and Eric Adams (D-Queens), who left office on December 31, 2013. The highest paid holdover staffer in either Senate office was Jesse Hamilton, who was paid $48,003 during the 6-month period as “counsel” in Adams’ former district. Hamilton was himself a candidate for the seat, to which he was elected in November.

The latest update to SeeThroughNY’s unique, searchable database of legislative expenditures also shows:

Over $24,247 in spending on “clothing,” “supplies” and other costs associated with an exhibit at the 2014 state fair.

Millions in expenditures on communications, ranging from $4.34 million for bulk and first-class postage to $41 for “pager lease(s)”.

$63,488 in legal fees for the firm representing Senators Dean Skelos and Michael Nozzolio in a federal lawsuit challenging the state’s 2012 redistricting legislation. The lawsuit reportedly ended in July 2014, with the federal court handing down a summary judgement siding with legislators and the Governor.

The total spending by each senator’s office can be viewed here.

“Taxpayers have a right to see how their money is being spent everywhere in government, and that includes the legislature,” said Tim Hoefer, executive director of the Empire Center. “These reports are an important part of government accountability, and should be released on a monthly basis, not semi-annually.”

Hoefer noted that both the Senate and Assembly, which has not yet released its April-September 2014 data, only compile expenses for six-months chunks of time—and that the data typically are not publicly available for almost six months after those periods end. In addition, by organizing the data into six-month periods that correspond to state fiscal years, which run from April 1 to March 31, the Legislature has obscured expense totals for its two-year sessions, which correspond to calendar years.

Noting that Governor Cuomo’s ethics reform deal with Assembly Democrats reportedly includes public disclosure of expense reimbursements, Hoefer said: “Legislative leaders should also more frequently release and update their expense data, preferably on a monthly basis.”

SeeThroughNY.net, the Empire Center’s transparency website, allows users to examine payroll and pension records, as well as school district contracts and legislative expenditures.

© 2015 Hudson Valley News Online

Tags:

You may also like

Bill Requires Municipalities To Maintain Their Websites

Skoufis’ legislation references a 2014 Empire Center highlighted the poor quality of municipal websites many of which lacked basic information. The report found that less than 20% of local governments received a passing grade on their website’s availability of information and usability including two municipalities that did not have a website. Some of those websites have improved over the past five years, including Jamestown’s, which received an “F” rating in 2014. The updated city website includes all of the information Skoufis’ legislation would mandate. Read More

Albany’s ‘big ugly’ provides political cover, but has some benefits

“This has been one of the worst developments in the political process here in New York in modern history,” said E.J. McMahon of the fiscally conservative Empire Center for Public Policy think tank and a former aide to Gov. George Pataki. “It really is corrosive of accountability and democracy and, implicitly, the constitution prohibits it.” Read More

Panel at LIA meeting knocks state single-payer health care bill

"Ninety-three hospitals would lose more than 10 percent of revenue," said Bill Hammond, director of health policy at the Empire Center for Public Policy, a fiscally conservative  Albany think tank. Read More

‘Pork’ Bill Hangs Over Other Issues in Albany

E.J. McMahon, research director for the Empire Center for Public Policy, a fiscally conservative think tank, questioned the need for these projects. His organization found recent SAM allocations paid for projects he deemed frivolous such as a skate park and a local highway garage. “It’s this huge mutual back-scratching,” he said. Read More

Capitol pressroom

Former Assemblyman Richard Brodsky and EJ McMahon, Founder and Research Director of the Empire Center, shared their insights into the effects of the legislation and the political implications. Read More

UNFINISHED BUSINESS AS ALBANY SESSION CLOCK TICKS DOWN

Of the $508 million in pork awarded last year, most of it came from the State and Municipal Facilities program, which is widely derided as legislative slush fund, according to an analysis by the fiscally  conservative Empire Center for Public Policy. Read More

Report says move start of state fiscal year, add budget office

Moving the start of the state fiscal year to July 1 and establishing a Legislative Budget Office are among the recommendations of the Empire Center to improve accountability in the budget process. Read More

Lawmakers look to make New York even more litigious

A 2017 study by the Empire Center found liability costs in New York exceed $20 billion a year. If those costs were passed on to every household in the state — which really they are, in a way, because all affected organizations and insurers have to pass their costs on to their clients —- it would work out to be $2,700 annually. Read More