The New York City Charter Revision Commission will hold
the third of five “Issue Forums” this Thursday in Staten Island, focusing on the
structure of City government.
Addressing the Commission will be five experts: Doug Muzzio, Baruch College; Eric Lane,
Hofstra University Law School; Brad Hoylman, former chair of Manhattan Community
Board 2; Marc V. Shaw, Interim Senior Vice Chancellor for Budget, Finance and
Financial Policy at CUNY; and Gerald Benjamin, SUNY New Paltz.
- TOPIC:Government
Structure
- PLACE:Staten Island Technical High School, 485
Clawson Street
STATEN ISLAND
- DATE: June 10,
2010 – 6
p.m.
At
Thursday’s forum, the Commission will invite testimony from the expert panel and
will accept public comment on the issue. Those wishing to testify may begin
signing up one half-hour prior to the start of the forum. Anyone wishing to testify will be given the opportunity to do so
regardless of when they arrive.
The forum is
open to the public and will be
streamed live via webcast through the Commission’s website at
www.nyc.gov/charter. Comments to the
Commission can be submitted through the Commission website by selecting “Contact the
Commission” or by emailing the Commission at commission@charter.nyc.gov.
Doug
Muzzio
Professor, School of Public
Affairs, Baruch College
A specialist in American public opinion, voting behavior,
and city politics, Doug Muzzio has extensive political, governmental, and media
experience. He is the co-director
of the Center for Innovation and Leadership in Government and the founder and
former director of Baruch Survey Research, both at Baruch College's School of Public
Affairs.
Muzzio is a political analyst and
on-air commentator for WABC-TV, and has done polling and political analysis for
ABC-TV and other news organizations.
His governmental experience includes: twice-elected trustee of the
Pequannock Township (New Jersey) Board of Education; chief of staff to New York
City Councilmember-at-large Antonio Olivieri; consultant to the New York City
Charter Revision Commission; research director for the Dinkins mayoral campaign;
consultant to City agencies and not-for-profit organizations, including the New
York City Sanitation Department, the New York City Board of Education, the New
York City Parks Council, the Federation of Protestant Welfare Agencies, and the
Hispanic Federation of New York City.
He is in his fourth year of developing and delivering cultural diversity
training programs for the New York City Police Department.
He is
currently writing a book, The Reel City: The American City in Cinema, 1896-2001 on the
images of the American city in movies.
Eric
Lane
Eric J. Schmertz Distinguished Professor of Public Law and Public
Service, Hofstra University School of
Law
Eric
Lane is the Eric J. Schmertz Distinguished Professor of Public Law and Public
Service at Hofstra University School of Law where he has been teaching since
1976. He is also the Senior Fellow
at the Brennan Center for Justice at NYU Law School.
Lane
has held many positions in state and local government. He has most recently served as a special
counsel to the Speaker of the New York City Council. He has also served as a consultant for
the Justice Project of the Center for Court Innovation, and from July 1993 to
February 1995, he served as counsel to the New York State Temporary Commission
on Constitutional Revision, which was established by Governor Mario Cuomo to
review various aspects of the New York State
Constitution.
In
1990, Lane served as chair of the New York City Task Force on Charter
Implementation. From 1986 to 1989, he served as executive director/counsel to
the New York City Charter Revision Commission. This Commission was responsible
for the most extensive changes in the City’s Charter since its inception. From 1981 to 1986, Lane was Chief
Counsel to the New York State Senate Minority. He serves on the boards of the Vera
Institute of Justice and the Neighborhood Defender Service of Harlem. He is a
member of the American Law Institute and the American Bar
Foundation.
The
author of many articles on governmental decision‑making, Lane co‑authored The Genius of America: How the Constitution
Saved the Country and Why It Can Again with Michael Oreskes. He has also written law texts with the
Honorable Abner J. Mikva: The Legislative Process and An Introduction to Statutory Interpretation
and the Legislative Process.
Brad Hoylman
Former Chair, Community Board 2,
Manhattan
Brad
Hoylman is the recent past chair of Manhattan Community Board 2, which
represents the neighborhoods of Greenwich Village, SoHo, NoHo, Little Italy,
Chinatown, Hudson Square and Gansevoort Market. As Chair of Community Board 2, he was
responsible for helping launch several community-based planning initiatives,
including: brokering a compromise
for the new design of Washington Square Park, planning open space on property
owned by St. Vincent’s Hospital, establishing planning principals for New York
University, rezoning a portion of the Far West Village, establishing a new
elementary school at the Foundling Hospital site and proposing a middle school
at 75 Morton Street, and creating the first community board committee for
Chinatown. Under Hoylman, Community
Board 2 supported the expansion of bicycle lanes and was the first community
board in the city to support congestion pricing. Hoylman is currently chair of the
community board’s St. Vincent’s Hospital
Omnibus Committee and its parliamentarian, and has served as the chair of the
Traffic and Transportation Committee.
Hoylman
is a graduate of Harvard Law School
and Oxford
University, where he was a
Rhodes Scholar. He is involved in
local Democratic politics in Greenwich Village,
where he serves as a Democratic District Leader. He is a Trustee of the Community
Services Society of New York and a member of Citizens Union. Professionally, Hoylman is a senior
executive and general counsel at a New
York City nonprofit
organization.
Marc V. Shaw
Interim Senior Vice Chancellor for Budget, Finance and
Financial Policy, City University of New
York
Marc
Shaw, who has held senior-level positions in both city and state government, is
currently Interim Senior Vice Chancellor for Budget, Finance and Financial
Policy at the City University of New York, where he oversees and manages the
finances of CUNY's 23 colleges and professional schools and the University's
central administration, including its investment portfolio. Prior to working at
CUNY, Shaw served as Senior Advisor to Governor David Paterson.
From
2006 to 2008, Shaw was Executive Vice President for Strategic Planning at Extell
Development Company. From 2002 to
2006, he was the First Deputy Mayor and Deputy Mayor for Operations to Mayor
Michael Bloomberg.
In
1996, he was appointed by Governor George Pataki to serve as the Executive
Director and Chief Operating Officer for the Metropolitan Transportation
Authority (MTA), responsible for overseeing the daily operations of the
Authority, including financial and strategic planning, and the capital
programming activities for headquarters and the operating agencies.
Prior
to working at the MTA, Mr. Shaw served as New York City’s Budget Director and
Finance Commissioner under Mayor Rudolph Giuliani.
Shaw
began his career in New York City government in 1988 as Director of Finance for
the New York City Council, where he was chief fiscal advisor to the Speaker of
the Council and served as the Council's principal negotiator on the city budget.
Beginning in 1981, Mr. Shaw worked for the New York State
Senate Finance Committee. He has
been an Adjunct Assistant Professor of Public Service at the Robert F. Wagner
Graduate School of Public Service at New York University, and an Adjunct
Professor at the School of International and Public Affairs at Columbia
University. He graduated magna cum laude from the State University College at
Buffalo, and received his M.A. degree from SUNY Buffalo.
Gerald Benjamin
Distinguished Professor, Associate
Vice President and Director of CRREO, SUNY New
Paltz
Gerald
Benjamin is a Distinguished Professor, Associate Vice President for Regional
Engagement and Director of the Center for Research, Regional Education and
Outreach (CRREO) at SUNY New Paltz, where he has been affiliated since
1968. As Director of CRREO,
Benjamin leads New Paltz’s efforts to raise its level of engagement within
communities, governments, not-for-profits and businesses across the Hudson
Valley.
At New
Paltz, Benjamin served as Chair of the Department of Political Science,
Presiding Officer of the faculty, and Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and
Sciences, which is the largest academic unit at SUNY New Paltz. Benjamin earned a B.A. with distinction
from St. Lawrence University, and received his Masters and Doctoral degrees in
Political Science from Columbia University.
Benjamin directed the Center for the New York State and
Local Government Studies at SUNY's Rockefeller Institute of Government in
Albany, served as Research Director of the Temporary State Commission on
Constitutional Revision appointed by Governor Mario Cuomo, and was Principal
Research Advisor to the 1989 New York City Charter Revision Commission. Between 2004 and 2006, Benjamin chaired
the Ulster County Charter Commission, which resulted in approval of the County's
first charter. In 2007, Benjamin was appointed by Governor Spitzer to the State
Commission on Local Government Efficiency and Competitiveness which proposed
wide-reaching reforms in local government in New York
State.
Between
1981 and 1993 Gerald Benjamin was an elected member of the Ulster County
legislature, where he served as both Majority Leader (1985-91) and Chairman
(1991-93), the latter of which, in the absence of an executive, made him the
County's Chief Elected Officer. During Benjamin's tenure, Ulster County had a
budget of $165 million and more than 1,300
employees.
Benjamin served in the United States Army, rising to the rank of
Captain in the Medical Service Corps. He has been a Fulbright Lecturer at the
University of Tokyo and the Japanese Foreign Ministry School, a Serbelloni
Fellow in Residence at the Rockefeller Foundation Study Center in Bellagio,
Italy and a Visiting Professor at Meiji University in Tokyo, Japan. A 1991 recipient of the New York
State/United University Professors Excellence Award, alone or with others he has
written or edited fourteen books or monographs and numerous government reports,
articles and opinion essays. His book with Richard Nathan, on Regionalism and
Realism in local governance in the New York City metropolitan region,
published by the Brookings Institution Press in 2001, was named an outstanding
academic title for 2002 by Choice magazine.