Alliance Note: Reports suggest there has been significant progress in negotiations between the Legislature and Governor Hochul on this year’s budget, but these negotiations are expected to continue into next week. Lawmakers are expected to pass another extender this week, pushing the new deadline from this Thursday to next Tuesday, April 16th. This gives us extra time to push our lawmakers to include needed provisions in the budget, especially a flexible 3.2% Cost-of-Living Adjustment (COLA) for community based human services agencies. A flexible COLA will allow agencies to cover rising costs associated with providing services and increase pay for the workforce. Support our push for the 3.2% COLA by sending letters to your lawmakers. Use this link to and click the 3.2% COLA bubble to send messages and see below for who to call as well as the short script to use. Read below for more updates on the budget negotiations.
NYS Lawmakers Plan to Extend Budget Talks through April 16
By Karen Dewitt | North Country Public Radio | Aril 9, 2024
New York State lawmakers plan to meet again on Thursday to pass another spending extender that will last until April 16. The budget was due April 1.
State Senate Majority Andrea Stewart-Cousins says she had hoped that the budget, now about ten days late, would have done by now. She says talks have been slow, and there have been other distractions, like a major celestial event on Monday.
“The eclipse has come and gone,” Stewart-Cousins said. “We didn’t make that deadline, but we continue to work towards concluding the budget as quickly as possible.”
Stewart-Cousins says the Senate will break for the Muslim holiday of Eid that marks the end of fasting during the month of Ramadan, and then return briefly on Thursday to pass another extender through Tuesday, so that state workers and state contractors can continue to be paid.
The major issues that are unresolved in the budget include a housing package. It would build more affordable housing, offer tax breaks to developers who agree to add affordable units, and strengthen rights for tenants.
Stewart-Cousins says talks are “progressing” on how to crack down on the growing retail theft. Although Democrats in the legislature so far have not signed on to Gov. Kathy Hochul’s plan to increase penalties for robbers who also assault a store employee.
Earlier this month, Hochul signaled that she might be willing to drop a controversial budget proposal that would have resulted in half of the state’s school districts receiving significantly less money from the state than they did in previous years. Hochul wanted to end the provision known as hold harmless, which guarantees that no school gets less funding than it did in the budget the year before.
The governor told reporters she was leaning instead toward a study to change the state’s foundation aid formula going forward, putting off any potential cuts until at least a year or two into the future.
“We talked about putting a process in place, so that by this time next year, giving everybody the notice and warning that they all asked for, that there will be a different formula,” Hochul said. “And I’m just deciding with the leaders how that mechanism will work. But I think it’s going to put us in a much better place.”
Stewart-Cousins says she thinks the final budget will include restorations for the hundreds of districts that would have had to scramble to make up for a sudden drop in funding.
“We are looking at mitigating the pain that half of the school districts in this state were going to experience,” she said.
The Senate leader says while budget talks are progressing, and meetings will continue among the governor and the top leaders in the legislature, she can’t guarantee that there will be a spending agreement by the time the next extender runs out, on Tuesday. She says budget talks are at “the beginning of the end,” but she says the end is always the hardest part.
NYS lawmakers plan to extend budget talks through April 16 | NCPR News (northcountrypublicradio.org)