Yeah I have the same question.
did NY pay these people or were they paid by their other-state employers?
Yeah I have the same question.
"Volunteer" is kind of misleading.
I dunno. Seems like some out of state companies are volunteering their salaried employees to go help NY? It's hard to get more details on this story
If they're working for pay in NY, they pay NY taxes like pro athletes from out of state playing at MSG.
Yeah I get that during normal times.
He killed all those people in New York. Cuomo tried to stop him.
They were offering 10K a week for nurses.
Did trump know and ignore it?
Let’s see what honest broker has to say
no
Why can't the POTUS force cities to deport illegals? Explain how sanctuary cities can defy the POTUS who is in charge of them.
He killed them intentionally. He even bragged about it.
You're the one flip flopping on this and locking up like a snapping turtle.
we broke DMC
Guess I asked him one too many times if Trump made any mistakes.
He'll keep talking about us tho.
Lol sea cow bails out
Q. Do the governors agree that the federal government is in charge?
A. They do not. Governors have made clear in recent days, not for the first time, that they will make decisions for their states driven by data that show whether efforts to contain the virus are working. Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, a Republican, who was one of the first governors to take aggressive action, on Saturday refused to offer a timeline for reopening his state. “We’re not going to flip a switch and everything’s going to get back to normal until we get a vaccine, until we get a way to prevent this,” DeWine said on MSNBC.
Q. Does the president have the authority to override state and local orders?
A. No. Under our cons utional system, states have the power and responsibility for maintaining public order and safety. As we’ve seen since the outbreak began, decisions about limiting social interactions by ordering people to shelter in place, closing businesses and shutting schools are being made by governors and local officials. Those same officials will make the call about when to ease up. Trump’s comments “are just advisory,” said John Malcolm of the Heritage Foundation
Q. But the president has set a period until the end of April in which all Americans are being urged to drastically scale back their public activities. Doesn’t that amount to a national order?
A. No. The guidelines are voluntary, and they underscore the limits on Trump’s powers. He can use daily briefings and his Twitter account to try to shape public opinion, and he has not been reluctant to do so. “When Donald Trump selects a narrative and begins to advance it, especially through his Twitter account, it has a remarkable effect on those who trust him,” said Robert Chesney, a University of Texas law professor wrote on the Lawfare blog. Late last month, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis abandoned a county-by-county approach and issued a statewide stay-at-home order, saying he consulted with Trump and White House advisers before acting.
Q. Still, Trump has invoked some federal laws to address the virus outbreak, hasn’t he?
A. Yes, he has. The Stafford Act allows the expenditure of tens of billions of dollars in emergency assistance. The Defense Production Act allows the president to direct private companies to produce goods or acquire raw materials. But Trump can only assert powers that Congress has specifically given him. “There are real limits on the president and the federal government when it comes to domestic affairs,” John Yoo, a University of California at Berkeley law school professor, said on a recent Federalist Society conference call. At the same time, the federal government has the power, under laws aimed at preventing the spread of communicable diseases, to quarantine people when they arrive in the United States and travel between state
Q. Is it clear that state and local governments have authority to impose the severe restrictions we’ve seen?
A. Lawsuits already are challenging state actions on religious grounds and as seizures of property for which the government must pay compensation. But for more than 100 years, the Supreme Court has upheld states’ robust use of their authority, even when it restricts people’s freedoms. In 1905, the court rejected a Massachusetts pastor’s complaint that he should not be forced to get a smallpox vaccine or pay a fine, Malcolm noted
https://apnews.com/b6196841a11fcfdb0b8fe7de68453c39
premature speculation... age related no doubt
No . Italy has being going through this for a month now. Do NY'ers think they're special?
And I think that’s where the hitch might be. The system might be telling them to pay but I think this will be solved by simply overwriting that mandate “manually” if you will to fit the cir stance.
But I tend to agree with chump if indeed they’re getting paid to “volunteer.”
Oh
He lost weight
Wait
That may be one of his turds
Whats this out of place lashing out for?
while must states are thinking of reopening by the end of this week, this state is doubling down on staying closed.
Don't mean to be so hard, but all this seems to be written on the wall, tbh. To be fair, I'd rather have NY's leadership right now. Wish my state wasn't run by a death cult.
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