NYC NOW - Evening Roundup: Court Blocks Cuomo’s Plan to Dismantle Ethics Board, Lt. Gov. Calls Himself Voice of New Yorkers, 90 Years Since NYC Hired First Black Conductor and Life Expectancy in New York
Episode Date: February 18, 2025New York’s highest court rejected former Gov. Cuomo’s attempt to strip the state ethics board of its enforcement power. Plus, New York's Lt. Gov. Delgado develops an independent streak. Also, WNYC...’s Ramsey Khalifeh reports on the man who broke a racial barrier that has since offered a pathway to the middle class for countless Black people and other people of color. And finally, WNYC’s Sean Carlson talks with New York City’s interim Commissioner of Health Michelle Morse about life expectancy rates for New Yorkers.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to NYC Now, your source for local news in and around New York City.
From WNYC, I'm Jenae Pierre.
Former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo has lost his bid to dismantle the State Ethics Board.
The ruling came down Tuesday from New York's top court.
Cuomo's lawsuit challenged the structure of the Commission on Ethics and Lobbying in Government.
That's the board that enforces state ethics laws.
The board has been investigating Cuomo's $5 million deal to write a book
during the pandemic. In a split decision, the court found the law creating the commission
did not violate the Constitution. The ruling means the ethics board can continue to enforce
the state's lobbying and ethics law, and it can proceed with its investigation into Cuomo's
book and whether he improperly used state resources to write it. Cuomo did not immediately
respond to questions about the ruling. Sources say he's weighing a run for New York City
mayor. Lieutenant governors are often quiet supporters of state governors.
But WMYC's Jimmy Vilkine reports, New York's lieutenant governor, is developing a bit of an independent streak.
Antonio Delgado says he views his job as being a voice for New Yorkers.
He plans to travel the state to combat anti-Semitism and biased crimes,
and he has no problems singing a different song than Governor Kathy Hokel.
Delgado says he didn't consult with the Democratic governor before saying publicly that Mayor Adams should resign.
I serve with the governor, but I don't.
don't serve at the pleasure of the governor, right? I am my own person. I have my own voice.
Hockel appointed Delgado as lieutenant governor, and then the two ran together when Hokel won a full
term in 2022. But Hockel's spokesman says Delgado doesn't speak for her administration.
New York City's first black train conductor broke racial barriers in the 1930s. After the break,
we look into the pathway to the middle class for tens of thousands of African-American
and other people of color.
Stay close.
90 years ago, New York City's transit system
hired its first black train conductor.
WMYC's Ramsey-C-Colipa reports on the man
who broke a racial barrier
that has since offered a pathway to the middle class
for tens of thousands of people of color.
New York City's subway system, as we know it, today,
was built during the first decades of the 20th century.
But back then, black people were not allowed
to work on board the trains.
That changed on October 15, 1935, when Jotham T. Coleman was hired as the first black conductor on the independent subway system, New York's only publicly owned transit at the time.
Polly Desjardley, a researcher at the New York Transit Museum, says he should be remembered as a civil rights icon.
So I'm focused on the stories that the museum tells.
I sort of have a hand in a lot of different things.
Dejardelay discovered Coleman's story in the museum's century-old archives.
She says before Coleman's appointment, black New Yorkers were relegated to lower paying jobs in the subways, working as porters or cleaners.
It was the Depression and having civil service rules was more equitable.
Suddenly jobs were opened up that were formally closed to African Americans.
The Transport Workers Union was formed a year before Coleman became a conductor in 1934.
I wanted to learn more about him, so I took a trip to the New York University's special collections room
to find records from the union's founding president, Michael Quill.
In one letter from Quill to a Harlem City Council member
written at the end of the 1930s,
Quill writes about the union's position
in including non-white workers.
The letter says the TW, quote,
has not only advocated for equal rights and privileges
for Negroes and industry,
but has consistently batted for such equality
within the limitations of the present state of our society.
You have to look at the trajectory.
Joshua Freeman is a labor historian
and retired professor from CUNY.
In the 1930s, transit workers were poorly paid.
It was a notoriously badly paid industry.
And black workers in it were paid the worst, right?
But once you get unionization, you begin a path towards benefits and salary increases
that really blossoms after World War II.
He says, although the new door opened,
sentiment from other white transit workers to include more black people in the union
wasn't exactly positive.
There was a lot of racism among.
white workers who didn't want to compete with jobs with black workers.
Yet the Board of Transportation kept moving forward. Records show that between 1939 and
1944, the number of black conductors in their workforce increased sixfold. Today, almost
50% of all bus and subway employees are black. That's WMYC's Ramsey Calife. New York City officials
are trying to figure out how to deal with an issue that affects us all, life expectancy rates.
For a deep dive on the topic, my colleague Sean Carlson talked with Michelle Morris.
She's the acting health commissioner of New York City.
Commissioner, can you tell us more about the life expectancy of New Yorkers before the pandemic and after?
In the decade or so leading up to the COVID pandemic, we actually saw a plateauing in life expectancy improvements for New York City.
And during the pandemic, unfortunately, we had a significant drop in life expectancy.
In fact, it dropped average about five years for black news.
New Yorkers and Hispanic New Yorkers in particular and a few years for others.
And so considering those significant drops in life expectancy and the inequities related to them,
we have been really thoughtful about how we get back to our healthiest state of health for New York City
and how we can work collaboratively across all parts of government to do so.
What is causing the decline and why is it so hard for the city to bounce back?
Unfortunately, the emergency phase of the pandemic led to a really significant, unfortunate loss of life.
It also led to a number of other life-threatening illnesses being exacerbated, quite frankly,
and causing a higher rate of mortality than we would normally see.
Now, the good news is that we just released our 2022 data, and that data showed that life expectancy
has improved in New York City.
In fact, it went up from 78 years the year before to about 81.5 years.
So we're excited to see that level of improvement.
However, it's really challenging to get back to where we want.
to be because there are a number of barriers that New Yorkers have to health improvements. Those
improvements require us to really make progress on the number one killer of New Yorkers right now,
which is chronic diseases. Yeah, we wanted to ask you about that. Which disease is the most
prevalent among New Yorkers? And how is your office planning on addressing it? It is the combination
of cardiovascular disease and diabetes-related diseases that cause the highest rate of mortality,
the number one cause of mortality for New Yorkers. And second is cancer.
And those honestly had been the top causes of early death in New York City prior to the pandemic.
So we're kind of back to the challenge that we were facing before the pandemic in addressing health across the city.
So what are some of the other ways the city plans to increase life expectancy?
Some of the other major concerns we have is overdose.
Unfortunately, overdose from opioids in particular with fentanyl in our drug supply has been a leading cause of death.
And it's preventable 100%.
And the opioid settlement fund dollars that are going to community-based organizations across the city is one of the ways we're doing that.
Another area that we're focusing on is violence.
We know that violence is a leading cause of death as well.
And it is one of the areas where New York City's health department has been leading in our violence intervention programs that are based in hospitals.
And those are extremely effective.
Now, if you had to choose one out of those 19 proposals, which one do you think will have the most impact?
One of the most important interventions that we've developed in the report is our community health worker interventions.
And the reason I say that is because community health workers are people who are from the community they're serving.
They are able to accompany the community that they're working in to address the top health issues of that community.
We saw this work incredibly well during COVID, and we were able to bring up the vaccination rates and bring down the cases in the neighborhoods that had the worst impacts from COVID using, again, community health workers who know what their community needs and who are armed with the health information and interventions that are going to be most protective in the neighborhoods we know we need to focus on.
So we've shifted that work from the emergency phase of COVID into chronic disease now.
Do we know what the price tag is on all of these proposals?
Combine, it's an investment of about $36 million per year.
Some of the work has already gotten started, which is very exciting.
And some of it really is going to need more resources to either get it going or keep it going.
You've been talking about identifying geographic areas in the city that need help and need attention.
Which neighborhoods in the city do need the most help?
The legacy of residential segregation in this city is still impacting which neighborhoods have access to which things and which neighborhoods do not have access to which things.
That might be health care, that might be healthy food, that might be safe parks and streets.
The data tells us that some of the areas where we need to put our resources are in the South Bronx, in East Harlem, and in central Brooklyn, especially Brownsville and Bushwick.
And so those neighborhoods, when we look at our data, show us over and over again, that these are neighborhoods that our city government, not just the health department, but all of us need to prioritize in order to make the investments that will produce the best health possible for those communities.
That's Michelle Morris, interim health commissioner of New York City.
Thanks for listening to NYC now from WMYC.
I'm Jinnay Pierre. We'll be back tomorrow.
