Mr. Flanagan and his counsel, David Lewis, have strenuously argued that the practice is supported by state law and precedent, noting that it began in March 2015, when Mr. Skelos asked that two vice chairmen
receive lulus diverted from their actual committee chairman.
Not exact matches
At the Brennan Center in 2004, Creelan wrote what has become an ur - text of state government dysfunction, which was especially withering of the arrangement in which state lawmakers
receive «
lulus» or stipends for leadership and committee posts.
The use of falsely classifying lawmakers as committee chairs came under scrutiny on Friday as The New York Times reported members of the Independent Democratic Conference — Sens. David Valesky, Jose Peralta and Diane Savino — have
received stipends, or «
lulus» in Albany parlance, despite holding the post of vice chair.
The lawmakers in question
received paid stipends or «
lulus» as a result of being designated committee chairs.
Lawmakers are being scrutinized for the system in which up to seven senators have
received paid stipends or «
lulus» for committee chairmanships they do not actually hold.
And over the last two weeks,
lulus have become a byword for Albany's political self - dealing, after news that eight senators — all members of a ruling coalition led by Republicans — had
received tens of thousands in such payments for jobs they did not hold.
Lawmakers currently earn $ 79,500, but are allowed to
receive outside income and have added on pay in the form of stipends or «
lulus.»
The payments were revealed last week by The New York Times, which reported that IDC members have
received committee leadership stipends, often called
lulus, even though they were vice chairs, not chairs, of the committees they serve on.
Last week, we reported on how seven Senators
received bonuses (called
lulus in Albany parlance) for leadership positions they didn't actually hold.