ALBANY, N.Y. -- The #MeToo movement has come to the state Capitol, but will there be changes to how New York addresses sexual harassment allegations? At the moment, it appears only men will be negotiating these changes. 

Nearly everyone in Albany seems to want some sort of reform for sexual harassment allegations in the state budget.

Proposals include banning confidential settlements as long as victims are protected, ending taxpayer-funded settlements and creating a uniform policy for all of state government in handling complaints. But the proposals may be negotiated by only men.

For now, Senate Minority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins says she hasn't been given any indication she'll be included in the talks. 

“No, I haven’t gotten any sense from the governor’s office that I’ll be included. And again we continue to push for a package that really assures everyone being safe here in the workplace and workplaces, frankly, all over. We can do more than we’ve done, we can do better and I hope we can get to a real package that protects everyone,” she said.

The state budget is typically negotiated by the governor, the Assembly speaker and Senate majority leader. In recent years, Independent Democratic Conference Leader Jeff Klein has been included in those talks. Klein himself has been accused of forcibly kissing a former staffer. Klein has denied and called for an investigation. He's supportive of sexual harassment reforms.