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Ortt, colleagues launch 'Reset, Reopen' economic rollout

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Tue, May 5th 2020 11:05 am

On Monday, New York State Sen. Rob Ortt joined his Republican colleagues, State Senate Deputy Minority Leader Joseph A. Griffo, Sen. Rich Funke, Sen. Tom O'Mara, Sen. George M. Borrello, Sen. Pat Gallivan, Sen. Daphne Jordan, Sen. Pam Helming and Sen. Fred Akshar, to roll out an economic "Reset, Reopen" plan for Upstate and Western New York to coincide with the virus's regression.

The policy consists of four distinct elements:

•Reopen businesses in a safe and pragmatic fashion.

•Reduce government control over businesses.

•Reform government to help businesses and taxpayers.

•Revitalize the economy and local communities.

Ortt challenged policymakers to go beyond simply returning to work, even as he noted the importance of reopening certain segments of the economy.

He said, “The COVID-19 pandemic has unleashed incalculable costs upon our country – the financial toll surpassed only by the human toll. As we put the pieces back together, it is incumbent upon elected officials to address the short-term and long-term challenges we face. In this great challenge, we have the unique opportunity to rethink, retool, and reboot our economy. While others talk about ‘un-pausing,’ I'm talking about resetting. We didn't pause the economy – we unplugged it. And just as we have assumed a war footing to combat the virus, we will need to assume the same stance in order to resuscitate and rebuild our economy. 

The GOP said that, over the past week, Gov. Andrew Cuomo has been receptive to reopening along regional lines, stepping away from the one-size-fits approach of earlier in the pandemic. The party said Cuomo heeded calls from Senate and Assembly legislators who have called for a regional approach to reopening with individual assessments of specific regions COVID-19 cases, and for businesses to reopen while accounting for the economic viability and potential risk of infection. 

Griffo said, “The vast toll of the coronavirus pandemic has led to untold pain, suffering and uncertainty for New York residents and businesses. As we begin the shift toward planning and implementing a safe economic reopening, we must do so by observing CDC guidance, eliminating the inconsistencies of the state administration’s executive orders, and allowing for a safe but practical reopening plan for Upstate New York.”

Funke said, “New York state is not only New York City and it is time we stopped governing like it is. We should begin to reopen our economy regionally using the prudent, phased approach recommended by the federal government. Upstate infection rates are much lower and our economy is much more fragile as evidenced by yet another report out today that shows 53 counties – mostly upstate – lost population in the last year. It’s time we better balanced our focus on the disease with our focus on the economy. It's time to begin to reopen upstate.” 

O'Mara said, “I have stressed throughout the ongoing COVID-19 response that we also need to be ready, once we weather this storm, to start an open and full discussion on the best ways to move forward for this entire state, upstate and downstate. It is going to require a restructuring of New York government, strengthening the state-local partnership, and getting back to work rebuilding New York with the right priorities, long-overdue commonsense reform, and fiscal responsibility. I look forward to continuing to join my Senate Republican colleagues throughout the weeks and months ahead to put forth for strategies that we believe are needed and to work to ensure that our upstate regions don't get left behind in the unprecedented recovery effort that we're facing.” 

Borrello said, “COVID-19 has exacted a catastrophic toll on our state, in the innocent lives it’s taken and the economic devastation it has wrought. New Yorkers have come together in an extraordinary way to combat the virus’ spread and those efforts are working. Now we must engage the next challenge: reopening and rebuilding our economy, while maintaining critically important safety protocols in our communities and in every workplace. The scope of the problem in front of us requires rethinking and reforming our state’s approach to business, which in the past has often been more harmful than helpful. The ‘Reset-Reopen’ plan recognizes that now it is urgent that we reverse that trend, so that our fragile economy and hurting businesses can rebound.” 

Gallivan said, “As we work to restart our economy, we must do so while simultaneously following the guidelines of the CDC and other health care experts. Analyzing each region based on population density, infection rate and health care capacity will help to determine which business sectors can reopen and the appropriate level of public health screening and protective measures that should apply. We must also look for ways to not only reopen our economy, but to support businesses and communities recovering from the devastating impact of this pandemic.”

Jordan said, “Reopening New York’s economy in a smart, sensible, regional, and safe business-to-business approach should be ‘job one’ in terms of getting folks back to work and helping our struggling small businesses. I’m proud to have led the important effort to get residential and commercial construction moving again, and I continue calling for the state to recognize the many businesses that can and should reopen. In many cases, it may be far safer to shop in our local small businesses that have safety plans than the big box stores that have much more foot traffic. I agree with my good friend Sen. Ortt that it’s not nearly enough to simply ‘un-pause’ businesses when our state is hemorrhaging jobs, Albany is awash in red ink, and over a million New Yorkers are out of work. We must jumpstart our economy by reopening businesses safely, reducing government control over job creators, reforming government bureaucracy to help businesses and taxpayers, and revitalize our economy and communities. This is our mission and it's critical to resetting New York state and successfully turning the page on this economic crisis.”

Helming said, “We need to get New York reopened in a smart and safe way. That starts with listening to small businesses and farmers. They need a seat at the table and a chance to make their voices heard. To kickstart our economy, we must make regulatory reform a top priority and reduce the cost of doing business in our state. Cutting taxes and red tape will give small businesses the confidence they need to expand and create jobs right here in our community.”

Akshar said, “The COVID-19 public health crisis has devastated local businesses and employees in communities across our state and nation. While we all work together now to stop the spread of this devastating virus and save lives, we must also take practical and thoughtful approach to healing the devastation wreaked on an economy that wasn't the healthiest to begin with. It's not enough to work toward getting things 'back to normal.' We must work toward safely rebuilding a better economic environment for our businesses and employees and a better collective future for families and communities across New York.”

The senators called for New York state to align the businesses on Empire State Development’s essential list with that of the federal government’s essential businesses list. By aligning, operations such as construction, sportsmen stores, manufacturing, and other low-risk occupations would be allowed to reopen. This, they said, would allow limited New York residents to safely return to work – helping workers, small businesses and a state unemployment system stretched to its financial and functional limits.

They said the CDC’s “Opening Up America Again” plan offers strict guidance for governors and legislators across the U.S. to utilize for the reopening of the economy in phases as public health milestones are met.

The senators announced they will follow up on the initial phase to lay out additional elements of his Reset, Reopen” plan pertaining to reduce, reform and revitalize in the coming weeks.

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