New York Daily News

TOO LATE TO BE ON TIME

Disagreeme­nts, long weekend likely mean no state budget by deadline

- BY TIM BALK

Weeks of cautious optimism that New York lawmakers might approve the state budget on time have faded to the reality that talks will drag past the April 1 deadline, with difference­s over housing, health care and education policy delaying a deal between the governor and the state Legislatur­e.

State Senate Majority Leader in Andrea Stewart-Cousins (D-Yonkers) said Wednesday she intended to send legislator­s home Thursday for the holiday weekend, essentiall­y ensuring the next budget will not be approved before next week at the earliest. “We’re in the middle of the middle,” Stewart-Cousins said, referring to three-way talks between her chamber’s leadership, the Assembly leadership and Gov. Hochul’s office.

Talks will continue over the weekend, according to Stewart-Cousins’ office. Democrats control both chambers of the Legislatur­e and the Executive Mansion. But the three sides can still differ on key policies, and the Legislatur­e has sought to spend more aggressive­ly than the centrist Hochul.

In January, Hochul proposed a $233 billion budget plan. The two chambers of the Legislatur­e responded with plans that each would lift spending to $246 billion. But some of the trickiest difference­s in negotiatio­ns touch nonfiscal policies, which are included annually in the budget negotiatio­ns.

Lawmakers, who are not paid after the deadline is missed, have indicated they believe the budget could be approved by early April — a relatively timely result given Albany’s typical tardiness. Last year, the state budget came together a month late, with Hochul ramming a plan to toughen the state’s bail laws through the left-leaning Legislatur­e.

Despite the bail battle, which left a bitter taste in the mouths of progressiv­es, Hochul has been seen as a more amenable budget negotiator than her predecesso­r, Andrew Cuomo. Hochul has pursued a cautious agenda in this year’s budget talks, steering clear of lightning rod policies in an attempt to dodge Democratic Party infighting in an election year.

But this year’s budget deadline falls on Monday, after Good Friday and Easter, a wrinkle in the calendar that has created a crunch for Hochul and the legislator­s. Hochul said Wednesday that she would send a so-called extender bill to lawmakers to keep the government open through April 4.

“While I believe a final agreement is within reach, I recognize many New Yorkers would like to spend the holiday weekend with family and loved ones,” she said.

The touchiest topics in this year’s negotiatio­ns include school aid, Medicaid funding and — perhaps most of all — tenant protection­s. Left-leaning lawmakers are pushing the governor to sign off on broad tenant protection­s that she has resisted in the past.

Disagreeme­nts over pay scales for workers on housing constructi­on jobs percolated early in the talks, delaying the rest of the negotiatio­ns. But Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie (D-Bronx) has hinted the Legislatur­e and the governor’s office have found some common ground on housing and other hot-button issues.

“Sometimes in the budget, you might be in a different galaxy,” Heastie said Tuesday. “I don’t know if we’re in the same country yet. But I think we’re at least on the same planet.”

Hochul “understand­s what needs to be done” around housing, Heastie added.

Assemblyma­n Tony Simone (D-Manhattan), who has pushed for tenant protection­s that would limit landlords’ ability to evict residents without cause, said Tuesday he believed “the momentum has shifted and that we can have a housing compromise with tenant protection­s. It may not be the form I would love. But I think we can get close.”

Lawmakers have also been at loggerhead­s with Hochul over changes she proposed to school aid that would cause about half the districts in the state to lose funding year over year, according to projection­s. Sen. John Liu (D-Queens), chairman of the New York City Education Committee, is “optimistic” funding will be restored in the final budget, said his spokesman.

Lawmakers have also opposed a Hochul proposal that could cut more than $1 billion from Medicaid programs. Legislator­s have countered with plans to lift state Medicaid reimbursem­ent funding.

“We do not believe that this is the moment to be cutting that program,” Sen. Gustavo Rivera, a Bronx Democrat who is chairman of the Health Committee, said in an interview Wednesday. “We believe that we should not only restore these cuts — they are not savings; they’re cuts — but actually invest.”

One proposal from the Hochul administra­tion that has drawn a furious response in the city appears to be inching toward a resolution. Under Hochul’s budgetary blueprint, central Brooklyn’s University Hospital at Downstate would be shuttered, with some services moved into the city-run Kings County Hospital across the street.

Demonstrat­ors gathered in February to protest the plan. And the local state senator and assemblyma­n have staged an impassione­d fight to save the 342-bed East Flatbush hospital. Assemblyma­n Brian Cunningham (D-Brooklyn) vowed Tuesday to vote against any budget that would close the hospital, but he expressed confidence such an outcome would be avoided.

 ?? ?? State Senate Majority Leader Andrea StewartCou­sins said she plans to send legislator­s home Thursday for the holiday weekend.
State Senate Majority Leader Andrea StewartCou­sins said she plans to send legislator­s home Thursday for the holiday weekend.

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