Daily Campaign Roundup: Wilmot Fights For Schools
By Mike Connery on 06/29/2010 @ 02:45 PM
TODAY'S CAMPAIGN ROUND-UP.... Today's installment of campaign-related news. Mary Wilmot fights for mayoral control of schools while Republican James Alesi refuses to take stand. Tony Avella continues to stand up for Queens residents while Republican incumbent Frank Padavan is AWOL from Senate. Sen. Andrea Stewart-Cousins pushes more legislation through Senate.
- Democratic Candidate Mary Wilmot comes out in favor of mayoral control of schools - Wilmot announced yesterday that she is in favor of mayoral control of city schools. Such a bill is close to passage in the Senate. Her opponent, Republican James Alesi, has been too afraid to take a position on the issue yet. The time is now to stand up for the children of the Rochester City School District,” said Wilmot. “Our City School District children and their parents deserve better than the silence and indecision coming from Mr. Alesi’s office. … New York taxpayers spend $18,000 a year per student, we graduate only 46% of our incoming kids, … the silence is deafening, his year long indifference defends an unacceptable status quo.”
- Democratic Candidate Tony Avella slams Frank Padavan for missing budget session – Avella rightfully criticized Republican incumbent Padavan for opting to campaign in his district rather than travel to the Capitol for the Senate’s budget session. “Padavan’s Albany absence is a slap in the face to the hardworking taxpayers in our district,” Avella said. “When he should have been working to resolve the budget crisis and education funding, he was too worried about his own political future.”
Avella also has continued to receive press for leading a protest against MTA service cuts in Queens. One of the most controversial changes was with the Q15A, a new alternate route of the Q15 bus meant to pick up riders stranded by the elimination of the Q14. The route has now routed down a residential stretch of 10th Ave. that residents say is too narrow. - Sen. Andrea Stewart-Cousins pushes safe distance law through Senate - A bill sponsored by Sen. Stewart-Cousins requiring a requiring safe passing distance as a motorist passes a cyclist was passed by the Senate. The bill was introduced after Merrill Cassell was struck and killed by a Bee-Line bus Nov. 6, 2009, in Greenburgh. “The buffer zone is a reasonable and necessary safety precaution for cyclists that often need to maneuver around cracks, potholes or the hazards that cycling on our roads can present,” Stewart-Cousins said. “This legislation will serve to educate the public about the need for motor vehicles and bicyclists to share our roads safely.”
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