Image of August 2010 RIOC Board Of Directors Meeting
By coincidence, on the same day that the Roosevelt Island Operating Corp ( RIOC ) took it’s first step to get government out of the retail leasing and management business by issuing the Roosevelt Island Main Street Master Leaseholder RFP , New York State Governor David Paterson clamped down on the RIOC governance reform legislation sponsored by Assembly Member Micah Kellner by vetoing it. The bill, A10392, provided according to Mr. Kellner:

…that Islanders will have a greater role in the governing processit opens up the corporation to the public and establishes the principle that Island residents must have a say in how the Island is run.

The legislation gives the public a role in the process of hiring the RIOC President requiring the Board of Directors to consider at least three candidates for the job and to hold hearings allowing members of the public as well as Board members to interview the candidates. It requires that meetings of the Board of Directors be subject to the states open meetings law, and specifies that members of the public must have an opportunity to comment on all agenda items before the Board votes on those items.

The bill also provides that two of the public members of RIOCs Board of Directors will be chosen upon the recommendation of the Speaker of the Assembly and the Temporary President of the State Senatewho will make their suggestions based on consultation with the local member of the Assembly and the Senate, ensuring input for the elected officials who are most answerable to Roosevelt Island residents…

Asked to comment on the Governor’s veto, Assembly Member Kellner replied:

I am incredibly disappointed that Governor Paterson vetoed the RIOC reform legislation I introduced, and I vehemently disagree with the reasons he has given for his veto. By passing the reform bill with overwhelming margins, the legislature clearly communicated its intent that RIOC should be more open and accessible, and that Island residents should have a greater say in the Islands decision-making process. RIOCs decisions have a vastly bigger impact on Island residents than on anyone else, and the needs of those who live on the Island should outweigh the abstract concerns expressed by the Governor in his veto message.

By rejecting these common-sense measures, the Governor has set back the cause of open government and public authorities reform. Nonetheless, I will not stop fighting to open up RIOC and make it more accountable to the Island residents it serves. I will bring these reforms back as many times as it takes to make them a reality.

Governor Paterson’s veto statement on the proposed Roosevelt Island governance reform legislation is below. Roosevelt Island Governance Reform Veto