Tuesday, July 20, 2021

Attorney General James Reaches $1.1 Billion Agreement with Big Three Distributors to Treat and Prevent Opioid Use in NYS

 

AG James Has Now Reached Agreements That Could BringMore Than $1.6 Billion from Opioid Manufacturers, Distributors, and Consultants to NYS

Trial Against Remaining Three Opioid Manufacturers Continues in State Court

 New York Attorney General Letitia James today announced an agreement with McKesson Corporation, Cardinal Health Inc., and Amerisource Bergen Drug Corporation — three of the nation’s largest drug distributors — that will deliver up to $1.1 billion to New York state to combat the ongoing opioid epidemic. The $1.1 billion agreement is the largest monetary settlement ever negotiated by Attorney General James. The agreement resolves claims made by Attorney General James for the three companies’ role in helping to fuel the opioid epidemic and will remove the three distributors from New York’s ongoing opioid trial, currently underway in Suffolk County State Supreme Court.

“For more than two decades, the opioid epidemic has wreaked havoc on countless communities throughout New York and across the rest of the nation, killing hundreds of thousands of our friends and family members and addicting millions more,” said Attorney General James. “And over the course of these past two decades, McKesson, Cardinal Health, and Amerisource Bergen distributed these opioids without regard to the national crisis they were helping to fuel. But today, we’re holding them accountable and delivering more than $1 billion more into New York communities ravaged by opioids for treatment, recovery, and prevention efforts — bringing the statewide total our office has negotiated in the last month alone to more than $1.6 billion. While no amount of money will ever compensate for the millions of addictions, the hundreds of thousands of deaths, or the countless communities decimated by opioids, this money will be vital in preventing any future devastation.”

In March 2019, Attorney General James filed the nation’s most extensive lawsuit to hold accountable the various manufacturers and distributors responsible for the opioid epidemic. The manufacturers named in the complaint included Purdue Pharma and its affiliates, as well as members of the Sackler Family (owners of Purdue) and trusts they control; Janssen Pharmaceuticals and its affiliates (including its parent company Johnson & Johnson); Mallinckrodt LLC and its affiliates; Endo Health Solutions and its affiliates; Teva Pharmaceuticals USA, Inc. and its affiliates; and Allergan Finance, LLC and its affiliates. The distributors named in the complaint were McKesson Corporation, Cardinal Health Inc., Amerisource Bergen Drug Corporation, and Rochester Drug Cooperative Inc.

The cases against Mallinckrodt and Rochester Drug Cooperative are now moving separately through U.S. Bankruptcy Court. The case against Purdue and the Sacklers is also moving through U.S. Bankruptcy Court, but, earlier this month, Attorney General James and a majority of states announced their approval of an agreement that would force the Sacklers and entities they control to pay more than $4.5 billion for opioid abatement, as well as shut down Purdue, and ban the Sacklers from ever selling opioids again. The agreement is pending court approval.

Additionally, late last month, Attorney General James announced an agreement with Johnson & Johnson that removed the company from New York’s opioid trial in exchange for up to $230 million for the state’s opioid prevention and treatment efforts, as well as it ending the sale of opioids nationwide.

The trial against the three remaining defendants — Endo Health Solutions, Teva Pharmaceuticals USA, and Allergan Finance — is currently underway and will continue in state court.

Largest Monetary Recovery in Attorney General James’ Tenure

As part of today’s agreement, McKesson, Cardinal Health, and Amerisource Bergen will pay New York state a total of up to $1,179,251,066.68, of which more than $1 billion will go towards abatement. Payments will start in just two months and will continue over the course of the next 17 years.

The majority of the $1.1 billion payment will be a guaranteed, base payment, with the remaining funds earmarked as incentive payments to be paid if New York maximally bars, resolves, or releases current and future subdivision litigation. Put simply, the greater the level of participation from political subdivisions across New York state, the more funds that ultimately will be paid out for abatement to the state and to local communities over the course of the 18 total years. More specifically, today’s agreement ensures the vast majority of funds will be allocated and tracked at a regional level to communities across the state that have been most hard hit by the opioid epidemic.

Part of today’s payment includes New York’s share of a national pot that will be provided to states that did not hire outside counsel. Like most other funds announced today, these funds will be used for abatement purposes and will not go toward the state’s general fund. Finally, any national fund created to compensate private practice attorneys for lawyers’ fees will also be used to pay private attorneys used by New York’s political subdivisions, ensuring the more than $1 billion being announced today for opioid abatement will not be allocated to anything else.

National Coordination of Data on Opioid Distribution

In addition to negotiating the largest monetary settlement since she took office, Attorney General James — in the context of an anticipated upcoming national settlement — negotiated for a change in the way information about opioid orders is collected and employed nationwide. Pursuant to that agreement, McKesson, Cardinal Health, and Amerisource Bergen will implement a new process for collecting and analyzing data about opioid orders received by the other companies through the creation of a groundbreaking clearinghouse, operating under the oversight of an independent third-party monitor. Specifically, this clearinghouse will pool data from the three distributors in order to allow consistent and aggregated data analysis — giving each distributor the ability to account for their own opioid shipments, while simultaneously accounting for the shipments of the other distributors. Additionally, the clearinghouse will use the distributors’ collective data to establish pharmacy-specific opioid shipment limits that each distributor must follow.

This system will enable, for the first time, a truer picture of overall opioids distribution across the nation and will require drug distributors to alter their shipments based on the shipments of other distributors.

Today’s agreement would additionally resolve lawsuits against McKesson, Cardinal Health, and Amerisource Bergen by Nassau and Suffolk counties if the county legislatures approve the agreement next month. In the meantime, Attorney General James plans to make a motion to remove the three distributors from New York’s ongoing opioid trial today in state court.

Today’s agreement was negotiated in coordination with a larger global settlement that remains ongoing, but that could possibly end litigation by thousands of additional entities, including all litigation pending by state attorneys general around the nation. While a global agreement still remains under negotiation, if an agreement is reached before July 1, 2022, New York will join that settlement and the terms of today’s agreement will be folded into that settlement.

Separately, but related to her work on opioids, this past February, Attorney General James co-led a coalition of nearly every attorney general in the nation in delivering more than $573 million — more than $32 million of which was earmarked for New York state — toward opioid treatment and abatement in an agreement and consent judgment with McKinsey & Company. The agreement with one of the world’s largest consulting firms resolved investigations by the attorneys general into the company’s role in working for opioid companies, helping those companies promote their drugs, and profiting millions of dollars from the opioid epidemic.

Attorney General James is especially grateful for the close cooperation of a number of state attorneys general and their staffs in the negotiation of today’s agreement, and for their ongoing partnership in the unfinished work of delivering justice and meaningful relief to those impacted by the opioid epidemic in New York and nationwide.

Governor Cuomo Updates New Yorkers on State's Progress Combating COVID-19

 

33,428 Vaccine Doses Administered Over Last 24 Hours

2 COVID-19 Deaths Statewide Yesterday


 Governor Andrew M. Cuomo today updated New Yorkers on the state's progress combating COVID-19.

"New Yorkers have made great progress beating back this virus, but we have to make sure everyone who's able gets vaccinated as soon as possible to defeat COVID-19 for good - especially with new, more contagious variants of the virus out there," Governor Cuomo said. "Getting shots in arms is the critical factor we need to fully rebuild our economy and secure New York's future. If you haven't received your shot yet, there's ample supply and vaccination sites across the state, so make an appointment or simply walk in today."
  
Today's data is summarized briefly below:

  • Test Results Reported - 68,705
  • Total Positive - 1,144
  • Percent Positive - 1.67%
  • 7-Day Average Percent Positive - 1.31%
  • Patient Hospitalization - 424 (+46)
  • Patients Newly Admitted - 78
  • Patients in ICU - 89 (+10)
  • Patients in ICU with Intubation - 33 (+3)
  • Total Discharges - 185,945 (+39)
  • Deaths - 2
  • Total Deaths - 43,036
  • Total vaccine doses administered - 21,845,860
  • Total vaccine doses administered over past 24 hours - 33,428
  • Total vaccine doses administered over past 7 days - 234,675
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with at least one vaccine dose - 71.2%
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with completed vaccine series - 65.9%
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with at least one vaccine dose (CDC) - 74.0%
  • Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with completed vaccine series (CDC) - 67.5%
  • Percent of all New Yorkers with at least one vaccine dose - 59.4%
  • Percent of all New Yorkers with completed vaccine series - 54.7%
  • Percent of all New Yorkers with at least one vaccine dose (CDC) - 61.7%
  • Percent of all New Yorkers with completed vaccine series (CDC) - 56.0%

State Senator Gustavo Rivera - Marijuana in NY: Know Your Rights

 

GOVERNMENT HEADER

167 Days and Counting, I'm going back to the Bronx For City Hall in Your Borough

 


Let's see, do I really want to be in the Bronx right now with all the shootings. I was there last week with my public schools chancellor Meisha Ross Porter as we attended Congressman Bowman's announcement of the New Green Deal for Public Schools'. $1.43 Trillion Dollars, If I had that when I ran for President, that would be me sitting in the White House not Joe Biden. 


Back to the Bronx I will bring my administration as I did when I was running for re-election as your favorite mayor of New York City. Get ready next week starting on Monday July 26th City Hall in Your Borough will be in the Bronx. I will be with my favorite borough president Ruben Diaz Jr. The two of us can continue our conversation from the groundbreaking of the Hip Hop Museum we started two months ago.




City Launches Ten-Year Capital Strategy Website for Fiscal Year 2022

 

Updated Ten-Year Capital Strategy website offers a summary of $133.7 billion in planned spending, including the guiding principles and investment priorities that inform the City’s capital program

 Department of City Planning (DCP) Director Marisa Lago today announced the launch of the digital version of New York City's Ten-Year Capital Strategy for Fiscal Year 2022. Prepared biennially, the Ten-Year Capital Strategy reflects a broad, long-term vision for the City’s capital investments across all five boroughs.

“Building on our commitment to harness technology to make government more transparent, the Ten-Year Capital Strategy website makes the City’s budget more understandable and easier to navigate than ever. By articulating the guilding principles that steer our spending decisions, and breaking down infrastructure priorities and capital investment at the dollar level, this website shows New Yorkers where the money comes from and where it’s going. This is the type of information that New Yorkers need to help plan with us for a more equitable, resilient future,” DCP Director Marisa Lago said.

Produced with the Mayor’s Office of Management and Budget (OMB), the website lays out the comprehensive capital planning that the City undertakes as part of its responsibility to all New Yorkers, explains the connection between capital investment and strategic priorities, and identifies anticipated sources of funding. With easy-to-read graphics, charts, maps, and more, this interactive version of the strategy makes the content more accessible to community boards, policymakers and the public at large. 

The entire report is also available to download as a PDF.

Learn about the City’s plans to allocate $133.7 billion in the current Ten-Year Capital Strategy, including:

  • An Overview of Spending that shows how capital resources will be allocated by agency, service and lifecycle category, and breaks down the funding source for every dollar
  • Guiding Principles that provide City agencies with a long-term framework to use in developing their capital project portfolios and underlying planning processes. These four principles are:
    • Maintain New York City’s financial responsibility
    • Promote forward-looking, holistic capital planning that anticipates citywide and neighborhood needs of tomorrow
    • Advance a more equitable New York City through capital investment
    • Consider community perspectives in capital planning and decision-making
  • Investment Priorities that help City agencies make capital investments that reflect citywide policy and strategic goals. These five priorities are:
    • Maintain and modernize our infrastructure and facilities
    • Strengthen public health and safety
    • Catalyze economic recovery and broaden access to education
    • Support growth and preserve affordability in our diverse neighborhoods
    • Reinforce citywide climate resiliency

In addition, the website now includes the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the City’s Capital Program, from the burden on last year’s budget to how DCP and OMB adjusted to prioritize strategies that put the city’s recovery front and center.

The Ten-Year Capital Strategy is separate and distinct from the City’s adopted Capital Budget and four-year Capital Commitment Plan, which, due to the passage of time and other factors, reflect changes from the Ten-Year Capital Strategy. These documents are available on OMB’s website.

The Ten-Year Capital Strategy Plan website is one of many digital platforms DCP has developed to increase transparency and public engagement. Other available tools include:

  • ZAP, which makes details and status of all land use applications directly available to the public through an intuitive, searchable map-based interface
  • ZoLa, which provides zoning districts and associated information for any lot in the City
  • Population Factfinder, which provides any New Yorker the ability to quickly understand the demographics of any part of the five boroughs, and a range of deeper research options
  • Community District Profiles, which provide a robust, intuitive graphical overview of each of our 59 Community Districts, and handy comparison charts
  • Facilities Explorer, which provides an intuitive interface to explore where all City or State facilities lie within New York City, and who they serve 

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Department of City Planning 

The Department of City Planning (DCP) plans for the strategic growth and development of the City through ground-up planning with communities, the development of land use policies and zoning regulations applicable citywide, and its contribution to the preparation of the City’s 10-year Capital Strategy. DCP promotes housing production and affordability, fosters economic development and coordinated investments in infrastructure and services, and supports resilient, sustainable communities across the five boroughs for a more equitable New York City. 

In addition, DCP supports the City Planning Commission in its annual review of approximately 450 land use applications for a variety of discretionary approvals. The Department also assists both government agencies and the public by advising on strategic and capital planning and providing policy analysis, technical assistance and data relating to housing, transportation, community facilities, demography, zoning, urban design, waterfront areas and public open space. 

Office of Management and Budget

The Mayor’s Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is New York City government's chief financial agency. OMB's staff of more than 400 analysts assemble and oversee both the expense and capital budgets.  The Agency is also charged with evaluating the efficiency and cost-effectiveness of City services and proposals, and OMB's economists provide vital information to government officials on the local, United States and world economies. OMB also helps implement the City's borrowing and bond programs and conducts legal reviews of capital projects for financing with bond proceeds.

Housing Lottery Launches For 60 Units At The Arches In Mott Haven, The Bronx

 

The Arches in Mott Haven, The Bronx. All images courtesy of NYC Housing Connect

The affordable housing lottery has launched for The Arches, a pair of 25-story residential buildings at 228 East 135th Street in Mott Haven, The Bronx. Designed by Fischer + MakooiArchitect and developed by The Chess Builders, the structure yields 430 residences. Available on NYC Housing Connect are 60 units for residents at 130 percent of the area median income (AMI), ranging in eligible income from $72,000 to $167,570.

Residences at The Arches in Mott Haven, The Bronx

Residences at The Arches in Mott Haven, The Bronx

Residents will have access to a wide range of amenities including assigned parking, shared laundry room, yoga and dance studio, media room, business center, children’s playroom, a doorman, and a landscaped roof garden. Units include name-brand appliances and finishes, air conditioning, and hardwood floors.

Residences at The Arches in Mott Haven, The Bronx

At 130 percent of the AMI, there is one studio with a monthly rent of $2,100 for incomes ranging from $72,000 to $124,150; 25 one-bedrooms with a monthly rent of $2,221 for incomes ranging from $76,149 to $139,620; and 34 two-bedrooms with a monthly rent of $2,705 for incomes ranging from $92,743 to $167,570.

Prospective renters must meet income and household size requirements to apply for these apartments. Applications must be postmarked or submitted online no later than August 19, 2021.

NY Lottery Announces Take 5 Game to Be Drawn Twice Daily

 

More drawings mean more chances for New Yorkers to win

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 Starting Monday, July 26, New Yorkers will be able to play the popular Take 5 game twice daily. The new draw time at 2:30 p.m. aligns Take 5 with Numbers and Win4, which already draw twice daily. Sales for the newly-added mid-day drawing will close at 2:15 p.m. The daily drawing at 10:30 p.m. will continue as currently scheduled. 

“Take 5 created more than 2.5 million cash prize winners last fiscal year. The added drawing for this popular game will give New York players more chances to win,” said NY Lottery Executive Director Gweneth Dean.

Take 5 is played by selecting five numbers from 1-39. Prizes are paid on a pari-mutuel basis. Money in the prize pool is allocated by percentage to prize tiers and distributed based on the number of winners for each tier. If there is no top prize winner, the top prize money is added to the second prize. The overall odds of winning any prize is 1 in 8.77. Complete prize and odds information is available on the Lottery’s web site at nylottery.ny.gov.

Over the last three fiscal years, New York’s Take 5 game has generated more than $325 million in Lottery Aid to Education and produced more than eight million cash prize winners.

Council Member Ruben Diaz Sr. - HISPANICS RELEGATED POLITICALLY TO NOTHING


 WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW

By Councilman Rev. Ruben Diaz
18 District, Bronx
HISPANICS RELEGATED POLITICALLY TO NOTHING

You should know that during the past primaries the political power of the Hispanic Community was relegated to nothing, while the African Americans enveloped everything.

 
You should know that the Hispanic population has grown, with a large enough population to have obtained a citywide and statewide political office. It is unfortunate though, that we, the Latino Community, have never been able to achieve statewide and citywide high level elected positions. The Hispanic people have always been there and used as a political springboard for other groups, but unfortunately that springboard has not, reciprocally, sprung in the Hispanics direction.  
 

According to an article written by Mr. Leonard Greene, published in the Daily News on Sunday, July 18, stated that the political power of African Americans has practically come to control and have acquired most political elected positions in New York.  
 

In New York State, African Americans control three high level political, powerful positions, that of New York State Attorney General, State Assembly Majority Leader, and the Senate Majority Leader.
 

Following these primaries African-Americans’ are shaping up to practically control most of the relevant elected citywide seats, the Mayor's Office, Ombudsman, City Council Majority Leader, the Bronx, Queens and Brooklyn Borough Presidents, and many other City Council positions, Congressional seats, Senators, Assembly members, and even President/ Chairmanship of the Democratic Party in the Boroughs of the Bronx, Queens, Brooklyn, and Manhattan.
 

On the contrary, the Hispanic Community has been left with the dogs tail; since we have never been able to obtain the unity and solid support of the other ethnic groups to have obtained citywide and statewide positions such as mayor, Comptroller or Ombudsman. Even the Asian Community, having a much smaller population than that of the Hispanics have obtained the citywide position of comptroller in the past.
 
 
When and who will be the Latino that in the future will rise up with the unified support of all and acquire the mayor's office? We do not know! But we do know that whoever that individual may be, it cannot be one of those opportunists, and traitors who have allowed themselves to be used by others to divide the Hispanic community leaving it politically bankrupt. 
 

These individuals are the reason why Hispanics have (Politically) been relegated to nothing while other groups take the cake and leave us the crumbs.
 

I am Councilman Rev. Ruben Diaz and this is what you should know.