Following statewide referendum, the larger half of the Legislature has gone paperless
Many of New York's 213 legislators joined the digital age Wednesday.
The 150 desks in the Assembly's ornate chamber had computer tablets mounted, with four large boxes on the screens that legislators can touch to see their calendars, look up bills, research legislation and find out where a particular measure stands before it can be voted on.
Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie said they were starting the switch on Earth Day, noting that it will save paper and money.
"It seems to be working," Assemblyman James Tedisco said, giving his tablet a test run. A longtime advocate for the change, he commended the feature that lets him look up every existing state law from his desk and noted that the computer wasn't set up for texting, browsing Facebook or other distractions.
Binders with paper copies of the bills were also set on the desks before the Assembly convened Wednesday. That will continue through the end of the legislative session in June so they have a backup in case of technical glitches, Tedisco said.
Down the hall in the Capitol, the ornate Senate chamber still had only the fat binders of paper on its 63 lawmakers' desks. The computer wiring is in place, iPads and other hardware have been ordered, and the computers should be up and running in May, a spokesman said.
New Yorkers approved a constitutional amendment last fall that permits the Legislature to switch from printed to electronic bills.
Tedisco, a Schenectady County Republican, moved on Wednesday to advocate that legislators save more trees and tax dollars and put an end to constituent mailers.
Assembly members get about $39,000 each annually for legislative postage and printing, often meaning thousands of pieces of direct mail that look like campaign ads. Saying he hasn't sent bulk mail like that since 2010, Tedisco has begun advocating "tweet and meet" instead, using email, Facebook, Twitter and seeing constituents in public places.