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(Airs 08/01/25 @ 10 p.m.) The Legislative Gazette is a weekly program about New York State Government and politics. On this week’s Gazette: The New York State Energy Planning Board releases its 2025 Draft State Energy Plan, we’ll speak with law professor Sarah Rogerson about immigration and the state’s "Protect Our Courts Act," and we’ll talk about the problems facing the state’s early intervention program.
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Twenty people have been charged in what Orange County officials are calling the largest gun trafficking case in county history.
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Daniel Morton-Bentley, General Counsel and Deputy Commissioner for Legal Affairs for the New York State Education Department, speaks with WAMC's Lucas Willard.
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With an uptick in youth violence this year, Albany County officials are taking a step to take guns off the street with a new buyback initiative.
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(Airs 07/31/25 @ 3 p.m.) WAMC’s David Guistina in conversation with Sarah Rogerson, Albany Law Professor and Director of the Edward P. Swyer Justice Center at Albany Law School, about New York's Protect Our Courts Act in regard to ICE entering courthouses to arrest immigrants.
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If you’re wondering where to safely catch and eat fish in New York, there’s a website for that. And it’s all thanks to one testing station in Fulton County.
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A plane crash on Block Island, Rhode Island Wednesday killed a Montgomery County legislator.
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New York Congressman Paul Tonko says the country's museums, lands, and cultural heritage are threatened by political interference and erasure.
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Calls to save the Newburgh-Beacon Ferry haven’t let up since the MTA abruptly announced it was shutting down the service earlier this month.
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The company that owns space rented by the City of Troy has filed a second notice of claims against the city as officials seek to relocate City Hall.
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As Republicans fear losing their narrow House majority in the upcoming midterms, GOP leaders in some states are discussing redrawing Congressional district boundaries to give their party an advantage in 2026.
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A Schenectady theater company will receive millions of dollars in state funding to improve accessibility and upgrade its buildings.