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Hochul's State of the State includes ambitious housing plan and changes to bail reform

Hochul is standing behind a low microphone, speaking, gesturing with her hands at waist level
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New York NOW livestream
Gov. Kathy Hochul gives her State of the State address on Jan. 10, 2023.

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, in her first State of the State message as an elected governor on Tuesday, outlined an ambitious housing program and an expansion of mental health services.

She also proposed new public safety measures, including more changes to the state’s controversial bail reform laws.

Hochul quoted Eleanor Roosevelt and Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s labor secretary, Frances Perkins, during her speech in a full New York State Assembly Chamber, reviving a tradition not used in over a decade.

Hochul held the speech in the chamber last year, after she replaced former Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who resigned in disgrace, but it was virtually empty due to COVID-related restrictions. Hochul said while New York was once the epicenter of the pandemic, it now seems to be lessening – but it has left the state with many challenges.

“After three very difficult, painful, tragic years, I’m proud to stand here and say that the state of our state is strong, but we have work to do,” Hochul said.

The governor outlined a plan, called the New York Housing Compact, to oversee the building of 800,000 new housing units over the next 10 years. She said housing construction in New York has not kept up with the 1.35 million new jobs created in the state in the past decade. The crunch is particularly intense in the New York City suburbs, where many people who have jobs in the state live in New Jersey or Connecticut instead.

Every locality in the state would be assigned a new home creation target. Downstate regions have a 3% target every three years, averaging to 1% a year, and upstate regions have a 1% target over the same time period. The plan includes rezoning to allow for multifamily units, splitting single-family lots into two, and rezoning some commercial areas into residential, including parking lots and underused shopping malls.

“Today, I say no more delay. No more waiting for someone else to fix this problem. Housing is a human right,” Hochul said to applause. “Ensuring enough housing is built is how we protect that right.”

If localities do not meet their targets, the state would step in and impose an expedited approval process, including shortcuts for environmental permits to developers who want to build in those areas.

The governor said a key component of the plan is reviving a tax break, known as 421a, given to real estate developers who include affordable housing in their projects. The provision expired last year, after Hochul and the Legislature were unable to agree on a replacement. The governor said she’ll work with lawmakers to do that this year.

Hochul also told lawmakers that public safety remains her “No. 1 priority.” The state’s crime rate was a major issue in the 2022 race for governor, which Hochul won by the narrowest margin in a generation. Her opponent successfully made an issue of the state’s higher crime rate and the recent 2019 bail reform laws, which ended most forms of cash bail.

Hochul is proposing more changes to the bail reform laws, which already have been altered twice. She would make it easier for judges to set bail for more serious crimes.

She said, though, that she still stands by the principles behind the original law.

“Bail reform is not the primary driver of a national crime wave created by a convergence of factors, including the pandemic,” Hochul said. “The bail reform law as written leaves room for improvement.”

Hochul also announced a $1 billion expansion of mental health services, including 1,000 more inpatient psychiatric hospital beds, and 3,500 more community-based residential beds.

She said it will be the biggest change since the deinstitutionalization of the state’s psychiatric hospitals in the 1970s.

The governor also announced plans to make child care more accessible and affordable, and she pledged not to raise taxes. She earned a standing ovation when she proposed raising the state’s minimum wage.

“I’m proposing a plan to peg the minimum wage to inflation,” Hochul said.

Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie said he was pleased to hear Hochul address the “drivers of crime” instead of waiting until the moment that someone is arrested, and he likes the governor’s housing and mental health plans.

He said he has not yet examined Hochul’s proposal to amend the bail reform laws.

Heastie said he also backs the idea to increase minimum pay for New Yorkers.

“The fact that you really want to get out of this trying to fix the minimum wage every couple of years, I think it’s a solid approach,” Heastie said.

There are tensions, though, between the governor and Senate Democrats over her nominee for the next chief judge of New York state. Fourteen of them say they will vote against Hochul’s choice of Hector LaSalle, saying some of his opinions are too conservative. Hochul said she’s not backing down.

Senate Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins did not comment after the speech.

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Karen DeWitt is Capitol Bureau chief for the New York Public News Network, composed of a dozen newsrooms across the state. She has covered state government and politics for the network since 1990.