The Senate has unanimously
approved its Gen*NY*sis proposal, which would create a life-sciences technology
development program and a new economic-development zone in New York.
The bill, the centerpiece
of the Senate's economic development program, passed June 18 as the Senate
moved toward a long-planned cessation of operations at the end of last week
The Business Council is urging
legislators to enact comprehensive Superfund refinancing and reform legislation,
including a permanent refinancing of the state Superfund and a statewide,
incentive-based voluntary cleanup program.
The Council outlined its
preferred approach to Superfund refinancing and reform in a June 20 letter
to Senate Majority Leader Joseph Bruno
ALBANYNew
York should add at least 10,000 megawatts of new, more efficient, and environmentally
friendly electricity-generating capacity within five years, and that priority
should be the focus of the state's revised Energy Plan, The Business Council
has told the state's Energy Planning Board
Three top leaders of New
York State's business community and of The Business Council
have strongly reaffirmed business's support for tough education standards
and tests based on them.
"It is extremely important
that we stand behind our standards and the tests that back them up,"
the three business leaders said in a letter delivered June 6 to Governor
Pataki, Commissioner of Education Rick Mills, members of the state Board
of Regents, and leaders and members of the state Assembly
The state Office of Science,
Technology, and Academic Research (NYSTAR) has awarded Albany Law School
a three-year contract to support the school's Science and Technology Law
Center.
The center will receive $350,000
a year for three years.
The center, the only one
of its kind in the state, will help companies develop and market new technologies
while strengthening the state's business infrastructure, the Governor said
in a release
The
Business Council is strongly opposing a bill that would limit the rights
of litigants and courts to seal court records to keep information arising
from civil litigation confidential.
The Council is encouraging
its members to ask legislative leaders and their own elected officials to
reject the bill (S
New York should have enough
energy to avoid blackouts this summer, but it will just "squeak by," and
margins in New York City will be "razor-thin," according to an updated forecast
by New York's Independent System Operator (ISO).
The ISO said its updated
projection, issued May 31, reaffirms how important and urgent it is that
New York increase its power-generation capacity
POWERING UP NEW YORK'S ECONOMY
A survey of New York employers on the importance of energy costs and supplies to our economic future.
The Business Council, New York's largest broad-based business group, is surveying New York State employers, chambers and business associations, and economic development specialists on how energy markets, supplies, and prices affect a company's prosperity and the state's economy
The nation's health-care
system should identify specific quality measures, release them publicly,
and use them to measurably improve quality of care, a leading expert on
health-care quality has told The Council's Health Committee.
Armed with these data, consumers
can play a meaningful role in helping reshape the delivery, quality, and
cost of health care, Bruce Boissonnault, executive director of the Niagara
Health Quality Coalition (NHQC), said at the Health Committee's May 22 meeting
The Assembly majority has
proposed reregulating energy markets in New York State.
At a press conference today,
Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver discussed the New York State Transitional
Energy Plan (NYSTEP), an Assembly plan which Speaker Silver said is designed
to provide rate relief, consumer protection, and an energy supply that secures
economic growth during New York's transition to competitive markets