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After 40 years and $1 trillion, the U.S. drug war has met none of its goals

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Do you think the cost is worth a continued fight?

Mexico_Failed_Drug_War_XLAT.JPGIn this April 16, 2009 file photo, a youth watches a crime scene from behind his home's fence after a man was murdered in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. According to police at the scene, the murder appeared to be related to organized crime. After 40 years of blood and money, both Mexico and the U.S. governments admit that the War on Drugs is a failure.

By Martha Mendoza / Associated Press Writer

MEXICO CITY (AP) -- After 40 years, the United States' war on drugs has cost $1 trillion and hundreds of thousands of lives, and for what? Drug use is rampant and violence even more brutal and widespread.

Even U.S. drug czar Gil Kerlikowske concedes the strategy hasn't worked.

"In the grand scheme, it has not been successful," Kerlikowske told The Associated Press. "Forty years later, the concern about drugs and drug problems is, if anything, magnified, intensified."

President Obama is promising to "reduce drug use and the great damage it causes" with a new national policy that he said treats drug use more as a public health issue and focuses on prevention and treatment.

Nevertheless, his administration has increased spending on interdiction and law enforcement to record levels both in dollars and in percentage terms; this year, they account for $10 billion of his $15.5 billion drug-control budget.

Kerlikowske, who coordinates all federal anti-drug policies, says it will take time for the spending to match the rhetoric.

"Nothing happens overnight," he said. "We've never worked the drug problem holistically. We'll arrest the drug dealer, but we leave the addiction."

His predecessor, John P. Walters, takes issue with that.

Walters insists society would be far worse today if there had been no War on Drugs. Drug abuse peaked nationally in 1979 and, despite fluctuations, remains below those levels, he says. Judging the drug war is complicated: Records indicate marijuana and prescription drug abuse are climbing, while cocaine use is way down. Seizures are up, but so is availability.

"To say that all the things that have been done in the war on drugs haven't made any difference is ridiculous," Walters said. "It destroys everything we've done. It's saying all the people involved in law enforcement, treatment and prevention have been wasting their time. It's saying all these people's work is misguided."

Public Enemy No. 1

In 1970, hippies were smoking pot and dropping acid. Soldiers were coming home from Vietnam hooked on heroin. Embattled President Richard M. Nixon seized on a new war he thought he could win.

"To say that all the things that have been done in the war on drugs haven't made any difference is ridiculous. It destroys everything we've done."

John P. Walters, former director of National Drug Control Policy

"This nation faces a major crisis in terms of the increasing use of drugs, particularly among our young people," Nixon said as he signed the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act. The following year, he said: "Public enemy No. 1 in the United States is drug abuse. In order to fight and defeat this enemy, it is necessary to wage a new, all-out offensive."

His first drug-fighting budget was $100 million. Now it's $15.1 billion, 31 times Nixon's amount even when adjusted for inflation.

Using Freedom of Information Act requests, archival records, federal budgets and dozens of interviews with leaders and analysts, the AP tracked where that money went, and found that the United States repeatedly increased budgets for programs that did little to stop the flow of drugs. In 40 years, taxpayers spent more than:

• $20 billion to fight the drug gangs in their home countries. In Colombia, for example, the United States spent more than $6 billion, while coca cultivation increased and trafficking moved to Mexico - and the violence along with it.

• $33 billion in marketing "Just Say No"-style messages to America's youth and other prevention programs. High school students report the same rates of illegal drug use as they did in 1970, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says drug overdoses have "risen steadily" since the early 1970s to more than 20,000 last year.

"This is something that is worth fighting for because drug addiction is about fighting for somebody's life, a young child's life, a teenager's life, their ability to be a successful and productive adult."

Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano

• $49 billion for law enforcement along America's borders to cut off the flow of illegal drugs. This year, 25 million Americans will snort, swallow, inject and smoke illicit drugs, about 10 million more than in 1970, with the bulk of those drugs imported from Mexico.

• $121 billion to arrest more than 37 million nonviolent drug offenders, about 10 million of them for possession of marijuana. Studies show that jail time tends to increase drug abuse.

• $450 billion to lock those people up in federal prisons alone. Last year, half of all federal prisoners in the U.S. were serving sentences for drug offenses.

At the same time, drug abuse is costing the nation in other ways. The Justice Department estimates the consequences of drug abuse - "an overburdened justice system, a strained health care system, lost productivity, and environmental destruction" - cost the United States $215 billion a year.

Harvard University economist Jeffrey Miron says the only sure thing taxpayers get for more spending on police and soldiers is more homicides.

"Current policy is not having an effect of reducing drug use," Miron said, "but it's costing the public a fortune."

'It's an ongoing tragedy'

From the beginning, lawmakers debated fiercely whether law enforcement - no matter how well funded and well trained - could ever defeat the drug problem.

"It's an ongoing tragedy that has cost us a trillion dollars. It has loaded our jails and it has destabilized countries like Mexico and Colombia,"

Former Alaska Sen. Mike Gravel

Then-Alaska Sen. Mike Gravel, who had his doubts, has since watched his worst fears come to pass.

"Look what happened. It's an ongoing tragedy that has cost us a trillion dollars. It has loaded our jails and it has destabilized countries like Mexico and Colombia," he said.

In 1970, proponents said beefed-up law enforcement could effectively seal the southern U.S. border and stop drugs from coming in. Since then, the U.S. used patrols, checkpoints, sniffer dogs, cameras, motion detectors, heat sensors, drone aircraft - and even put up more than 1,000 miles of steel beam, concrete walls and heavy mesh stretching from California to Texas.

None of that has stopped the drugs. The Office of National Drug Control Policy says about 330 tons of cocaine, 20 tons of heroin and 110 tons of methamphetamine are sold in the United States every year - almost all of it brought in across the borders. Even more marijuana is sold, but it's hard to know how much of that is grown domestically, including vast fields run by Mexican drug cartels in U.S. national parks.

The dealers who are caught have overwhelmed justice systems in the United States and elsewhere. U.S. prosecutors declined to file charges in 7,482 drug cases last year, most because they simply didn't have the time. That's about one out of every four drug cases.

The United States has in recent years rounded up thousands of suspected associates of Mexican drug gangs, then turned some of the cases over to local prosecutors who can't make the charges stick for lack of evidence. The suspects are then sometimes released, deported or acquitted. The U.S. Justice Department doesn't even keep track of what happens to all of them.

In Mexico, traffickers exploit a broken justice system. Investigators often fail to collect convincing evidence - and are sometimes assassinated when they do. Confessions are beaten out of suspects by frustrated, underpaid police. Judges who no longer turn a blind eye to such abuse release the suspects in exasperation.

In prison, in the U.S. or Mexico, traffickers continue to operate, ordering assassinations and arranging distribution of their product even from solitary confinement in Texas and California. In Mexico, prisoners can sometimes even buy their way out.

The violence spans Mexico. In Ciudad Juarez, the epicenter of drug violence in Mexico, 2,600 people were killed last year in cartel-related violence, making the city of 1 million across the Rio Grande from El Paso, Texas, one of the world's deadliest. Not a single person was prosecuted for homicide related to organized crime.

And then there's the money.

"For every drug dealer you put in jail or kill, there's a line up to replace him because the money is just so good."

Walter McCay, who heads the non-profit Center for Professional Police Certification in Mexico City

The $320 billion annual global drug industry now accounts for 1 percent of all commerce on the planet.

A full 10 percent of Mexico's economy is built on drug proceeds - $25 billion smuggled in from the United States every year, of which 25 cents of each $100 smuggled is seized at the border. Thus there's no incentive for the kind of financial reform that could tame the cartels.

"For every drug dealer you put in jail or kill, there's a line up to replace him because the money is just so good," says Walter McCay, who heads the non-profit Center for Professional Police Certification in Mexico City.

McCay is one of the 13,000 members of Medford, Mass.-based Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, a group of cops, judges, prosecutors, prison wardens and others who want to legalize and regulate all drugs.

A decade ago, no politician who wanted to keep his job would breathe a word about legalization, but a consensus is growing across the country that at least marijuana will someday be regulated and sold like tobacco and alcohol.

California voters decide in November whether to legalize marijuana, and South Dakota will vote this fall on whether to allow medical uses of marijuana, already permitted in California and 13 other states. The Obama administration says it won't target marijuana dispensaries if they comply with state laws.

The dilemma: How to slow demand'

Mexican President Felipe Calderon says if America wants to fix the drug problem, it needs to do something about Americans' unquenchable thirst for illegal drugs.

Kerlikowske agrees, and Obama has committed to doing just that.

And yet both countries continue to spend the bulk of their drug budgets on law enforcement rather than treatment and prevention.

"President Obama's newly released drug war budget is essentially the same as Bush's, with roughly twice as much money going to the criminal justice system as to treatment and prevention," said Bill Piper, director of national affairs for the non-profit Drug Policy Alliance. "This despite Obama's statements on the campaign trail that drug use should be treated as a health issue, not a criminal justice issue."

Obama is requesting a record $15.5 billion for the drug war for 2011, about two thirds of it for law enforcement at the front lines of the battle: police, military and border patrol agents struggling to seize drugs and arrest traffickers and users.

About $5.6 billion would be spent on prevention and treatment.

"For the first time ever, the nation has before it an administration that views the drug issue first and foremost through the lens of the public health mandate," said economist and drug policy expert John Carnevale, who served three administrations and four drug czars. "Yet ... it appears that this historic policy stride has some problems with its supporting budget."

Carnevale said the administration continues to substantially over-allocate funds to areas that research shows are least effective - interdiction and source-country programs - while under-allocating funds for treatment and prevention.

Kerlikowske, who wishes people would stop calling it a "war" on drugs, frequently talks about one of the most valuable tools they've found, in which doctors screen for drug abuse during routine medical examinations. That program would get a mere $7.2 million under Obama's budget.

"People will say that's not enough. They'll say the drug budget hasn't shifted as much as it should have, and granted I don't disagree with that," Kerlikowske said. "We would like to do more in that direction."

Fifteen years ago, when the government began telling doctors to ask their patients about their drug use during routine medical exams, it described the program as one of the most proven ways to intervene early with would-be addicts.

"Nothing happens overnight," Kerlikowske said.

Afflicting 'the body and soul of America'

Until 100 years ago, drugs were simply a commodity. Then Western cultural shifts made them immoral and deviant, according to London School of Economics professor Fernanda Mena.

Religious movements led the crusades against drugs: In 1904, an Episcopal bishop returning from a mission in the Far East argued for banning opium after observing "the natives' moral degeneration." In 1914, The New York Times reported that cocaine caused blacks to commit "violent crimes," and that it made them resistant to police bullets. In the decades that followed, Mena said, drugs became synonymous with evil.

Nixon drew on those emotions when he pressed for his War on Drugs.

"Narcotics addiction is a problem which afflicts both the body and the soul of America," he said in a special 1971 message to Congress. "It comes quietly into homes and destroys children, it moves into neighborhoods and breaks the fiber of community which makes neighbors. We must try to better understand the confusion and disillusion and despair that bring people, particularly young people, to the use of narcotics and dangerous drugs."

Just a few years later, a young Barack Obama was one of those young users, a teenager smoking pot and trying "a little blow when you could afford it," as he wrote in "Dreams From My Father." When asked during his campaign if he had inhaled the pot, he replied: "That was the point."

So why persist with costly programs that don't work?

Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, sitting down with the AP at the U.S. Embassy in Mexico City, paused for a moment at the question.

"Look," she says, starting slowly. "This is something that is worth fighting for because drug addiction is about fighting for somebody's life, a young child's life, a teenager's life, their ability to be a successful and productive adult.

"If you think about it in those terms, that they are fighting for lives - and in Mexico they are literally fighting for lives as well from the violence standpoint - you realize the stakes are too high to let go."


Indiana Rep. Mark Souder resigns after affair with staffer

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Indianapolis -- Indiana Republican Rep. Mark Souder acknowledged an affair with a staffer today and unexpectedly announced his resignation, giving Democrats a chance at capturing what many had thought was a safe Republican seat. The eight-term congressman apologized for his actions but provided no details. "I am so ashamed to have hurt the ones I love," he said at...

Congress_Souder_DCAB104.JPGHouse Oversight and Government Reform Committee member Rep. Mark Souder, R-Ind., says he'll resign from Congress effective Friday over an affair with a staffer.Indianapolis -- Indiana Republican Rep. Mark Souder acknowledged an affair with a staffer today and unexpectedly announced his resignation, giving Democrats a chance at capturing what many had thought was a safe Republican seat.

The eight-term congressman apologized for his actions but provided no details.

"I am so ashamed to have hurt the ones I love," he said at a news conference in Fort Wayne. "I am sorry to have let so many friends down, people who have worked so hard for me."

His resignation is effective Friday.

Souder's decision could damage the Republicans' chances of holding onto the GOP-leaning district in northeastern Indiana. Souder won a bruising Republican primary on May 4 with 48 percent of the vote and was to face the Democratic candidate who four years ago gave him the toughest challenge since he was first elected in 1994.

Souder, 59, said he would not be a candidate in the fall election. It will be up to Republican Gov. Mitch Daniels to decide whether to call a special election to fill the vacancy or wait until the November ballot.

"I sinned against God, my wife and my family by having a mutual relationship with a part-time member of my staff," Souder said. "In the poisonous environment of Washington, D.C., any personal failing is seized upon and twisted for political gain. I am resigning rather than put my family through a painful drawn out process."

Souder has been married to his wife, Diane, since 1974, according to the biography on his office website. They have three adult children and two grandchildren.

Souder won the Republican primary over car dealer Bob Thomas, who spent much of his own money on television commercials portraying Souder as a career politician who wasn't a true fiscal conservative. Souder countered by emphasizing his A-plus marks from the National Rifle Association and 100 percent rating from the National Right to Life Committee.

Souder had been expected to face a stiff contest against Democrat Tom Hayhurst, a former Fort Wayne city councilman who got 46 percent of the vote against Souder in 2006. Nevertheless, the 3rd Congressional District has a strong Republican tilt; John McCain carried the district by more than 10 points in the 2008 presidential election.

One possible Republican replacement for Souder is state Sen. Marlin Stutzman of Howe, who finished second to former Sen. Dan Coats in this month's GOP primary for the U.S. Senate.

Hayhurst said in statement that his thoughts and prayers were with Souder and his family.

"I'm not running for Congress to run against anyone, but I'm running because I think I can help change Washington and that will not change not matter who is in the race," Hayhurst said.

Souder's resignation continues a significant turnover among Indiana's congressional delegation this year.

Democratic Sen. Evan Bayh announced in February he wouldn't seek re-election, saying he had tired of Congress. Democratic Rep. Brad Ellsworth is leaving his southern Indiana seat to run for Bayh's position.

Republican Rep. Steve Buyer said he January he wouldn't seek a 10th term in the House after his wife was diagnosed with an incurable autoimmune disease.

What's going on: Microsoft upgrade hopes to make Hotmail cool again

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Microsoft Corp. is trying to make Hotmail cool again. The free Web mail service soon will be switching to a new approach that Microsoft hopes will give Hotmail an edge over rival offerings from Yahoo Inc. and Google Inc. The upgrade, expected to be available in July or August, will automatically sort incoming messages into...

microsoft.JPGSAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Microsoft Corp. is trying to make Hotmail cool again.

The free Web mail service soon will be switching to a new approach that Microsoft hopes will give Hotmail an edge over rival offerings from Yahoo Inc. and Google Inc.

The upgrade, expected to be available in July or August, will automatically sort incoming messages into different categories devoted to users' key contacts and Internet social networks. It will also provide previews of incoming photos, videos and other material without having to open an attachment or click on a link.

Other tools are being added to make it less cumbersome to send photos, videos, documents and other attachments to e-mail recipients. Another tweak is supposed to make is easier to sync Hotmail on mobile phones.

It's all part of the most extensive overhaul to Hotmail since Microsoft bought the service 12 years ago, said Chris Jones, a Microsoft executive who is overseeing the renovations.

"Our service wasn't doing the best job that it could," Jones said during a Monday preview of the makeover.

Read more about it
» Visual Tour: Microsoft Revamps Hotmail With New Tools [PC World]

» Will the new Hotmail make Outlook obsolete for consumers? [Seattle PI]

In other news
» Germany Asks Google to Surrender Private Data [NY Times]

» Shakeup at Wikipedia in Wake of Porn Purge [Fox News]

» Postpartum depression hits as many dads as moms [USA Today]

»

Update: Fired Auburn cop indicted in missing PBA money case; read the indictment

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Auburn, NY -- Former Auburn Police Officer Brian K. Hutchings today was indicted on 10 new charges that accuse him of stealing thousands of dollars from the department’s Police Benevolent Association. The indictment Here is a filed today against Brian K. HutchingsThe indictment alleges Hutchings 48, of 72 Metcalf Drive, stole the money while he was treasurer of the...

hutchings.JPGBrian Hutchings

Auburn, NY -- Former Auburn Police Officer Brian K. Hutchings today was indicted on 10 new charges that accuse him of stealing thousands of dollars from the department’s Police Benevolent Association.

The indictment
Here is a copy of the indictment filed today against Brian K. Hutchings
The indictment alleges Hutchings 48, of 72 Metcalf Drive, stole the money while he was treasurer of the group between 2001 and 2008. PBA officials said some $75,000 was missing from their fund.

Hutchings faces up to seven years imprisonment on the most serious of those charges – third-degree grand larceny.

In a separate 11-count indictment, Hutchings was charged with more bribery and official misconduct crimes for allegedly tipping off a trucking company about when and where the state Department of Transportation would conduct roadside truck inspections. In return, the indictment alleges, Hutchings received personal services from that company at his residence.

“It’s always a sad day when a member of the criminal justice system is accused of a crime,’’ Cayuga County District Attorney Jon Budelmann said.

Hutchings was arraigned on both indictments today in county court. He pleaded not guilty and was released on his recognizance, a court clerk said.

Two months ago, Hutchings was indicted on 14 charges, which accused him of accepting bribes and misconduct for abusing his position for personal gain, officials said. He was also accused in that five-felony count indictment of trying to coerce a local, unnamed business to forgive a bill that he owed to the company.

The city fired Hutchings last month. He had been a police officer for 19 years and was making $56,141 a year at the time of his dismissal.

Tim Cottrell, president of the Auburn police officers union, said the arrest of Hutchings has worsened department morale, which he said stands at an all-time low. Police Chief Gary Giannotta declined comment and PBA President Chris White was unavailable.

The new indictments, which were made public today, charge Hutchings with felony first-degree scheme to defraud, felony third-degree grand larceny, three felony counts of fourth-degree grand larceny and five misdemeanor counts of petit larceny in the missing PBA money case.

In the other indictment, Hutchings is charged with felony charges of third-degree receiving a bribe and second-degree official misconduct for receiving a reward and nine official misconduct charges, all misdemeanors.

Budelmann said it is too early to talk about terms of imprisonment for Hutchings if he is found guilty but added he would seek restitution on behalf of the PBA.

He also said his investigation determined that no other police officers were involved in the case involving the missing money.

The PBA serves as the police department’s social organization.

You can reach Scott Rapp at srapp@syracuse.com or 289-4839.

Democratic donors take aim at New York gubernatorial candidate Steve Levy

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NEW YORK — Some Democratic donors want their money back from Republican gubernatorial candidate Steve Levy. Attorney Larry Silverman planned to file a lawsuit Tuesday in Suffolk County on behalf of five plaintiffs. The five say they wouldn’t have contributed to Levy if they’d known he would run for governor as a Republican. Levy was re-elected Suffolk County executive in...

NEW YORK — Some Democratic donors want their money back from Republican gubernatorial candidate Steve Levy.

Attorney Larry Silverman planned to file a lawsuit Tuesday in Suffolk County on behalf of five plaintiffs. The five say they wouldn’t have contributed to Levy if they’d known he would run for governor as a Republican.

Levy was re-elected Suffolk County executive in 2007 as a Democrat with endorsements from the GOP, Independence, Conservative and Working Families Parties. He was recruited to run for governor by the Republican Governors Association and by state GOP Chairman Ed Cox.

Levy began the race with $4.1 million on hand, much of it from Democratic contributors.

Cuomo: Store sold soldiers overpriced electronics

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ALBANY, N.Y. — New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo has sued companies he says preyed on Fort Drum soldiers by selling them laptops, televisions and other electronic goods on credit at wildly inflated prices. Cuomo says that the SmartBuy store operating out of Salmon Run Mall in Watertown sold products that were marked up an average of 225 percent above...

ALBANY, N.Y. — New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo has sued companies he says preyed on Fort Drum soldiers by selling them laptops, televisions and other electronic goods on credit at wildly inflated prices.

Cuomo says that the SmartBuy store operating out of Salmon Run Mall in Watertown sold products that were marked up an average of 225 percent above the original retail price and financed the sales illegally through automatic deductions from soldiers’ payrolls.

Cuomo’s lawsuit seeks to ban the defendants from doing business in New York and to obtain restitution.

He says the SmartBuy shop in Watertown is closed, but that the same companies operate stores near other military posts.

A lawyer for SmartBuy says the company does not deceive its customers.

» Read more about the story on Reuters' website.

New York to reopen campground after town chips in to cover its cost

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CAROGA LAKE, N.Y. — The state Department of Environmental Conservation says it will open its campground in Caroga Lake after local officials agreed to kick in money to cover the park’s operating deficit. Caroga Lake was one of seven campgrounds and two day-use areas in the Adirondack and Catskill forest preserves slated to stay closed this summer because of the...

CAROGA LAKE, N.Y. — The state Department of Environmental Conservation says it will open its campground in Caroga Lake after local officials agreed to kick in money to cover the park’s operating deficit.

Caroga Lake was one of seven campgrounds and two day-use areas in the Adirondack and Catskill forest preserves slated to stay closed this summer because of the state’s fiscal crisis. The 161-site campground was about $36,000 in the red last year.

Town of Caroga officials worried about the closing’s effect on tourism.

The DEC manages 52 campgrounds in the Adirondacks and Catskills. The state Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation began shutting down 55 parks and historic sites elsewhere in the state on Monday to save money.

Interior secretary Ken Salazar acknowledges role lax oil regulation played in Gulf spill

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Obama plans to establish a presidential commission to look into the disaster.

2010-05-18-ap-Salazar.JPGInterior Secretary Ken Salazar testifies Tuesday before the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington.
WASHINGTON — Grilled by skeptical lawmakers, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar on Tuesday acknowledged his agency had been lax in overseeing offshore drilling activities and that may have contributed to the disastrous oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

“There will be tremendous lessons to be learned here,” Salazar told a Senate panel in his first appearance before Congress since the April 20 blowout and explosion on the Deepwater Horizon rig.

His appearances before two of the three Senate panels holding hearings Tuesday on the giant oil spill came as the federal officials kept a wary eye on the expanding dimensions of the problem. The government increased the area of the Gulf where fishing is shut down to 46,000 square miles, or about 19 percent of federal waters. That’s up from about 7 percent before.

Government scientists were anxiously surveying the Gulf to determine if the oil had entered a powerful current that could take it to Florida and eventually up the East Coast. Tar balls that washed up on Florida’s Key West were shipped to a Coast Guard laboratory in Connecticut to determine if they came from the Gulf spill.

New underwater video released by BP PLC, the oil giant that owns a majority interest in the blown well, showed oil and gas erupting under pressure in large, dark clouds from its crippled blowout preventer safety device on the ocean floor. The leaks resembled a geyser on land. The five-minute clip apparently was recorded late Saturday and Sunday afternoon from aboard a remotely operated submarine.

Salazar, testifying before the Senate Energy and Resources Committee, promised an overhaul of federal regulations and said blame for the BP spill rests with both industry and the government, particularly his agency’s Minerals Management Service.

“We need to clean up that house,” Salazar said of the service. While most of the agency’s 1,700 employees are reliable and trustworthy, he said, there were “a few bad apples.”

President Barack Obama, who has decried the “cozy relationship” between government regulators and the energy industry, has proposed splitting the agency into two parts to separate regulatory duties from those who collect royalty fees from oil and gas companies.
2010-05-18-ap-Oil-Spill.JPGView full sizeSenate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee member Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., shows a map locating the Gulf oil spill during a hearing Tuesday on Capitol Hill in Washington.
Sen. Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M., the committee chairman, said the panel’s mission was to decipher “the cascade of failures that caused the catastrophic blowout.” In addition, he said, Congress needs to figure what must be done to make sure it never happens again.

While the cause of the accident at the well has yet to be pinpointed, information uncovered so far raises the question of where the Minerals Management Service was, Bingaman said.

“It is long past time to drain the safety and environmental swamp that is MMS,” declared Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. “This agency has been in denial about safety problems for years.” Wyden said it was time for the government to “play catch-up ball in a hurry.”

Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., pointed to an AP investigation’s findings that the rig that exploded was allowed to operate “without safety documentation required by government regulations.”

BP said Tuesday it was collecting about 84,000 gallons a day from a mile-long tube drawing oil from the blown-out well to a ship on the surface. But it cautioned that increasing the flow through the tube would be difficult. “This remains a new technology and both its continued operation and its effectiveness in capturing the oil and gas remain uncertain,” BP said in a statement.

Salazar denied reports that MMS had approved a number of new oil drilling applications in deep waters of the Gulf since the Deepwater Horizon explosion and spill. He said no new deep water drilling has begun since April 20, and no wells will be drilled until a safety report is completed on the BP spill later this month.

Deputy Interior Secretary David Hayes told the committee that about a dozen applications were approved after April 20, but were suspended on May 6 before work began.

Obama plans to establish a presidential commission to look into the disaster, modeled on those for the 1986 explosion of the space shuttle Challenger and the 1979 nuclear accident at Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania.

Salazar cautioned against overreaction, noting that the Gulf waters produce nearly a third of the nation’s oil. He said the Challenger disaster delayed the space program for 2 1/2 years and Three Mile Island “shut down the nuclear industry for 30 years.”

Sen. Bob Bennett, R-Utah, expressed hope “we don’t pull back.” “The country made a very serious mistake following Three Mile Island by pulling back with respect to nuclear power,” Bennett said.

White House spokesman Bill Burton said an executive order on the presidential commission would come out soon, possibly this week.

Burton was asked about increasingly sharp congressional rhetoric toward BP, given that the administration must work with BP in the cleanup. “Well, our view is that we didn’t choose any partner for this catastrophe,” Burton said. “What we’ve done is worked with the responsible party to do everything we can to stop oil from leaking from the bottom of the Gulf and to mitigate the environmental disaster that we’re seeing in the water right now.”

Jane Lubchenco, administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, said Tuesday that aerial surveys show some tendrils of light oil close to or already in the loop current, which circulates in the Gulf and takes water south to the Florida Keys and the Gulf Stream. But most oil is dozens of miles away from the current.
2010-05-18-ap-Cousteau.JPGView full sizeJean-Michel Cousteau talks to media after he and his expedition team were turned away by the U.S. Coast Guard after arriving at the Breton Island National Wildlife Sanctuary Tuesday to document the effects of oil on marine life in the Gulf of Mexico off the coast of Louisiana.
Lubchenco said it will take about eight to 10 days after oil enters the current before it begins to reach Florida. However, researchers at the University of South Florida in Tampa suggested oil from the spill could reach the Florida keys as early as Sunday.

Meanwhile, federal officials said 189 dead sea turtles, birds and other animals have been found along Gulf coastlines since the oil spill started. Officials said they don’t know how many were killed by oil or chemical dispersants. Barbara Schroeder of NOAA’s fisheries program said necropsies have not detected oil in the bodies of the sea turtles.

Acting U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Director Rowan Gould says the spill’s effects could be felt for decades and may never be fully known because so many affected creatures live far offshore.


King & King Architects wins national award for "green'' renovation of headquarters

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Syracuse, NY -- King & King Architects, of Syracuse, and IBC Engineering PC, of Rochester, recently received national recognition for King & King’s “green” headquarters building near downtown. The companies were among 18 to receive awards from the American Council of Engineering Companies at a gala in Washington, D.C. King & King worked with IBC to turn a 100-year-old...

2009-08-19-gjw-king5.JPGWork spaces and offices are built on the second floor of King & King Architect's building at 358 W. Jefferson St. The company and its engineering firm, IBC, recently won national recognition for their work on the "green'' building that once housed Dupli Envelope & Graphics.

Syracuse, NY -- King & King Architects, of Syracuse, and IBC Engineering PC, of Rochester, recently received national recognition for King & King’s “green” headquarters building near downtown.

The companies were among 18 to receive awards from the American Council of Engineering Companies at a gala in Washington, D.C.

King & King worked with IBC to turn a 100-year-old industrial building at 358 W. Jefferson St. into an energy-efficient work space. It incorporates high-efficiency boilers and chillers, solar panels, rooftop vegetation and reflective materials, the companies said in a news release.

The building is seeking the top rating — platinum — under the U.S. Green Building Council’s Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design criteria.

In March, ACEC’s New York affiliate honored King & King and IBC with awards for the green renovation project.

The group’s top statewide award went to another Syracuse company, C&S Engineers, for its remediation of the Midler Crossing brownfield site for the Pioneer Cos. About 90,000 gallons of two industrial cleaning chemicals were removed through a process that heated the ground, collected toxic vapors and cleaned them.

C&S was honored for its innovative application of new or existing technologies, complexity, future value to the engineering profession and exceeding client needs.

School board candidates' names missing from ballot in Onondaga school election

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Elizabeth Crump, David Pierce and David Toomey are uncontested in their bids for three board seats.

onondagaJPGOnondaga Central School District accidentally left the names of the school board candidates off its ballots today. Here, students graduate from the high school school last year.
Onondaga, NY – The names of the three candidates running today in uncontested elections for school board in the Onondaga Central School District are missing from the ballot.

Elizabeth Crump, David Pierce and David Toomey are the only candidates seeking the three, three-year terms on the board to be filled this year.

The polls are open until 9 p.m. today at the Junior-Senior High School and Rockwell School.

To correct the oversight, voters are being given a paper ballot to vote for school board candidates.

Voters who cast ballots before the omission was discovered are being contacted and asked to return to the polls to cast a paper ballot in the school board election.

School officials were unavailable for comment.

In addition to filling school board seats, voters are casting ballots on the proposed $18,371,638 school budget for 2010-11.

The proposed budget is up 2.56 percent from the current budget. If the budget is approved, the tax rate would go up an estimated 1.95 percent to $28.49 per $1,000.

Voters are also deciding whether to spend $242,500 to buy two school buses. The state will reimburse the district for much of the cost of the buses.

John Stith can be reached at jstith@syracuse.com or at 251-5718.

Gov. David Paterson signs bill banning pesticides on school playing fields

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Albany, NY -- Gov. David Paterson signed a bill this afternoon banning the use of pesticides on school athletic fields and day care playgrounds. Schools will have one year to stop applying pesticides on playing fields. They still will be able to use chemical treatments if a pest infestation breaks out. More than 18,000 people signed petitions in favor of...

Albany, NY -- Gov. David Paterson signed a bill this afternoon banning the use of pesticides on school athletic fields and day care playgrounds.

Schools will have one year to stop applying pesticides on playing fields. They still will be able to use chemical treatments if a pest infestation breaks out.

More than 18,000 people signed petitions in favor of the bill, which previously died in the Legislature nine times. Advocates cited scientific studies that show exposure to pesticides can increase children’s risk for cancer, exacerbate asthma and trigger seizures.

Chemical companies lobbied against the bill. They say pesticides are highly regulated by the state and federal governments and therefore are safe to use.

Schools will likely see a slight increase in cost during the first two years of switching from chemical to non-chemical treatments, but their annual cost should fall between 7 and 25 percent after the third year, according to a study by Grassroots Environmental Education, a nonprofit public health advocacy group in Nassau County.

Grassroots Environmental Education also has offered free training to school groundskeepers on ways to care for fields without pesticides.

» Read our earlier coverage on the topic.

Update: Power restored to (almost) all in Auburn

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Auburn, NY -- All but one of the 700 customers who lost power in Auburn this afternoon have their lights back on, according to NYSEG. A truck crash knocked out a power substation on Grant Avenue, knocking out electricity to many businesses along Grant Avenue, said NYSEG spokesman Bob Pass. The truck actually crashed into low-hanging cable or telephone wire,...

Auburn, NY -- All but one of the 700 customers who lost power in Auburn this afternoon have their lights back on, according to NYSEG.

A truck crash knocked out a power substation on Grant Avenue, knocking out electricity to many businesses along Grant Avenue, said NYSEG spokesman Bob Pass.

The truck actually crashed into low-hanging cable or telephone wire, but that brought down a NYSEG pole with three transformers on it, Pass said.

The downed transformers disrupted a nearby substation, plunging the commercial corridor into darkness, he said.

Workers had been hoping to restore power by 7 p.m., said Pass, however they were able to bring in power from another source and restore 699 of the 700 customers by 5:30 p.m.

The one customer still without power is a vacant building near the scene of the crash, Pass said.

New York Conservatives to endorse gubernatorial candidate before GOP

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ALBANY, N.Y. — In an esoteric but important move, New York’s Conservative Party announced Tuesday that it will choose a nominee days before the state Republican convention, which would likely boost Rick Lazio’s campaign for governor in the GOP primary. Republican candidate Steve Levy claims the action is a maneuver by Conservative bosses to head off his rising support among...

ALBANY, N.Y. — In an esoteric but important move, New York’s Conservative Party announced Tuesday that it will choose a nominee days before the state Republican convention, which would likely boost Rick Lazio’s campaign for governor in the GOP primary.

Republican candidate Steve Levy claims the action is a maneuver by Conservative bosses to head off his rising support among the rank-and-file Conservatives. Lazio’s camp says it’s simply rallying all Republicans around their candidate against likely Democratic candidate Andrew Cuomo, who is more popular and has more campaign cash than either GOP candidate.

The Conservative Party’s announcement that its convention will be May 28 may turn out to be a critical move in the 2010 campaign.

That’s because Republicans know the Conservative ballot line has been crucial in statewide races against the Democrats’ enrollment advantage. The result is that three candidates are fighting hard for the party endorsement: Lazio, the former congressman from Long Island; Levy, the Democratic Suffolk County executive who enrolled in the Republican Party as he announced his candidacy; and Carl Paladino, the developer and tea party Republican from Buffalo.

It also adds to the complex strategy of the campaigns. Under a Republican Party rule, candidates get on the GOP line of the ballot if they get 51 percent of the vote at the June convention.

But if a candidate like Levy, whose Republican enrollment won’t be effective until next year, gets 25 percent of the first ballot vote, he could be placed into a GOP primary if he gets 51 percent of a second, special vote of all delegates. Levy is endorsed by state GOP Chairman Ed Cox and several Republican leaders from larger counties who hold great sway in convention votes that are weighted by population.

“If there was a high level of enthusiasm and confidence in the Lazio campaign, such maneuvering would not be necessary,” said Levy spokesman Josh Hills.

The Lazio campaign said the Conservative Party’s announcement wasn’t a maneuver. Instead, Lazio’s spokesman said the decision will unite Republicans and Conservatives under Lazio, a true Republican, over Levy, who is currently enrolled as a Democrat. In March, Lazio was endorsed by Conservative Party leaders, although Lazio has previously run for county executive on the Conservative, Republican, Democratic and left-leaning Working Parties Families lines.

Lazio campaign manager Kevin Fullington said the move shows Levy has little traction. “Principles matter. Party loyalty matters. Our Republican Party matters,” Fullington said.

State Conservative Party Chairman Michael Long says he expects his convention on May 28 will result in Lazio’s endorsement. Long says he wasn’t trying to influence the Republican convention scheduled for June 1-3 in Manhattan.

“I thought the silliness in the Republican Party would be over by now,” he said in an interview. “I hoped we could move united, but that’s not happening ... I’m just not in the business of putting a Democrat up on the Conservative Party line who has a history of supporting Barack Obama, John Kerry and Hillary Clinton, someone who conveniently makes a transition.”

Paladino spokesman Michael Caputo said his candidate will run as a tea party Republican and support conservative values whether he gains the Conservative nomination or not.

Times Square car bombing suspect appears in federal court in New York City

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NEW YORK — The suspect in a botched car bombing in Times Square appeared in court Tuesday on terrorism and weapons charges for the first time since his arrest two weeks ago and was quickly led away in handcuffs after being held without bail. Faisal Shahzad, a Pakistan-born U.S. citizen, muttered one word at the 10-minute hearing — “yes”...

2010-05-18-ap-Bomber.JPGIn this courtroom sketch, defendant Faisal Shahzad (right) sits with assistant public defender Julia Gatto during his arraignment in federal court in New York on Tuesday. The suspect in a botched car bombing in Times Square did not enter a plea to five felony charges against him.
NEW YORK — The suspect in a botched car bombing in Times Square appeared in court Tuesday on terrorism and weapons charges for the first time since his arrest two weeks ago and was quickly led away in handcuffs after being held without bail.

Faisal Shahzad, a Pakistan-born U.S. citizen, muttered one word at the 10-minute hearing — “yes” — when asked to confirm an affidavit about his financial status, which allowed him to have a public defender appointed.

Shahzad, wearing a gray sweatsuit and with his hair a bit longer than in photos splashed around the world, was handcuffed behind his back and led out of court after a magistrate read him his rights.

His attorney, Julia Gatto, asked during the hearing if Shahzad could be provided with halal meals, according to Muslim dietary laws that govern how food is prepared. She didn’t comment afterward and didn’t immediately return an e-mail message.

The federal courtroom had extra officers on hand and was emptied for a security sweep immediately before the hearing.

Shahzad, 30, of Bridgeport, Conn., was arrested May 3 on a Dubai-bound plane at John F. Kennedy International Airport on charges that he drove an SUV rigged with a homemade car bomb into Times Square two nights earlier, sending thousands of tourists into a panic on a busy Saturday night. The bomb didn’t explode, and no one was hurt.

Authorities say the former budget analyst had voluntarily waived his rights to an initial court appearance while he was cooperating. His decision to talk to investigators without an appearance that normally happens a day or do after arrest was allowed by law but is uncommon for a suspect without a formal plea deal with prosecutors. Shahzad didn’t enter a plea Tuesday to any of the five felony counts against him.

Since his arrest, Shahzad “has provided valuable intelligence from which further investigative action has been taken,” the U.S. attorney’s office in Manhattan said in a statement. The investigation continues, the statement said.

Shahzad is charged with attempted use of weapons of mass destruction and attempting acts of terrorism transcending national boundaries, each carrying a maximum life term; using a destructive device in an attempted violent crime, punishable by up to 30 years in prison; transporting and receiving explosives, punishable by up to 10 years; and attempting to damage and destroy property with fire and explosives, punishable by five to 20 years.

Authorities said shortly after Shahzad’s arrest that he had admitted driving the SUV bomb into Times Square and told authorities he had received terror training during a recent five-month trip to Pakistan.

Federal authorities raided locations in three states last week and picked up on immigration violations three men who are suspected of providing money to Shahzad to help build the homemade bomb of fireworks, propane and battery-operated alarm clocks. Several people also have been taken into custody in Pakistan.

CIA Director Leon Panetta and retired Gen. James Jones, President Barack Obama’s national security adviser, were in Pakistan on Tuesday meeting with officials there on the failed Times Square bombing and the terrorist safe havens where the suspect is believed to have received training.

In light of the attack, National Security Council spokesman Mike Hammer said, “we believe that it is time to redouble our efforts with our allies in Pakistan to close this safe haven and create an environment where we and the Pakistani people can lead safe and productive lives.”

One U.S. official said the trip is not confined to the Times Square bombing attempt but noted that the emphasis is on cooperation between the two countries in keeping pressure on extremists in that region. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the meetings.

Shahzad appeared in court on the same day a New York defense attorney wrote a letter to a chief federal court judge demanding he be produced. Ron Kuby accused authorities of violating Shahzad’s rights by “squeezing him for information” in secret. He argued that federal authorities were violating criminal procedures requiring suspects to be promptly presented in court. “A suspect buried in the bowels of a Manhattan version of Guantanamo ... is essentially without power to compel the government to comply” with the procedures, he wrote.

Authorities have not publicly addressed a possible motive for the bombing attempt. But in e-mails provided to The Associated Press by a Connecticut doctor, Shahzad complained that Muslims were under siege around the globe. “Everyone knows how the Muslim country bows down to pressure from the West,” he wrote on Feb. 25, 2006. “Everyone knows the kind of humiliation we are faced with around the globe.”

In the same e-mail, Shahzad says Muslims are “attacked and occupied by foreign infidel forces.” He cites cartoon drawings of the Prophet Muhammad, the plight of the Palestinians and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. “Friends with peaceful protest!” he writes. “Can you tell me a way to save the oppressed? And a way to fight back when rockets are fired at us and Muslim blood flows?”

The e-mails, first reported by The New York Times, were provided by Dr. Saud Anwar, a founder of the Pakistani American Association of Connecticut, who said he was given them by a Shahzad friend who received them.

Nearly all Central New York school districts report budgets passing; Fulton, Canastota only defeats so far

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It was a tough budget year with aid cuts. Most districts proposed tax increases of less than 3 percent.

2010-05-18-hannibalvotes3.JPGHannibal residents voted on the school budget, school board elections and propositions at the Hannibal Central School District offices on Cayuga Street on Tuesday.

Central New York voters passed nearly every school budget in the region.

As of 10:45 p.m., the only defeats reported were in Fulton and Canastota districts. The budgets were defeated by less than 10 votes each.

All the remaining districts in the region - except one which was still counting votes - reported budgets passing.

Voters also choose school board members. In many districts, voters decided propositions to purchase school buses and pay for libraries.

Find out how the vote when in your school district:
» Cayuga County school districts
» Madison County school districts
» Onondaga County school districts
» Oswego County school districts


Syracuse area road report: Your guide to CNY construction news

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Here is road construction news and an interactive map for Syracuse and Central New York from the newsroom of The Post-Standard. Indicates ramp or road restrictionsIndicates ramp or road closures Onondaga County Butternut Street bridge reconstruction: View I-81ButternutStreetBridge in a larger map Click map markers for details on the following construction news: • Both directions reduced to two lanes from...

Here is road construction news and an interactive map for Syracuse and Central New York from the newsroom of The Post-Standard.

Indicates ramp or road restrictionsIndicates ramp or road closures

Onondaga County

Butternut Street bridge reconstruction:


View I-81ButternutStreetBridge in a larger map

Click map markers for details on the following construction news:

Both directions reduced to two lanes from Bear Street to I-690 interchange.

Until June 1. For Butternut Street bridge reconstruction.

Northbound reduced to one lane between Harrison Street onramp and I-690 interchange.

Until June 1. For Butternut Street bridge reconstruction.

Butternut and State streets onramp to I-81 north closed.

State Street onramp to reopen April 23 after building demolition complete. Butternut Street onramp to reopen Aug. 31 after bridge reconstruction.

Butternut Street bridge closed.

Until Aug. 31.


Interstate 81:


View I-81Roadmap in a larger map

Click map markers for details on the following construction news:

Southbound reduced to two lanes over Mattydale bridge.

All times until Aug. 25.

Southbound reduced to one lane over Oneida Lake outlet.

Until May 1. For bridge repairs.

Northbound reduced to two lanes over Oneida Lake outlet.

Until May 1. For bridge repairs.


West Street bridge reconstruction:


View ErieBoulevardbridge in a larger map

Click map markers for details on the following construction news:

Erie Boulevard bridge over West Street closed.

Until Sept 30. For bridge reconstruction. Detour: Going westbound, take West Genesee Street (Route 5) to Geddes Street, turn left and follow to Erie Boulevard. Going eastbound, turn left of Plum Street and follow to West Genesee Street (Route 5) and follow to Franklin Street.

Northbound West Street offramp to westbound Erie Boulevard closed.

Until Sept. 30. For bridge reconstruction.


East:


View Fatal crash in a larger map

Click map markers for details on the following construction news:

Route 298 reduced to a single lane over Thruway in DeWitt.

9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., Tuesday, May 18 to Thursday, May 20.


Cayuga County


View CayugaCountyRoadmap in a larger map

Click map markers for details on the following construction news:

Route 90 reduced to single lane for both directions.

Until Oct. 16. For bridge replacement.


Other traffic links:

Check out area real-time traffic cameras.

Compare the lowest CNY gas prices online.

Video captures fatal 2009 shootout between Syracuse police and parolee

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Syracuse, NY -- A Centro bus video captured the shootout between two Syracuse police officers and a parolee in front of a South Side laundromat in April 2009. The video was released a day after a detective, shot twice by the parolee, revealed its existence while receiving an award from Mayor Stephanie Miner. The parolee, James Tyson, was killed...

Syracuse, NY -- A Centro bus video captured the shootout between two Syracuse police officers and a parolee in front of a South Side laundromat in April 2009.

The video was released a day after a detective, shot twice by the parolee, revealed its existence while receiving an award from Mayor Stephanie Miner. The parolee, James Tyson, was killed during the shootout.

Detective Richard Curran said the video showed the 23 seconds that changed his life forever.

In the video, a South Salina Street bus pulls up to a traffic light as gunshots pierce the air.

One passenger is heard yelling, "He's shooting! Oh my God! Oh my God!" Another: "Get down! Get down!" Others scream.

In a second video of the bus's interior, a woman with a young child dives onto the floor. Some watch the shooting out the windows, jarring at the gunshots.

Curran can be seen in the far left of the video crouching behind a parked car, which has its lights on.

This is what happened, according to police:

Curran and Detective Ed Falkowski had pulled over the parolee's car in the parking lot of the Colonial Laundromat on suspicion the parolee, James Tyson, was carrying a handgun.

Tyson struggled with the officers, and Falkowski shoots him with a Taser. Tyson grunted at the Taser shot, then pulled out a .357 Magnum and fired next to Falkowski's ear.

Falkowski, who was also honored by Miner Monday, sustained a broken ear drum from the blast. He fell to the ground and began returning fire at Tyson, police records state.

Curran ran for cover behind a parked car. Before he made it, he was shot in his lower back and right side, according to records. When he got behind the car, he, too started firing until he ran out of ammunition.

The remainder of the gunfight can be heard, but not seen, on the video. Falkowski began chasing Tyson, who turned and pointed his gun at Falkowski from about 25 feet away.

Falkowski crouched and fired. Tyson stumbled backwards and threw his handgun at Falkowski, causing it to land behind the officer.

Ambulances took both officers and Tyson to the hospital. Tyson was pronounced dead 27 minutes after the shooting began.

Previous coverage

» Two Syracuse detectives get heroes' welcome after return from D.C. (5/17/2010)
» Details of harrowing Syracuse police shootout with parolee released (1/17/2010)
» Grand jury clears Syracuse police officers in fatal shooting (4/29/2009)
» Slain shooter's family offers condolences, seeks answers (4/15/2009)
» Syracuse cop shot, suspect killed in gunfight (4/13/2009)

» Complete coverage of the story

Videos :
» Top Cops: Curran and Falkowski (5/17/2010)
» Chief Miguel talks about second officer injury in shoot-out (4/14/2009)
» Cop shot and man killed in South Side shootout (4/13/2009)

Syracuse agency extends sales tax exemption for Destiny USA

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Syracuse, NY -- The Syracuse Industrial Development Agency voted 4-0 Tuesday to extend Destiny USA’s sales tax exemption on construction materials, but the agency said it had no word on when, or if, construction will re-start on the mall expansion. Developer Robert Congel’s expansion of the Carousel Center shopping mall has been stalled since Citigroup stopped advancing money on...

Destinyexpansion.JPGView full sizeDeveloper Robert Congel, left, and his business partner, Bruce Kenan, tour the unfinished expansion of the Carousel Center mall last fall. There is no word on when, or if, construction will resume. Syracuse, NY -- The Syracuse Industrial Development Agency voted 4-0 Tuesday to extend Destiny USA’s sales tax exemption on construction materials, but the agency said it had no word on when, or if, construction will re-start on the mall expansion.

Developer Robert Congel’s expansion of the Carousel Center shopping mall has been stalled since Citigroup stopped advancing money on a $155 million construction loan a year ago.

Construction was halted after the shell of the 1.3-million-square-foot, three-story addition was already up. More than $30 million in contractor bills have gone unpaid.

The development agency gave the project an exemption from sales taxes on construction materials when it issued $323 million in bonds to help finance the expansion in February 2007. It extended the exemption twice, the last one until the end of last year.

Three of the developer’s companies — Destiny USA Holdings LLC, Destiny USA Land Holding Co. and Carousel Center Co. — recently requested another extension, this one until the end of this year. The agency’s directors voted Tuesday to grant the request.

Susan Katzoff, an attorney for the agency, said such extensions are routinely given to developers when projects run into delays. She said Congel has not given the city a date for re-starting construction or reported progress in settling his dispute with Citigroup.

The developer may need the extension to cover invoices for materials ordered before construction stopped, or he may simply want the exemption in place if construction restarts later this year, Katzoff said.

“I’m only making assumptions based upon the request and what might makes sense,” she said.

In recent months, Citigroup and Congel have said little publicly about their dispute. The issue remains tied up in court, but there have been indications that the two sides are exploring a possible settlement.

Citigroup says it stopped funding the project because of cost overruns, construction delays and a lack of any signed leases. Congel is suing the bank, alleging that it reneged on a loan agreement.

A judge in Syracuse issued a preliminary injunction last year, ordering the bank to resume lending to the project pending a trial. One appeals court has upheld the decision, but Citigroup is trying to get a second one to hear its appeal.

The $155 million construction loan is part of a complicated financing package for the $540 million addition.

Katzoff said the vote on Tuesday does not affect the extension the agency gave last year of a deadline for Congel to complete the project.

The developer had until Aug. 1, 2009, to complete the first phase of the addition or risk losing a 30-year property tax exemption on it. In July, the agency gave him an 87-day extension because of the funding dispute with the bank. However, the clock does not start ticking on the extension until, and if, Citigroup resumes its funding.

In other business Tuesday, the agency held an executive session, attended by Mayor Stephanie Miner and Corporation Counsel Juanita Perez Williams, to discuss what Chairman Bill Ryan said was potential litigation. He declined afterward to say what the potential litigation was about.

Contact Rick Moriarty at rmoriarty@syracuse.com or (315) 470-3148.

Fundraiser planned to benefit recuperating Onondaga County Legislator Bill Kinne

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Syracuse, NY - Onondaga County Legislator Bill Kinne said he has never been prone to headaches. So when the mother of all headaches struck him March 31, he knew he was in trouble. Minutes later, he was in an ambulance on the way to the hospital. Kinne, 53, suffered a subarachnoid hemorrhage — bleeding around the brain — that...

1023 KINNE 1 SDC CITY.JPGBill Kinne, Onondaga County legislatorSyracuse, NY - Onondaga County Legislator Bill Kinne said he has never been prone to headaches. So when the mother of all headaches struck him March 31, he knew he was in trouble. Minutes later, he was in an ambulance on the way to the hospital.

Kinne, 53, suffered a subarachnoid hemorrhage — bleeding around the brain — that kept him in Upstate University Hospital nearly a month. He returned home April 27.

“All the doctors agree, I’m very lucky,” said Kinne, a legislator for 18 years. “There was a lot of blood, they said, but they caught it in time.”

Doctors have told Kinne he will be unable to return to his landscaping job for at least the remainder of the year. The Democrat, who represents Syracuse’s Valley, Elmwood and University neighborhoods, said he hopes to return to meetings of the county Legislature sooner. But the date of his return depends on the results of medical tests in June.

Family and friends have launched a fund-raising effort to help Kinne as he recuperates. A fund-raising party will be held at 5 p.m. June 18 at American Legion Post 1468, 110 Academy St., in the Valley neighborhood of Syracuse. Tickets cost $20, with children under 12 free. The event will feature food, drink and raffles.

For information or tickets, or to make donations, call Larry Kinne at 633-0027 or Bill Kirkby at 450-0173.

Larry Kinne, Bill’s brother, said friends and family decided to raise money because Bill Kinne probably will be unable to work as a landscaper for eight months or more.

“For what he went through, he’s doing well,” he said. “It’s just going to be a long recovery process.”

Bill Kinne said he will go back for more tests in June because doctors have been unable to pinpoint the source of his bleeding.

In the meantime, he is resting and undergoing physical therapy. Kinne said he gets regular updates from his colleagues on the Legislature, and has been eager to return.

He asked his doctor if he could attend the May 4 session, but was told to wait.

“I probably should take her advice,” Kinne said.

Contact Tim Knauss at tknauss@syracuse.com or 470-3023.

State parks are furloughed as New York lawmakers fail to pass a budget

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Volunteers, municipalities are stepping forward to take over care of some state parks.

2010-05-12-mjg-ParkCloses1.JPGMichael Mawhinney and Megan McPherson, of Syracuse, planned to have their wedding ceremony at Clark Reservation on Sept. 18, but the state budget problems have prevented that from happening. The two were photographed inside a shelter at the small picnic area at Clark Reservation. Behind them is Glacier Lake.
Open and shut
A look at the status of state parks affected by the late state budget:

Clark Reservation: Open; restrooms are open, maintained by a volunteer group; no reservations or permits.

Chittenango Falls: Parking lot and overlook are open; trail is closed.

Fort Ontario: Closed.

Old Erie Canal: Trails and parking lots are open; bathrooms are closed; town of DeWitt is doing some maintenance at the Cedar Bay site.

Helen McNitt (access to Cazenovia Lake): Open.

Oriskany Battlefield: Open, operated by National Parks Service. (That’s been the arrangement for some time).

Selkirk Shores: Closed for swimming.

Springbrook Greens Golf Course at Fairhaven: Closed. The regional parks office is looking for a private company to operate it.

Syracuse, NY -- Megan McPherson thought everything was set for her Sept. 18 marriage to Michael Mawhinney. Now she’s contending with a wedding crasher: the late state budget.

McPherson booked both pavilions at Clark Reservation State Park for the ceremony. The small one would do if it were a nice day, the big one in case of rain. She never factored in the state shutting down 55 parks and historic sites and cutting services at 24 others in the face of a $9 billion budget shortfall. Clark is on the list to close.

Seven Central New York parks and one beach are on that list. State legislators have pledged to restore all of the cuts to the parks department when the budget is passed. But no one knows when that will be.

Statewide, 85 year-round workers have been moved to other parks. The state has held off hiring 250 seasonal employees and 130 lifeguards. Since the list came out, 350 camping reservations statewide have been canceled.

With no one to mow, lawns are turning into weedbeds. Bathrooms are boarded up. Trails are closed. Historic sites are shuttered and will spend at least the beginning of the season unseen. If there’s no budget by July, some beaches might stay closed all summer, according to parks department officials.

Both the parks department and legislators have said the parks could end up closed all year if neither side budges. Parks officials in Albany have said all the parks on the list are closed.

But in Central New York, the public has stepped up to help keep at least two partially open. And while the state says the parks could be closed all year, a parks spokesman in Albany and the regional director in Central New York said the parks could reopen when funding is restored.

Clark Reservation may not be “open” enough to host the McPherson/Mawhinney wedding, but it’s not really closed, either. Volunteers are stepping up.

The Park Friends Council will soon be scrubbing the toilets and restocking the toilet paper at the popular hiking spot in Jamesville. Usually, the group just runs the nature center. Dan Smothergill, from the friends council, said he really didn’t want to get into the business of cleaning bathrooms, but his group of 80 volunteers felt like there was little choice.

He’s also worried that once his group steps up, it might seem like a permanent solution. “And we don’t want to do that,” Smothergill said.
20100514-ll-cedarbay1.JPGView full sizeMary Oot (left), of Minoa, and Karen Karoglanian, of Camillus, enjoy their conversation in the Old Erie Canal State Historic Park at Cedar Bay, in DeWitt, on Friday. The park is among those being closed, and the DeWitt officials have offered to mow the grass to keep it accessible.
Cedar Bay, a popular picnic area along the Old Erie Canal, is supposed to be closed, too. On Friday, the town of DeWitt mowed the grass and dandelion puffs that had grown calf-high. And there is nothing to keep people from parking there and walking or riding the trail along the canal.

The town is going to continue mowing grass, said Mike Moracco, assistant director of the town parks and recreation department. He said the town would like to open the bathrooms and put the swings back up, too. “We thought we’d just come over and give them a hand,” Moracco said. He said the town and state are working on a written agreement.

Rob Hiltbrand, regional director for the parks department, said the town could end up taking over the property permanently. It backs up to town-owned land, and the town is looking into some plans for expanding the recreation area, Hiltbrand said.

Other parks in Central New York haven’t been as lucky. The gates to Fort Ontario in Oswego are closed and locked. It opened briefly Mother’s Day weekend for a battle re-enactment.

Bobbi Elmer has worked at the fort for 10 years. She’s never experienced anything like this. The shelves in the gift shop are mostly bare. Elmer and a few other year-round workers are going through the routine work of boxing up historic artifacts. The historic buildings that have been renovated will remain empty of people.

Visitors to Chittenango Falls are welcomed by a barricade blocking the trail that loops around the waterfalls. The bathrooms are closed. Only the parking lot and overlook are open.

In Central New York, most of the year-round employees at the parks on the closed list have been sent to work at Green Lakes State Park or the Lorenzo State Historic Site, Hiltbrand said.

He’s acting as if the parks are closing, but making plans to catch up on maintenance once the budget passes. Beaches are a different story. For them, there will be a point of no return, Hiltbrand said. It takes time to hire lifeguards and test water. Both of those things would have been done already for Selkirk Shores, on the closed list. If the budget goes much past June, it will be hard to make up for that lost time. Lifeguards will have found other jobs.

Whatever happens, it is already too late for the McPherson/Mawhinney wedding. For now, the couple is hunting for another outdoor setting with enough parking for 120 guests. (They have a separate spot for the reception.)

The couple had been content to wait, knowing that the Legislature would restore the cuts to the parks. But their time is up. “I can’t afford to wait any longer,” McPherson said. She needs to have the invitations printed. For that, she needs to be able to tell people where to go.

They wanted to get married outdoors, but the parks are either booked or short of parking. McPherson isn’t sure what they’ll end up doing. “It’s not going to be what we pictured,” she said.

Marnie Eisenstadt can be reached at meisenstadt@syracuse.com or 470-2246.

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