Right now, there are close to 10,000 bills in Albany. Frequently, the only thing legislators know about a bill is what is included in the one sentence official description. They often vote based on this single sentence. We are getting feedback from legislators and staffers showing that they believe A6761/S8352 only affects homeless children and not every minor in the state.
We must make sure they understand what this bill really does. We need to set the record straight! And get the Assembly and State Senate to publish an accurate description of the bill.
TAKE ACTION
Please use the panel to the right to send a message to your Assemblymember and State Senator telling them the truth about A6761/S8352.
Please call your Assemblymember and State Senator and politely let them know that despite what the official description says, this bill applies to EVERY child in New York.
Look them up here:
https://nyassembly.gov/mem/search/
https://www.nysenate.gov/find-my-senator
Call the bill sponsors and politely ask what they intend to do to stop this deception of the people of New York about A6761/S8352:
Senator Rachel May, (518) 455-2838, (315) 478-8745
Karines Reyes, Sponsor, (718) 931-2620, (518) 455-5102
Call the bosses of the legislature and politely ask what they intend to do to stop this deception of the people of New York about A6761/S8352:
Andrea Stewart-Cousins, Senate Majority Leader
Legislative Office Building, Room 907
Albany, NY 12247
Phone: (518) 455-2585
Fax: (518) 426-6811
Twitter/X: @AndreaSCousins
https://www.facebook.com/andrea.stewartcousins
Carl Heastie, Speaker of the Assembly
LOB 932, Albany, NY 12248
(518) 455-3791, (718) 654-6539
Twitter/X: @carlheastie
https://www.facebook.com/carl.heastie
Asm. Reyes acknowledges the bill covers all children in the Memo she wrote for the bill saying it would allow “A minor who comprehends the need for, the nature of, and the reasonably foreseeable risks involved in a health services, as well as alternatives, may consent to the service on their own.” No age limit, no limit to "homeless" minors, this includes all minors in the State.
Similarly, the New York Civil Liberties Union in a statement supporting A6761/S8352, wrote “A.6761 (Reyes) would fill the gaps in New York law by allowing decisionally-capable young people to consent to their own health care. The NYCLU strongly supports A.6761 and urges its immediate passage.”
Legislators need to consider these issues:
The minimum age for everything is being raised, but lowered for medical procedures and drugs
For more than a decade, New York legislators have been steadily raising the minimum age for minors to do everything from using tanning salons to buying tobacco to getting married. Yet in the world view expressed in A6761, a 12-year-old is not mature enough to go to a tanning salon but he or she is old enough to decide to remove healthy organs.
These are just some of the ways New York has raised minimum ages for minors:
2012, Age for using a tanning salon raised to 16.
2012, Minimum age for piercings and tattoos without parental consent set at 18
2016, Age for tanning raised to 18
2017, Age of marriage raised from 14 to 17 with parental and judicial consent
2019, Minimum age a person can be prosecuted as an adult raised to 18
2019, Minimum age to buy tobacco and e-cigarettes raised from 18 to 21
2020, Legal age of marriage raised to 18
2021, Age to buy a semi-automatic rifle raised from 18 to 21
2022, Age to buy nitrous oxide cylinders raised to 21
2023, Juvenile delinquency prosecution of any child under 12 banned
2024, Minimum age to drive an All-Terrrain Vehicle (ATV) raised from 10 to 14.
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