Adams aide Cabrera making $227G

From: POLITICO New York Playbook PM - Tuesday Mar 08,2022 09:02 pm
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POLITICO New York Playbook PM

By Sally Goldenberg

Presented by AARP

The salary listing is in for one of Mayor Eric Adams’ contentious new hires: A cool $227,786 for senior adviser Fernando Cabrera. That yearly wage, listed in the daily City Record, puts Cabrera in the same bracket as the commissioners of the Community Affairs Unit, Fred Kreizman, and the Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs, Manuel Castro Lucero.

Cabrera — who got the job after backlash over his prior anti-gay remarks scuttled a planned appointment as head of the Office of Community Mental Health — is earning more than a number of similarly ranked City Hall officials. Elizabeth Maclean, a senior policy adviser, is making $199,000, and Eric Ulrich, a senior adviser for performance, is getting $201,000, according to the City Record. One senior adviser’s salary tops all: Adams’ closest political confidant, Ingrid Lewis-Martin, is earning $252,000 a year.

Cabrera, a pastor and former City Council member from the Bronx, is one of a trio of Adams appointments that sparked anger over anti-gay comments for which he recently apologized. During a trip to Uganda, he appeared to commend the government for banning same-sex marriage and attributed the prohibition to a reduction in the rate of HIV cases. Following news of his potential hiring — first reported by POLITICO — Cabrera was placed in limbo for several weeks as Adams tried to find a job that would be more palatable to critics. Not everyone was satisfied, though. Allen Roskoff, president of the Jim Owles Liberal Democratic Club, said at the time: “No matter what the job is, you shouldn’t be hiring bigots — I don’t care if he’s going to work in a stock room."

 

A message from AARP:

More than 15,000 nursing home residents have died of COVID-19 – so far. That’s unacceptable. Yet long before COVID-19, chronic issues like understaffing and poor infection control put residents at risk. It’s time to strengthen oversight and put the safety and well-being of nursing home residents first. New York lawmakers must increase support for the Long Term Care Ombudsman Program in the state budget. Learn More.

 


HAPPY TUESDAY: We’re back with your afternoon check-in to spill the day’s tea — as we know it thus far — during one of the busiest seasons in New York politics.

THIS MORNING’S PLAYBOOK unintentionally omitted the birthday of NY1’s Zack Fink. Happy birthday from both AM and PM teams, Zack!

From the Capitol


HOCHUL TALKS WOMEN IN POLITICS: On International Women’s Day, Gov. Kathy Hochul held a breakfast reception in the War Room of the state Capitol today and spoke about the importance of women in government and as candidates for public office.

And it’s personal for Hochul: She’s the state’s first female governor. And she noted that New York has its first female Senate Majority Leader in Andrea Stewart-Cousins; first woman Assembly Majority Leader in Crystal Peoples-Stokes; and first woman attorney general in Tish James.

“We are part of that living history of breaking down the barriers once and for all so no one can ever question the ability of a woman to be the attorney general of the state of New York or the governor of the state of New York or any other position — because we have what it takes,” Hochul said to cheers from the women lawmakers and aides in attendance.

SESSION THIS WEEK: The state Senate and Assembly are in for a four-day work week and have scheduled today’s sessions for 3 p.m. and 2 p.m. respectively.

From City Hall


NYPD PREPPING FOR UNREST AND THE OPEN ROAD: The city’s Police Department awarded a $3.4 million contract for helmets that will be used for both disorder control and scooter riding, according to a public disclosure released today. The city will be purchasing the protective gear from Super Seer, a Colorado-based firm that produces helmets marketed specifically to police departments, including an array of tactical wares coming in a variety of colors and styles. It was unclear which models the administration would be ordering. The department’s crackdown on protests in the summer of 2020 galvanized calls to cut the NYPD’s budget. And while the “defund” slogan has since faded from local political discussions as crime has climbed to the top of voters’ minds, the left wing of the City Council is still likely to push back on department spending in the upcoming budget. — Joe Anuta


FROM THE DELEGATION

GOT CHOCOLATE?: Nine members of New York’s congressional delegation are pressing Adams to keep flavored milk in city schools, days after POLITICO reported on his crusade to remove chocolate milk from the nation’s largest school system.

The March 8 letter, signed by a bipartisan group of lawmakers including Democratic Reps. Antonio Delgado and Grace Meng, and Republicans Elise Stefanik and Lee Zeldin , also a Republican candidate for governor, urges Adams to consider the implications for the state’s dairy industry and the potential consequences for schoolchildren in New York City. — Michelle Bocanegra

 

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ON THE BEATS


REAL ESTATE: New York City Council Member Crystal Hudson is opposing two development proposals in her Brooklyn district that are nearing the end of the city’s formal land use review process, setting up a potential scenario in which the Council could vote down plans that would collectively bring upwards of 400 new apartments to the area, a portion of them affordable. The Council typically defers to the wishes of local members on land use proposals, making Hudson’s position on the plans key to their eventual approval.

Hudson said at a Council hearing today that she wants a broader community-led rezoning for the area along Atlantic Avenue, where the developments are proposed, rather than “piecemeal” proposals for individual sites. “While the city has failed to act, private developers repeatedly bring forward piecemeal proposals for large projects, without regard for their cumulative impact on the community and neighborhood infrastructure,” Hudson said. Developers argued the plans are in line with the vision behind the potential community-led plan, and said stalling until a larger rezoning is approved would delay much-needed housing. — Janaki Chadha

SUNY: The State University of New York launched a global search for a new chancellor today, months after Jim Malatras stepped down amid scrutiny of his ties to the former Cuomo administration. Chair Merryl Tisch and Vice Chair Cesar Perales will lead the search committee, which will also be made up of students, faculty and community leaders, according to a news release. An outside firm, Boston-based Isaacson Miller, has been tapped to recruit candidates. — Michelle Bocanegra

EDUCATION: Mayor Adams went back to his alma mater, Bayside High School, this morning to make his case for why mayoral control of city schools should be extended for four years. He pointed to the corruption and patronage that plagued the previous school board system and argued that students and families have suffered as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic. “We applaud Governor Hochul for sending a clear and loud message that we need to have mayoral accountability for four years and it should be included in the budget,” Adams said.

— Mayoral control will expire at the end of June. The state Legislature will have to decide by April 1, the state budget deadline, or through legislation by June 30. Schools Chancellor David Banks and Adams pointed to increases in graduation rates and universal pre-kindergarten as signs that mayoral control is beneficial. The chancellor also called for taking politics out of the equation. “We have to remove our schools, our children’s futures, from the political horse trading that happens in Albany,” Banks said. “We hear our parents, we hear that this system betrayed them but more politics will not solve the systemic problems that our system faces.” — Madina Touré

— Advocates and lawmakers rallied today at the Capitol to support full funding of pre-k programs for all 4 year olds across the state. Hochul has proposed no increase in funding for pre-k, which falls at $952 million annually, according to the governor's budget book. However, some lawmakers and school officials say that’s not enough to guarantee free universal pre-k to all of New York’s 4 year olds. Funding for public pre-schools was increased in the 2021-2022 budget by $105 million with the help of federal assistance, which aimed to expand pre-k to more than 200 districts. Current state funding for pre-k is allocated based on district need, which has created inequalities in cost and access to pre-k programs across the state, lawmakers and advocates said. — Meghan Brink

ENERGY: In one of the first in-person, large-scale climate actions in Albany this year, NY Renews and other groups brought more than 400 people to the state Capitol to push lawmakers to support $15 billion in climate funding in the new state budget due at the end of the month. Protesters marched to the Executive Mansion and blocked both street level entrances to the Capitol, hoping to get arrested. “If there is nothing on climate in either [one-house] budget, they’re going to have lots of constituents to answer to,” said Eddie Bautista, executive director of the New York City-Environmental Justice Alliance, as he stood in front of the locked revolving door on the State Street side of the Capitol.

On the Empire State Plaza, lawmakers hyped the crowd and pitched their proposals. Sen. Robert Jackson (D-Manhattan) led a call and response for “$15 billion. Now,” and encouraged attendees to spread the word to keep the pressure on. Sen. Rachel May (D-Syracuse) told POLITICO she expected to hear what was included in the one-house budget for climate soon. “We are going to be working on every front to get as much money as we possibly can in the budget,” she said. She’s also sponsoring a bill to require a fuller and more detailed account of on-budget climate law spending from the Division of Budget.

Lawmakers and others posed with a sign that evoked the terrorist attack on 9/11, with a plane labeled “climate change” flying over a New York City-esque skyline with two towers. Below it read, “Wake Up America, 2050 is Too Late.” Other signs on display included “Think Global, Act Hochul.”

The focus for NY Renews and their partners remains on the $15 billion ask ahead of budget, with little attention to the Climate and Community Investment Act that would put a fee on carbon emissions and likely raise gas and other fossil fuel costs for consumers. “We’re not making any investment right now,” said Shiv Soin, the executive director of youth-led organization Treeage based in New York City. — Marie J. French

AROUND NEW YORK


— Datashows that 2021 was the deadliest year for homeless individuals in New York City.

— Advocates of caregivers for people with developmental disabilities are calling for an increase for the workers’ long-term wage.

— A vendor error caused roughly 44,000 residents to receive a notice stating if they didn’t verify their home address, their voter registration status was in peril, according to the NYC Board of Elections.

— In Rensselaer County, dozens of workers were served with federal grand jury subpoenas as part of an FBI investigation that’s examining absentee ballots in elections in the last two years.

— Roughly 50,000 upstate residents were powerless due to Monday night’s powerful windstorm.

 

A message from AARP:

More than 15,000 New York nursing home and long-term care residents have died of COVID-19 – so far. That’s unacceptable. Yet, long before COVID-19, chronic issues like understaffing and poor infection control put residents at risk. New York seniors deserve better. It’s time to strengthen oversight and put the safety and well-being of nursing home residents first.

New York lawmakers must increase support for the Long Term Care Ombudsman Program in the state budget. Nursing home residents don’t need another study of this program – which is supposed to act as their voice; residents need an expanded and adequately-funded Ombudsman program. Learn More.

 
 

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