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More Budget Reactions

by: phillip anderson

Tue Mar 31, 2009 at 10:16:46 AM EDT


Here's more reactions to the budget deal from around the state:

New York Times - Paterson Tries To Defend Budget Deal

Gov. David A. Paterson and legislative leaders on Monday defended their secretive negotiations and the eye-popping $131.8 billion budget they produced over the weekend, even as they warned that further deterioration in the economy could force them to return to the bargaining table in the coming months.

In a subdued appearance in the Capitol, Mr. Paterson, joined by Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver and Senate Majority Leader Malcolm A. Smith, described the deal as a necessary consensus between cutting spending and finding new revenue in the face of a large, and continually growing, budget gap.

"I think that there's a balance now between taxes on higher incomes and taxes on everybody, so that there's a shared sacrifice," Mr. Paterson said. He also said that he might have to revisit cuts to services and so-called nuisance taxes - like levies on sugared sodas and downloaded songs - that he agreed to abandon in the new deal.

"I would like to tell you that this budget brings about the end of our fiscal crisis, but I can't do that; that would be intellectually dishonest," Mr. Paterson said. But the deal was an important step, he added. "We can see the light at the end of the tunnel."

But as outside analysts began poring over hundreds of pages of the budget, they said they saw little evidence of stern spending discipline, even in the face of a major recession. In closing a budget deficit that in the end surpassed $17 billion, lawmakers relied on billions of dollars in new taxes and fees, some of which may not even raise as much revenue as hoped if the economy continues to worsen. And like every Albany budget, whether in good years or bad, this one includes $170 million worth of what critics call pork-barrel spending for lawmakers' pet projects.

"The disappointment from the business community is that the Legislature doesn't seem to understand how serious this crisis is, and that it threatens our future," said Kathryn S. Wylde, president of the Partnership for New York City, a business trade group. "The response - of holding the state budget basically harmless - just doesn't fly with people who are cutting salaries, laying people off and aren't sure where their business is going."

Mr. Paterson and his staff appear to have won significant concessions from the health care sector by overhauling outdated Medicaid reimbursements, while shifting money away from expensive in-patient care to preventative care and clinics. Over time, officials said, that shift would save both operating costs and capital money.

...

"What does the future hold? One way of looking at that is, New York - and every other state - are going to be in desperate straits if the federal stimulus money runs out in two years," said Robert B. Ward, deputy director of the Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government, an Albany research organization. "It won't be long until the drumbeat starts to make this a longer-lasting enhancement of federal aid."

- Albany's Big 3 Is Cut to One as Silver Flexes Might

It's Sheldon Silver's Albany now.

Mr. Silver, the powerful and cagey Assembly speaker, achieved what he wanted in the budget that emerged from the shadows of the statehouse this weekend, cementing his newfound role as the capital's center of gravity.

He won the policy fight, forcing Gov. David A. Paterson to raise taxes on the wealthiest New Yorkers, an idea that the governor decried as potentially disastrous three weeks ago. The $131.8 billion budget, which could hardly be called austere, is largely a reflection of the liberal tilt of Mr. Silver, and the Assembly's predilection for big spending on social programs, no matter the economic climate.

Mr. Silver also dictated the process, turning back the clock to the most secretive budget negotiations the capital has seen in years, casting aside the open government that Mr. Paterson and other Democrats once said would follow the party's sweeping victories in recent state elections. He argued that technicalities in recently passed budget reform legislation allowed the Legislature to circumvent requirements for open meetings among those negotiating the spending plan.

And the speaker preserved the Legislature's cherished spending on pet projects, pushing successfully for $170 million for members to dole out in district spending, leaving that pool of money essentially untouched, despite the fiscal crisis.

He argued that "nonprofit organizations throughout the state have been devastated by the economic downturn," but lawmakers appropriated money for gun clubs, churches, a yoga foundation and the Wantagh American Legion Pipe Band, among thousands of other projects.

Critics say Mr. Silver, a Democrat from the Lower East Side who has been speaker for the last 15 years, is the symbol of all that is broken in state government, a man who long ago forsook principle for power. They also say that he lacks the fiscal discipline to prudently manage the state's escalating future deficits.

Allies say he is the only senior Democrat in state government fielding a competent staff with the expertise to lead the state, and that he will usher in a more activist left-leaning agenda on important policy issues, like the recent agreement among state leaders to eliminate many of the remaining stringent Rockefeller era penalties for drug offenses.

Daily News - New York State Democrats cheer as rest of us grumble

Just as the Chinese emperors of old imposed the Death of a Thousand Cuts, the New York State Democrats are proposing the Death of a Thousand Hikes.

Drafted in shameful secrecy, the new budget has a host of hikes that are incidental when taken one at a time:

A 500% hike in the surcharge on utilities, an average of $100 a year.

A $90 increase in the cost of health insurance.

A $1.20-a-month "public safety" tax on cell phones.

Another "public safety" surcharge: $10 a year on car insurance policies.

A 75-cent increase in the fee for a learner's driving permit.

A 24% hike in car registration fees.

A 4% increase in the tax on car service fares.

A 9% increase in the cigar tax.

A 58% increase in the wine tax.

A 27% increase in the beer tax.

Together, the increases are burdensome in already hard times, more so because the budget preserves as sacred $170 million in political pork.

New York Post - SETTING NY BACK 30 YRS.

New York's ruling Democratic triumvirate took a giant generational leap backward yesterday to the destructive days of John Lindsay, Abe Beame and Nelson Rockefeller.

The budget created by Gov. Paterson, Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver and Senate Majority Leader Malcolm Smith is a monstrously bloated, tax-and-spend plan that, in one fell swoop, reverses a three-decade-long effort to strengthen business and prevent taxpayers from fleeing the state.

The wrecking ball of a new state budget, approved in Kremlin-like secrecy by the troika, also ranks as one of the biggest betrayals in process and substance by a governor in New York history.

The reform effort being reversed by Paterson & Co. began in 1975, when then-newly elected Democratic Gov. Hugh Carey, ending 16 years of Republican rule, famously declared that the "Days of Wine and Roses" were over.



Buffalo News
- State spending, massive tax hikes draw waves of protest

Gov. David A. Paterson emerged from behind closed doors Monday to defend the state's newly proposed $131.8 billion budget, but business groups railed against its massive tax hike package as education and health care special interests complained it does not spend enough.

Critics of the 2009 budget rushed to the Capitol and flooded lawmakers' telephones to try to unravel support, especially those from upstate.

But Paterson, who in a session with reporters appeared to undermine some elements of the plan he had just negotiated, said there were few options for a government that saw its projected deficit leap by billions in just a couple weeks, to $17.7 billion.

"None of this makes sense," he said of a plan that imposes record tax increases and cuts many popular programs. But he said the choices were difficult and a "shared sacrifice" by all New Yorkers. "This is in response to a crisis," he said.

...

But several Senate Democrats emerging from a caucus meeting said their 32-member coalition is holding steady and will back the budget despite GOP criticisms that it especially targets upstate for cuts and tax increases. With the GOP vowing to vote no, it would take only one Democrat to vote no, resulting in an unbreakable tie because the state has no lieutenant governor.

"We don't like the things that are in there," said Sen. William Stachowski, a Lake View Democrat. He said he would support the budget today. "We've never had to deal with a $17 billion budget hole," he said.

The Nation - A Progressive Victory In New York

Governor David Paterson and the leaders of the Legislature have struck a deal to create two new tax brackets for those earning above $300,000 and $500,000. The new tax structure would raise an estimated $4 billion annually.

This is largely due to the work of State Senator Eric Schneiderman, the Working Families Party, and others who responded to the state's $15 billion budget deficit by asking the wealthy to pay their fair share and demanding an end to the injustice of people earning $20,000 per year paying the same tax rate as Bernie Madoff, Donald Trump and the hedge funders -- 6.85 percent. Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver was instrumental in making progressive tax reform part of the final budget negotiations.

Initially, Gov. Paterson proposed the same tired conservative economic policy that has dominated the past thirty years--$9 billion of harsh cuts in education, healthcare and social services, and $5 billion in new taxes that would hit the struggling poor and middle-class the hardest. No sacrifices for the wealthy. Although there are still cuts that will cause a lot of pain for working people and the poor, this budget will be vastly improved.

Dan Cantor, executive director of the Working Families Party, told the Times: "It's a profound breakthrough for tax fairness." In the perennial balancing act between a transformative politics aimed at a more humane and sustainable society, and the necessary compromises to begin addressing people's immediate needs, progressives have scored an important and timely victory.

What are they saying in your neighborhood today?

phillip anderson :: More Budget Reactions
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$170,000,000 (0.00 / 0)
Can someone explain to me the difference between member items and AIG retention bonuses?  

Health Care (0.00 / 0)
Budgets in this climate basically suck - no one likes tax increases and service cuts.  The one good thing in the budget is that the primary care advocates won out over the hospital infrastructure with important reforms in Medicaid payment.  I don't think I have ever seen that and this is a very positive development.  We need to stop using the Medicaid program as a way to keep a bloated hospital infrastructure in place while short changing people needing access to basic health services.

Utica Observer-Dispatch (0.00 / 0)
   * Most legislators - let alone the public - have no idea how this spending plan was put together. It was one of the most secretive deals ever concocted in Albany, done by three downstate Democrats working behind closed doors. It locked out Republicans and back-pedaled on budget reform that had been made in recent years.

   * It raises taxes and increases spending, though just the opposite should be the goal. The budget is $10.5 billion more than the current one - a shameful 10 percent increase - most of which will be covered by federal economic stimulus funds, program cuts and new taxes and fees. And while it makes cuts to health care and education, left untouched is $85 million each to the Assembly and Senate for member items - pet projects in members' home districts. Not only is this an unfair process in the way the money is handed out, but it most often results in the unnecessary spending of millions of dollars that can best be described as re-election insurance for incumbents.

   * While it overhauls the state's income tax rates to get $4 billion from wealthier residents who have been paying about the same rate as a family making $40,000 a year, middle-class families aren't likely to see any more money in their pockets. Quite the opposite. Senate Minority Leader Dean Skelos said there's no relief from skyrocketing property taxes - the STAR rebate program is gone - along with higher taxes on wireless devices, cigars, beer and wine. A typical upstate family of four will have to pay about $2,400 more a year in higher state taxes and fees as a result of this budget, Skelos said. In New York City and the surrounding suburbs, a family can expect to pay $4,700 to $5,000 more.

That bit about the STAR rebate program is contrary to what I heard, but I guess some Republicans will say anything to get attention.

The other bit about member items is always a winner whenever it's mentioned.  It's a tiny sliver of the budget, but just like federal earmarks, it makes good news copy.  Still, I think Albany has better things to worry about than whether West Armpit Center gets a new swingset or whatever.


I stand corrected. (0.00 / 0)
From the Buffalo article:

They also said Paterson and legislators failed to deal in any way with rising property taxes; instead, the budget cancels the STAR rebate check program, worth $1.5 billion to property owners. And they said the budget is silent on reforms needed to help control Medicaid costs or help localities in cutting expenses.

Keep in mind that it's Senate Republicans saying this.  I'm not sure what is the best way to control property taxes, but it seems to me the whole STAR program was a band-aid from the very start.  People like to see those checks in the mail, especially after the shock of seeing the bill (with the usual 8-10 percent increase) for the school tax come in the mail.

I would say the first thing that needs to be done is to re-empower voters to tell school boards to GFY when they take property owners for granted as they usually do.  As it stands, a district can enact a contingency budget that spends 99.999% of the money anyway, but inflicts considerable pain upon everyone in the school district.  It shouldn't be possible for a school board to punish voters like that.

I would also make it mandatory to have the budget in the voters' hands a full 30 days before the budget vote.  I want to know what I'm voting on.


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