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County lawmakers from Oswegatchie, DeKalb, Madrid, Lisbon named to Sen. Ritchie's mandate relief committee

Posted 12/5/14

St. Lawrence County legislators from Oswegatchie, DeKalb, Madrid and Lisbon have been named to Sen. Patty Ritchie’s mandate relief committee. Senator Ritchie announced that she has named County …

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County lawmakers from Oswegatchie, DeKalb, Madrid, Lisbon named to Sen. Ritchie's mandate relief committee

Posted

St. Lawrence County legislators from Oswegatchie, DeKalb, Madrid and Lisbon have been named to Sen. Patty Ritchie’s mandate relief committee.

Senator Ritchie announced that she has named County Legislator Joe Lightfoot of Oswegatchie, and incoming legislators David Forsythe of Lisbon and Larry Denesha of DeKalb to her Mandate Relief Working Group, which she created in 2011 to help deliver on her promise to reduce expensive mandates that drive up costs for counties and local governments.

The group will be co-chaired by St. Lawrence County Legislator Kevin Acres of Madrid and Lightfoot.

The panel of city, county, village, town and school leaders has proposed two dozen recommendations, and several have been enacted into law.

“Unfunded mandates are like a hidden tax often imposed by faceless bureaucrats on local governments that drive up spending and costs to local taxpayers,” Ritchie said in a released statement. “While many are well-meaning, such as those that help protect people at work, and set standards to enhance public safety, often there are better, less expensive and less-burdensome ways to achieve those same goals.

“My Mandate Relief Working Group is already making a difference, identifying mandates that can be repealed or reformed, providing savings to local governments and relief for local taxpayers.”

In one example, the Governor recently signed legislation, recommended by the Mandate Relief Working Group, that repeals a 20-year-old duplicative building inspection requirement for schools.

The rule included a 100-point questionnaire for school officials to complete each year even though they already were required to perform regular inspections under a separate law.

Another mandate identified by the group that was repealed was the so-called “ropes” rule, which required local volunteer fire departments to equip every firefighter with costly, specially designed escape gear that was almost never used at rural fire scenes.