Pubdate: Fri, 30 Dec 2016 Source: Journal News, The (NY) Copyright: 2016 The Gannett Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.lohud.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1205 NEW NY LAWS: BATTLING HEROIN, INCREASING MINIMUM WAGE A new year brings new laws in New York, including stronger treatment options for opioid addiction and increasing the state's minimum wage. New York's minimum wage increases Dec. 31, 2016. ALBANY -- A new year brings new laws in New York, including stronger treatment options for opioid addiction and increasing the state's minimum wage. Many of the state's new laws each year are pegged to the start of the calendar year, and in the case of the higher minimum wage, it starts Saturday, Dec. 31. The state's minimum wage is increasing from $9 an hour to $11 an hour in New York City, and to $10.50 for businesses in the city with fewer than 10 employees. On Long Island and in Westchester County, the increase is from $9 to $10 per hour; while the rest of the state's minimum wage is rising from $9 to $9.70 per hour. "No one who works full-time should be condemned to a life of poverty," Gov. Andrew Cuomo said in a statement Thursday. Here's a look at the key new laws: The state has passed a series of new laws in recent years to fight a surge in heroin and opioid addiction, and several of them take effect Jan. 1. "We have removed artificial barriers that prevented New Yorkers from receiving the help they need and put into place new safeguards to get these drugs off the street," Cuomo said in a statement. A law will end the requirement of needing prior insurance authorization in order to go immediately into an inpatient treatment facility -- something lawmakers and health-care advocates said was an impediment to getting immediate care for people in need. There are other laws associated with medical treatment for opioid addition that also go into effect, such as requiring insurers to pay for medicine to treat substance abuse in emergency situations and expanding access to naloxone -- a drug that can reverse the effects of an overdose. "This legislative package removes many of the burdensome insurance coverage barriers keeping people from treatment," Sen. Terrence Murphy, R-Yorktown, Westchester County, who sponsored many of the bills, said in a statement. [non drug-policy -relevant portions, snipped] - --- MAP posted-by: