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Newsday, Melville, N.Y., Joye Brown column: Her silencing of Nassau lawmakers speaks volumes
(Newsday (Melville, NY) (KRT) Via Thomson Dialog NewsEdge) Jan. 15--Abolish the Nassau County Legislature.
Maybe that's harsh.
But, darn it, who could blame anyone for harboring legis-cidal thoughts after yesterday's parody of a business meeting?
It was the first full session of the term, a time for new beginnings; a time when the Legislature's brand new presiding officer, Democratic Legis. Diane Yatauro, could have begun the hard job of restoring dignity to what had become a laughingstock of a branch of local government.
But nooooooo.
Yatauro instead turned into a high-tech version of the Queen of Hearts from Alice in Wonderland.
Off with their mikes!
She didn't say it. She did it, with a flick of a switch.
Legis. Francis X. Becker was criticizing a proposal to have Nassau take over three local sewer districts.
Off with his mike!
"This is a disgrace, this was never done by [former presiding officer] Judy Jacobs," cried Becker, so angry his voice needed no amplification.
Legis. John Ciotti was asking questions about the proposal when Yatauro struck again, complaining he was talking too loudly.
Off with his mike!
"I'm shouting," Ciotti shouted, "because you turned off my microphone; so I could be heard."
Curiously (not), Yatauro cut off only Republican legislators, allowing fellow Democrats to talk and even interrupt other legislators.
But the cutting hardly stopped there.
The county comptroller's office had asked the legislature to put off a decision on the sewer takeover because it needed more financial information.
So did the Nassau Interim Finance Authority, a panel overseeing county finances.
So did a group of local residents, armed with 700 signatures they had collected over two days, who said they had just heard about the proposal.
"I can say I have a right to be angry," a woman from East Rockaway told legislators. "This vote is premature ... We just want to know what the plan is."
Meanwhile, Eric Naughton, director of the legislature's independent office of budget review, sat in the chamber's audience, waiting to testify about the proposal's financial impact.
He waited -- and was still waiting when Yatauro called the proposal to the floor for a vote.
Republicans voted against it.
The Democratic majority voted, and passed it, just as it had been determined to do before yesterday's session even started.
It didn't matter that legislators -- or the public -- had questions; that the comptroller and NIFA wanted more financial information; or that the legislature had a budget review office, ready and willing to give lawmakers information.
Nassau needs a functioning legislature and a presiding officer willing to lead it, not silence it.
In the past few months alone, the county has made some boneheaded moves.
It's bonding the cost of millions of dollars in property tax appeal refunds, a move that put Nassau's finances in jeopardy years ago -- even as sales tax revenues plummet and its budget grows increasingly tight.
Last week, Nassau reported that lawmakers were stunned to find expensive televisions and other items in their offices at the newly renovated county courthouse building.
Everybody went on record complaining, but not one legislator said, hey, maybe we should take another look at this as finances are tighter now than when we agreed on this thing.
That's what legislatures are supposed to do.
But not in Nassau. Last month, the outgoing legislature voted big raises for every elected county official -- except themselves, because the county charter bars legislators from raising their own salaries during an ongoing term.
But that may change soon.
"I've been assured that this body is going to vote themselves a raise and change the charter," Legis. Roger Corbin said last month.
That's magnanimous. And a sign of even more outrageousness to come.
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Copyright (c) 2008, Newsday, Melville, N.Y.
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.
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