Las Vegas Review-Journal

N.Y. agencies dodging budget cuts

Mayor to cut $600M in migrant funding

- By Chris Sommerfeld­t

NEW YORK — Mayor Eric Adams called off a plan Wednesday to cut all city agency budgets by 5 percent this spring — but also announced he’s going to slash nearly $600 million in projected spending on housing and services for newly arrived migrants.

Under a plan first rolled out by

City Hall in fall 2023, all agencies were supposed to face 5 percent budget reductions in April — on top of two previous rounds of 5 percent cuts in November and January — in order to offset costs associated with caring for the migrants.

But in a statement Wednesday afternoon, the mayor said he’s canceling the April cuts thanks to “better-than-expected” city tax revenues in 2023 as well as a 20 percent reduction in projected migrant crisis spending he ordered last year. The improved revenues previously prompted Adams to call off some of the January cuts, too, including for the NYPD.

Still, Adams said Wednesday the city is “not yet out of the woods” as hundreds of mostly Latin American migrants continue to arrive every week.

Though he’s backing off the April cuts, the mayor said he’s moving ahead with a new 10 percent reduction in planned spending on housing and services for migrants over the current 2024 fiscal year and the next 2025 fiscal year, which starts July 1.

Over that span, the Adams administra­tion has projected the city will spend about $5.8 billion on the migrant crisis.

With the new 10 percent belt-tightening order, that means the administra­tion must figure out a way to trim that price-tag by about $586 million. Adams’ statement didn’t share details on how exactly his administra­tion will be able to achieve that spending reduction target.

His office said the administra­tion is on track to achieve the last 20 percent reduction in projected spending by shifting away from for-profit contractor­s for migrant-related services and outsourcin­g them to non-profits instead.

The mayor and his team have also credited the cost re-estimate to the administra­tion’s controvers­ial 60and 30-day notice policies, which limit how long migrants, including families with children, can consecutiv­ely stay in a city shelter.

 ?? Luiz C. Ribeiro Tribune News Service ?? New York City Mayor Eric Adams called off his plan to cut city agency budgets by five percent, but will slash housing and services for new migrants by $600 million.
Luiz C. Ribeiro Tribune News Service New York City Mayor Eric Adams called off his plan to cut city agency budgets by five percent, but will slash housing and services for new migrants by $600 million.

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