Governor Cuomo Signs Legislation to Provide $45 Million for Communities Impacted by Lake Ontario and St. Lawrence River Flooding in Wilson
Earlier today, Governor
In addition, the Governor will be requesting an expedited major disaster declaration from the
Amid ongoing questions about the transparency and management of the
A rush transcript of the Governor's remarks is available below.
Thank you, thank you very much. It's my pleasure to be back in
I've done many events with Howard. You wouldn't know it from his presentation today, but he has a good sense of humor. Usually. And I've seen all sorts of reactions, but I've never seen the reaction I saw today. The man got up, started to speak, and the swans fled. I've never seen that response before. Must say something, Howard. But he has done a phenomenal job at what he's done. Let's give a round of applause to
To all the dignitaries who are here, our guests, our neighbors, thank you very much for taking the time to come out. To the state officials who are working, the commissioners who are working, but especially my colleagues in the legislature who came back for an extraordinary session to do additional business that wasn't done during the regular legislative session. And that's always difficult and it's hard to do. It's sort of after school, after you graduate school you get a call and they say you have to come back for another 2 days, you're not really in that mood. That's what an extraordinary session is. But the legislature came back for an extraordinary session and they did great work and one of the things they did is passing the relief package for
Well, as you heard from Howard, and as everybody knows, Mother Nature has gotten offended by something, someone did along the way, but we have a pattern of extreme weather that is just undeniable now. We have weather circumstances in this state that we never had before. Seven feet of snow in Buffalo. Now, we get snow in Buffalo, but we don't get seven feet of snow. We had Superstorm Sandy, we had floods, hurricanes, et cetera. And now we have record breaking heights at
It's undeniable that one of the causes or the main cause has been the amount of rainfall. I believe it's more complicated than that and I also believe it gets into how this situation was regulated, but there's no doubt that what accelerated the situation was the amount of rainfall, and now we have
But we do have the responsibility of dealing with the fallout. And the first step is handling the emergency nature of it. And unfortunately we've gotten too good at handling these emergencies. As I mentioned, the number of extreme weather circumstances we have. Think about this: my father was governor for 12 years. I've been governor for roughly half that amount of time. I've had about twice as many natural disasters in half the time that my father had when he was governor. So, the frequency is up, and the legislature has been very good at making sure the sophistication of our emergency response has gotten much, much better in terms of equipment, personnel et cetera. So, as you heard from Howard, step one was the emergency response, and we were there with deployments of boats, pumps, and personnel. The main workforce for the state, the
There is no art form to a sandbag. You do 60,000 sandbags, your back hurts, I can promise you that. And if it wasn't for the
The second step is we're applying to the federal government for financial assistance through what's called
There's a group called the IJC which does the regulation of the releases of water. The state doesn't have any appointees on that, that's federal. But there are three federal appointees, one is vacant, one is from the great state of
I also want to reinforce the no wake zone that we put into effect. Five miles per hour within the 600 feet of the shoreline. I know that's a burden for boaters. I'm a boater. But look at the damage you can do. You're talking about docks that are already under water. You're talking about homes that are getting flooded. And every wave literally does additional damage. So we're coordinating with local law enforcement, but please show consideration. Follow that rule, five miles per hour within 600 miles of the shoreline. And then as I mentioned before, the state passed a new program authorized up to
You know they will say that well this is one in one hundred years. This has never happened before. Some people say, well that's great, this is a onetime situation and it will never happen again. They have told me this is once in one hundred years, about ten times a year right. So I go the other way. I believe that this is not the last we've seen of it. And I think preparedness is prudence. I would prepare and mitigate and learn from this. We understand what happened. If the water comes to this height again. Let's make sure it doesn't do this amount of damage again and let's make the repairs now, and that's covered in this bill.
In terms of damages for
The program goes into effect immediately. We are implementing it.
I am going to sign the bill, but before I sign the bill, one point. The when you're governor of
We have to help
VIDEO of the remarks is available on YouTube here (https://youtu.be/8NDDQijrjUg) and in TV quality (h264 format) here (https://spaces.hightail.com/receive/nHBIoR9Th9).
AUDIO of the remarks is available here (https://soundcloud.com/nygovcuomo/governor-cuomo-makes-an-announcement-in-wilson).
PHOTOS of the event will be available on the Governor's Flickr page (https://www.flickr.com/photos/governorandrewcuomo/albums).



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