Hochul’s climate law delay confounds environmentalists, Dems
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The Bottom Line
New York Governor Hochul is pushing to delay climate law emission mandates citing energy cost concerns.
How This Affects You
If emission mandates are delayed, New York may miss climate targets and reduce air quality improvements, potentially increasing respiratory illness and healthcare costs for state residents.
AI Summary
Governor Kathy Hochul is pushing New York state lawmakers to delay emission mandates mandated under the state's climate law, citing concerns that stricter regulations will drive up utility and gas bills for residents. Hochul visited Tonawanda to make the case directly to legislators, framing the delay as necessary to shield consumers from energy cost spikes amid global fossil fuel market volatility. The move has fractured her coalition: environmentalists and fellow Democrats argue she is using temporary energy market conditions as cover to weaken environmental protections the state enacted to meet climate goals. The dispute reflects tension between the governor's economic concerns and climate advocates' push to keep New York on track with its emissions-reduction targets. The outcome will determine whether the state's climate law enforcement proceeds as originally intended or faces rollbacks.
What's Being Done
Governor visited lawmakers to make case for delay; environmentalists and Democrats are opposing the effort to weaken environmental protections.
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