Biography

Assemblymember  Sarahana Shrestha

Sarahana Shrestha was born and raised in Kathmandu, Nepal, and moved to the United States in 2001 as a student. She became naturalized as an American citizen at the Ulster County Courthouse in 2019.

Growing up in Nepal, Sarahana lived through a historic uprising for democracy against a centuries-old monarchy, and a decade-long civil war that claimed lives and transformed the country forever. Her view of justice and democracy was shaped by bearing witness to extreme wealth inequality, the intersection of ethnicity, caste, gender, religion, and class, and the impact the addition of public goods, such as roads, had on previously neglected communities.

In the Hudson Valley, Sarahana found her bearings as a climate organizer. She joined campaigns to stop fossil fuel plants and to bring energy democracy to New York State. She decided to run for office because this moment of crisis demands bold action on everything that constitutes our safety net: climate, housing, healthcare, public education, jobs, worker rights, childcare, and more.

The onset of the Covid-19 pandemic confirmed Sarahana’s belief that the investments in our future must be in social and care infrastructure. In the Hudson Valley, lifelong residents witnessed neighborhoods change overnight due to the volatile housing market, working parents were left to juggle childcare and work, and essential workers had no option but to risk their lives. Sarahana recognizes that the reactive temporary measures put in place are not enough to protect us from increasingly frequent emergencies under climate change in an unsustainable economy. To be resilient, we must guarantee stability to working families, build infrastructure for the public good, and organize our economy toward well-being, not profits.

Sarahana is proud to be the first New York State legislator of Nepali origin, and only first-generation immigrant to represent this district in its history. She lives in the Town of Esopus with her husband, their dog, and several free-spirited chickens.

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Assemblymember Shrestha Urges the PSC to Conduct an Analysis on Whether Public Ownership of Central Hudson Will Lower its Rates, and to Lower the Authorized Rate of Return on Equity that Determines How Much Profit It Can Collect

Kingston, NY – While Assemblymember Shrestha is in session in Albany amidst budget negotiations, a representative of her office will submit the following comment on her behalf at today’s PSC hearing in Kingston: “We give investor-owned utilities...

Assemblymember Shrestha Will Host an Online Town Hall to Provide Updates on the Ongoing Central Hudson Rate Case

Kingston, NY – The Office of Assemblymember Sarahana Shrestha is an intervening party to the ongoing Central Hudson rate case, which is undergoing confidential settlement negotiations. The Department of Public Service is expected to release a joint...

AM Shrestha Says Governor Hochul’s Time Would Be Better Spent Staying in Albany to Pass a Budget Than Coming to Ulster County for a Press Conference

Kingston, NY – Governor Hochul was in Kingston this afternoon to tout her proposed changes to the state’s discovery law, specifically Kalief’s law, a policy item with no fiscal implications that is holding up state budget negotiations. AM Shrestha...

AM Shrestha Commends the Ulster County Legislature for Withdrawing Res. No. 165, Says Its Passage Would Have Been an Endorsement of Torture

Kingston, NY – “I commend Ulster County legislators for reconsidering a vote on Res. No. 165, and the sponsor for withdrawing it altogether,” said Assemblymember Shrestha, “I’m cautiously optimistic that no other attempt to undo the HALT law...

Floor Speech on Assembly One-House Budget Bill

Despite the state having a higher GDP than entire nations like Sweden, New Yorkers have seen diminished spending power in recent years, owing to exceptional housing costs as the gap between wages and inflation widens. Meanwhile, as of 2022, the top 1.5%...

AM Shrestha Says Assembly’s Modest Proposal to Tax the Rich More Must Be Included in the Final Budget

Albany – The Assembly passed its “one-house” budget proposal today, which proposes a spending of $256.5 billion – $4.5 billion or 1.8 percent over the Executive proposal. This increase is largely attributed to commitments to human services, Medicaid,...
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