State Legislature passes state budget 4 months late

Major elements of the budget include:
  • Eliminating sales tax exemption on clothing and shoes costing under $110 on October 1st. The $110 exemption would return April 1, 2012. That is supposed to bring in $330 million.
  • Cutting in half the charitable deductions for New Yorkers making $10 million a year.
  • Expanding the hours of the Quick Draw gambling game run by the Lottery Division, often in bars, and expanding the hours of video slot machines at race tracks.
  • Delaying $100 million in business tax breaks.
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Updated: 8/04/2010 4:31 pm
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) - New York's Legislature on Tuesday night passed a state budget that's more than four months late.

Gov. David Paterson stressed that the budget was significant in that it would not depend on gathering more debt.

"It was a very meaningful budget in that, in spite of all the discussion earlier in the year, there was no borrowing. We didn't borrow a dime," he said.

In the end, Democratic Sen. William Stachowski of Buffalo, who withheld his vote since June to force action on a proposal to empower state universities, changed his mind. Instead of a law, the proposal became a nonbinding "framework" for continued negotiations. The proposal was intended to empower the State University of New York and City University of New York to have greater autonomy from Albany.

But the framework was enough to get all 32 Democratic senators to vote for the $1.75 billion revenue bill, the final piece of the $136 billion state budget. The budget increases spending 2 percent, or less than inflation, a fraction of the nearly 10 percent increase in spending a year ago in the first year of a fiscal crisis.

The 2010-11 budget completed Tuesday night includes a 5 percent cut - about $1.4 billion - in school aid and addresses a $9.2 billion deficit stemming from the fiscal crisis.

"Today we completed the final stage of a fair and responsible budget that works for New Yorkers," said Austin Shafran, spokesman for the Senate's Democratic majority.

Republican Sen. Stephen Saland of Poughkeepsie called it "one of the most slipshod and undemocratic budgets" ever passed by a state. Senate Republican leader Dean Skelos of Nassau County said the negotiations, in which Democrats excluded Republicans, were "totally dysfunctional" and resulted in too much spending and taxing.

Now that the budget is finally approved, lawmakers can begin to collect their pay withheld since the April 1 budget deadline. Each has had more than $30,000 in base pay withheld under the decade-old law.

The Democrat-led Assembly had already passed its budget bills in June at the end of the regular session.

In the end, even the three Democratic senators who withheld their votes to force discussion on the empowerment plan for SUNY and CUNY agreed to vote on the final budget bill. The empowerment bill would give the universities the power to grow, set their own tuition and enter into private partnerships to develop hotels and other projects.

"The empowerment is a huge disappointment," said Sen. Neil Breslin of Albany County, one of the three. "But I'm not going to hold the budget up."

The latest a state budget was adopted was Aug. 11, 2004.

"We couldn't set a record," said Sen. William Stachowski of Buffalo, another of the three. "We've given it five weeks."

The 2010-11 budget totals about $136 billion, after Paterson vetoed about 6,700 spending items the Legislature added to Paterson's approved budget proposal, including $190 million in pork-barrel grants for lawmakers to send to health, social service and civic groups in their districts.

The Senate and Assembly agreed, at Paterson's insistence, on a contingency plan to deal with the possibility that $1 billion in promised Medicaid reimbursement won't come from Washington. Starting in September, Paterson will exact across-the-board funding cuts and in December will provide a more comprehensive plan, with the Legislature's input, to compensate for any lost aid.

The Assembly, Senate and governor also agreed to remove a new tax on wealthy hedge fund managers from Paterson's budget proposal. Officials fear the tax would drive the managers and their big paychecks to Connecticut, a concern underscored by a public recruitment effort by Connecticut officials.

The Senate overwhelmingly approved Paterson's property tax cap, although it has little support in the Assembly.

Paterson told WSYR Radio in Syracuse on Tuesday that if the Assembly doesn't return to Albany in the coming weeks to consider the bill as promised, then he may compel them to Albany in October - the height of the election season - to consider whether to approve it or reject it.

"When 80 percent of New York's residents want a property tax cap and (taxes are) literally driving people out of the state, that's exactly what will happen if it isn't addressed in later August or September," Paterson said.

The budget bill passed along party lines, 32-28.

Major elements of the budget include:
  • Eliminating the sales tax exemption on clothing and shoes costing under $110. The exemption would end in October, then return April 1, but exempt clothing and shoes worth $55. The $110 exemption would return April 1, 2012. That is supposed to bring in $330 million.
  • Cutting in half the charitable deductions for New Yorkers making $10 million a year.
  • Expanding the hours of the Quick Draw gambling game run by the Lottery Division, often in bars, and expanding the hours of video slot machines at race tracks.
  • Delaying $100 million in business tax breaks.

Statement from Governor Paterson's Director of Communications Morgan Hook on budget passage:

"Today the state finalized a budget that closes a $9.2 billion budget gap. This was done primarily through spending cuts and with no borrowing. Additionally, for the first time in State history, we have taken action – through an FMAP contingency plan, which was championed by the Governor – in anticipation of a loss of federal revenue, and put spending cuts in place to fill the gap. Governor Paterson has spent the last eight months fighting for the fiscal health of New York on behalf of all New Yorkers. A fiscally responsible budget will help our State turn the corner on this economic crisis, and put us on a path to recovery."

Statement from Senator Darrel Aubertine:

“Today, we closed down the budget process by passing a revenue bill that keeps my commitment to the people of Oswego, Jefferson and St. Lawrence counties to block the governor’s proposed new taxes. After months of frustration that we all felt, this budget, while far from perfect, is a considerable improvement on where we were April 1.

“In the end, we passed a budget that not only rejected tax increases, but made real and substantial cuts to control our state’s spending. This budget restored funding that brings a return on investment for our local communities, be it parks and historic sites or agricultural programs benefitting the state’s number one industry. This budget protects jobs, especially those at Ogdensburg Correctional Facility, and implements new programming to create new ones.

“I am not happy with the fact that this process took this long. It points to the need for reform and change in the budget process. The very changes which had been rejected for decades, but are now gaining momentum, be it an independent budget office or performance based budgeting to make our state’s departments and bureaucracies accountable. As we saw in the findings of the bipartisan Task Force on Government Efficiency reports, we must be vigilant in finding ways to save money by seeking out the waste and making our state more efficient.

“In addition to closing down the budget process, we sent a strong message once again to our colleagues in the Assembly that we will not sit idly by while the people of this state clamor for property tax relief. For the third time in about two years, I voted for a property tax cap which is the first step toward comprehensive relief that must also include mandate relief and a circuit breaker, along with a change in the aid formula to address the needs of low wealth school districts upstate.

“Moving forward, we must continue to look for efficiencies and ways to reduce spending so that the taxpayers of this state can find the relief that is long overdue.”--Sen. Darrel J. Aubertine
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