This week, members of the Assembly Minority Conference, led
by Assemblyman Jake Ashby (R,C,I,Ref-Castleton)—a U.S. veteran—have met with
veterans around the state to discuss budget cuts to counseling, job training
and legal services being proposed by Gov. Andrew Cuomo. The governor has called
for cutting $5.68 million of veterans services including a $4 million cut to
the extremely successful Joseph P. Dwyer Veteran Peer-to-Peer Program.
The first four meetings were held in the Buffalo, Rochester,
Watertown and Utica areas, with additional events planned in the coming weeks.
During these events, our members heard from veterans and veterans’ service
organizations that rely on these services and witness firsthand the positive
impacts they have in their communities. Among some of the veteran-related
programs facing funding cuts are:
•Helmets-to-Hardhats: $200,000—Assists post-9/11 veterans’
transition into careers in the building trades.
•Clear Path for Veterans: $200,000—Serves as a key source
for veterans in upstate New York to access resources and programs including
professional skills and training development, peer and wingman services and K-9
therapy programs.
•NYS Defenders Association Veterans Defense Program:
$500,000—Provides training, legal assistance and support to provide
representation of veterans and service members involved in the criminal or
family court systems.
•SAGE Veterans Project: $100,000—SAGE advocates and offers
services that help lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender older adults who are
veterans of military service improve their access to the VA and other veteran
services, as well as support their overall health and wellness.
•Legal Services of the Hudson Valley Veterans and Military
Families Advocacy Project: $200,000—Provides assistance with applying for
veterans benefits and representation before the Board of Veterans Appeals and
in federal court, at no cost to veterans, when benefits are denied.
We are also pushing to codify the expansion of the MERIT
scholarship program by enacting it into law. After public outrage about the
scholarship being threatened last year, the program was temporarily saved due
to an executive order. Now, we are asking it be passed by the Legislature and
signed by the governor.
A common theme emerged from our meetings; funding for
veteran services should never, ever be used as a budgetary bargaining chip. The
governor’s cuts are comprehensive and deep. He is suggesting not a reduction in
services for veterans, but their functional elimination. This is simply
unacceptable.
That fact that we need to hold statewide meetings and have
these discussions is highly distressing. New York’s heroes, who have risked
their lives to protect our democracy and the very budget process that puts
their services at risk, deserve so much more. In the coming weeks, we hope to
hear from more of these heroes about how damaging eliminating these services
will be and I hope their words are not ignored.
One thing remains certain, protecting and honoring those who
have sacrificed so much to defend our nation is one of our fundamental
responsibilities. The Assembly Minority Conference remains committed to
fighting for our veterans just as they fought for us.