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Home > NEWS > Email from the President > Governor Transition Unshackle Upstate: Staying the course in this extraordinary time
March 12, 2008
This week’s communication was intended to be a summary of Unshackle Upstate’s Albany lobbying effort on March 4, during which several dozen staff and volunteer leaders from Buffalo Niagara, Rochester, Syracuse, and Binghamton braved last week’s version of a winter storm to travel to the Capitol to advocate for Unshackle’s 2008 priorities – brownfields and energy policy reform, tax relief for young professionals, and opposition to the Assembly-passed IDA “reform” legislation. It seemed to be an important and effective series of meetings with legislators and administration officials; meetings which enhanced relationships to move proposed legislation benefiting the Upstate economy closer to reality.
However, one week later – with the terrible news about and from Governor Spitzer – last week seems like ages ago; and whatever progress we made regarding Unshackle Upstate’s economic revitalization agenda has to be “under further review.”
If the balance of political power in Albany always is some sort of moving target, the Spitzer-related announcements which started on Monday have exponentially sped up that movement and – at the same time – have us all searching for new clarity and stability. At the moment, we certainly don’t have it – and I’d be skeptical of anyone who says he or she does.
So, with the Governor’s just announced resignation, where are we? Here’s what we believe (I strongly hesitate using the word “know”):
And that’s the message I want to stress to the members of the Partnership – in the midst of a huge/unexpected change in Albany and of all the inevitable uncertainties surrounding it, the need for state policies and resources to help revitalize Upstate and Buffalo Niagara, in particular, remains. That’s why the extent of the Partnership’s state focused advocacy efforts will not diminish one bit. There may be some new tactics, but there will not be any hesitancy to continue to do whatever is necessary to improve our region and its economy.
Please join us! Send a message (it’s about brownfields reform which we feel has the best chance of positive action by the legislature over the next several weeks) to our representatives in Albany that, no matter who's NYS's governor, “we want our economy moving; not our people.”
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