196th New York State Legislature
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Legislative bodyNew York State Legislature
JurisdictionNew York, United States
TermJanuary 1, 2005 – December 31, 2006
Members62
| 196th New York State Legislature | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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New York State Capitol (2009) | |||||
| Overview | |||||
| Legislative body | New York State Legislature | ||||
| Jurisdiction | New York, United States | ||||
| Term | January 1, 2005 – December 31, 2006 | ||||
| Senate | |||||
| Members | 62 | ||||
| President | Lt. Gov. Mary Donohue (R) | ||||
| Temporary President | Joseph Bruno (R) | ||||
| Party control | Republican | ||||
| Assembly | |||||
| Members | 150 | ||||
| Speaker | Sheldon Silver (D) | ||||
| Party control | Democratic | ||||
| Sessions | |||||
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The 196th New York State Legislature, consisting of the New York State Senate and the New York State Assembly, met from January 5, 2005, to December 31, 2006, during the eleventh and twelfth years of George Pataki's governorship, in Albany.
Senators
The asterisk (*) denotes members of the previous Legislature who continued in office as members of this Legislature. Jeffrey D. Klein and George H. Winner Jr. changed from the Assembly to the Senate at the beginning of this legislature. Assemblywoman Catharine Young was elected to fill a vacancy in the Senate.
Note: For brevity, the chairmanships omit the words "...the Committee on (the)..."
| District | Senator | Party | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | Kenneth LaValle* | Republican | |
| 2nd | John J. Flanagan* | Republican | |
| 3rd | Caesar Trunzo* | Republican | |
| 4th | Owen H. Johnson* | Republican | |
| 5th | Carl L. Marcellino* | Republican | |
| 6th | Kemp Hannon* | Republican | |
| 7th | Michael Balboni* | Republican | |
| 8th | Charles J. Fuschillo Jr.* | Republican | |
| 9th | Dean Skelos* | Republican | |
| 10th | Ada L. Smith* | Democrat | |
| 11th | Frank Padavan* | Republican | |
| 12th | George Onorato* | Democrat | |
| 13th | John Sabini* | Democrat | |
| 14th | Malcolm Smith* | Democrat | |
| 15th | Serphin R. Maltese* | Cons./Rep. | |
| 16th | Toby Ann Stavisky* | Democrat | |
| 17th | Martin Malave Dilan* | Democrat | |
| 18th | Velmanette Montgomery* | Democrat | |
| 19th | John L. Sampson* | Democrat | |
| 20th | Carl Andrews* | Democrat | |
| 21st | Kevin Parker* | Democrat | |
| 22nd | Martin Golden* | Republican | |
| 23rd | Diane Savino | Democrat | |
| 24th | John J. Marchi* | Republican | |
| 25th | Martin Connor* | Democrat | |
| 26th | Liz Krueger* | Democrat | |
| 27th | Carl Kruger* | Democrat | |
| 28th | José M. Serrano | Democrat | |
| 29th | Thomas Duane* | Democrat | |
| 30th | David Paterson* | Democrat | Minority Leader; on November 7, 2006, elected Lieutenant Governor |
| 31st | Eric Schneiderman* | Democrat | |
| 32nd | Rubén Díaz Sr.* | Democrat | |
| 33rd | Efrain Gonzalez Jr.* | Democrat | |
| 34th | Jeffrey D. Klein* | Democrat | |
| 35th | Nicholas A. Spano* | Republican | |
| 36th | Ruth Hassell-Thompson* | Democrat | |
| 37th | Suzi Oppenheimer* | Democrat | |
| 38th | Thomas P. Morahan* | Republican | |
| 39th | William J. Larkin Jr.* | Republican | |
| 40th | Vincent Leibell* | Republican | |
| 41st | Stephen M. Saland* | Republican | |
| 42nd | John Bonacic* | Republican | |
| 43rd | Joseph Bruno* | Republican | re-elected Temporary President |
| 44th | Hugh T. Farley* | Republican | |
| 45th | Betty Little* | Republican | |
| 46th | Neil Breslin* | Democrat | |
| 47th | Raymond A. Meier* | Republican | |
| 48th | James W. Wright* | Republican | |
| 49th | David J. Valesky | Democrat | |
| 50th | John A. DeFrancisco* | Republican | |
| 51st | James L. Seward* | Republican | |
| 52nd | Thomas W. Libous* | Republican | |
| 53rd | George H. Winner Jr.* | Republican | |
| 54th | Michael F. Nozzolio* | Republican | |
| 55th | James S. Alesi* | Republican | |
| 56th | Joseph Robach* | Republican | |
| 57th | Patricia McGee* | Republican | died on April 2, 2005 |
| Catharine Young* | Republican | on May 10, 2005, elected to fill vacancy[1] | |
| 58th | William Stachowski* | Democrat | |
| 59th | Dale M. Volker* | Republican | |
| 60th | Byron Brown* | Democrat | on November 8, 2005, elected Mayor of Buffalo |
| Marc A. Coppola | Democrat | on February 28, 2006, elected to fill vacancy[2] | |
| 61st | Mary Lou Rath* | Republican | |
| 62nd | George D. Maziarz* | Republican | |
Employees
- Secretary: ?