Posted on 03/29/2016 11:55:43 AM PDT by nickcarraway
Governor Cuomo and legislators in Albany are considering a plan that would raise the state's minimum wage to $15 an hour, but do so faster in New York City than upstate. But there's been an unintended consequence of such a proposal: a reignition of the debate over what exactly constitutes "upstate." It's unclear, for instance, whether Westchester County (or Long Island, for that matter) would get to $15 an hour on the same schedule as New York City. Even among Westchester politicians, there's no agreement over how the county should be classified.
Assembly Democrats have argued that Westchester shoud follow the same schedule as New York City. Assemblywoman Shelley Mayer of Yonkers says that "Mine is not an upstate community. Its a downstate, urban community on the border of the Bronx," adding, "the cost of housing is slightly more for a two-bedroom apartment in Yonkers than in the Bronx. So its a fluid border."
But another letter, signed by "elected officials from across Upstate New York" and supporting an increase to $15 upstate no later than 2021, includes signatures from several Westchester politicians, including two Yonkers city councilmembers.
The inclusion of those Yonkers politicians prompted Jon Campbell, a Gannett reporter covering the state government, to tweet, "I gotta say out of bounds. I mean ... Yonkers literally borders the Bronx." And in recent days, Campbell has been following the debate on Twitter (using the hashtag #whereisupstate), especially in the wake of newspaper articles that referred to Rye as "upstate." Perhaps the most robust conversation this time around took place Monday in response to a tweet by Washington Post writer Philip Bump, who noted that no one seems to know what "upstate" means, and then solicited comments on whether western New York counts.
A couple of Twitter users suggested that anything north of New York City is considered upstate. Another says it's anything north of Westchester. Another, anything north of Putnam County. Yet another suggests it's anything above Albany, and that "Western NY doesn't exist." One user suggests that western New York is indeed its own thing, but also says that "Buffalo, Syracuse, that's upstate." (Responded Bump to that one: "How the hell is Buffalo upstate but western NY isnt?")
For what it's worth, Politico last week looked into instances where "upstate" is mentioned by state law, though even there definitions vary:
Among those who have spent a significant amount of time north of Yankee Stadium, there are two definitions that appear with the most frequency. One of these defines upstate as any county north of New York City that isnt serviced by Metro-North. This is closely mirrored by the statute that created the states Energy Planning Board, which includes Dutchess, Orange, Putnam, Rockland and Westchester in the Downstate region, as well as Ulster (which lacks a Metro-North station).
The other common definition is narrower, and includes only those MTA-serviced regions where a significant percentage of the population uses the authoritys trains to commute to jobs in Manhattan. This can be found in the 2013 law that detailed the plan for constructing casinos upstate and excluded Putnam, Rockland and Westchester. A section of the transportation law that distributes the states gas tax to counties for highway funding creates the largest map of downstate. The upstate region defined here excludes Columbia County, whose northernmost point is only 20 miles from Albany. So, to recap: "Upstate" means whatever you want it to mean, and everyone else insists that you're wrong.
Fascists.
Typical politicians.
The rest of us do.
This is gonna hit everybody.
Skilled workers in offices are already saying “if someone with no skills at all is getting 15, why am I just getting 30?”
and they have a great point.
that’s why minimum wage laws are so STUPID!
Anything above NYC.
It retired and moved to Florida.
She’s an Uptown Girl,
Up on the roof
Under the rainbow
& On the sunny side of the street.
You know those lights were bright on Broadway
That was so many years ago
Before we all lived here in Florida
Before the Mafia took over Mexico
There are not many who remember
They say a handful still survive
To tell the world about
The way the lights went out
And keep the memory alive
Anywhere outside NYC.
Starts just above Harlem
This will pretty much finish off upstate NY. The first nail in the coffin was the outright banning of Fracking.
And the way the economy is going in NYS, “upstate” is becoming the Bronx, Pelham border.
Kind of. A good rule of thumb is about a bit over an hours drive outside of the city. City workers will commute that far out, so ... beyond that is “Upstate”.
Upstate NY is the Adirondack Mountains coz they are actually “UP”.
Everything to the north of Staten Island.
So the Bronx is upstate New York?
I say anything north of I84 which is pretty close to what you’re saying
When the people start getting nicer you are in upstate New York.
When the people are rude and pushy you are in NYC.
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