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Assembly candidate touts state accountability plan

Albany has become the portrait of corruption and dysfunction. It seems every day a new scandal erupts onto the front pages of newspapers and, with each new story, average voters become more disenchanted and more apathetic toward their government. We must put an end to this.

As a candidate for state Assembly in Astoria, I have been traveling the district and talking to my neighbors in the community I have lived in my entire life. In a sympathetic tone, everyone asks the same question: “Why would you ever want to go to Albany?”

The answer is simple. I want to go to Albany because I know I can make a difference for the community I love. I know I can help clean up the mess.

Because of Albany’s dysfunction, the significant problems faced by our state go unresolved. Our schools face a more than $1 billion dollar-budget cut, three Queens hospitals have closed in recent years and special interests like Con Edison and the Metropolitan Transportation Authority run amok and operate as out-of-control bureaucracies by overcharging and under-serving residents.

We need to rein in Albany and ensure that our state works for its citizens, not the special interests.

We should begin by holding our representatives to much higher standards. Too many Albany politicians have been caught with their hands in the cookie jar, stealing taxpayer money to pad their own pockets instead of funding needy causes. Criminal penalties must be increased for those who break the public trust so the message is clear that corruption will not be tolerated.

And when politicians are caught breaking the public trust, investigations must be undertaken by truly independent authorities rather than by colleagues and friends. It is time to force the fox out of the hen house. We need an independent ethics commission that will hold those who break the law responsible.

Accountability is also lacking among Albany politicians because voters are denied real choices on Election Day. Fair elections are a rarity in New York, where the current system allows politicians to choose their voters by drawing their own districts rather than allowing voters to choose their representatives. That is why we need an independent redistricting commission to create districts based on what our communities need and not politics.

Since money holds too much influence in the political process, we also need campaign finance reform that guarantees lower maximum contributions, stricter disclosure requirements and public financing of elections to level the playing field. By making our redistricting and campaign finance systems fairer, we will ensure that the voices of New Yorkers are heard louder than the special interests on Election Day.

Albany has been allowed to abuse its power and authority for far too long. I look forward to the day when we are no longer ashamed of our government, but rather are proud it stands for us.

In the Assembly, I will lead the fight to change the system and make state government accountable to the people once again. I hope you will stand with me and join the fight.

Aravella Simotas

State Assembly Candidate

Astoria