Letter writer ignores reality of lax criminal justice reforms on small-town communities

Posted 16 July 2026 at 2:46 pm

Editor:

It is exhausting to read the regular contributions from William Fine, which have devolved from political disagreement into outright hostility toward his neighbors. Whenever someone in our community raises valid, common-sense concerns about the strain on our local infrastructure, crime, or public safety, Mr. Fine’s immediate response is to throw around labels like “racist,” “bigoted,” and “hateful.”

This isn’t debate it’s an attempt to silence people. Disagreeing with New York’s bail reform or worrying about the logistical and financial strain of unfettered immigration does not make someone a bad person—it makes them a concerned citizen.

Mr. Fine loves to cite ivory-tower studies from New York City think tanks to tell us that everything is fine. But those academic statistics don’t line up with the reality facing upstate communities. Our local law enforcement, judges, and small-town budgets are dealing with real-time pressures and repeat offenders that these studies completely ignore.

We live in a community where people look out for one another, regardless of politics. It is deeply disappointing that a United States veteran uses his platform not to bridge gaps, but to express unfettered hatred for anyone who doesn’t subscribe to his specific progressive ideology. Orleans County deserves a conversation grounded in mutual respect and local reality, not partisan vitriol from Brockport.

Paul Lauricella

Yates