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(Airs 05/03/24 @ 10 p.m.) The Legislative Gazette is a weekly program about New York State Government and politics. On this week’s Gazette: Governor Hochul highlights changes in New York’s reading curriculum, Republican Assembly Minority Leader Will Barclay shares his thoughts on what he considers too much spending in the state budget, and we’ll take you to the newly recognized 150 year old Hudson-Athens light house.
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Pro-Palestine demonstrators at Vassar College continued discussions with administrators Friday as an encampment slowly grows on campus.
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Schenectady County is expanding its ice hockey facility, now named after a longtime local police official.
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WAMC's David Guistina speaks with Andrew Waite, News Columnist for The Daily Gazette, about the arrest of Upstate Canna owner Donald Andrews.
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Troy residents and city councilors are seeking more information on a downtown improvement project.
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Cities and towns across New York are celebrating an increase in Aid to Municipalities funding in the new state budget.
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For the love of the birds and the bees, and other pollinators, Sustainable Saratoga is asking residents to keep the clippers away during May.
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Siena College leaders are reflecting after a recent trip of a lifetime that included an audience with the pope.
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WAMC's David Guistina speaks with Mike Goodwin, City Editor of The Times Union, about a recently announced deal to keep Troy's Burdett Birthing Center open for at least five years.
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Ahead of Saturday’s 150th Kentucky Derby, Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority officials say safety strides are being made since last year’s Triple Crown races.
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State University of New York Chancellor John King is urging high schoolers to seek out financial aid for college.
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Hundreds of locals gathered in Saratoga Springs on Saturday to plant trees to celebrate Arbor Day — and leave a lasting legacy.