Friday, September 28, 2012

andrew substandard cuomo says thou shall not

bet at Nassau OTB when I am in church.  OTBs should be open 365 days of the year just like the lottery.
NY PML Sec 109 /105 is clearly unconstitutional.
A top aide to New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said on Monday that the state is considering a plan to seek a private, for-profit company to replace the New York Racing Association as the operator of the state’s three most high-profile racetracks.
Howard Glaser, Cuomo’s director of state operations, said on a radio show Monday morning that the state is considering issuing a request for proposals to replace NYRA, the not-for-profit company that by law holds the franchise to operate Aqueduct, Belmont, and Saratoga until 2033. The option will be considered once NYRA’s board is reconstituted with a majority of state appointees and the new board has time to assess the association’s operations, Glaser said.
“We’ll see when the new board is in place what the ultimate review will entail,” Glaser said.
Glaser was interviewed on the radio show by Frederic Dicker, a radio host who also writes a column for the New York Post. On Monday morning, Dicker, who is writing an authorized biography of Cuomo, quoted unidentified sources as saying that the new board would seek private companies such as Churchill Downs Inc., the Stronach Group, or “the manager of major entertainment destinations” to replace NYRA.
Earlier this year, the state legislature, acting at Cuomo’s behest, passed legislation requiring the dismantling of NYRA’s 25-member board, which currently has 11 state appointees. The new board, to be in place for three years, will have 17 members, of which 12 will be controlled by the state, including eight controlled by Cuomo.
Glaser said Cuomo is expected to sign the legislation “soon,” at which point he will make his eight appointments. Cuomo will also have the power to appoint the chairman. Currently, the NYRA board does not have a chairman. The term of the former chairman, Steven Duncker, expired at the beginning of September.
Rich Azzopardi, a spokesman for Cuomo, said on Monday morning that the governor would have no comment on his plans for NYRA’s board or the information in Dicker’s column.
Under an agreement reached in 2008 that allowed NYRA to emerge from bankruptcy, the state took the deeds to NYRA’s three tracks and gave the franchise to operate the tracks to NYRA for 25 years. That agreement was approved by the legislature.
It is unclear if the state would need new legislation in order to nullify the existing agreement. Chris Wittstruck, a lawyer who is an authority on New York racing law, said that it is possible the new board could approve a plan to dissolve NYRA at the end of its three-year tenure, freeing the state to select a new operator.
“It’s the simplest thing in the world for them to do that,” Wittstruck said.
NYRA has not been cash-flow positive for more than a decade. However, that is likely to change for the 2012 fiscal year due to payments that NYRA has begun to receive from a massive casino that opened at Aqueduct late in 2011, 10 years after it was first authorized by law.
On the radio interview, Glaser said that the “legal franchise” continues to reside with NYRA.
“That doesn’t change,” Glaser said. “That was part of a legal agreement. But that’s a different question as to who the operator is.”
J. Gary Pretlow, the New York representative who is the chairman of the New York Assembly’s Racing and Wagering Committee, said on Monday that he would be “opposed to any effort to privatize” the operation of the tracks.
“NYRA could work very well under the scenario we’d already put forward,” Pretlow said. “That is, they would operate under the new board and very strict oversight from the state for three years, and then we’d let them try to work it out.”
Cuomo and casino companies lobbied aggressively over the past year for gambling legislation in New York that would allow up to seven new casinos in the state. The state’s existing eight casinos are tied to racetracks and are restricted to operating devices called video lottery terminals, which are essentially slot machines that are tied into the state’s lottery system to get around the state’s constitutional ban on slot machines.
The legislation allowing for up to seven new casinos was passed earlier this year, but that legislation, which would put a constitutional amendment on the ballot, would have to be approved again by the legislature next year. The constitutional amendment would then have to be approved by a statewide referendum before the state could begin awarding casino licenses.
If the effort is ultimately successful, the existing legislation providing subsidies for tracks and horsemen from the operation of the video lottery terminals would not apply to the new casinos. The existing operators of casinos, including Genting New York, which operates the Aqueduct casino, are expected to be first in line when applying for the new licenses, which would also allow them to operate table games in addition to any type of slot-machine-like device.
Casino companies have been eyeing the sprawling property at Belmont Park in Elmont, Long Island, as a possible casino location for a decade. Several months ago, the state’s New York Racing Franchise Oversight Board approved a plan to solicit bids for two parcels of land on the property for redevelopment. The RFP for the parcels said that the property could not be used for video lottery terminals, though the RFP did not place any specific prohibition on other gambling activities.
Cuomo sought the dissolution of NYRA’s board after the association came under intense scrutiny last winter because of a takeout scandal and a rash of catastrophic breakdowns at Aqueduct. Cuomo and his aides have said that the two problems indicate that NYRA’s management is failing to operate the tracks successfully.
“The functioning of NYRA is substandard,” said Glaser on the radio program.
An investigation by the Inspector General into the takeout scandal has been conducted, but the results have not been released. In addition, a report examining the rash of Aqueduct breakdowns was completed more than a month ago and distributed to Cuomo’s office, but the office has declined to comment on the report.

Brought to you by the man who is too lazy and/or

 ... to ask Attorney General Eric Scheiderman for a FREE FORMAL OPINION  as to whether NY PML Sec  109/105 is constitutionally defensible (see eg NY Const. Art. 1, Sec 3) and /or applies to Nassau OTB. 
 
John D. Sabini/The NY Racing and Wagering Board have been repeatedly petitioned to ask for a Free Opinion and have failed to do so. 
 
It is even clear to a horse that you can't close Nassau OTB on Roman Catholic Easter Sunday and Palm Sunday and not on Greek Orthodox Easter Sunday and Palm Sunday. Fair is fair.
 
Let's bet on Eric's scholarly opinion assuming we can find someone with standing to request same.
 
 
 
News from the New York State Racing and Wagering Board
Contact: Lee.Park@racing.ny.gov<mailto:Lee.Park@racing.ny.gov>


September 28, 2012



STATEMENT FROM JOHN D. SABINI, CHAIRMAN OF THE NEW YORK STATE RACING AND WAGERING BOARD


"The sweeping reform suggestions announced today by the Task Force on Racehorse Health and Safety are welcome recommendations that will greatly improve horse and rider safety in New York state. The measures will be fully implemented by the Racing and Wagering Board. The Board will hold a special meeting within the next two weeks to enact several emergency rules in accordance with the Task Force's recommendations. These rules will apply to all Thoroughbred racing in New York State. The Racing and Wagering Board will also adopt other recommended protocols and policies that do not require specific rulemaking actions."





Rules expected to be enacted on an emergency basis include:

 *   Voiding claims (at claimant's discretion) for horses that are vanned off the grounds
 *   Requiring that Claimants be advised of Intra-Articular Corticosteroid Administrations
 *   Adjusting the Purses Claiming Ratio to 1.6 times claiming price
 *   Corticosteroid Administration Changes

    *   DepoMedrol prohibited within 15 days
    *   All other Intra-Articular Corticosteroids prohibited within 7 days
    *   All Systemic Corticosteroids prohibited within 5 days

 *   Required Corticosteroid Reporting to Stewards
 *   Clenbuterol prohibited within 21 days
###



-----
HI-
Thanks for the help. The item’s below. I’d be happy to mail you a copy, if you give me a mailing address.

Claude Solnik
(631) 913-4244
Long Island Business News
2150 Smithtown Ave.
Ronkonkoma, NY 11779-7348 

Home > LI Confidential > Stop scratching on holidays

Stop scratching on holidays Published: June 1, 2012

Off Track Betting in New York State has been racing into a crisis called shrinking revenue. Some people have spitballed a solution: Don’t close on holidays.
New York State Racing Law bars racing on Christmas, Easter and Palm Sunday, and the state has ruled OTBs can’t handle action on those days, even though they could easily broadcast races from out of state.
“You should be able to bet whenever you want,” said Jackson Leeds, a Nassau OTB employee who makes an occasional bet. He added some irrefutable logic: “How is the business going to make money if you’re not open to take people’s bets?”
Elias Tsekerides, president of the Federation of Hellenic Societies of Greater New York, said OTB is open on Greek Orthodox Easter and Palm Sunday.
“I don’t want discrimination,” Tsekerides said. “They close for the Catholics, but open for the Greek Orthodox? It’s either open for all or not open.”
OTB officials have said they lose millions by closing on Palm Sunday alone, with tracks such as Gulfstream, Santa Anita, Turf Paradise and Hawthorne running.
One option: OTBs could just stay open and face the consequences. New York City OTB did just that back in 2003. The handle was about $1.5 million – and OTB was fined $5,000.
Easy money.

Cuomo orders jockeys to safety of church

and/or no racing while he may be in Church.  Safety requires New York Tracks to not run on "Palm Sunday" and "Easter Sunday" when Andrew Cuomo is praying.  Safety first! Bettors can go to hell or New Jersey or elsewhere if they want to bet.  NY  Const. ARt. 1, Sec 3. Freedom. Andrew Cuomo is unsafe for New York Bettors who want to be at Nassau OTB any day of the year there is track running with races of interest to them.  Safety. Andrew Cuomo style. And he thinks someday he will be King. No.
For Immediate Release: September 28, 2012

GOVERNOR CUOMO ORDERS BROAD OVERHAUL OF HORSE AND JOCKEY SAFETY MEASURES AT NYRA TRACKS
Steps include creation of NYS Equine Medical Director position, reform of conflict-ridden veterinary structure, new drug prohibitions, and widespread rule changes
Changes come as Task Force Report on Racehorse Health and Safety is Released
Governor Andrew M. Cuomo today announced his office has received the findings and recommendations of the New York Task Force on Racehorse Health and Safety and that the state will undertake an unprecedented series of reforms to promote equine safety at New York racetracks. 

The Task Force was appointed at the request of the Governor's office following a spate of deaths at Aqueduct Racetrack during its winter meeting.  The Task Force was directed to review the circumstances involving the deaths, analyze the causes, and recommend any necessary action to prevent equine breakdowns at NYRA operated facilities. The Task Force was also charged with examining horse claiming rules, veterinary procedures and drug use in order to promote equine safety.
"New York is committed to placing the health, safety and welfare of the equine athlete as the top priority of horseracing," Governor Cuomo said. "As we bring accountability and responsible business practices to horseracing, these recommendations will be an integral part of a new and improved racing product. I have requested the Racing and Wagering Board to promptly adopt the changes identified by the Task Force to create a safety-conscious environment for racehorses. I sincerely thank the members of the Task Force on Racehorse Health and Safety for their important work."

The Governor's actions include recommending a complete overhaul of NYRA's veterinary practices, the creation of an Equine Medical Director position within the state's racing regulatory body, strict prohibitions regarding medications, and new rules for claiming races. Since the Task Force found that the inability of jockeys to communicate their concerns about the health of horses established an unacceptably elevated level of risk, the State will create an   anonymous equine safety hotline to enable jockeys to report horse health concerns without fear of retribution.

Task Force Chairman Scott E. Palmer, VMD, said, "The Task Force has spent countless hours analyzing the circumstances of each equine death at Aqueduct. We found multiple factors that created a 'perfect storm' of conditions that caused these tragic breakdowns. We have produced realistic recommendations that will make a lasting difference in racehorse health and safety. We are proud of this report and thank Governor Cuomo for creating this Task Force."
Racing and Wagering Board Chairman John D. Sabini said, “The recommendations put forth by this Task Force are strong and effective responses to the equine fatalities at Aqueduct. The Board stands ready to incorporate the full report into our policies and procedures.”
The Task Force found that while there was no single root cause for the Aqueduct fatalities, a combination of factors likely led to the increased rate of horse deaths. These factors included: increased purses in claiming races that incentivized stakeholders to run substandard horses; the use of corticosteroids that may have limited the ability of veterinarians to identify pre-existing conditions that disposed horses to catastrophic injuries; a lack of protocols and inconsistencies in pre-race inspections and veterinary procedures; and mild weather on a track designed for harsher winters.
During its comprehensive examination, the Task Force found that NYRA's organizational veterinary structure was inherently conflicted by reporting to an entity (the Racing Office) whose function is inconsistent with deliberate and careful equine risk management practice.   Other structural shortcomings with NYRA's veterinary practice include: a lack of uniform protocols and procedures among track veterinarians, a failure to standardize risk factors to assess racehorses' fitness to run, and no uniformity in veterinary care recordkeeping or proper use of existing veterinary practice management software.

The State Racing and Wagering Board and NYRA will be directed to take these actions:
·         Establish an Office of the Equine Medical Director to oversee horse safety 
·         Create an independent veterinary practice structure within NYRA which will put the health of the horses first and which reporting directly to the chief executive officer of NYRA
·         Establish an anonymous reporting mechanism for jockeys to report health or safety violations without fear of reprisal
·         Prohibit Clenbuterol within 21 days of a race
·         Prohibit Methylprednisolone (DepoMedrol®) within 15 days of the date of a race
·         Prohibiting all other intra-articular corticosteroids within seven days of a race
·         Prohibiting all other systemic corticosteroids within five days of a race
·         Requiring trainers to maintain and records of corticosteroid administrations and notify the Stewards in writing within 48 hours of all intra-articular corticosteroid administrations
·         Extending the claiming rule that voids claims in the event a claimed horse dies on the race track to make a claim voidable within 1 hour of the conclusion of a race if the horse is vanned off the track
·         Amending the economic proportionality claiming rule to allow a purse-to-claim ratio no greater than 1.6-to-1
·         Requiring horse claimants be notified within 48 hours of any intra-articular administration of corticosteroids to the claimed horse in the 30 days prior to the race
·         Expanding out-of-competition drug testing to include corticosteroids and clenbuterol
·         Improving documentation of findings of fatal injuries, including the development of standard protocols for handling of horses sustaining fatal injuries
·         Requiring testing laboratory accreditation
·         Formalizing necropsy procedures
NYRA will also examine the possibility of installing of a synthetic surface on the inner track at Aqueduct.

The members of the Task Force on Racehorse Health and Safety are:
·         Chairman: Dr. Scott E. Palmer, the hospital director and staff surgeon at the New Jersey Equine Clinic, has served as a past president of the American Association of Equine Practitioners (AAEP). He currently serves as Chairman of the AAEP Racing Committee. Palmer has also been twice named “Veterinarian of the Year” by the New Jersey Association of Equine Practitioners.
·         Jerry Bailey, a retired Hall of Fame jockey, is a seven-time Eclipse champion jockey who has won the Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont Stakes twice each, as well as five Breeders' Cup Classics. Bailey, who currently works as a television analyst, served as President of the Jockeys' Guild.
·         Alan Foreman, the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Thoroughbred Horsemen's Associations, Inc., also serves as Vice Chairman of the Racing Medication & Testing Consortium and as counsel to many horsemen's and racing industry organizations.
·         Dr. Mary Scollay, the equine medical director of the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission, previously led a pilot racehorse injury reporting project that became the Jockey Club's Equine Injury Database.


The report's executive summary is available here: www.governor.ny.gov/assets/documents/ExecutiveSummary.pdf




###


Additional news available at www.governor.ny.gov
New York State | Executive Chamber | press.office@exec.ny.gov | 518.474.8418





*************************************
WE WORK FOR THE PEOPLE
Performance * Integrity * Pride

Cardinal Emperor Andrew Cuomo has no clothes

Andrew Cuomo is not to be believed. If he cared about the law and New York he would see that Nassau OTB is open 365 days of the year. He is free to go to church and we are free to bet .
 
For Immediate Release: September 27, 2012
***MEDIA ADVISORY***
SEPTEMBER 28, 2012
Friday, September 28
12:00 PM Cuomo Administration Officials and Industry Experts Announce New Horse Safety Measures for NYRA Tracks
Blue Room (Room 250)
State Capitol
Albany, New York
OPEN PRESS

The meeting will be webcast at www.governor.ny.gov.
###
 
Additional news available at www.governor.ny.gov
New York State | Executive Chamber |
press.office@exec.ny.gov | 518.474.8418
*************************************
WE WORK FOR THE PEOPLE

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

nj bettors can't open nassau otb accounts but

nassau otb bettors go to NJ on "Palm Sunday" and "Easter Sunday" when his Lord Andrew Cuomo does not let them bet at Nassau OTB. Note that Nassau OTB does not close on Greek Orthodox Easter and Greek Orthodox Palm Sunday because Andrew Cuomo is GREAT?
Churchill Downs Inc. filed a federal lawsuit on Friday seeking to block the Texas Racing Commission from enforcing a prohibition on telephone and Internet betting by state residents on horse races, according to court filings.

The suit, filed in U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas, is the first to be filed by a racing company seeking to overturn state prohibitions on Internet or telephone wagering. Churchill owns and operates Twinspires.com, the largest account-wagering operation in the United States, an operation that accepts bets from players in states in nearly every jurisdiction in which racing is legal and account-wagering is not explicitly illegal.

The action is also highly unusual because Churchill acknowledged in the suit that Texas laws have long banned Internet and telephone betting. Churchill, however, contends in the suit that the state racing commission did not begin to enforce the ban on account wagering until 2011 as part of an effort to direct business to in-state tracks. As a result, Churchill has said that the enforcement is a violation of the federal commerce clause, which prohibits states from placing restrictions on out-of-state businesses that do not exist for in-state businesses.

On Monday, officials for the Texas Racing Commission disputed Churchill's contention that the state had not enforced prohibitions on account wagering until 2011. Bill Childs, the commission's public information officer, said that the state's attorney general sent a letter to account-wagering companies in 2000 warning the companies that telephone and Internet betting was illegal. Also, in 2005, the attorney general sent a letter to Youbet.com, a leading account-wagering company, warning the company that account wagering was not authorized in the state. Youbet, which was one of the most aggressive account-wagering companies in the United States, disputed the letter.

Churchill launched Twinspires.com in 2007. It later purchased several other leading account-wagering companies, including Youbet.com, and has since grown to become the dominant account-wagering company in the country.

Officials from Churchill did not immediately respond to questions posed to a spokesperson on Monday afternoon.

The suit stems from a cease-and-desist letter the Texas Racing Commission sent account-wagering companies, including Twinspires.com, late in 2011. The letter reiterated that Texas law requires bettors to be "in person" at a racetrack or simulcasting enclosure in order to place a bet, citing a law that was passed earlier that year explicitly stating that Internet and telephone betting on horse racing violated the "in-person" provision.

The law was passed as part of a suite of bills reauthorizing the Texas Racing Commission, including legislation providing for the commission's funding.

In its lawsuit, Churchill quotes from the legislative record as evidence that the law was clarified to include Internet and telephone betting in order to "generate more revenue for the commission," which is funded in part by revenue at racetracks. In addition, Churchill said that the effect of the enforcement would lead to more revenue at in-state tracks and simulcast centers, which will result in more revenue for the state as a whole through taxes and fees.

"The limited legislative history also reveals the sole motivation behind reaffirming the in-person requirement: to encourage the commission to cover anticipated budget shortfalls by enforcing laws that discriminate against out-of-state businesses in favor of in-state businesses, and thereby raise additional revenue for the commission," the suit states.

Childs said that the quotes from the legislative record were taken out of the full context of the discussion of the new legislation.

Although the federal commerce clause clearly prohibits acts that favor one state's businesses over another, states have generally also been given wide latitude in enforcing gambling laws that are more restrictive or liberal than neighboring states. The federal Internet Gambling Prohibition Act includes an exemption for horse race betting among a blanket prohibition on gambling over the Internet, but the act also gives states the right to decide whether to allow Internet gambling on horse racing within their borders.

Account-wagering companies have long complained about states that allow for horse racing but do not allow for telephone or Internet betting. In most cases in the past, however, the companies have backed down if confronted by a state attorney general about the practice.

Childs said that eight of the nine companies that were sent the cease-and-desist letter in late 2011 stopped taking bets from Texas residents without disputing the content of the letter. The exception was Churchill Downs.

Under the in-person requirement, residents of Texas are allowed to bet only at seven locations in the state, the largest in the continental United States Because of that restriction, account-wagering companies are eager to provide residents with additional outlets for wagering.

nj doesn't allow bettors to open NY OTB accounts

Churchill Downs Fights Texas Betting Law
     AUSTIN (CN) - Texas would hurt out-of-state tracks if it renews enforcement of laws that require in-person bets, the operator of the Kentucky Derby horse race says.
     Kentucky-based Churchill Downs and Churchill Downs Technology Initiatives Company dba Twinspires.com sued Chuck Trout, the executive director of the Texas Racing Commission, and nine commissions members Friday.
     Churchill says the commission has traditionally refused to enforce the 25-year-old "unconstitutionally discriminatory" laws because the U.S. Constitution does not authorize wagering regulation that favors in-state tracks over out-of-state tracks.
     As a result of the "unspoken but implicit understanding" between the industry and the commissions, Texans have been wagering on out-of-state races online or over the telephone since the 1990s, according to the federal complaint.
     "A state cannot impose an 'in person' transaction requirement on the purchase of shoes or books, for no reason than to favor local businesses at the expense of out-of-state entities like Zappos.com or Amazon.com," Churchill says. "Such a law would surely violate the Commerce Clause. The same principle applies here. Indeed, this case is even more extreme."
     Renewed enforcement would allegedly impose a heavy tax on out-of-state tracks, which would be forced to funnel wagers through a Texas competitor, establish their own in-state track or force customers to travel out of the state to place their wagers. Churchill says most Texans would no longer be able to bet on the Kentucky Derby.
     "This is tantamount to forcing Pepsi to to sell its soda only through Coke machines, only if Coke consents, and only if Pepsi agrees to endure whatever marketing conditions Coke might demand and pay whatever fee Coke imposes," the 20-page complaint states. "The resulting competitive disadvantage to Pepsi is obvious. And Texas law is no different."
     Churchill says the commission will resume enforcement of the laws for one reason: money, "to generate more revenue for the commission, by shifting market share from out-of-state to in-state race tracks."
     "A significant portion of the commission's budget comes from revenues from Texas tracks," the complaint states. "The commission makes no money when a Texan wagers on an out-of-state race, unless it is funneled through a Texas track. So in 2011, during the commission's legislative reauthorization process, the Legislature indicated that the commission could make up for anticipated shortfalls in its budget, simply by enforcing its longstanding (but unconstitutional) inperson requirement." (Parentheses in original.)
     Churchill says it accepts wagers over the Internet from Texas and elsewhere through its TwinSpires.com platform.
     It seeks declaratory and injunctive relief for violations of the Civil Rights Act. It is represented by James Ho with Gibson Dunn of Dallas. 

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Wendy Long Esq. thinks she knows when Palm Sunday

and Easter Sunday are.  Let's give Wendy Long Esq. the NY law challenge and have her tell us
whether it is lawful to close Nassau OTB on Roman Catholic Palm Sunday and not Greek Orthodox Palm Sunday. Ditto for Roman Catholic Easter Sunday and Greek Orthodox Easter Sunday. Wendy Long teaches Sunday school in her church.
Fair is fair so the incumbent Senator and lawyer should answer the same questions.

hint see NY Const. Art. 1, Sec. 3 and the Gregorian and Julian Calendars.

 
 
Hello,

Thank you for your interest in volunteering for Wendy Long! I'm Shoshana, Wendy's Volunteer Coordinator. Some of us have already spoken, and others have also already been volunteering. We appreciate the help! If you have not yet volunteered, but would like to, the best way is to pick up literature to hand out at your local victory office or make calls at a victory office! 

We have victory offices located all over New York, including in Staten Island, Chester, Kingston, Nesconset, Watertown, Syracuse, Glen Falls, Lancaster, Geneva, NYC, Brooklyn, Cragsmoor, White Plains, Dryden, Newfield, Lansing, and Jamestown. The full list is below, and I have provided a link to Wendy's website, which also has the list. We also have a Nassau County office coming soon! If you would like to stay up to date on the Nassau office, let me know! 

Lastly, you can purchase signs, bumper stickers, and more through her online store here: http://www.cafepress.com/wendylongfornewyork
Thank you so much, and feel free to contact me any time at: shoshana@WendyLongForNewYork.com

Shoshana Weissmann

Volunteer Coordinator - Wendy Long for NY


PO Box 4491, New York, NY, 10163 


267 Smithtown Blvd.
Nesconset, NY 11767
Contact: Eric Arpert 
631.219.9790


2582 Hylan Blvd.
Staten Island, NY 10306
Contact: Kerry Donnelly 
718.737.8790


55 Brookside Ave.
Chester, NY 10918
Contact: Ian Miller 
845.467.7709


612 Ulster Ave
Kingston, NY 12401
Contact: Ridge Harris 
845.467.7710


11 South Street, Suite 102
Glens Falls, NY 12801
Contact: Chris Kelleher 
518.796.8579


132 Court Street
Watertown, NY 13601
Contact: Curtis Biederbeck 
Curtis@doheny4Congress.com 
845.392.8156


2910 Erie Blvd. East 
Syracuse, NY 13224
Contact: Patrick Mocete 
315.415.9620


505 Exchange St. 
Geneva, NY 14456
Contact: Drew Wayne 
315.415.9118


6363 Transit Road, Suite 540
Lancaster, NY 14086
Contact: Sean McCormick 
716.218.0241

The Metropolitan Club
122 East 83rd St.
New York, NY 10028
Contact: Erika Roberts 
917-335-8569 

8112 3rd Ave. 
Brooklyn, NY 11209 
Christine Sisto 
(718) 630-5200


214 Mamaroneck Ave. 
White Plains, NY 10601 
Chairman Doug Colety 
914 949-3020


Literature pick-up 
Cragsmoor, NY 12420 
John Constable 
845-798-6295


Offices in Dryden, Newfield, and Lansing, NY 
David Bravo-Cullen 
607-592-6170


2 East Second St.
Jamestown, NY 14701 
Jacqueline Chiarot 
716-256-8710
 
 
HI-
Thanks for the help. The item’s below. I’d be happy to mail you a copy, if you give me a mailing address.

Claude Solnik
(631) 913-4244
Long Island Business News
2150 Smithtown Ave.
Ronkonkoma, NY 11779-7348 

Home > LI Confidential > Stop scratching on holidays

Stop scratching on holidays
Published: June 1, 2012


Off Track Betting in New York State has been racing into a crisis called shrinking revenue. Some people have spitballed a solution: Don’t close on holidays.
New York State Racing Law bars racing on Christmas, Easter and Palm Sunday, and the state has ruled OTBs can’t handle action on those days, even though they could easily broadcast races from out of state.
“You should be able to bet whenever you want,” said Jackson Leeds, a Nassau OTB employee who makes an occasional bet. He added some irrefutable logic: “How is the business going to make money if you’re not open to take people’s bets?”
Elias Tsekerides, president of the Federation of Hellenic Societies of Greater New York, said OTB is open on Greek Orthodox Easter and Palm Sunday.
“I don’t want discrimination,” Tsekerides said. “They close for the Catholics, but open for the Greek Orthodox? It’s either open for all or not open.”
OTB officials have said they lose millions by closing on Palm Sunday alone, with tracks such as Gulfstream, Santa Anita, Turf Paradise and Hawthorne running.
One option: OTBs could just stay open and face the consequences. New York City OTB did just that back in 2003. The handle was about $1.5 million – and OTB was fined $5,000.
Easy money.

Santa Anita runs on Palm Sunday & Cuomo prays

Gov’s ‘bettor’ way

Plan to kill NYRA and privatize horse racing

  • Last Updated: 12:33 AM, September 24, 2012
  • Posted: 12:31 AM, September 24, 2012
headshot
Gov. Cuomo, in a startling move, has decided to “privatize’’ the running of the famed Aqueduct, Belmont and Saratoga thoroughbred tracks with a new management company that will replace the scandal-scarred New York Racing Association, The Post has learned.
Cuomo, who will sign legislation within days giving the state control of NYRA’s board of directors, plans to seek public bids for a new operator to replace NYRA, a not-for-profit corporation, from for-profit companies with deep experience in the racing and/or entertainment industries, sources said.
G.N.Miller/New York Post
Andrew M. Cuomo
State officials believe operators of such prestigious tracks as Churchill Downs, site of the Kentucky Derby, and Santa Anita Park, in Arcadia, Calif., as well as the managers of major entertainment destinations, will pay huge fees to run the three New York tracks.
A source with firsthand knowledge said it will take several months to draw up the specifics, and bids will likely be solicited by the middle of next year.
“Why not let Churchill Downs compete with Santa Anita, with Formula One, with Madison Square Garden for the best operation of the tracks?’’ asked the source.
Aides to Cuomo including Howard Glaser, the director of state operations, had worked for months on a sweeping NYRA reorganization plan in preparation of the governor’s signing of new legislation giving the state direct control of the 55-year-old racing association’s operations.
But in mid-summer, as the Saratoga meet got under way, the Cuomo aides decided that NYRA’s organizational structure and management team, which has had a series of scandals in recent years, wasn’t up to the job and that a new approach — proven outside management — was needed.
“The NYRA model won’t work. It’s flawed, and it’s unable to do the job. Privatizing makes the most sense,’’ said the source.
The Post reported in July that current NYRA President/CEO Ellen McClain would be fired after the governor signed the legislation taking control of the racing association. A source said McClain’s dismissal would likely occur early next month.
The legislation to be signed by Cuomo creates a new 17-member board of directors for NYRA, eight to be picked by Cuomo and four by the leaders of the Legislature. The current NYRA board will have only five appointees.
Meanwhile, as part of a build-up to the coming changes at NYRA, Cuomo will announce on Friday a new oversight and regulatory process for ensuring the health and safety of horses at the three tracks, it was learned.
The changes will include the creation of an oversight body, separate from the moneymaking side of the racing business, to address a growing number of horse deaths and injuries at the three tracks.
Experts link the problem to increasingly lucrative racing purses generated by the huge profits coming to NYRA from the year-old racino at Aqueduct.
“Nobody really had the best interests of the horses in mind,’’ said the source.
The Post has also learned that the state Inspector General has concluded that “negligent oversight’’ by NYRA’s top management and its board of directors was responsible for the massive “takeout” scandal that cost bettors nearly $8.5 million over a 15-month period ending late last year.
Acting Inspector General Catherine Leahy Scott, nearing the end of a five month investigation, concluded that former NYRA CEO Charles Hayward and General Counsel Patrick Kehoe, along with “virtually everyone else in a position of responsibility,’’ knew of a legal requirement to lower the amount the association took from bets being placed at the three tracks but failed to act, said a source with knowledge of the report.
Hayward and Kehoe were fired by NYRA in May after the state Racing and Wagering Board disclosed the takeout scandal. However, the Inspector General’s report will say the state board didn’t act quickly enough.
Cuomo followed up the report by ordering an investigation by the Inspector General, partly to determine if NYRA officials had engaged in criminal conduct or might be liable in a civil court action.
The IG report concluded that no criminal conduct occurred and that a successful Civil Court action was unlikely, the source said.
fredric.dicker@nypost.com

closed when tracks are running that we want to bet

Letter: Don't equate OTB with casinos

Patrons stand in Suffolk OTB in Hauppauge (March
Photo credit: Ed Betz | Patrons stand in Suffolk OTB in Hauppauge (March 29, 2012)
Whether New York State becomes home to additional casinos is a matter for state officials and voters to decide ["Casinos and taxes: Here we go again," Letters, Sept. 13].
Off-track betting corporations are a different animal. As created by the State Legislature in the 1970s and detailed in state law, the mission of OTBs is quite clear: Provide revenue for the support of government, curb unlawful bookmaking and support the state's horse racing and breeding industries.
Not one cent of taxpayer money is used to operate OTBs. On the contrary, OTBs turn over millions of dollars to local governments annually. In 2011, Suffolk OTB provided $1.5 million to the county and its taxpayers.
Lottery revenue is earmarked for education while OTB revenue benefits local government. A public discussion about casinos is well and good, but accuracy must be a central part of it.
Philip C. Nolan, Hauppauge
Editor's note: The writer is the chief executive of the Suffolk Regional Off-Track Betting Corp.

Greek Bettors against Steinman


 

WebCivil Supreme - Case Detail
 
Court:Nassau Civil Supreme
Index Number:011310/2009
Case Name:NASSAU REGIONAL OFF-TRACK vs. NEW YORK RACING ASSOCIATION
Case Type:Commercial Division
Track:Complex
RJI Filed: 06/11/2009
Date NOI Due:
NOI Filed:
Disposition Date: 01/24/2011
Calendar Number:
Jury Status:
Justice Name: STEPHEN A. BUCARIA

Attorney/Firm For Plaintiff:
BLANK, ROME, TENZER, GREENBLAT  Attorney Type: Attorney Of Record  Atty. Status: Active
405 LEXINGTON AVENUE
NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10174
212 885-5000

Attorney/Firm For Defendant:
BEE READY FISHBEIN HATTER, ETC    Attorney Type: Attorney Of Record    Atty. Status: Active
170 OLD COUNTRY ROAD STE 200
MINEOLA, NY 11501
516-746-5599



About

Leonard Steinman is running for Supreme Court Justice on Long Island to improve the quality of our legal system because he knows that justice matters. If you live in Nassau or Suffolk, support Len's campaign & vote Steinman for Justice on Nov. 6!
Biography
Leonard Steinman was born and raised on Long Island. As a courtroom lawyer at a major Manhattan law firm, he knows how frustrating the judicial system can be. Len is dedicated to bringing his private sector work ethic to the bench and improving our justice system to make it faster, more efficient and fairer, by ensuring that everyone follows the rules. While practicing law full-time, Len has also dedicated himself to improving Long Island by volunteering for various important civic positions, including his participation in overseeing Nassau County's perilous finances as a member of the NIFA Board.


Experience That Matters:
-28 years of courtroom experience.
-Senior Partner of major Manhattan law firm.
-Named N.Y. Metro-Area SuperLawyer in 2011 and 2012.
-NIFA (Nassau County Interim Finance Authority) Board Member.
-Member of the College Council of SUNY, College of Old Westbury.
-Past Chairman of the Nassau County Industrial Development Agency.
-Lecturer, New York State Bar Association
-Graduated law school with Honors and member of Law Review.

Ideas That Matter
-Len will bring his private sector work ethic to the bench.
-Len will respect the public, by making decisions promptly and fairly.
-Len will respect attorneys by being professional, courteous and punctual.
-Len will respect the law by ensuring that everyone follows the rules.


Len is married and lives on Long Island with Lesly, his wife of 27 years, and his twin daughters, Alex (who currently attends Penn State) and Hallie (who currently attends Binghamton University).


About

Leonard Steinman is running for Supreme Court Justice on Long Island to improve the quality of our legal system because he knows that justice matters. If you live in Nassau or Suffolk, support Len's campaign & vote Steinman for Justice on Nov. 6!
Biography
Leonard Steinman was born and raised on Long Island. As a courtroom lawyer at a major Manhattan law firm, he knows how frustrating the judicial system can be. Len is dedicated to bringing his private sector work ethic to the bench and improving our justice system to make it faster, more efficient and fairer, by ensuring that everyone follows the rules. While practicing law full-time, Len has also dedicated himself to improving Long Island by volunteering for various important civic positions, including his participation in overseeing Nassau County's perilous finances as a member of the NIFA Board.


Experience That Matters:
-28 years of courtroom experience.
-Senior Partner of major Manhattan law firm.
-Named N.Y. Metro-Area SuperLawyer in 2011 and 2012.
-NIFA (Nassau County Interim Finance Authority) Board Member.
-Member of the College Council of SUNY, College of Old Westbury.
-Past Chairman of the Nassau County Industrial Development Agency.
-Lecturer, New York State Bar Association
-Graduated law school with Honors and member of Law Review.

Ideas That Matter
-Len will bring his private sector work ethic to the bench.
-Len will respect the public, by making decisions promptly and fairly.
-Len will respect attorneys by being professional, courteous and punctual.
-Len will respect the law by ensuring that everyone follows the rules.


Len is married and lives on Long Island with Lesly, his wife of 27 years, and his twin daughters, Alex (who currently attends Penn State) and Hallie (who currently attends Binghamton University).

leonard d steinman for supreme court justice

proudly presents how to make money from public benefit corporations, eg Nassau OTB


 

WebCivil Supreme - Case Detail
 
Court:Nassau Civil Supreme
Index Number:011310/2009
Case Name:NASSAU REGIONAL OFF-TRACK vs. NEW YORK RACING ASSOCIATION
Case Type:Commercial Division
Track:Complex
RJI Filed: 06/11/2009
Date NOI Due:
NOI Filed:
Disposition Date: 01/24/2011
Calendar Number:
Jury Status:
Justice Name: STEPHEN A. BUCARIA

Attorney/Firm For Plaintiff:
BLANK, ROME, TENZER, GREENBLAT  Attorney Type: Attorney Of Record  Atty. Status: Active
405 LEXINGTON AVENUE
NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10174
212 885-5000

Attorney/Firm For Defendant:
BEE READY FISHBEIN HATTER, ETC    Attorney Type: Attorney Of Record    Atty. Status: Active
170 OLD COUNTRY ROAD STE 200
MINEOLA, NY 11501
516-746-5599   

Leonard Steinman for Supreme Court Justice

www.steinmanforjustice.com/
Official website for Leonard Steinman for Supreme Court Justice. ... Share the link to this site with friends and colleagues. And most important, vote for Leonard ...

Friday, September 21, 2012

nassau otb bettors against leonard steinman


Leonard Steinman is not a lawyer for all the people of New York who bet horses.
You'd think a "super lawyer" would know that you can't close Nassau OTB, a public benefit corporation, only on Roman Catholic Holidays in preference to Greek Orthodox holidays with the same name. eg Palm Sunday and Easter Sunday. Leonard Steinman's firm was well paid by Nassau OTB when Dino Amoroso was President of Nassau OTB.  Put the billing records on the public table.

Vote no and/or demand that Leonard Steinman and/or his firm sue (or make a telephone call to Attorney General Eric Schneiderman) so that bettors who wish to bet at Nassau OTB may do so on any day of the year when there is a race running in the United States that they want to bet. Don't be fooled by the foolish words of Leonard Steinman's website. See below.
Perhaps Leonard Steinman does not have any Greek friends?


HI-
Thanks for the help. The item’s below. I’d be happy to mail you a copy, if you give me a mailing address.

Claude Solnik
(631) 913-4244
Long Island Business News
2150 Smithtown Ave.
Ronkonkoma, NY 11779-7348 

Home > LI Confidential > Stop scratching on holidays

Stop scratching on holidays
Published: June 1, 2012


Off Track Betting in New York State has been racing into a crisis called shrinking revenue. Some people have spitballed a solution: Don’t close on holidays.
New York State Racing Law bars racing on Christmas, Easter and Palm Sunday, and the state has ruled OTBs can’t handle action on those days, even though they could easily broadcast races from out of state.
“You should be able to bet whenever you want,” said Jackson Leeds, a Nassau OTB employee who makes an occasional bet. He added some irrefutable logic: “How is the business going to make money if you’re not open to take people’s bets?”
Elias Tsekerides, president of the Federation of Hellenic Societies of Greater New York, said OTB is open on Greek Orthodox Easter and Palm Sunday.
“I don’t want discrimination,” Tsekerides said. “They close for the Catholics, but open for the Greek Orthodox? It’s either open for all or not open.”
OTB officials have said they lose millions by closing on Palm Sunday alone, with tracks such as Gulfstream, Santa Anita, Turf Paradise and Hawthorne running.
One option: OTBs could just stay open and face the consequences. New York City OTB did just that back in 2003. The handle was about $1.5 million – and OTB was fined $5,000.
Easy money.



Make a Contribution
Welcome to the website of the Steinman For Justice Committee! We are dedicated to electing Leonard Steinman as a New York Supreme Court Justice of the 10th Judicial District, which covers Long Island's Nassau and Suffolk counties.  We have a unique opportunity to elect someone with extraordinary qualifications to improve our state court bench.  We know Len to be smart, tough and fair.  We also know him to be a family man, dedicated to helping our community with a quiet sense of purpose and humility.  
Explore our site and learn more about Len - his courtroom experience, his work on the NIFA Board and his honors and achievements.  If you can, please use this opportunity to contribute to Len's campaign so we can spread our message.  Share the link to this site with friends and colleagues.  And most important, vote for Leonard Steinman for Supreme Court Justice on November 6th!  We need Len because justice matters!
                     

                     

STEINMAN FOR JUSTICE Committee
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