The Suffolk County Legislature voted April 9 to authorize County-funded litigation challenging New York State's law moving most local elections to even-numbered years, a decision that followed a lengthy public-comment period in which dozens of residents and advocates urged opposing positions.
Supporters of the authorization framed the State action as a threat to local control and the county charter. "This is in defense of what we've ... fought for: local control," said Legislator Anthony Piccirillo on the floor, arguing that local issues would be overshadowed if combined with state and federal races.
Opponents and community groups urged the Legislature not to spend taxpayer dollars on litigation. Planned Parenthood Hudson Peconic Director Lauren LaMagna told lawmakers the organization opposed using public funds to contest the change, saying consolidated even-year elections raise turnout in communities that typically vote at lower rates in off-year contests. "Holding local elections at the same time will make the process less confusing for voters and will lead to greater participation of all Suffolk County citizens in local elections," LaMagna said.
Public speakers included civic groups, voter-rights advocates and residents. Many described the change as a civic-engagement reform; others said the move was a partisan power play and an intrusion on municipal autonomy. Political consultants and local activists on both sides warned of larger political consequences.
After debate the Legislature first rejected a motion to table. On final consideration members authorized the County Attorney to commence litigation; the vote count recorded in the meeting minutes was 13 in favor and 5 opposed. The resolution authorized the County to contract with legal counsel to pursue a challenge to the State's enactment.
What happens next: The County will move forward with procurement or retention of outside counsel according to procurement rules and the RFP-waiver procedures noted in the record. Any litigation would be filed in State or federal court and could take months to resolve; in parallel, advocates on both sides said they plan to continue civic outreach to voters.
Reporting note: Public comments for and against the action were extensive and included detailed claims about turnout, equity and costs. The vote authorizes litigation; it does not change local election dates.