New York Post

♥ of NY woes is totten gov't

- Michael Goodwin mgoodwin@nypost.com

NEW York wouldn’t be New York if the new logo for the campaign to boost the city didn’t raise hackles. The naysayers were quick to argue there’s nothing wrong with Milton Glaser’s iconic “I ♥ NY” poster from the ’70s and they are right — up to a point.

The point being that the new logo, “We ♥ NYC,” offers a snappy reminder that this is a new time, a new crisis and a new call to action.

Besides, because this is an emergency, there’s no time to waste in arguing over aesthetics.

The new effort to juice New York’s image and economy has a $20 million bankroll from big employers including Amazon, Google, Macy’s, Madison Square Garden and major real estate firms. Monday’s Times Square kickoff gave Mayor Adams and Gov. Hochul a chance to put a positive spin on the push to woo visitors and lift spirits by celebratin­g community volunteers and local businesses.

Adams claimed there are “only two types of people on the globe: those who live in New York and those who wish they could.”

For accuracy’s sake, he should have included a third type: those who lived here and bolted because of the decline gripping the city and state.

The boosterism is all well and good, except the heart of the problem is not with ordinary New Yorkers or the private sector. Nor is it one of poor public relations.

The problem is the government. It’s terrible and getting worse.

From City Hall to Albany, elected officials seem to have sworn an oath to make New York unlivable. The litany of their dirty deeds is too well known and causing too much ruin to be airbrushed out of the picture.

Center could not hold

The political class has imposed a regime of high crime, high taxes, failing schools, public disorder and a sclerotic bureaucrac­y that is responsive only to the highest bidder and the most radical ideas. The sensible center no longer has a prayer.

For their part, Adams and Hochul have pledged to work together to fix what’s broken since their early days in office, but each has taken turns sabotaging the goal. Adams took aim at the crime problem, but Hochul wasn’t much help and showed little willingnes­s to use her power to fight fellow Dems in the Legislatur­e.

Now it’s Adams who is sabotaging a comeback with his open-ended invitation to the illegal immigrants who claim asylum. Upwards of 50,000 have accepted the invitation and the strain on city services — and taxpayers — threatens to become an unsustaina­ble burden.

Projected costs started in the millions, then billions and most recently, more than $10 billion. The sky is no limit to the price tag of sanctuary madness.

The result is that the Adams-Hochul partnershi­p, while preferable to that of their feuding predecesso­rs’, hasn’t yielded anywhere near the significan­t changes needed to save the city and state. With each passing day, the climb gets harder and the options fewer.

One thing for certain is that nothing they have done will staunch the stampede for the exits. Having just spent a few days in Florida with former New Yorkers and others who are thinking of changing their residency, I returned with even less confidence in the city’s future.

One thing the governor and mayor haven’t done, and should, is take their combined firepower on the road and get voters across the state riled up about how the Legislatur­e and bleeding-heart prosecutor­s are creating the crime climate.

Bloomberg bucks

The time is especially right for that extra effort because Hochul is also getting the benefit of another big bankroll. Michael Bloomberg, the multibilli­onaire former mayor, is reportedly the lead funder behind a $5 million ad campaign promoting some of her budget proposals.

Most prominent among them is a fix to the notorious bail law that would give judges more discretion and a pledge not to hike income taxes. The ads are digital, on television and in the mail, and are paid for by a 501(c)(4) called American Opportunit­y.

Yet Hochul hasn’t exactly helped her cause with a budget proposal increasing spending by $5 billion, to an astonishin­g $227 billion. The one-house bills the Senate and Assembly offered would double that spending increase, to $10 billion.

As for taxes, the Citizens Budget Commission says the lawmakers’ proposals both add “$2 billion in additional annual taxes” and come “on top of the roughly $1 billion business tax surcharge extension proposed by the governor.”

And so it goes under oneparty rule. There’s not a meaningful Republican anywhere in sight, so the only hope is that relative moderates — emphasis on relative — unite to limit the damage.

They better act fast. The budget is due before the new fiscal year begins April 1, leaving little more than a week to save New York from even further ruin.

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