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 Queens leaders call on Hochul to restore Excluded Workers Fund 
 BY SKYE OSTREICHER 
 New Yorkers 50-plus helped build our city and  
 make it the great place that it is: and city leaders  
 must be dedicated to addressing the challenges this  
 population experiences. 
 Visit PoliticsNY.com and learn how Mayor-elect  
 Adams will raise the issue of ageism and make sure  
 his administration confronts it head on. As a leader  
 in Age Friendly policies, how will Mayor-elect Adams  
 broaden this work throughout NYC? 
 Beth Finkel, State Director of AARP New York,  
 shared with Mayor-elect Adams, “one of our thoughts  
 is actually renaming NYC’s Dept of the Aging – not a  
 very forward-thinking name – and I’m thinking it’d  
 be right up your alley to come up with a stronger, better  
 name.” 
 To which Adams replied, “we’re looking for Seniors  
 to come up with the best name for it… We are  
 open. The name should be more active than the Department  
 of Aging. I say it’s the Department of Living. 
  Whatever name our seniors come up with, we’re  
 gonna put it out to you.” 
 Adams is known for making Brooklyn the first  
 age-friendly borough, and now will be able to orchestrate  
 an age-friendly NYC. Part of this plan will offer  
 restaurant, theater and transportation discounts for  
 TIMESLEDGER   |   QNS.18     COM   |   DEC. 17 - DEC. 23, 2021 
 seniors, he shared. 
 Adams will be rolling out his 100-day plan and at  
 the heart of it is how NYC becomes more inclusive,  
 especially of  its seniors. AARP New York will also  
 be delivering a plan to the new administration with  
 some ideas from its membership. 
 This video interview is sponsored by AARP New  
 York, which represents 750,000 members in New  
 York City. 
 Watch the full video at PoliticsNY.com. 
 BY JULIA MORO 
 Elected officials and community  
 organizers are calling  
 on  Gov.  Kathy  Hochul  to  immediately  
 invest an additional  
 $3 billion to the New York State  
 Excluded Workers  Fund  to  aid  
 countless immigrant families  
 previously  left  out  of  crucial  
 financial support. 
 Queens Borough President  
 Donovan Richards sent a letter  
 to Hochul on Wednesday, Dec. 8,  
 urging  the  governor  to  replenish  
 the fund that quickly ran out  
 of funds to dispense.  
 “There is no doubt that our  
 excluded workers still face  
 severe economic hardship,”  
 Richards said. “Even after this  
 week’s announcement that the  
 $2 billion fund has been fully exhausted, 
  it is clear that a pressing  
 need for additional financial  
 assistance still exists here in  
 Queens.” 
 After over a year of civil disobedience  
 in hunger strikes and  
 marches, activists were able to  
 secure $2.1 billion from the state  
 for excluded workers. Since  
 online  applications  opened  in  
 early August, over $2 billion has  
 gone out the door to families in  
 need.  
 Now that there is no money  
 left in the fund, activists have  
 taken to the streets once again  
 to make sure all excluded workers  
 who needed this aid can still  
 get it. 
 Workers chanted, “Who  
 feeds us while we feed you” and  
 “All I want for Christmas is  
 to not get left behind,” as they  
 marched down the streets near  
 Bryant Park on Friday, Dec. 10. 
 Jackson Heights state Senator  
 Jessica Ramos, the original  
 sponsor of the bill that established  
 the fund, joined activists  
 groups, including Make  
 the Road New York and others,  
 to  call  for  additional  funding  
 before the holidays. 
 Ramos said the excluded  
 workers fund has been a tremendous  
 success, and it desperately  
 needs to be extended.  
 “We saw how this fund  
 pumped important money into  
 our small business,” Ramos  
 said. “We helped our immigrants  
 catch up on their bills,  
 pay their rent, buy school supplies  
 for their kids, put food on  
 the table. We didn’t just hold this  
 city down during the pandemic;  
 we built this city. It is the immigrant  
 workforce that has always  
 made this city happen.” 
 Advocates have estimated  
 that  around  50,000  applicants  
 were left out of aid due to a lack  
 of funds. However, that number  
 doesn’t include the hundreds of  
 thousands they say face barriers  
 to applying on time.  
 Guillermo Campos, a vendor  
 at Corona Plaza, said when  
 he got laid off during the pandemic, 
  he wasn’t able to receive  
 unemployment. 
 “When I found out about  
 the first round of the Excluded  
 Workers Fund, I was too ill to  
 apply,” Campos said. “I wasn’t  
 physically capable of applying.  
 I’m here because I’m asking  
 Governor Hochul to earmark  
 $3  billion  this  coming  year  
 because $2.1 billion wasn’t  
 enough. There were many like  
 me who weren’t able to apply to  
 the Excluded Workers Fund the  
 first time around. But we’re going  
 to win this time and we’re  
 going to win $3 billion dollars.” 
 More  than  350,000  New  
 Yorkers applied for aid, nearly  
 all receiving the highest tier of  
 benefits — a one-time payment  
 of $15,600.  
 Ramos pointed out how excluded  
 workers could not receive  
 unemployment or other  
 government benefits during the  
 height of the pandemic, yet still  
 paid and pay taxes.  
 “Ninety-nine percent of the  
 applications approved all paid  
 their taxes the last three years.  
 What does that tell you?” Ramos  
 said. “It tells you that the excluded  
 fund is our money, we put that  
 money in there, and we deserve  
 it back. We’re simply asking  
 Hochul  to  give  us  what’s  ours.  
 Recognize our labor and bring  
 justice to our communities.” 
 Hundreds marched in Manhattan on Dec. 10 to call on Gov. Kathy  
 Hochul to invest in the Excluded Workers Fund.     
 Photo courtesy of Make the Road New York 
 NYC’S MAN IN DEMAND: MAYOR-ELECT ERIC ADAMS 
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