192nd New York State Legislature

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192nd New York State Legislature



191st 193rd

The facade of the New York State Capitol building in bright daylight

New York State Capitol (2009)

Overview
Jurisdiction
New York, United States
TermJanuary 1, 1997 – December 31, 1998
Senate
Members61
PresidentLt. Gov. Betsy McCaughey Ross (R)
Temporary President
Joseph Bruno (R)
Party controlRepublican
(35–26)
Assembly
Members150
Speaker
Sheldon Silver (D)
Party controlDemocratic
1997: (96–54)
1998: (97–53)
Sessions






1stJanuary 8 – August 4, 1997
2ndJanuary 7 – June 19, 1998
3rdDecember 17 – 18, 1998

The 192nd New York State Legislature, consisting of the New York State Senate and the New York State Assembly, met from January 8, 1997, to December 31, 1998, during the third and fourth years of George Pataki's governorship, in Albany.




Contents





  • 1 Background


  • 2 Elections


  • 3 Sessions


  • 4 State Senate

    • 4.1 Senators


    • 4.2 Employees



  • 5 State Assembly

    • 5.1 Assembly members


    • 5.2 Employees



  • 6 Notes


  • 7 Sources




Background


Under the provisions of the New York Constitution of 1938 and the U.S. Supreme Court decision to follow the One man, one vote rule, re-apportioned in 1992 by the Legislature, 61 Senators and 150 assemblymen were elected in single-seat districts for two-year terms. Senate and Assembly districts consisted of approximately the same number of inhabitants, the area being apportioned contiguously without restrictions regarding county boundaries.


At this time there were two major political parties: the Democratic Party and the Republican Party. The Reform Party, the Conservative Party, the Liberal Party, the Green Party, the Right to Life Party, the Libertarian Party, the Tax Cut Now Party, the Natural Law Party, the Workers World Party and the Socialist Workers Party also nominated tickets.



Elections


The New York state election, 1996, was held on November 5. No statewide elective offices were up for election. The approximate party strength at this election, as expressed by the vote for U.S. President, was: Democrats 3,650,000; Republicans 1,739,000; Reform 503,000; Conservatives 183,000; Liberals 107,000; Green 76,000; Right to Life 24,000; Libertarians 12,000; Tax Cut Now 11,000; Natural Law 5,000; Workers World 3,500; and Socialist Workers 3,000.


All 38 sitting women members of the legislature—State Senators Catherine M. Abate (Dem.), of Manhattan; Nancy Larraine Hoffmann (Dem.), of Syracuse; Olga A. Méndez (Dem.), of East Harlem; Velmanette Montgomery (Dem.), of Brooklyn; Suzi Oppenheimer (Dem.), of Mamaroneck; Mary Lou Rath (Rep.), of Williamsville; Nellie R. Santiago (Dem.), of Brooklyn; and Ada L. Smith (Dem.), of Queens; and Assemblywomen Patricia Acampora (Rep.), of Mattituck; Carmen E. Arroyo (Dem.), of the Bronx; Nancy Calhoun (Rep.), of Blooming Grove; Joan Christensen (Dem.), of Syracuse; Barbara M. Clark (Dem.), of Queens; Elizabeth Connelly (Dem.), of Staten Island; Vivian E. Cook (Dem.) of Queens; RoAnn Destito (Dem.), of Rome; Gloria Davis (Dem.), of the Bronx; Eileen C. Dugan (Dem.), of Brooklyn; Donna Ferrara (Rep.), a lawyer of Westbury; Sandy Galef (Dem.), of Ossining; Deborah J. Glick (Dem.), of Manhattan; Aurelia Greene (Dem.), of the Bronx; Audrey Hochberg (Dem.), of Scarsdale; Earlene Hill Hooper (Dem.), of Hempstead; Rhoda S. Jacobs (Dem.), of Brooklyn; Susan V. John (Dem.), of Rochester; Melinda Katz (Dem.), a lawyer of Queens; Betty Little (Rep.), of Queensbury; Naomi C. Matusow (Dem.), a lawyer of Armonk; Nettie Mayersohn (Dem.), of Queens; Debra J. Mazzarelli (Rep.), of Patchogue; Patricia McGee (Rep.), of Franklinville; Catherine Nolan (Dem.), of Queens; Chloe Ann O'Neil (Rep.), an elementary school teacher of Parishville; Audrey Pheffer (Dem.), of Queens; Frances T. Sullivan (Rep.), of Fulton; Helene Weinstein (Dem.), a lawyer of Brooklyn; and Sandra Lee Wirth (Rep.), of West Seneca—were re-elected. Ann-Margaret Carrozza (Dem.), a lawyer of Queens, was also elected to the Assembly.


Eileen C. Dugan died three days after the election. On February 18, 1997, Joan Millman (Dem.), a teacher and librarian of Brooklyn, was elected to fill the vacancy.


The New York state election, 1997, was held on November 4. One vacancy in the State Senate was filled.


On February 3, 1998, Adele Cohen (Dem.), a lawyer of Brooklyn; Kate Murray (Rep.), a lawyer of Levittown; and Maureen O'Connell (Rep.), a registered nurse and lawyer of East Williston; were elected to fill vacancies in the Assembly.


On March 24, 1998, Pauline Rhodd-Cummings (Dem.), of Queens, was elected to fill a vacancy in the Assembly. Thus the 192nd Legislature ended having 43 women members, surpassing the previous record of 39 in the 190th New York State Legislature (1994).



Sessions


The Legislature met for the first regular session (the 220th) at the State Capitol in Albany on January 8, 1997;[1] and recessed indefinitely on August 4.[2]


Sheldon Silver (Dem.) was re-elected Speaker of the Assembly.


Joseph Bruno (Rep.) was re-elected Temporary President of the Senate.


The Legislature met for the second regular session (the 221st) at the State Capitol in Albany on January 7, 1998;[3] and recessed indefinitely on June 19.[4]


The Assembly met again on July 29, 1998, to enact a bill on parole which had been approved by the Senate during the regular session.[5]


The Legislature met again from December 17 to 18, 1998, to enact another piece of legislation concerning the school system of New York City, and to raise the salaries of the members of the next Legislature.[6]



State Senate



Senators


The asterisk (*) denotes members of the previous Legislature who continued in office as members of this Legislature. Assemblyman Michael Balboni was elected to fill a vacancy in the Senate.


Note: For brevity, the chairmanships omit the words "...the Committee on (the)..."
































































































































































































































































District
Senator
Party
Notes
1st

Kenneth LaValle*
Republican

2nd

James J. Lack*
Republican

3rd

Caesar Trunzo*
Republican

4th

Owen H. Johnson*
Republican

5th

Carl L. Marcellino*
Republican

6th

Kemp Hannon*
Republican

7th

Michael J. Tully Jr.*
Republican
died on August 5, 1997

Michael Balboni*
Republican
on November 4, 1997, elected to fill vacancy
8th

Norman J. Levy*
Republican
Chairman of Transportation; died on February 7, 1998

Charles J. Fuschillo Jr.
Republican
on March 24, 1998, elected to fill vacancy
9th

Dean Skelos*
Republican

10th

Alton R. Waldon Jr.*
Democrat

11th

Frank Padavan*
Republican

12th

Ada L. Smith*
Democrat

13th

Emanuel R. Gold*
Democrat

14th

George Onorato*
Democrat

15th

Serphin R. Maltese*
Cons./Rep.

16th

Leonard P. Stavisky*
Democrat

17th

Nellie R. Santiago*
Democrat

18th

Velmanette Montgomery*
Democrat

19th

John L. Sampson
Democrat

20th

Marty Markowitz*
Democrat

21st

Carl Kruger*
Democrat

22nd

Seymour P. Lachman*
Democrat

23rd

Vincent J. Gentile
Democrat

24th

John J. Marchi*
Republican

25th

Martin Connor*
Democrat
Minority Leader
26th

Roy M. Goodman*
Republican

27th

Catherine M. Abate
Democrat

28th

Olga A. Méndez*
Democrat

29th

David Paterson*
Democrat

30th

Franz S. Leichter*
Democrat

31st

Efrain Gonzalez Jr.*
Democrat

32nd

David Rosado
Democrat

33rd

Larry Seabrook*
Democrat

34th

Guy J. Velella*
Republican

35th

Nicholas A. Spano*
Republican

36th

Suzi Oppenheimer*
Democrat

37th

Vincent Leibell*
Republican

38th

Joseph R. Holland*
Republican

39th

William J. Larkin, Jr.*
Republican

40th

Charles D. Cook*
Republican

41st

Stephen M. Saland*
Republican

42nd

Neil Breslin
Democrat

43rd

Joseph Bruno*
Republican
re-elected Temporary President
44th

Hugh T. Farley*
Republican

45th

Ronald B. Stafford*
Republican
Chairman of Finance
46th

James W. Wright*
Republican

47th

Raymond A. Meier
Republican

48th

Nancy Larraine Hoffmann*
Democrat

49th

John A. DeFrancisco*
Republican

50th

James L. Seward*
Republican

51st

Thomas W. Libous*
Republican

52nd

Randy Kuhl*
Republican

53rd

Michael F. Nozzolio*
Republican

54th

Richard A. Dollinger*
Democrat

55th

James S. Alesi*
Republican

56th

Jess J. Present*
Republican
died on August 8, 1998
57th

Anthony Nanula*
Democrat

58th

William Stachowski*
Democrat

59th

Dale M. Volker*
Republican

60th

Mary Lou Rath*
Republican

61st

George D. Maziarz*
Republican


Employees


  • Secretary: Stephen F. Sloan (1997)

    • Steven M. Boggess (1998)


State Assembly



Assembly members


The asterisk (*) denotes members of the previous Legislature who continued in office as members of this Legislature.


Note: For brevity, the chairmanships omit the words "...the Committee on (the)..."













































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































District
Assembly member
Party
Notes
1st

Patricia Acampora*
Republican

2nd

Fred W. Thiele, Jr.*
Republican

3rd

Debra J. Mazzarelli*
Republican
changed party affiliation on May 14, 1997[7]
Democrat
4th

Steve Englebright*
Democrat

5th

Paul E. Harenberg*
Democrat

6th

Robert C. Wertz*
Republican

7th

Thomas F. Barraga*
Republican

8th

Phil Boyle*
Republican

9th

John J. Flanagan*
Republican

10th

James D. Conte*
Republican

11th

Robert K. Sweeney*
Democrat

12th

Steven L. Labriola
Republican

13th

David Sidikman*
Democrat

14th

Marc Herbst*
Republican

15th

Donna Ferrara*
Republican

16th

Thomas DiNapoli*
Democrat

17th

Michael Balboni*
Republican
on November 4, 1997, elected to the State Senate

Maureen O'Connell
Republican
on February 3, 1998, elected to fill vacancy[8]
18th

Earlene Hill Hooper*
Democrat

19th

Charles J. O'Shea*
Republican
on November 4, 1997, elected to the Nassau County Board of Assessors

Kate Murray
Republican
on February 3, 1998, elected to fill vacancy[8]
20th

Harvey Weisenberg*
Democrat

21st

Gregory R. Becker*
Republican

22nd

Thomas Alfano*
Republican

23rd

Audrey Pheffer*
Democrat

24th

Mark Weprin*
Democrat

25th

Brian M. McLaughlin*
Democrat

26th

Ann-Margaret Carrozza
Democrat

27th

Nettie Mayersohn*
Democrat

28th

Melinda Katz*
Democrat

29th

William Scarborough*
Democrat

30th

Joseph Crowley*
Democrat
on November 3, 1998, elected to the 106th U.S. Congress
31st

Gregory W. Meeks*
Democrat
on February 3, 1998, elected to the 105th U.S. Congress[8]

Pauline Rhodd-Cummings
Democrat
on March 24, 1998, elected to fill vacancy[9]
32nd

Vivian E. Cook*
Democrat

33rd

Barbara M. Clark*
Democrat

34th

Ivan C. Lafayette*
Democrat

35th

Jeffrion L. Aubry*
Democrat

36th

Denis J. Butler*
Democrat

37th

Catherine Nolan*
Democrat

38th

Anthony S. Seminerio*
Democrat

39th

Anthony J. Genovesi*
Democrat
died on August 10, 1998
40th

Edward Griffith*
Democrat

41st

Helene Weinstein*
Democrat

42nd

Rhoda S. Jacobs*
Democrat

43rd

Clarence Norman Jr.*
Democrat

44th

James F. Brennan*
Democrat

45th

Daniel L. Feldman*
Democrat

46th

Jules Polonetsky*
Democrat
in December 1997, appointed as NYC Commissioner of Consumer Affairs

Adele Cohen
Democrat
on February 3, 1998, elected to fill vacancy[8]
47th

William Colton
Democrat

48th

Dov Hikind*
Democrat

49th

Peter J. Abbate Jr.*
Democrat

50th

Joseph R. Lentol*
Democrat

51st

Félix W. Ortiz*
Democrat

52nd
vacant

Assemblywoman-elect Eileen C. Dugan died on November 8, 1996

Joan Millman
Democrat
on February 18, 1997, elected to fill vacancy[10]
53rd

Vito J. Lopez*
Democrat

54th

Darryl C. Towns*
Democrat

55th

William F. Boyland*
Democrat

56th

Albert Vann*
Democrat

57th

Roger L. Green*
Democrat

58th

N. Nick Perry
Democrat

59th

Elizabeth Connelly*
Democrat

60th

Eric N. Vitaliano*
Democrat

61st

Robert A. Straniere*
Republican

62nd

Sheldon Silver*
Democrat
re-elected Speaker
63rd

Steven Sanders*
Democrat

64th

Richard N. Gottfried*
Democrat

65th

Alexander B. Grannis*
Democrat

66th

Deborah J. Glick*
Democrat

67th

Scott Stringer*
Democrat

68th

Nelson Antonio Denis
Democrat

69th

Edward C. Sullivan*
Democrat

70th

Keith L. T. Wright*
Democrat

71st

Herman D. Farrell, Jr.*
Democrat
Chairman of Ways and Means
72nd

Adriano Espaillat
Democrat

73rd

John Ravitz*
Republican

74th

Carmen E. Arroyo*
Democrat

75th

Rubén Díaz Jr.
Democrat

76th

Peter M. Rivera*
Democrat

77th

Aurelia Greene*
Democrat

78th

Roberto Ramirez*
Democrat

79th

Gloria Davis*
Democrat

80th

Jeffrey D. Klein*
Democrat

81st

Jeffrey Dinowitz*
Democrat

82nd

Stephen B. Kaufman*
Democrat

83rd

Samuel Bea Jr.*
Democrat

84th

J. Gary Pretlow*
Democrat

85th

Ronald C. Tocci*
Democrat

86th

Richard L. Brodsky*
Democrat

87th

Mike Spano*
Republican

88th

Audrey Hochberg*
Democrat

89th

Naomi C. Matusow*
Democrat

90th

Sandy Galef*
Democrat

91st

Willis Stephens*
Republican

92nd

Alexander J. Gromack*
Democrat

93rd

Samuel Colman*
Democrat

94th

Nancy Calhoun*
Republican

95th

John Bonacic*
Republican

96th

Thomas J. Kirwan*
Republican

97th

Joel M. Miller*
Republican

98th

Jacob E. Gunther III*
Democrat

99th

Patrick R. Manning*
Republican

100th

Robert A. D'Andrea*
Republican

101st

John J. Guerin*
Republican

102nd

John Faso*
Republican
Minority Leader from March 2, 1998[11]
103rd

James Tedisco*
Republican

104th

John McEneny*
Democrat

105th

Paul D. Tonko*
Democrat

106th

Ronald Canestrari*
Democrat

107th

Robert G. Prentiss*
Republican

108th

Pat M. Casale*
Republican

109th

Betty Little*
Republican

110th

Chris Ortloff*
Republican

111th

Bill Magee*
Democrat

112th

Chloe Ann O'Neil*
Republican

113th

Marc W. Butler*
Republican

114th

H. Robert Nortz*
Republican

115th

David R. Townsend Jr.*
Republican

116th

RoAnn Destito*
Democrat

117th

Frances T. Sullivan*
Republican

118th

Michael J. Bragman*
Democrat
Majority Leader
119th

Joan Christensen*
Democrat

120th

Bernard J. Mahoney*
Republican

121st

Harold C. Brown Jr.*
Republican

122nd

Clifford W. Crouch*
Republican

123rd

Jay J. Dinga*
Republican

124th

Robert J. Warner*
Republican

125th

Martin A. Luster*
Democrat

126th

Daniel J. Fessenden*
Republican

127th

George H. Winner, Jr.*
Republican

128th

Bob Oaks*
Republican

129th

Craig J. Doran*
Republican

130th

James Bacalles*
Republican

131st

Susan V. John*
Democrat

132nd

Joseph D. Morelle*
Democrat

133rd

David F. Gantt*
Democrat

134th

Joseph Robach*
Democrat

135th

David Koon*
Democrat

136th

Jerry Johnson*
Republican

137th

Charles H. Nesbitt*
Republican

138th

Joseph T. Pillittere*
Democrat

139th

David E. Seaman*
Republican

140th

Robin Schimminger*
Democrat

141st

Arthur O. Eve*
Democrat

142nd

Richard R. Anderson*
Republican

143rd

Paul Tokasz*
Democrat

144th

Sam Hoyt*
Democrat

145th

Richard J. Keane*
Democrat

146th

Richard A. Smith
Democrat

147th

Thomas M. Reynolds*
Republican
Minority Leader until March 2, 1998;[11]
on November 3, 1998, elected to the 106th U.S. Congress
148th

Sandra Lee Wirth*
Republican

149th

Patricia McGee*
Republican

150th

William L. Parment*
Democrat


Employees



  • Clerk: Francine Misasi


Notes



  1. ^ Pataki Vows Property Tax Cut and Rise in School Spending by Richard Perez-Pena, in the New York Times on January 9, 1997


  2. ^ With a Rush, Legislature Ends a Session of Records by Richard Perez-Pena, in the New York Times on August 5, 1997


  3. ^ PATAKI PROPOSING HEALTH CARE PLAN FOR YOUNG PEOPLE by B. Drummond Ayres Jr., in the New York Times on January 8, 1998


  4. ^ Summary of Major Actions of the 221st Session of the Legislature by Richard Perez-Pena, in the New York Times on June 28, 1998


  5. ^ ASSEMBLY PASSES PATAKI'S MEASURE TO LIMIT PAROLE by Raymond Hernandez, in the New York Times on July 30, 1998


  6. ^ Senate Passes Charter Plan For Schools by Clifford J. Levy, in the New York Times on December 18, 1998


  7. ^ Assemblywoman Switches to Democratic Party by Richard Perez-Pena, in the New York Times on May 15, 1997


  8. ^ abcd Assemblyman Wins Vote for Flake's Seat by Jonathan P. Hicks, in the New York Times on February 4, 1998


  9. ^ Choices for the State Legislature; ...In a special election last March, voters...elected Pauline Rhodd-Cummings in the New York Times on September 4, 1998


  10. ^ Special Election Tomorrow to Fill Assembly and Council Seats by Jonahan P. Hicks, in the New York Times on February 17, 1997


  11. ^ ab Republicans in Assembly Select New Leader by Richard Perez-Pena, in the New York Times on March 3, 1998



Sources



  • Results of Voting in New York Races for the State Legislature and the Courts in the New York Times on November 7, 1996






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