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Gov. Cuomo Responds To Criticism Of Nursing Home Policies By Attacking Critic

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo speaking April 15, 2020.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/governorandrewcuomo/49777500213/
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo speaking April 15, 2020.

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo on Wednesday launched an attack on one of the critics of his nursing home policies – Assemblyman Ron Kim, who lost his uncle to COVID-19 in a nursing home. Cuomo says Kim’s disagreements over policies is really about an old feud over a bill to regulate nail salons.

Cuomo has come under increasing fire for his administration’s decision to withhold for months the true number of the 15,000 nursing home residents and other older adults in long-term care who died of the coronavirus. On Wednesday, in a phone briefing with reporters, he turned the tables on one of his critics. The governor singled out Assemblyman Ron Kim, a Queens Democrat whose uncle died of COVID in April in a nursing home in Flushing, one of the areas hardest hit by the virus when New York was at the epicenter of the pandemic.New York Governor Andrew Cuomo on Wednesday launched an attack on one of the critics of his nursing home policies – Assemblyman Ron Kim, who lost his uncle to COVID-19 in a nursing home. Cuomo says Kim’s disagreements over policies is really about an old feud over a bill to regulate nail salons.

“There’s been a long, hostile relationship with Assemblyman Kim,” Cuomo, also a Democrat, said.

Cuomo says Kim’s attacks are really about a dispute the two had over the regulation of abuses in nail salons in New York City several years ago. He accused Kim of a pay-to-play scheme, saying he took campaign contributions from nail salon owners who resisted the reforms.

“I do believe Ron Kim acted unethically if not illegally,” said Cuomo. “I do believe he has a continuing racket where he raises money from the owners of the salons who opposed the salon bill.”   

published report at the time questioned Kim’s change of heart, when he opposed the reforms he had initially supported. But no instances of wrongdoing were found.

Kim is the Assembly sponsor of a bill to strip Cuomo of his wide-ranging emergency powers, granted to him by the legislature at the start of the pandemic in March 2020.

He is among a growing number of bipartisan legislators seeking an independent investigation of the suppression of the nursing home death numbers. Kim penned a letter, along with nine other Democratic lawmakers, that accused the governor and his staff of obstructing justice. Cuomo’s Chief of Staff Melissa DeRosa said in aprivate meeting with Democratic lawmakers that they delayed answering legislators’ requests for the data because they “froze” following a federal Justice Department inquiry. The lawmakers also question whether there is relationship between campaign donations from for-profit nursing homes to Cuomo and his decision, early in the pandemic, to grant the homes immunity from prosecution for anything that might go wrong.

Cuomo says the charges are a “lie” and he says he’s making his accusations against the assemblyman because Kim attacked him first.

Cuomo also blamed former President Donald Trump, the New York Post, and Republican political operative Roger Stone, among others, who he accused of spreading conspiracy theories when a “void” was created by his administration’s delay in releasing the nursing home data.  

Assemblyman Kim, in a statement, stood by his accusations, saying “the governor can smear me all he wants,” but Kim says the nursing homes who donated $1.25 million to the governor’s campaigns benefitted from Cuomo’s policies.

“These facts are not going way because they are the facts-unacceptable facts that hold him accountable,” Kim said in the statement.  

Kim also told the New York Times, that in a private phone call with the governor on February 11, Cuomo promised to publicly “destroy” him if Kim did not cease his criticism on the nursing home controversy.

In a statement, Cuomo senior advisor Rich Azzopardi called Kim “unscrupulous” and says it is the Assemblyman who is “lying.” Azzopardi, who says he was present during the call with the Democratic lawmakers, says “At no time did anyone threaten to 'destroy' anyone with their 'wrath' nor engage in a 'coverup.' That's beyond the pale and is unfortunately part of a years-long pattern of lies by Mr. Kim against this administration.”

Assembly Speaker Carl Speaker Heastie, in a statement, did not take sides between the governor and Kim, who is one of the members of his majority conference, tried to make peace between the two Democrats, saying that “everyone involved needs to lower the temperature and work together” to move the state out of the pandemic.

Cuomo, in the briefing, was asked when the ban on visitors at nursing homes might be lifted. The governor announced that amusement parks and other family entertainment venues could be reopened on March 26, and that summer camps would be allowed to hold programs beginning in June. But state health commissioner Dr. Howard Zucker says nursing homes will remain off limits for now, because residents are more at risk of death from the disease.

“I recognize it’s been very hard on the relatives of those who are in nursing homes,” Zucker said. “And as soon as we feel it is safe, we will move forward to the appropriate ways to get visitors there.”

Zucker and other top aides to Cuomo blamed, in part, the nursing home staff for the continued ban. They say only 49% of workers accepted the vaccination when it was offered through a recently concluded federal program. 73% of residents agreed to receive the doses.   

Karen DeWitt is Capitol Bureau chief for New York State Public Radio, a network of public radio stations in New York state. She has covered state government and politics for the network since 1990.
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