Dear reader,
What an exciting time to start covering Onondaga County! I jumped into my new job on the last day of September, so my first two weeks have been absorbed with the budget and elections and trying to learn as much as I can as quickly as possible. (If you have advice or a unique perspective on the county, I’d love to hear from you!)
Although I’ve been away for a few years, I’m a daughter of upstate New York. I grew up in Owego, a small, historic town on the banks of the Susquehanna. Local politics, with all their idiosyncrasies, have always been a part of my life. (I have vivid memories of being an anxious ten-year-old getting up to speak at a county hearing on fracking.)
Growing up in a small, close-knit community taught me the patience to listen for nuance in complex stories.
When I report ongoing stories, I sometimes think about what it was like to be a little girl in the 2011 flood that swallowed the streets of my town. First came hard news and stark details: the downtown shelter had to be moved to higher ground because it flooded; people used kayaks and canoes to rescue their neighbors; and waterlogged books piled up next to the second-hand bookstore in town.

Later, there was the aftermath: FEMA descended on our town and people grappled with relief on the one hand, and exhaustion with bureaucracy on the other. I work to capture those details in the stories I cover.
I’ve spent the last five years in Alaska, Tajikistan, and suburban New Jersey, but a part of my heart has always stayed in upstate New York. I am so excited to get to know a new part of this state that I love. I have broad interests—agriculture, migration, incarceration, labor, and more—and I hope to use my role covering the county to examine the effects of seemingly small, bureaucratic decisions and processes on real lives.
I’m always thrilled to meet new people and would love to hear from you! With almost half a million people in Onondaga County, I need your help to build a kaleidoscopic view of what goes on in all its corners.
You can reach me at lrobertson@centralcurrent.org or text me at (315) 992 – 1595 to set up a time to get coffee and chat about what you see from where you’re sitting. And if you run into me around town, come say hi! Chances are I’ll be wearing big green glasses and a colorful coat.
I’m so grateful to the Central Current team for welcoming me into this amazing newsroom, and I look forward to meeting more of you around Syracuse.
Warmly,
Laura Robertson
Reporter
Central Current
Read more of Central Current’s coverage
Onondaga County Executive Ryan McMahon has kept the county in a state of emergency for nearly three years. Why?
McMahon has hundreds of times renewed two executive orders barring outside municipalities from funding housing for migrants in Onondaga County. That’s “unconstitutional,” says an NYCLU lawyer.
New York AG appeals ruling that could allow landlords to choose not to rent to Section 8 tenants
Thousands of Syracuse tenants rely on Section 8 vouchers from the Syracuse Housing Authority.
With power in the Onondaga County Legislature, Watts begins planning path forward on county’s housing crisis
Tuesday’s housing summit hosted a bipartisan group of elected officials from across the county. Legislature Chair Nicole Watts hopes it will be a launchpad for a months-long planning process.
Sean Kirst: In Syracuse, not all car accidents these days get a response from the police
Drivers are basically being asked — after many non-injury collisions — to sort it out themselves. Police blame a shortage of officers.
New York AG’s office bars former Onondaga County jail medical provider from NY jails
Over twenty months, there were four deaths in their care at the Onondaga. County jail. The AG said they violated New York “corporate practice of medicine” laws.
