Sen Tom Duane's blog

PODCAST: The Pridecast

With the State Capital roiling and the August sun broiling, my latest podcast takes listeners back to a less heated time, bringing you along on one of my favorite summer activities: Marching in June's New York City Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) Pride parade.

This podcast includes my interviews with Manhattan Borough President Scott M. Stringer, New York Dems Co-Chair David Pollak, and other parade-goers, as well as my own reflections on LGBT issues in Albany.

As the State Senate's only openly gay member, and the only openly HIV+ elected official in New York State, I am at the front of the fight for equal rights in New York. Since my days on the New York City Council -- and as a grassroots activist in such groups as the Chelsea Gay Association, Gay and Lesbian Independent Democrats and ACT UP! before that -- my leadership has made a major impact on the LGBT community. This year was my 32nd time marching in the New York City LGBT Pride parade.



PODCAST: "Albany, Meet Podcast"

This podcast features my first-person narration of a typically hectic Tuesday in the State Capital, as well as my one-person-at-a-time introduction of podcasting to the denizens of Albany.

As I make my way back and forth from my office in the Legislative Office Building to the Capitol, I encounter lobbyists -- amateur and professional, other legislators, government aides... and even Governor Eliot Spitzer.

Making his first appearance on my podcast, the Governor stops to say a few words for my loyal listeners.

State Senate Minority Leader Malcolm Smith (D-Queens) also addresses the podcast audience before the two of us enter an in-depth policy briefing with the Senate Minority Conference.

Since I found that many in our State Capital are not yet familiar with podcasting, I spent much of the walk introducing those I met to the concept.



PODCAST: A Visit to an Illegal Hotel in Manhattan

This episode focuses on the "illegal hotels" that are proliferating in much of Manhattan, keeping desperately needed affordable housing stock off the market, and creating hazardous conditions for New York residents and visitors alike.

The podcast features a special guest appearance by my good friend and colleague, Upper West Side Assemblymember Linda Rosenthal, who gives an audio tour of a room she booked online in a notorious illegal hotel on West 79th Street. Annie Venesky, a resident of the same building, is also featured narrating a walk through of her floor. The result is an intimate look at the problem of illegal hotels from the perspective of both a tenant and a "guest." At the end of the show, I share some of the ways we're working to fix the problem.



Podcast: Minority Report

In effort to dispel the myth that Democratic minority members of the State Senate are powerless to change policy in New York State, I’ve used my second podcast to informally discuss some of my strategies for getting things done in the Legislature.

Recorded before last week’s Democratic victory in 7th Senate District special election, the podcast offers a unique primer on the legislative process in New York State, as I explain how to move legislation in Albany on a procedural level, and on a personal one.

My next podcast will examine the issue of “illegal hotels” in Manhattan—residential buildings in which landlords rent out some units by the night for big profits. Not only must legal, residential tenants cope with a rotating cast of strangers coming and going noisily at all hours, but these unregulated “hotel rooms” generally don’t comply with fire and health regulations, putting both tenants and guests at risk.



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