Community

Photo from PSEG Long Island Facebook

PSEG Long Island is prepared for the third storm to hit the service area in seven days, with gusty winds and heavy rain forecasted for Friday evening, Jan. 12 into Saturday,  Jan. 13.

The weather system could bring rainfalls of nearly 2 inches in certain areas, along with peak wind gusts of 42-58 mph across the service area — enough to potentially topple trees, bring down branches on wires and cause outages.

PSEG Long Island has personnel ready to respond safely and as quickly as possible throughout the storm. Additionally, approximately 160 off-Island utility personnel are being procured to work alongside PSEG Long Island’s highly trained crews.

“PSEG Long Island is closely monitoring the third weather front to approach our area in a week, and we are once again prepared for potential impacts on the system,” said Michael Sullivan, vice president of Electric Operations at PSEG Long Island. “We have performed system and logistic checks, and have a full complement of personnel who will mobilize for restoration in stormy weather conditions. Our crews will work to safely restore any outages as conditions will allow.”

Is your home prepared to withstand forecasted wind gusts?
Here are some tips:
– Collect and store loose outdoor items, including patio furniture, garbage cans, sports equipment or decorations.
– Find a safe location for your vehicle. Park away from trees, streetlamps and power lines. If possible, park in a garage.
– Secure fencing, porches, canopies and sheds, shutters and loose gutters on your property.
– Make sure all doors and windows are closed and locked securely.

Customers are asked to note the important storm safety tips below and to visit psegliny.com/safetyandreliability/stormsafety for additional storm preparation information.

Customer Safety:

  • Downed wires should always be considered “live.” Please stay as far away as possible from them, and do not drive over or stand near them. To report a downed wire, call PSEG Long Island’s 24-hour Electric Service number at 800-490-0075 or call 911.
  • Electric current passes easily through water. If you encounter a pool of standing water, stop, back up and choose another path.
  • Never use a generator or any gasoline-powered engine inside your home, basement, or garage or less than 20 feet from any window, door, or vent. Use an extension cord that is more than 20 feet long to keep the generator at a safe distance.

Stay connected:

  • Report an outage and receive status updates by texting OUT to PSEGLI (773454). You can also report your outage through our app or our website at psegliny.com/outages.
  • To report an outage or downed wire, you can also call PSEG Long Island’s 24-hour Electric Service number at 800-490-0075.
  • Follow PSEG Long Island on Facebook and X (formerly Twitter) to report an outage and for updates before, during and after the storm.
  • Visit PSEG Long Island’s MyPower map for the latest in outage info, restoration times and crew locations across Long Island and the Rockaways at mypowermap.psegliny.com/.

By Aidan Johnson

New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation, with the Department of Environmental Conservation and the Canal Corporation, partnered together to host the 13th annual First Day Hike at Sunken Meadow State Park in Kings Park. The Jan. 1 event was just one of many that were held across the state and nation to help kick off the new year, according to the state Parks website.

Kara Hahn, deputy regional director at New York State Parks, considered the event a “tremendous success.”

“The hike began on the boardwalk overlooking the beautiful white pebble beach on the Long Island Sound. Participants made their way east toward the marsh, crossed over Sunken Meadow Creek on the New Bridge and followed Mousehole Trail back west along the creek,” Hahn said in a statement.

“The group then crossed back over the creek at Old Bridge and returned to the boardwalk, proceeding west to the park office to complete the 1.5-plus mile hike,” she added.

Douglas Pfeiffer. Photo from SBU

Douglas Pfeiffer, associate professor in the Department of English in the College of Arts and Sciences at Stony Brook University recently received an honorable mention from the Modern Language Association of America (MLA) for his book “Authorial Personality and the Making of Renaissance Texts: The Force of Character.” The MLA recently reported Pfeiffer’s distinction through a news release announcing the 2023 MLA Prize for a First Book, which was awarded to Vanderbilt University’s Akshya Saxena.

According to the MLA, this annual award honors an exceptional scholarly work authored by one of the association’s 20,000 global members and published the previous year as their first book-length text. Eligible works include literary or linguistic studies, critical editions of important texts, and critical biographies. This year marks the 30th anniversary of the award.

“I feel extremely gratified and proud to see a project that I’ve been following since its early stages get recognized as a major contribution not only to Professor Pfeiffer’s field of early modern studies, but to the general field of literary scholarship,” said Andrew Newman, professor and chair of the Department of English. “Anyone who reads it will come away with a much richer understanding of authorship.”

In addition, Pfeiffer’s book was also recently awarded the Roland Bainton Prize which was selected  by the Sixteenth Century Society which recognized its quality/originality of research; methodological skill and/or innovation; development of fresh and stimulating interpretations or insights and the book’s literary quality.

Professor Pfeiffer is an expert on the history of rhetorical and literary theory, Renaissance humanism, and English poetry of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. A former professor at the University of California, Irvine, he joined the faculty at Stony Brook in 2007 and went on to receive a SUNY Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in teaching in 2022. He holds a PhD from Columbia University.

The MLA announcement cites Professor Pfeiffer’s book as “a tremendous achievement. In this substantial volume,” it continues, “Pfeiffer traces the phenomenon of author centrism to the scholarship of early Renaissance humanists. Focusing on several well-chosen case studies, this deeply researched multilingual monograph brings welcome new interpretations and insights not only to Renaissance studies but to literary studies more broadly.”

The Prize for a First Book, along with 21 additional MLA awards, will be presented at the association’s annual convention in Philadelphia on Friday, January 5, 2024.

Assemblyman Keith Brown (R,C-Northport) congratulates Board of Greenlawn Water District on receiving grant funding through the NYS Water Infrastructure Improvement Act (WIIA) on Jan. 10, 2024.

Assemblyman Keith Brown’s (R,C-Northport) office attended a ceremony on Wednesday, Jan. 10, to help congratulate the Board of Greenlawn Water District on being awarded a $1.4 million grant through the NYS Water Infrastructure Improvement Act (WIIA) to complete Drinking Water (DW) Project No. 19713, which will include wellhead treatment for volatile organic compounds (VOCs) at Well No. 6.

Through the WIIA grant, the board has been awarded $1,392,300, including total estimated eligible project costs. The Environmental Facilities Corporation (EFC) will determine the actual amount of the grant when the project is complete and final project costs have been confirmed.

“I am very excited to see the board put this grant funding to good use to protect the drinking water for our Greenlawn residents,” said Brown. “Thank you and congratulations to the Greenlawn Water District Board of Commissioners, Chairman John H. Clark, Treasurer John T. McLaughlin, Secretary James M. Logan, Superintendent Robert Santoriello and Chief Plant Operator Frank DeMayo on this grant—I will be on the lookout for future updates on this project and others you intend to take on to continue to improve water quality for our residents.”

Bruce Stillman. Photo from CSHL

The toxic talk and policies towards immigrants in the United States is hurting American science and could threaten the country’s ability to compete in technology, an important economic driver.

That’s one of several messages Bruce Stillman, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory President and Chief Executive Officer, shared in an exclusive interview.

The attitude of some Americans towards immigrants, particularly amid the southern border issue, is “scaring a lot of people off, thinking about working in the United States,” said Stillman. Some of these talented immigrants are wondering why they would come to America. “The perception is that the US is not as welcoming as it used to be,” even for the immigration of highly skilled people, he added.

This hostility could have a detrimental top-down effect on science.

Indeed, immigrants have distinguished themselves, earning top prizes in science and accounting for 38 percent of the Nobel Prizes in physics, 34 percent in medicine and 37 percent in chemistry since 1901, according to Forbes.

“This is a very important economic and competitiveness issue,” said Stillman, who grew up in Australia.

It is increasingly difficult to recruit people from certain countries, particularly amid challenges getting visas, Stillman said.

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory has an offer out to a “very talented scientist” who has been waiting for almost a year to receive a visa, he said.

Many people have an opinion on the way things ought to be, Stillman explained, including issues related to diversity, equity and inclusion.

“The dialog in the US is no longer civil, but now people are emboldened to attack those in leadership positions,” he explained in an email. “It is part of the wider adversarial dialog going on in America.”

Policies in some states like Florida create the impression, even to accomplished and dedicated workers, that the country does not want them to work here.

CSHL embraces “talented scientists who want to work in the US to come to CSHL,” he explained.

Major scientific recession

Apart from immigration policies that exclude a broad swath of people who might otherwise ensure American technological competitiveness, Stillman is also worried about how political logjams in Washington could limit future funding for science.

“The moderates on both sides of Congress need to come together to override those on the left wing of the Democratic party and those on the right wing in the Republican party,” he explained.

Stillman does not understand why most members of Congress don’t vote out the extremes. If everyone in the middle stood up, “they would be lauded by the general public,” Stillman wrote in an email.

Listening to the fringes of science on both sides who attack science raises the risk of maintaining a leadership position.

Still, he maintains that he is optimistic that the general public and the moderate majority will prevail.

Learning from history

As the leader of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory for 29 years, Stillman recognizes his institution’s role in a dubious chapter in American history.

Indeed, a century ago, the United States passed the Johnson-Reed Act, or the Immigration Act of 1924, which provided a quota that limited the number of immigrants to two percent of the people of each nationality in the country as of the 1890 census. The law excluded immigrants from Asia.

After that law, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory played a role in this policy by creating a eugenics record office.

CSHL put up a web site 18 years ago to chronicle the lab’s involvement in a period when science was used to justify discriminatory policies.

“We have highlighted on our web site about the eugenics movement so as to educate children and adults about how misunderstanding science, in this case genetics, can lead to dangerous public policy,” he explained in an email.

This year, on the 100th anniversary of the immigration law, the lab plans to highlight the 1924 Immigration Act as something that led to policies that are “not compatible with what the US is about,” he said.

Building for the future

Like other labs, CSHL is competing to earn federal grants from the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation.

The lab needs to raise “considerable amounts of money each year to eep cutting edge science moving forward,” he wrote.

Indeed, CSHL recently started a major expansion on seven acres of land at the top of the campus to build four research buildings. The lab plans to hire about 14 to 16 new faculty to join the current staff of 56 investigators.

These buildings will expand on programs that explore brain-body physiology, which describes how organs such as the stomach and others interact with the brain.

Many diseases, including cancer, upset the normal brain body interactions, he added. Intervening in these circuits can lead to new therapeutics for cancer and for many neurological disorders.

Researchers at CSHL will publish several discoveries in the next few years in this field that represent “important breakthroughs,” Stillman said.

At the end of May and early June, CSHL will host an annual symposium on brain body physiology, which will include a lecture for the general public.

CSHL is pursuing the most ambitious capital campaign in the lab’s history, raising funds to support the construction of new research and education buildings and to increase the endowment to support the science.

The lab is also building another center called NeuroAI that integrates neuroscience, artificial intelligence and computer science. The computational AI effort has “taken on a life of its own,” he explained. “We plan a major effort to understand how our brain does normal computation and then use this knowledge to improve computer programs.”

In the realm of artificial intelligence, CSHL has used a program called alpha fold, which a unit of Google called Deep Mind developed.

This program predicts protein-protein interactions and protein-drug interactions, which helps “transform the way biology is done,” he said.

While the work “accelerates” the science, it doesn’t “replace doing real experiments,” he added.

Local residents gathered Dec. 29 in front of Port Jefferson Harbor to participate in a ceasefire vigil organized by the North Country Peace Group. The event, held amid the ongoing Israeli-Hamas conflict, aimed to raise awareness and call for an immediate end to the violence in Gaza.

As the clock struck noon, participants displayed signs bearing messages of peace and hope. Speakers from the peace group shared their thoughts on the conflict, urging those present to advocate for diplomatic solutions and humanitarian aid.

“We need to be visible, we need to let people know what our community stands for,” Port Jefferson resident Myrna Gordon said. “We need to let them know that we want a ceasefire, that we want to end these atrocious killings. It’s important for our community to see that we’re here, that we’re not going to go away, and what’s happening now.”

Attendees shared stories of hope, emphasizing the cost of the ongoing conflict.

“We’ve been doing this for over 50 years,” Gordon said. “You do get tired, and you do get worn down by the bureaucracy. But with support like this in our communities, we’re very fortunate to have a very solid community of peace activists, people who are simply working for justice. We just have to stay the course.”

Despite the somber mood, the vigil was also a testament to the enduring human spirit. The shared grief and the collective call for peace created a powerful sense of solidarity among those present.

The ceasefire vigil is just one of many similar events taking place around the world. As the conflict continues, the call for peace grows louder, urging leaders to find a way to end the suffering and bring about a lasting peace.

Above, 'Glorious Sunset' by Paul Edelson will be on view at Gallery North through Feb 18. Image courtesy of Gallery North

Gallery North, 90 North Country Road, Setauket kicks off the new year with Coalescence, a selection of works by painter Paul Jay Edelson and sculptor Arthur Bernstein, on view from January 11 to February 18. 

Coalescence is a two-person exhibition featuring small and medium-scale oil paintings by Paul Jay Edelson and wood and resin sculptures by Arthur Bernstein. These two unique artists use inspiration from nature to materialize balletic compositions and abstract forms. 

‘Open Form’ by Arthur Bernstein will be on view at Gallery North through Feb 18. Image courtesy of Gallery North

Edelson’s alla prima paintings condense nebulous liminal atmospheres formed where land, sea and sky meet. He captures these protean seascapes through expressive marks that allude to the initial subject, often the shores of Long Island, while simultaneously exploring abstract moments of color and texture. 

The graceful abstract sculptures of Arthur Bernstein allude to solidified fluid movements and organic forms, which are often informed by the wood itself. The works are primarily carved from black walnut, which is native to Long Island and sourced locally. Bernstein’s attention to the balance of negative space, combined with the gently curving forms, create engaging structures for viewers to navigate.

The community is invited to an opening reception on Thursday, January 11, from 6 to 8 p.m. As a complement to the exhibition, Gallery North will host a Meet & Greet and wine tasting with the artists for Gallery North members on Thursday, February 1 from 6 to 8 p.m.. The exhibition and reception will all be free and open to the public. 

This exhibition is generously sponsored by Jefferson’s Ferry and Suffolk County’s Department of Economic Development and Planning. For more information, call 631-751-2676 or visit www.gallerynorth.org.

Photo by Abigail Choi/ Councilmember Kornreich's office

The delicious aroma of fresh coffee filled the air as Emma S. Clark Memorial Library in Setauket held a ribbon cutting for its new Level Up Kitchen Library Café on Jan. 7. 

Library board members and staff, Level Up Kitchen Library Café owner Chelsea Gomez, Town of Brookhaven Councilmember Jonathan Kornreich, architect John Cunniffe, and Thomas Pirraglia of Urban Village Contracting, Inc., were all in attendance.

Library Director Ted Gutmann thanked everyone involved in the entire three-part construction project.”We stayed open the whole time [during construction]. We didn’t have to close…[the cafe] has been open now a few weeks, and it’s been very popular with our patrons.” 

“Seeing the library evolve and meeting the changing needs of the community is very heartening, and this place continues to be very relevant and continues to be the absolute heart of this area,” said Councilmember Kornreich.

Library patrons will be able to grab a quick snack on-the-go, or stay for a bite to eat and enjoy a more leisurely experience at the library in the new, indoor seating area adjacent to the historic 1892 reading room. Café customers will also have access to the outdoor seating terrace, which opened in August 2022 and looks out over the library’s beautifully landscaped grounds and the historic Setauket Village Green.

The extensive menu features soup of the day, wraps, grilled cheese, frittatas, bagels, croissants, and rolls as well as scones, cookies, brownies and cakes. Drinks include hot and iced coffee, hot and iced tea, hot cocoa and more with many nut-free, gluten-free, vegetarian and vegan options.

Pictured at the ribbon cutting, from left, are Joan Kahnhauser (Head Adult Services Librarian), Councilmember Jonathan Kornreich, Chelsea Gomez (Level Up Kitchen Library Café owner), Angeline Yeo-Judex (Library Board Member), Ted Gutmann (Library Director), Anthony M. Parlatore (Library Board Member), Suzanne Shane (Library Board Secretary), Linda Josephs (Library Board Member), John Cunniffe (Architect), Linda Pirraglia, Thomas Pirraglia (Urban Village Contracting), and Lisa DeVerna (Library Marketing & Communications Manager).

Operating hours for the café are Mondays  to  Fridays from 9:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m.; Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and Sundays from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. For more information, please call 631-941-4080 or visit www.emmaclark.org/cafe/.

Have your photo taken with Elsa from ‘Frozen’ at this wintry celebration. Photo from The Whaling Museum

The Whaling Museum and Education Center, 301 Main St., Cold Spring Harbor is bringing back its Narwhal Ball for a second year in a row on Sunday, February 4 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. (10:30 a.m. for members). This popular winter celebration promises to excite guests with arctic tales and treasures including a very special guest from the north, the icy queen Elsa.

The museum will welcome visitors into a magical winter wonderland with snowflakes and glittering lights throughout the museum. To further immerse visitors in the icy feels of winter, the museum’s workshop will once again be fashioned into an old school ice cream parlor serving two flavors of delicious Original Recipe Ice Cream courtesy of Kilwin’s of Huntington. Every ticket includes a scoop to sit and enjoy.

Guests will learn all about arctic creatures through interactive presentations where polar animal tusks will be exhibited for exploring. The museum education team will share facts and engage kids in the wonderment of the world’s coldest regions. 

Throughout the museum, participants will find lots of frosty crafts to make and take and fun arctic learning activities. Crafts will include Painting with Ice, a beloved activity where kids can let their creativity shine like the Northern Lights! Guests will make a stop at the Wheel of Fortune: Arctic Edition activity table where they can challenge their knowledge of arctic creatures and win a prize. More crafts and activities await Narwhal Ball-goers at every turn including some new surprises for this year.

Guests will gather around as Elsa shares Nordic tales from her icy domain. When not sharing fascinating tales of encounters with polar creatures and brave adventurers, Elsa will be waiting to meet guests in front of a snow filled backdrop, a perfect photo opportunity.

“Narwhals have inspired story tellers for thousands of years with thoughts of unicorns and mystical creatures galore. This event is a celebration of awe-inspiring arctic animals, shimmering snow-covered lands and the adventurers that explored these icy places. We can’t wait to share it with you!” said Brenna McCormick-Thompson, Curator of Education at The Whaling Museum.

The Whaling Museum is selling limited timed tickets online until Friday, February 2 at noon at  $20  per child, $8 adults, $6 seniors;  $15 per child, $5 adults/seniors for museum members. Tickets at the door will be $25 per child, $8 adults, $6 seniors; $20 per child, $5 adults/senior for museum members. To order, visit www.cshwhalingmuseum.org. For further information, call 631-367-3418.

Photo from Albany Drugged Driving Rally

Suffolk County District Attorney Raymond A. Tierney continued his two-day rally in Albany today calling on lawmakers, with the District Attorneys Association of the State of New York (DAASNY), to pass a bill that would close the loopholes in the drugged driving law that make it unworkable. Current law does not allow an individual to be arrested and prosecuted for operating a vehicle while obviously impaired by any substance that is not listed in Section 3306 of the Public Health Law. Senate Bill S.3135 and Assembly Bill A.174, also known as the “Deadly Driving Bill,” closes the loopholes.

“There is noone on our roads, driver, motorcyclist,bicyclistor pedestrian, whois immune from becoming a victim of a drugged driving crash. Closing this loophole is important because we must doeverything we can to stop the horrendous loss of lives on our roadways. Impaired is impaired. Dangerous is dangerous, no matter whether it is alcohol or drugs,” said District Attorney Tierney. The type of alcohol ingested by the driver does not matter for an alcohol DWI and the same should be true for drugs and other substances. We have to use common sense to keep New York families safe.”

“The District Attorneys Association of the State of New York has consistently advocated for legislation to close loopholes in New York State’s drugged driving laws that preventthe prosecution of all impaired drivers to the fullest extent of the law. The passage of the Deadly Driving Bill (S.3135/A.174) would eliminate the often-impossible requirement of specifically identifying the drug that is impairing a drugged driver,” said District Attorneys Association of the State of New York President, Erie County District Attorney John J. Flynn. “We are committed to making sure New York State’s roadways are safe and that impaired drivers are prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, but to do so requires necessary modifications to our current laws. The legislation will also aid in the prosecution of these offenders by expanding the probable cause for evidential blood draws and protect the safety of our roadways by automatically suspending driver’s licenses for individuals charged with impaired driving.”

“Public safety isn’t just about responding when tragedy strikes; it’s also about prevention. Albany County has seen far too many fatal traffic crashes in recent years that were completely avoidable,” said Albany County District Attorney David Soares. “The Deadly Driving Bill would allow this office to engage in prevention by streamlining the process for prosecuting drugged driving cases. As amateur chemists escalate their efforts to poison our community, we in law enforcement must also escalate our efforts to stop them, which requires leaders to provide us with the laws and tools to do our jobs.”

“Drugged driving is not a mistake. It’s a selfish and dangerous act. It doesn’t matter whether the drugs are on a list or not. It only matters that they make the driver dangerous. The party may end but the consequences of drugged driving can last a lifetime,” said Onondaga District Attorney Bill Fitzpatrick. “Please join me in supporting this life saving piece of legislation sponsored by Assembly Transportation Chair Bill Magnarelli and Senator John Mannion.”

“The Deadly Driving Bill is common sense legislation, and I am proud to support such a proposal that values public safety,” said Monroe County District Attorney Sandra Doorley. “Illegal drugs and narcotics are always evolving, and this legislation ensures that law enforcement and the courts can stay on top of all impairing substances without awaiting time-consuming updates to the New York Public Health Law. Those who drive impaired choose to consume mind-altering substances before driving their vehicle, putting countless lives at risk. We must be able to hold these deadly drivers accountable, and when appropriate, help connect them with services if they are struggling with substance abuse disorder of any kind.”

“Drunk, drugged, and distracted driving are at epidemic levels today. As cops and prosecutors, we need all the tools we can get to make successful prosecutions against dangerous drivers,” said Nassau County District Attorney Anne Donnelly. “Under New York State law, arresting someone for driving under the influence of drugs is difficult. I thank District Attorney Tierney and his team for crafting a bill that will fix this loophole once and for all. We ask our legislators in Albany to pass this bill. It will save lives and will make our roadways safer for pedestrians, bikers and motorists.”

“New York State’s recreational marijuana program and the explosion of illegal cannabis sales in our convenience stores and smoke shops has made one thing crystal clear: our roads have more drivers impaired by the use of drugs than ever before,” said Staten Island District Attorney Michael McMahon. “Yet our laws are woefully inadequate in addressing the danger that these drivers pose to fellow motorists, passengers, and pedestrians. I am proud to lend full support to this legislation which would expand law enforcement’s ability to hold impaired and intoxicated drivers responsible for endangering themselves, their passengers, and all around them after they made the terrible, irresponsible, and dangerous decision to get behind the wheel after using substances. We also need more Drug Recognition Experts to carry out field sobriety examinations. Road safety must be a priority in Albany this session, and we look forward to working with the Sponsors to pass this legislation and to fight for funding for more DRE training across the state.”

“New York’s outdated approach to impaired driving handcuffs law enforcement, puts innocent people at risk and leaves those who might be struggling with a drug problem unchecked and untreated,” said Family and Children’s Association, President/Chief Executive Officer, Dr. Jeffrey Reynolds. “If we’ve learned anything during the current opioid crisis, its that public safety is enhanced when law enforcement and addiction treatment providers work together. Arrests often precipitate treatment entry, potentially putting those struggling with addiction on the road to recovery and leaving our communities safer and healthier. Drugs have evolved rapidly in recent years and New York’s laws should absolutely follow suit.”

“Responsibility.org and the National Alliance to Stop Impaired Driving (NASID) support the critical efforts to reform New York’s drugged driving laws, especially broadening the scope of drugged driving to include all impairing substances rather than those just on the predefined New York Public Health 3306 list,” said National Alliance to Stop Impaired Driving (NASID) Director & Responsibility.org Senior Vice President of Traffic Safety Darrin Grondel. “This legislation eliminates a dangerous loophole where some impaired drivers can’t be arrested or held accountable. Statistics show that fatal and serious injury crashes involving drugged and/or drunk drivers have increased significantly in New York, and these statistics are glaring red flags that something is not working, and action is needed to improve existing law regarding impaired and drugged driving.”

“Cannabis, opioids, even some over the counter medications can negatively impact the way people drive, which affects the safety of all road users,” said National Safety Council Vice President of Government Affairs Jane Terry. “Impairment, regardless of the type of substance, causes a decline in visual function, mental judgment and motor skills. The National Safety Council fully supports this bill to help make roads safer and save lives in the state of New York.”

“As the backbone of New York’s efforts to reduce the incidence of impaired driving, STOP-DWI’s 58 local coordinators have had a front-row seat to the lack of accountability for drivers who are impaired by substances not included on the Public Health Law list. As New York State works to reduce impaired crashes, we must ensure justice for victims of these crashes isn’t hindered by public policy barriers,” said NYS STOP-DWI Coordinators’ Association Chair Lindsay Tomidy. “While STOP-DWI has advocated for legislative reform for over a decade, we’ve observed an alarming rise in fatalities caused by impaired drivers statewide. For every one of these fatalities, our coordinators are working first hand with more innocent victims who are not given reasonable answers on the lack of justice for their loved ones who were taken by an irresponsible choice made. This coalition represents a collective voice for New York to join the rest of the nation in holding impaired drivers liable for their deadly decisions to ingest impairing substances and share the roads with millions of innocent and defenseless New Yorkers.”

“Drugged driving is a growing and complex problem. We are a movement of caring individuals with a shared purpose to end the devastation of drunk and drugged driving, which is both a violent crime and a health and safety issue that affects every community,” said MADD Regional Executive Director NY|NJ|PA Paige Carbone. “New York’s laws do not work well to stop drugged drivers before they crash leaving deadly drivers free to endanger everyone. MADD supports the Deadly Driving Bill, and our vision is to create a nation without drunk and drugged driving.”

“Far too many people are being seriously injured or killed by drivers impaired by drugs. Indeed, according to recent state data from 2022, 37% of fatal crashes in New York State are drug related,” said AAA New York State Legislative Committee Chairman,John Corlett. “AAA strongly encourages legislators to pass legislation closing the glaring loopholes in the state’s drug impaired driving laws during this legislative session. AAA also commends both Suffolk County District Attorney Raymond Tierney and Nassau County District Attorney for their leadership on this issue.”

“Under the current law, defense lawyers exploit a loophole in the criminal system from which they benefit financially and leaves their clients unaccountable for their actions,” said Remove Intoxicated Drivers President William Aiken. “The drugged driving bill S.3135/A.174 is needed to include all drugs that can impair one’s ability to driver. The passage of this bill will result in safer roads for everyone.”

“To be blunt, impaired is impaired and dead is dead. Under the current law, ‘the list,’ and all the other procedural impediments, make it far too difficult for law enforcement to protect New Yorkers from drugged drivers,” said DEDICATEDD President Marge Lee. “If the drug is not on the list or cannot be named, the law actually makes protection impossible. When we, the victims, identify our dead there is no list. We have no options. We personally know the definition of dead. We need the expanded definition of drugs and the legal definition of impaired. DEDICATEDD is begging our legislators to pass the Deadly Driving Bill.”

“Pass this legislation and stop tying the hands of law enforcement by requiring them to identify the specific drug used by perpetrators before an arrest can be made,” said NY Coalition for Transportation Safety Director Cynthia Brown. “Close the loophole that allows drugged drivers to walk free and continue to be a threat to all other roadway users.”

“The landscape of drugs and drugged driving is a kaleidoscope of factors that is ever changing. Currently, there are an overwhelming number of drugs including over the counter, prescription drugs, and illicit drugs that may cause impairment and a public safety risk when taken while driving,” said Association of Transportation Safety Information Professionals (ATSIP) CEO Tara Casanova Powell. “For this reason, several states have revised their language to ‘under the influence of alcohol or any drug or any combination thereof.’ Furthermore, only four States remaining that restrict drug-impaired driving statutes to a limited set of drugs: Alaska, Hawaii, Florida, and Massachusetts. As the Secretariat and responsible party on record with the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) as the Accredited Standards Developer (ASD) for the Manual on Classification of Motor Vehicle Traffic Accidents and advocate for research-based, data driven legislation to support public safety, ATSIP strongly supports the Deadly Driving Bill (S.3135/A.174).”

District Attorney Tierney collaborated with Senate Sponsor, John Mannion and Assembly Transportation Committee Chair, Bill Magnarelli to close the loopholes and add the best, scientifically supported tools available to make New York’s drugged driving law a model for the rest of the country.

District Attorney Tierney was joined by impaired driving victims’ families, community members, district attorneys, lawmakers, traffic safety advocates, criminal justice professionals, and members of the Coalition to Protect New Yorkers from Drugged Driving to promote the passage of the bill.

Drugged drivers threaten the lives of random and innocent roadway users of every age, gender, ethnicity, and economic status every day throughout New York State. Data collection is notoriously problematic in this area, but the trend is significant. All roadway fatalities in New York have increased, including impaired driving fatalities. But the rate of increase in drug-involved fatalities has outpaced drinking driver fatalities in the last five years. Drug-involved fatalities have increased 33% from 200 in 2018 to 266 in 2022. The raw number is also higher than alcohol and represents 23% of the total number of roadway fatalities in the state.

It is a public safety and public health issue. Under the current law, an obviously impaired driver cannot be arrested and prosecuted without naming the drug ingested as one on the Public Health Law 3306 list even though drivers also use many substances that are not on the list to get high. Those substances range from inhaling things like “Dust-Off” computer cleaner, to Xylazine (also known as “tranq”) to newly created synthetic drugs to drugs that finally made it to the list and were then altered by brilliant, but unscrupulous, chemists like fentanyl analogs.

The loophole also means that a driver using a drug on the Public Health Law list can avoid prosecution by refusing an identifying test, not disclosing what they are using, avoid responsibility, not get the substance abuse treatment that is already in the law and sidestep drugged driving license repercussions. There is no intervention to help the driver avoid a repetition of the dangerous driving event and no deterrence to protect the public.

According to the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), New York was one of only 5 states that use a list for drugged driving as of 2022. In January of 2023 NTSB sent letters to the Governors of these states, including New York, with Safety Recommendation H-22-044 supporting impaired driving charges for all drugs that impair driving (without reference to a list). On January 1, 2024, Oregon officially abandoned the requirement and updated their statutes to add driving under the influence of any impairing drugs to their impaired driving law. Now New York is one of only 4 states relying on an unworkable list. The proposed Deadly Driving Bill’s definition of “drug” in the Vehicle and Traffic Law to include any substance or combination of substances that impair, to any extent, physical or mental abilities meets the NTSB recommendation. The bill also defines impairment and intoxication for the first-time using language supported by the New York Chapter of the American College of Physicians.

The bill does not expand law enforcement’s ability to make car stops nor does it create new crimes. It makes existing law workable. It does not roll back cannabis legalization. And it does not create a “per se” drugged driving charge that would be based only on the driver having a specific amount of a drug in the driver’s bloodstream. Current scientific research does not support a “per se” statute because drugs work differently than alcohol in the body. Blood levels do not correlate to impairment the same way. Instead, the revised law would continue to require a showing of “actual impairment” using the best training and scientific tools available, not just the presence of a substance. But when impairment from any substance can be seen, the driver must be prohibited from driving.