G-01-2014 mccmc (Valesky) (2)News from Sen. Valesky’s Office

(Oneida, NY – Feb. 2014) Sen. David J. Valesky (D-Oneida) joined colleagues in the Senate Majority Coalition to issue a comprehensive report shedding light on New York’s notoriously dense regulatory structure and identifying 2,219 specific rules, regulations and practices that put New York’s businesses at a competitive disadvantage.

The report is the product of surveys, meetings, community outreach and the input of more than 100 business owners, advocacy organizations and individuals that participated in one of nine industry-specific public forums conducted throughout the state.

This process was begun last June to identify 1,000 rules and regulations to be revised or eliminated.

“This process has been extremely valuable, and I believe the report is an excellent representation of what we heard from businesses and individuals from every corner of the state,” Valesky said. “I look forward to taking the next step and putting these recommendations into action, in cooperation with my colleagues in the Majority Coalition and Governor Cuomo, as another way to create a better environment for successful businesses and job growth in New York state.”

During the course of this bipartisan fact-finding effort, several common themes emerged as issues within the state’s regulatory structure and bureaucracy, including:

* Agencies should provide guidance in navigating complex regulations, which can be more burdensome than complying with the regulation itself

* Agencies should work cooperatively with businesses toward compliance rather than immediately penalizing

* Agencies should be held accountable to timely respond to permit, license and grant applications, as well as inquiries from covered businesses

* Agencies should develop fair and predictable regulations

* Commissioners should be held accountable to conduct an agency-by-agency review of regulations as required by law

Agencies should communicate to avoid conflicting regulatory interpretations

The Legislature should strengthen the State Administrative Procedure Act

While addressing these “big picture” ideas are important to improving New York State’s regulatory environment, identifying specific regulations are just as important and will provide the logical starting point for comprehensive reform.

The Senate Majority Coalition decided that the best way to identify individual regulatory burdens was to focus on specific industries vital to regional and statewide economic growth.

This forum process helped identify 2,219 specific regulatory burdens New York state businesses must contend with. Each specific burden corresponds to a specific regulation or section of law, or a practice of an agency that has the effect of a regulation or statute in that it creates a burden on business as if it were a validly enacted law or rule.

This report is a continuation of efforts begun last year and the Senate Majority Coalition hopes it will serve as a blueprint in working with Governor Andrew M. Cuomo toward his stated goal of reducing the regulatory burden for employers and entrepreneurs in this state.

Some recent studies provide a roadmap to show how over-regulation can negatively affect the economy. A recent study commissioned by the Small Business Administration’s Office of Advocacy, found the total impact of Federal regulations on the United States’ economy in 2008 as being $1.75 trillion – more than 12 percent of the economy.

More directly comparable to New York, a 2009 study found that regulations in California – a state with a similarly burdensome regulatory regime – cost $493 billion annually, resulting in a loss of 3.8 million jobs and reducing business tax receipts by more than $16 billion.

In June, the Senate Majority Coalition introduced and passed a package of 14 bills addressing the job-killing regulatory environment in New York state.

The full report can be found on Senator Valesky’s website at www.valesky.nysenate.gov.

By martha

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