Pubdate: Fri, 12 Jan 2001 Source: Daily Gazette (NY) Copyright: 2001 The Gazette Newspapers Contact: P.O. Box 1090, Schenectady, NY 12301-1090 Fax: (518) 395-3072 Website: http://www.dailygazette.com/ Author: Mark A. Dunlea Note: The writer is vice chairman of the Green Party. PATAKI MISSED A LOT WITH STATE OF THE STATE Campaign finance reform, universal health care, a higher minimum wage and a halt to the genetic engineering of our food supply are top state legislative priorities for the Greens this year. Unfortunately, support for such issues was noticeably absent from Gov. Pataki's recent State of the State address. Our political system is awash in special-interest money. Candidates at the federal and state level raised record levels of campaign contributions, ensuring that virtually every incumbent was re-elected. Besides public campaign financing, we need to overhaul our voting machinery and enact reforms such as same-day voter registration, a nonpartisan Board of Elections, preferential voting and proportional representation. While the governor acknowledged the need to reform funding for schools, he failed to call for equity or an increase in funding. We need to end the practice where the quality of a child's education depends upon the wealth of his community. The governor did announce an increase in funding for after-school programs, but far short of the real need. Also needed is more funding for child care. The governor, though acknowledging the need for dramatic reforms to the Rockefeller drug laws, provided no specifics. It is time to admit the war on drugs has been a disaster. Drug use has not been reduced, violence from the drug trade has destroyed many inner-city communities, and the United States now has the highest prison population in the world, primarily targeting people of color. Drug abuse should be treated not as a criminal problem, but with prevention and treatment programs. It is a scandal that we spend more on prisons than on higher education. The governor called for more than $1 billion worth of new tax giveaways to large businesses, yet failed to announce any safeguards to hold these companies accountable for creating jobs with such public subsidies - particularly living-wage jobs. The governor did recognize the need to refinance the state Superfund program to clean up toxic sites - after allowing it to run out of money. He did not mention that he wants to weaken cleanup standards while resisting efforts to make corporate polluters pay a fairer share of the bill. The Green Party urges local residents to contact the governor about these issues. His address is State Capitol, Albany, N.Y. 12224. MARK A. DUNLEA, Poestenkill The writer is vice chairman of the Green Party. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake