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Lawyer tells court race influenced charges in UAlbany bus case
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Ariel Agudio sits quietly during her sentencing Friday June 16, 2017 in front of Judge Roger McDonough at the Albany County Judicial Center in Albany, N.Y. Aguido s attorney argued to have her two convictions thrown out on Feb. 8, 2021. (Skip Dickstein/Times Union)SKIP DICKSTEINShow MoreShow Less
2of5Ariel Agudio, right joined by her attorney Mark Mishler responds to a question from the judge during her sentencing Friday June 16, 2017 in front of Judge Roger McDonough at the Albany County Judicial Center in Albany, N.Y. (Skip Dickstein/Times Union)SKIP DICKSTEINShow MoreShow Less
Churchill: Cuomo announcement a step toward vaccine sanity
The governor said Friday that New York will open vaccination to those with comorbidities beginning Feb. 15.
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Laura Greco, a cancer patient, had been considering getting a restaurant job to access the COVID-19 vaccine. After an announcement by Gov. Andrew Cuomo on Friday, that won t be necessary. (Skip Dickstein/Times Union)SKIP DICKSTEIN
ALBANY After Thursday’s column about Laura Greco, the cancer patient frustrated that New York had left her ineligible for the vaccine, I heard from many people in similar situations.
I heard, for example, from Kelley McAfee in Queensbury, who five years ago was diagnosed with a rare, incurable type of blood cancer. She, too, was frustrated by absurd New York rules that opened COVID-19 vaccinations up to roughly half the population but not her.