The Schenectady County Legislature on Jan. 1, 2026, amended its rules to create a standing committee on food and nutrition and Chair Gary Hughes said the county will provide $3 million to support the Electric City Food Co-op in downtown Schenectady.
The rules amendment (Resolution 6-26) was read by the clerk and explained in remarks from Chair Hughes; the roll-call vote on the rules amendment was recorded as 14 aye, 1 absent and the resolution passed. In explaining his vote earlier, Hughes tied the committee creation to recent experience during a period of need and to a new "neighbor helping neighbor" initiative he had cited in his remarks.
Hughes described the committee as a standing body the legislature will use to sustain food-and-nutrition efforts in the face of federal cuts and to support local projects designed to improve access to groceries and nutrition services. He specifically said: "Tonight, we'll take action to provide a total of $3,000,000 in county funds to support the opening of the Electric City Food Co-op in Downtown Schenectady." The chair also referenced other planned investments, including an aquatic center on the SUNY Schenectady campus and a full-service supermarket and housing project for the Hamilton Hill neighborhood.
The resolution as read amended the legislature's rules of order and procedure to create the committee; the transcript records the amendment's passage by roll call. The chair's speech framed the committee and the funding pledge as part of a broader strategy for neighborhood revitalization, food security and community partnerships. The precise budget authorization and next administrative steps were not read as part of the resolution text in the transcript; further detail will need to be confirmed in subsequent committee materials and written resolutions.