New York Daily News

ERIC WON’T SQUEEZE NYPD

Pushes back at Council speaker criticism of police OT spending

- BY MICHAEL GARTLAND AND CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T

Mayor Adams vowed Wednesday that when it comes to the pending city budget, he is “not compromisi­ng on public safety.”

“That’s not going to happen,” he said during a press conference in the Bronx. “Public safety is the foundation of the city. That’s what taxpayers say. That’s what my businesses are saying. That’s what everyone is saying. We want to be safe, and I’m not compromisi­ng on that.”

The mayor was responding to criticism from Council Speaker Adrienne Adams, who a day earlier slammed the NYPD for going over budget on overtime spending and for failing to adequately explain why in a recent hearing.

The speaker, who’s not related to Mayor Adams, said during an interview Tuesday she agrees with the premise laid out by the Council’s Progressiv­e Caucus that community investment­s such as housing and mental health services should take priority over NYPD spending.

She also noted that the city needs to “rein in” NYPD overtime spending and that “no other agency could possibly get away with this.”

“We’re very concerned, and we’re going to have to take a serious look at this,” she said.

The mayor’s staunch support of NYPD spending is nothing new. But his latest comments come amid budget negotiatio­ns with the City Council and amount to drawing a proverbial line in the sand as the possibilit­y of a showdown with the speaker and other Council members looms over proposed cuts to city agencies such as the Parks Department and public libraries.

Mayor Adams was asked about those cuts Wednesday and said “it is a misreporti­ng to state that we are making cuts.”

“We’ve asked every agency in the city to look for efficienci­es,” he said, stressing that those requests were aimed in part at culling vacant positions. “I think the libraries are doing an amazing job. We told them we want you to focus on vacancies and efficienci­es” while trying to avoid layoffs and “ensure that we don’t cut the delivery of services.”

But Queens Councilwom­an Tiffany Caban, a democratic socialist member of the Council Progressiv­e Caucus, said it’s “simply untrue” for Adams to claim he isn’t slashing library funding.

“Talk to librarians. Talk to people at the libraries. They are saying that they can’t deliver the services. They are saying that they can’t keep open on Saturdays because [the administra­tion] is going to eliminate positions they need,” she told the Daily News.

Caban also made the case that Adams’ budget is “not pro-public safety” because she argued it prioritize­s “unnecessar­y” police overtime spending over investment­s in social services.

“Libraries are public safety, funding housing is public safety, funding social services is public safety,” she said. “Every dollar that goes toward unnecessar­y overtime funding is a dollar that doesn’t go into [those initiative­s].”

In his Bronx news conference, Adams acknowledg­ed the hardship finding efficienci­es represents for city agencies, but pointed to the $4 billion bill he expects will be ultimately attached to the city’s handling of the migrant crisis.

“That money will come from somewhere,” he said. “There is a financial crisis that we are facing. So I understand what they are saying. I respect it, but I need for all of my agencies to focus on how do we weather this storm.”

Still, Adams’ first budget proposal of this year kept projected NYPD spending flat — a fact progressiv­e lawmakers have homed in on.

To boot, city Comptrolle­r Brad Lander released a report this week that found the city has already overspent on its NYPD overtime budget by $98 million in 2023 and will nearly double its OT budget once the fiscal year is through.

Asked about police OT, Adams said Wednesday the additional money spent is going toward keeping the subways safe, a major concern of his and of Gov. Hochul.

He suggested that much of the overtime is bankrolled by state and federal funding that’s specifical­ly earmarked toward safety in the subways and the city’s broader economic recovery.

“Our city must be safe. I have never shied away from that,” he said. “That’s the foundation of the economic recovery and the stability of the city.”

 ?? ?? Mayor Adams said he will “not compromise” on public safety, disagreein­g with City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams (inset top), who says the city needs to “rein in” NYPD overtime costs.
Mayor Adams said he will “not compromise” on public safety, disagreein­g with City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams (inset top), who says the city needs to “rein in” NYPD overtime costs.

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