Budget Cuts 2020
Trump released his fiscal year 2020 budget proposal on Monday, including massive increases for military spending and huge domestic cuts.
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If it were any other year, you could imagine New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio grandstanding about that passed in Albany on April 3. After all, the state’s multibillion-dollar spending plan from New York City’s public hospitals, leaves the city without an increase in education funding, and mandates that the city to the state-run Metropolitan Transportation Authority. It forces the city to to the state by the end of the year – a deadline City Hall called The state also didn’t authorize judges – something de Blasio has long – and it didn’t raise taxes on the rich to raise revenue, another.Many downstate Democratic lawmakers did make their disappointment heard loud and clear. Zellnor Myrie, called the budget “one of the most difficult in this state's history.” State Sen. Jessica Ramos, who used to work for the mayor, called it “an austerity budget filled with regressive legislation that will starve our neighbors and fill our jails.”But in the days since the budget passed, the leaders of city government have been uncharacteristically quiet about it.
De Blasio hasn’t released a statement about it, and his comments the week before the budget passed were mostly conciliatory. New York City Council Speaker Corey Johnson, who negotiates the city budget with the mayor, hasn’t released any statements or posted any tweets about the state budget either, and his office didn’t respond to a request for comment. Same for New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer, the city’s fiscal watchdog.But can you blame them? There’s a we’re-all-in-this-together vibe in New York’s halls of government these days. Governors and mayors who used to rail against Trump are, hoping to keep equipment moving.
And even as Gov. Andrew Cuomo has preempted de Blasio on matters like and, the mayor has largely accepted it.The state budget is just the latest example. In January, de Blasio was saying the city had “ from the state budget.” In February, where he said the governor’s proposed cuts to the city “would be nothing less than devastating for everyday New Yorkers.” At the end of March, while the budget was being negotiated, that “it was wrong to even think about cutting Medicaid dollars from localities.” But when City & State asked the mayor for his thoughts on the budget on April 2, when nearly all of the details had been settled, his tone was more resigned.“The governor and the Legislature in their wisdom did what they did. We will deal with it,” he said. “I think in a perfect world, (the budget) would have been the state holding the city harmless. We were not held harmless. But we will live to fight another day.”The only thing the mayor singled out that day was the state increasing the city’s obligations – a hot issue, but not nearly on the level of state Medicaid or education funding.
Crimson skies xbox one youtube. De Blasio may have other reasons for his subdued tone, explained George Sweeting, deputy director of the New York City Independent Budget Office, a watchdog agency for the city budget. For one, it’s too early to assess the budget’s overall fiscal impact on the city. The state budget is always complex, and a new provision that allows Cuomo to make mid-year adjustments further complicates it. ”There’s even more than usual to sort out this year,” Sweeting said.Medicaid spending, one of the matters of greatest importance to the city, still isn’t sorted out either, even though the budget has been signed. The state slashed spending, which would require the city to make up some of the difference, but that change. That’s because the federal government’s latest stimulus bill prevents states from cutting Medicaid if they want to receive any funding.
And while the city will be receiving.02% less money for education than it did last year, even though City Hall was expecting an increase of around $350 million to, de Blasio understands that increases aren’t likely in this economy. The state’s fiscal outlook is far worse than it was just one month ago. State and city alike are expecting massive revenue shortfalls because of the sputtering economy and increased spending to deal with the coronavirus crisis. Cuomo has said the state is looking at anywhere from a $9 billion to $15 billion shortfall. De Blasio himself that the city would be looking to cut at least $1.3 billion from its planned $95 billion budget.“Obviously, the world is entirely different,” de Blasio said at an April press conference.
“I gave my (budget) testimony up in February, up in Albany. That seems like a century ago.”And the city’s fiscal picture may be different yet a month from now. The mayor is holding out hope that the federal government will pass another stimulus bill that would contain direct help for states and municipalities that have been spending big during the crisis.“There could be a lot of help out there,” de Blasio said at an April press conference. “If you take every single dollar that New York state needs to make up its budget deficit, to make it 100% whole, every dollar that New York City needs to make us 100% whole, the federal government could achieve that in a heartbeat.”The state budget is even more complex this year, and federal funding remains a big question mark. So while de Blasio has been relatively quiet in regards to the budget, Sweeting from the IBO said he’s sure that the city’s budget team is working hard to analyze everything before the mayor releases his own executive budget for the city on April 24.“If he’s being quiet because (City Hall) is trying to figure all this out, it doesn’t surprise me,” Sweeting said.On Monday, a de Blasio spokeswoman said as much.
“Our focus is very much on COVID,” said Julia Arredondo, deputy press secretary for de Blasio, “but of course we are continuing to assess how the budget will impact the City.”. As founder and research director of the Empire Center for Public Policy, E.J. McMahon is a go-to expert on budget plans and policy proposals. His organization promotes greater transparency, accountability and fiscal responsibility in state government, which often puts him at odds with lawmakers and the governor.
McMahon previously worked as a journalist in Albany, as an Assembly Republican staffer and a budget adviser for almost 30 years, giving him great insight into the goings-on in the Capitol.