For months, Gov. Cuomo and DOH Commissioner Dr. Howard Zucker failed to disclose the true number of nursing home residents who died from COVID-19. Last week, the attorney general’s office reported that the March 25directive requiring nursing homes accept COVID-positive patients was, in fact, a contributing factor in the spread of the disease in these facilities. Only after the attorney general released the findings of her investigation did the DOH report that nearly 13,000 nursing home residents lost their lives during the pandemic.
Minority Conferences are calling on their majority colleagues to issue subpoenas compelling administration officials to appear and testify at legislative hearings, and for the Legislature to rescind the emergency powers granted to the governor at the onset of the pandemic.
“The attorney general’s bombshell report is the first step to finally getting some answers for the thousands of families who lost loved ones in the state’s nursing homes,” said Assembly Minority Leader Will Barclay (R,C,I-Pulaski). “The administration must take full responsibility for the role the March 25 directive played in the spread of the virus in these facilities and admit their culpability. I stand by my colleagues and demand a thorough and comprehensive investigation—the people of New York deserve full transparency. Today, we say, ‘enough is enough’. It is time the governor’s emergency powers are rescinded. The welfare of the state can no longer be left in the hands of one man; legislative oversight must be restored.”
“The Department of Health has betrayed the public trust in the middle of the worst public health crisis we have faced in a generation. The first step to repair that trust is the resignation of Health Commissioner Dr. Howard Zucker. The attorney general’s report was just the tip of the iceberg—this is just the beginning of what I think should be a thorough investigation into the actions of Gov. Cuomo and his entire administration. I am proud to stand with my Senate Conference and colleagues in the Assembly to call for an investigation and an end to the governor’s emergency powers, and I hope our democratic colleagues get serious and join us,” said Senate Minority Leader Robert Ortt (R-Tonawanda).
“The Senate Majority has the power to get the answers so many grieving families are after, but to date, they have chosen not to use it,” said Senator Sue Serino, ranking Minority Member on the Senate’s Aging Committee. “With real lives on the line, the attorney general’s report makes it painfully clear that we absolutely cannot afford to wait another day—let alone weeks—for the health commissioner to be ready to appear before us at a budget hearing. When you have the power to make a difference, it is not enough to say you will ‘consider’ the issuance of a subpoena, or the holding of a hearing, you have to set politics aside, do what is right and take action. We will not stop pushing until New Yorkers get the answers they deserve.”
Janice Dean, an outspoken voice for justice for grieving New York families, said, “Our families have been waiting for almost a year for answers as to why our loved ones were put in harms’ way without warning and why our governor has done everything he can to cover up his deadly mistakes. We deserve answers for our families and to ensure this never happens again to anyone else’s family.”
Ted Minissale, Phil Minissale and Cindy Lizzi, Capital Region residents whose mother, Agnes Minissale, passed away from COVID-19 in April,offered the following, “Our family has suffered tremendous loss, and since our mother, Agnes, passed away, we have waited for the truth to come out. So many families have gone through this – losing a loved one because questionable decisions were made that put patients in danger and impacted people’s lives. A lot of people need to own their mistakes, and there needs to be accountability for the families, like ours, who have lost so much.”
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