Kathy Hochul Inaugurated as the First Woman Governor of New York State

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Her Inaugural Address:


Wow, this is extraordinary, so extraordinary. I’m almost speechless, but I’m really not, because you’ve got to sit down and relax. We’re going to be here for a few minutes because it took us a long time to get here.

And I’m still touched by the words of young Kayden Hern. You wonder how we found a Poet Laureate? Well, to find a Poet Laureate, you have to walk the streets of Harlem. I was outside the Apollo Theater, it was Amateur Night. I was checking it out, we were just giving them some money. And there’s a long line around the block, and I saw this young man standing there. I said, “You’re going in to watch somebody?” He goes, “No, I’m a poet. I’m going to go recite.”

Okay. So I said, “What’s your poem?” I figured he’d whip out a piece of paper and read it to me. He had memorized it. And he gave me a poem and I said, I stood there on the spot and I said, “If I win this election, you are my Poet Laureate and I want you here.” 

I want to recognize all the clergy for reminding us of the presence of God in our lives. And I listened closely to all their words, knowing that in my heart, I am stronger because of the influence of God in my life, and will continue to seek His counsel through the Bible as I guide the people of this state.

I also want to recognize the extraordinary leaders, and you heard many of them speak here. My God, we’re blessed in this state. We have the finest. To have, first of all, the Majority Leader of the United States Senate as our own Senator, Chuck Schumer. I thought maybe he was the Postmaster General, he delivers so much. Thank you. Thank you, Chuck.

We have a former Governor with us, David Patterson, thank you for being a source of great counsel to me, as only a few number know the struggles of this position, but you inspire me, David Patterson. The members of the New York Congressional Delegation — my former colleagues, Joe Morelle, Paul Tonko, Ritchie Torres and my former roommate, Carolyn Maloney. 

What can one say about Tish James? Well, Mama Dukes is our mother, we’re clearly sisters, and we are kindred sisters in the fight for justice. So proud to serve with you, my friend, Attorney General Tish James.

And a great person who embodies what a public servant really means, our great Comptroller, Tom DiNapoli, thank you for many years of service.

Our leaders in the Legislature, Speaker Carl Heastie, thank you my friend. Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins, thank you for all you do for our state. The members of the State Legislature, we’ve got a lot of work to do. Looking forward it, I really am. I’m energized. And I thank all of you for answering the call to service as well.

But I come out of local government, so I have to recognize some of my locals. I didn’t have a place as big as this when I was in local government, but the Mayor of New York is here. Mayor Eric Adams has joined us. And I thank you. Thank you for traveling here and being with us. 

Our District Attorneys, our Council Members, Mayor Adams, Mayor Walsh, Mayor Spano, Mayor Sheehan. And County Executives, and elected officials from all over the state.

I have to say I spoke to two of my leaders back home in Buffalo, spoke as I have every single day many times for the last week or so. Mayor Byron Brown and County Executive Mark Poloncarz truly wanted to be here, but they’ve endured a lot as well, and I want to thank them for being in the trenches together, as we battle the deadly storm.

Also to the members of the Judiciary, we look to you for leading our way, making the right decisions, and I’m proud of every one of you.

To the Girl Scouts, 4-H students, young students we saw in the video, thank you. And to the men and women of labor who are with us here today. 

People often ask how I get through this. You know, it’s kind of a rough and tumble job for a woman, isn’t it? I said, “I got steel running through my veins.” My daddy was a steelworker. My grandpa was a steelworker. My uncles were steelworkers. So I can handle this. Don’t worry about me. But I know how hard the men and women of labor work every single day, and you make us proud. 

But let me get to the people I spend the most time with, although not as often as I’d like these days. The love of my life, New York’s first-First Gentleman, Bill Hochul. He has endured my absences, and the stress, and I told him, “Stop reading the social media. Don’t read the blogs. Don’t read the news anymore.” Because as a family member, you feel it deeply, right? All of us, your family feels it almost deeper than we do because we ask for this. So to my husband who’s been with me since we were both Assembly interns.

To my parents who could not be here, we lost my mom a few years ago, she departed literally two months before I was nominated to be the Lieutenant Governor eight years ago, but I think of her every single day. And my father who couldn’t travel here, but I know he’s with us in spirit. And my entire family, sister Sheila, brothers who are here, nieces and nephews, and my Aunt Patricia who’s been working on campaigns with me since I was a kid. So to them, I’m grateful.

But two who’ve endured the most absence from their mother would be my children Will and Katie, who grew up with a mother who ran for office when they were preschoolers. Most mothers were not doing that at the time. And I dragged them knocking on doors and sometimes when they had to go to the bathroom, we had asked strangers if my kids could come in and we’ve got a lot of stories. So thank you for all the absences, but still supporting your mom no matter what.

And to your wonderful spouses, my own children, Christina, and Matt, who’ve encouraged me also from the very beginning.

And I think you all had a chance to hear from my granddaughter Sofia. She thinks I’m really small because all I can do is see her on FaceTime every day. So I think she was rather shocked to see that grandma was bigger than this. But she reminds me of our obligation to the next generation.

When we think about time, I think about two and a half centuries ago, George Clinton took this oath of office, the one that my husband just administered me on a Bible that was the family Bible of the Roosevelt family that went back to the 1600s. So we always reflect about history, but when Clinton was sworn in as Governor, I can tell you right now, not a soul in that place would’ve ever dreamed that a woman would take that same oath in this state.

And it’s been a journey. And after that, seventy years later, a group of bold and really audacious women, and a few enlightened men, there’s a lot of them around, like Frederick Douglass at the time. They gathered in Seneca Falls. Where’s Seneca Falls, how do you find it without GPS? This was hundreds of years ago. But people found their way to this place, the crossroads of New York. And they stood up and they fought and they said, “We’re sick and tired of this existence.” And they declared that all men and women are created equal. And they pursued the right to vote. Radical, radical concept at the time, the right to vote, women can’t vote. If you read all the arguments, they’re absurd.

But since then, New York women have been the trailblazers for the rest of our nation, where they overcame every barrier to push forward, despite all the odds. Names like Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Sojourner Truth, whose statue is in my office. Harriet Tubman, whose life story I read when I was eight years old and I treasured it, the struggles this young woman did and ended up living in Auburn, New York for the last 50 years of her life. Susan B. Anthony, against the tides of her time from Rochester, going around the country, friends with Frederick Douglass.

And you heard Mama Dukes mention Shirley Chisholm. I was a young staffer on Capitol Hill. I knew Shirley Chisholm because she was actually buried in Buffalo. She fell in love with a man from Buffalo. I used to see her all the time. What an inspiration, standing up. Who would’ve thought a woman of color could run for President of the United States?

But then we have Hillary Clinton, another New Yorker. She has been an inspiration to me from the very beginning.

And then we think about the women who transformed the Supreme Court before it went in this direction. Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor. 

And as I mentioned, we live among legends like Dr. Hazel Dukes, who is still to this day, at 91 saying, “We still have that march toward justice. It’s not finished yet. We’re still working together.”

Each of the women I mentioned redefined leadership in their own way. And they paved the way for others to follow. And to be clear, it wasn’t just because they’re women that they made their mark. They embodied the courage and the character that still defines New Yorkers to this day. And above all, they were fighters. And now, as I stand before you, humbled by this honor, I’m ready to take on the fight.

To paraphrase one of our former governors, Teddy Roosevelt, “The people have now chosen a woman to be in the arena.” You’ve heard of the man in the arena. There’s now a woman in the arena. And that man and that woman are willing to be marred by dust and sweat and blood to strive valiantly and spend herself in a worthy cause.

As the sign says, I didn’t come here to make history. I came here to make a difference. And to pursue the worthy causes, pursue them together. And as your Governor, I’ll keep fighting for you every single day. And this is what I know about New Yorkers, just like the Lieutenant Governor, Lieutenant Governors do a lot of traveling. I know every corner of this state. New Yorkers are tough. They’re undeterred. They’re unafraid. We’re also innovators and creators. We can be optimists and realists, dreamers and doers. But above all, when we are united, there’s no stopping us. And there is no fight for what is right that we will ever back down from.

Now those of you who’ll gather with us in a little over a week, I’ll be presenting an ambitious State of the State, so I won’t go into policy today, save up for that one. It’ll even be longer.

But right now, there’s some fights we just have to take on. The affordability crisis in housing and energy and everything. It’s making life just too damn hard for New Yorkers.

And the gun violence epidemic, my gosh. The loss of lives goes on and on. 

The rise in hate crimes. What happened here? Especially antisemitism, Asian hate, anti LGBTQ hate and the systemic racism that still persists to this day. Those are the fights we are called to take on. We must.

And we’re still dealing with the lingering effects of the pandemic that disrupted every aspect of our lives. The loss of learning for our children, the loss of jobs for our workers, the tear in the social fabric that led to mental health challenges and increases in crime. We’re still reeling from all this. 

And while we’re doing it, we still have to fight back against the Supreme Court’s hostile assault on basic rights such as a woman to make decisions about her own body. We are in this fight. We’re in this fight to the end.

And just as we are reflecting on history today, when history looks back on our time, the question will be to all of us, in the present, the question will be whether we rose up to meet these challenges today and challenges yet unknown.

Whether we took the torch that was passed to us from those trailblazers and made it burn even brighter before we passed it off to the next generation. They’ll ask whether we advanced the causes of social justice and the progressive values that have set us apart from all the rest. Standing before you, I know the answer is yes.

Because obstacles don’t define us. Rather, it is the unparalleled courage and character of us that defines us as a people. So my confidence in the future is steeped in our glorious past – in the face of adversity, we always persist. We persevere, we prevail.

Think back when our young state needed to open up new markets. What’d they do? They achieved the most ambitious engineering feat in the history of our country by building the Erie Canal, creating Upstate and transforming New York City from a little village to an economic powerhouse.

And think about other challenges, when women around this country, as I said, faced oppression, the National Women’s Suffrage Movement was born right here, nowhere else but our state. And when events happened, like at Stonewall and the Triangle Shirtwaist fire, and the fight for civil rights came here, we took on those fights. We fought for those rights – LGBTQ rights, workers’ rights, civil rights. All of those causes found their national champions in one state – our state. No other state has that legacy.

You know, it was 20 years ago, the unspeakable terrorist attack, 9/11. They sought to divide us, take us down. You know what? New York rose up, became even stronger instead.

And just this year, we prayed for their souls, we experienced twin tragedies in my hometown of Buffalo. I see Senator Kennedy here. He knows what I’m talking about. Crystal Peoples-Stokes would’ve joined us, but she’s dealing with the aftermath as well.

First of all, we had a hate-filled domestic terrorist attack on my neighbors in Buffalo, simply out grocery shopping on a beautiful day. Afterward, we came together – the legislature, our leadership – and we passed the toughest gun laws in our country to say no more.

And just over the Christmas weekend, with the blizzard of the century, and we pray for their families, the souls we lost. But oh my gosh, we had heroic people. It was dangerous. It was so dangerous to be out there. I want to recognize the heroic first responders, law enforcement, and the ordinary citizens who helped the strangers in their time of need. And we are so honored to have some of the men and women who fought that blizzard here with us today. 

And one of them – they all have incredible stories – but one of them I want to highlight: protection specialist John Makin. He saved three stranded ambulances carrying sick people to the hospital that got stranded and could not move. He and a few good Samaritans also helped a doctor on his way to save lives, and his mother were trapped in a car. They didn’t know if they were going to hold on. He rescued them. He worked with another fireman and a citizen because Buffalo is truly the city of good neighbors. To John and everyone else who worked during that blizzard, please stand up and let’s give these heroes a round of applause.

State Police, National Guard, State Fire, all of our agencies pulled together and I’m so proud, so proud of what we did. New York State workers alone were responsible for 600 saves – saved the lives of 600 people.

But as we can see, every single time New York faces a travesty. We turn it into a source of strength, and growth, and advancement. And these are the times that confirm my undying belief in the people of New York, moving in one direction: Ever Upward.

Because New York stands for something extraordinary: Opportunity and ambition, compassion and tolerance, and the most fascinating people and places. Ultimately, a place where millions can come to, to build their lives, their families, live a good life. And that’s why I’m energized. I’m enthusiastic to be in this arena, no matter what comes our way. Because this is the New York I believe in, and the New York that I’ll fight for every day.

And here’s where we’re taking the fight next. First, we must – and will — make our state safer. This means New Yorkers can walk our streets and ride our subways, our kids can go to school, free from fear. And we’ll work together with our partners, our mayors, and get it done.

Secondly, we have to make our state more affordable. Yes, people want to be here. But the thought of not being able to have your grandkids grow up in the same community that they were raised in because they can’t afford it? That’s very sad. And New Yorkers are just struggling to pay rent, food and gas to get to their jobs. They’re hurting. Our people are hurting. We’re going to fight for them. And we must reverse the trend of people leaving our state in search of lower costs and opportunities elsewhere. We can do this.

And lastly, we must create opportunities for the people today, but also invest in a tomorrow so our young people, like our poet, Kayden, can have a better life.

And we’re going to keep opening the doors to communities and people who’ve historically not had opportunities. We’ll create economic empowerment so communities of color are no longer left behind and marginalized. We’ll make sure that our kids can thrive and have a first-rate education, so their future has unlimited possibilities.

And while so many states are sliding backwards when it comes to basic fundamental rights, New Yorkers will never have to worry about whether their rights are protected here in the state. Because the right to choose, the right of marriage, the right to vote, and the right to a life free from hatred and discrimination is basic to who we are. They’re all worth fighting for.

And as we protect our future generations and their rights, we’re going to continue to lead the nation in our ambitious plan to combat climate change and protect our environment. Because no place on Earth has more God-given natural treasures than New York.

Just look at these images of New York around us. From the grandeur of the high peaks in the North Country, to the Great Lakes, to the storied Hudson River and the Majesty of the Mighty Niagara, to the pristine beaches of Long Island. It’s beautiful.

So I’ll fight for all that, but as I said, most importantly, I’m here to fight for the people. Everyone, no matter where they came from, how they got here – to those whose ancestors came here in bondage on slave ships, and others who saw opportunity and saw New York as a shining beacon, drawing millions from every corner of the planet, just like my impoverished grandparents left Ireland as teenagers came through Ellis Island.

And because of that, we are home to the most diverse population – people of every color, creed, national origin and orientation call New York home. And for the next four years, our sole mission will be to lift up every New Yorker and make a difference in their lives, so their tomorrows will be better than their yesterdays.

My friends, let me close with a few final thoughts. I may be the one standing before you, but this day doesn’t belong to me. It belongs to the New York men and women who take care of the rest of us – the nurses and doctors who saved our people during a pandemic, the home health care aides who allow us to age, and our parents to age, the teachers who are fighting so hard to get our kids back on track, and they’re always asked to do so much more than just be an educator. We honor them.

This day belongs to the waitresses. I’m a former waitress. I make really good chicken wings. The waitresses, the hotel workers, the union workers, and so many others. Sometimes they have to work a couple of jobs just so they can give their kids a hot meal, pay their bills during this cold winter.

And this day also belongs to our law enforcement and emergency responders who wake up every single day, set their alarm, go out into the world and they face the storms, the fires, the hurricanes, the flooding, the blizzards and all the other risks to themselves, just so we can be safe in our beds at night.

This day also belongs to the resilient farmers – my gosh, that’s a tough, tough business – all over the state of New York. Their food feeds the rest of us throughout this state.

And to our small businesses, the owners. I helped my mom start a small business a long time ago. I know the struggles. You put everything – you put your hopes and dreams into your business, and sometimes things like a pandemic just knock you back. They’re so resilient. We’re here to help them because they add the charm and the character and the personality to our downtowns.

And this day belongs to little girls and to young women who will grow up knowing that from this day forward, there are no barriers they can’t overcome. 

I remember one of my first days as Governor – very first days – I went back to the Erie County Fair. I’ve always gone to the Erie County Fair. A young mother came up to me with her little five-year-old daughter and she said, in this hushed voice, “Look sweetie, it’s a girl Governor.” And to which she said, I’ll never forget, “That means little girls can grow up to be whatever they want and so can you.” And that is true. That is true.

So as I approach the next four years with the energy and the sense of purpose and optimism, I know I’m not alone. For I’m joined in that arena with others who will fight the good fights and the worthy pursuits that Roosevelt spoke of. Let’s use these coming years to truly make a difference for each other and to make this state stronger than it’s ever been in our glorious history.

New York, just as you have put your faith in me, and I thank all the voters of New York, I also have faith in you. And to my very core, I believe there is nothing we cannot accomplish together, and so we will.

May God bless New York, may God bless the United States of America, and thank you New York.

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NEW LIGHT OF NEW YEAR LIGHTS UP THE DARK OF OLD

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WPCNR THE SUNDAY BAILEY. Philosophy By John F. Bailey. January 1, 2022:

The sunlight of the new 2023 streamed in with relentless optimism into  people’s lives today.

You and I were presented with a new set of days to continue working on ourselves.

To deal with our flaws and revive our self-discipline and resolve to defeat them.

Today’s determined sun chased the shadows of yesterday’s cold dismal damp forlorn tired rain. Saturday was a metaphor for 2022 one of the most disappointing years of performance.

This morning’s warmth of light lit up the darkness of the last year.

It beckoned through windows to follow the light. As Hank Williams sang, “I saw the Light.”

The awakens our inner self and eternal optimism of “We can do this,” “We can survive this,” “I can do myself better,” “I can change.”

We may not be able to overcome the dark negatives that keep eating away at our ability to perform at the top of our game. The light that streams in this morning on the first day of the year, whether it’s cloudy or rainy, just stirs that self-analysis, the melancholy of memory when you were a young and callow fellow, or young woman of enthusiasm and effort and the joy of those years when you were moving forward.

Taking those memories into account of younger years should not be viewed as regrets, the light of the new can energize the melancholy into new energy to make more of you.

I was particularly struck by the way sunlight struck the old books I have never read on the bookshelves in a way that showed how within creations of others in the past their light they saw still awaits you the child, the teen, the young adult or if  you’re “aging up,” still thinking like a young “whipper-snapper,” or a woman of adventure back in the day.

My wife is in the downsizing stage of life. House is too big. We have too much stuff.

(With each book I am throwing out, to prepare to move to the appropriate sized cozy apartment is like throwing out an old friend, even though I may not have read them, the work, experience and philosophies the book magically messages me from its presence makes it hard to dedicate them to  momentos I have already disposed of, like my collections of beer cans. )

The tasks you have always wanted to do are still waiting to be done.

The bad habits can be stopped.

The tendency to be defensive when criticized.

Resolutions of last year have long been forgotten. But you know what they were.

I have a few resolutions for this year.

I have to write every day.

I have to kiss my wife good night and good morning.

I have to tell my children how great they are and how to be strong in the face of unfairness or bad things. And always warn them to be careful. And when someone criticizes you, look them in the eye when they tell you how bad you are. (They are just making themselves feel good . And then you do better, proving them wrong. They hate that.)

I have go to Lifetime every day and swim.

I have stop making generalizations about behaviors and other people.

I have to read scripts slower. Use spellchecker.

I have to stop procrastinating (leaving writing to the last moment). After 50 years writing I still do that but this year my 50tieth year as a writer, I have actually finished things before I absolutely have to have them done. I cannot tell how good that makes me feel.

I have to call my sisters more scattered to the four winds.

I have to watch baseball more in person, because I like it.

I have to overcome fear of writing the truth

I have to not work opinions into my news stories, remember–facts tell the story.

One more thing, I have to tell my wife I love her every day.

(Telling her you love her is not a weakness. She may not tell you she loves you, but you tell her you love her. It’s all right, I except that,)

I have to stop forgetting things she tells me.

Go get those “can’ts” in your mind starting today.

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KATHY HOCHUL INAUGURATION TODAY AS FIRST ELECTED WOMAN GOVERNOR OF NEW YORK 2 PM

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MS HOCHUL CELEBRATING HER WINNING THE JUNE DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY OVER TOM SUOZZI AND JUUMANE WILLIAMS. IN NOVEMBER SHE DEFEATED LEE ZELDIN BY 7% OF THE VOTE.
Inauguration Day is tomorrow!

Governor Kathy Hochul, Lieutenant Governor Antonio Delgado, Attorney General Letitia James, and Comptroller Tom DiNapoli will be sworn in for their next term in Albany tomorrow at 2 PM
WHEN: Sunday, January 1, 2023

TIME: 2:00 p.m.

WATCH ONLINE: governor.ny.gov/inauguration
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YOUR LOCAL EPIDIOMOLOGIST LOOKS INTO 2023 WHAT’S HAPPENING IN COVID NOW

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Your Local Epidemiologist

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COVID in China, the U.S., and everything in-between

By Dr. Katelyn Jetelina. Reprinted with permission. December 29, 2022:

Well, I was very much enjoying my holiday but COVID continues to do its COVID thing. It’s time for an update.

China: A humanitarian disaster

As expected, the COVID-19 situation in China is out of hand. In an interesting turn of events, China went from a “zero COVID” policy to a “let it rip” policy by dropping all mitigation measures without fully vaccinating the highest of risk or strengthening their healthcare system.

Egregiously, they stopped reporting cases, hospitalizations, and deaths, too. This looks good for them on paper, but when we rely on epidemiology 101 and anecdotal reports, which are plentiful, the situation in China is beyond grim.

Officials estimate between 5,000-10,000 people are dying per day. (At the U.S. peak, we lost 3,800 people per day). Epidemiologists expect death toll to rise in China in the coming months leading to 0.5-1 million cumulative deaths.

A humanitarian disaster.

This outbreak could have implications worldwide, like the emergence of a variant of concern.

The best we can tell, BF.7 is spreading in China, which is an Omicron subvariant about 3 evolutionary steps behind what is spreading in most of the world. But, a new variant of concern could appear.

(This is more possible than probable because transmission is high everywhere).

Just like cases and deaths, though, China is not reporting genomic data.

In other words, we don’t know if and how the virus is changing and what it may (or may not) mean to the international community.

U.S. responds domestically

So, how should the United States respond? Well, it depends on our goal: delay or decrease transmission from China? Identify variants of concern? Pressure the Chinese government to uphold international responsibilities?

Yesterday, the U.S. publicly signaled two goals:

Delay transmission. On a scale from “do nothing” to “ban all travel”, the U.S. chose something in the middle.

Travelers coming to the U.S. from China will be required to have a negative PCR test within 48 hours of departure. This starts on January 5, 2023. I assume the goal is to buy time—delay a wave in the U.S. seeded by travelers.

And this may be a legitimate concern, as Milan reported that 50% of passengers on flights from China tested positive. However, the extent to which this delays transmission, and by how much, is up for debate:

  1. As Adam Kucharski pointed out, “uncontrolled domestic transmission will grow exponentially while importations grow linearly. In other words, we’re much more likely to get an infection from a fellow resident than a traveler.”
  2. The policy doesn’t start until next week in order for airlines to prepare, which likely won’t help if transmission is already out of control in China.
  3. To test pre-departure within 48 hours of travel is problematic. Studies have shown that this will reduce transmission by only 10%.Figure: The post-arrival transmission for pre-arrival testing. Wells et al., 2022. Int J Public Health. Source here.
  4. Finally, buying time is only useful if we actually did something to prepare.

Using back of the napkin math, this policy would prevent ~10,000 infections in the U.S. If a variant of concern did pop up and was 100% immune invasive and every passenger had it (unlikely scenario), we would delay a wave by one week.

In any health crisis, policy decisions are challenging.

Risks (ethics, lack of effectiveness, potential other harms, like xenophobia) must be weighed with benefits (low cost, possibility of delay). Then politics get involved.

Epidemiologically this policy isn’t adding up for me.

Find variants of concern. The second goal is to find potential variants of concern.

Given zero data is being released by China, enhanced surveillance of PCR cases with a travel history to China is worthwhile.

The U.S. will not have access to pre-departure testing results in China, but we can do it once people arrive.

The CDC already has a great program in place (see figure below), but because of the China situation, it expanded to 2 more airports. While this program is proactive, it’s not that big: 10% of passengers at 7 airports. We should expand our capacity even more.

It would be more advantageous to sequence airplane wastewater.

Traveler-based SARS-CoV-2 Genomic Surveillance Overview diagram
(CDC)

A homegrown problem: XBB.1.5

Regardless of the China situation, current variants in the U.S. are likely more problematic. At least in the short-term.

Specifically, we have a new subvariant on the horizon: XBB.1.5. This is an offshoot of BA.2, which is different from the subvariant currently circulating (BQ.1.1— an offshoot of BA.5).

Phylogenetic tree with scale bar indicating genetic distance, from Wang et al, Cell

Both lab and epidemiological data show XBB.5.1 may be cause for concern:

  • In the “real world,” and particularly in New York, cases are exponentially increasing.
  • Currently XBB.1.5 has a 120% weekly growth advantage, which equates to, on average, 1 infected person infecting 2 others.
  • This rate is higher than we’ve seen with any other subvariant this year given our immunity wall.Source: Graph from JWeiland, Analysis from Trevor BedfordSo, as expected, we see a clear uptick in Northeast wastewater.
  • This is unwelcome given that admissions for people over age 70, for example, are the third highest since the pandemic began. This doesn’t reflect the new variant or impact of holidays, yet, either.
U.S. Covid-19 Wastewater Monitoring by Region. Yellow=Northeast; Pink= South; Green= West, Purple=Midwest (Source: Biobot Analytics)
  • In the lab, XBB.1.5 is presenting a more confusing picture.
  • It has a similar ability to escape our immunity as other subvariants. Because of this, we wouldn’t think it would cause a massive wave compared to what is circulating right now.
  • XBB.1.5 does have higher ACE2 binding affinity—it allows it to latch onto our cells better; it’s more sticky—but that wouldn’t necessarily cause it to be more transmissible.
  • So something else may be going on—another part of the virus may have changed that influences transmission. We need to look into this more.

Bottom line

We should be very concerned for the people of China. And it is possible that a variant of concern will arise from their disaster. But the U.S. already has a problem of its own.

I was hoping for a quieter 2023. There may still be a chance, but these are not welcome developments going into the New Year.

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WESTCHESTER DA INDICTS 5 FOR 56 CATALYTIC CONVERTER THEFTS

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WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. From the Office of the Westchester County District Attorney. December 29,2022:

 Westchester County District Attorney Miriam E. Rocah has announced a 24-count indictment of five men in connection with the countywide theft of 56 van and bus catalytic converters with a fair market value of more than $50,000.

The year-long investigation, conducted by 13 law enforcement agencies, led to a coordinated takedown of the five men alleged to have participated in the five-month stealing spree.   

DA Rocah said: “This case sends a clear message that Westchester County is cracking down on catalytic converter thefts, a nationwide scourge plaguing car owners with thousands of dollars in replacement costs and damages. I applaud the efforts taken by the criminal investigators in my Office and all of our law enforcement partners in continuing to protect Westchester residents and businesses from fraud and theft.” 

The Westchester County District Attorney’s Office initiated the investigation with the Briarcliff Manor Police Department, the Greenburgh Police Department, the New Rochelle Police Department, and the Pelham Manor Police Department, which identified Timothy Jimenez, 24, Christian Ancrum, 23, and Jason Vargas, 19, all of New Rochelle, and Joealen Garcia, 31, of Orlando, Florida, as the individuals who allegedly participated in the theft of a total of 56 catalytic convertors from Ford Econoline vans, Royal Coach Lines buses, and school buses in Briarcliff, Greenburgh, Peekskill, Pelham, and Yonkers on 11 different occasions between November 21, 2021 and March 28, 2022. At least 42 of the stolen catalytic converters were recovered in a Bronx scrap yard.  

The investigation also identified a fifth defendant, Nicholas Luzardi, 23, of New Rochelle, who is alleged to have been in possession of stolen catalytic convertors in Pelham Manor on January 28, 2022. 

Assisting in the investigation were the Mount Pleasant Police Department, the North Castle Police Department, the Peekskill Police Department, the Yonkers Police Department, the Westchester County Department of Public Safety, the New York City Police Department, the New York State Police, and the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office in New Jersey. 

Jimenez, Vargas and Luzardi were arraigned in Westchester County Court on December 22, 2022. Ancrum is scheduled to be arraigned on January 5, 2023. Garcia will be arraigned following his arrest.  

A Westchester County Grand Jury indicted the defendants on the following charges:  

·         Jimenez was charged with six counts of Grand Larceny in the Third Degree, six counts of Auto Stripping in the First Degree, three counts of Grand Larceny in the Fourth Degree, and Criminal Possession of Stolen Property in the Third Degree, all felonies, and three counts of Auto Stripping in the Third Degree, misdemeanors.  

·         Ancrum was charged with two counts of Grand Larceny in the Third Degree, two counts of Auto Stripping in the First Degree, three counts of Grand Larceny in the Fourth Degree, and three counts of Auto Stripping in the Third Degree. 

·         Garcia was charged with two counts of Grand Larceny in the Third Degree, two counts of Auto Stripping in the First Degree, and Criminal Possession of Stolen Property in the Third Degree. 

·         Vargas was charged with three counts of Grand Larceny in the Third Degree, three counts of Auto Stripping in the First Degree, Grand Larceny in the Fourth Degree, and Auto Stripping in the Third Degree. 

·         Luzardi was charged with Criminal Possession of Stolen Property in the Third Degree. 

Stolen catalytic converters carry a resale value averaging $300 each at scrap yards, and up to $1,000 on the black market, for the precious metals they contain, such as palladium, platinum and rhodium.

Larger vehicles, trucks and SUVs are often targeted because the larger-sized catalytic converters carry higher values, and because the height of the vehicle from the ground allows for easier access to steal the catalytic converters.

The case is before Judge George Fufidio in Westchester County Court, and is being prosecuted by Senior Assistant District Attorney and Auto Crimes Coordinator Adrian Murphy of the Trials and Investigations Division. 

The charges against the defendants are merely an accusation, and the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.  

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SUPREME COURT UPHOLDS TITLE 42. NY IMMIGRATION COALITION LABELS COURT DECISION “MORALLY AND ETHICALLY UNACCEPTABLE”

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WPCNR SUPREME COURT SURVEILLANCE. From the New York Immigration Coalition. December 27, 2022 updated December 28, 2022;

Today, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled that the Biden administration cannot end the implementation of Title 42. Title 42 was originally slated to end on December 21, before Chief Justice John Roberts granted an appeal to pause the termination on December 19.

The New York Immigration Coalition denounced this decision from the Supreme Court, which they say will continue to jeopardize the safety of asylum seekers, and demanded that President Biden secure additional protections for new arrivals.

Murad Awawdeh, Executive Director, New York Immigration Coalition:


“The Supreme Court’s decision today to prohibit the termination of Title 42 is a devastating failure of justice for the thousands of people and families who have been continually subjected to violence and cruelty because of this policy. For years, Title 42 has proven to be a horrifying distortion of American values, existing as a front for xenophobia and racism.

As Title 42 continues to be shuttled through the courts, it has resulted in untold pain and lives lost for those who are simply seeking freedom and safety in the United States.

This is morally and ethically unacceptable, and the Supreme Court should be ashamed that they continue to sustain such an unsparing policy. We urge the Biden administration to take meaningful action and secure additional protections for asylum seekers, such that a humane and fair asylum system can finally be achieved for all.”

In its order, the high court said it would hear arguments in the case in February. 

Supreme Court Judge Neil Gorsuch wrote in his dissenting opinion (Justices Sonia Santomayor, Elena Kagan, and Ketanji Brown Jackson also dissented) to end Title 42,

“The current border crisis is not a Covid crisis. And courts should not be in the business of perpetuating administrative edicts (Title 42) designed for one emergency only because elected officials have failed to address a different emergency (migrants massing at the border) We are a court of law, not policymakers of last resort.”

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NEW! Condo Tax Reform: Governor Hochul Signs Law Enabling Greenburgh to tax new future condominium construction as residential properties.

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WPCNR THE FEINER REPORT. By Greenburgh Town Supervisor Paul Feiner December 27, 2022:

Governor Kathy Hochul signed legislation sponsored by Senator Andrea Stewart Cousins and Assemblyman Tom Abinanti  into law that will allow the town of Greenburgh to assess newly constructed condominiums and cooperative units as residential properties – not commercial properties.

The law does not apply to existing condo and coop buildings. They will continue to be assessed as commercial properties.

There is a potential for significant development in the town in the coming years. The town will generate more revenue if developers build developments that will be taxed at residential rates.

Greenburgh has spent considerable time and money to assess properties at 100% equalization levels. It’s important to the town to ensure that assessing methods are accurate. The New York State Assessors Association also supports legislation  that would allow municipalities to assess newly constructed condominiums and cooperative units to reflect the most current market values as all other residential properties.

Again- this law does not apply to  any condo and cooperative which already exists within the town. They will continue to be taxed  at the commercial rate. 

There are about 5,000 existing condo properties in the town. It would create great hardships to many existing condo owners to tax them at higher rates. It would be unfair to existing owners to treat Greenburgh condo/coop owners differently from owners in the rest of the county of Westchester.

Prior to the decision by the Governor to sign the legislation into law the Greenburgh Town Board passed a home rule request for Assembly bill A10488 and Senate bill S9413. We appreciate the fact that the Governor, Senator Cousins and Assemblyman Abinanti were responsive to Greenburgh’s concerns. The state-wide bill was not signed into law.

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GOVERNOR HOCHUL TODAY. UPDATE ON BUFFALO-WESTERN NY CONDITIONS AS 0F 12 NOON– SNOW COMING BACK. 12 INCHES MORE ON WAY–25 DEATHS–DRIVING BAN IN EFFECT. THRUWAY STILL CLOSED INDEFINITELY FROM PENNSYLVANIA BORDER TO ROCHESTER. NASSAU COUNTY ALBANY COUNTY SEND RESCUE PERSONNEL. “ALL HANDS ON DECK” EFFORT FROM NATIONAL GUARD POLICE, FIRE, BUSINESSES WITH BIG TRUCKS TO GET TO THE STRANDED. INTERNET COMMUNICATION KEY IN CITIZENS CALLING FOR HELP.

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SPB60GZb4Q8

Eighteen minute news conference from the Governor, Mayor of Buffalo, County Executive Everybody pitching in for everyone else. Click RED highlighted white > arrow to view.

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