The Record (Troy, NY)

NYSAC releases new economic impact report

- Staff report

NEWYORK » The New York State Associatio­n of Counties ( NYSAC) responded to the latest economic stimulus plan in the U. S. Senate that does not deliver aid to state and local government­s.

According to NYSAC’s updated economic impact report, counties and New York City face a catastroph­ic $13.5 billion loss in revenue across two fiscal years that could lead to significan­t cuts to services and permanent layoffs, slowing the economic recovery and threatenin­g gains made against the virus.

“While there are elements of this plan that are laudable, it simply does not deliver for our residents who will face cuts to essential services, or for the essential workers who fought this pandemic on the front lines and now face layoffs. As Congress continues negotiatio­ns, we will remain laser focused on fighting to ensure that the final bill includes unrestrict­ed and flexible aid to allow states and local government­s to offset expenses and significan­t revenue loss attributab­le to COVID-19 so our essential workers can continue providing essential services,” Dan McCoy, Albany County Executive and President of the New York State Associatio­n of County Executives and County Executives of America, stated.

“Counties have reached a critical juncture in which the loss of revenue due to reduced economic activity and increased expenses from COVID-19 response have pushed them to the breaking point. Without direct, flexible state and local aid, counties across the state will be forced to cut local services and programs including transporta­tion infrastruc­ture improvemen­t projects, services like county libraries and parks, senior meals on wheels, and human service programs benefiting thousands of New Yorkers,” John F. Marren, President of the New York State Associatio­n of Counties and Chairman of the Ontario County Board of Supervisor­s, noted on revenue losses.

“Part of the economic recovery is investing in America’s future. We are out of time—Congress must act to provide significan­t aid to states and counties and they must do it now. State and local government­s compromise nearly 15% of the gross domestic product. Without federal assistance, counties will have no choice but to make layoffs permanent and eliminate local services – risking the health and wellbeing of our most vulnerable residents and jeopardizi­ng the fragile economic recovery,” Stephen J. Acquario, NYSAC Executive Director, added on the need for action and funding.

Some key takeaways of the NYSAC report include:

• Sales tax is the number one source of county revenue for nearly half of all counties and averages over 20 percent of local revenue

• Over the next 12 months we project sales tax losses could be between $1 billion to $1.3 billion for the 57 counties (not including New York City). Including New York City, the sales tax losses over the next 12 months could reach $3.2 billion

• Hotel Occupancy taxes are down nearly 80 percent in most counties since COVID

• Gaming Revenues have stopped completely since COVID. For the next year we expect these revenue losses to range between $57 million to $86 million

The report also notes that State and local government­s are major employers and provide nearly 12 percent of all U.S. jobs. Economists have noted that in the last downturn, during the Great Recession, the federal government’s austerity approach and prematurel­y ending financial assistance to states and local government­s contribute­d significan­tly to the slow recovery, both in employment terms and contributi­ons to gross domestic product.

Last week, a bi-partisan group of county executives called on congressio­nal leaders and the president to compromise on a new federal stimulus package that provides funding for states and local government­s.

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