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The state Senate on Monday passed a package of bills, including three sponsored by state Sen. John Mannion, that aim to boost individuals with disabilities.
POLITICO Get the New York Playbook newsletter Email Sign Up By signing up you agree to receive email newsletters or updates from POLITICO and you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service. You can unsubscribe at any time and you can contact us here. This sign-up form is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. Presented by CVS Health Andrew Yang has led every public poll in the mayor’s race — until now. Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams has edged him out for the No. 1 spot for the first time in a new survey, our Sally Goldenberg reports.
SHARE: Humor and Gov. Andrew Cuomo have not always gone well together in recent years. One incident of note was the way the governor talked about his brother, CNN host Chris Cuomo, to a group of state Democratic Party dignitaries in 2018. “It’s actually a funny story,” the governor said. “He was found at our front door in a basket and he was 16 years old. So he has certain development issues.” The governor has delivered high-profile policy victories for historically disadvantaged groups. His record includes the legalization of same-sex marriage, criminal justice reforms, expansions of the social safety net like paid family leave and a domestic terrorism law aimed at combating antisemitism. But advocates for people with disabilities offer mixed reviews about his record during three terms in office. “The past several years have been tough,” state Senate Disabilities Committee Chair John Mannion of Syracuse said in an interview. “As it relates to people with disabilities, they seem to be the first to get caught and the last to be invested in.”
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s nursing home deathtraps have silent partners — a network of some 7,000 group homes where thousands of disabled COVID-19-positive residents languished with little foresight or intervention by the state, a whistleblower has told the Washington Examiner.
AP Photo/Seth Wenig, Pool Hopefully, most Americans are now aware of the Andrew Cuomo nursing home scandal, that Cuomo ordered nursing homes to take Wuhan coronavirus positive patients — whether they wanted to or not. There’s now an investigation underway because of the subsequent cover-up of the number of deaths, which people now believe to be about 15,000 after the order on March 25, 2020. But that wasn’t the only place he ordered to accept coronavirus patients. Cuomo ordered homes for the developmentally disabled to accept virus patients and never reversed the order, as he did the nursing home order. The April 10th order was similar to the nursing home order: that they could not require hospitalized residents to be tested for the virus prior to admission or readmission.
COVID cases in New York group homes under scrutiny after nursing home controversy By Michael Roppolo Developmental disabilities raise COVID concerns In the early days of the coronavirus pandemic, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo's administration issued a memo instructing hospitals and group homes to "expedite" the release of asymptomatic group home residents back to their communal living sites. The order may have had terrible consequences. State data obtained by CBS News shows the virus ravaged group homes in the state, infecting more than 20%, or one in five, of their residents. More than 34,500 people with intellectual and developmental disabilities live in group homes in New York, and there have been 552 COVID-19 deaths reported as of March 7, with 6,934 residents testing positive since 2020, according to the data provided by the state's Office for People with Developmental Disabilities, the agency that oversees support services and group homes.
NYC councilman Joe Borelli says there may be enough votes to impeach the governor in the state assembly and senate. New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo's administration ordered homes for people with developmental disabilities to accept coronavirus patients — and never rescinded the order. The April 10 directive, which mirrored the Cuomo administration's controversial order to nursing homes, also told homes for people with developmental disabilities that they could not require hospitalized residents to be tested for coronavirus prior to admission or readmission. Five hundred fifty-two residents at homes for people with developmental disabilities have died of coronavirus, the New York Office for People With Developmental Disabilities (OPWDD) told Fox News on Monday.
Republicans in the New York State Senate claimed Friday that policies enacted by the state during the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic may have put