Public Hearing - February 6, 2024

                                                                       1

 1  BEFORE THE NEW YORK STATE SENATE FINANCE
    AND ASSEMBLY WAYS AND MEANS COMMITTEES
 2  ----------------------------------------------------
            JOINT LEGISLATIVE HEARING
 3             In the Matter of the
            2024-2025 EXECUTIVE BUDGET
 4        ON LOCAL GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS/
                GENERAL GOVERNMENT
 5  ----------------------------------------------------
    
 6                              Hearing Room B
                                Legislative Office Building
 7                              Albany, New York
    
 8                              February 6, 2024
                                9:39 a.m.
 9  
    
10  PRESIDING:
    
11            Senator Liz Krueger
              Chair, Senate Finance Committee
12  
              Assemblywoman Helene E. Weinstein
13            Chair, Assembly Ways & Means Committee
    
14  PRESENT:
    
15            Senator Thomas F. O'Mara
              Senate Finance Committee (RM)
16  
              Assemblyman Edward P. Ra 
17            Assembly Ways & Means Committee (RM)
    
18            Assemblyman Edward C. Braunstein
              Chair, Assembly Committee on Cities
19  
              Senator Luis R. Sepúlveda
20            Chair, Senate Committee on Cities 1
    
21            Assemblyman Fred W. Thiele, Jr.
              Chair, Assembly Committee on Local Governments
22  
              Senator Monica R. Martinez
23            Chair, Senate Committee on Local Government
    
24            Senator Rachel May
              Chair, Senate Committee on Cities 2

                                                                   2

 1  2024-2025 Executive Budget
    Local Government Officials/
 2  General Government
    2-6-24
 3  
    
 4  PRESENT:  (Continued)
    
 5            Assemblyman Harvey Epstein
    
 6            Senator John C. Liu
    
 7            Senator Jeremy A. Cooney
    
 8            Assemblyman Charles D. Fall
    
 9            Senator Andrew Gounardes
    
10            Assemblyman Jonathan G. Jacobson
    
11            Assemblyman Robert C. Carroll
    
12            Assemblyman William Conrad
    
13            Senator Shelley Mayer
    
14            Assemblyman Steven Otis
    
15            Assemblywoman Latrice Walker
    
16            Assemblywoman Rebecca A. Seawright
    
17            Assemblyman Chris Eachus
    
18            Assemblywoman MaryJane Shimsky
    
19            Senator Rob Rolison
    
20            Assemblywoman Jo Anne Simon
    
21            Assemblywoman Yudelka Tapia
    
22            Assemblyman Al Taylor
    
23            Senator Roxanne J. Persaud
    
24            Assemblyman Michael Reilly
    

                                                                   3

 1  2024-2025 Executive Budget
    Local Government Officials/
 2  General Government
    2-6-24
 3  
    
 4  PRESENT:  (Continued)
    
 5            Senator Cordell Cleare
    
 6            Assemblyman Michael Tannousis
    
 7            Assemblywoman Jessica González-Rojas
    
 8            Assemblyman Zohran K. Mamdani
    
 9            Senator Leroy Comrie
    
10            Assemblyman Nader J. Sayegh
    
11            Assemblyman Ari Brown
    
12            Assemblyman Jeff Gallahan
    
13            Senator Steven D. Rhoads
    
14            Assemblywoman Jenifer Rajkumar
    
15            Assemblywoman Dana Levenberg
    
16            Assemblyman David I. Weprin 
    
17            Senator Robert Jackson
    
18            Assemblyman J. Gary Pretlow
    
19            Assemblywoman Alicia Hyndman
    
20            Senator Samra G. Brouk
    
21            Assemblywoman Taylor Darling
    
22            Assemblyman Scott Gray
    
23            Senator Simcha Felder
    
24            Assemblyman Jonathan Rivera
    

                                                                   4

 1  2024-2025 Executive Budget
    Local Government Officials/
 2  General Government
    2-6-24
 3  
    
 4  PRESENT:  (Continued)
    
 5            Assemblywoman Chantel Jackson
    
 6            Assemblyman Steven Otis
    
 7            Assemblyman Demond Meeks 
    
 8            Senator Brad Hoylman-Sigal
    
 9            Assemblywoman Rodneyse Bichotte Hermelyn
    
10            Assemblyman Alec Brook-Krasny
    
11            Senator Alexis Weik
    
12            Assemblyman Lester Chang
    
13            Assemblyman Michael Novakhov
    
14            Assemblywoman Patricia Fahy
    
15            Assemblyman Tony Simone
    
16            Senator George M. Borrello
    
17            Assemblyman Manny De Los Santos
    
18  

19

20

21

22

23

24


                                                                   5

 1  2024-2025 Executive Budget
    Local Government Officials/
 2  General Government
    2-6-24
 3  
    
 4                     LIST OF SPEAKERS
    
 5                                         STATEMENT QUESTIONS
    
 6  Honorable Eric Adams
    Mayor 
 7  City of New York                           11        21
    
 8  Honorable Byron Brown
    Mayor 
 9  City of Buffalo
         -and-
10  Honorable Ben Walsh
    Mayor
11  City of Syracuse                          
         -and-
12  Honorable Mike Spano
    Mayor
13  City of Yonkers                           
         -and-
14  Honorable Kathy M. Sheehan
    Mayor
15  City of Albany                            
         -and-
16  Honorable Malik Evans
    Mayor 
17  City of Rochester                         172       206
    
18  Honorable Adrienne Adams
    Speaker
19  New York City Council                    
         -and-
20  Honorable Brad Lander
    Comptroller
21  New York City Comptroller's
     Office                                   294       313
22  

23

24


                                                                   6

 1  2024-2025 Executive Budget
    Local Government Officials/
 2  General Government
    2-6-24
 3  
    
 4                     LIST OF SPEAKERS, Continued 
    
 5                                         STATEMENT QUESTIONS
    
 6  Barbara J. Van Epps 
    Executive Director
 7  New York State Conference of
     Mayors                                   
 8       -and-
    Stephen J. Acquario
 9  Executive Director
    NYS Association of Counties             
10       -and-
    Gerald Geist
11  Executive Director
    Association of Towns of the
12   State of New York                      385       411
    
13  Dustin M. Czarny
    Democratic Caucus Chair
14  Election Commissioners Association
     of the State of New York
15       -and-
    Karen Wharton
16  Democracy Coalition Coordinator
    Fair Elections for NY
17       -and-
    Erica Smitka
18  Deputy Director
    League of Women Voters 
19   of New York State
         -and-
20  Joanna Zdanys
    Senior Counsel 
21  Brennan Center for Justice 
     at NYU School of Law                   452       465
22  
    
23  
    
24

                                                                   7

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Good morning.  

 2                  I'm Fred Thiele, chairman of the 

 3           New York State Assembly's Local Governments 

 4           Committee, and I am filling in for Ways and 

 5           Means Chair Helene Weinstein as cochair of 

 6           today's hearing.  

 7                  Chair Weinstein is recovering from 

 8           knee surgery and is hoping to join us soon.  

 9           And by soon, I mean maybe as soon as this 

10           afternoon.

11                  Today we begin the eighth in a series 

12           of hearings conducted by the joint fiscal 

13           committees of the Legislature regarding the 

14           Governor's proposed budget for fiscal year 

15           '24-'25.  The hearings are conducted pursuant 

16           to the New York Constitution and the 

17           Legislative Law.

18                  Today the Assembly Ways and Means 

19           Committee and the Senate Finance Committee 

20           will hear testimony concerning the Governor's 

21           budget proposal for local governments.  

22                  I will now introduce the participating 

23           members from the Assembly, and after that 

24           Senator Krueger will introduce members from 


                                                                   8

 1           the Senate.  In addition, Ranking Ways and 

 2           Means Member Ra will introduce members from 

 3           his conference.

 4                  So Assembly Majority members 

 5           participating today:  Assemblymember 

 6           Braunstein, who chairs our Cities Committee, 

 7           which is one of the participating committees 

 8           today; Assemblymember Darling; Assemblymember 

 9           Fall; Assemblymember González-Rojas; 

10           Assemblymember Mamdani; Assemblymember 

11           Sayegh; Assemblymember Shimsky; 

12           Assemblymember Simon; Assemblymember Weprin; 

13           and Assemblymember Epstein.  And 

14           Assemblymember Seawright.

15                  Senator?

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you very 

17           much.  Good morning, everyone.  

18                  And I'm glad to be joined by my 

19           special guest partner today, Fred Thiele.  

20           Each hearing I've had a special guest 

21           Assembly leader.

22                  I want to introduce Senator Roxanne 

23           Persaud; Senator Andrew Gounardes; 

24           Senator Sepúlveda; Senator Felder; 


                                                                   9

 1           Senator Liu; Senator Martinez; Senator May; 

 2           Senator Hoylman-Sigal; Senator Comrie; 

 3           Senator Cleare.  

 4                  And I'm going to turn it over to my 

 5           ranker on Finance, Tom O'Mara, to introduce 

 6           his members.

 7                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Thank you, 

 8           Chairwoman Krueger.  

 9                  Good morning, everyone.  

10                  On our side we have our ranker on 

11           Local Governments, Senator Steve Rhoads; our 

12           ranker on the Cities 2 Committee, Senator Rob 

13           Rolison.  And we also Senators Alexis Weik 

14           and George Borrello.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Assemblymember Ra 

16           to introduce the Minority members.

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you.  

18                  Good morning.  We have with us this 

19           morning Assemblymember Reilly, our ranker on 

20           Cities; Assemblymember Ari Brown, our ranker 

21           on Local Governments; and Members Gallahan, 

22           Gray and Tannousis.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  The ground rules 

24           for today, before we start.  The time limits 


                                                                   10

 1           for witnesses:  Governmental witnesses have 

 2           10 minutes, nongovernmental witnesses have 

 3           three minutes.  

 4                  Time limits for questions and answers 

 5           by legislators:  The chairs of the committee 

 6           relevant to each governmental witness will 

 7           get 10 minutes, and a second round of three 

 8           minutes if desired.  Ranking members of these 

 9           committees will get five minutes each.  All 

10           other members of relevant committees will get 

11           three minutes each.

12                  To our witnesses, all written 

13           testimony has been submitted to the 

14           legislators in advance so we ask that all 

15           witnesses please do not read your testimony 

16           to us.  Please, instead, summarize.  

17                  Legislators, please let myself or 

18           Senator Krueger know if you wish to question 

19           each witness or panel of witnesses.  After 

20           the opening remarks of each witness or panel 

21           of witnesses has been concluded, the list 

22           will be closed.

23                  Witnesses and legislators should 

24           locate the time clock and keep an eye on it.  


                                                                   11

 1           Please note that when the clock is down to 

 2           zero, you will be alerted that your time is 

 3           up.  Please be considerate and respect the 

 4           clock so that everybody has a chance to be 

 5           heard.  

 6                  Please note that these time frames for 

 7           questioning include both questions and 

 8           answers.  So members are respectfully 

 9           requested not to commence a new question with 

10           insufficient time on the clock to permit the 

11           witness to answer.

12                  Due to the length of our hearings, we 

13           have no alternative but to strictly enforce 

14           these time limits.

15                  I should add that if any witnesses for 

16           later in the day are here and have not yet 

17           checked in, please do so at the top of the 

18           stairs.

19                  I will now call our first witness, 

20           which is the mayor of the great City of 

21           New York, Eric Adams.  

22                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  (Mic off; 

23           inaudible.)  I want to thank you, 

24           Chair Krueger, and in her absence my 


                                                                   12

 1           long-time colleague, Brooklyn colleague 

 2           Chair Weinstein, and Cities Chairs Sepúlveda 

 3           and Braunstein, Local Government Chairs 

 4           Martinez and Thiele, and members of the 

 5           Assembly Ways and Means and the Senate 

 6           Finance committees.  

 7                  I feel like it was only days ago that 

 8           I was sitting behind that chair as a State 

 9           Senator serving in this body.  

10                  I am Eric Adams, the mayor of the City 

11           of New York.  I'm proud to be here today with 

12           Jacques Jiha, director of our Office of 

13           Management and Budget.  

14                  And as I said in my recent State of 

15           the City, our city has been a place of 

16           possibilities.  It is a place where you can 

17           start a business, start a family, and make 

18           your mark.

19                  Two years ago we came into office with 

20           a clear mission:  To keep the American dream 

21           burning bright and alive by protecting public 

22           safety, rebuilding our economy, and making 

23           our city more livable.  

24                  Twenty-four months later -- it only 


                                                                   13

 1           has been two years; sometimes it's hard to 

 2           believe.  But being a mayor is like dog 

 3           years -- one day is many days.  But you look 

 4           at the city, crime is down, jobs are up, and 

 5           every day we are delivering for working-class 

 6           New Yorkers.

 7                  You have been our partners.  I talk 

 8           about it all the time, how we were so 

 9           successful in the last two years.  To keep 

10           New York City on its upward trajectory, we 

11           must continue that strong participation.  

12                  Protecting public safety means 

13           granting New York City the power to shut down 

14           illegal smoke shops, so New Yorkers can walk 

15           down the street without being bombarded by 

16           illegal shops that operate outside the law 

17           and put New Yorkers at risk.  

18                  Rebuilding our economy means creating 

19           homes for New Yorkers that they can afford, 

20           so working-class families can earn a living, 

21           raise their kids, and make it in the greatest 

22           city in the world.  

23                  It also means preparing our young 

24           people to succeed.  Reading and math test 


                                                                   14

 1           scores are up, and we are outpacing the 

 2           state, but if we don't extend mayoral 

 3           accountability, we risk going backwards.  

 4                  Making this city more livable means 

 5           investing in cleaner streets and more vibrant 

 6           public spaces.  To continue those 

 7           investments, we need financial support to 

 8           cover the costs of the asylum-seeker 

 9           humanitarian crisis.  

10                  These are urgent needs that support 

11           working-class families in New York City, and 

12           our administration is asking for your help 

13           once again.  

14                  But first, I want to thank you for 

15           your partnership in "getting stuff done" in 

16           New York last year.  Thanks to your 

17           leadership, we will preserve more affordable 

18           housing as a result of J-51 benefits.  We 

19           were able to make substantial investments in 

20           our young people’s education, and we were 

21           able to defray some of the substantial costs 

22           associated with managing the asylum-seeker 

23           humanitarian crisis.  

24                  New York City is proud to uphold our 


                                                                   15

 1           legacy as a city of immigrants.  And we are 

 2           proud that we have demonstrated leadership 

 3           and compassion, when so many others showed 

 4           only cruelty.  Over the past 22 months, we 

 5           have provided more than 173,900 

 6           asylum-seekers with food, medical care, 

 7           shelter, and education for their children.  

 8           Of those, we have helped more than 107,000 -- 

 9           more than 60 percent -- take the next step on 

10           their path to self-sufficiency and the 

11           American dream.  We have helped tens of 

12           thousands file Temporary Protected Status, 

13           asylum and work authorization applications, 

14           bringing them one step closer to living a 

15           more stable life.  

16                  However, right now there are more than 

17           66,000 asylum-seekers still in our care.  

18           When you add in the 55,000 longtime 

19           New Yorkers in the city's DHS system, as well 

20           as others, that means we have close to 

21           three times the number of people in our 

22           shelter system than when we came into office.  

23           And it all comes at a great cost to our city.  

24                  In November, due to the growing 


                                                                   16

 1           asylum-seeker humanitarian crisis, sunsetting 

 2           federal stimulus that was used to support 

 3           vital programs, and the cost of funding 

 4           long-ignored labor contracts, we faced a 

 5           historically large $7.1 billion budget gap.  

 6           We are legally required to balance fiscal 

 7           years '24 and '25 in January.  So we 

 8           developed our financial plan without relying 

 9           on federal assistance because, after many 

10           trips to Washington -- 10, to be exact -- I 

11           realized that the federal cavalry was not 

12           coming to the rescue.  

13                  We did not procrastinate.  We knew 

14           that the faster we made the painful but 

15           necessary decisions, the faster we could 

16           stabilize the city's finances.  We 

17           front-loaded our implementation of the plan, 

18           which includes multiple rounds of savings 

19           through our Plan to Eliminate the Gap, or 

20           PEG, a hiring freeze, and a freeze on 

21           other-than-personal-services spending, among 

22           other things.  

23                  These decisions proved to be 

24           effective, resulting in a record level of 


                                                                   17

 1           $6.6 billion in PEG savings over fiscal years 

 2           '24 and '25 in the November and January 

 3           plans.  And we accomplished all this without 

 4           layoffs, without raising taxes or major 

 5           disruptions to city services.  Our savings 

 6           include $1.7 billion that we achieved by 

 7           taking steps to manage the cost of providing 

 8           services for new arrivals by, one, reducing 

 9           daily household costs; negotiating and 

10           renegotiating rates and rebidding contracts 

11           and shelters run by for-profit vendors; 

12           implementing intensive case management 

13           support to help asylum-seekers reach their 

14           final destinations and leave our care; and 

15           transitioning away from a humanitarian- 

16           relief-centered model of care to nonprofit 

17           service providers.  

18                  And in January, after a careful review 

19           of savings initiatives we implemented in 

20           November, we restored funding for critical 

21           initiatives protecting public safety, public 

22           spaces, and young people.  

23                  While these actions are important to 

24           New Yorkers, they represent less than 


                                                                   18

 1           3 percent of the savings we achieved over the 

 2           two years.  But I need to be crystal clear:  

 3           Although we have stabilized our financial 

 4           situation through hard work and advanced 

 5           planning, we're not out of the woods.  But I 

 6           want you to understand that -- we are not out 

 7           of the woods.

 8                  While we appreciate the commitment the 

 9           Governor made last year to cover one-third of 

10           the city's asylum-seeker costs, this was 

11           based on the premise that the city, the 

12           state, and the federal government would split 

13           the costs three ways.  The federal government 

14           has only committed $156 million, the vast 

15           majority of which we have yet to receive 

16           because of a complicated reimbursement 

17           process.  Despite our efforts, we cannot 

18           assume they will give us any more.  

19                  While we are deeply grateful for the 

20           $1 billion that was appropriated in this 

21           year's State Budget, the midyear adjustment 

22           of nearly $900 million, and the $1.1 billion 

23           in shelter costs proposed in the Governor's 

24           Executive Budget, we are still shouldering 


                                                                   19

 1           the largest share of asylum-seeker costs.  

 2                  In our budget, we assume that the 

 3           state will meet its commitment to cover 

 4           one-third of $10.6 billion in migrant costs 

 5           over fiscal years '23 through '25.  As of the 

 6           Governor's Executive Budget, the state's 

 7           commitment to the city is just over 

 8           $3 billion, or roughly 28 percent, which is 

 9           $400 million short.  

10                  This, along with $200 million in 

11           budget hits like the Distressed Hospitals 

12           Fund sales tax intercept and school aid 

13           reduction, grows our fiscal year '25 gap by 

14           $600 million.  New Yorkers are already 

15           carrying most of the asylum-seeker costs.  

16           It's wrong to ask them to do more, and it's 

17           put our city in a precarious position.  Today 

18           we're asking the state to increase its 

19           commitment and cover at least 50 percent of 

20           our costs.  

21                  Next, when it comes to our schools, we 

22           strongly support the Governor's four-year 

23           extension of mayoral accountability.  Mayoral 

24           accountability allows us to make much-needed 


                                                                   20

 1           systemic changes quickly, efficiently, and 

 2           equitably.  Under the current system, the 

 3           buck stops with me, and you've seen that we 

 4           were able to produce results.  

 5                  Thanks to mayoral accountability, we 

 6           have improved reading and math test scores 

 7           over the last two years, outpacing the state, 

 8           while closing racial disparities.  We also 

 9           launched New York City Reads, a nation- 

10           leading curriculum that teaches our kids the 

11           fundamentals of reading.  

12                  This is more than a curriculum change, 

13           it's a reading revolution.  New York City 

14           Reads is already being implemented in 

15           90 percent of our schools.  

16                  We need mayoral control to continue 

17           the success that we have produced.  

18           Chancellor Banks and I know that our public 

19           schools can change lives and produce the 

20           leaders of tomorrow.  

21                  In addition to having a good 

22           education, every child has a right to a safe, 

23           clean place to live, and that's what we want 

24           to do.  


                                                                   21

 1                  And I will turn over my time on time.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Okay.  First I'd 

 3           like to add that we've been joined by 

 4           Assemblymember Carroll, Assemblymember 

 5           Rivera, Assemblymember Eachus, and 

 6           Assemblymember Tapia.  

 7                  For our first question, I call upon 

 8           Assemblymember Fall.  

 9                  And we're also joined by 

10           Assemblymember Taylor.  Sorry.  

11                  Oh, I'm sorry, we do the chairs first.  

12           My apologies.  

13                  Assemblymember Braunstein.  Sorry.

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Thank you, 

15           Fred.  

16                  And thank you, Mr. Mayor and your 

17           team, for coming up here to join us today.

18                  You mentioned you have 66,000 

19           asylum-seekers in your care now.  Does that 

20           number fluctuate, or is it typically 

21           consistent around that number?

22                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  We are getting 

23           anywhere between 2500 to 4,000 asylum-seekers 

24           a week, a week.  


                                                                   22

 1                  And as they come in with our new 

 2           30-day initiative, and 60-day for children 

 3           and families, we are trying to get as many 

 4           out the door as possible to be 

 5           self-sustaining.  So that number does 

 6           fluctuate and it does change based on how 

 7           many we get in.  From time to time we get a 

 8           surge coming from particularly the state of 

 9           Texas.  But the number does move from time to 

10           time.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Can you give 

12           me like a low and a high?

13                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  A low and a high of 

14           how many we get in?

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  How many you 

16           have at any one time.  Is it sometimes you 

17           have 40,000, sometimes you have 80,000?

18                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  No, we have never 

19           gotten down to those numbers.  

20                  We had, as I indicated, 172,000 total.  

21           We were able to get 60 percent out of care, 

22           but it has never gone down below around 

23           60,000.

24                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  And what's 


                                                                   23

 1           been the highest?  

 2                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  A hundred and 

 3           seventy-three thousand.

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  In your care 

 5           at one time?

 6                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  At one time, the 

 7           highest number has probably been around 

 8           roughly 100,000.

 9                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Okay.  So 

10           right now it's at 66,000 but there was a time 

11           when you had 100,000 in your care.

12                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Yes.  And the reason 

13           we were able to move from the high-water mark 

14           of having over 100,000 is because of the 

15           initiatives we put in place to have people 

16           being self-sustaining.

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Okay.  You 

18           let the current -- in the recent financial 

19           plan the state sets aside $1.9 billion for 

20           the city to assist with asylum-seekers.  How 

21           much of that money have you drawn down?

22                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  On the current 

23           amount.

24                  You have the current numbers, Jacques?  


                                                                   24

 1                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  Yes.  Yes.  

 2           As of the end of December, we submitted 

 3           invoices for about --  because these are 

 4           liquidated invoices, as per the agreement 

 5           with the state, about $1.2 billion.  But we 

 6           only get credit for 28 percent.

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  So out of the 

 8           1.9 you've put in requests for 1.2?  

 9                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  

10           One-point-two billion dollars.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Okay.  

12                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  And Assemblymember, 

13           we should be clear, it's not a 

14           dollar-for-dollar reimbursement, both on the 

15           federal level and on the state level.  If it 

16           was dollar for dollar, it would be easy for 

17           us to draw down on it, but we only get 

18           a twenty -- 28 percent based on the dollars 

19           we submit.  So if we submit a hundred 

20           dollars, we would get 28 percent of that 

21           returned to us.

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Okay.  The 

23           Governor's Executive Budget sets aside 

24           2.4 billion to help with the asylum-seekers.  


                                                                   25

 1           How would you spend that money?  

 2                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Some of it is going 

 3           to be spent already on the humanitarian 

 4           relief centers that we have in place.  And 

 5           it's going to be spent on housing and some of 

 6           the other needs that come with the 

 7           asylum-seekers.

 8                  We have to -- and I think it's 

 9           important for all of us to note -- we have to 

10           take full care of the asylum-seekers.  That's 

11           cleaning, housing, feeding.  Everything a 

12           family needs, we're picking up the cost for 

13           those needs.

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  So let's talk 

15           about humanitarian relief centers.  Right?  

16           Those are generally the tents, like you have 

17           at Floyd Bennett Field?  I have one at 

18           Creedmoor in my district.  My district we 

19           have -- you know, it's a tent, it's a 1,000 

20           single men, it's in the middle of a 

21           residential community, there's a school 

22           across the street, there's a senior center 

23           next door.  It's been problematic for the 

24           community, you know, without question.


                                                                   26

 1                  And here in your testimony you tout 

 2           that you're transitioning away from the 

 3           humanitarian relief center model.

 4                  So I guess for my constituents we want 

 5           to know how long can we expect this Creedmoor 

 6           site to be there?  And is there an end date 

 7           in sight?

 8                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Assemblyman, your -- 

 9           I grew up in Queens and I know that community 

10           very well.  And what your residents are 

11           feeling is what I would feel if it was on 

12           134th Street or -- 167th Street, I should 

13           say, where my mother's house is.  This should 

14           not be happening to your community.  It 

15           should not be happening in Floyd Bennett 

16           Field, it should not be happening anywhere in 

17           our city.  And no, I don't see a relief in 

18           sight.  I see that everyone is starting to 

19           ship migrants and asylum-seekers to New York 

20           City.  It's happening every day, and there's 

21           not any relief in sight.  

22                  That's why I went down to the southern 

23           border.  That's why I went to South America.  

24           And what I saw down there is telling me there 


                                                                   27

 1           is no relief in sight for us.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  So you 

 3           mentioned that at one time you had 

 4           100,000 asylum-seekers in your care.  You're 

 5           current at 66,000.  So where are the other -- 

 6           you know, at some point there was 100,000.  

 7           That extra 30,000, where were they being 

 8           housed?  

 9                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  What we did, we 

10           realized that we were not going to receive 

11           financial assistance the way we deserve from 

12           the federal government.  There was no 

13           solution or plan coming from the Congress or 

14           from Washington, D.C.  We knew we had to put 

15           in place a two-pronged plan.  One, we had to 

16           decrease the number of our census that was in 

17           our care.  That's why we did the 30-day and 

18           the 60-day program.  

19                  Eighty percent of the people that we 

20           put in the 30-day program were able to 

21           self-sustain themselves.  We did a 

22           re-ticketing program because many people came 

23           here and did not want to come to New York.  

24           We were able to send them to their final 


                                                                   28

 1           destination.  And others were able to find 

 2           their way, like many of our immigrant 

 3           families have done in generations prior.  

 4                  And that's how we were able to bring 

 5           down the number in care.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  But that's 

 7           not -- my question is if at one time you were 

 8           housing 100,000 and now you're housing 

 9           66,000.

10                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  We have 67,000, as 

11           Jacques just shared with me.  Both -- when we 

12           looked at the number I've given you of 

13           100,000, that is the asylum-seekers plus the 

14           long-term traditional New Yorkers who were in 

15           our homeless shelter system.  It's a 

16           combination of the two.

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  So we got the 

18           numbers crossed up.  We'll follow up on that.  

19                  Finally, I just want to get back to 

20           the Creedmoor tent.  If the numbers come 

21           down, do we have your commitment that the 

22           tents will be the first places taken offline?

23                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  I'm sorry, if the 

24           numbers come down --


                                                                   29

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  If the 

 2           asylum-seeker numbers come down and you start 

 3           having the opportunity to move people out of 

 4           shelter, will the tents be the first places 

 5           to be taken offline?  Or will you start 

 6           moving people out of hotels and keep the 

 7           tents up?  

 8                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  No.  Our goal is to 

 9           move people out of the tents.  And as soon as 

10           we can move those people out of the tents, 

11           we're going to do that.  It's costly.  It is 

12           not the ideal situation for people to be in.  

13           And it's not good for the communities that 

14           they're located in.  

15                  So our goal is to move people out of 

16           the tents as we deal with this shifting 

17           emergency.  And I want to be clear on these 

18           numbers.  At the low end of 2500 a week, 

19           that's 10,000 a month that we have to find 

20           care for.  So we have to be very clear on 

21           what this administration has done.  Ten 

22           thousand people a month we have to find care 

23           for.  We don't want to put people in tents.  

24           We have been placed in an unsustainable 


                                                                   30

 1           situation.  

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Okay.  I'm 

 3           just going to shift to one more topic while 

 4           I've got two minutes left.

 5                  The city's moving forward to implement 

 6           Local Law 97.  I represent -- the affordable 

 7           housing in my district is co-op housing.  

 8           It's garden apartments, it's seniors on fixed 

 9           income, young families starting out.  The 

10           lawyers for the co-ops are telling us that to 

11           comply with Local Law 97 they're looking at 

12           increasing everybody's monthly maintenance 

13           costs 15 percent.  And remember, that's 

14           before property taxes, which these co-op 

15           owners, under our unfair property tax system, 

16           pay some of the highest effective property 

17           tax rates in the city already.  They're 

18           looking at increased maintenance costs of 

19           15 percent per month.  

20                  We've suggested the city work with us 

21           on a tax abatement, property tax abatement, 

22           to help some of these buildings comply with 

23           Local Law 97.  I'll tell you, a lot of them 

24           are just looking now to just figure out how 


                                                                   31

 1           they're going to pay the penalty.  They're 

 2           not even thinking about how they're going to 

 3           comply.  

 4                  Would your administration be willing 

 5           to work with us to try and find a way to 

 6           offer a property tax abatement to incentivize 

 7           some of these co-ops to comply with the new 

 8           energy mandates?

 9                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Yes, more than 

10           willing.  You know, my first apartment was a 

11           -- I should say my second apartment was a 

12           co-op.  I know what it is to have 

13           working-class people live in a co-op.  That 

14           is where their value is and that's where the 

15           large amount of the assets -- we would love 

16           to sit down with you and figure out how we 

17           can be as helpful as possible.  

18                  And we've taken some major steps to 

19           try to minimize the pain to those co-ops and 

20           property owners.  But I agree with you 

21           100 percent.

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  All right.  

23           Thank you, Mr. Mayor.

24                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  (Inaudible.)


                                                                   32

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

 2                  Good morning, everyone.

 3                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Good morning.

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Good morning, 

 5           Mr. Mayor.

 6                  Just for people who don't know, both 

 7           the panel and the guests, you have to press 

 8           the button pretty hard to go from green to 

 9           red and red to green.  And so we've all been 

10           practicing.  So it's not you, it's that the 

11           systems are brand-new.  Thank you.

12                  Our first up is the chair, Senator 

13           Sepúlveda.

14                  SENATOR SEPÚLVEDA:  Good morning, 

15           Mayor.

16                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  How are you, 

17           Senator?  

18                  SENATOR SEPÚLVEDA:  Good morning, 

19           Senator Savino.  Good to see you.

20                  So I've been on a mission for about 

21           two years now to reform the property tax 

22           system in New York City.  I've done extensive 

23           research about what it can do to help develop 

24           affordable housing in the City of New York.  


                                                                   33

 1           And I think it would be a monumental shift in 

 2           policy for the city to transform the property 

 3           tax system.

 4                  Just recently I attended the hearing 

 5           at the Tax Equity Now NY LLC case versus 

 6           New York City at the Court of Appeals, and 

 7           sat for the entire argument.  And based on my 

 8           31 years of being an attorney, I believe the 

 9           city is going to lose that case.

10                  Is the city prepared to comply with 

11           that case in the event that you lose the case 

12           in a couple of months when the decision will 

13           be rendered?  Is the city prepared to take 

14           actions to modify the property tax system in 

15           the City of New York?  

16                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Senator, thank you 

17           for that.  

18                  One of the original lawsuits was with 

19           Martha Stark.  She used to be the finance 

20           chair.  I was going to sign on as amicus 

21           court brief, but I couldn't.  My property in 

22           Bed-Stuy is hit with unfair taxes as well.

23                  And we're not ready right now.  We are 

24           looking internally of how to do what many 


                                                                   34

 1           administrations have been attempting to do to 

 2           adjust this unfair property tax system.  

 3           There's several proposals.  Even the 

 4           Comptroller put forward a proposal.  We want 

 5           to continue to move this forward and in next 

 6           year so we can get this addressed.

 7                  SENATOR SEPÚLVEDA:  Very good.  Thank 

 8           you.  Because I believe that that's -- it 

 9           would be a major step.  When we're talking 

10           about that affordable housing and developing 

11           more affordable housing, I think that would 

12           be a major step to correcting some of these 

13           issues.

14                  Now, there have been a lot of 

15           discussions up here and in the city over 

16           housing itself.  So can you tell us, based on 

17           your information, what would happen if Albany 

18           up here doesn't act?  

19                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  If Albany fails to 

20           act?

21                  SENATOR SEPÚLVEDA:  Yes.

22                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  We're dealing with 

23           an inventory problem, even with our expansion 

24           of the FHEPS vouchers.  Many people are 


                                                                   35

 1           walking around with FHEPS vouchers in their 

 2           possession, but they cannot find housing.  

 3           Our battle is an inventory problem as well as 

 4           an affordability problem.  

 5                  And so that is why we presented 

 6           several initiatives, in partnership with the 

 7           Governor.  We have 136 million square feet of 

 8           available office space that can be converted.  

 9           We can raise our FAR.  We could also come up 

10           with a real tax incentive.  And I think 

11           there's a place to have tenant protections.  

12           I think it's time for us to come together and 

13           come up and deal with the inventory crisis 

14           that we're facing.  And if we don't, we're 

15           going to continue to see an increase in our 

16           shelter population.

17                  SENATOR SEPÚLVEDA:  Well, as chair of 

18           Cities 1 I'm here to make sure that we do 

19           everything we can to address these issues.

20                  Now, can the city help low- and 

21           moderate-income homeowners finance the 

22           potential conversions of basements to create 

23           more inventory?

24                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Yes.  And that is 


                                                                   36

 1           part of the proposal that we put forward and 

 2           that's part of the proposal that the Governor 

 3           has included in their budget.

 4                  We have many basement and other 

 5           dwellings, from grandparents' additional 

 6           housing on properties that we could use to 

 7           help with the housing crisis that we're 

 8           facing.  We have to think differently about 

 9           building housing.  And that's one of the 

10           proposals in our City of Yes plan that we put 

11           in place.  

12                  Many of the areas in the city, they 

13           have not participated in building affordable 

14           housing.  And we have had development and 

15           zoning rules that have really prevented our 

16           city from being integrated at the level that 

17           it ought to be.

18                  SENATOR SEPÚLVEDA:  And discuss with 

19           us the benefits of extending the 421-a tax 

20           exemption program for the City of New York.

21                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Many properties -- 

22           on many projects we did not put a shovel in 

23           the ground, Senator, due to COVID.  And it 

24           really prevented the level of development 


                                                                   37

 1           that we deserve.  And when you look at the 

 2           numbers that we presented and the large 

 3           number of housing we built, 51 percent was 

 4           dealing with 421-a.  

 5                  So if you remove -- if we don't have 

 6           some form of tax incentive, no matter what 

 7           the name of it is, it is going to prevent the 

 8           level of building that we need to deal with 

 9           the housing crisis that we're facing.

10                  So I'm hoping that our lawmakers will 

11           look at the success that we had and realize 

12           the role that 421-a played as we continue to 

13           look at how we find a balance of tenant 

14           protection as well as building new units of 

15           housing, as we do also rehab units of 

16           housing.

17                  SENATOR SEPÚLVEDA:  Let me shift topic 

18           a little bit here.  The Executive Budget 

19           proposes increasing the Transitional Finance 

20           Authority bonding from 13.5 billion to 

21           19.5 billion from July 1, 2024, and from 19.5 

22           billion to 25.5 billion beginning July 1, 

23           2025.

24                  This cap hasn't increased since 2009.  


                                                                   38

 1           What necessitates the increase in bonding 

 2           authority now?

 3                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  A combination of 

 4           things.  We have some huge capital 

 5           obligations that's in front of us, everything 

 6           from building four new jails, the BQE, class 

 7           size.  When you look at the capital 

 8           initiatives we have coming through the School 

 9           Construction Authority, we have real capital 

10           obligations.  And if we don't raise our limit 

11           and allow us to do so, it is going to impact 

12           many of those major projects that we have in 

13           front of us.  

14                  We have to be able to raise the cap so 

15           that we can reach our building obligations 

16           that's been handed down to us.

17                  SENATOR SEPÚLVEDA:  On the public 

18           safety front, one of the issues that's 

19           discussed in my district, especially at the 

20           community boards, is the issue of e-bike 

21           safety.  We've proposed -- several of us have 

22           proposed legislation to combat the issue of 

23           e-bikes on streets, the danger, the crime 

24           that's committed with these e-bikes.


                                                                   39

 1                  What steps is the city taking or can 

 2           the city take, with our assistance if 

 3           possible, to combat the issue of these 

 4           e-bikes that are essentially creating unsafe 

 5           environments in our communities?

 6                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Well, I'm not the 

 7           choir; I wrote the song on this one.  

 8                  (Laughter.)

 9                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Every community 

10           meeting I attended, and at my town halls, 

11           this topic comes up.  We had a reuse of our 

12           streets after COVID.  After COVID, there was 

13           a large use of online ordering, restaurant 

14           ordering, and it gave a boon to e-bikes, 

15           micromobility, and we have to now adjust to 

16           that.  

17                  And we have several phases that we're 

18           doing.  Number one, education.  We want to 

19           partner with our delivery services, our 

20           restaurants, and those who are considered 

21           deliveristas, that we were able to increase 

22           and give them the pay that they deserve, to 

23           educate them on how to properly use the 

24           streets.  


                                                                   40

 1                  Number two, enforcement.  We've 

 2           removed thousands of illegal mopeds and 

 3           e-bikes off our streets.  Many of them were 

 4           being used for illegal means.  They were 

 5           being used to commit crimes.  They were 

 6           unregistered.  Many of them were stolen.  So 

 7           we did the proper enforcement.  

 8                  And then we wanted to partner with the 

 9           City Council to put in place a real 

10           registration program so that we could 

11           identify those who are abusers and make sure 

12           that we're taking those bikes off the streets 

13           so they won't continue to be used illegally 

14           in the process.

15                  SENATOR SEPÚLVEDA:  Mayor, I proposed 

16           legislation to do exactly that at the state 

17           level.  I hope that I can get the city's 

18           support to pass this legislation, because 

19           it's going to require registration, it's 

20           going to require certain requirements of 

21           those that sell the e-bikes.  And certain 

22           safety measures to train people to use 

23           e-bikes, to register, to get insurance, 

24           things of that nature.  


                                                                   41

 1                  And I look forward to the city's 

 2           support with that.

 3                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  And we need to do 

 4           that.  But I also want to be clear.  When it 

 5           comes to pedestrian fatalities, what we have 

 6           done in the city -- we have the lowest 

 7           pedestrian fatalities since 1910.  That's how 

 8           well we are doing with our Vision Zero.  We 

 9           have a long way to go.  We're nowhere near 

10           the zero that we're looking for.  But we've 

11           made some real improvements with Commissioner 

12           Ydanis Rodriguez over at the DOT, and we're 

13           going to continue to do so.  But e-bikes is 

14           one of our areas of focus.

15                  SENATOR SEPÚLVEDA:  Thank you for 

16           that, Mayor.

17                  Now, one last question.  Senator 

18           Comrie and I believe Assemblywoman Rajkumar 

19           have a bill, the SMOKEOUT bill, on the 

20           illegal smoke shops that we have in the city.  

21           Now, you had indicated that if we give you 

22           the authority to be able to close them down, 

23           that you can do it in 30 days.

24                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Yes, I can.  And my 


                                                                   42

 1           hat's off to the -- Senator Comrie and 

 2           Assemblywoman Rajkumar, because this 

 3           important initiative that came out of the 

 4           state, what you wanted to accomplish is going 

 5           up in smoke.  

 6                  And there are too many illegal shops.  

 7           And I think all of you are experiencing this; 

 8           it's not only localized to New York City.  

 9           The dream of legalizing cannabis is going in 

10           the wrong direction.  And if I'm given the 

11           authority to locally address this problem, we 

12           will rid our city of illegal smoke shops in a 

13           30-day period.

14                  SENATOR SEPÚLVEDA:  Thank you, Mayor.  

15                  Now, just the statement I want to make 

16           is that the issue with the migrant crisis is 

17           something that's unprecedented in the history 

18           of the City of New York.  And I know there 

19           are many critics about what you've done, but 

20           there was no blueprint to help the city do 

21           that.  So I want to congratulate you for at 

22           least taking a humane position and 

23           understanding that these people come here, 

24           many of them, for a better life.  And we know 


                                                                   43

 1           there have been incidents of crime recently 

 2           that don't bode well for them.  I hope not 

 3           everyone's --

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Senator, I --

 5                  SENATOR SEPÚLVEDA:  -- painted with 

 6           the same brush, but thank you for the 

 7           position you've taken.

 8                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Thank you.

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I have to be the 

10           mean one to cut you off.  Thank you, 

11           Senator Sepúlveda.

12                  Assembly.

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Yes, thank you, 

14           Senator.

15                  We are joined also by Assemblymember 

16           Seawright and Assemblymember Taylor.  

17                  And our next questioner is our 

18           Assembly Cities ranker, Assemblymember 

19           Reilly, for five minutes.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN REILLY:  Thank you, 

21           Mr. Chair.

22                  Good morning, Mr. Mayor.

23                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Good morning.  How 

24           are you?


                                                                   44

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN REILLY:  So lately of 

 2           course in the news we've seen recently with 

 3           the asylum-seekers, the migrants, with the 

 4           involvement with the New York City Police 

 5           Department, especially in Times Square.  The 

 6           issues have arisen that, you know, you have 

 7           an executive order, you have a state of 

 8           emergency.  

 9                  Will you commit to or consider issuing 

10           an executive order that will resist or take 

11           away the restraints that the NYPD and other 

12           law enforcement have to have collaboration 

13           with federal ICE, so that those who commit 

14           crimes like that are actually notified at the 

15           federal level so they can look to remove 

16           them.  

17                  What's your stance on that, and would 

18           you consider that?

19                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Well, first, the 

20           incident that we all are familiar with that 

21           took place in Manhattan was despicable.  And 

22           the actions of what you saw there is not a 

23           reflection of the -- of over 100,000 migrants 

24           and asylum-seekers who are in our city.


                                                                   45

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN REILLY:  So, Mr. Mayor, 

 2           let me be clear.  I'm not saying that the 

 3           NYPD should notify on all asylum-seekers.  I 

 4           understand that we have the sanctuary city 

 5           law.  

 6                  But the idea of an executive order 

 7           would be to suspend it for issues like the 

 8           incident that happened in Times Square.  And 

 9           we're seeing that it's happening more and 

10           more, because the next day there was another 

11           one.  So there's a fine-tuning that we can 

12           do, and I think there's an ability to do 

13           that.  

14                  So that's my question for you is, is 

15           that something you will consider?  

16                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Well, first, I 

17           didn't think you were saying that it was for 

18           everyone.  And you and I share the same 

19           vision.  Those who come here should have the 

20           opportunity.

21                  There was a law that was passed by the 

22           City Council that made the decision that we 

23           could not cooperate with ICE.  It was a law.  

24           I cannot turn back that law.  That's the 


                                                                   46

 1           City Council's action, and the City Council 

 2           must make that decision.

 3                  I believe if you create repeated 

 4           felonies in our city, the federal government 

 5           should do its job and have that individual 

 6           deported from our city.  There is a privilege 

 7           to be here and participate in the American 

 8           dream.  I don't have the authority to do 

 9           that.  The City Council would have to do 

10           that.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN REILLY:  So my -- so I'm 

12           going to reiterate the executive order 

13           position here.  You issued an executive 

14           order, declared a state of emergency in the 

15           city, you suspended the shelter laws, which 

16           were created by the City Council.  There's an 

17           ability to suspend laws that were created by 

18           the City Council.  That's what the idea of 

19           the executive order is.  And I don't mean it 

20           in any disrespect that way.

21                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  No, I don't think we 

22           take it as that.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN REILLY:  I'm just trying 

24           to explain to the audience and to the people 


                                                                   47

 1           that -- why I'm addressing this question.  

 2           You have the ability to issue that executive 

 3           order, to suspend that law temporarily, 

 4           whether it's up to five days or it can be 

 5           extended at that time.  Will you do that?

 6                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  The -- as I shared 

 7           with you, as you saw, we had one case in 

 8           Staten Island that the Staten Island judge 

 9           made an opinion, a decision that we were 

10           overreaching our executive order authority.

11                  If I could have the authority and if 

12           my legal team tells me I have the authority 

13           to have cooperation with ICE for those who 

14           commit felony dangerous crimes, that is 

15           something we would love to entertain and to 

16           look at.

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN REILLY:  So you mentioned 

18           the case in Staten Island.  It automatically 

19           was appealed.  And then fast forward, the 

20           same type of argument the city presented in 

21           Manhattan was actually decided in that case 

22           in Staten Island.

23                  So the ability for the city to address 

24           the migrant asylum crisis was given the 


                                                                   48

 1           opportunity with the decision in 

 2           Staten Island.  So why did the city appeal 

 3           instead of allowing that decision to stand 

 4           and it would have helped in the right to 

 5           shelter case?

 6                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  No --

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN REILLY:  Instead, it moved 

 8           forward in Manhattan court.

 9                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  No, it -- it's 

10           interpreted that it may have helped.  We 

11           don't believe it would have helped.

12                  Our goal is to ensure that the right 

13           to shelter ruling is not dealing with the 

14           migrant and asylum-seeker crisis.  That's two 

15           different incidents.

16                  The right to shelter that was put in 

17           place over 40 years ago was dealing with 

18           those New Yorkers that needed shelter, those 

19           few men.  It did not deal with a migrant and 

20           asylum crisis.  And that is what we want to 

21           get classified in the court, and that is what 

22           we are fighting for right now.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN REILLY:  Thank you, 

24           Mr. Mayor.


                                                                   49

 1                  So just to be clear, I think an 

 2           executive order allowing ICE to be notified 

 3           by the NYPD will restore public safety and 

 4           will also build morale in the NYPD.  Because 

 5           right now I think there's low morale because 

 6           of that.  Thank you.

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Thank you, 

 8           Assemblymember Reilly.

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

10                  Senator Roxanne Persaud.  Oh, I'm 

11           sorry, another rule for the day:  If somebody 

12           is called up and they need a microphone, 

13           someone else kindly gives them their seat.

14                  Thank you.

15                  SENATOR PERSAUD:  Thank you.  Good 

16           morning, Mr. Mayor and team.

17                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Good morning.

18                  SENATOR PERSAUD:  Thank you for being 

19           here.  I just have a few questions pertaining 

20           to social services and the amount of funding 

21           that is being used to provide resources to 

22           the immigrant population that we're 

23           experiencing now.  Could you tell us that 

24           cost?


                                                                   50

 1                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  The cost of those 

 2           services?

 3                  SENATOR PERSAUD:  Yes.

 4                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Jacques, will you 

 5           give some numbers for us?

 6                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  It's about 

 7           $4.2 billion this year and about $4.9 billion 

 8           next year.  And it covers everything ranging 

 9           from housing --

10                  (Call of "microphone.")

11                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  It's on.

12                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  It's on.

13                  And it covers everything ranging from 

14           housing to security and, you know, food and 

15           everything.

16                  So I don't know if that's what you're 

17           referring to, the overall costs.

18                  SENATOR PERSAUD:  All costs.

19                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  Yes.

20                  SENATOR PERSAUD:  So we know that 

21           food, the issue of food in the migrant 

22           community has become an issue.  And last week 

23           you announced the shift that you are going 

24           to -- that your administration is going to -- 


                                                                   51

 1           instead of giving the food, you're going to 

 2           be giving prepaid cards.

 3                  And so people are asking us, as the 

 4           Social Services Committee, why is that?  

 5                  And I think we also had people who 

 6           were not aware that everyone in housing, in 

 7           temporary housing, gets certain 

 8           accommodations.  And the conversation is that 

 9           you're only giving this accommodation to this 

10           population.  Could you address that?

11                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  If there's one thing 

12           I learned in New York, New Yorkers are very 

13           opinionated and they share their thoughts.

14                  And so first we want to dismiss the 

15           misinformation.  We're not giving people 

16           American Express cards.  We found that the 

17           food delivery service that we set up during 

18           the emergency, we could find a better way to 

19           do it in our belief that we want to cut 

20           20 percent of the migrant cost.  So we have a 

21           pilot project with 500 people, that we are 

22           giving them a food card, so instead of -- a 

23           debit card.  Instead of having to deliver 

24           food and have people eat food that we were 


                                                                   52

 1           seeing waste in food, they are now able to 

 2           get their own food that is going to be spent 

 3           $12 a day.  So we're going to save money on 

 4           delivery, we're going to save money on people 

 5           wasting food.  And this is a pilot project 

 6           we're going to use that is going to save us 

 7           $6.7 million a year and is -- if the pilot 

 8           turns out to be successful, then we're going 

 9           to expand it not only with the migrants and 

10           asylum-seekers, we would look to do that 

11           expansion throughout the entire system.  

12                  We're trying to find smarter, more 

13           cost-effective ways to deal with this crisis 

14           that was dropped in our lap.

15                  SENATOR PERSAUD:  Okay, thank you.  My 

16           time is up already.  Thank you.

17                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

18                  Assembly.  

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Thank you.  

20                  We've been joined by Assemblymember 

21           De Los Santos, Assemblymember Rajkumar, 

22           Assemblymember Simone, Assemblymember 

23           Levenberg.  

24                  And our next questioner is 


                                                                   53

 1           Assemblymember Fall, for three minutes.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN FALL:  Yes, thank you, 

 3           Mr. Chair.

 4                  Thank you, Mr. Mayor, for being here.  

 5           But also really want to thank your team for 

 6           the incredible work that they do with my 

 7           office every time I call.  They're very 

 8           responsive.  So always got to give kudos to 

 9           your incredible team that's here.

10                  You know, public safety is a -- it's a 

11           big priority for me, so the fact that your 

12           administration has removed thousands of guns 

13           off of our streets makes a difference.  We 

14           truly appreciate that.  The North Shore 

15           Action Plan, you know, you have with 

16           Councilmember Hanks, you know, I think it 

17           shows what the vision is for the North Shore 

18           of Staten Island.  

19                  And as far as Lower Manhattan, the 

20           issues that EDC has tried to address with the 

21           helicopter issues as far as quality of life, 

22           I appreciate all the work that's being done 

23           there.

24                  I want to bring the issue related to 


                                                                   54

 1           DEP.  Obviously every time it rains we have 

 2           heavy flooding that's taking place out on 

 3           Staten Island and certain parts of 

 4           Lower Manhattan.  What can I share with my 

 5           constituents on the short-term measures that 

 6           the city has taken, and long-term measures 

 7           that you look to accomplish in the future to 

 8           prevent such flooding?  

 9                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Thank you, 

10           Assemblyman.  First off, thank you for your 

11           kind words.  And we try to be one of the most 

12           accessible administrations that we want to be 

13           in the history of the city.

14                  I took a drive out to Staten Island, I 

15           think it was at that time Senator Savino, 

16           who's here with us now, she was a Senator at 

17           the time, and saw firsthand of the impact of 

18           the water damage that happens after a storm.

19                  And there's a short-term, there's a 

20           long-term, and there's a mid-term plan.  Long 

21           term, we really have to deal with the 

22           environmental crisis that we are facing.  And 

23           just as with the climate changes, it's going 

24           to include, number one, shoring up our 


                                                                   55

 1           shorelines of -- making Rit Aggarwala, who's 

 2           my DEP commissioner, is part of our most 

 3           recent plan and Plan NYC -- our Plan NYC 

 4           proposal shows how we're looking throughout 

 5           the entire city in general, but specifically 

 6           in areas like Staten Island, the Lower East 

 7           Side, out in the Rockaways, Jamaica Bay area, 

 8           how we're using several different coastal 

 9           flood protections, flood protection for 

10           buildings, cloudbursts.  Something that we're 

11           using a lot of, combined sewer overflow 

12           management, is something that's important.  

13           We're doing green infrastructure, sewer 

14           repair.  

15                  So there's a short-term and mid-term 

16           and a long-term plan.  This environmental 

17           crisis we face is going to take all three 

18           levels of approach.  And that's what DEP is 

19           doing.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN FALL:  Gotcha.  

21                  I only have 20 seconds left, so I do 

22           want to call to your attention the Stapleton 

23           projects, the Carter Center.  The provider 

24           there needs to change.  It's not working for 


                                                                   56

 1           the community.  It hasn't been working for 

 2           over a decade.  We need to see some 

 3           improvements there.  

 4                  And I also would love to have --

 5                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  I'm sorry, I didn't 

 6           get -- that word was --

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN FALL:  The Carter Center 

 8           in Stapleton.  

 9                  And I would love to have a fast ferry 

10           from Staten Island to Brooklyn.

11                  (Laughter.)

12                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  I would like that 

13           also (laughing).

14                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

15                  Next up is my friend Senator Borrello, 

16           who I don't think has ever visited New York 

17           City.  

18                  (Laughter.)

19                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  So maybe you want 

20           to have him come.  

21                  (Overtalk.)

22                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  I'm going to invite 

23           you to a Broadway play.

24                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  I've been there 


                                                                   57

 1           several times and --

 2                  (Laughter; overtalk.) 

 3                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  First of all, 

 4           Mayor Adams, thank you for being here.

 5                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Thank you.

 6                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  Diane Savino is 

 7           looking at me like "be nice."

 8                  So, look, we all know that the root 

 9           cause of the problems that you're 

10           experiencing with the migrant crisis is the 

11           fact that the Biden administration has failed 

12           to secure our border.  Okay?  That's the 

13           disease that has to be cured.  The rest of us 

14           are just trying to manage the symptoms.  So I 

15           understand that's the position that you're 

16           in.  

17                  But if I heard you correctly, you're 

18           saying it's about a $10 billion cost this 

19           year.  The federal government has not stepped 

20           up, and you would like the state to increase 

21           that $2.4 billion to like $5 billion?  Is 

22           that correct?

23                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  The first level is 

24           the state agreed to a third.  We would like 


                                                                   58

 1           to get them to the third.  And the reason 

 2           they agreed to the third, because it was 

 3           going to break it down a third for the feds, 

 4           a third for the city, and a third for the 

 5           state.

 6                  The feds never gave their third.  So 

 7           we're getting 70 percent of the burden.  And 

 8           we're saying that we're the economic engine 

 9           of the state and we've always been here for 

10           the state.  We need the state now to be here 

11           for us in the city.

12                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  So you've reached 

13           out to the federal government.  They 

14           originally agreed to the third?  Or was that 

15           the proposal and they just decided to --

16                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  They never agreed to 

17           the third.  That was the decision that was 

18           made here in Albany, we would divide it in 

19           three ways.  We never thought we would get a 

20           third from the federal government.

21                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  Okay.  So what kind 

22           of response do you get from the federal 

23           government about, you know, essentially -- I 

24           mean, are you calling on the federal 


                                                                   59

 1           government to secure the border to help stop 

 2           this?  

 3                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  I'm calling for our 

 4           partners in the Senate and Congress and the 

 5           White House to come up with a real solution 

 6           for immigration reform so that cities like 

 7           New York, Chicago, Houston and others are not 

 8           going through this.  Cities should not be 

 9           dealing with a national crisis.  

10                  SENATOR BORRELLO:   I understand 

11           that's the narrative that we need to have 

12           comprehensive immigration reform.  But that's 

13           like somebody walking into an emergency room 

14           with symptoms of a heart attack and the 

15           doctor says, Well, I can't treat your heart 

16           attack until we address your diet and 

17           exercise regimen.  

18                  No, we have to address the security 

19           threat first and foremost.  But -- so with 

20           that being said, my next question is New York 

21           City remains a sanctuary city, which is a 

22           welcome mat to people across the world to 

23           come here.  

24                  Do you stand on the policy that 


                                                                   60

 1           New York City should remain a sanctuary city?  

 2                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Yes, I do.  I think 

 3           that being a sanctuary city is the origin of 

 4           all of us.  All of us came from some level of 

 5           immigration.  

 6                  But I think that those who come here 

 7           and abuse our good nature, they need to be 

 8           dealt with on the federal level, deported.  

 9           And that's the type of abuse we saw.

10                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  Well, there's no 

11           way to distinguish that.  The bottom line is 

12           New York City remains a sanctuary city.  That 

13           is what's drawing people here.  I know we 

14           want to blame Governor Abbott.  That's only 

15           about 10 percent of the folks are actually 

16           bused here.  In fact, many of them are coming 

17           from NGOs that are being funded by the 

18           federal government that are bringing them 

19           here to New York.  

20                  Once again, we need to repeal the 

21           sanctuary status in order to stop the flow so 

22           you can manage the situation as best as you 

23           can.

24                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  No, I don't think 


                                                                   61

 1           people come here because we're a sanctuary 

 2           city.  I think they come here because we're 

 3           the greatest city on the globe.  And that's 

 4           why the World Cup decided to come here.  you 

 5           know, we're the greatest city in the greatest 

 6           state on the globe.  

 7                  And when I was in South America, 

 8           people wanted to come.  They thought this was 

 9           the start of the American dream.  That's what 

10           I believe.  

11                  SENATOR BORRELLO:  God bless you, and 

12           good luck.

13                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Thank you.

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Thank you, 

15           Senator.

16                  Assemblymember Mamdani, three minutes.

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN MAMDANI:  Thank you.

18                  Good morning, Mr. Mayor. 

19                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Good morning, 

20           Assemblyman.  Good to see you.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN MAMDANI:  Good to see you 

22           as well.  

23                  Mr. Mayor, Columbia and NYU are two of 

24           the largest property owners in New York City, 


                                                                   62

 1           yet are exempted from paying $327 million a 

 2           year in property taxes all because of an 

 3           exemption granted to them by the State 

 4           Constitution.  Would you support ending this 

 5           exemption?  

 6                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  I would entertain 

 7           that.  I would like to see what the exemption 

 8           is looking like.  I think at this time 

 9           everyone needs to participate.  And I think 

10           there are ways of using those institutions.  

11           They all need to do more and give more.

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN MAMDANI:  Thank you.

13                  Mayor Adams, in your testimony you 

14           spoke of the importance of legal 

15           requirements, and you've also described 

16           yourself as a law-and-order mayor.  Is that 

17           correct?  

18                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  I like to believe 

19           that.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN MAMDANI:  Okay.  So on to 

21           my question.  

22                  We have the slowest buses in the 

23           country.  And recognizing the need to speed 

24           up our buses, the law required you to build 


                                                                   63

 1           20 miles of bus lanes in 2022.  In that year 

 2           you built 12.9 miles.  The law then required 

 3           you to build 30 miles of bus lanes in 2023.  

 4           You built 7.8 miles.  

 5                  How can you call yourself a 

 6           law-and-order mayor when New Yorkers can't 

 7           trust you to follow the law?  

 8                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Well, I think 

 9           that -- first of all, that's a -- that's an 

10           unfair accusation.  I spent 22 years of my 

11           life following, protecting, and ensuring the 

12           law is followed.  

13                  And so when you cannot fulfill a 

14           requirement of building a number of bus lanes 

15           to all of a sudden say that, you know, you 

16           don't believe in law and order, I think 

17           that's a far stretch.

18                  We've done an amazing job of building 

19           bus lanes.  And what I did that was different 

20           from previous administrations, I did 

21           something revolutionary.  I'll allow  

22           communities to communicate.  We spoke with 

23           community residents.  We heard from them.  So 

24           in addition to being a law-and-order mayor, 


                                                                   64

 1           I'm a mayor that listen to communities.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN MAMDANI:  Okay.  Well, I 

 3           would just say that in a time when you have 

 4           spoken a lot about fiscal prudence, the 

 5           Citizens Budget Commission has said that 

 6           speeding up our buses by just 15 percent 

 7           would save the MTA more than $260 million a 

 8           year.

 9                  Moving on to my final question, 

10           Mayor Adams, more than 27,000 Palestinians 

11           have been killed by Israel over the last four 

12           months, with more than 7,000 still missing 

13           under the rubble.  How many more Palestinians 

14           have to be killed for you to call for a 

15           ceasefire?

16                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Well, I've been 

17           extremely clear on calling for anything that 

18           ends this conflict.  Bring the hostages home.  

19           Free the hostages.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN MAMDANI:  Absolutely --

21                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  I saw what happened 

22           on October 7th.  I saw the despicable act of 

23           Hamas.  I saw babies were killed.  And so no 

24           innocent family should die on the Palestinian 


                                                                   65

 1           side or on the Israeli side.

 2                  We need to be extremely clear.  My 

 3           record is sound and solid on fighting on 

 4           behalf of people in this city and across the 

 5           globe.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN MAMDANI:  So would you --

 7                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  It's sound and 

 8           solid.  And I don't think anyone who's come 

 9           on the scene recently can look at my 30-year 

10           uninterrupted history on fighting on behalf 

11           of Palestinians, Jews, African-Americans, 

12           LGBTQ, AAPI.  I have a solid record, brother, 

13           and you cannot come up against it.

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Thank you.

15                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

16                  We've been joined by Robert Jackson.  

17                  And next up is Senator Hoylman-Sigal.

18                  SENATOR HOYLMAN-SIGAL:  Good morning, 

19           Mr. Mayor.  Welcome back to Albany.

20                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Thank you.

21                  SENATOR HOYLMAN-SIGAL:  As you know, 

22           the Executive Budget, as was mentioned, 

23           includes 2.4 billion in supplemental aid to 

24           the City of New York.  Over the last year, 


                                                                   66

 1           you've announced a series of cuts to various 

 2           programs, including libraries, 3-K and 

 3           sanitation.  I appreciate that you've 

 4           restored some of those cuts.  But as I 

 5           understand it, you're still planning to cut 

 6           up to 1.2 billion in your next budget.  And 

 7           we know, in my district, that libraries are 

 8           still closed on Sundays.  

 9                  If you do get this 2.4 billion -- 

10           that's a pretty big tin cup -- do we have 

11           your commitment that all the cuts will be 

12           restored to at least where they were in the 

13           FY '24 enacted budget?  

14                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Senator, this is a 

15           moving crisis that -- as I indicated earlier 

16           to Assemblyman Braunstein, that we don't see 

17           an end to.  And year after year we have to 

18           fulfill our obligation of balancing our 

19           budget.  

20                  We were able to restore cuts to the 

21           NYPD class, to the libraries.  We were able 

22           to restore some of the cuts to our education, 

23           to the Department of Education, to our parks, 

24           our fire department.  We were able to do that 


                                                                   67

 1           because we successfully brought down the 

 2           population of the number of migrants and 

 3           asylum-seekers we had in our care.  We were 

 4           successfully able to do that.  

 5                  In addition to that, we had better 

 6           than expected revenues to do so.  So as much 

 7           as we can prevent the upcoming PEGs, we would 

 8           like to do so.  And as much as we could bring 

 9           down the population in care, we will continue 

10           to look of how we could restore.  But we're 

11           not out of the woods.  We're long out of the 

12           woods.

13                  SENATOR HOYLMAN-SIGAL:  So are you 

14           saying that the 2.4 billion isn't enough?  

15                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  No.  No.  No, it is 

16           not.  We need -- we need more.  We are --

17                  SENATOR HOYLMAN-SIGAL:  Is there a 

18           number?

19                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Jacques, do we have 

20           an exact number?  

21                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  We talk 

22           about 50 percent of the costs.  Because 

23           currently the -- the $2.4 billion you're 

24           referring, it's only $1.1 billion in new 


                                                                   68

 1           commitment to the city.  Okay?  And we 

 2           already had like 1.9 already accounted for, 

 3           so it's only $1.1 billion of new commitment 

 4           that the state made.

 5                  So a portion of it is for the tents, 

 6           the HERRCs -- the Creedmoors, the Randall's 

 7           Islands.  That was already budgeted for, that 

 8           was already included in the budget.  So the 

 9           only thing that is new is $1.1 billion.

10                  SENATOR HOYLMAN-SIGAL:  In my last 

11           30 seconds, is the language in the 

12           Executive Budget on giving localities the 

13           authority to close illegal cannabis shops 

14           sufficient for you to do the job?  

15                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  It moves us in the 

16           right direction, but it's not going to 

17           fulfill what needs to be done.

18                  Local authorities should address the 

19           cannabis issue -- not being heavy-handed, but 

20           being able to close down the shop and hold 

21           people responsible.

22                  SENATOR HOYLMAN-SIGAL:  Thank you.

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

24                  Assembly.  


                                                                   69

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Assemblymember 

 2           Weprin for three minutes.

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN WEPRIN:  Thank you, 

 4           Mr. Chair.

 5                  Thank you, Mr. Mayor, for coming up 

 6           here with your team.  And I think I've worked 

 7           with each and every one of the members of 

 8           your team on many issues.  And I appreciate 

 9           your close relationship with the 

10           State Legislature; possibly your having 

11           served in the State Senate for many years may 

12           have contributed to that.

13                  I am now -- well, I am chair of the 

14           Assembly Insurance Committee and have worked 

15           very closely with Chris Ellis, who's here, 

16           dealing with small contractors, including 

17           many small businesses and MWBEs who often 

18           struggle to find competitive insurance 

19           options to meet the standards required for 

20           public construction projects.

21                  Last year, with Chris and his team's 

22           assistance, we passed legislation to remove 

23           the prohibition on using owner-controlled 

24           insurance policies, OCIPs, allowing city 


                                                                   70

 1           departments like the Department of Ed, 

 2           New York City IDA, Health + Hospitals, and 

 3           the New York City Housing Authority to 

 4           authorize contracts on certain projects.  

 5                  This bill was signed into law by 

 6           Governor Hochul on October 25th of last year.  

 7           It took effect immediately.

 8                  I'd like to inquire -- and maybe Chris 

 9           has been monitoring it -- on the status of 

10           the implementation of these contracts and 

11           what impact has it had in the city and the 

12           departments handling these contracts.  And 

13           have the awarded contracts been 

14           representative of the MWBEs that we hope 

15           would benefit from this legislation?

16                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Thank you.  Thank 

17           you.  You have been a partner on so many 

18           different initiatives throughout the years, 

19           Assemblyman.  We want to thank you for that.

20                  The city is now working to roll out 

21           the program, particularly around MWBEs in our 

22           construction contracts.  So we are in the 

23           process of rolling out the program.

24                  ASSEMBLYMAN WEPRIN:  Thank you.  And 


                                                                   71

 1           if you could kind of give me an indication -- 

 2           I know it's recent, the law just went into 

 3           effect.  But if you could monitor it and 

 4           maybe have someone get back to me as to how 

 5           many contracts have taken place and what the 

 6           effect of the legislation has been.

 7                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Chris does not -- he 

 8           does not fail to remind us.  You're one of 

 9           his favorite Assemblypersons --

10                  (Laughter.)

11                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  -- so I'm sure he's 

12           going to -- he's going to reach out to you.

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN WEPRIN:  Okay, thank you.  

14                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

15                  Next up is Senator Felder.

16                  SENATOR FELDER:  Good morning.  How 

17           are you?

18                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Hey, how are you, 

19           Senator, good to see you.

20                  SENATOR FELDER:  Thank you, 

21           Senator Krueger, for allowing me to ask a 

22           question.  

23                  And good morning, Mr. Mayor.  Thank 

24           you for schlepping up to Albany.


                                                                   72

 1                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Thank you.

 2                  SENATOR FELDER:  As you know very 

 3           well, New York's special-needs children and 

 4           their families are hurting and have been 

 5           hurting for a very long time.  I know that 

 6           you inherited these issues from previous 

 7           administrations, but that cannot be an excuse 

 8           for us not to take everything -- do 

 9           everything possible to help these families.

10                  In July a federal judge ordered the 

11           city's Education Department to implement 

12           approximately 40 reforms to be in compliance 

13           with federal law and improve special 

14           education services in the city.  It's my 

15           understanding, based on the special monitor's 

16           report, that some of the deadlines have been 

17           met; others have not been met.

18                  Now, these issues have been neglected 

19           for a very long time, and that's why I was so 

20           moved, when you ran for mayor, you chose to 

21           speak about your personal experience with 

22           dyslexia, a learning disability that was 

23           discovered late in life.

24                  You have made great progress for 


                                                                   73

 1           children with dyslexia in the city and you've 

 2           kept the issue at the forefront.  But the 

 3           priorities stated in your first State of the 

 4           City address, and I quote, "as someone who 

 5           struggled with an undiagnosed learning 

 6           disability Mayor Adams is committed to giving 

 7           students with learning disabilities the tools 

 8           they need to succeed."

 9                  The fact is that today children and 

10           families with special needs, children with 

11           special needs and their families are hurting 

12           terribly.  And it is a crisis that's been 

13           going on for a long time.

14                  So my question to you today is, how 

15           are we going to work together to finally 

16           resolve this issue?  You know, I'm not 

17           looking for a hundred percent; I know that's 

18           impossible.  But we can't say that just 

19           because something's been going on for a very 

20           long time that we can't do anything about it.

21                  And I'm begging you, you know -- you 

22           know, that's my question.  What are we going 

23           to do to finally get our hands around this 

24           problem to resolve it?  


                                                                   74

 1                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Well said, Senator.

 2                  And really my first introduction into 

 3           this was Assemblywoman Jo Anne Simon and the 

 4           work she has done.  We -- the administration 

 5           added 490 million to Carter Cases.  And this 

 6           is not enough.  The real price tag is about a 

 7           billion dollars.  And we cannot continue to 

 8           deny these families, I agree with you 

 9           100 percent.  And we're going to continue to 

10           do what we have to do to look after these 

11           families.

12                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And I have to be 

13           mean to you, Mr. Mayor, and cut you off.  

14           Thank you.

15                  Assembly.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Assemblymember 

17           Epstein for three minutes.

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN EPSTEIN:  Thank you, 

19           Chair.  

20                  And Mr. Mayor, thank you for being 

21           here and for your work.  

22                  So just to be clear, you support 

23           tenant protections, good cause, in all city 

24           residential buildings that are not subject to 


                                                                   75

 1           rent regulation?  

 2                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  I support a version 

 3           of tenant protection.  I'm a small property 

 4           owner, and I know what tenant protection is.  

 5           Every one of my tenants signed a lease that I 

 6           would never raise their rent as long as 

 7           they're in.  

 8                  So I support tenants.  And there's a 

 9           place we can all come together that we can 

10           build and protect.  

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN EPSTEIN:  That's great, 

12           Mayor.  

13                  So we have a lot of expiring use 421-a 

14           buildings.  There's -- every year thousands 

15           of units come out of rent regulation because 

16           they were pre-2013 rent-regulated because of 

17           421-a.  We don't have a lot of tools right 

18           now to be able to continue to regulate those 

19           units and keep those as affordable housing.  

20                  I'm wondering, are there other tools 

21           that you're looking for, for HPD for those 

22           old expiring 421-a units?  We have a bill, 

23           Senator Cleare and I, about helping those 

24           retain affordability around some condo 


                                                                   76

 1           conversions.  But I'm looking at what else 

 2           your office is doing to protect those units 

 3           that are coming out of rent regulation.

 4                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Well, you know, I 

 5           presented this when I was a State Senator and 

 6           we reached a roadblock because of releasing 

 7           of information.  

 8                  We need to use technology better to 

 9           identify our entire housing stock that should 

10           be protected.  And we should identify when 

11           it's about to leave, for whatever reason -- 

12           if it's in court, or there's some form of 

13           landlord abuse -- so we can give it the 

14           resources that they deserve.  We're 

15           hemorrhaging affordable units, and we're 

16           finding out after we lose them.  We have to 

17           use technology better to stop hemorrhaging 

18           these units.

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN EPSTEIN:  So I know 

20           Senator Cleare and I, as well as other folks, 

21           want to work with your office to try to 

22           retain all those affordable units.  Because 

23           the more we lose from here, the more the 

24           crisis is going to exacerbate.  


                                                                   77

 1                  I know we talked a lot about basement 

 2           apartments and legalization of cellar and 

 3           basement apartments.  Can you tell us, you 

 4           know, what the opportunity will be this year 

 5           to try to get those units legalized and what 

 6           the city would do if we allowed you to modify 

 7           the MDL to legalize those units?

 8                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  The goal is to -- 

 9           the cost of legalizing those units is 

10           extremely high.  And the goal is to be able 

11           to offset the costs and give the support to 

12           those families that would like to legalize 

13           these units.  And by having that 

14           authorization, it's going to move us forward 

15           in the right direction to do so.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN EPSTEIN:  Thank you, 

17           Mr. Mayor.  I want to turn to cannabis.  Do 

18           you think what the Governor is proposing now 

19           will allow you to padlock all the illegal 

20           establishments so they can no longer operate?  

21           And if not, what other authority do you need?

22                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  No.  The way to 

23           propose this -- it's a step in the right 

24           direction.  It's an acknowledgment that this 


                                                                   78

 1           is a process that has gotten out of control.  

 2           But the authorizations we need is to do the 

 3           inspections.  Right now police officers, the 

 4           sheriff cannot go in and do the actual 

 5           inspections unless it's cigarettes.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Thank you, 

 7           Mr. Mayor.

 8                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

 9                  Senator Gounardes.

10                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  Good morning, 

11           Mr. Mayor.  Thank you very much for being 

12           here.

13                  I want to start asking about housing.  

14           Obviously it's the issue that everyone is 

15           grappling with and talking about.  I know 

16           that the city, through it's City of Yes 

17           proposal, has talked about leveraging 

18           religious institutions and bringing them in 

19           as partners for the construction of housing.  

20           This is something that you worked on even at 

21           the borough president's office.  

22                  With the City of Yes proposal for 

23           religious institutions, how many units of 

24           housing do you think that will help us unlock 


                                                                   79

 1           across the city?  What are the 

 2           administration's projections for how much 

 3           housing can be created by leveraging 

 4           religious institutions?

 5                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  And first I want to 

 6           correct something if it was misspoke.  We 

 7           never -- I never stated that the Governor is 

 8           paying 50 percent of our migrant costs.  I 

 9           just want to be clear on that, because 

10           somehow that was misinterpreted.  

11                  The number of exact units that we 

12           projected -- do we have the exact number?  

13           Our goal -- 

14                  (Off the record.)

15                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  The City of Yes is 

16           100,000, but our overall goal is to get 

17           500,000 units.  But the City of Yes is 

18           100,000.

19                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  Okay.  One of the 

20           things in the City of Yes proposal with 

21           religious institutions, it's a bill that 

22           Assemblymember Cunningham and I are working 

23           on to do that statewide.  We like the idea of 

24           partnering with religious institutions.  We 


                                                                   80

 1           think the greatest opportunity is in New York 

 2           City, just given the number of institutions 

 3           we have.  And so we'd love to work with you 

 4           more on how we can both advance the City of 

 5           Yes proposal there, and also our statewide 

 6           legislation, to make these institutions 

 7           partners to create the type of affordable 

 8           housing that we need.

 9                  I want to shift gears -- 

10                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  And we would love to 

11           work with you.  You've always produced some 

12           smart bills from even the red light cameras.  

13           And so our team would love to look at that 

14           bill and work with you on this.

15                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  That's great.

16                  I was very glad to see in your State 

17           of the City address last week -- I guess two 

18           weeks ago now -- your focus on social media 

19           and the focus of this to be the health 

20           commissioner's advisory on this.  It builds 

21           upon what the Governor's put out.  

22                  I am working on two bills with 

23           Assemblymember Rozic around the addictive 

24           algorithms and the collection of data from 


                                                                   81

 1           minor users that I think fit very nicely with 

 2           what your administration has put out.  Would 

 3           love to have your team weigh in on those 

 4           bills.  Would love to have your support for 

 5           those bills.  Because we agree this is the 

 6           mental health crisis of our time, and these 

 7           companies are making billions by profiting 

 8           off the mental health and personal privacy of 

 9           minors and they're getting away with it 

10           scot-clean.  And it's having a huge impact.

11                  And so in my last few moments here I 

12           want to think about social media in schools.  

13           What impacts are you seeing with the 

14           proliferation of social media, the impact on 

15           students and in our school buildings 

16           currently?  

17                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Well, we met with 

18           social media companies last week, the major 

19           companies -- TikTok, Google, Meta and 

20           Instagram -- and the commissioner, Dr. Vasan, 

21           did a forum on this.  And we're seeing a 

22           major impact -- depression, suicidal 

23           thoughts, et cetera -- and it's being sourced 

24           and being connected to social media.


                                                                   82

 1                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  Thank you.  

 2                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 3                  Assembly.

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Assemblymember 

 5           González-Rojas for three minutes.

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GONZÁLEZ-ROJAS:  Thank 

 7           you, Mr. Mayor.

 8                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Thank you.

 9                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GONZÁLEZ-ROJAS:  I am 

10           asking this not just as a legislator but as a 

11           parent.  As a legislator, we fully funded 

12           Foundation Aid for our schools.  But as a 

13           parent, I'm watching the impacts of the 

14           proposed $550 million cuts that we have.  

15                  Last year I had a -- my son's teacher 

16           cried to me that she was being excessed, and 

17           she took her talents to Long Island.  So 

18           we're losing our talented teachers, and our 

19           students are struggling.  

20                  And I ask this as a mom:  How can we 

21           trust you?  Why should we trust you with 

22           mayoral control?  

23                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Well, you know, just 

24           as you are a mom, I'm a dad.  And I know what 


                                                                   83

 1           we need to help our children.  But not only 

 2           am I a dad, the schools that you're talking 

 3           about, I wore a bulletproof vest for 22 years 

 4           and protected those babies that you're 

 5           talking about.  And the decisions I'm making 

 6           of outpacing the city and outpacing the state 

 7           in education -- dyslexia screening, 

 8           educational opportunities, keeping our 

 9           schools safe.  

10                  And so if you have a lack of trust in 

11           the commitment that we've shown, I find that 

12           surprising.

13                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GONZÁLEZ-ROJAS:  I know 

14           I'm experiencing this as a mom.  My partner 

15           is on CEC 30.  There's just a lot of concerns 

16           our parents have for children who are in 

17           school right now.

18                  Moving on, are you aware that HRA is 

19           required to process public benefits within 

20           30 days of application?  

21                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Yes, I am.

22                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GONZÁLEZ-ROJAS:  We have 

23           food insecurity still on the rise.  I see it 

24           in my district in Jackson Heights, East 


                                                                   84

 1           Elmhurst, Corona, Woodside, and yet cash 

 2           assistance application processing rates have 

 3           declined nearly 41 percent and SNAP 

 4           processing has not picked up to pace despite 

 5           litigation.  I'm worried about my neighbors 

 6           going hungry.  

 7                  Can you speak to what you're doing to 

 8           specifically address this?  We asked this 

 9           question last year, and we're still not 

10           seeing those rates increase to the level 

11           needed.  

12                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  And Assemblywoman -- 

13           and I agree with you, no family should go 

14           hungry.  The SNAP backlog is now at what we 

15           consider functionally zero, less than 800 

16           cases overdue.  This is over a 65 percent 

17           reduction from where we were most of the 

18           summer.

19                  So you asked the question last year.  

20           We took action.  And the action that we're 

21           going to take and we're taking is taking an 

22           antiquated method that had people waiting too 

23           long, duplication of services, and we're 

24           doing this even with the manpower issue that 


                                                                   85

 1           we're facing.  

 2                  So because you asked that, we did not 

 3           walk away here not fully understanding how 

 4           serious this is.  And we took appropriate 

 5           action, and it's revealed in the numbers.  

 6           And my team will give you a full report to 

 7           show how much we've taken that action.

 8                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GONZÁLEZ-ROJAS:  Thank 

 9           you.

10                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Thank you.

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

12                  Senator Rolison.

13                  SENATOR ROLISON:  Thank you, Chair.  

14                  Good to see you, Mr. Mayor, and your 

15           team here this morning.

16                  A question on Floyd Bennett Field --

17                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Yes, sir.

18                  SENATOR ROLISON:  -- a federal 

19           installation.  My understanding is -- is that 

20           that is not being given to the City of 

21           New York by the federal government without 

22           cost.  Is that correct?  

23                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  That's correct.

24                  SENATOR ROLISON:  And what is that, 


                                                                   86

 1           approximately?  I saw it before, but I was 

 2           just -- 

 3                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  (Conferring.)  You 

 4           say that number.  I don't even want to say 

 5           it.

 6                  We're going to get back to you on the 

 7           specific cost of the field.  But it's not 

 8           free.  And it's not cheap.

 9                  SENATOR ROLISON:  I know it's not.  

10           And is that cost being borne essentially just 

11           by city funds, or are there state funds mixed 

12           in with that too, do you know?  

13                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  The state is picking 

14           that up.

15                  SENATOR ROLISON:  Okay.  To go over to 

16           the retail theft issues that obviously the 

17           state is experiencing, in the Governor's 

18           proposed budget she put in approximately 

19           $40 million for various initiatives, 

20           $20 million going to the State Police to 

21           create a task force.  

22                  Is there money carved out in that that 

23           you know of, Mr. Mayor, that's going right to 

24           the NYPD?


                                                                   87

 1                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  I'm not sure in that 

 2           budget, do we know -- no, it's not going 

 3           directly to the NYPD.

 4                  But we held -- we don't have that 

 5           number yet if it's going specifically to the 

 6           NYPD.  But we held a retail theft summit and 

 7           came away with real ideas, and we're seeing a 

 8           real impact.  And many of the retail thefts 

 9           that we're experiencing are repeated 

10           offenders.

11                  SENATOR ROLISON:  Right.  Because I 

12           see that in May of 2023 the chief of crime 

13           control strategies, Michael LiPetri --

14                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Yes.

15                  SENATOR ROLISON:  -- he had spoke 

16           about the small number of, say, 250 

17           individuals who had been arrested almost 

18           2500 times.

19                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Exactly.

20                  SENATOR ROLISON:  And like you, I was 

21           on the job for 26 years, and I know that 

22           there's got to be additional measures that 

23           can be taken to isolate these people so 

24           they're not continually doing it and causing 


                                                                   88

 1           this retail theft, which destabilizes the 

 2           entire retail market.  Some people don't even 

 3           want to go into stores because they're 

 4           constantly seeing it.  

 5                  So as someone that was on the job and 

 6           had a career, what are your thoughts that -- 

 7           what else needs to be done that we could be 

 8           helpful here in the State Legislature?

 9                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  That's a great 

10           question.  And I appreciate your service at 

11           the same time.  

12                  But many people believe that retail 

13           theft is not hitting everyday communities.  

14           When you have a Miss Jones that must take the 

15           bus to go pick up her medicine because the 

16           drugstore closed down that's in her 

17           community, that hits her directly.  When you 

18           lock up the items in the store and you see 

19           our stores are closing, that hits our 

20           unemployment directly.  

21                  So you have a small number of people 

22           that are repeated offenders, and they are 

23           arrested and then they're back out on the 

24           street doing it again.  And so we need to 


                                                                   89

 1           send a very clear and loud message that we're 

 2           not going to allow those repeated offenders 

 3           to continue.  And I don't think we have sent 

 4           that message clearly enough.  

 5                  We have really energized the owners of 

 6           these stores to report it.  We're doing our 

 7           job as the police.  We need the other parts 

 8           of the system to do their job as well.

 9                  SENATOR ROLISON:  I agree with you.  

10           Thank you, Mr. Mayor.

11                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Thank you.

12                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

13                  Assembly.

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Assemblymember 

15           Brown for three minutes.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN ARI BROWN:  I think I get 

17           five as the ranker.

18                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  It's all good.  You 

19           have a good first name.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Mr. Brown, you 

21           get three minutes.  This is -- Cities gets 

22           five for this, and then when we get to the 

23           local governments, you'll get five.

24                  ASSEMBLYMAN ARI BROWN:  Okay.  


                                                                   90

 1                  Good morning, Mr. Mayor.

 2                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Good morning.

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN ARI BROWN:  We're honored 

 4           to have the second-best-dressed guy in the 

 5           state here before us.

 6                  (Laughter.)

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN ARI BROWN:  Today is a 

 8           special day, not just because it's my 

 9           birthday -- it's also President Reagan's 

10           birthday.  President Reagan had that famous 

11           quote:  Government's first duty is to protect 

12           the people, certainly not to run their lives.  

13                  Mr. Mayor, in 2021 you had said we 

14           should protect our immigrants.  New York City 

15           will remain a sanctuary city under an Adams 

16           administration.

17                  Mayor Adams, why were the criminal 

18           migrants that assaulted NYPD officers near 

19           Times Square released without proper bail?  

20           And what measures are being taken to ensure 

21           their return to court, especially considering 

22           that all of them gave us the middle finger, 

23           fled out West, and thank God they were just 

24           caught in Arizona.  


                                                                   91

 1                  Can you explain the criteria behind 

 2           the decision to release these individuals, 

 3           especially given their prior arrests and the 

 4           severity of the charges they face?  

 5                  Given the criticism surrounding the 

 6           release of these attackers, what changes or 

 7           reforms are you considering to ensure the 

 8           safety of law enforcement officers and of the 

 9           public?  Have you petitioned the Governor to 

10           use her power under Section 24 of the State 

11           Public Officers Law to get rid of DA Bragg?  

12           If not, why not?

13                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  The -- that was -- 

14           that was a mouthful (laughing).

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN ARI BROWN:  I think it 

16           wiped out two minutes.

17                  (Laughter.)

18                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  First, as I stated, 

19           the assaults on our police officers that we 

20           all witnessed was not only assault on 

21           individuals, but assault on our system of 

22           justice.  And I want to be clear on that.  

23           And it was a despicable display of how you 

24           respond to a city that provided services.  


                                                                   92

 1                  And we cannot mix up the role of 

 2           sanctuary cities with the actions of those.  

 3           The overwhelming number of migrants and 

 4           asylum-seekers are doing the right thing, 

 5           taking the next step on their journey.  I 

 6           have no authority on what happens on the 

 7           other arms -- on the prosecutorial level or 

 8           on the federal level.  My job is to make sure 

 9           our police officers do their apprehension, 

10           which they did, which they are doing and 

11           continue to do.  No matter who it is, you 

12           break the law, the New York City Police 

13           Department is going to carry out their 

14           function. 

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN ARI BROWN:  Thank you, 

16           Mr. Mayor.

17                  Along the same lines, antisemitism is 

18           at an all-time high, especially in New York 

19           City and places of education and certainly in 

20           places of higher education.  New York City 

21           Public Schools Chancellor David Banks had 

22           made several empty statements about zero 

23           tolerance but continues to allow the 

24           antisemites to bully, harass, indoctrinate 


                                                                   93

 1           our children and attack our teachers and 

 2           children in New York City public schools.  

 3                  Why haven't you taken control to 

 4           ensure that those teaching these lies and 

 5           spreading Jew hatred are stopped and removed 

 6           from the classroom and that teachers and 

 7           students who are bullying and harming our 

 8           Jewish children and teachers in our schools 

 9           are held accountable?  

10                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Well, I think that 

11           as I shared with your colleague a little 

12           earlier, not only is my position strong on 

13           ending Islamophobia, antisemitism, LGBTQ 

14           violence, anti-Sikh violence.  Our life 

15           record has shown that.  And I think 

16           Chancellor Banks has made it clear not only 

17           in his presentation a few days ago, but in 

18           his actions, that he's not going to create or 

19           allow an environment to exist in the New York 

20           City public school system that is going to be 

21           against anyone that lives in our school 

22           system.

23                  And the increases that we're seeing, 

24           particularly after October 7th, has been in 


                                                                   94

 1           not only antisemitism but even in 

 2           Islamophobia.  You're seeing an increase in 

 3           hate.  In New York City we don't have any 

 4           room for hate in our schools or on our 

 5           streets.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN ARI BROWN:  Thank you, 

 7           Mr. Mayor.  

 8                  In fact, the Jewish population of the 

 9           world is a fraction of a percent, so the 

10           percentage of antisemitism is extraordinarily 

11           greater than any other population.

12                  I appreciate that the chancellor has 

13           said these things in words.  But really what 

14           action has he taken?  Where is this action?  

15           What is it?  Can you help elaborate on that, 

16           please.

17                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Well, I think every 

18           day, from his instructions in school to 

19           bringing together groups, what we're doing 

20           with breaking bread, building bonds, bringing 

21           groups together.  

22                  One of the biggest issues that we're 

23           seeing, Assemblymember Brown, we live in an 

24           isolated society and our children don't grow 


                                                                   95

 1           up hating.  Our children learn hate from the 

 2           society that we're in.  And that's part of 

 3           what Senator Gounardes was talking about what 

 4           social media is doing -- the misinformation 

 5           you see on social media, it's unimaginable.  

 6           We have our young people believing that 

 7           Bin Laden was right for taking down our Trade 

 8           Center.  Something is wrong in our society 

 9           when we're seeing hate being so pervasive and 

10           so available and so normalized.  That 

11           includes what we're seeing with antisemitism.

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN ARI BROWN:  Thank you, 

13           Mr. Mayor.  What I was saying was I would 

14           hope he would take action by removing the 

15           teachers that are spreading this hate.  

16           Action.  Thank you, Mr. Mayor.

17                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Thank you.  

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Thank you, 

19           Assemblymember.

20                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you very 

21           much.  

22                  Next up is Senator Comrie.

23                  SENATOR COMRIE:  Good morning, 

24           Mr. Mayor.


                                                                   96

 1                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  How are you, 

 2           Senator?  Good to see you.

 3                  SENATOR COMRIE:  Good to be seen and 

 4           not looked at.  

 5                  (Laughter.)

 6                  SENATOR COMRIE:  I'll tell you about 

 7           that later.

 8                  (Laughter.)

 9                  SENATOR COMRIE:  I have three 

10           questions.  

11                  Number one, the Public Service 

12           Advisory Commission for the MTA has come out 

13           with a plan that would save seniors and 

14           ultimately the handicapped a lot of money and 

15           clear up the fare system around the MTA so it 

16           will be clearer by, number one, expanding the 

17           Fair Fares program.  I hope that we can 

18           expand that to 200 percent of the poverty 

19           level.  

20                  And that we can also do better 

21           advertisements so people are clear.  People 

22           aren't clear about what they can save because 

23           there's no -- not enough advertisements at 

24           the booths or anywhere to show people that 


                                                                   97

 1           there is a Fair Fares program or alternate 

 2           programs.  

 3                  So I hope that we can -- that your 

 4           team will take a look at it and support that 

 5           program.  It would increase ridership, 

 6           especially for people in the outer -- better 

 7           boroughs, as I like to say.  You could save 

 8           10 or 12 hours a week in commute time if we 

 9           expand that program.  I hope you can support 

10           that.

11                  I would also hope that you can support 

12           my bill to lower insurance rates for commuter 

13           vehicles.  We have too many vehicles -- most 

14           of the vehicles that are servicing the 

15           airports, servicing passengers, even many 

16           ambulance services, they're all paying 60,000 

17           to $80,000 a year in insurance rates.  We 

18           have a captive insurance program that's been 

19           adopted by this Governor in other parts of 

20           the state.  I hope that you can support that 

21           also.

22                  I do have two other questions.  I want 

23           to thank you for supporting the SMOKEOUT bill 

24           that Assemblymember Rajkumar and I have to 


                                                                   98

 1           make sure that we can eliminate these scourge 

 2           of smoke shops that unfortunately were put in 

 3           place by the actions of our previous 

 4           governor.

 5                  And can you just explain to the public 

 6           that -- I've gotten some concerns from people 

 7           that too many people would be arrested, and 

 8           how that could be implemented in a safe 

 9           manner.

10                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Thank you.  And just 

11           dealing with the Fair Fares, which I think is 

12           a great equalizer, we put $20 million into 

13           the $75 million annual program.  And it helps 

14           a lot.  It makes a huge difference.  

15                  And to respond to your bill for the 

16           SMOKEOUT, it's not going to be heavy-handed.  

17           We are not going to go backwards.  I fought 

18           for years in the police department to stop 

19           overaggressive policing around marijuana use, 

20           and I'm not going to see our police 

21           department go backwards.  We can find an 

22           balance of not allowing the abuse of the bill 

23           and allowing our children to be sold not only 

24           the cannabis but other illegal products 


                                                                   99

 1           inside these stores.  We can find that 

 2           balance.

 3                  SENATOR COMRIE:  Thank you.  I've got 

 4           five seconds.

 5                  I support mayoral accountability.  I 

 6           know you can't answer it now, but if you 

 7           could just tell the public what actions 

 8           you'll take to improve communications between 

 9           parents and people who say that they can't 

10           access the system now.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Thank you, 

12           Senator.

13                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Thank you.

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  We are joined by 

15           Assemblymember Hyndman.  

16                  And our next questioner is 

17           Assemblymember Darling, for three minutes.

18                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN DARLING:  Thank you.  

19                  Hi, Mayor and team.

20                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  How are you doing?

21                  ASSEMBLYMEMBER DARLING:  Thank you for 

22           coming here.  And thank you always for your 

23           proactiveness and responsiveness.  I know 

24           it's a lot to govern the biggest, largest, 


                                                                   100

 1           most amazing city in the world, so I thank 

 2           you for that.  

 3                  And as you know, I represent Nassau 

 4           County, and I always want to encourage our 

 5           residents to come and enjoy the city because 

 6           we know we need that for revenue streams and 

 7           to support each other.  

 8                  So my question is, how do you plan to 

 9           navigate potential differences in priorities 

10           and resources between Nassau County and 

11           New York City while working towards common 

12           goals for the betterment of the entire 

13           region?

14                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  For which --

15                  ASSEMBLYMEMBER DARLING:  For Nassau 

16           County.  So I'll say it again.  

17                  How do you plan to navigate potential 

18           differences in priorities and resources 

19           between Nassau County and New York City while 

20           working towards common goals for the 

21           betterment of the entire region?  

22                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  And I think that 

23           that question is an important one, and we saw 

24           a reflection of our regional approach by the 


                                                                   101

 1           World Cup.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMEMBER DARLING:  Yup.

 3                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  You know?  To be 

 4           able to partner with Governor Murphy to bring 

 5           this major event to the global stage was 

 6           important.

 7                  And what I'm finding in other parts of 

 8           the country, there's a regional plan.

 9                  ASSEMBLYMEMBER DARLING:  Exactly.

10                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  We have the Regional 

11           Planning Authority, they're doing an amazing 

12           job.  But I think we could do a better job 

13           with our region, the smaller, more 

14           micro-region -- Nassau, Westchester, 

15           Long Island -- and come up with real ways 

16           around public safety, because we're finding 

17           that people who are committing crimes are 

18           going throughout our entire region --

19                  ASSEMBLYMEMBER DARLING:  Exactly.

20                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  And also in economic 

21           development, tourism, we should be all part 

22           of the same team.  And so I look forward to 

23           some ideas that you may have and partner with 

24           Andrew Kimball, who's in charge of our EDC, 


                                                                   102

 1           to see how we could attract businesses into 

 2           our area.

 3                  ASSEMBLYMEMBER DARLING:  I love that, 

 4           and I love that we're on the same page.  We 

 5           know that we're going to be stronger 

 6           together.  So I look forward to that 

 7           partnership, and tag me in, because I want to 

 8           be a part of that.

 9                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Love it.

10                  ASSEMBLYMEMBER DARLING:  Thank you.  

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

12                  Senator Cleare.

13                  SENATOR CLEARE:  Good morning, 

14           Mr. Mayor.

15                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  How are you doing, 

16           Senator?

17                  SENATOR CLEARE:  Good.  I have a 

18           couple of questions about housing, the 421-a 

19           extension.  

20                  How many projects does that represent, 

21           and how many units is that, how many units of 

22           housing?

23                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  That we were able to 

24           build with 421-a?  Or are you saying --


                                                                   103

 1                  SENATOR CLEARE:  No, that are being 

 2           impacted by the extension, the time needed 

 3           for them to complete their projects.  There 

 4           were some projects that were waiting.  And if 

 5           we have a list of where they are, that would 

 6           be helpful.

 7                  SENIOR MAYORAL ADVISOR SAVINO:  

 8           Senator Cleare, you're speaking about the 

 9           vested -- so the proposal in the Governor's 

10           budget, there's an extension for 421-a for 

11           vested projects, and then there's a 

12           replacement for the existing housing 

13           project --

14                  SENATOR CLEARE:  The vested projects.

15                  SENIOR MAYORAL ADVISOR SAVINO:  So the 

16           421-a vested projects, it's a moving target.  

17           It's very hard to quantify the number of 

18           units because as -- we had Deputy Mayor Maria 

19           Torres-Springer up last week and she 

20           addressed this, I think, very extensively 

21           with Senator Kavanagh and Assemblywoman -- 

22           Rosenthal, thank you.  I'm getting senile in 

23           my old age here.  

24                  It's hard to quantify the number of 


                                                                   104

 1           units.  It's not an exact number because some 

 2           of them, they were shovels that went into the 

 3           ground and then the program expired and they 

 4           never moved forward.  We will not know, 

 5           because people don't apply for the 421-a 

 6           benefit until the end of their application, 

 7           not at the beginning.  So it's not as if they 

 8           apply for benefits, the program expired and 

 9           we're waiting.  So it's really difficult to 

10           answer that question.

11                  SENATOR CLEARE:  Okay.  So when you 

12           can, please send it.  As soon as you all 

13           know.

14                  Also, I just want this administration 

15           to really lift up senior housing.  Housing is 

16           the number-one concern that walks into my 

17           office in my district.  You know, we have 

18           overcrowded families, we have people wanting 

19           to get an apartment.  And particularly our 

20           seniors who want senior housing, the waiting 

21           list is five, six, seven years to get into 

22           senior housing.  And I just really want, as 

23           chair of the Aging Committee and also as a 

24           representative of my district, to lift up the 


                                                                   105

 1           need for senior housing.

 2                  The migrant crisis has really impacted 

 3           my district with a large number of African 

 4           migrants into my community.  We want to be 

 5           compassionate -- and are compassionate -- and 

 6           extend a hand, but this has really impacted 

 7           our district.  The quality of life issues, 

 8           overcrowding -- we have blocks where there's 

 9           400, 500 men on the street on a daily basis.  

10           We have houses of worship who want to 

11           participate in the program that the city 

12           offers to sleep and have them in an adult day 

13           care setting.  But they can't meet the code 

14           that they are being asked to meet.

15                  Can some of this money that the state 

16           is giving, or money that the city has -- how 

17           can we help those houses of worship provide a 

18           space for these people to be?  And I want to 

19           thank your office, by the way, for their 

20           really working with me on these issues around 

21           our new New Yorkers.

22                  We'll talk later.

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Sometimes the 

24           questioner takes all the time --


                                                                   106

 1                  (Laughter.)

 2                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  I'm easy.  I'm low 

 3           maintenance.

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Thank you.  I'd 

 5           like to recognize Assemblyman Ra so he can 

 6           recognize some of his members who have come 

 7           to the hearing.

 8                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  I want to recognize 

 9           we've been joined by Mr. Brook-Krasny, 

10           Mr. Chang, and Mr. Novakhov.  Thank you.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Thank you.

12                  And our next questioner is 

13           Assemblymember Seawright for three minutes.

14                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SEAWRIGHT:  Thank you, 

15           Chairs Thiele and Krueger. 

16                  And thank you, Mr. Mayor and your 

17           team, for coming up to Albany today.  I want 

18           to thank you for your women-forward New York 

19           City action plan with the ERA State 

20           Equality Amendment on the ballot this 

21           November.  We appreciate all that you're 

22           doing.  

23                  Not a day goes by that I don't hear 

24           from a constituent about e-bikes, so I 


                                                                   107

 1           appreciate your response to Senator Sepúlveda 

 2           on enforcement and education and partnering 

 3           for registration.  

 4                  But I'd like to focus my remarks today 

 5           on the 5G towers that are being placed.  I 

 6           had sent a letter to you back in 2022 calling 

 7           for a moratorium until a study could be done 

 8           on the environmental and health aspects of 

 9           the towers.

10                  And so why not stop this until we 

11           could have this study?  The community board 

12           in my district has passed a resolution 

13           against this.  The community doesn't want it.  

14           In one instance a tower was placed right 

15           outside the window of a baby nursery.  And if 

16           you look at the study done in New Hampshire 

17           and other states, you know, they have called 

18           for a moratorium and for further distance 

19           away from homes and apartments for these 

20           towers to be installed.

21                  Have you considered parks or other 

22           places away from where residents live to 

23           install the towers?

24                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Yeah, the -- you 


                                                                   108

 1           know, there's always a period of reflection 

 2           when you deal with new technology, new ways.  

 3           In just about everything you introduced, 

 4           there are pros and cons.  I cannot tell you 

 5           how much this 5G and using these towers is 

 6           helping so many places that don't have access 

 7           to the technology that they need.  And I 

 8           think there's a place that we can sit down 

 9           and find a middle ground.

10                  But we want to continue to move 

11           forward.  I've made it clear that I want to 

12           use technology to run our city more 

13           efficiently.  And we don't want to do 

14           anything that's going to be harmful to 

15           communities and to families.  We have not 

16           witnessed any real danger in using these 

17           towers from our reports and from our studies.  

18           If you have something to counter that, we 

19           would love to look over it.  Because that's 

20           our goal.  These structures, they're 5G 

21           antenna towers that are designed to bring 

22           free, high-speed internet access across the 

23           five boroughs.

24                  We saw during COVID-19 that high-speed 


                                                                   109

 1           internet is not a luxury, it's a necessity, 

 2           and we need to make sure that we can get it 

 3           across the entire city.  And that's our goal, 

 4           and we want to do it in a safe way.

 5                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SEAWRIGHT:  Thank you.

 6                  And as we focus on affordable housing, 

 7           as the chair of the People with Disabilities 

 8           Committee, I would just ask that we really 

 9           focus on not only housing being affordable, 

10           but it also being accessible for seniors and 

11           people with disabilities.

12                  Thank you.  

13                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Well said.

14                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And I don't think 

15           we've said it yet today, but if there are 

16           questions that you don't have time to answer 

17           or, as you said, you need to get back to us 

18           on, we'd appreciate it if you send that 

19           information to both Ways and Means and 

20           Finance and we'll make sure all the members 

21           get the answer.

22                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  We'll make sure.  

23           Just as Chris talks about his favorite 

24           Assemblyperson, he talks about you being his 


                                                                   110

 1           favorite Senator.

 2                  (Laughter; inaudible cross-talk.) 

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  You're cutting 

 4           people's throats on your own team.

 5                  (Laughter.)

 6                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay, where are 

 7           we supposed to be?  We are next at 

 8           Senator Robert Jackson.

 9                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Thank you.  

10                  Mayor Adams and your team, welcome to 

11           Albany.

12                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Thank you.  Good to 

13           see you.

14                  SENATOR JACKSON:  So my question is, 

15           the first one, Aid to Municipalities, 

16           $715 million are given to municipalities 

17           around the State of New York -- with the 

18           exception of New York City.  And they can 

19           spend the money as they deem appropriate.  

20                  Why aren't we getting it?  And I ask 

21           you to support me when I raise it in the 

22           Democratic Conference.  But we need AIM money 

23           just like everybody else.  So what's your 

24           opinion on that real quick, if you don't 


                                                                   111

 1           mind?  

 2                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  I am with you, 

 3           Senator.  You know, I believe you are 

 4           100 percent correct.  And I think it's 

 5           admirable that you have taken on this fight, 

 6           and everyone needs to line up behind you.  

 7           It's just fair that New York City should 

 8           receive that as well.

 9                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Thank you.

10                  My next question, I attended a mayoral 

11           accountability or mayoral control hearing in 

12           Manhattan.  About 60 people spoke.  And it 

13           talked about, you know, that mayoral 

14           accountability, control, is not working.  And 

15           they want to move to a transition over a 

16           period of time similar to other cities in the 

17           United States, Chicago and other places like 

18           that.  

19                  So -- and as you know our Governor has 

20           proposed to give you mayoral control for 

21           four years.  And that's exceeding your term 

22           of office.  Obviously you're in an electoral 

23           process, and that will happen.  But in your 

24           current term I'm not willing to give anyone 


                                                                   112

 1           more than their term.  That's me as an 

 2           individual.  

 3                  But I want you to know that the 

 4           transition is very important.  Almost 

 5           everyone who spoke at the hearing talked 

 6           about a transition away from mayoral 

 7           accountability, mayoral control.  What's your 

 8           quick opinion about that?  

 9                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Well, we have almost 

10           a million students in our school system, 

11           hundreds of thousands of parents.  And when 

12           we have hearings that on average have less 

13           than a hundred people, just proportionately, 

14           the numbers just don't add up.  

15                  And of course you and I both know in 

16           this business of government the most 

17           passionate about being against something is 

18           normally those who come out the most.

19                  The reality is we have a school system 

20           that before mayoral control we were 

21           graduating around 50 percent of our students.  

22           We're at 80 percent.  We are outpacing the 

23           state in reading and math.  We are dealing 

24           with dyslexia, healthy food --


                                                                   113

 1                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Mayor Adams, I'm 

 2           sorry, I just have one more question of you 

 3           before the time is up.

 4                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Yes.  Okay, I just 

 5           wanted to --

 6                  SENATOR JACKSON:  No, I heard you, but 

 7           I want you to know the sentiment of the 

 8           people who attended those hearings.  And 

 9           obviously that I'm sure you're aware of it.

10                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Right.

11                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Class size 

12           reduction.  That's supposed to occur over the 

13           next several years.  I hope and expect, 

14           expect it to be met.  Let me just say that to 

15           you as someone that filed a lawsuit.  I'm not 

16           hearing anything else but that.

17                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  One hundred percent, 

18           we're going to follow the law.  And we stated 

19           that over and over again, and we will do so.

20                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Thank you.

21                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

22                  Assembly.  

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Thank you.  

24                  We are joined by Assemblymember 


                                                                   114

 1           Bichotte Hermelyn.  

 2                  And our next questioner is 

 3           Assemblymember Simon, for three minutes.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  It always sneaks 

 5           up on you.  

 6                  So thank you very much, Mr. Mayor, for 

 7           your testimony and for your hard work.  I 

 8           have a couple of questions for you.  

 9                  One is -- and I just want to 

10           appreciate your work and your 

11           administration's work on dyslexia and 

12           literacy.  And we need to really ensure full 

13           implementation.  I'm curious how you're going 

14           to do that, because I'm cognizant of some of 

15           the blips.  So that's one question.

16                  The other is a real problem with 

17           enforcing of parking prohibitions with cops 

18           and various agencies parking in bike lanes.  

19           Which raises the issue of where are the bike 

20           lanes that are protected bike lanes that we 

21           need that will help limit that?  It's a huge 

22           issue in my district.

23                  And then second -- 

24                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  And that's parking 


                                                                   115

 1           in the bike lanes?  

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  Parking in the 

 3           bike lanes, other prohibited places.  Often 

 4           it's agency workers and police officers.  And 

 5           you don't have the jail and the central 

 6           booking.  

 7                  And then the other issue of course is 

 8           truck traffic.  You've been great on WIM.  

 9           But the trucks are going through the 

10           neighborhoods.  It's a huge problem, 

11           particularly in Cobble Hill.  Too long -- the 

12           trucks are too long and we're allowing them 

13           in.  What are we doing about enforcement?  

14                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  And we're going to 

15           look at -- are you talking about particularly 

16           area in the district that this is happening? 

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  Well, it happens 

18           all over.  But it's particularly problematic 

19           on those streets that border the BQE.

20                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Okay.  Mm-hmm.  

21           Mm-hmm.  So why don't we bring in the local 

22           precinct commander and my head of traffic and 

23           find out specifically what is the issue over 

24           there.  There's been a long problem over 


                                                                   116

 1           there through the BQE.  They've tried many 

 2           different things to try to free the flow of 

 3           traffic, even closing certain areas in a 

 4           particular time, the entrance going out down 

 5           by Red Hook.  

 6                  We're going to continue to figure it 

 7           out.  We have too many vehicles on the 

 8           street, you know, and now with the last-mile 

 9           delivery services, that adds to the problem.  

10           And that is why we have to come up with a 

11           real way of dealing with more micromobility 

12           and improving our transit system.  

13                  But let us look at and try to come up 

14           with the right solutions over there.

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  And the parking, 

16           the placard parking, the cops parking in bike 

17           lanes and what's happening with building --

18                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  And they shouldn't 

19           be -- the local integrity control officer at 

20           every precinct should be policing around his 

21           or her precinct.  And if there's a problem 

22           there, I want to really encourage you to 

23           reach out to the commanding officer, meet 

24           with the local integrity control officer and 


                                                                   117

 1           Deputy Commissioner Stewart, who is in charge 

 2           of community affairs, so we can address that 

 3           problem.  Because that shouldn't happen.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  We've done that.  

 5           And the issue for us often is the fact that 

 6           because it's central booking, people come in 

 7           from all over and park even though they're 

 8           not the local precinct.  So it's cops coming 

 9           in from all over.  So it really needs to be a 

10           bigger, broader umbrella push from your 

11           office.

12                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Right.  Right.  And 

13           let me look into it, because that's not an 

14           acceptable answer from him.

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  Thank you.  

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  I 

17           want to introduce Senator Weik, but I want to 

18           say it's Senator Rhoads' time to question.  

19           Sorry, Senator Weik.  

20                  SENATOR RHOADS:  Thank you, Madam 

21           Chairwoman.

22                  Hello, Mayor Adams.  Thank you -- 

23                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  How are you?

24                  SENATOR RHOADS:  -- for your testimony 


                                                                   118

 1           today.  I only get three minutes, so I'm 

 2           going to try and make it quick.

 3                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Oh, good.

 4                  SENATOR RHOADS:  You've indicated 

 5           before that the migrant crisis is something 

 6           that will destroy the City of New York.

 7                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Yes.

 8                  SENATOR RHOADS:  Yet you've indicated 

 9           today that you have no plans to change the 

10           city's designation as a sanctuary city.  Why 

11           is that?

12                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Well, I think 

13           you're -- we're mixing the two.  Migrants and 

14           asylums are paroled into the country.  People 

15           who have sanctuary city are those who are 

16           immigrants, and they're not turned over to 

17           ICE.  So there's two different -- sanctuary 

18           city and migrants and asylums are two 

19           different issues.  They're paroled into the 

20           country legally.  They're here legally.

21                  SENATOR RHOADS:  Well, they're 

22           given -- my understanding is they're given 

23           legal status.  Right?  The Biden 

24           administration is calling them 


                                                                   119

 1           asylum-seekers, but asylum is supposed to be 

 2           for those who are suffering political 

 3           persecution in their home country.  

 4                  We've had 8½ million border crossings 

 5           in the last three years; 8.5 million people 

 6           have been given legal status, 170,000 of 

 7           which are winding up in the City of New York.

 8                  This isn't a problem -- with all due 

 9           respect, this isn't a problem with respect to 

10           our ability to handle migrants.  The ultimate 

11           problem is the ability -- is the Biden 

12           administration allowing these individuals 

13           access into the country and then walking away 

14           from the problem and leaving yourself, as 

15           mayor of the City of New York, leaving the 

16           governor of Texas, leaving the mayor of 

17           Chicago to handle the resulting chaos.

18                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  And it is extremely 

19           a full-time job being the mayor of the City 

20           of New York.  I cannot solve a national 

21           crisis.  The national government needs to 

22           solve that crisis, and I've said it more than 

23           once.  And that includes the White House and 

24           it includes the lawmakers that should come up 


                                                                   120

 1           with the answers so that cities like Chicago 

 2           and Denver and New York are not taking the 

 3           weight.

 4                  SENATOR RHOADS:  Which leads me to my 

 5           next question.

 6                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Yes.

 7                  SENATOR RHOADS:  Why has there been -- 

 8           you're talking about a crisis that is going 

 9           to cost the City of New York $4 billion this 

10           year.  The federal government has given you 

11           $157 million in support.  The same federal 

12           government is charging the state my 

13           estimation is $300 million for the use of 

14           Floyd Bennett Field, federal property.  Not 

15           only are they not giving it to you for free, 

16           they're actually charging us to be able to 

17           house some of those migrants.  

18                  Have you, Mayor, done anything to 

19           coordinate with Governor Abbott in Texas, who 

20           is dealing with a problem probably 10 times 

21           the amount of the problem that we have here 

22           in the City of New York -- or other mayors 

23           and governors in border states -- to force 

24           the federal government to take responsibility 


                                                                   121

 1           for their failed border policies?

 2                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Our coalition has 

 3           grown.  We have reached out and attempted to 

 4           coordinate with Governor Abbott.  We have 

 5           been successful in coordinating with mayors 

 6           across the city.  Unfortunately, he does not 

 7           seem willing to coordinate.

 8                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Assembly.

 9                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Assemblymember 

10           Tannousis for three minutes.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN TANNOUSIS:  Thank you.  

12                  Mr. Mayor, I want to direct your 

13           attention to the incident that occurred a few 

14           days ago where the migrants assaulted those 

15           police officers.  The first question I have 

16           for you is, is there any possibility or 

17           potential of you speaking to the City Council 

18           to actually reverse the sanctuary city law 

19           that would not allow the city to cooperate 

20           with ICE, with the federal government, in 

21           detainer proceedings?  

22                  The second question I have for you is, 

23           there were 14 people involved in that 

24           incident.  Six of them were charged; only one 


                                                                   122

 1           of them the district attorney of Manhattan 

 2           requested bail for.  We have a district 

 3           attorney in Manhattan that thinks he was 

 4           elected to be a public defender and not a 

 5           district attorney.

 6                  Is there anything you can do on your 

 7           end to ensure that these district attorneys 

 8           offices around the -- from the five boroughs 

 9           do what they're supposed to do?  In this 

10           situation, those six people were charged with 

11           violent crimes.  All of those crimes were 

12           bail-eligible, and yet the district attorney 

13           only requested bail for one out of those six.  

14                  Is there any way you can work with the 

15           district attorney's offices around the 

16           boroughs to ensure that the right thing is 

17           done by our community?  

18                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  First, the 

19           cooperation with ICE.  It is my strong belief 

20           that if a person commits a serious crime -- 

21           felony, violent crime -- the federal 

22           government should do its job and deport that 

23           individual if they're found guilty.  And I 

24           will continue to say that.  


                                                                   123

 1                  With my five district attorneys 

 2           throughout the entire city, we have worked 

 3           collaboratively with them.  They have been 

 4           real partners in bringing down crime.  They 

 5           have a non-mandate.  And I think there's a 

 6           reason they have a non-mandate, that they 

 7           determine how they're going to prosecute 

 8           crimes and which crimes they're going to 

 9           prosecute.  I think DA Bragg as well as the 

10           other DAs, Eric Gonzalez and others, they 

11           have been real partners in this pursuit of 

12           making our city safe, and I think they're 

13           going to continue to do that.

14                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

15                  Senator Weik.

16                  SENATOR WEIK:  Good afternoon, Mayor, 

17           and thank you --

18                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  How are you?

19                  SENATOR WEIK:  -- for joining us 

20           today.  We're glad to have you here.

21                  I have three questions, so we'll try 

22           to squeeze them in.  My first is, with 

23           congestion pricing being a target for 

24           New York City, the American Red Cross is 


                                                                   124

 1           located in Lower Manhattan and congestion 

 2           pricing threatens their very existence.  What 

 3           have you done to fight for some kind of 

 4           exemption for them or repeal congestion 

 5           pricing?  

 6                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  I think that when 

 7           this decision came out of the state, I would 

 8           have loved for the city to have more power 

 9           and authority over this to make decisions, 

10           since these are our streets.  We have very 

11           little.  We have one appointment, and much of 

12           the decision is between the MTA and the 

13           federal government.  We should have more 

14           power and authority, and I think we would 

15           have a different version.  

16                  I can continue to advocate and lift my 

17           voice to make sure that it is executed 

18           fairly, but we did not have the power when 

19           that was handed down from the state.

20                  SENATOR WEIK:  Well, please don't 

21           underestimate the value of your voice.  I 

22           know that a lot of organizations are looking 

23           to you to make sure that you're advocating on 

24           their behalf.


                                                                   125

 1                  I'm going to move on to my next 

 2           question, which is the FDNY.  FDNY hasn't had 

 3           any new classes.  They struggle to respond to 

 4           fires safely because of bus lanes and bike 

 5           lanes being occupied.  What's your plan to 

 6           assist or provide more for FDNY?

 7                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  We just did that in 

 8           our -- we put money back into the FDNY, 

 9           bringing the fifth man in many of our sites.  

10                  We just settled a contract, I think 

11           they had over 90 percent ratification.  The 

12           more we make the job impressive and 

13           attractive, the more we can continue to 

14           recruit.  And we have held them harmless as 

15           we continue to build the manpower within the 

16           F --

17                  SENATOR WEIK:  What can we do -- I'm 

18           sorry, because of time.

19                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Yeah, no problem.

20                  SENATOR WEIK:  What can we do to make 

21           it easier for them to respond to fires 

22           throughout the city?  

23                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Congestion pricing.  

24           You know, unclog our streets.


                                                                   126

 1                  SENATOR WEIK:  All right, we're going 

 2           to agree to disagree on that one.

 3                  (Laughter.)

 4                  SENATOR WEIK:  I'm going to move on to 

 5           my last question, which of course is NYPD.  

 6           There are more demands than ever.  What are 

 7           you doing to advocate for their safety and 

 8           for their ability to do their job.

 9                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Well, you know, as I 

10           like to remind people all the time, I know 

11           what that job is about and what it's like.  

12           And that's why I joined them the other night 

13           when they executed a warrant to deal with 

14           those --

15                  SENATOR WEIK:  Well, what are you 

16           doing, Mayor, to make sure that we're 

17           increasing whatever we can to give them as 

18           many tools as possible to be able to handle 

19           this what seems like a daily migrant crisis 

20           on our streets that are threatening the 

21           safety of the people who live in New York 

22           City?  

23                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Well, I think when 

24           you really look at what we are doing, number 


                                                                   127

 1           one, the number-one thing the PBA, who 

 2           represents them, calls for is to give them a 

 3           fair contract.  We did that, after almost 

 4           eight years.  

 5                  And number two, I think that any 

 6           lawmaker --

 7                  SENATOR WEIK:  Will you be working 

 8           with the DA to try to make sure that we're 

 9           able to remand these individuals and keep our 

10           officers and our streets safer?

11                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  The --

12                  (Time clock chiming.)

13                  SENATOR WEIK:  We tried.  

14                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  You'll have to 

15           get back to us with the rest of the answer.  

16           Thank you.

17                  Assemblymember.

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Assemblymember 

19           Hyndman for three minutes.

20                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN HYNDMAN:  Always good to 

21           see you, Mayor.

22                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Thank you, 

23           Assemblywoman.  (Inaudible.)

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN HYNDMAN:  I also want to 


                                                                   128

 1           give kudos to Chris and his responsiveness, 

 2           especially when it came up for the City of 

 3           Yes.  Sometimes it seemed like the City of 

 4           Yes has turned into a city of no for our 

 5           community boards and civics.  

 6                  So I think the preliminary meeting we 

 7           had with Mr. Garodnick was good, but more 

 8           outreach needs to be done, especially when it 

 9           comes to the basements and ADUs.  Because as 

10           you know, Southeast Queens, we have so many 

11           homeowners who are really concerned about the 

12           quality of life as far as their blocks 

13           becoming crowded, more congestion.  

14                  And so when our colleagues talk about 

15           bike lanes and expansion, it's not that 

16           Southeast Queens doesn't want to be part of 

17           more green infrastructure, it's just that 

18           transportation in Southeast Queens has not 

19           improved.  

20                  I know that Senator Comrie talked 

21           about the fair fares.  And if we could really 

22           work collaboratively to get the commuter 

23           fares for the Long Island Rail Road reduced, 

24           and that's something I think our communities 


                                                                   129

 1           could be -- really work towards.  

 2                  Thank you also for having so many 

 3           deputy mayors that are women.  I think that's 

 4           important for a lot of young women, 

 5           especially the daughters I have in the public 

 6           school system.  

 7                  I know the Governor has put in 

 8           four years for mayoral accountability.  I'm 

 9           not sure where I stand on that yet.  I will 

10           say that the -- Chancellor Banks has been 

11           very responsive to Southeast Queens when it 

12           comes to any problems or assistance that we 

13           need.  

14                  I think -- but I do believe that it 

15           should be taken out of the budget, because 

16           the more and more policy that we put in the 

17           budget I think is detrimental.  And I think 

18           mayoral control deserves to really be talked 

19           about with colleagues in New York City.

20                  And for all of my colleagues I 

21           really -- who live outside of the City of 

22           New York, I hope they will work with their 

23           county execs to help us with the migrant 

24           issue and not continue to say no.  They sound 


                                                                   130

 1           very concerned, so speaking to their 

 2           executives I'm sure would help us alleviate 

 3           the problem.

 4                  And that's all I have today.  Thank 

 5           you.  

 6                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Thank you.  Thank 

 7           you for that.  And I agree with you with 

 8           Chancellor Banks.  Many people talk about 

 9           having parents have access.  When you have a 

10           million students, you have to create ways of 

11           access, and no one has done it better than 

12           Chancellor Banks.  Chancellor Banks he 

13           attends more meetings, more groups, focus 

14           groups, communicates with people.  His level 

15           of accessibility is impressive.  

16                  But we want to be clear.  Mayoral 

17           accountability is just that.  I want to be 

18           held accountable.  And if you water it down 

19           to the point that I'm not held accountable, 

20           then it's not mayoral accountability.  It's 

21           either mayoral accountability or it's not 

22           mayoral accountability.  And I'm hearing a 

23           lot of proposals that turns it into other 

24           folks' accountability.  One person should be 


                                                                   131

 1           responsible for the school system.

 2                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 3                  Senator John Liu.

 4                  SENATOR LIU:  Thank you, Madam Chair.  

 5                  Mr. Mayor, always good to see you.

 6                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Always.

 7                  SENATOR LIU:  I agree with and I 

 8           applaud your strong statement that people 

 9           come to New York City not because it's a 

10           sanctuary city, but because we are the best 

11           city in the world.  So thank you for that.  

12                  Thank you also for setting a tone with 

13           your administration in terms of 

14           responsiveness.  Everyone on your team is 

15           responsive.  Actually, Diane Savino responds 

16           even before I say or ask anything.  

17                  (Laughter.)

18                  SENATOR LIU:  So I suppose I 

19           appreciate that.

20                  Earlier on you had answered questions 

21           about the request for increasing the city's 

22           borrowing authority.  All right.  Now, we 

23           haven't done that since the Great Recession 

24           in 2008, and 9/11 before that.  Your 


                                                                   132

 1           predecessor asked for that, didn't really 

 2           give a strong argument for that, so we didn't 

 3           do it.  

 4                  You cited a few things.  I'm kind of 

 5           happy to hear that you mentioned class sizes 

 6           and that you pledged to comply with the law 

 7           that requires reduction of class sizes in 

 8           New York City.  Which, again, addresses a 

 9           decades-old problem that was not your making.  

10           But you're the mayor now, and we have now 

11           fully funded Foundation Aid, so we do need 

12           you to do that.

13                  But no one has said anything about 

14           what the capital plan is to reduce class 

15           sizes.  So how much of that additional 

16           borrowing authority would you use to reduce 

17           class sizes?  What kind of plan is there?  

18           And if the answer is you're putting together 

19           a plan, it's probably important to do it 

20           right away.

21                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  And Jacques will go 

22           over the details, because every time he goes 

23           over it with me, my head spins, you know.  

24                  But let me say this.  We execute the 


                                                                   133

 1           laws that are handed down to us.  The state 

 2           made a decision, and it is our obligation and 

 3           responsibility to fulfill that decision, 

 4           including figuring out how we're going to 

 5           hire more teachers and start the whole 

 6           recruitment process that's connected to that.  

 7                  But Jacques, can you go over --

 8                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  Yeah.  We 

 9           currently have, for the School Construction 

10           Authority, about $17 million for school 

11           construction in general.

12                  SENATOR LIU:  So how many additional 

13           seats would that -- 

14                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  But we 

15           would probably give you -- all give you a 

16           briefing on the specifics on how much of 

17           those resources are basically dedicated 

18           specifically for class size.  Okay?  We'll 

19           review them, those numbers, with you, okay, 

20           and provide you the information that you 

21           need.

22                  SENATOR LIU:  So you're looking for 

23           about another $10 billion of borrowing 

24           authority.


                                                                   134

 1                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  We're 

 2           looking for $19 billion, because we have --  

 3                  SENATOR LIU:  Ten in the first round?  

 4                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  Not just 

 5           for schools.  It's -- 

 6                  SENATOR LIU:  So what would come 

 7           first, the schools or the jails?  

 8                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  (Laughing.)  

 9           It's a good question.

10                  (Laughter.)

11                  SENATOR LIU:  Say schools.  Say 

12           schools.  Quickly, before I run out of time!  

13                  (Laughter.)

14                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  We have 

15           three major --

16                  SENATOR LIU:  No answer.

17                  Thank you, Madam Chair.  

18                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I think we would 

19           like very much everything on --

20                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  Sure, 

21           definitely, we'll provide --

22                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  -- those numbers 

23           and, on behalf of the Finance Committee, the 

24           entire capital proposal of two years' bonding 


                                                                   135

 1           authority.

 2                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  Sure.  

 3           Sure.

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

 5                  Assembly.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Assemblymember 

 7           Bichotte Hermelyn for three minutes.

 8                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BICHOTTE HERMELYN:  

 9           Thank you.  Good to see you, Mr. Mayor.

10                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Thank you.  Always 

11           good seeing you.

12                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BICHOTTE HERMELYN:  Good 

13           seeing you and the team.  

14                  I want to first thank you and the 

15           whole team for just phenomenal work, 

16           responsive.  And again, I want to thank you 

17           all for pushing and making sure that we pass 

18           these landmark MWBE bills.  So we're very, 

19           very grateful for pushing equity and 

20           empowerment in our community.

21                  I also want to just commend you on 

22           your hard work on dealing with this 

23           unprecedented asylum seeker/migrant issue.  

24           No other city is dealing with this burden 


                                                                   136

 1           that we are, and you're doing as much as you 

 2           can with the very little that we have.

 3                  My question to you today is about 

 4           mayoral control -- mayoral accountability.  

 5           It says that the Center for American Progress 

 6           has repeatedly shown that mayor-led school 

 7           districts improve school and student 

 8           performance, full stop.

 9                  I wanted to know what has your 

10           administration done to continue this trend to 

11           improving student and school success.  But 

12           also I want to know if mayoral accountability 

13           is not renewed, what is the alternative?  Is 

14           it going back to the school boards, where 

15           separate but unequal was a big contributing 

16           fact to our segregation, our school 

17           segregation?  Can you expound on that?

18                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Thank you.  And I 

19           think that's such an important question.  

20                  When you do an analysis of what this 

21           chancellor has done, even down to New York 

22           City Reads, and what he's doing that not only 

23           is the state embracing this, but even 

24           national leaders are now seeing what we're 


                                                                   137

 1           doing around dyslexia screening, around a 

 2           better environment.  

 3                  And how the equity issue is being 

 4           addressed.  Brownsville has been ignored for 

 5           so many years.  And with the resources we are 

 6           putting into Brownsville, turning around 

 7           their numbers.

 8                  The request is a simple one.  Let us 

 9           finish the job.  Let us finish the job.  An 

10           80 percent graduation rate, outpacing the 

11           state on reading and math.  A safe 

12           environment.  And so we can't play with this 

13           and go backwards.  We have two 

14           public-school-reared -- one mayor and one 

15           chancellor that really understand what these 

16           children need, everything from teaching our 

17           children how to do self-care with breathing 

18           in the morning, to better food so we don't 

19           feed the healthcare crisis through bad food.  

20           You're just seeing what you asked for.  

21                  There was a vision of mayoral 

22           accountability.  This is what you envisioned.  

23           You know, what you envisioned when you passed 

24           it is what you are getting right now.  So why 


                                                                   138

 1           take that away from the success that we're 

 2           having?  We can't go backwards.  Too much is 

 3           at stake.  We can't go back to 50 percent 

 4           graduation rates.  We have 80 percent 

 5           graduation rates and we are moving even 

 6           better.

 7                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BICHOTTE HERMELYN:  

 8           Thank you.

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

10                  Senator Tom O'Mara, ranker.

11                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Thank you, 

12           Chair Krueger.  

13                  Good morning, Mayor.  Thank you for 

14           being here.

15                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Good to see you.

16                  SENATOR O'MARA:  I applaud your 

17           career, to mayor through Senate, New York 

18           Police Department -- captain, I believe, 

19           right?

20                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Yes.

21                  SENATOR O'MARA:  I started my law 

22           career as an assistant DA in Manhattan.  So I 

23           commend you for that work.  And what a sad 

24           state we're in, frankly, in this state and in 


                                                                   139

 1           the City of New York as it comes to 

 2           enforcement of crime.  I applaud your 

 3           efforts, but you seem to be the lone voice in 

 4           the wilderness calling for sanity with 

 5           regards to bail, with regards to calling for 

 6           deporting these rogue packs of migrants that 

 7           are committing crimes.  Not just the assault 

 8           on the NYPD officers the other day, but now 

 9           I'm reading today about a pack of moped 

10           riders going around snatching phones, 

11           snatching purses, dragging a woman down the 

12           street.  

13                  And I applaud your calls to at least 

14           ask for bail, but also that we should be 

15           considering and pursuing deportation of these 

16           criminals that are coming here illegally.  

17           Yes, maybe they're getting asylum once they 

18           get here, but they're crossing the border 

19           illegally.  And the crisis at the border is 

20           certainly your crisis right now, and it's our 

21           crisis as a result of that in New York State.

22                  Many states have sent National Guard 

23           troops to Texas, to the southern border, to 

24           help enforce the border.  The Republican 


                                                                   140

 1           conferences of the State Legislature have 

 2           called on Governor Hochul to send New York 

 3           National Guards to the border to help stem 

 4           this crisis and at least slow down the flow 

 5           of these illegal migrants coming into the 

 6           country.

 7                  Do you support the Governor sending 

 8           the National Guard from New York down to the 

 9           border to help stem this tide?

10                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  No, I think the 

11           Governor is using the Guards correctly here.  

12           She's assisting us in certain levels of our 

13           operation.

14                  Many of the migrants and 

15           asylum-seekers that are going through the 

16           border, they are leaving those areas and 

17           coming up to the city areas.  That's what I 

18           learned when I was down in El Paso.  I 

19           commend the Governor how she's using our 

20           Guards here to deal with this crisis that 

21           we're facing.

22                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Well, if they weren't 

23           in El Paso to begin with, they wouldn't be 

24           coming up here to New York and being our 


                                                                   141

 1           problem.  We need to stop them from getting 

 2           into El Paso, and have a legal system to get 

 3           them here.  

 4                  So I certainly disagree with you on 

 5           that, because we're working on the problem 

 6           after the fact and not stemming the problem.

 7                  I read recently there's been some 

 8           improvements in crime on the subways.  And I 

 9           think that's a result of a significant surge 

10           in law enforcement activity that you were 

11           pushing.  Now, recently, I've read there 

12           might be somewhat of an uptick on subway 

13           crime.  

14                  Can you talk a little bit about the 

15           surge that you put in place, and has that 

16           been retracted at all since then?  And the 

17           cost of that surge of NYPD officers into the 

18           subways, what the cost to the city was and I 

19           think the state.  Governor Hochul said they 

20           were going to help share in that.  What has 

21           been the cost to New York State for that 

22           surge to help the crime in subways?

23                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  I believe the exact 

24           amount was $40 million.  We'll get the exact 


                                                                   142

 1           amount for you.  But it was --

 2                  SENATOR O'MARA:  State, state money?  

 3                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Yes.  

 4                  It was such a crucial move with the 

 5           subway safety plan.  Because that was a time 

 6           when we couldn't get passengers back on our 

 7           subway system.  And the Governor stepped up, 

 8           and, you know, you guys and ladies stepped 

 9           up.  And it was a game-changer.  We went from 

10           dismal ridership to over 4 million daily 

11           riders.  That's our economic engine for our 

12           city, and I cannot thank the state and the 

13           Governor enough, because it was a very 

14           challenging period of time.  

15                  And we have to shift and make sure 

16           manpower is deployed correctly, because we 

17           can't lose our subway system.  

18                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Has there been a 

19           decline in that surge now?  Is that resulting 

20           in somewhat of an uptick in subway crime at 

21           this point?

22                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Yes.  There has been 

23           a decline in the manpower.  We're doing some 

24           creative things, going to 12-hour tours, and 


                                                                   143

 1           really shifting our deployment where we're 

 2           seeing the crime taking place.  

 3                  We have a real leader down there, 

 4           Chief Kemper, and we're going to continue to 

 5           push back any attempt to make our subway 

 6           system a dangerous place.

 7                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Thank you, Mayor.

 8                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Thank you very much.

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Assembly.

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Assemblymember 

11           Gallahan for three minutes.  

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN GALLAHAN:  Thank you, 

13           Mr. Chairman.

14                  Thank you, mayor, for your testimony 

15           today, and your staff.

16                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Thank you.

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN GALLAHAN:  My question 

18           pertains to the World Trade Center.

19                  This past July the Governor announced 

20           that the Public Authorities Council Board 

21           approved new construction of 1200 units, 

22           housing units, at 5 World Trade Center.  

23           According to the Governor's press release, 

24           this will become the only housing site at the 


                                                                   144

 1           World Trade Center.  

 2                  And, further, the units will be 

 3           available to those with incomes between 

 4           40 percent and 120 percent of the area median 

 5           income, which is about a little under 40,000 

 6           to a little under $119,000 for an individual 

 7           living alone.  Also, 20 percent of the units 

 8           will be set aside for those who lived or were 

 9           working in Lower Manhattan during 9/11 and in 

10           the immediate aftermath.

11                  My question is, does your 

12           administration still support this new housing 

13           at the World Trade Center?  And what role 

14           will your administration have in the 

15           construction in Tower 5?

16                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  We think what the 

17           Governor's proposing is very important.  We 

18           believe that it is an area where we can have 

19           housing.  And we believe, as part of our City 

20           of Yes plan, we look at the entire city to 

21           build more.  And whatever way we can partner 

22           with the Governor, we are willing to do so.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN GALLAHAN:  Thank you.

24                  Is there any concern with the site and 


                                                                   145

 1           its neighbors -- St. Nicholas Orthodox Church 

 2           being one, the Liberty Park -- and will this 

 3           affect public access to these places?  Will 

 4           it be impacted or limited by this project?

 5                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  I don't believe so.  

 6                  I believe you get a substantial number 

 7           of visitors that are there each year now.  

 8           There are several houses of worship in that 

 9           area.  And I don't believe it will have a 

10           negative impact on that at all.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN GALLAHAN:  And what is the 

12           exact timeline meant by "immediate 

13           aftermath"?  I'm having a hard time 

14           understanding what "immediate aftermath" 

15           might be.  

16                  And what is the range of dates that 

17           you must have worked or lived in 

18           Lower Manhattan to qualify for these 

19           20 percent set-aside units?

20                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  I think that's 

21           something the Governor's office can give you 

22           the exact answer to that question.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN GALLAHAN:  And what is the 

24           definition of Lower Manhattan for the 


                                                                   146

 1           purposes of the 20 percent for the set-aside 

 2           units?  Which streets and addresses are being 

 3           considered Lower Manhattan?

 4                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Again, I think that 

 5           should come from the Governor's office.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN GALLAHAN:  And my final 

 7           question is, are you concerned that you'll 

 8           find enough people who lived through 9/11 

 9           where the attacks were to live in this 

10           building that is across the street and 

11           overlooks Ground Zero, and will you be able 

12           to meet the 20 percent, do you believe you'll 

13           be able to meet that 20 percent?  And I 

14           believe that's probably connected to the 

15           aftermath question that I asked earlier, but 

16           what's your opinion of that?

17                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Yeah, I believe 

18           we'll be able to find enough people that 

19           lived -- after 9/11 that lived in that area 

20           as well.  I don't think there's going to be a 

21           problem accommodating that.  

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN GALLAHAN:  Thank you so 

23           much.

24                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Thank you very much.


                                                                   147

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  I 

 2           think I'm the last Senator, so to speak.

 3                  So, Mr. Mayor, many questions have 

 4           been asked, and I'm going to try not to 

 5           repeat anything.  Although I do want to just 

 6           tie into things you were already talking 

 7           about.

 8                  One, the very first questioner from 

 9           the Senate about the e-bikes and the issues 

10           that we need to address.  And I also want to 

11           continue to work with the city, because I 

12           carry a number of those bills.  And I think 

13           that we are in the same place, but we need to 

14           get this done because it's just too dangerous 

15           out there for pedestrians.  

16                  But also I know that the NYPD has 

17           recently started a -- at least a model of 

18           being on the bridges and stopping the mopeds 

19           coming in without license plates.  And I 

20           think that that's an incredibly effective 

21           model to address a huge problem, because the 

22           illegal mopeds without the license plates are 

23           also involved with crime.  We also see them 

24           riding on sidewalks and in bike lanes.  


                                                                   148

 1                  And the Governor has a number of 

 2           proposals to fix this within her budget, so I 

 3           hope the city can endorse and support that 

 4           effort as well, because I think it fits in 

 5           very well with what you're trying to do and 

 6           what we need to do in densely crowded 

 7           New York City.

 8                  Something that didn't get asked 

 9           today -- and I don't know that you will have 

10           an answer, I just want to know who to talk 

11           to.  So we have all these hospitals that are 

12           closing or being proposed to close.  We even 

13           have hospitals that want to open.  And yet 

14           there doesn't seem to be anyone in city 

15           government who's ever asked to play a role in 

16           this.  

17                  So for example, in Manhattan, 

18           Mount Sinai Beth Israel has announced it's 

19           closing at a ridiculously quick pace without 

20           permission from the state.  And we're very 

21           concerned that there will be no hospital, 

22           basically, south of 34th Street to provide 

23           services to patients in Lower Manhattan.  

24                  And the fact is that a huge number of 


                                                                   149

 1           patients Beth Israel sees are actually coming 

 2           across from Brooklyn, because the data from 

 3           Brooklyn is that about half of Manhattan 

 4           hospital patients are from Brooklyn because 

 5           they're not getting adequate hospital care in 

 6           Brooklyn.  And yet the state is talking about 

 7           radically shrinking or actually closing 

 8           Downstate in Brooklyn, and then yet Northwell 

 9           wants to put a giant hospital on the 

10           Upper East Side where we have more beds per 

11           capita than anywhere in the country.

12                  So I have frustrations with the state 

13           government about why we aren't asking the 

14           hard questions and having government play a 

15           role in regional hospital planning.

16                  So I'm curious, does anyone ever ask 

17           the city?  Does the city see that this also 

18           should be a responsibility?  I'm told that if 

19           Beth Israel closes, Bellevue estimates 

20           they'll need $150 million more per year to 

21           take care of the patients that will flow to 

22           them.  That certainly is your issue.  That if 

23           SUNY Downstate closes in Brooklyn, there will 

24           be much larger demand at Kings County.  


                                                                   150

 1           That's your issue.

 2                  So again, I'm just curious.  Who 

 3           should we be talking to?  Because I don't 

 4           think the state is factoring in enough of the 

 5           really big issues for the people of the City 

 6           of New York.

 7                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  And I think you 

 8           raise a great point.  Because when you look 

 9           at Downstate, clearly it's going to have an 

10           impact on Kings County.  And when you look at 

11           the fact that you won't have any hospitals 

12           south of 30-something Street, it's going to 

13           impact, you know, Lower Manhattan.  And 

14           you're right, many residents from Brooklyn 

15           travel into Manhattan.  I think it's a 

16           misnomer that you can't get quality care in 

17           Manhattan, because you do.  You have some 

18           great hospitals in Brooklyn -- a misnomer 

19           that you can't get good care in Brooklyn.

20                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Mm-hmm.

21                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  We've had 

22           conversations with the Governor over one of 

23           the hospitals in the borough that -- in the 

24           Borough of Brooklyn that we're going to 


                                                                   151

 1           continue to be as supportive as possible.  

 2                  The H+H system, I think that's a 

 3           starting point, with Dr. Katz, to sit down 

 4           and -- as you stated, there needs to be a 

 5           regional conversation.  Because when we close 

 6           one, how does it impact some of the other 

 7           safety-net hospitals and how does it impact 

 8           our H+H system.  As you know, we don't have 

 9           an impact -- we don't have any, you know, 

10           decision-making authority on closing a 

11           hospital or not.  It's the state.  But I 

12           think you're right, there should be a 

13           regional conversation about this.

14                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  And 

15           so I should recoordinate with Dr. Katz?  

16                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Yes.  Dr. Katz and 

17           Dr. Vasan, the commissioner of the Department 

18           of Health and Mental Hygiene.

19                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

20                  For the record --

21                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Yes.

22                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  -- would you 

23           agree with me --

24                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  I always get scared 


                                                                   152

 1           when I hear that.  

 2                  (Laughter.)

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  -- that the 

 4           majority of asylees to New York, the majority 

 5           of migrants to New York are not criminals and 

 6           are not committing crimes.

 7                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Without a doubt.  

 8                  And, Senator, if we would allow them 

 9           to work, it would be a game-changer for our 

10           city.  Food service workers, nurses, 

11           lifeguards -- anything you could imagine.  We 

12           have an employee shortage in our city.  If we 

13           would just allow them to work, we will have a 

14           different outcome in this entire crisis.  

15                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Great.  Sometimes 

16           I sit up on this podium and I hear some of my 

17           colleagues and I just think, even if they 

18           don't live in New York City like we all do, 

19           they have this illusion that every person 

20           who's come here from a different country has 

21           come here to commit crimes and create threats 

22           to the rest of us.

23                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Far from true.  Far 

24           from true.


                                                                   153

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  That's far from 

 2           true.  So I wanted you on the record on that.  

 3           Thank you.

 4                  We already started to talk about the 

 5           issues of how -- what you need the capital 

 6           money for.  And I think we are going to have 

 7           some separate briefings, so I won't go into 

 8           that.  But I did want to ask you -- and it's 

 9           a self-serving question, because I carry a 

10           bill called the Climate Change Superfund Act 

11           which would require that the gas and oil 

12           companies who cause the most pollution and 

13           climate change damage have to pay the State 

14           of New York $3 billion a year for the next 

15           25 years.  That would be $75 billion.  

16                  And when I read your budget, I see 

17           that there's an estimate that New York City 

18           plans to spend $829 million on projects that 

19           are exclusively for adaptation and 

20           resilience, and another 1.3 billion on 

21           projects that are partially for these climate 

22           purposes.  

23                  We know the federal government has 

24           told us we need to build a seawall at the 


                                                                   154

 1           cost of $52 billion, and we've all been 

 2           having lots of discussions about who's 

 3           responsible for paying.  But you know the 

 4           City of New York is going to end up 

 5           responsible for paying a whole lot of that.  

 6           And if we don't deal with it, we won't have 

 7           Lower Manhattan -- even though one of my 

 8           colleagues apparently has never been there so 

 9           doesn't know where it is.  But trust me, it's 

10           a great area, and we don't want it 

11           underwater.

12                  So would you agree that we need more 

13           money to do the work that you're ending up 

14           responsible for, but the oil and gas 

15           companies are responsible for creating the 

16           damage?  

17                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  I agree.  And I 

18           think that far too often those who are 

19           responsible for some of the damages that's 

20           impacting our cities and our families are 

21           being left harmless.  And they should play a 

22           better role.

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I'm just checking 

24           in my brief.  Two minutes left.  


                                                                   155

 1                  I think we already talked about 

 2           cannabis and all of our desire to close those 

 3           illegal stores as fast as possible, and I 

 4           have been coordinating with Senator Savino 

 5           about additional language that we're working 

 6           on to try to get this done.  Because I would 

 7           love to see you be right and your being able 

 8           to close all the illegal shops in New York 

 9           City in 30 days.  That would be a pretty 

10           amazing accomplishment that every 

11           neighborhood cares about.

12                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  And your 

13           neighborhood is hit extremely hard --

14                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Tell me about it.

15                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  -- with all these 

16           illegal shops.

17                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Yes.  Yes.  You 

18           know, I have Grand Central, Penn Station, all 

19           the areas that people come through.  And 

20           look, people want the legal shops.  That's 

21           the other thing I've learned.  I thought that 

22           neighborhoods like mine might object.  It 

23           turns out -- it's fascinating -- that the 

24           highest users of the legal shops are over 


                                                                   156

 1           60 years old.  

 2                  And I even learned that there's kosher 

 3           weed and a big demand for it.  I thought it 

 4           was a vegetable.  I didn't even know it had 

 5           to be kosher.

 6                  (Laughter.)

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Senator Felder 

 8           and I will discuss it later, or perhaps one 

 9           of the other Assemblymembers here.  I didn't 

10           really think we needed to make it kosher, but 

11           apparently we do and there's huge demand.  So 

12           I want it legal.  I want you to be able to 

13           get these illegal stores closed as fast as 

14           possible.  

15                  And I'm going to cede back my 

16           48 seconds.  Thank you very much.

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Thank you.  

18                  We've been joined by Assemblymembers 

19           Jackson and Meeks.

20                  Our next questioner is 

21           Assemblymember Ra, Ways and Means ranker, for 

22           five minutes.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you.

24                  Mayor, thanks for being here today.  I 


                                                                   157

 1           just wanted to get into a little bit of the 

 2           issues with the city's budget that have been 

 3           ongoing.  Obviously a lot has been talked 

 4           about with, you know, the costs of 

 5           asylum-seekers that the city has borne.  I 

 6           think we all agree that the federal 

 7           government needs to step in and provide more 

 8           support with regard to this issue.

 9                  But I think there are other factors at 

10           play as well.  And one of the things that I 

11           think we're dealing with, both at the state 

12           level and I think at the city level, is the 

13           outmigration trends that have caused a loss 

14           in revenue in the last few years.  

15                  Any thoughts with -- or concerns with 

16           regard to taxpayers leaving New York City and 

17           what initiatives are perhaps there to help 

18           reverse this trend, both in terms of, you 

19           know, residents but also less people coming 

20           into offices and shows and all of that and 

21           the impact that has on the city's revenue.

22                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  And when you do an 

23           analysis of who we're losing, we're losing 

24           working-class people.  The affordability is a 


                                                                   158

 1           real issue.  And because of the partnership 

 2           we've had with the state, we've been able to 

 3           put money back in the pockets of everyday 

 4           working-class people.  

 5                  And don't underestimate that 

 6           partnership.  It was through the state we 

 7           were able to get the increase in earned 

 8           income tax credit.  That was a huge win.  It 

 9           was through the state that we were able to 

10           reduce the cost of childcare from $55 a week 

11           to less than $5 a week.  That was a huge win.  

12           When you look at the hundreds of thousands of 

13           people that live in NYCHA, to have good 

14           affordable housing -- we put it in our 

15           housing plan, but it was the state, our 

16           partnership, that allowed us to get the NYCHA 

17           land trust.  That was a huge win.  

18                  And so the reports are clear:  

19           Working-class people are finding it extremely 

20           difficult to stay in the city, and many was 

21           leaving because of education.  We expanded 

22           gifted and talented programs that many people 

23           are taking a second look at our educational 

24           system.  And the schools are getting better.  


                                                                   159

 1                  So we are doing those things -- public 

 2           safety, education, livability.  That is going 

 3           to slow down this hemorrhaging.

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  And I know that 

 5           recently there was a management report that 

 6           was released regarding staffing shortages 

 7           that are slowing or hindering the work of 

 8           several of the city agencies.  How are you 

 9           planning to address that given, you know, the 

10           budget crunch and the hiring freeze that is 

11           currently going on, to make sure that those 

12           services are available to the residents?

13                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Yeah, we were -- 

14           even prior to the hiring freeze, Assemblyman, 

15           we were dealing with a real staffing 

16           shortage.  We had 14,000 jobs that were 

17           available that we couldn't fill, and it was 

18           for a number of reasons.  

19                  Number one, civil service was not paid 

20           a comfortable and a respectable salary.  We 

21           were able to settle close to 95 percent of 

22           our union contracts, 100 percent of our 

23           uniformed services contracts.  Now that we 

24           have this hiring freeze, because we're 


                                                                   160

 1           dealing with a real economic strain -- and we 

 2           don't want to put a pause on hiring.  Our 

 3           goal is to fill the jobs that we needed.  

 4           Some of the areas we've left harmless, like 

 5           our public safety areas and some of our 

 6           social services areas.  

 7                  But there are other jobs we would like 

 8           to fill if we could deal with this economic 

 9           challenge that is really being fed by the 

10           asylum crisis that we're experiencing.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  And then, lastly, 

12           mayoral control.  We have a proposal in this 

13           budget for a four-year extension.  One of the 

14           things I heard a lot about from our New York 

15           City members is just they want to increase 

16           transparency.

17                  So as -- you know, if this extension 

18           were to be passed in this budget, what is 

19           your plan to try to increase the transparency 

20           and accountability within the system so the 

21           parents, you know, know what's going on 

22           within the school system?

23                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  There is a high 

24           level of transparency from our PEPs to our 


                                                                   161

 1           PTAs.  You know, we've been in this business 

 2           a long time.  And I'm sure you go to many 

 3           town halls, many meetings; there's never 

 4           going to be enough feeling as though we want 

 5           more input, we want more input.

 6                  If we didn't have mayoral 

 7           accountability in place, we would have a real 

 8           problem dealing with the asylum-seeking 

 9           crisis.  Imagine going to every school board 

10           to figure out where children are going to go, 

11           in which school.  How are we going to deal 

12           with the class-size issue without mayoral 

13           accountability in place?  You need to have an 

14           entity such as the mayor and the chancellor 

15           that can make these very tough and difficult 

16           decisions.  

17                  And I think, lastly, we are winning.

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you, Mayor.

19                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  The Senate is 

20           done.  So please, Assembly, continue.  

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Okay, we will.  

22                  Assemblymember Jackson, for three 

23           minutes.

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Thank you, 


                                                                   162

 1           Chair.  Hi, Mr. Mayor.

 2                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  How are you doing, 

 3           Assemblywoman?  

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Always well.  

 5                  All right.  So I'm sure my colleagues 

 6           have talked to you through the moon about 

 7           this issue, 2.4 billion for migrants and 

 8           asylum-seekers.  So in the Bronx, of course 

 9           we have a lot of people who may be 

10           undocumented, having housing issues.  You can 

11           name all the issues that we have in the 

12           South Bronx.  

13                  When they see that we're putting 

14           $2.4 billion in the budget for migrants and 

15           asylum-seekers, they think, well, what about 

16           me?  What about my housing need?  What about 

17           my health insurance need?  What about my fast 

18           track to workforce?

19                  How do you wish we should respond to 

20           that, as people who are responsible for 

21           taking care of the whole City of New York?

22                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  That's a legitimate 

23           question.  And New Yorkers, they're angry.  

24           Particularly in those communities that are 


                                                                   163

 1           underserved, they feel as though, you know, 

 2           why are we being overlooked?  

 3                  And I think you should respond to them 

 4           that the mayor's not overlooking you.  The 

 5           same services and more that we give to 

 6           migrants and asylum-seekers, we're giving to 

 7           long-term New Yorkers.  Migrants and 

 8           asylum-seekers can't get FHEPS vouchers.  You 

 9           know?  Long-term New Yorkers can get that.  

10           Migrants and asylum-seekers at the HERRCs, 

11           they're taking showers outdoors.  They're 

12           sleeping on cots.  Their restroom facilities 

13           are outdoors.  

14                  And so there's this misbelief that the 

15           migrants and asylum-seekers are getting more 

16           than what long-term New Yorkers are getting.  

17           That's just not true.

18                  And job training -- migrants and 

19           asylum-seekers are not getting job training 

20           over long-term New Yorkers.  In fact, the 

21           federal government's not allowing them to 

22           work.  And that is at the heart of the 

23           problem.  

24                  So I think you should share with them 


                                                                   164

 1           that when you do an analysis of the delivery 

 2           of services and resources to low-income 

 3           New Yorkers of -- this administration has put 

 4           low-income New Yorkers in struggling 

 5           communities first.

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN JACKSON:  Thank you.  

 7                  Thank you, Chair.

 8                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Thank you.  

 9                  Assemblymember Meeks for three 

10           minutes.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN MEEKS:  (Mic off; 

12           inaudible.)

13                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  How are you?

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN MEEKS:  (Mic off.)

15                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Good.

16                  (Off the record.)

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN MEEKS:  Can you hear me 

18           now?

19                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Yes, we can.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN MEEKS:  As it relates to 

21           the full funding of Foundation Aid, how has 

22           that affected your school district?  

23                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  It has not.  We have 

24           100 percent of funding of FSF, 100 percent.  


                                                                   165

 1           It has not impacted at all.  We've gone 

 2           beyond the call of duty in doing so.  And 

 3           under the Governor's budget, the FY '25, we 

 4           received $222 million more than we received 

 5           in FY '24.  

 6                  But the real issue is that DOE would 

 7           have received an additional $130 million more 

 8           than in FY '25.  So we are concerned about 

 9           some of the particular changes that are going 

10           to take place.  And we want to make sure that 

11           we are being held whole in the process.

12                  You want to add to that answer?  

13                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  It's 

14           about -- yeah.  Like the mayor said, it would 

15           cost us about like $130 million.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN MEEKS:  Okay.  And I also 

17           want to commend you all on the major strides 

18           to go from a 50 percent graduation rate to 

19           over 80 percent.  Highly commendable.  

20                  What would you say were like the major 

21           cultural changes as it relates to that?  

22                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Yeah.  In my 

23           first -- I just want to go back.  When I 

24           first stated it would not impact, I was 


                                                                   166

 1           thinking when you were talking about Fair 

 2           Student Funding.  That's what I was thinking 

 3           about, Fair Student Funding.  So I'm glad, 

 4           Jacques, you caught that.

 5                  I think it's a combination of things.  

 6           You know, Chancellor Banks has always made it 

 7           clear that by the time our children reach 

 8           11th grade, they ask why was I here?  What 

 9           was the purpose?  And we removed the purpose 

10           of education.  And not every child is going 

11           to go to college, but they should be able to 

12           have a pathway to be a contributor to 

13           society.  And Chancellor Banks has really 

14           changed the game with his partnerships with 

15           outside entities -- tech companies, 

16           hospitals, facilities.  And we have started 

17           to give children their purpose.  And previous 

18           administrations as well, from Mayor Bloomberg 

19           to Mayor de Blasio.  We're continuing that 

20           tradition of saying the responsibility lies 

21           with the mayor and the chancellor.

22                  Prior to that, Assemblyman, no one 

23           knew who to point to.  There was a group of 

24           boards, there was a lot of mismanagement of 


                                                                   167

 1           funds, there was a lot of issues around that.  

 2           And now people are able to point:  This is 

 3           your responsibility, the buck stops with you, 

 4           and you must produce the product and be able 

 5           answer the questions that come with that.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN MEEKS:  Thank you.

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Okay, our last 

 8           questioner --

 9                  UNIDENTIFIED LEGISLATOR:  Oh, no, 

10           please.

11                  (Laughter.)

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  -- is Cities 

13           Chair Braunstein for his second round of 

14           three minutes.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Thank you, 

16           Fred.

17                  Just a couple more questions.  The 

18           Transitional Finance Authority's outstanding 

19           debt, the city comptroller reports that it 

20           has $48 billion in outstanding debt for the 

21           fourth quarter of 2024.  The cap is currently 

22           13.5 billion.  So what do you attribute that 

23           extra $35 billion of outstanding debt to?

24                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  This is --


                                                                   168

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  If you could 

 2           speak in the mic.  

 3                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  Yeah.  This 

 4           is debt that is outside of that 

 5           $13.5 billion.  There is a cap of 

 6           $13.5 billion, okay, that doesn't count 

 7           toward the debt limit.  And anything above 

 8           that counts toward the debt limit.  You 

 9           follow what I'm saying to you?

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  No.

11                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  Okay.  We 

12           have a debt limit --

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  13.5 billion.

14                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  There is a 

15           total debt limit for the city that is 

16           basically based on the values of properties 

17           in New York City in general.  Okay?  

18                  There -- so when the city reached the 

19           debt limit back in the nineties, so -- {no 

20           audio} -- transitional fund, the TFA, to 

21           basically issue more debt.  

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Okay.  Okay.  

23                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  The city 

24           has authority up to $13.5 billion, okay?  But 


                                                                   169

 1           at some point it gets to a point where the 

 2           city becomes almost -- it was basically easy 

 3           for the city, easier for the city to issue 

 4           TFA instead of GO debt.  So the city issued 

 5           TFA debt that fall outside.  

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  But that's 

 7           still under the city's other general -- 

 8                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  The general 

 9           debt limit.

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Okay.

11                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  Okay?  

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Okay.  

13                  The other question I have is I know 

14           that you're facing some challenging financial 

15           decisions because the federal stimulus money 

16           is drying up, particularly when it comes to 

17           your education budget -- you know, 3-K 

18           program, summer programs.  How much stimulus 

19           funding is drying up this year from last 

20           year?  

21                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  It's about 

22           $900 million {no audio}.  

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Year to year, 

24           900 million?  


                                                                   170

 1                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  Yeah.  

 2           But -- {mic off; inaudible}.  

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  That's not a 

 4           few years out, that's just in one year 

 5           you're -- so last year you got 900 million 

 6           more from the federal government than you're 

 7           getting this year.

 8                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  (Nodding.)

 9                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  For education 

10           or for everything?  

11                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  Educational 

12           programs, about 700.  But overall it's about 

13           $900 million.

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  So but for 

15           the education piece -- 

16                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  Seven 

17           hundred.

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  -- like we're 

19           talking about, you were using for 3-K, 

20           Summer Rising -- 

21                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  3-K, 

22           Summer Rising, yup.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  -- 

24           700 million from one year to the next.


                                                                   171

 1                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  Yup.  Yup.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Okay.  

 3                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  A huge hit.  A huge 

 4           hit.  You know, permanent programs with 

 5           temporary dollars.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  I know.  I 

 7           mean, ideally we would have -- if we knew it 

 8           was coming, we would have tried to plan for 

 9           it.  But I understand it's a lot of -- 

10                  NYC BUDGET DIRECTOR JIHA:  That was 

11           the plan.  But because of the migrant crisis, 

12           we have to pivot.  Okay?  That was the plan 

13           all along, transitional financing to 

14           basically take care of this problem.  {Mic 

15           off; inaudible.}

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Okay, thank 

17           you.  

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Thank you very 

19           much.  

20                  And Mr. Mayor, thank you for your 

21           testimony --

22                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Thank you.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  -- and for your 

24           responses to the Legislature's questions 


                                                                   172

 1           today.  

 2                  We look forward to working with you in 

 3           the coming weeks as we craft a budget for the 

 4           city and for all the State of New York.

 5                  Thank you.  

 6                  NYC MAYOR ADAMS:  Thank you very much.  

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

 8                  And we're going to take a short break, 

 9           everyone.  Which still doesn't mean you 

10           should all attack the mayor right away.  Let 

11           them head out into the hallway.  

12                  (Brief recess taken from 12:12 to 

13           12:29 p.m.)

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  We are resuming 

15           the hearing with Panel A:  Honorable Byron 

16           Brown, mayor of the City of Buffalo; 

17           Honorable Mike Spano, mayor of the City of 

18           Yonkers; Honorable Malik Evans, mayor of the 

19           City of Rochester; Honorable Ben Walsh, 

20           mayor of the City of Syracuse; and Honorable 

21           Kathy Sheehan, mayor of the City of Albany.  

22                  And before we start the panel, I just 

23           want to add that we are joined by 

24           Assemblymember Otis and Assemblymember Conrad 


                                                                   173

 1           for this panel.  

 2                  And I think our plan is to have each 

 3           of you make your presentation and reserve 

 4           questions until the end.  And who would like 

 5           to begin?

 6                  BUFFALO MAYOR BROWN:  I'll begin.

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Okay.

 8                  BUFFALO MAYOR BROWN:  Thank you for 

 9           the opportunity today to deliver testimony to 

10           the Joint Legislative Budget Committee on the 

11           fiscal year 2025 Executive Budget.  I would 

12           like to thank Senate Finance Committee Chair 

13           Liz Krueger, Assembly Ways and Means Chair 

14           Helene Weinstein.  I would also like to thank 

15           Senate Local Government Committee Chair 

16           Monica Martinez and Assembly Local Government 

17           Committee Chair Fred Thiele for allowing all 

18           of us mayors to speak on behalf of the 

19           residents of our communities.  

20                  I'd also like to acknowledge 

21           Assemblyman Conrad and Assemblyman Rivera, 

22           who are from Western New York, and thank them 

23           for being here today.

24                  You have my written testimony, but 


                                                                   174

 1           I'll highlight some of my most pressing 

 2           requests.  

 3                  My first request is the need for AIM 

 4           funding for the City of Buffalo.  There has 

 5           been no increase in AIM funding since 2012.  

 6           I think when the state went away from 

 7           revenue-sharing, it eliminated an amount of 

 8           predictable revenue for local governments, 

 9           particularly our cities, which has been very 

10           harmful to cities being able to balance their 

11           budgets and put sound budgets together.

12                  So I want to make a major push for the 

13           restoration of AIM funding in this year's 

14           budget.

15                  The City of Buffalo is at a 

16           crossroads.  The world around us is rapidly 

17           changing, our economy has evolved in a way 

18           that was unimaginable before COVID-19.  

19           Climate change has created an entirely new 

20           reality of what a Buffalo winter looks like, 

21           and this requires more essential services 

22           from our municipal workers than ever before.  

23           Instead of responding to 50 or 60 inches of 

24           snow fallen over several months, it has been 


                                                                   175

 1           more common that the snow falls in a couple 

 2           of days, threatening the life and safety of 

 3           our residents.

 4                  We've been forced to retain additional 

 5           equipment and labor from private contractors 

 6           at the cost of millions of dollars.  For 

 7           Buffalo storms this January, we've already 

 8           paid outside contractors over $5 million, 

 9           with a total overall cost approaching 

10           $7 million.  These massive speedy responses 

11           drive hundreds of thousands of dollars for 

12           the municipal workforce in overtime, as they 

13           work to clear roads, respond to emergencies, 

14           and shelter our most vulnerable residents.  

15                  If Buffalo is to fulfill its 

16           obligation to its residents, many of which 

17           are the most vulnerable in the 

18           Western New York region, Buffalo must be 

19           climate-resilient.

20                  I also have a request for resources 

21           for cultural assets that are regional in 

22           nature that are located physically in the 

23           City of Buffalo.  And the present funding 

24           formula between county government and city 


                                                                   176

 1           government doesn't adequately support the 

 2           funding, the work, the maintenance that the 

 3           city puts into these cultural assets that are 

 4           located in the city and draw people to our 

 5           region.  We are requesting a fund for these 

 6           cultural assets.

 7                  Finally -- and I'm not going to be too 

 8           long -- there is an inequity in how county 

 9           government is funded and how city government 

10           is funded.  I'm asking the state to look at 

11           these many areas of inequity in the funding 

12           formula.  It is different for communities 

13           outside New York City, which is its own 

14           county, but all of our cities don't have the 

15           same equity and fairness in terms of the 

16           funding formula for county governments.  

17                  And if we're concerned about equity, 

18           if we're concerned about segregation in 

19           communities, if we're concerned about poverty 

20           in communities, then we have to look at the 

21           funding formula of how cities are funded 

22           versus how counties are funded in New York 

23           State.  

24                  Because I'm here with fellow mayors 


                                                                   177

 1           presenting today, I will end my comments 

 2           there and be available for your questions.

 3                  Thank you.

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Who would like to 

 5           go next?

 6                  SYRACUSE MAYOR WALSH:  I'll go.

 7                  Thank you, Chair Krueger, Chair 

 8           Thiele -- please give my best to 

 9           Chair Weinstein -- and members of the 

10           legislative fiscal committees for inviting me 

11           to these joint hearings to discuss the state 

12           budget.  It is an honor to be here.

13                  I am grateful to the Legislature for 

14           its support of the City of Syracuse.  I am 

15           particularly appreciative of the members of 

16           our local delegation, including Senators 

17           May -- nice to see you, Senator -- and 

18           Mannion and Assemblymembers Magnarelli, Pam 

19           Hunter, and Stirpe.  Through my six years as 

20           mayor, New York State has been a steady and 

21           impactful partner.  

22                  Syracuse is at the center of multiple 

23           national and world-leading initiatives in 

24           coordination with New York State.  


                                                                   178

 1           Construction on the $2.25 billion 

 2           Interstate 81 project is finally underway. 

 3           Micron's $100 billion commitment to build a 

 4           massive semiconductor chip fab in our 

 5           community is advancing.  The Syracuse Surge, 

 6           our strategy for inclusive growth in the new 

 7           economy, continues to draw investment.  With 

 8           the state's assistance, all of these major 

 9           efforts are focused on creating equitable 

10           opportunity for people in the city and around 

11           the region.  

12                  These transformational initiatives 

13           create new and different challenges, 

14           particularly in the areas of housing, 

15           public infrastructure and workforce 

16           development.  As such, I want to continue to 

17           work with New York on smart and strategic 

18           investments.  

19                  Syracuse strongly supports the efforts 

20           by this Legislature and Governor Hochul to 

21           increase affordable housing.  In 2020 I 

22           introduced the Resurgent Neighborhoods 

23           Initiative in Syracuse, a program to increase 

24           housing and build stronger neighborhood 


                                                                   179

 1           business corridors.  We set a big goal for 

 2           Syracuse -- hundreds of units of affordable 

 3           new-construction single- and two-family homes 

 4           at scattered sites all over the city.  With 

 5           New York State's help, we're more than 

 6           halfway to our goal.  

 7                  We're also working with the state and 

 8           partners to advance multiple large-scale 

 9           mixed-income housing projects.  The financing 

10           and design plans for the first phase of the 

11           East Adams Neighborhood Transformation are 

12           actively underway, and construction will 

13           begin in 2025.  This multiphase plan will 

14           include a one-to-one replacement of all 

15           Syracuse Housing Authority public housing 

16           units in that neighborhood and include some 

17           new mixed-income apartments, totaling 

18           1,400 units of new housing on the southside.  

19           We're also reactivating the former 

20           state-owned Syracuse Developmental Center 

21           site on the westside, and the old 

22           Maria Regina campus on the northside, which 

23           will put two long-vacant properties back on 

24           the tax rolls and add hundreds of new units 


                                                                   180

 1           of quality housing.  

 2                  At my State of the City address last 

 3           month, I announced a new "housing promise":  

 4           Before I leave office at the end of 2025, 

 5           Syracuse will have 2,500 new units of quality 

 6           housing completed or underway in the city. 

 7           It's an ambitious number, but based on our 

 8           experience -- and with the help of New York 

 9           State -- we will make it happen.  

10                  Restoring the city's existing housing 

11           stock is one of the most effective ways we 

12           can meet the housing needs of a growing 

13           region.  Decades of job loss and population 

14           decline did severe damage to housing in 

15           Syracuse.  

16                  Earlier this year we completed the 

17           Syracuse Housing Study, one of the most 

18           in-depth housing analyses ever done by a 

19           city.  The study finds the city is burdened 

20           with two separate but related problems -- we 

21           have both a market gap and an affordability 

22           gap.  The market gap is the difference 

23           between what it costs to create and maintain 

24           housing and the market's willingness to pay 


                                                                   181

 1           for it.  The affordability gap is the 

 2           difference between what it costs to create 

 3           and maintain housing and the market's ability 

 4           to pay for it.  

 5                  We are now underway with a Syracuse 

 6           housing strategy which will provide a roadmap 

 7           for how to address the issues raised by the 

 8           study in the coming years.  It will require 

 9           nontraditional strategies.  We will need to 

10           bring new support and assistance to 

11           homeowners, especially in transitional or 

12           "bridge" neighborhoods.  By bolstering these 

13           stable but moderately distressed 

14           neighborhoods, we will halt further decline 

15           and build more areas of strength faster.  

16                  With the state's help, we've taken a 

17           critical step with the formation of the 

18           Syracuse Housing Trust Fund.  The fund will 

19           give us more tools and financial capacity to 

20           construct, renovate, repair and rehabilitate 

21           housing in the city.  We will need the 

22           state's continued support going forward.  

23                  New York's quality, abundant water 

24           supply is a precious natural resource.  About 


                                                                   182

 1           200,000 people in the City of Syracuse and 

 2           multiple surrounding communities get their 

 3           drinking water from Skaneateles Lake, a 

 4           pristine Finger Lake southwest of the city. 

 5           In close coordination with the Health 

 6           Department and DEC, we're making good 

 7           progress on a plan to extend one of the 

 8           two intake pipes that draw water from the 

 9           lake to a deeper location that is less 

10           susceptible to turbidity due largely to 

11           climate change.  

12                  We're also working on a plan to switch 

13           to on-site chlorine generation for 

14           disinfection using salt, water and 

15           electricity.  In partnership with the state, 

16           we can ensure clean drinking water and 

17           community protection long into the future.  

18                  The city's highly regarded workforce 

19           development initiatives in technology, 

20           advanced manufacturing and construction are 

21           drawing investment to Central New York.  The 

22           Syracuse Surge has helped us upskill 

23           thousands of adults and young people to meet 

24           employers' tech workforce needs.  Our 


                                                                   183

 1           Syracuse Build initiative is putting city 

 2           residents into union apprenticeships and 

 3           good-paying careers in building and 

 4           construction.  

 5                  Syracuse strongly supports 

 6           Governor Hochul's ON-RAMP proposal to build a 

 7           network of innovative workforce development 

 8           hubs across upstate.  With the flagship hub 

 9           in Syracuse, this project will help expand 

10           our successful Syracuse Surge and 

11           Syracuse Build programs.  

12                  I made a firm commitment to the city's 

13           financial well-being when I became mayor. 

14           Despite progress through careful fiscal 

15           management, the city still spends more on the 

16           vital services residents deserve than we take 

17           in from taxes, fees, and state aid, otherwise 

18           known as a structural deficit.  

19                  Clearly, that is not a sustainable 

20           position, which is why we launched a 

21           Revenue Enhancement Workgroup last year, with 

22           the goal of wiping out our structural 

23           deficit.  The group identified multiple 

24           options, including instituting a hotel room 


                                                                   184

 1           occupancy tax, similar to those enacted 

 2           recently in the nearby Town of DeWitt and 

 3           Village of Skaneateles.  We will be asking 

 4           the Legislature to authorize this same source 

 5           of revenue for the city in this session.  

 6                  As we institute new local measures to 

 7           achieve fiscal sustainability, I also must 

 8           address the negative impact of the state's 

 9           12-year freeze on AIM -- actually, it has not 

10           been increased in 15 years.  AIM is the 

11           second-largest source of revenue for the City 

12           of Syracuse, and flat AIM is a major 

13           contributor to our fiscal plight, as you 

14           heard from Mayor Brown.  

15                  At the start of 2024, newly elected 

16           Syracuse City Auditor Alexander Marion issued 

17           a report on the impact of frozen AIM aid on 

18           city operations and the city's structural 

19           deficit.  He made four recommendations, 

20           including adjusting the AIM formula 

21           considering factors such as the value of 

22           state-owned, tax-exempt properties in each 

23           municipality; meeting ambitious goals for 

24           affordable housing; and improvements to 


                                                                   185

 1           municipal infrastructure.  We ask the 

 2           Legislature to work with the administration 

 3           to update AIM in this year's budget.  

 4                  In closing, I reiterate my 

 5           appreciation to the members of the Syracuse 

 6           delegation and the full Legislature for your 

 7           steadfast backing.  You share in Syracuse's 

 8           resurgence.  We welcome your continued 

 9           partnership as we work to create equitable 

10           and sustainable prosperity for all of the 

11           people we serve.

12                  Thank you.  

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Who's next?

14                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  I'll go.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Mayor Spano, 

16           welcome back.

17                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  Good to see you, 

18           Assemblyman.  And -- I'm assuming this is 

19           working?

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Yeah.

21                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  Assemblyman and 

22           members of the Legislature, it's good to be 

23           back here.  I feel like I was here just 

24           yesterday, and it's not.  It's good to see 


                                                                   186

 1           my -- certainly the chairs, my local 

 2           delegation -- obviously, Senator Shelley 

 3           Mayer, and the Senate Majority Leader I know 

 4           has responsibilities, but certainly I know is 

 5           probably listening from her office -- and is, 

 6           as all you should know, very accessible to 

 7           us -- as well as Assemblyman Nader Sayegh and 

 8           Assemblyman Gary Pretlow.

 9                  I have a pretty lengthy speech I'm not 

10           going to share with you.  I submitted an even 

11           longer one to you.  But there are a couple of 

12           things I think that -- to talk about.  I'm 

13           certain that there will be other questions 

14           that will offer some clarity to other issues.

15                  So yeah, let's start off with AIM aid.  

16           And, you know, we all know that, you know, 

17           New York has kind of over the years tried to 

18           pay down the whole Medicaid cost -- that was 

19           a big deal -- to counties.  And while 

20           counties, at least the counties around me, 

21           are somewhat flush with cash, the cities have 

22           the greatest responsibilities.  You know, 

23           we're educating our kids, we're the urban 

24           center, we have our police, our fire, our 


                                                                   187

 1           boards of education.  There's so much there.  

 2                  And yet AIM aid has -- the last time 

 3           AIM aid was increased was spin-up money that 

 4           I was able to achieve what I was -- in 2011.  

 5           After that spin-up it went down and remained 

 6           flat.  And we all know that AIM aid is just 

 7           that recognition.  It's that recognition from 

 8           all up here that you're partners with us in 

 9           our efforts to do what we need to do to 

10           educate our kids, keep our communities safe, 

11           keep that quality of life, and of course 

12           educate our kids.

13                  This being held at that line for all 

14           these years is literally devastating for us.  

15           It hurts.  It hurts us, and again, you know, 

16           all the other costs continue to go up with 

17           it.  You know, I don't know if anybody's 

18           really talked about it but, you know, health 

19           insurance.  Health insurance costs for this 

20           year are going to go up to the tune of -- at 

21           least in Yonkers, to the tune of over 

22           $20 million.  It will be 6 percent on the 

23           property tax levy just to cover the cost of 

24           the healthcare increase to the city.  Six 


                                                                   188

 1           percent.

 2                  Now remember, we have a property tax 

 3           cap.  So that's really not going to work, 

 4           because I have to start with raising -- I'd 

 5           have to bring the tax cap up to 6 percent, by 

 6           the way, and that's a real issue for us.

 7                  So healthcare, the loss of federal 

 8           funds, I know we're all suffering that.  But 

 9           I think that if we speak and we have another 

10           conversation later on, we could talk about 

11           ARPA funds and what the Big 5 cities have 

12           spent that money on, especially in dealing 

13           with COVID and dealing with the mental health 

14           issues that we have kind of taken on since 

15           COVID has gone, right?  And so that 800 or 

16           $700 million statewide is a pretty 

17           significant number.  If we don't get the feds 

18           to fill it, and you don't fill it, then we're 

19           going to have to fill it.  

20                  And if we don't fill it, the jobs are 

21           going to be cut for the kids and urban 

22           centers are going to lose psychologists.  

23           They're going to lose sports.  They're going 

24           to lose music and art.  These are the things 


                                                                   189

 1           that they lose because we all know that, you 

 2           know, it's -- it's social bankruptcy before 

 3           it's anything else.  And so we really need to 

 4           talk about that.

 5                  We need to talk about the cost of 

 6           healthcare and how it's affecting us.  We 

 7           need to talk about why we need more AIM aid.  

 8           We need to talk about education aid, at least 

 9           for me.  And I have a number of places that I 

10           think we can go to in terms of helping a city 

11           like Yonkers.  But it's more regional, so I'm 

12           probably not going to bring it up here.  But 

13           I certainly will take it up with my 

14           delegation.

15                  But think about this.  The City of 

16           Yonkers, because we're in Westchester County 

17           and we have the highest cost of living, 

18           right, yet we are -- our kids, 75 percent of 

19           our kids live at or below the rate of 

20           poverty.  We end up -- we're ranked 282 in 

21           the state in terms of per-pupil 

22           Foundation Aid.  Think about that.  Per-pupil 

23           Foundation Aid.

24                  So our median income in Yonkers is 


                                                                   190

 1           less than the state's average, so we have 

 2           this huge cost of living, huge cost that's 

 3           here.  We have a median income that's lower 

 4           than the state's median income.  And we get 

 5           more towards the end in terms of pupil aid.

 6                  As a matter of fact, just to throw 

 7           this out there, if you take what Buffalo, 

 8           Rochester and Syracuse contribute to 

 9           education, combined it, their local per-pupil 

10           share, the City of Yonkers spends $1400 more 

11           per pupil.

12                  So that's something that at least -- 

13           you know, that's something that's kind of 

14           different than the conversation that we can 

15           all have, but it's certainly something that 

16           has to be talked about for us.

17                  There's lots of things that we're 

18           doing that are good things.  I could talk to 

19           you about our budget deficit, which is an 

20           annual event.  But we do need to find ways 

21           through which we can help fill those gaps.  

22           One way, like I said, is to continue putting 

23           that bullet aid in, which will help Yonkers 

24           quite a bit.  To maybe change the regional 


                                                                   191

 1           cost index.  Some of this can help us get out 

 2           of our own way.

 3                  Despite the fact the money has always 

 4           been an issue for us, we still have been able 

 5           to do the things that you would expect us to 

 6           do.  We're graduating our kids at 90 percent, 

 7           and that's a pretty big accomplishment for 

 8           our schools, considering that they don't get 

 9           the same level of funding.  And we're the 

10           safest big city of our size in all New York 

11           State.  We're the fastest-growing city -- 

12           next to New York City, obviously.

13                  And when you look at housing, even 

14           though it costs a lot to build, we have 

15           actually put forth just in the past 10 years, 

16           12,500 new units of housing.  Ten percent of 

17           it -- actually, 22 percent of it is 

18           affordable.  

19                  And so we're doing the things you'd 

20           like us to do, and I think that's important.  

21           But you need to know that it's a struggle.  

22           And I think it's a struggle for all of our 

23           cities in an effort to kind of make it all 

24           work.  Because we're the urban centers, we're 


                                                                   192

 1           the ones that are going to educate our kids, 

 2           we're the ones that take care of, you know, 

 3           mostly Black and brown children.  You want us 

 4           to succeed.  You know, you don't have a 

 5           Congressman that says, you know, we should do 

 6           restitution, put $14 trillion in -- you know 

 7           what, take a trillion and put it into 

 8           education in urban centers and then see how 

 9           the world will change when our kids are given 

10           the same opportunities as anyone else.  

11                  My kids will not have the same 

12           educational experience as they'll have in 

13           Scarsdale just across the border, Bronxville 

14           across the border, or Hastings.  But if you 

15           give us the funding that we need, we can kind 

16           of make it work.

17                  But anyway, I kind of went off the 

18           beaten path, I apologize.  But I will 

19           certainly be available for any questions you 

20           might have.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Okay, it's 

22           between Albany and Rochester.  Who's --

23                  ROCHESTER MAYOR EVANS:  Ladies first.

24                  (Laughter.)


                                                                   193

 1                  ALBANY MAYOR SHEEHAN:  All right.  

 2           Thank you so much for having us today, 

 3           Chairs Krueger and Weinstein -- who's not 

 4           here.  

 5                  I also want to thank Assemblymember 

 6           Thiele and Senator Martinez for coming and 

 7           addressing the New York Conference of Mayors 

 8           yesterday.  We truly appreciated hearing from 

 9           you, so thank you for taking the time out of 

10           your day to do that.

11                  I come here every year talking about 

12           Capital City Funding, and I had said that if 

13           we could make it permanent, I won't have to 

14           come and talk about it ever again.  I'm 

15           thrilled to see our Assemblymember, Pat Fahy, 

16           who has always fought for Capital City 

17           Funding for us.  

18                  And I want to give a shout out to 

19           Senate Vice President Pro Tem Neil Breslin, 

20           as well as John McDonald who, while he no 

21           longer represents the City of Albany, fights 

22           for us here in the Assembly.

23                  And I'm grateful for the fact that 

24           this body -- for the support that we've 


                                                                   194

 1           received from both the Senate and the 

 2           Assembly over the years, and for the third 

 3           year in a row now, Governor Hochul has built 

 4           that aid directly into her budget.

 5                  The one thing that I do want to bring 

 6           your attention to with respect to what we're 

 7           asking for, though, is to really look at 19-A 

 8           and make it permanent.  We are sitting here 

 9           in a place that used to be home to nearly 

10           10,000 people.  This was a neighborhood -- 

11           churches, businesses, schools, all taken by 

12           eminent domain, torn down, accelerating the 

13           flight from the City of Albany as people were 

14           displaced.

15                  And so when we think about what it is 

16           going to take to replace that, in a city 

17           where 64 percent of our property is not 

18           taxable, and most of that property is owned 

19           by the state, we believe that what we're 

20           proposing for 19-A works.  It provides a 

21           permanent amount of funding within 19-A that 

22           incorporates the Capital City Funding and a 

23           very small, small percentage of the value of 

24           all of that property that the state owns.


                                                                   195

 1                  And then it's tied to the tax cap, so 

 2           that we know that it's going to go up when 

 3           the tax cap goes up.  

 4                  That will build in for residents of 

 5           the City of Albany, businesses, those who 

 6           come here day in and day out, whether they 

 7           work here or they're visitors here, the 

 8           confidence to know that we will have the 

 9           resources that we need to be able to run our 

10           city government.  And I believe that the time 

11           has come for us to give that certainty so 

12           that we're not wringing our hands and 

13           wondering year to year whether or not we're 

14           going to be able to make ends meet.

15                  I also want to join my other mayors in 

16           talking about AIM.  You know, the one thing 

17           about AIM that we have to make sure that 

18           we're focused on is that AIM was a way of 

19           providing unrestricted funding to cities.  

20           It's tied to a formula.  We may disagree 

21           about how that formula works, but it's tied 

22           to a formula that looks at the poverty rates 

23           in our city, the amount of home ownership in 

24           our city.  It's tied to need in as close a 


                                                                   196

 1           way as it can be.

 2                  But it also allows us to avoid having 

 3           to raise a regressive tax, our property 

 4           taxes, especially in cities where we have 

 5           high numbers of seniors -- our populations 

 6           are aging -- and high numbers of people who 

 7           come to our cities because we are focused on 

 8           providing affordable housing.  We're focused 

 9           on providing affordable homeownership 

10           opportunities.  And so every time we raise 

11           the property taxes, we're impacting that 

12           affordability for our residents.

13                  And so we would like to see an 

14           increase in AIM.  It's actually gone down.  

15           Our AIM aid is down 9 percent from 2009.  

16           There were certain cities that were cut over 

17           these years.  And so while some saw a slight 

18           increase and then a decrease back down, this 

19           is something that needs to be addressed.  And 

20           the fairness piece of this for our residents 

21           really has to do with an issue that is 

22           impacting all of New York State, and that's 

23           affordability.  

24                  And that property tax bill is a huge 


                                                                   197

 1           part of affordability.  Whether you're 

 2           renting an apartment or whether you're 

 3           looking to achieve homeownership, you are 

 4           paying those property taxes.  And so AIM is a 

 5           way for the state to take its more 

 6           progressive income taxes and ensure that some 

 7           of that is coming back to our cities and that 

 8           there's an increase that we can rely upon, 

 9           year in and year out, whether it's tied to 

10           inflation or another index.

11                  And so we really think that the time 

12           has come.  I know that there was a view that 

13           we had ARPA money.  That money is gone.  We 

14           saw increases in sales tax; that's flattening 

15           out.  The cannabis tax, have to tell you -- 

16           it's a whopping $23,000, I think is what 

17           we're projecting.

18                  So we need to get serious about 

19           ensuring that this revenue source is 

20           available for the cities in the state 

21           because, again, it allows us to avoid that 

22           regressive tax that can hurt our homeowners, 

23           the property tax, which is really the only 

24           other lever that we as mayors control.


                                                                   198

 1                  So we are hopeful that our voices will 

 2           be heard, that we will be able to get 

 3           something in the budget this year and then 

 4           tie that to an increase that we can rely on, 

 5           especially during these inflationary times.  

 6           We've all shown that we're great stewards of 

 7           our taxpayer dollars.  In the City of Albany 

 8           we've kept growth at less than 2 percent 

 9           every year that I've been mayor as you 

10           average it out over those years.  We all saw 

11           that increase with the ARPA money.  Wasn't 

12           really our money.  And we're all going to 

13           have to grapple with ensuring that we're able 

14           to balance our budgets going forward.

15                  And so we want to be partners with 

16           you, we want to demonstrate to you what good 

17           stewards we are of those taxpayer dollars.  

18           And allow us to ensure that we have the 

19           ability to fill those positions in our police 

20           departments, our fire departments, focus on 

21           public safety, focus on growing our cities, 

22           focus on making our cities communities of 

23           choice as our state grows and takes advantage 

24           of the incredible opportunities that are 


                                                                   199

 1           coming our way.

 2                  Thank you.

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Thank you.

 4                  Mayor Evans.

 5                  ROCHESTER MAYOR EVANS:  (Mic off) -- 

 6           absence Chairwoman Weinstein, and 

 7           Chairman Thiele.  And I also just want to 

 8           also thank members of my delegation that are 

 9           here:  Senator Brouk, Assemblyman Meeks, 

10           Senator Cooney.  Thank you all for being 

11           here.

12                  You have my testimony, so I will not 

13           read it verbatim.  I'll be brief, but I just 

14           want to make a couple of points.

15                  When I took office in 2022 I 

16           immediately declared a gun violence emergency 

17           because Rochester had one of the highest 

18           per-capita murder rates in the country and we 

19           had seen our highest gun death rates that we 

20           had ever seen.  

21                  I declared a gun violence emergency, 

22           but I could have easily also declared a 

23           poverty emergency.  Of the top five poorest 

24           zip codes in New York State, Rochester, a 


                                                                   200

 1           medium-sized city in upstate New York, we 

 2           have three of the top five poorest zip codes 

 3           in New York State.  That is not only 

 4           something that we are not proud of or happy 

 5           about, it's something that I think we have to 

 6           come to you, as we go to all levels of 

 7           government, and appeal to you to help in that 

 8           situation.

 9                  And the dollars might come in AIM aid, 

10           or we could come up with a new name.  I don't 

11           care what we call it.  But we need more 

12           resources in Rochester because in the 

13           richest, most powerful nation in the world, 

14           in one of the richest states in the country, 

15           there should not be a city on the banks of 

16           the Genesee River that has a childhood 

17           poverty rate that is almost half and 

18           contains, of the top five poorest zip codes 

19           in New York State, the top three. 

20                  This is an issue not just for 

21           Rochester, but for us as a state, and I want 

22           to appeal to you to help make that the center 

23           of any decisions that we make as they relate 

24           to the allocation of resources.  It is 


                                                                   201

 1           critical.

 2                  It is also no mistake that if you look 

 3           at the redlined areas in the City of 

 4           Rochester, if you look at our Vacuum Oil site 

 5           that we are working to clean up from an 

 6           environmental justice perspective, all of 

 7           those areas that have the highest poverty 

 8           rates were also redlined areas that existed 

 9           for many, many years.  And we are bearing the 

10           brunt of that.  Our children are bearing the 

11           brunt of that.

12                  So an increase in AIM aid or whatever 

13           we want to call it is something that could 

14           have a major impact on our city and thereby I 

15           think also improve our state.  You can't have 

16           a city that has that many children living in 

17           poverty.

18                  The second point I wanted to make is 

19           gun violence.  I said I declared a gun 

20           violence state of emergency.  I've been in 

21           office -- this is going into my third year.  

22           We cut -- homicides last year were down by 

23           almost 34 percent.  And one of the things 

24           that this body and the state helped us with 


                                                                   202

 1           was GIVE money.  I cannot stress enough the 

 2           importance of the Gun Violence Elimination 

 3           Program and the impact that that has had on 

 4           us driving down gun violence.  

 5                  There is no reason why a state like 

 6           New York, with its pretty strict gun laws, 

 7           should have people across the state dying of 

 8           gun violence.  My commitment is to try to do 

 9           everything we can, from a prevention, 

10           intervention and suppression standpoint, to 

11           make sure that we drive down gun violence.  

12           We must make sure that we put investments in 

13           programs -- not just intervention or 

14           suppression, but also preventative programs 

15           that will stop young people in particular 

16           from picking up a gun, and encouraging them 

17           to make sure that they pick up a book or that 

18           they get into a workforce development program 

19           where they can get jobs.  It is absolutely 

20           critical that we continue to invest in those 

21           programs.  

22                  Just a couple of things from the 

23           Governor's Executive Budget that I looked at 

24           that I want to highlight that I think that 


                                                                   203

 1           are important for both Rochester and Monroe 

 2           County.  Our city and our county, we work 

 3           together.  Our legislative proposals are 

 4           joint because we believe that we have more 

 5           firepower if we're able to work together.  

 6                  I want to highlight the investment in 

 7           new public safety communications systems.  

 8           That is extremely important for us.  

 9                  The FAST NY Shovel-Ready Grant 

10           Program, a great program.  As much as we can 

11           get shovel-ready sites to clean up these 

12           brownfields and other dilapidated areas that 

13           have been poisoned by individuals -- you 

14           know, what happens and what frustrates me as 

15           a mayor is these folks, they tear our cities 

16           up, leave it poisoned -- we have a Vacuum Oil 

17           site that we're working on cleaning up -- and 

18           then they leave the city, the poorest of the 

19           residents, to clean up this mess that they 

20           benefited from for like a hundred years.  

21                  And then by the time I become mayor, 

22           they say, Hey, congratulations, here you are.  

23           Any resources to clean up those sites is 

24           extremely important.


                                                                   204

 1                  Equipment grants to support response 

 2           to emergency weather events, as Mayor Brown 

 3           mentioned.  

 4                  Very happy to see the increased access 

 5           to swimming and instruction for important 

 6           life skills, and the creation of the Office 

 7           of Workforce Development, which is needed 

 8           because the sugar high of ARPA will be 

 9           ending.  And we have put millions of dollars 

10           into workforce development as a means, as a 

11           means of decreasing poverty.  

12                  We know that all these jobs are here, 

13           but without the skills and workforce, it 

14           doesn't matter.  We can have all the jobs we 

15           want, but if we are not tying people to those 

16           jobs that are going to pay them a livable 

17           wage, none of it matters.  But what do we do 

18           after ARPA runs out?  So I'm happy to see 

19           that in the budget, and we need to make sure 

20           we do that. 

21                  A continued investment in clean water 

22           infrastructure and reduced lead exposure.  

23           Rochester has been a national model for this.  

24           We spoke at President Biden's Lead Summit 


                                                                   205

 1           that he had last year where we talked about 

 2           our commitment to accelerate the replacement 

 3           of every single lead service line in 

 4           Rochester by 2030.  

 5                  We want them all replaced.  We want 

 6           them all gone, because we don't want to have 

 7           our children bearing the contaminants that 

 8           lead brings.  We did it in paint, and now 

 9           we're doing it in water.  That is an 

10           expensive enterprise.  So any dollars that 

11           the state can put our way is something that 

12           we would be extremely grateful for.  And I'm 

13           happy that that is in this budget.  

14                  We are also happy about the continued 

15           investment in roadway infrastructure through 

16           CHIPS, Pave Our Potholes, and Extreme Winter 

17           Recovery.  

18                  And also the expanding of access to 

19           mental health services.  That is up there 

20           with the opioid epidemic, the challenges 

21           around mental health.  It all relates.  It is 

22           all correlated, and I believe that it is all 

23           things that we should make sure that we 

24           invest in.  And I am happy to see those in 


                                                                   206

 1           this budget.  

 2                  So I thank you for your time today, 

 3           and look forward to answering any questions 

 4           that I may be able to answer.  

 5                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  I thank you all 

 6           for your testimony.  

 7                  I just want to add that we've been 

 8           joined by Assemblymember Fahy and 

 9           Assemblymember Pretlow.  Thank you for being 

10           here.

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I'm sorry, I just 

12           want to add Senator Shelley Mayer, Senator 

13           Samra Brouk, Senator Rachel May, who's back; 

14           she had to go.

15                  Thank you.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Okay.  And we're 

17           going to open the questioning with 

18           Assemblymember Shimsky.

19                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SHIMSKY:  Boy, that was 

20           fast.  

21                  We've been talking a lot about the 

22           challenges you all face in an operating 

23           budget scenario.  But especially as climate 

24           change gets worse, I suspect your capital 


                                                                   207

 1           needs are going to be exploding too.  

 2                  Since one of my mayors is on the 

 3           panel, I think I'd like to engage Mayor Mike 

 4           a little bit on this issue.  Now, the City of 

 5           Yonkers has done some really good things that 

 6           have helped with stormwater management.  The 

 7           most spectacular one is probably the 

 8           multi-phase Saw Mill River daylighting 

 9           downtown, which is great.  But you still have 

10           a lot of challenges to go.  Do you want to 

11           maybe list a few of them and talk about how 

12           you hope to be able to fund these one day?  

13                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  Yes.  And thank 

14           you, Assemblywoman.  Yeah, the story of 

15           infrastructure, the story of our schools, our 

16           police, fire infrastructure, the cleaning of 

17           our streets, the dealing with the effects of 

18           climate change, I think it's fair to say we 

19           could all probably give you price lists 

20           that's in the hundreds of millions if not 

21           billions of dollars, each and every one of 

22           us.  

23                  And, you know, Yonkers is a city of 

24           hills, you know, it's built on two mountain 


                                                                   208

 1           ranges -- seven rivers, seven hills, seven 

 2           lakes, seven valleys.  And so when Hurricane 

 3           Ida hit, you know, we were whacked pretty 

 4           hard.  It was probably worse than what Sandy 

 5           had to do to us.  In general, it was worse.

 6                  And so when you're looking at certain 

 7           infrastructure projects, everything that 

 8           we're going to come to you with is going to 

 9           have a price tag of 50 million or more, in 

10           some cases.  It's big stuff.

11                  Now, we could try and prioritize and 

12           get us enough money to kind of do -- you 

13           know, take care of Troublesome Brook -- 

14           perfect name.  That's the name, Troublesome 

15           Brook, right?  And to do a couple of 

16           different things.  But then we also have, you 

17           know, like the mayor said before, just the 

18           issue of lead.  Right?  So the federal 

19           government has put down certain things that 

20           we have to do.  One of them is they say you 

21           have to create a list.  Well, we have 

22           30,000 people that we have to inspect their 

23           pipes.  It's $10 million just to create their 

24           list, you know, for them before we even talk 


                                                                   209

 1           about how we're going to solve the problem.

 2                  And so, again, we've built a -- you 

 3           know, we just built a school with the help of 

 4           New York State, and thank you for that.  

 5           We -- you know, and that has been big for us.  

 6           But just repairs of our schools -- you know, 

 7           we're talking about, just to get to where we 

 8           need to be, another half a billion dollars.  

 9           I don't have that.  Because if I raise -- if 

10           I borrow 30 million -- my budget person is 

11           sitting over there -- if I borrow 30 million, 

12           we have to raise taxes 1 percent.  It's 

13           just -- there -- the money just isn't there.  

14                  And so any help we can get from the 

15           deep pockets, which I refer to the state and 

16           the federal government --

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Thank you, 

18           Mr. Mayor.

19                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  Thank you, 

20           Assemblyman.  

21                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  And 

22           our first questioner is the chair, 

23           Senator May.

24                  SENATOR MAY:  Thank you.  And thank 


                                                                   210

 1           you all for your testimony.  

 2                  The Cities 2 Committee partly exists 

 3           because we have these -- some of these 

 4           specific problems, like concentrated poverty 

 5           in our small and medium cities.  And I wanted 

 6           to -- first of all, I hear you loud and clear 

 7           about AIM aid.  Every year you advocate for 

 8           it; every year we in the Legislature advocate 

 9           for it; every year the Governor shoots it 

10           down.  

11                  So I think the city auditor in 

12           Syracuse has a creative idea for how to 

13           propose it differently.  I don't know, 

14           Mayor Brown, if you were suggesting a 

15           different way to kind of come at AIM aid in 

16           relation to like county versus city needs.  

17           If you have creative ways to do this that 

18           maybe are a little different from what we've 

19           done before that might get a different 

20           result, I am all ears.  So that's just 

21           open-ended.  I'm available anytime.

22                  I did want to talk about the 

23           concentrated poverty issue.  When we had a 

24           hearing in December about this issue after 


                                                                   211

 1           Syracuse was listed No. 2 in the nation for 

 2           child poverty, one of the things we heard was 

 3           that the state tends to support and fund 

 4           affordable housing projects that are supposed 

 5           to be 100 percent affordable, understandably, 

 6           but 100 percent affordable housing actually 

 7           can serve to further concentrate poverty.  

 8           And we need more mixed-income housing in our 

 9           smaller cities.

10                  So what tools do you need from the 

11           state to make it possible to support 

12           mixed-income, development of mixed-income 

13           neighborhoods?  Is that something any of you 

14           have thoughts about?  

15                  ALBANY MAYOR SHEEHAN:  Well, if I 

16           could, I have a council that passed very 

17           restrictive inclusionary zoning.  We had an 

18           inclusionary zoning ordinance.  It was 

19           working.  It required that 5 percent of the 

20           units within a new market-rate development be 

21           affordable.  They raised the percentage and 

22           lowered the income level, and I have not had 

23           a single market-rate project proposed in my 

24           city.  And that's because there is no tax 


                                                                   212

 1           credit or other way of paying for those 

 2           affordable units.  

 3                  So while I support the spirit of it, 

 4           the reality is that banks will not finance it 

 5           unless it cash-flows.  And even though we 

 6           might hope that banks would be willing to 

 7           make less money or take more risk, that's not 

 8           how it's working.  And so I think some sort 

 9           of credit for developers who create a certain 

10           percentage of affordable units within 

11           market-rate housing will move some of those 

12           units out of the areas of concentrated 

13           poverty.  But it requires some dollars, and 

14           they're dollars that we as local governments 

15           just simply don't have.

16                  SYRACUSE MAYOR WALSH:  (Mic off; 

17           inaudible.)  It cuts both ways.  So we know 

18           that left to its own devices, the market 

19           isn't going to finance or fund the gap for 

20           incorporating affordable units into 

21           market-rate projects.  So again, to the 

22           mayor's point, we need flexible financing to 

23           assist with that.

24                  On the flip side -- as, Senator, you 


                                                                   213

 1           and I have talked about before -- the toolkit 

 2           for affordable housing is very restrictive as 

 3           well.  So for low-income-housing tax credits, 

 4           which is the biggest tool in the affordable 

 5           housing toolkit, it doesn't allow for the 

 6           inclusion of market-rate units in an 

 7           otherwise affordable project.  And what we 

 8           all know is that concentrating any type of 

 9           housing, whether it's low-income housing or 

10           luxury housing, isn't the best way to do it.

11                  And so that's one of the reasons we 

12           created the Syracuse Housing Trust Fund, was 

13           to try to have a mechanism -- where we have 

14           to obviously find resources for -- where we 

15           can make strategic investments in different 

16           projects, whether they be like affordable 

17           projects or otherwise market-rate projects, 

18           to incorporate a mix of income levels into 

19           them.  

20                  So the short answer is some sort of 

21           flexible financing tool.  You know, we have 

22           seen some limited use of economic development 

23           funds, state economic development funds to do 

24           that.  I think we could see more of that.  


                                                                   214

 1                  But thank you for the question.  

 2                  SENATOR MAY:  Let me also ask if any 

 3           of you --

 4                  BUFFALO MAYOR BROWN:  May I answer 

 5           that?

 6                  SENATOR MAY:  Quickly.  

 7                  (Mic difficulties.)

 8                  BUFFALO MAYOR BROWN:  It takes real 

 9           power to get this mic on.  

10                  (Laughter.)

11                  BUFFALO MAYOR BROWN:  I think flexible 

12           finances is critically important, but having 

13           the resources to provide incentives for 

14           housing development is critical.  

15                  And again, you know, when we look at 

16           what the Governor tried to do with affordable 

17           housing across the state last year, a lot of 

18           communities were resistant to that.  In my 

19           community, the majority of the affordable 

20           housing is physically located in the City of 

21           Buffalo.  Seventeen percent of city rental 

22           units are income-restricted.  Almost 

23           70 percent of affordable housing is in the 

24           city.  Eighty percent -- 87 percent of public 


                                                                   215

 1           housing is in the city.

 2                  We've built over 4,000 units of 

 3           affordable housing during my tenure as mayor 

 4           of the City of Buffalo.  So having flexible 

 5           financing is critically important, and 

 6           recognizing that something -- there should be 

 7           some incentive for communities that have 

 8           invested in affordable housing.  You know, 

 9           some --

10                  SENATOR MAY:  Okay, I'm going to -- 

11           I'd like to move on to a couple of other 

12           topics, though.

13                  BUFFALO MAYOR BROWN:  Okay.

14                  SENATOR MAY:  But thank you.

15                  One of them is about the role of my 

16           committee.  Actually every time I come to 

17           Albany I am impressed with the public 

18           transportation here and I'm excited by the 

19           new FLEX system that's an on-demand system 

20           for getting out to the train station, for 

21           example.

22                  What we heard from Mayor Evans about 

23           fighting gun violence -- how much do you 

24           share with each other things that are working 


                                                                   216

 1           or things that you have tried and that have 

 2           failed?  And how can this -- the Cities 2 

 3           Committee be helpful in brokering some of 

 4           those conversations and making sure we are 

 5           learning from each other?  

 6                  ALBANY MAYOR SHEEHAN:  Well, we just 

 7           met for two days, a day and a half, with the 

 8           New York Conference of Mayors, so we do share 

 9           a lot of information.  

10                  And I think -- I'll be very quick, but 

11           a lot of us are investing our ARPA dollars in 

12           new programs that are really tests of 

13           theories of change with respect to mental 

14           health issues and how we address those 

15           issues, rapid rehousing.  There's a lot of 

16           creativity that is going on with those ARPA 

17           dollars.  

18                  We plan on measuring the outcomes and 

19           then figuring out how to fund the things that 

20           work permanently.  And so I imagine we will 

21           be back next year with very specific requests 

22           because we want to ensure that when we can 

23           demonstrate that something works, that we 

24           have a funding stream that's going to pay for 


                                                                   217

 1           it.

 2                  SENATOR MAY:  Thank you.

 3                  And just real quickly, are any of you 

 4           looking at Detroit's example of using a land 

 5           value tax to replace some or all of the 

 6           property tax so that you can really get more 

 7           land in production for housing or get rid of 

 8           some of the surface parking lots that are 

 9           blights on our cities?

10                  ROCHESTER MAYOR EVANS:  (No audio.)  

11           -- just around the land value tax.  But as 

12           you know, we would need this honorable body 

13           to have permission to be able to do that.

14                  SENATOR MAY:  I carry the bill.

15                  ROCHESTER MAYOR EVANS:  But I think 

16           it's a discussion that's worth having, 

17           because we just can't keep doing the same 

18           thing that we've been doing.  We know that's 

19           the definition of insanity.

20                  SENATOR MAY:  Mayor Evans, I have a 

21           kind of pointed question for you because one 

22           of my constituents died 11 months ago at a 

23           concert in Rochester.  I know one of your 

24           constituents died, Mayor Brown's constituents 


                                                                   218

 1           died there.

 2                  Have you taken any steps to make sure 

 3           that doesn't ever happen again?  Are there 

 4           policy measures we can take at the state 

 5           level to prevent that kind of tragedy?  

 6                  ROCHESTER MAYOR EVANS:  Well, you 

 7           know, I mean it was a terrible tragedy, that 

 8           concert.  One of the things we did was do an 

 9           assessment of these concert venues to see 

10           what their security plans were, and also to 

11           make sure that if you are doing an event like 

12           this, to make sure that you are hiring people 

13           who, number one, understand crowd control and 

14           also make sure that people aren't being 

15           packed into these locations.  

16                  And that's something that you have to 

17           do working through zoning and the fire 

18           department.  That's something that we did.  

19           And we did ultimately end up closing down 

20           that location as a result of that tragedy 

21           that happened last March.

22                  SENATOR MAY:  I'm glad to hear that, 

23           honestly.  We're working on some legislation 

24           to make sure -- whatever the state can do to 


                                                                   219

 1           make sure that kind of tragedy doesn't happen 

 2           again.

 3                  ROCHESTER MAYOR EVANS:  Thank you.

 4                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  Senator, if I 

 5           can -- can I just -- just on policing real 

 6           quick.  You know, in 2012 when I took office, 

 7           Yonkers was under a Department of Justice 

 8           investigation.  They wanted to take over the 

 9           police department, they wanted to institute a 

10           lot of different measures to change the 

11           department.  It was under investigation for 

12           being aggressive and maybe even have 

13           systematic racism.  

14                  And we -- anyway, we went to work with 

15           the Department of Justice and made a hundred 

16           different changes.  Like we banned chokeholds 

17           long before the murder of George Floyd.  But 

18           my point is we made a hundred different 

19           changes working with community groups -- the 

20           clergy, community groups, working with 

21           legislators, working with the Department of 

22           Justice.  And we did a bunch of things.  Some 

23           of the things were kind of corny:  "Coffee 

24           with a Cop," "Pizza with the Police" -- 


                                                                   220

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Mayor, I have to 

 2           cut you off, I'm sorry.  

 3                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  I know, I'm 

 4           sorry.  I'm going off on a tangent.  I 

 5           apologize, Senator.

 6                  SENATOR MAY:  Thank you.  Thank you 

 7           all.

 8                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  But just so you 

 9           know, there's ways we can do it, keep the 

10           crime low, and also keep complaints against 

11           our officers -- we've done it.

12                  SENATOR MAY:  Thank you.  Thank you 

13           all.

14                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Assembly.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Yes, 

16           Assemblymember Conrad, for three minutes.

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN CONRAD:  Thank you, 

18           Chairs.

19                  I guess I would direct this question 

20           to Mayor Byron Brown, but it could be 

21           addressed to all of you as a panel.  

22                  We talked about AIM funding.  I 

23           certainly support your efforts to get a 

24           higher rate of AIM funding.  I've been in 


                                                                   221

 1           local government, I know what that does for 

 2           you, and CHIPS and so on.  And I certainly 

 3           can understand where you're coming from.  

 4                  But one of the things I want to talk 

 5           about is the cost of clean water.  And I was 

 6           interested by the testimony of the Syracuse 

 7           mayor.  But what I was experiencing at the 

 8           local level of government was the cost of 

 9           chemicals to actually clean drinking water to 

10           be able to get it out to our customers and to 

11           our residents.  And I know we have the lead 

12           pipes, we have fluoride issues, we've got the 

13           gamut.  And that's a very expensive thing.  

14                  But the question I have is, are you 

15           experiencing the same amount of increase of 

16           cost of chemicals?  In my tenure in the local 

17           town board, the cost went up from 200 to 

18           300 times more.  And that expense is of 

19           course going back to the taxpayer.  Are you 

20           experiencing that?  And really my question 

21           is, I see that Syracuse is attempting to do 

22           something there.  I'll go from there.  So 

23           I'll leave it to you.

24                  BUFFALO MAYOR BROWN:  The cost of 


                                                                   222

 1           every commodity has gone up, including the 

 2           cost of chemicals that go into the water.

 3                  And in Buffalo, we are transferring, 

 4           automating systems.  And what we saw in other 

 5           communities across the country, when they 

 6           changed water sources, when they changed 

 7           systems, water got contaminated.  So you have 

 8           to be very careful.  In addition to costs, 

 9           you have to do the research to make sure that 

10           when systems are changed, different chemicals 

11           are used, that it's going to work properly.

12                  Lead is a major issue, I think, for 

13           all of us.  As Mayor Spano said, the federal 

14           government is requiring lead pipes to be 

15           replaced by a certain period of time.  

16           Buffalo years ago started a program called 

17           ROLL, Replace Old Lead Lines.  We have 

18           replaced thousands of lead lines, at a cost 

19           of a little over $30 million.  But to do all 

20           of the lead lines in the City of Buffalo 

21           would be about half a billion dollars.  

22                  So costs are going up with chemicals, 

23           but to do the work that's being required by 

24           the federal government to address lead pipes, 


                                                                   223

 1           that's going to be very expensive for all of 

 2           us.

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN CONRAD:  I guess I'll 

 4           leave it to the Syracuse mayor.  You 

 5           mentioned a program using electric and salt 

 6           to kind of clean the water.  Is this new 

 7           tech?  And how costly is it?

 8                  SYRACUSE MAYOR WALSH:  So hopefully to 

 9           reduce costs and increase public safety, 

10           rather than trucking in chlorine gas to the 

11           facility, we're using a process to create it.  

12           So that's the idea.  

13                  But again, to your point, part of that 

14           is -- aside from the public safety aspect, 

15           part of it is just cost savings.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN CONRAD:  Thank you.  

17           Appreciate it.

18                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

19                  Senator Shelley Mayer.

20                  SENATOR MAYER:  Thank you very much.  

21                  And thank you for being here.  A 

22           special thank you to my -- Mayor Mike Spano, 

23           thank you for your leadership in Yonkers and 

24           restoring confidence in our city.


                                                                   224

 1                  One thing none of you mentioned -- and 

 2           particularly you, Mayor Spano -- is that the 

 3           Governor's proposal on school aid funding, 

 4           even for the Big 5 and other districts, if 

 5           you got more, you're still getting less more 

 6           than you would have gotten before her 

 7           proposals, because she reduced the 

 8           inflationary index in the Foundation Aid 

 9           formula.  And for Yonkers, I think that's 

10           about 33 million or thereabouts.  

11                  So Yonkers, because they have a 

12           mayoral-control type of situation, but even 

13           in the others, your school funding is 

14           extremely important.  So none of you spoke to 

15           that.  I just wonder, Mayor Spano, if you 

16           have any comments on that.

17                  And my other two comments are -- one 

18           on AIM, I like your idea, Mayor Evans, of 

19           coming up with a new name or a new thing, 

20           because every year we put in increased AIM in 

21           our one-house budget.  Since I was in the 

22           Assemblymember, and Mayor Spano before me, we 

23           have been fighting for increased AIM.  I 

24           think it's absolutely acknowledged that 


                                                                   225

 1           cities can't make it without additional state 

 2           funding.  But somehow this word "AIM" seems 

 3           to be a problem.  And so maybe, working 

 4           collectively, we can come up with a new idea.

 5                  And thirdly, Mayor Spano, you rightly 

 6           pointed out that DOT investment in the City 

 7           of Yonkers' aging roadways is inadequate.  I 

 8           wonder if you could address sort of the 

 9           specifics of those -- any of those three 

10           things.  

11                  Last, I just want to say on the 

12           regional cost index, we hear you loud and 

13           clear.  We know it would really make a 

14           difference for all of Westchester's schools.  

15           So that is top of mind.  

16                  But I just wondered, on the State Ed 

17           cuts, new name of AIM and DOT, whether you 

18           could address those.

19                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  (Mic off; 

20           inaudible.)  Remember, you guys had a formula 

21           but we never fully funded it.  And so the 

22           last couple of years you started fully 

23           funding the formula.  So that meant that 

24           where we were not getting upwards of 


                                                                   226

 1           $40 million that we should have gotten, we 

 2           started getting it.  Which has been great.  

 3           But then the formula, at least under the 

 4           Governor's proposed budget, has changed.  And 

 5           so I hope that you'll address that.  That 

 6           would be a significant help for us.

 7                  You know, because like I said, we have 

 8           not decreased our contribution, nor will we 

 9           decrease our contribution to education, even 

10           when we get huge increases from New York.  So 

11           hopefully whatever you get, that would be 

12           great for us.  

13                  AIM aid, I think we talked about 

14           enough, and you guys know where we all stand 

15           on AIM.  But infrastructure money, especially 

16           for paving -- you know, the weather is so 

17           severe these days.  Our roads just -- they 

18           don't -- they don't last.  

19                  You know, it used to be you could pave 

20           a street and it would last 10 years or so.  

21           You pave a street, it's less than two years 

22           and it's just a mess.  And so -- and that's 

23           something that really affects the quality of 

24           life.  And so any type of dollars we can get 


                                                                   227

 1           just for something as simple as paving would 

 2           make our constituents very happy.

 3                  SENATOR MAYER:  Thank you.

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Assembly.  

 5                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Thank you.  

 6                  Assemblymember Otis for three minutes.

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  Thank you, Chairs.  

 8                  And thank you, Mayors.  Appreciate the 

 9           comments.  

10                  And we've heard a few of you talk 

11           about water costs in different ways.  And so 

12           I'm going to assume all five of you would say 

13           the costs of water infrastructure repair are 

14           going up, not down.  We'll get a group 

15           decision on that.

16                  PANEL MEMBERS:  Yes.

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  Number two, in 

18           terms of drilling down more on stormwater 

19           problems, stormwater infrastructure has been 

20           revealed to be more pressing since recent 

21           storms.  Is that something maybe some of you 

22           who have not spoken yet on water can talk 

23           about, things that you're seeing that you 

24           didn't think you were going to have to deal 


                                                                   228

 1           with stormwater improvements but now have to, 

 2           seeing storm damage.  Would someone like to 

 3           weigh in on that category?  

 4                  ROCHESTER MAYOR EVANS:  I think the 

 5           storm damage is something that is a major 

 6           challenge, but just as equal as the storm 

 7           damage is the massive water main breaks that 

 8           are happening in cities across the state and 

 9           across the country, really.  

10                  We had a major one that was a 

11           catastrophe two years ago that basically 

12           disrupted water throughout almost half of the 

13           city because of the aging infrastructure of 

14           the water mains.  So that is also a major 

15           issue where you're starting to see more water 

16           main breaks than you've seen in previous 

17           years.  Due to a couple of things -- the 

18           aging infrastructure, but also the extreme 

19           swings in weather that we're seeing.  

20                  We say in Rochester, you know, you can 

21           wear a fur coat and have a bathing suit 

22           underneath because the weather's just going 

23           to -- you never know what the weather's going 

24           to be.  And that affects the critical 


                                                                   229

 1           infrastructure as it relates to water mains.  

 2                  But to your point, it costs dollars to 

 3           be able to fix these things, and you're 

 4           seeing these costs continue to accelerate 

 5           over the years.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  So when you have a 

 7           water main break, you're handling that on an 

 8           emergency basis and just doing what you have 

 9           to do.  Where you're trying to hit those 

10           kinds of vulnerabilities ahead of time, how 

11           are each of you going about funding that?  

12           Some through state dollars, some through 

13           federal dollars?  What's your strategy in 

14           terms of trying to cover some of those costs?

15                  ROCHESTER MAYOR EVANS:  In Rochester 

16           it's an all-of-the-above strategy, trying to 

17           use multiple resources.  But a lot of it is 

18           local share that we have to put forth in 

19           order to do that.  And we are trying to be 

20           proactive in trying to address the ones that 

21           might be older and replacing them before they 

22           rupture, or those that are rupturing on a 

23           daily basis.

24                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  And on the lead 


                                                                   230

 1           pipe issue, where are you going to go for 

 2           dollars?  I think Mayor Brown, you said it's 

 3           a half a billion dollars --

 4                  BUFFALO MAYOR BROWN:  Half a billion.  

 5                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  Half a billion.  I 

 6           said B.  I was there with B for Buffalo.

 7                  (Laughter.)

 8                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  How are you -- 

 9           what's your game plan for funding that?  

10                  BUFFALO MAYOR BROWN:  We're still 

11           working through that game plan.  What we can 

12           do at a local share annually is just not 

13           enough right now.

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  Okay.  Thank you 

15           all for what you do.

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

17                  Senator Samra Brouk.

18                  SENATOR BROUK:  Thank you so much.  

19                  And thank you all for all of your 

20           patience today, and being here.

21                  I'm going to talk to my mayor here, 

22           Mayor Evans, and first of all just want to 

23           say thank you so much for your leadership.  

24           You talked about when you came into office -- 


                                                                   231

 1           I don't think anyone would say you came into 

 2           an easy job coming off of the COVID pandemic 

 3           and so many other things.  

 4                  So I want to say back to you some of 

 5           the things that I heard you talk about and 

 6           make sure I heard them right and make sure 

 7           they're on the record again.

 8                  You talked about obviously AIM 

 9           funding.  You talked about some of the 

10           concentrated poverty that we have in the City 

11           of Rochester.  You talked about your gun 

12           violence emergency order.  And you also 

13           talked about the fact that Rochester has not 

14           received the funding that we are owed for so 

15           many years, and that you clearly see a 

16           relationship between these two things.  I too 

17           see that relationship.  My office, as you 

18           know well, came out with a report last year 

19           really defining the fact that Rochester has 

20           received such little funding and our rising 

21           rates of violence, really differentiating us, 

22           unfortunately, from a lot of other cities in 

23           New York and even nationwide.  

24                  But you also talked about things that 


                                                                   232

 1           are working.  And I think that oftentimes 

 2           that's not getting the headlines and we're 

 3           not paying enough attention, especially at 

 4           the state, to what's working.  And so what I 

 5           hear from you is you were able to make 

 6           significant inroads of decreasing gun 

 7           violence through preventative programs.  And 

 8           that if we're serious about that, we perhaps 

 9           need to increase some of those line items.

10                  So I would love for you to talk about 

11           what an increase in GIVE funding could do for 

12           the City of Rochester, but also what some of 

13           this anti-poverty funding -- and again, we 

14           won't call it AIM, I guess, because that's 

15           harder to get.  So we'll call it whatever we 

16           want to call it.  But essentially we need 

17           more unrestricted funding for you, as the 

18           mayor of the city, to decide where that goes 

19           so that it can best benefit your residents.

20                  So if you could talk about those two 

21           things and what you could do with it, I would 

22           love to hear it.

23                  ROCHESTER MAYOR EVANS:  Yeah, and I 

24           think, you know, one of the things, you want 


                                                                   233

 1           to give people hope but you've got to give 

 2           them opportunity.  And opportunity sometimes 

 3           costs dollars.  So that means investing in 

 4           workforce development programs that will give 

 5           people a pathway out of poverty, where you 

 6           will be less likely to pick up a gun.  Those 

 7           type of things are absolutely critical for 

 8           us.

 9                  Anything with workforce and job 

10           training, mental health supports.  We've done 

11           pilots where we now offer mental health 

12           supports in our libraries and rec centers.  

13           If you would have told me that we had to do 

14           that 10 or 15 years ago, I would have said, 

15           No, that's not where -- the schools do that, 

16           or you go to a counselor's office to be able 

17           to do that.  But we know that those things 

18           have paid dividends in terms of those types 

19           of things.  

20                  We've invested in a program where we 

21           actually go after individuals that are -- 

22           that have shotguns or have been shot, to 

23           redirect them into positive opportunities 

24           where they are now working and doing well.  


                                                                   234

 1                  But again, those types of 

 2           interventions cost money.  So that is where 

 3           we will put those extra resources, and that 

 4           will save the government so much money in 

 5           other social service supports because it's an 

 6           investment on the front end and not the back 

 7           end.

 8                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 9                  Assembly.  

10                  SENATOR BROUK:  Thank you.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Assemblymember 

12           Rivera, for three minutes.

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN RIVERA:  Thank you, 

14           Mr. Chair.

15                  My two questions and comments are for 

16           my mayor, Mayor Brown.  A couple of things.  

17           You know, we're here discussing the budget in 

18           a lot of different directions, and there's a 

19           lot of things in this budget that, you know, 

20           a lot of my colleagues are really having to 

21           review and assess and determine, you know, 

22           how hard we're going to have to fight for 

23           changes.  

24                  And you mentioned a few things, and I 


                                                                   235

 1           just want to sort of touch on them.  One of 

 2           the things you mentioned was funding arts and 

 3           culturals.  And, you know, thankfully I've 

 4           been appointed as the subcommittee chair of 

 5           Regional Tourism, and I've been able to go 

 6           across the state and see just how beautiful 

 7           this state is, truthfully, and how unique our 

 8           arts and cultural organizations are and what 

 9           they can do and their capacity and the 

10           economic benefit from it.  And we know that 

11           when we spend money there, that's money we're 

12           getting back.

13                  So, you know, we have a big challenge 

14           in front of us with, you know, cutting 

15           NYCHA -- no, I'm sorry, not NYCHA -- the 

16           New York Council for the Arts almost in half.  

17           So there's a lot that's going to be done 

18           around that.  So I applaud you for mentioning 

19           that.

20                  I want to talk for a second on AIM.  

21           You know, there's been a lot of initiatives 

22           that predate certainly my time here that 

23           touch on AIM.  One of the things that myself 

24           and Senator Cooney, who's right behind me, 


                                                                   236

 1           pushed recently in the last few years was a 

 2           bill that would call upon the state to 

 3           assemble a new AIM task force to reassess the 

 4           formula, to get down to really challenging 

 5           ourselves and what it should look like and 

 6           how it needs to change.

 7                  Unfortunately, that bill was vetoed.  

 8           And I'm asking you and perhaps your -- the 

 9           other mayors here, if you would support us in 

10           pushing for the Governor to reconsider that.  

11           We believe that maybe we change the name of 

12           it, maybe we call it something else.  But at 

13           the end of the day, we need to change the 

14           formula.  And creating a panel, a task force, 

15           assembled of people from all over the state, 

16           supported by NYCOM and NYSAC and other 

17           entities, is a first step in that.  

18                  So I'm asking sort of if you'd support 

19           us in that.

20                  BUFFALO MAYOR BROWN:  Thank you very 

21           much, Assemblyman Rivera.  I would certainly 

22           be very supportive of that.  

23                  I think for all of us -- Buffalo, all 

24           of these cities -- we need AIM now.  We don't 


                                                                   237

 1           need it next year or the year after that, we 

 2           need it right now.  We have urgent, pressing 

 3           financial concerns.  So I definitely support 

 4           that.

 5                  I mentioned arts and culturals.  

 6           Again, I see an inequity between all of the 

 7           services that are provided by the city to 

 8           support the cultural jewels and gems that we 

 9           have in Erie County and the City of Buffalo, 

10           but we don't get commensurate support to 

11           support those culturals.  I just take one of 

12           the zip codes in your district, 14201, 

13           highest poverty rate in Erie County.  

14                  So we have to weigh supporting our 

15           arts and culture with trying to lift people 

16           out of poverty.

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN RIVERA:  Thank you, 

18           Mr. Mayor.

19                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Senator Cooney.  

20                  SENATOR COONEY:  Thank you, Chair.  

21                  Always wonderful to see all of our 

22           upstate mayors.  And thank you for the 

23           incredible work and innovation that you do.  

24                  And Mayor Spano, I'll let your -- 


                                                                   238

 1           we're still sensitive about this third, 

 2           fourth city thing, but I'll let it go today.

 3                  (Laughter.)

 4                  SENATOR COONEY:  Mayor Evans, I know 

 5           you've been a terrific advocate for public 

 6           transportation, as have all of the mayors.  

 7           And I'm wondering if you could comment 

 8           specifically on our opportunity in Rochester 

 9           to expand our long-distance bus service by 

10           kind of doing Phase 2 of the Louise Slaughter 

11           Intermodal Transportation System as it 

12           relates to this kind of Interloop North 

13           Transformation Project that you and your team 

14           have been working on.  That would be of value 

15           to the City of Rochester?  

16                  ROCHESTER MAYOR EVANS:  Yeah, the 

17           intermodal Phase 2 station is absolutely 

18           critical to the City of Rochester.  I mean, a 

19           major city should have such a facility.  I 

20           think it is long overdue.  

21                  And I think we should definitely do it 

22           not only because it's the right thing to do, 

23           but I think Louise would be very, very happy 

24           to see us making progress on this long-held 


                                                                   239

 1           project that could transform Rochester as it 

 2           relates to transportation.

 3                  SENATOR COONEY:  Well, I completely 

 4           agree with you.  Moving and staying with you, 

 5           Mayor Evans, something else that the former 

 6           Congresswoman cared about was literacy.  And 

 7           you have been a wonderful advocate, both in 

 8           your time as a school board member to now, as 

 9           mayor, for child literacy.

10                  The Imagination Library program -- 

11           this is part of the Dolly Parton 

12           Foundation -- has started in Rochester under 

13           the leadership of Dr. Matt Present.  I know 

14           you delivered a milestone book to a family, 

15           this is where we give children under the age 

16           of five access to free children's books so 

17           that they can supplement their reading at 

18           home.

19                  Could you talk to us about that 

20           program specifically for the City of 

21           Rochester?

22                  ROCHESTER MAYOR EVANS:  It is 

23           absolutely critical.  We know -- and I know 

24           that the Governor talked in her State of the 


                                                                   240

 1           State about the importance of reading and 

 2           education and making sure that our kids get 

 3           back on track.

 4                  The Imagination Library is an amazing 

 5           concept of any child under five can get a 

 6           free book in the City of Rochester.  In 

 7           November I delivered their milestone book at 

 8           a young -- Corduroy, I still remember the 

 9           book, one of my kids' favorite books -- to 

10           continue to support literacy.

11                  So I think it's absolutely a model for 

12           the state.  Because if we're going to get to 

13           a level where kids are able to be strong 

14           adults, they need to become strong readers.  

15           And instilling that in them at a very early 

16           age is important, and the Imagination Library 

17           is one organization that I believe that helps 

18           to do that.

19                  SENATOR COONEY:  Well, we're going to 

20           try to expand that statewide with 

21           legislation, so more on that to come.

22                  Finally, just an acknowledgment.  As 

23           the city school district looks to 

24           consolidate school buildings for their use, 


                                                                   241

 1           some of those buildings will come back to the 

 2           City of Rochester for a purpose.  Would you 

 3           be open to considering housing options for 

 4           some of those buildings as it makes sense 

 5           within the city's plan?

 6                  ROCHESTER MAYOR EVANS:  Absolutely.  

 7           As they make sense, obviously we'll wait to 

 8           get those back, put out RFPs and we see what 

 9           we get.  But housing is definitely an option.

10                  SENATOR COONEY:  Thank you, Mayors. 

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

12                  Assembly.

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Assemblymember 

14           Meeks, for three minutes.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN MEEKS:  Thank you, Chair.  

16                  I'll be addressing Mayor Evans.  

17                  So we've heard, you know, throughout 

18           the day about three of the top five poorest 

19           zip codes being in the City of Rochester.  

20           One of the things that I recognize is those 

21           same top three zip codes are part of the top 

22           10 zip codes that represent 56 percent -- 

23           I'll repeat that, 56 percent of all child 

24           sexual and physical abuse cases in our 


                                                                   242

 1           region.  And there tends to be a correlation 

 2           with the poverty and the challenges that our 

 3           children experience.

 4                  The Governor has proposed 25 million 

 5           of additional aid to attack poverty in the 

 6           City of Rochester.  How would you begin to 

 7           tackle these type of challenges in our 

 8           community?  

 9                  ROCHESTER MAYOR EVANS:  I think one of 

10           the big challenges is that we have to make 

11           sure that we are focused on children and the 

12           issues that have been associated with 

13           poverty, be it lead poisoning or physical 

14           abuse.  These are all things that are 

15           absolutely tied to poverty.  

16                  You mentioned it, we just had a 

17           horrific case yesterday that made the news 

18           that is a direct result of child abuse that 

19           someone that was living in poverty 

20           experienced.  So I think that that's 

21           important.

22                  But again, I always go back to this 

23           concept of hope and opportunity.  If you're 

24           going to give people opportunity -- or hope, 


                                                                   243

 1           you have to make sure that they have 

 2           opportunity.  That means making sure that you 

 3           invest in workforce development programs, 

 4           that you invest in mental health, that you 

 5           invest in youth job programs, that you invest 

 6           in strong mental health supports.  

 7                  All these things I think are 

 8           absolutely critical to get rid of the sting 

 9           of poverty that exists in our community.  And 

10           then good housing.  I mean, good housing, 

11           there's a direct correlation to a kid's 

12           performance in school.  In the City of 

13           Rochester you have people who sometimes 

14           throughout their career in school could move 

15           20 times from dilapidated structure to 

16           dilapidated structure.  Imagine if any of us 

17           had to be able to do that.  You cannot talk 

18           about bringing someone out of poverty without 

19           making sure that you have a good housing 

20           policy to make sure that they are able to do 

21           that.

22                  Homeownership, which we know is still 

23           one of the critical things that creates 

24           wealth, investing in those programs.  And, 


                                                                   244

 1           you know, in our testimony that we presented 

 2           we talked about our By the Block program, 

 3           which is a program to get people into homes.  

 4                  These are all things that we can 

 5           invest in to give people not a handout, but a 

 6           hand up.  And this is what these types of 

 7           resources will be able to do for our 

 8           community.

 9                  ASSEMBLYMAN MEEKS:  Well, we 

10           definitely look forward to working in that 

11           space.

12                  And just to share some other 

13           statistics, children who experience abuse are 

14           nine times more likely to be involved in 

15           criminal activity.  Fourteen percent of all 

16           men and 36 percent of all women in prison 

17           were abused as children.

18                  So there's a direct correlation with 

19           these challenges, and we must change these 

20           systems.  Thanks.

21                  ROCHESTER MAYOR EVANS:  Thank you.

22                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

23                  Senator Martinez.

24                  SENATOR MARTINEZ:  Good afternoon.  


                                                                   245

 1           Thank you, Mayors, for being here today.  

 2                  And thank you for the invitation to be 

 3           at your conference yesterday morning and 

 4           allowing both my colleague and friend 

 5           Assemblyman Fred Thiele to speak to you.  And 

 6           we heard you loud and clear regarding what 

 7           your needs are, specifically when it pertains 

 8           to AIM.  And you've heard us loud and clear 

 9           that we are committed to assisting you in 

10           this effort.

11                  And I also want to thank every single 

12           one of you because you've all mentioned 

13           housing and the need to increase housing 

14           stock.  Now, my question to you is the 

15           Governor has created this Pro-Housing 

16           Community initiative that she has funded for 

17           municipalities to apply.  My question is, 

18           have you applied for this, to become a 

19           pro-housing community?  And if you have, are 

20           you encountering difficulty in the process?

21                  And I can tell you on Long Island we 

22           have three of our municipalities have 

23           received funding, they have applied.  So she 

24           just came down recently and provided money to 


                                                                   246

 1           these districts, and I just want to know if 

 2           you're having difficulty or if the process 

 3           has been difficult for you.  And if it has, 

 4           how can we assist?

 5                  And that goes to any one or all of 

 6           you.

 7                  ROCHESTER MAYOR EVANS:  I'll just say 

 8           we've applied.  I haven't heard of any 

 9           difficulty yet, but we definitely have 

10           applied and I'm hoping that we will be able 

11           to be recipients of some of those resources.

12                  SENATOR MARTINEZ:  Great.

13                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  At least for us, 

14           like I said, we're in Westchester County 

15           where for 20 percent of the population we 

16           have now 40 percent of the affordable housing 

17           in the entire county.  And we -- if there's 

18           something that we can apply for, we do it, 

19           and we do it across the board.

20                  It all depends on how restrictive it 

21           is or if there are local concerns.  But for 

22           the most part, we're able to get access and 

23           the Governor has been very good with our 

24           offices in seeing a lot of these through.


                                                                   247

 1                  SYRACUSE MAYOR WALSH:  (Mic off; 

 2           inaudible.)  But just to tie it back to AIM, 

 3           because I don't think we've talked enough 

 4           about it --

 5                  (Laughter.)

 6                  SYRACUSE MAYOR WALSH:  -- I think that 

 7           it is relevant that the cities represented 

 8           here bear a disproportionate burden of the 

 9           affordable housing in any given region.  As 

10           you've heard, some pretty significant 

11           statistics.  

12                  So, you know, as we are considering 

13           possible adjustments to AIM, I think the fact 

14           of the role that cities play in producing 

15           affordable housing, critical affordable 

16           housing, should be a factor in the resources 

17           we receive from Albany.  Beyond just what's 

18           included within the Governor's current plan.

19                  SENATOR MARTINEZ:  And I know you've 

20           all mentioned you need AIM now.  We get it.  

21           But we also need to hear from you in terms of 

22           what you're thinking in terms of dollars.  

23           Right?  You say you need money, but yet we 

24           need an X amount.  Right?  


                                                                   248

 1                  So I think that would be helpful when 

 2           we're trying to re-figure out how to allocate 

 3           additional monies.  And that would just be 

 4           helpful.

 5                  ALBANY MAYOR SHEEHAN:  I think one of 

 6           the things -- (mic off; time clock 

 7           sounding) -- is the increase but also then 

 8           tying it to some, you know, inflation number 

 9           so that we can count on it.  So catch us up, 

10           and then keep us caught up.

11                  SENATOR MARTINEZ:  Thank you.

12                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

13                  Assembly.

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Well, thank you.  

15                  And on that AIM question, you know, to 

16           use a really bad pun, when you're picking a 

17           number, AIM high.

18                  (Laughter.)

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Yeah, that was 

20           bad.  That was my dad joke for today, thank 

21           you very much.  

22                  (Laughter.)

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Next up is our 

24           Local Governments ranker, Assemblymember 


                                                                   249

 1           Brown, for five minutes.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMEMBER ARI BROWN:  (Mic off; 

 3           inaudible.)  -- construction business for 

 4           nearly 50 years, and current deputy mayor of 

 5           my village, and I used to be the chairman of 

 6           the Town of Hempstead Industrial Development 

 7           Agency.

 8                  So my question is, why not use the 

 9           best tool in your arsenal without having to 

10           go to the state?  When I sat for many, many 

11           years on the IDA, we built some of the 

12           biggest projects in the state, market-rental 

13           housing, that were so successful.  We had a 

14           past governor that tried to destroy all the 

15           IDAs, made it seem like a pariah of the area.  

16                  Let them do a 15-or-20-year PILOT.  

17           Why not use this tool that you already have 

18           instead of looking to some other tax-exempt 

19           incentives?  This could be your best method 

20           of creating this housing.

21                  ALBANY MAYOR SHEEHAN:  We wouldn't 

22           have built a single unit of market-rate 

23           housing if it were not for our IDA.  

24                  The challenge that we have with the 


                                                                   250

 1           restrictive inclusionary zoning that our 

 2           council has introduced is that it would 

 3           require PILOTs that far exceed anything that 

 4           I think would be acceptable to our residents 

 5           going forward.  And I think it's asking the 

 6           municipalities to pay in lost tax dollars for 

 7           creating affordable housing units that people 

 8           want to see in creating mixed-income.  

 9                  We don't have any problem with all 

10           market-rate.  We don't have any problem with 

11           all affordable.  The challenge is creating 

12           mixed-income housing that spreads beyond just 

13           the areas where we have high concentrations 

14           of poverty.  And that's where we think that 

15           there are tools that if we do it through the 

16           IDA and we tax-exempt it out of it, we're 

17           actually ultimately going to be coming to you 

18           and saying, We need even more AIM because 

19           we've lost the opportunity.

20                  So we are doing it.  We have a 

21           formula.  We provide tax incentives through 

22           our IDA for these market-rate units.  They 

23           wouldn't happen without PILOTs.

24                  ASSEMBLYMEMBER ARI BROWN:  Thank you, 


                                                                   251

 1           Mayor.  And I think that's exactly my point.  

 2           I think there's a misconception of how IDAs 

 3           work.  It's not a tax exemption.  You would 

 4           actually --

 5                  ALBANY MAYOR SHEEHAN:  No, understood.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMEMBER ARI BROWN:  -- be 

 7           spreading out the increase over many years.  

 8           And as a builder, I know how valuable that 

 9           could be.  And the tool would be to try to 

10           sell this to your residents as a positive 

11           thing.  So much bad press in the past -- 

12                  SYRACUSE MAYOR WALSH:  (Mic off; 

13           inaudible.) -- virtually every housing 

14           project in the city.  And I would encourage 

15           the Legislature to look very closely at any 

16           proposed legislation that weakens the ability 

17           of the IDAs to do more of this, because it's 

18           needed.  Thank you.

19                  ASSEMBLYMEMBER ARI BROWN:  If I may 

20           ask the mayors -- and anyone could take this 

21           question also -- 10, 15 years ago our 

22           wonderful Governor Cuomo removed the aspect 

23           of doing retail through the IDAs.  How did 

24           that affect your communities?


                                                                   252

 1                  SYRACUSE MAYOR WALSH:  I will say I 

 2           think it's -- I previously served as the 

 3           executive director of the Syracuse IDA.  It 

 4           presents a challenge.  I think we all 

 5           understand that, you know, we shouldn't be 

 6           using an IDA to subsidize, you know, a 

 7           corporate chain retail store that's going to 

 8           go in there anyways.  But using that but-for 

 9           provision and doing your financial due 

10           diligence, ensuring that you're extracting a 

11           benefit from that public investment, I think 

12           as long as you apply the same tests, we 

13           should be more flexible in what types of 

14           projects we apply them to.

15                  ASSEMBLYMEMBER ARI BROWN:  Thank you.

16                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  (Mic off.)

17                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Turn your mic --

18                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  -- take -- can 

19           you hear me now?  

20                  So you take this 10 percent or this 

21           20 percent, potentially, then you add project 

22           labor agreements, right?  Now you go to the 

23           developers, they'll say, okay, you got 

24           project labor agreement, it will cost me 30 


                                                                   253

 1           percent more whatever it costs for the 

 2           affordable, and then they look at me 

 3           cross-eyed and go, there is a tax incentive 

 4           your IDA can give me that would make me want 

 5           to build here.  Right?

 6                  And so -- and then we take it all on 

 7           the chin, because we all do, because when 

 8           people say, Oh, you know those mayors and 

 9           their IDAs, they're giving away the store.

10                  No, we're not giving away anything.  

11           We're trying to find a sweet spot so that we 

12           can build the housing, bring people here.  At 

13           the same time know that we have the police, 

14           fire and education, and we can't do it if we 

15           just give it away for free.  So we're always 

16           trying to find that.  And I think that every 

17           one of us does that.

18                  ASSEMBLYMEMBER ARI BROWN:  Thank you 

19           very much.  And my last question, I'm 

20           wondering if you all have local development 

21           corporations in your arsenal also.  

22           Non-for-profits can certainly benefit, and 

23           maybe they'd be drawn to your municipality if 

24           that was in place.


                                                                   254

 1                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  Yes.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMEMBER ARI BROWN:  I thank 

 3           you, and I yield my other 14 seconds.

 4                  (Laughter.)

 5                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  Thanks, 

 6           Assemblyman.

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  I 

 8           think I'm the last Senator.  Thank you all.

 9                  So yes, we all keep talking about AIM, 

10           we never get it.  And for the record, 

11           New York City hasn't gotten it, I don't know, 

12           a decade now, maybe?  So it is -- it's a real 

13           issue for everyone out there.  

14                  And yes, any innovative ideas of how 

15           we call it something new or market it as 

16           something new so we can finally get the 

17           Governor's attention, that would be very 

18           helpful.

19                  But you were also answering the 

20           question, and I forget which of my colleagues 

21           asked you now, about using the state funds 

22           that are under I think about eight different 

23           categories for different kinds of housing.  

24           And she's now sort of -- you know, at first 


                                                                   255

 1           it was a stick and then it was a little bit 

 2           of a carrot, and now it's you don't get any 

 3           of it unless you do this.  And yet I'm pretty 

 4           sure all your cities are doing this and want 

 5           to do more of it.

 6                  So you say you're working on things 

 7           together.  So in your discussions that you've 

 8           been having about working together, perhaps 

 9           we need to redefine the categories of those 

10           eight funding streams.  Because it's 

11           $650 million, right, in the budget, and it's 

12           only going to be able to go to communities 

13           who are, quote unquote, affordable-housing- 

14           friendly, I think that's the terminology 

15           she's using.  But if there aren't exactly the 

16           right fits for what you need to get 

17           affordable housing done in your cities, maybe 

18           one of the things we can work with you on 

19           during the budget process is some 

20           redefinition of some of these programs that 

21           have been out there forever but maybe really 

22           never were the square peg in the square hole, 

23           so to speak, for our upstate cities.

24                  So I'm just curious whether any of you 


                                                                   256

 1           have thought about that or might be willing 

 2           to look at that in the context of us trying 

 3           to help you be eligible for money that's 

 4           there that you need, that you want to use the 

 5           correct way, but for whatever reasons has not 

 6           really jibed with what will work in your 

 7           cities.

 8                  So it's more a suggestion of getting 

 9           back to us, as opposed to you're going to 

10           automatically have that answer.

11                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  Thank you, 

12           Senator.

13                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Well, thank you.

14                  I think Assembly.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Yes.  

16                  Assemblymember Reilly, Cities ranker, 

17           for five minutes.

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN REILLY:  Thank you, 

19           Mr. Chair.  Thank you, Mayors.

20                  I wanted to ask you about specifically 

21           grand larceny autos, car thefts.  How is it 

22           impacting your cities?  And I currently have 

23           legislation that would increase repeated 

24           offenders to make a crime of aggravated grand 


                                                                   257

 1           larceny auto.  What do the numbers look like 

 2           in your cities?  And do you see an increase 

 3           in youth offenders, 16- and 17-year-olds?

 4                  ROCHESTER MAYOR EVANS:  Well, I mean, 

 5           sadly, I hate to say last year Rochester led 

 6           the state in the number of auto thefts -- I 

 7           think Buffalo was second.  

 8                  But one of the things that we did 

 9           was -- the second half of the year we saw a 

10           precipitous drop.  We worked with our county 

11           and youth court to make sure that we launched 

12           a program called the JEDS program, which 

13           targeted -- exactly as you're mentioning -- 

14           youthful offenders to say if they are doing 

15           these things repeatedly, they have to do 

16           these things, they have to be monitored, 

17           sometimes on an ankle monitor.  They have to 

18           go to school, they have to get counseling, 

19           they have to get those things.

20                  And we saw a major decrease in repeat 

21           offenders.  But it caused mayhem and havoc.  

22           I mean, this "Kia boys" phenomenon was 

23           something that was big.  I remember seeing 

24           Mayor Walsh last year:  "Hey, did it come to 


                                                                   258

 1           your city yet?"  And he said "Not yet."

 2                  SYRACUSE MAYOR WALSH:  It has.

 3                  ROCHESTER MAYOR EVANS:  And now it 

 4           has.  

 5                  But now in Rochester we're seeing a 

 6           precipitous decline because of the 

 7           interventions that we put in working with the 

 8           youthful -- the youthful offenders and really 

 9           zeroing in on them.  It's still an issue, but 

10           not as much of an issue as it was around this 

11           time -- the first six months of last year 

12           were absolutely bananas as it related to car 

13           thefts in our community.  But luckily we're 

14           seeing a precipitous decrease now.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN REILLY:  I remember years 

16           ago when I was a sergeant in Brooklyn with 

17           the NYPD, and the key fob incident was the 

18           old Toyota Camry key was the one that they 

19           used to take.

20                  On the same line, staying on crime, 

21           how is organized retail theft in your cities, 

22           if anybody would --

23                  SYRACUSE MAYOR WALSH:  I'll weigh in 

24           on that one.  It's been a real problem.  I'm 


                                                                   259

 1           really proud of the work that the Syracuse 

 2           Police Department has done, in close 

 3           cooperation with our Onondaga County district 

 4           attorney, where we have reached out, we've 

 5           run the numbers, we have identified the 

 6           locations that have been hardest hit, and 

 7           then have also identified the most frequent 

 8           offenders and have really focused in on those 

 9           repeat offenders, in partnership with some 

10           retailers -- I'll specifically give a shout 

11           out to Rite Aid, who we've worked closely 

12           with.  We've been able to turn the tide.  In 

13           those cases where we've been able to focus 

14           our efforts, we've been able to put some 

15           repeat offenders in jail.  But it's a real 

16           problem.  And again, it's a problem that 

17           disproportionately impacts our poorest 

18           communities that need these retail operations 

19           the most.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN REILLY:  And just to be 

21           clear, I know we're on the same page with 

22           this.  This isn't targeting those that are 

23           stealing because of poverty.  This is about 

24           the organized retail thefts to resell.


                                                                   260

 1                  SYRACUSE MAYOR WALSH:  Absolutely.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN REILLY:  And I want to 

 3           make sure that everybody knows that we're on 

 4           the same page with that.

 5                  And I have legislation also for that, 

 6           that would help be able to compile the 

 7           charges if you have a previous conviction in 

 8           organized retail theft.

 9                  (Overtalk.)

10                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  You know, 

11           Assemblyman, this is how bad it got.  You 

12           would go into a -- let's say Marshall's on 

13           Central Avenue in Yonkers, take a bag, take 

14           the bag, walk out the door.  I would have our 

15           crime units sitting outside because that's 

16           what we were doing, because we were trying to 

17           protect our retail.  

18                  And they would say to us, Well, if 

19           it's less than a thousand dollars, we're not 

20           prosecuting.  And that word got out quick in 

21           the community, and there were people walking 

22           in and taking a thousand dollars of stuff and 

23           walking out the door.  I wanted to do it.  

24           You know, but we --


                                                                   261

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN REILLY:  Yeah, yeah, yeah.

 2                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  But we were --

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN REILLY:  He says that 

 4           jokingly.

 5                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  -- able to get 

 6           them -- I did say that jokingly.

 7                  (Laughter.)

 8                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  But they did get 

 9           that -- they did change, they worked with us.  

10           We also did some things which I'm sure that 

11           the mayor was talking about, which is if 

12           you're a repeat offender, you know, after we 

13           get you the first time, we get you to sign -- 

14           you know, you have to sign a piece of paper 

15           saying you won't trespass.  So it's a greater 

16           crime.  And we then prosecute the person on 

17           the second time, and that has drastically 

18           reduced our numbers.

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN REILLY:  So we spoke 

20           earlier with the mayor in New York City and 

21           we talked about the migrant and asylum-seeker 

22           issue.  And no way am I trying to transition 

23           from crime to that.  This is just 

24           specifically I'm asking, how is -- and if it 


                                                                   262

 1           is -- the migrant crisis impacting your 

 2           cities fiscally and what support do you need?

 3                  ALBANY MAYOR SHEEHAN:  We've welcomed 

 4           over 800 migrants from New York City, who 

 5           have come in through New York City and are 

 6           now in the City of Albany and in a couple of 

 7           adjoining communities.  And, you know, the 

 8           challenge is work authorizations.  You know, 

 9           getting individuals the legal help that they 

10           need to get work authorizations as quickly as 

11           possible is a key to the success of these 

12           individuals in our communities.

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN REILLY:  Thank you.

14                  (Off the record.)

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Go right ahead.

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay, thank you.

17                  Senator May, chair, for her 

18           three-minute follow-up.

19                  SENATOR MAY:  Thank you so much.

20                  I realized one of the things I was 

21           expecting to hear all of you talk about was 

22           lead service line replacement, and I didn't 

23           hear any of you talk about it --

24                  ROCHESTER MAYOR EVANS:  I mentioned 


                                                                   263

 1           it.

 2                  SENATOR MAY:  Did you mention it?

 3                  ROCHESTER MAYOR EVANS:  Yeah, I talked 

 4           about it.

 5                  SENATOR MAY:  Okay.  How big a 

 6           challenge is that for you?  And do we need a 

 7           separate funding stream for dealing with that 

 8           challenge?

 9                  ROCHESTER MAYOR EVANS:  Yeah, I 

10           mentioned it.  I mean, our goal is to replace 

11           all of ours by 2030, I believe.  And it's -- 

12           you know, the capital stack is important.  

13           I'll put on my hat -- I was a banker back in 

14           the day.  How do you fund it all?  And we're 

15           piecing it together with -- we've used ARPA  

16           funds, we're going to go after federal 

17           dollars.  The state has funded some of it.

18                  But it's just not enough to get to 

19           where you want to be to replace every -- (no 

20           audio) -- to get to that point.  And I know 

21           Mayor Brown said the same thing as well.

22                  ALBANY MAYOR SHEEHAN:  Yeah, and one 

23           of the things that we haven't talked about is 

24           that there's a portion of this lead line, at 


                                                                   264

 1           least in our city, that is privately owned.  

 2           And so we need to ensure that there are grant 

 3           sources available for residents who are 

 4           required to pay the cost of the replacement 

 5           of that line.  We have some grant programs 

 6           that are in place, but that is a huge piece 

 7           of this, is that, you know, getting rid of 

 8           our lead is only part of the equation.  And 

 9           we cannot burden particularly, you know, 

10           homeowners who are seniors, who are on a 

11           fixed income, you know, people who are living 

12           in apartments, with that cost.  

13                  And so it's important to look at not 

14           just what we need, but that private funding 

15           source for that part of the lead service that 

16           is privately owned.

17                  BUFFALO MAYOR BROWN:  In Buffalo we're 

18           picking up that cost for the homeowner.

19                  UNIDENTIFIED PANELIST:  So are we.

20                  SENATOR MAY:  That's great.

21                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  It's a big cost.  

22           I mean, you talk about a system that's over 

23           200 years old.  I have portions of southwest 

24           Yonkers that they have wood mains that are 


                                                                   265

 1           still in operation.

 2                  (Overtalk.)

 3                  SENATOR MAY:  There's still some of 

 4           that in Syracuse.

 5                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  When we start 

 6           tearing the system up, it's a real problem 

 7           for us.

 8                  SYRACUSE MAYOR WALSH:  The only thing 

 9           I would add is that the bipartisan 

10           infrastructure law has been a significant 

11           boost in funding for that specific use.  

12           That's where we're getting our extra funding 

13           from.  But it's still not enough.

14                  SENATOR MAY:  Okay, thanks.

15                  And then I also wanted to mention I 

16           know the Mayor's Ball was a fundraiser for 

17           the Police Athletic League after-school 

18           programs in terms of both fighting crime, 

19           giving kids something to do after school.  

20           We're fighting for that in the Senate to make 

21           sure that there's funding for that.  But I 

22           wanted to make sure you knew I see this as 

23           city issue that we really need to make sure 

24           we are providing funding for.


                                                                   266

 1                  SYRACUSE MAYOR WALSH:  Great.  Thank 

 2           you, Senator.

 3                  SENATOR MAY:  Yup.  

 4                  All right, thank you.

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Assemblymember 

 7           Braunstein, Cities chair, for 10 minutes.

 8                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Thank you.  

 9           Hopefully I don't use all of the 10 minutes.  

10                  And thank you, all of you, for joining 

11           us again this year.

12                  I'm just going to follow up on what my 

13           colleague said he was starting to ask about 

14           the asylum-seekers.  We heard the mayor of 

15           the City of New York this morning, he says 

16           the city is caring for 66,000 asylum-seekers 

17           right now.  If you could just go through -- 

18           we'll start with Mayor Sheehan -- how many 

19           asylum-seekers is your city caring for?

20                  ALBANY MAYOR SHEEHAN:  So as I said, 

21           in the City of Albany we have 800 of those 

22           asylum-seekers.  So through that funding that 

23           is being provided to New York City, that 

24           funding is then paying for individuals to be 


                                                                   267

 1           staying in our community because of the space 

 2           constraints that exist in New York City.

 3                  We also have a number of volunteer 

 4           organizations that are then working with 

 5           those individuals, providing legal services 

 6           and ensuring that they are getting the 

 7           assistance that they need if they're seeking 

 8           asylum, if they have parole status.  

 9                  You know, many of these individuals 

10           are coming to us, they don't even know their 

11           status.  So, you know, this is an issue 

12           that -- you know, we've spoken to folks at 

13           the federal level, there is so much more that 

14           needs to be done to streamline these 

15           issues and create a pathway for these 

16           individuals.  Overwhelmingly they want to 

17           work, overwhelmingly they're looking for a 

18           new home.  And we need a workforce, but the 

19           challenge for us is finding enough people -- 

20           even if we had the funding, finding enough 

21           people who are qualified to represent them to 

22           get them to that point where they get that 

23           work authorization is what we're finding to 

24           be the largest hurdle.


                                                                   268

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Okay.  

 2                  Mayor Brown?

 3                  BUFFALO MAYOR BROWN:  We have a 

 4           limited number of migrants, if you will, in 

 5           the City of Buffalo.  

 6                  There are migrants in some of the 

 7           surrounding suburban communities -- Amherst, 

 8           Cheektowaga -- and they have expressed 

 9           concern about the cost of those individuals 

10           being in those suburban communities, 

11           particularly the cost of providing education 

12           for the children.

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Mayor Walsh?

14                  SYRACUSE MAYOR WALSH:  In Syracuse, 

15           Onondaga County is currently in litigation 

16           with New York City, so there has not been any 

17           formal asylum-seeker relocations to 

18           Onondaga County.  I'm sure we have some 

19           within the community, but none that we're 

20           formally aware of.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Mayor Evans?

22                  ROCHESTER MAYOR EVANS:  And in 

23           Monroe County we've taken a couple of hundred 

24           asylum-seekers from New York City.  You know, 


                                                                   269

 1           Rochester has a large refugee resettlement 

 2           organization in Rochester, and we've been 

 3           able to take the number we have at a 

 4           controlled pace.

 5                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  In Yonkers we 

 6           have one hotel capable of taking a hundred 

 7           families.  I believe it's full.

 8                  My -- you know, in Yonkers we have not 

 9           had any issues with the migrants, 

10           asylum-seekers, whichever word you want to 

11           use.  My bone of contention has been that, 

12           you know, New York City kind of sprung this 

13           on us without any plan, without any funding.  

14                  And when you're talking -- if you take 

15           40 or 50 kids that could come out of this one 

16           hotel, it can be a real budget-buster for our 

17           board of education.  From what I understand, 

18           we probably have about 20 students, so it's 

19           not that bad.  I think we probably have more, 

20           let's say -- I would say undocumented that 

21           are in the system that we're dealing with as 

22           well.  So ...

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Okay.  Thank 

24           you.  


                                                                   270

 1                  And then just one more question for 

 2           Mayor Brown.  You had said earlier -- you 

 3           know, you were referencing the inequitable 

 4           funding formula.  You're referring to AIM?  

 5           You feel that as AIM applies to cities versus 

 6           counties that you feel maybe it should be 

 7           more need-based?

 8                  BUFFALO MAYOR BROWN:  No, I wasn't 

 9           solely referring to AIM, I was referring to 

10           the county sales tax distribution formula.  

11           An additional percentage was added that did 

12           not follow the original formula that we 

13           believe put the city at a disadvantage.

14                  So if the original formula had been 

15           followed from 1986 to 2022, that would have 

16           meant an additional $1.2 billion coming to 

17           the City of Buffalo.  So that additional 

18           percentage that was added that was supposed 

19           to be temporary to help Erie County out of a 

20           financial --

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  What year was 

22           that?

23                  BUFFALO MAYOR BROWN:  1985.  It was 

24           implemented to help the county out of a 


                                                                   271

 1           financial crisis.  It was supposed to be 

 2           temporary.  It hasn't been temporary.  And 

 3           the formula has not been adjusted to reflect 

 4           the needs of the City of Buffalo and other 

 5           municipalities.

 6                  I think that formula has to be fixed 

 7           and would certainly like the state to help do 

 8           that, because the local county government 

 9           itself is not going to do it.  I think it's 

10           going to require the state to do it.

11                  And there are many other examples in 

12           Erie County of financial inequity between the 

13           county and the city in the way things are 

14           funded and the way they are allowed to be 

15           funded under state law.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Okay.  Yeah, 

17           I just wanted you to expand on that.  And, 

18           you know, we'll follow up offline just to get 

19           more details about what you're talking about, 

20           see if we can help you with that.

21                  BUFFALO MAYOR BROWN:  Thank you.

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Thank you.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Senator Rhoads.

24                  SENATOR RHOADS:  Thank you so much, 


                                                                   272

 1           Chair Thiele.  I doubt that I'll take the 

 2           full five minutes.

 3                  I know that you gave answers with 

 4           respect to the migrant crisis and how they're 

 5           impacting your individual jurisdictions.  Out 

 6           of curiosity, of the five mayors that are 

 7           here, did any of you declare yourselves to be 

 8           sanctuary cities?

 9                  ALBANY MAYOR SHEEHAN:  We are a 

10           sanctuary city.  Which simply means that our 

11           police department will not inquire as to 

12           legal status unless it is central to an 

13           investigation that they're conducting.  

14                  It is part of the chief of police -- 

15           the International Chief of Police's 

16           recommendations for police policy.  We don't 

17           want people to be afraid to call the police 

18           because they're worried that they'll be asked 

19           about their immigration status.

20                  SENATOR RHOADS:  Sure.  But if there's 

21           any kind of criminal activity, there's no bar 

22           to your police department actually 

23           communicating with Immigration and Customs 

24           Enforcement at that point.


                                                                   273

 1                  ALBANY MAYOR SHEEHAN:  I mean, it's 

 2           pretty rare that that happens.  But if it is 

 3           central to the investigation, then clearly we 

 4           work with our partners in state and federal 

 5           government to ensure that we're enforcing the 

 6           law.

 7                  SENATOR RHOADS:  Okay.  Thank you for 

 8           that answer.

 9                  And I know that some of you are 

10           dealing with -- and I believe in the City of 

11           Albany you said you had 800, if I'm not 

12           mistaken, migrants that are there.  And I 

13           know a few of you mentioned a few different 

14           numbers.

15                  In advance of receiving those 

16           migrants, was there any communication from 

17           the City of New York to let you know that 

18           they would be coming?

19                  ALBANY MAYOR SHEEHAN:  There was some 

20           limited communication.  The first buses 

21           arrived Memorial Day weekend, so it was a bit 

22           of a challenge.  But we have a number of 

23           community-based organizations that I had 

24           already pulled together months in advance, in 


                                                                   274

 1           anticipation of what we saw happening across 

 2           the country with migrants just being dropped 

 3           off, human beings being put on buses and 

 4           dropped off in distant cities.

 5                  So we had pulled together our 

 6           community-based organizations that work in 

 7           this space.  We're also a refugee 

 8           resettlement city.  Albany Law School has an 

 9           Immigration Law Clinic, so we had as best we 

10           could be prepared to and looked at what we 

11           would do were we to be receiving 

12           asylum-seekers in our city.  

13                  That work really has not been funded, 

14           and that is one of the frustrations that we 

15           have.  We think that we have people who are 

16           able to help, willing to help, but the 

17           funding is very -- you know, certain agencies 

18           get some funding and other agencies have not.  

19                  And so that's been -- I will say it's 

20           been a frustration.  We're frustrated that 

21           there is not an immigration court in the City 

22           of Albany.  So when somebody comes to the 

23           City of Albany from New York City, their case 

24           has to get transferred to Buffalo.  Getting 


                                                                   275

 1           from Albany to Buffalo is expensive.  

 2                  There are a lot of barriers that have 

 3           been put in place, I think unnecessarily, 

 4           that are preventing people from being able to 

 5           get their work authorizations, move forward 

 6           through the system, and be able to work.  

 7           Because if you can get a job here, we can 

 8           help you find housing.  If you have an income 

 9           source and you're paying taxes, then it 

10           becomes a very different experience for the 

11           families that are seeking to come here.

12                  SENATOR RHOADS:  And with limited 

13           time -- I didn't want to cut off the ability 

14           of the other mayors to answer that question, 

15           but --

16                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  Yeah, I'll -- 

17           two things.  We found out about the 

18           asylum-seekers -- I found out from my police 

19           department because they I guess communicated 

20           with NYPD.  And then of course after I 

21           inquired I found that they'd be coming 

22           probably within a day after that.

23                  And as far as -- we're not a sanctuary 

24           city, but we had changed our policies and 


                                                                   276

 1           regulations.  Our police department, our 

 2           police forces know that they are there to 

 3           serve and protect everyone irregardless of 

 4           their immigration status.  It's not a 

 5           question they ask unless of course it's an 

 6           investigation that deals with that.

 7                  SENATOR RHOADS:  The relevant 

 8           question, though, in terms of you and your 

 9           own budgets is the fact that while the City 

10           of New York received a billion dollars in 

11           funding last year and through the budget is 

12           seeking an additional -- well, seeking 

13           2.4 billion total as part of this year's 

14           budget, have you received any funding from 

15           the City of New York to compensate you for --

16                  (Overtalk.)

17                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  I like to 

18           talk -- you know, we have -- and Senator, 

19           that's such a good question.  That was my 

20           bone of contention, which was, you know, you 

21           come here without a plan and then there's no 

22           additional dollars that are being associated 

23           with this to help us.  All right?  And so -- 

24           you know, in terms of whatever comes our way.


                                                                   277

 1                  SENATOR RHOADS:  The city's dropping 

 2           these individuals on your doorstep and is not 

 3           giving you --

 4                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  Well, you know, 

 5           we have a sales tax and we have a hotel 

 6           occupancy tax.  New York City uses their 

 7           loophole, they use that exemption not to pay 

 8           the local government.  So we've lost tens of 

 9           thousands of dollars just on the hotel 

10           occupancy taxes.  So they're paying the bill, 

11           but they're not paying the local government 

12           at least that.  And --

13                  SENATOR RHOADS:  That's just housing.  

14           The other resources --

15                  (Overtalk.)

16                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  Yeah.  Just the 

17           taxes that they owe us, we don't get.

18                  SENATOR RHOADS:  But education, social 

19           services, those are all being borne by your 

20           taxpayers.  

21                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  Are being borne 

22           by us and the county.

23                  SENATOR RHOADS:  Can you estimate what 

24           the cost has been?


                                                                   278

 1                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  I don't know.  I 

 2           can get back to you, though, Senator.

 3                  SENATOR RHOADS:  Okay.  I was going to 

 4           ask you a question about unfunded mandates 

 5           from the state.  I've got seven seconds left.  

 6           If you wouldn't mind getting back to me on 

 7           that issue, I would appreciate it.

 8                  Thank you.

 9                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Thank you.

10                  Assemblymember Jacobson for three 

11           minutes.

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN JACOBSON:  Good afternoon.

13                  I'd like to follow up about the 

14           lead-contaminated lines.  I mean, that's all 

15           over the state.  Because most of the cities 

16           have state of the art -- unfortunately, the 

17           state of the art was about 1890.  And so we 

18           have lead there.

19                  And this year also, in the budget, the 

20           Clean Water Infrastructure Act funds got cut 

21           in half.  We were getting, since 2019, 

22           $500  million a year.  It's now cut to 250 a 

23           year.  And what I'm proposing is that not 

24           only do we restore that, but add an extra 


                                                                   279

 1           100 million for lead line replacement so 

 2           there'd be a line item in the budget, which 

 3           would make it easier.

 4                  Because right now all the state 

 5           programs are piecemeal, right?  You get about 

 6           $10,000 a line, and you get it done.  And 

 7           it's so expensive to do it that way that if 

 8           you can do neighborhoods together in one 

 9           shot, you can really bring the cost down.  I 

10           know in Troy, after doing nothing for years, 

11           they did it that way.  

12                  And I just want to know, have you 

13           been -- any of you been able to do 

14           neighborhoods in one shot and how it reduced 

15           the cost?

16                  ROCHESTER MAYOR EVANS:  Yeah.  I mean, 

17           we absolutely -- we only do neighborhoods in 

18           one shot.  We don't do a scattershot, we pick 

19           areas of the city and then we do those areas.  

20           And that has been very successful for us.

21                  But again, the overall cost is just 

22           astronomical.  And in order to really meet 

23           this 2030 date that I put out there, I mean, 

24           putting that out there, we -- it's just going 


                                                                   280

 1           to cost more money.

 2                  But yeah, we do neighborhood by 

 3           neighborhood in order to -- it makes it also 

 4           more efficient and allows us to do what we 

 5           need to do on it in the neighborhood and then 

 6           move to the next one.  So we do it quadrant 

 7           by quadrant.

 8                  ASSEMBLYMAN JACOBSON:  What's your 

 9           average cost?

10                  ROCHESTER MAYOR EVANS:  I don't know 

11           the average cost off the top of my head, but 

12           we can get back to you on that.

13                  BUFFALO MAYOR BROWN:  Buffalo does it 

14           by need.  So when a lead service line breaks, 

15           we replace it.  We've replaced I think over 

16           3,000 broken lead service lines across the 

17           city.  It's estimated we have another 40,000 

18           and that that would cost us about half a 

19           billion dollars.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN JACOBSON:  About 12,000 

21           each, yeah.

22                  And let me ask you this.  One of the 

23           problems of all small cities and villages, 

24           when you want to repair the streets -- and 


                                                                   281

 1           this is someone who has been on the Newburgh 

 2           City Council, and I ran on -- with signs that 

 3           said "Let's fix all the streets" -- is the 

 4           cost of ADA compliance.  That's more than the 

 5           paving.

 6                  And I would like to set up a separate 

 7           CHIPs fund for that.  How much does the ADA 

 8           compliance -- when you do it, compare to the 

 9           cost of paving?

10                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And you'll have 

11           to get back to him following, because he used 

12           up his time.  Sorry.

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN JACOBSON:  Thank you, 

14           Senator.  

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Assemblymember 

16           González-Rojas, three minutes.

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GONZÁLEZ-ROJAS:  Thank 

18           you all for being here.

19                  Specifically for Mayor Brown, Mayor 

20           Evans and Mayor Walsh, I know that your 

21           cities face high rates of poverty and food 

22           insecurity, and I'm working with members 

23           statewide -- I represent Queens, but working 

24           with members statewide to address some of 


                                                                   282

 1           that, and specifically looking at universal 

 2           school meals so that every child has a free 

 3           breakfast and free lunch, as well as 

 4           increasing the SNAP benefit for individuals.  

 5                  Right now the minimum SNAP benefit is 

 6           $23 a month.  So as we all know, the price of 

 7           eggs, you know, you can get a few dozen eggs 

 8           with that $23, and that's about it.  And we 

 9           want to increase that to $100 a month.  

10           New Jersey did it.

11                  So I would just love to hear from you 

12           about how these food security proposals would 

13           fare for your districts and your communities, 

14           and what else needs to be done to address 

15           poverty and food insecurity.

16                  BUFFALO MAYOR BROWN:  Just very 

17           quickly, Senator, I think your proposal is a 

18           sound one.  We know that in the City of 

19           Buffalo the bulk of households in poverty are 

20           single female head of households, and we have 

21           a very large percentage of children living in 

22           households in poverty.

23                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GONZÁLEZ-ROJAS:  Thank 

24           you.


                                                                   283

 1                  ROCHESTER MAYOR EVANS:  Yeah, and that 

 2           proposal I think will go a long way not only 

 3           just in the City of Rochester, where you have 

 4           childhood poverty, but throughout the state.  

 5                  I'm a member of an alliance, Mayors 

 6           Against Childhood Hunger, and, I mean, these 

 7           are the type of innovative things that we 

 8           need to be able to take care of.

 9                  Students do better in school when 

10           they're able to eat.  And it's a major issue 

11           that many of us take for granted, but 

12           absolutely critical.  And we absolutely 

13           should be doing universal meals.  It works.  

14           I was a member of the school board and at one 

15           point, because people were embarrassed to 

16           hand in the form, we said, You know what 

17           we're going to do, we're going to make it 

18           universal for everyone.  You don't have to 

19           hand in the form.  You don't want to eat it, 

20           fine, but you have it for everyone.

21                  Those are the types of things that we 

22           should do, and it's just common sense in my 

23           book.

24                  SYRACUSE MAYOR WALSH:  I would agree 


                                                                   284

 1           with both my colleagues here.  Certainly 

 2           supportive of the proposal.  

 3                  One additional note is just the 

 4           challenge that we have in I would guess all 

 5           of our cities relative to food deserts and 

 6           the model of grocery store is not fitting 

 7           into our communities.  It's really hard to 

 8           attract traditional grocery stores to many of 

 9           our neighborhoods, and that's what our 

10           neighborhoods are crying out for, is walkable 

11           access to healthy, affordable groceries.

12                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GONZÁLEZ-ROJAS:  Thank 

13           you so much.

14                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  It's important 

15           to us too.  I mean it really is.  We thought 

16           it was so important that even now New York 

17           State fully funds it with federal funds, but 

18           we went out and funded it ourselves, just to 

19           make sure it happened.

20                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN GONZÁLEZ-ROJAS:  

21           Exactly.  Well, we're committed to supporting  

22           you all.  Thank you so much.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Thank you.

24                  And I have just a few questions.


                                                                   285

 1                  First of all, not to beat AIM to 

 2           death, but, you know, you heard me yesterday 

 3           at NYCOM.  Certainly we are committed to 

 4           working with you on whatever it might take, 

 5           or if we need to vary -- you know, come up 

 6           with some changes or something that might 

 7           entice the Governor to provide increased 

 8           funding through AIM.  So we certainly look 

 9           forward to working with you on that.

10                  Other than that, just a couple of 

11           questions.  Mayor Brown, you had talked about 

12           city/county and the sales tax in Buffalo.  I 

13           was just curious, from the other mayors, is 

14           that unique to Buffalo?  Or is that something 

15           other cities are dealing with also?

16                  BUFFALO MAYOR BROWN:  I think the way 

17           the tax structure has evolved city to city in 

18           the state is different.  I think it is unique 

19           to Buffalo.  Syracuse has a greater share of 

20           its county sales tax than Buffalo does.  

21           Rochester has a greater share of its county 

22           sales tax than Buffalo does.  

23                  I think the formula doesn't work any 

24           longer.  The formula was changed in 1985 to 


                                                                   286

 1           address a fiscal crisis that the county was 

 2           having, and it was never rationalized after 

 3           that.  And Buffalo, which is the city that 

 4           has the greatest poverty, the greatest 

 5           affordable housing, the greatest number of 

 6           new Americans, is being shortchanged in an 

 7           inequitable funding situation.

 8                  ALBANY MAYOR SHEEHAN:  Can I just -- 

 9           on the AIM --

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Yes.

11                  ALBANY MAYOR SHEEHAN:  To put it in 

12           context, one of the reasons we're hesitant to 

13           give you a number is we don't want to give 

14           you sticker shock.  

15                  (Laughter.)

16                  ALBANY MAYOR SHEEHAN:  But if AIM had 

17           kept pace with inflation, it would be up 

18           32 percent from where it is now.  And so, you 

19           know, we have talked about 10 percent a year 

20           over three years, you know, a way of catching 

21           us up over time.  You know, we understand 

22           that you have difficult decisions to make and 

23           lots of things that need to be funded.  But I 

24           think that's why we've been bashful.


                                                                   287

 1                  But 32 percent would be my number.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Yeah, that is the 

 3           approach I think we took with -- I don't know 

 4           if it was last year or the year before with 

 5           the one-house was, you know, what would be 

 6           the adjustment just for the cost of living.  

 7           It is a substantial number.

 8                  ALBANY MAYOR SHEEHAN:  It's a big 

 9           number.

10                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  Assemblyman, 

11           just an even -- kind of easier point for us 

12           to swallow, right, is Governor Cuomo when he 

13           was here, right, he bragged about he'd only 

14           allow state spending to go up 2 percent.  

15           Right?  And AIM aid is part of state 

16           spending.  It stayed flat, stayed at zero.  

17           So he took that 2 percent and spent it on 

18           something else, whatever.  

19                  And if we just got 2 percent that we 

20           should have gotten every year as part of the 

21           state policy that was enacted here, yeah, we 

22           would have gotten another almost 25 million?  

23           Yeah, 25 million.  And a year, to that.

24                  ROCHESTER MAYOR EVANS:  And I think 


                                                                   288

 1           even when you think about 2 percent or 

 2           whatever the dollars might be, the dollars 

 3           might seem small but the impact to our cities 

 4           are monumental.  I mean, it just can't be 

 5           understated what those dollars would be able 

 6           to do for all of the things that we just 

 7           mentioned for sure.

 8                  BUFFALO MAYOR BROWN:  The crack 

 9           researchers on my staff say that New York 

10           State has provided municipalities some sort 

11           of revenue sharing since 1789.  That hasn't 

12           happened since 2012.

13                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Who was the 

14           Governor?

15                  (Laughter.)

16                  BUFFALO MAYOR BROWN:  They didn't give 

17           me that name.

18                  ALBANY MAYOR SHEEHAN:  And it's been 

19           longer for many of us, Mayor Brown.

20                  (Laughter; overtalk.)

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  I kidded in our 

22           majority conference that AIM hadn't been 

23           increased since the Coolidge administration.  

24           You're actually going back a little further 


                                                                   289

 1           than that.

 2                  (Laughter.)

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  So just two 

 4           different topics, if I could get a response.  

 5           I mean, this was talked a little bit about at 

 6           NYCOM yesterday, and that is Tier VI, which 

 7           is a double-edged sword for you.  The need to 

 8           try to recruit and retain staffing is 

 9           something that I think all levels of 

10           government are dealing with, and certainly 

11           the pension system is part of that.  Of 

12           course any increase in cost of the pension 

13           system you are -- there's an employer 

14           contribution you have to be mindful of.

15                  So how do you balance that, and what 

16           are your thoughts with regard to Tier VI and 

17           possible reform?

18                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  You know, the 

19           whole idea of these pensions, right, have all 

20           been based around what was happening 

21           economically -- Tier I, II, III, IV, V, VI.  

22           Right?  So now we're at VI because of what 

23           was happening to us with Tier IV and the 

24           costs that were borne to us.


                                                                   290

 1                  And so I will tell you that Tier VI 

 2           has been -- has been saving at least my city 

 3           a lot of money.  But I will also tell you 

 4           that my labor leaders aren't super thrilled 

 5           about it either.  So I'm going to stop short 

 6           of endorsing it but say that it does provide 

 7           us with some savings.  And, you know, maybe 

 8           it should be looked at sometime in the 

 9           future, but right now it is helping stem the 

10           tide of the bleeding.

11                  ALBANY MAYOR SHEEHAN:  Well, we'd like 

12           to see what the projections would look like.  

13           We want to be part of the conversation.  It 

14           is -- we are having difficulty recruiting.  

15           Tier VI is less competitive than what a lot 

16           of private-sector employers require.  I think 

17           where we got ourselves in trouble in the past 

18           was doing away for the lower tiers with the 

19           contributions that were supposed to continue 

20           throughout an employee's lifetime.  I think 

21           if we can agree that having the employee 

22           continue to contribute that 3 percent or, you 

23           know, whatever that is, that has been a huge 

24           help.  And so we could look at Tier VI 


                                                                   291

 1           through that lens and ensure that we're able 

 2           to be competitive in hiring people.

 3                  But we'd really love to see from the 

 4           Comptroller's standpoint and from the 

 5           standpoint -- you know, we're the ones that 

 6           get the bill.  So, you know, what are the 

 7           projections of what that's going to look 

 8           like.  But we recognize we do have to be 

 9           competitive in order to attract workforce.  

10           And we're not with Tier VI, I will say that.  

11           That's the -- what we're getting from people 

12           that we're trying to hire and the -- that's 

13           the input that we're getting, is that it's 

14           not competitive.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  And I have just 

16           one more subject area, the Open Meetings Law.  

17           The Open Meetings Law we have now, coming out 

18           of the pandemic we modified the Open Meetings 

19           Law to allow hybrid meetings, to allow the 

20           public to participate remotely, under certain 

21           circumstances to allow the public officials 

22           and public bodies to participate remotely.  

23           That expires.  The Governor has proposed 

24           extending it I think as is.  I don't think 


                                                                   292

 1           she's proposing any changes.

 2                  Just your thoughts on that extender, 

 3           whether there should be -- you know, in your 

 4           implementation of this are there things you 

 5           would like to see changed?  Is it fine the 

 6           way it is?  Any suggestions with regard to 

 7           that?  (Pause.)

 8                  Don't all go at once.

 9                  (Laughter.)

10                  YONKERS MAYOR SPANO:  I'm always going 

11           to get myself in trouble.  Honestly, you 

12           know, COVID is over, we can go back to work.  

13           For me, it's not an issue.

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  I'll leave it at 

15           that.  Thank you very much.

16                  (Laughter.)

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  That is our last 

18           question.  So we're done.  First of all, I 

19           want to thank you all for your testimony and 

20           for being here today.

21                  You know, as a former town supervisor, 

22           I think you have the most difficult job in 

23           all of government.  The way I used to 

24           describe being town supervisor when I was 


                                                                   293

 1           there was that when I would go to the grocery 

 2           store, the list I came out with was always 

 3           longer than the list I went in with.  So we 

 4           appreciate all the great work you do on the 

 5           frontlines, and we look forward to working 

 6           with you to come up with a good budget.

 7                  So thank you so much.

 8                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Exactly the same 

 9           from the Senate.  Thank you very much.

10                  Next panel, we're calling up the 

11           New York City Comptroller Brad Lander, and 

12           the New York City Council Speaker Adrienne 

13           Adams. 

14                  And we're asking everyone to take 

15           their conversations with the five mayors out 

16           in one hall or the other.

17                  (Off the record.)

18                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  If everyone can 

19           take their conversations out in the hall.  We 

20           don't want you to not talk to each other, 

21           just take it out to the hall to talk to each 

22           other.

23                  Do we need more chairs at the table?  

24           You're okay?  Okay.


                                                                   294

 1                  Good afternoon.  I just wanted to 

 2           point out that I just got an alert that our 

 3           friend Jumaane has couped everyone, since the 

 4           Adams administration and the City Council and 

 5           the Comptroller are here in Albany.  So you 

 6           have nowhere to go home.  Sorry.

 7                  (Laughter.)

 8                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  That's only a 

 9           New York City joke.  Everyone else is going, 

10           what is she saying?  So never mind.  

11                  It's the Assembly's day to run the 

12           hearings.  I'd better let him do it.

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Well, I live 

14           close enough to get the joke, unfortunately.

15                  {No audio} -- New York City 

16           comptroller.  You want to fight over it, 

17           that's fine with me, too.  Flip a coin, 

18           whatever you'd like to do.  You just happen 

19           to be first on the list here, that's all.

20                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Good 

21           afternoon, Chair Thiele, Chair Krueger, 

22           members of the committee.  Thank you so much 

23           for the opportunity to testify today to 

24           discuss the New York State Executive Budget 


                                                                   295

 1           for fiscal year 2025, especially as it 

 2           pertains to the City of New York.

 3                  First, the good news.  The city 

 4           continues its economic rebound.  Jobs have 

 5           recovered to pre-pandemic levels, inflation 

 6           has moderated, and there's reason to be 

 7           optimistic that the economy will see the soft 

 8           landing that few economists believed likely a 

 9           year or two ago.  And fiscally, revenues have 

10           consistently come in above plan, and the 

11           outlook has improved since the Governor's 

12           midyear update and the city's November plan.  

13                  But of course significant challenges 

14           remain.  Jobs are growing faster in 

15           lower-wage industries than higher ones.  

16           Housing affordability threatens the stability 

17           of families and discourages businesses from 

18           locating in the city.  City expenses, 

19           including areas including uniformed overtime, 

20           Carter cases, and shelter for asylum-seekers 

21           are growing faster than revenues.  Federal 

22           pandemic stimulus is expiring and, as a 

23           result, budget gaps increase in each 

24           subsequent outyear.  


                                                                   296

 1                  And we have many challenges as well 

 2           building and maintaining the critical public 

 3           infrastructure that we need -- our public 

 4           schools, housing, transit, parks, hospitals 

 5           and more -- especially in the face of aging 

 6           infrastructure and more frequent climate 

 7           disasters.  

 8                  So as we work through the current 

 9           budget cycle, I'll be pushing for stronger 

10           management from City Hall to help close 

11           outyear budget gaps without cuts to essential 

12           services, to address the affordability 

13           crisis, and to set New York City on a strong 

14           economic footing for the years ahead.

15                  We do need help from the State 

16           Legislature by restoring funding reductions 

17           made in Foundation Aid and sales tax 

18           intercept; providing additional support 

19           focused on helping asylum-seekers obtain work 

20           authorization and jobs so they can move out 

21           of shelter; a thoughtful approach to 

22           increasing the city's debt limit; and 

23           especially reaching a deal on housing to 

24           address the affordability crisis.


                                                                   297

 1                  I'll begin by talking about the work 

 2           welcoming asylum-seekers, as you've been 

 3           discussing.

 4                  New York City has received over 

 5           170,000 asylum-seekers.  It's worth noting 

 6           that during the pandemic we lost nearly half 

 7           a million residents.  So that is folks who 

 8           are there to help do a lot of the jobs that 

 9           New Yorkers need done in childcare, in home 

10           care, in construction, in restaurants.  If we 

11           can help people get to work, they will 

12           continue to help drive our flourishing 

13           economy, as immigrants have done in New York 

14           City since Dutch refugees fled religious 

15           persecution and Irish and Italian immigrants 

16           fled hunger and Jews and Dominicans and 

17           Chinese folks all made their way to make 

18           New York City the greatest immigrant city 

19           that the world has ever seen.  

20                  And what we can do, rather than 

21           shutting our doors, is help that tradition 

22           continue to make sure people can get on their 

23           feet.  To do that, we do need help and 

24           support.  Of course we're going to keep 


                                                                   298

 1           pushing for federal aid, but we know that not 

 2           a lot more is coming, given this Congress.  

 3                  It is fair that the city and the state 

 4           would split the costs of meeting the goals of 

 5           the city's -- the federal obligation to 

 6           provide the state's opportunity to seek 

 7           asylum.  And it's worth remembering that the 

 8           right to shelter is grounded in the State 

 9           Constitution.  The work that the city is 

10           doing is on behalf of the Constitution of the 

11           State of New York.  

12                  I am grateful that the state is 

13           investing the money for legal services that 

14           are helping new arrivals file their asylum 

15           applications, gain temporary protective 

16           status, and get work authorization that helps 

17           people move out of shelter and get on their 

18           feet.  

19                  We've actually helped several thousand 

20           folks move through those systems with state 

21           resources in city clinics co-operated with 

22           the federal government.  I hope you'll come 

23           see it sometime.  It's actually something 

24           that we should be doing a lot more of.


                                                                   299

 1                  And we'd like to see the city actually 

 2           emphasize that work even more strongly.  I 

 3           was struck by what Mayor Sheehan said about 

 4           being eager to get people who have work 

 5           authorization.  The program that we'd like to 

 6           have would use those resources together, help 

 7           folks get that work authorization, and then I 

 8           hope they would be welcomed in cities all 

 9           across the state.

10                  I also urge the Legislature to pass 

11           the Access to Representation Act, which will 

12           make sure that legal services are available 

13           to people throughout that process.

14                  Probably I think the most important 

15           business I hope you will do this year is 

16           confronting the housing affordability crisis.  

17           Last year a deal eluded the Governor and the 

18           Legislature, and I really hope this year will 

19           be different.  We need more housing 

20           production, stronger tenant protections and 

21           more housing vouchers.  

22                  First, such a deal should facilitate 

23           the creation of new housing across income 

24           levels, with a strong emphasis on 


                                                                   300

 1           affordability.  That will require a new 

 2           approach to taxing multifamily housing 

 3           development to replace the 421-a program.  

 4                  My office has offered up a 

 5           framework to reform the taxation of 

 6           multifamily housing development, starting 

 7           with tax parity between rentals and condos, 

 8           with a better approach to matching costs and 

 9           benefits in order to create truly affordable 

10           rental and cooperative rental and 

11           homeownership housing, including a 

12           21st-century reboot of the Mitchell-Lama 

13           program.  

14                  A comprehensive strategy for growth 

15           would include office to residential 

16           conversions, a path to basement apartment 

17           legalization, and regional growth targets 

18           grounded in fairness and aligned with 

19           planning and infrastructure investments.

20                  The second component of the deal we 

21           need is protecting tenants from displacement 

22           with good-cause eviction protections.  

23                  And third should be the creation and 

24           funding of the Housing Access Voucher 


                                                                   301

 1           Program.  We urgently need those vouchers to 

 2           help homeless families who have long been 

 3           stuck in shelter, and to help the most 

 4           vulnerable, including some folks like in 

 5           those New York Times articles on homeless 

 6           mentally ill New Yorkers who are a danger to 

 7           themselves and to others to get off the 

 8           street in ways that would increase their 

 9           safety and their neighbors' safety.

10                  Finally, some New York City subsidized 

11           affordable housing stock is at risk due to a 

12           combination of unaddressed rent arrears 

13           accumulated during the pandemic and rising 

14           costs.  The state should provide $250 million 

15           in emergency affordable housing preservation 

16           funds with priority for the most vulnerable 

17           portfolios, to put these buildings back on 

18           sound financial footing.

19                  I was encouraged to see in the 

20           Governor's budget resources to strengthen our 

21           mental health infrastructure.  We need those 

22           investments to provide the services necessary 

23           to keep people healthy and safe.  The state 

24           should increase the Medicaid payment rate to 


                                                                   302

 1           cover the full cost of hospital care, 

 2           particularly for inpatient psychiatric beds, 

 3           which are still not at pre-pandemic levels.

 4                  And I urge the Legislature to pass the 

 5           Home Care Savings and Reinvestment Act to 

 6           bring home care back under the direct 

 7           management of the state and out from under 

 8           costly for-profit managed care companies.

 9                  I ask the Legislature to continue to 

10           consider passing Senator Ramos and 

11           Assemblymember Reyes's Workplace 

12           Accountability and Greater Enforcement -- or 

13           WAGE -- Act, which would expand local labor 

14           enforcement in New York City to combat wage 

15           theft, retaliation against workers, and other 

16           violations of New York State labor law by 

17           strengthening the existing workers' rights 

18           enforcement authority of the Comptroller's 

19           office to complement the enforcement efforts 

20           of our government partners.

21                  You may have seen Comptroller 

22           DiNapoli's audit out just this week which 

23           highlights some of the challenges of labor 

24           investigations in New York City.  And we'd be 


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 1           very happy to be able to step up and 

 2           complement that enforcement if that 

 3           legislation passes.

 4                  On education, while we're very 

 5           grateful -- and I really mean this -- to the 

 6           legislators for increases in the 

 7           Foundation Aid in recent years -- that was 

 8           really critical -- this year's budget would 

 9           decrease that expected aid by $130 million by 

10           lengthening the reference period for 

11           inflation adjustment after the spike in 

12           prices we experienced over the past two 

13           years.  

14                  With federal COVID aid -- especially 

15           for our schools -- expiring, I hope the state 

16           will consider adding funding to help 

17           localities preserve some of the great 

18           programs we started, like Summer Rising and 

19           3-K and student mental health programs, 

20           rather than take it away.

21                  At the higher education level, while 

22           the Legislature has invested more in SUNY, 

23           I'm sad to say that CUNY has consistently 

24           faced cuts at the city level.  That is not 


                                                                   304

 1           the State Legislature's fault, but there is 

 2           something that you could do to help us.  

 3           While CUNY faces cut after cut, two of the 

 4           city's largest private owners of real estate, 

 5           Columbia and NYU, continue to benefit from 

 6           property tax exemptions, $342 million in 

 7           FY '24 alone.  The CUNY Repair Act, 

 8           introduced by Senator Liu and Assemblymember 

 9           Mamdani, would help remedy that inequity.  

10           Private universities would pay something more 

11           like their fair share so CUNY could thrive as 

12           one of the greatest engines of upward social 

13           mobility we have anywhere.

14                  If there's a common theme that ties 

15           all of those items together, it's that we 

16           need to combine strong fiscal management with 

17           wise public policy so we can avoid steep 

18           cuts, balance our budgets, and invest in the 

19           infrastructure to ensure a thriving, diverse 

20           city.  I'll be pushing aggressively through 

21           the city budget process to make that a 

22           reality, but the state also has a part to 

23           play to help pave the road to that future.

24                  So we ask, first, treat New York City 


                                                                   305

 1           fairly and on par with other localities in 

 2           the state.  I mentioned already 

 3           Foundation Aid, but also the extension of the 

 4           sales tax intercept for distressed hospitals 

 5           only in New York City reduces our revenue by 

 6           $150 million each year for three more years, 

 7           even as we have rising budget gaps.  

 8                  And we're still the only school 

 9           district in the state that doesn't receive 

10           transitional charter school aid.

11                  The last issue that I have, I'm happy 

12           to do in response to a question, Chair, about 

13           the capital debt limit.  

14                  And I will turn it over to the 

15           Speaker.

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Thank you.

18                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Thank you 

19           very much.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Speaker Adams.

21                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  Thank you 

22           so much.

23                  Good afternoon, Chair Krueger, Chair 

24           Thiele, Ranking Minority Members O'Mara and 


                                                                   306

 1           Ra, and all members of the Senate Finance and 

 2           Assembly Ways and Means committees, and 

 3           Assembly Cities Committee.  And a special 

 4           greeting to all of my colleagues from Queens 

 5           today.  Great to see you.

 6                  I am New York City Council Speaker 

 7           Adrienne Adams, and I thank you so much for 

 8           providing me the opportunity to discuss the 

 9           Governor's Executive Budget for state 

10           fiscal year 2025 and its potential impact on 

11           New York City.  I would also like to thank 

12           Senate Majority Leader Stewart-Cousins and 

13           Assembly Speaker Heastie.

14                  I have submitted my full written 

15           testimony with a more complete set of 

16           priorities.  In my oral testimony, though, I 

17           will touch upon a select few.

18                  Our governments share the goal to 

19           improve the lives of New Yorkers.  One way we 

20           must do this is by building more housing, 

21           especially homes that are affordable to a 

22           range of New Yorkers.  Housing is key to the 

23           safety and stability of our city, and 

24           confronting our housing crisis is one of the 


                                                                   307

 1           top priorities we must address together.

 2                  The Governor's Executive Budget 

 3           includes several welcome and important 

 4           policies intended to increase housing 

 5           production in our city and around the state, 

 6           including legislation to eliminate the 

 7           required floor-to-area ratio that's 

 8           restricted housing development in key parts 

 9           of New York City.  Legislation to enable the 

10           conversion of commercial buildings to 

11           housing, accompanied by the financial 

12           incentives that facilitate these conversions 

13           for the creation of affordable housing, is 

14           also critical.

15                  It is vital that state funding and a 

16           new financial incentive program for 

17           affordable housing production throughout our 

18           city are put into place this session to 

19           remove the barriers to housing development, 

20           in conjunction with tenant protections as 

21           part of our efforts to confront the housing 

22           crisis.  

23                  We appreciate the Governor's continued 

24           inclusion of funding for supportive housing 


                                                                   308

 1           in her budget and encourage deeper 

 2           investments in collaborative city and state 

 3           efforts to develop even more.  It is one of 

 4           the most effective solutions to successfully 

 5           tackle issues of mental health and reentry 

 6           from the justice system.  

 7                  At the same time, we cannot ignore the 

 8           continued rent arrears facing our public 

 9           housing system since the beginning of the 

10           pandemic that destabilized families.  Last 

11           year's budget offered significant help 

12           through the Emergency Rental Assistance 

13           Program, and additional support will be 

14           needed this year to help NYCHA reduce the 

15           outstanding balance of unpaid rent from over 

16           70,000 households.

17                  Homelessness remains at high levels.  

18           State funding to cover the cost of the rate 

19           increase of StateFHEPS rental vouchers is 

20           essential to avoid placing an additional 

21           $198.8 million of unfunded mandate on the 

22           city.  Additional programs to combat 

23           homelessness, such as the Housing Access 

24           Voucher Program, or HAVP, and Rental 


                                                                   309

 1           Supplement Program, RSP, should be adequately 

 2           funded by the state.  HAVP requires at least 

 3           $250 million to provide aid to those most at 

 4           risk of becoming homeless and already 

 5           unhoused.  RSP would provide New York City 

 6           with the ability to provide housing vouchers 

 7           for underserved residents, regardless of 

 8           immigration status, helping those perpetually 

 9           stuck in the shelter system without access to 

10           other pathways to stable, permanent housing.

11                  The city appreciates the support in 

12           the Governor's budget for our efforts to 

13           provide shelter and support services to 

14           people seeking asylum who have arrived in our 

15           city, and urges that those funds remain in 

16           the adopted budget.  

17                  As a city with one of the highest 

18           costs of living, food insecurity remains a 

19           major issue.  In fiscal year 2023, 1 million 

20           New Yorkers relied on SNAP benefits.  But 

21           because benefit levels are not adjusted for 

22           cost of living, New Yorkers are at a 

23           disadvantage compared to their counterparts 

24           across the nation.  


                                                                   310

 1                  There was some reprieve for New 

 2           Yorkers during the pandemic when SNAP benefit 

 3           recipients were provided the maximum benefit, 

 4           and we urge the state to continue with the 

 5           higher benefit level to provide adequate 

 6           nutrition for New Yorkers.

 7                  Education for young people at all 

 8           levels is one of the best investments we can 

 9           and should make.  While the Governor's 

10           proposed budget continues fiscal support for 

11           New York City's funding for universal 

12           pre-K -- that we appreciate -- we urge the 

13           state to consider increasing its commitment 

14           towards early childhood education to protect 

15           our city's 3-K program that is facing 

16           challenges from the expiration of federal 

17           stimulus funds.

18                  Our school system also needs greater 

19           support for students in temporary housing, 

20           after recently enrolling over 20,000 more 

21           students -- adding to the over 100,000 such 

22           students already in our schools.  We urge 

23           that the school Foundation Aid formula 

24           reflect the prior year's inflation rate of 


                                                                   311

 1           approximately 4 percent, rather than the 

 2           10-year average of 2.4 percent, which does 

 3           not reflect the needs of our schools.

 4                  Supporting CUNY as an engine of 

 5           opportunity that educates New Yorkers from 

 6           all backgrounds will also require state 

 7           funding for increased personnel costs once 

 8           the current round of collective bargaining is 

 9           settled.  Without this help, CUNY would be 

10           forced to make cuts in other critical 

11           operating expenses, which will come at the 

12           expense of our students' education.  

13                  To protect New York City from cost 

14           shifting that has been overly relied upon to 

15           balance state budgets, we urge you to reverse 

16           the proposed extension of the Distressed 

17           Hospital Fund sales tax intercept -- that 

18           would take an additional $150 million from 

19           the city -- so we can adequately support our 

20           public hospitals.

21                  New York City must also be granted 

22           greater local control over our tax 

23           expenditures as a necessary tool to safeguard 

24           the health of our own budget.  Albany is a 


                                                                   312

 1           critical partner in this process, but the 

 2           city needs the authority and input on the tax 

 3           programs that significantly affect us, to 

 4           ensure our resources are used wisely.  This 

 5           will require the state to not authorize a 

 6           city tax credit without a home-rule request, 

 7           a provision giving the city local authority 

 8           to determine tax credits and authorization to 

 9           obtain data needed to evaluate tax breaks.

10                  We support state bills to give IBO 

11           access to tax data and to alter or repeal 

12           real property tax exemptions for private 

13           institutions of higher education.  All of 

14           this would allow the city greater local 

15           control and ability to conduct oversight.

16                  At the center of our considerations 

17           are the working families and New Yorkers who 

18           comprise the backbone of our city and state.  

19           We look forward to working with you, our 

20           partners in the State Legislature, to enact a 

21           budget that equitably supports our city and 

22           state.  

23                  Thank you very much for your 

24           consideration and for your time.


                                                                   313

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Thank you.

 2                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  First up, our 

 4           Cities chair, for 10 minutes, 

 5           Assemblymember Braunstein.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Thank you, 

 7           Fred.

 8                  And thank you, all of you, for joining 

 9           us today.  It's good to see you up here.

10                  The first question I have is for 

11           anybody who can answer it.  I'm not expecting 

12           you have the answer, but you might.  The 

13           mayor testified earlier that currently the 

14           city has around 67,000 migrants in their 

15           care.  Those numbers, do they fluctuate?  

16           Does anybody know what the low number was?  

17           Has there been a higher number?  I'm just 

18           trying to get a sense of how those numbers 

19           move.

20                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  We put them 

21           out monthly in our monthly newsletter, and 

22           we've been tracking them from when they were, 

23           you know, essentially zero prior to July 

24           2022, and they have been rising steadily 


                                                                   314

 1           since then.

 2                  That current 67,000 is a high, but 

 3           there's been somewhat of a tapering, mostly 

 4           as the 30- and 60-day rules have gone into 

 5           effect, so people have been pushed out of the 

 6           H+H shelters, even as folks continue to come.  

 7           I've got a little chart that shows -- yes.

 8                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Yeah, I mean 

 9           that's what I was asking for.  So you would 

10           say as a chart it would be a tapering --

11                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Oh, I'm 

12           sorry, the peak was 69,000, and it's now at 

13           67,000, so it's a little lower than it's 

14           been.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Is there a 

16           projected increase, do you know?

17                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  This is 

18           really the 40,000 -- you know, the $69,000 

19           question.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  But if you 

21           don't know, I understand.  

22                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Well, we 

23           don't know.  The impacts of the 60-day rule 

24           are just -- you know, what they said is that 


                                                                   315

 1           for single adults, in response to the 30-day 

 2           rule, about 80 percent of people wound up 

 3           leaving and only 20 percent -- but of 

 4           families, we think it's going to be a higher 

 5           percentage that need shelter and wind up 

 6           staying in shelter.  And we'll be seeing that 

 7           in the coming months, and we'll report on it.

 8                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Okay, thank 

 9           you.

10                  For the speaker or your team, you 

11           know, you reference -- and it's frustrating, 

12           we're seeing the potential loss of the 3-K 

13           program.  You know, how much do we anticipate 

14           that program in particular will cost?  I know 

15           the Mayor's office testified earlier that 

16           they expect they're going to lose, just for 

17           education alone, $700 million in stimulus 

18           funding year to year.

19                  You know, you talked about us changing 

20           the formula slightly for Foundation Aid, 

21           which the comptroller estimates could be 

22           around 130 million.  How much is the 3-K 

23           program cost?

24                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  Do we have 


                                                                   316

 1           a cost on that, Tanisha?

 2                  NYC COUNCIL CFO EDWARDS:  (Mic off.)

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Your mic 

 4           isn't on.  There you go -- now you turned it 

 5           off again.  There you go.

 6                  NYC COUNCIL CFO EDWARDS:  It's 

 7           difficult in this -- 

 8                  (Laughter.)

 9                  NYC COUNCIL CFO EDWARDS:  For FY '24 

10           the cost level was $760 million.  In FY '25 

11           it's expected to be -- and this is because 

12           there was a sort of 5 percent peg to the 

13           program -- $509 million.  

14                  So that would be the general cost to 

15           efficiently run the 3-K program, or at least 

16           how much is currently budgeted now.

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Okay.  I 

18           mean, I understand your coming to us -- we 

19           have increased education funding to the City 

20           of New York to historic levels over the last 

21           few years.  So --

22                  NYC COUNCIL CFO EDWARDS:  Well, a lot 

23           of the money that the city has received from 

24           the state was from pre-K.  And it's been 


                                                                   317

 1           great, but with our level of funding coming 

 2           in for 3-K, in order to get the amount of 

 3           seats that we need across the city, where the 

 4           needs are great -- in some areas there are 

 5           waitlists for months and months and months.

 6                  And so we need additional money to 

 7           fulfill the need where they're needed.

 8                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Okay, thank 

 9           you.

10                  For comptroller Lander, the city is 

11           requesting increasing the Transitional 

12           Finance Authority bond limit I believe the 

13           Governor has proposed -- was it the Governor 

14           or the mayor's office is asking for 6 billion 

15           this year, then another increase of 6 billion 

16           the year after that.  You know, what's your 

17           thoughts on that?

18                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Yeah.  So the 

19           mayor asked for 19.6 billion, and what's in 

20           the Governor's budget is, as you say, 

21           $12 billion over two years.  And that's an 

22           increase in the city's overall debt limit, 

23           which is set by a very kind of imprecise 

24           formula that values the total city 


                                                                   318

 1           real estate.  

 2                  So, you know, what's key is keeping 

 3           debt service below 15 percent of the city's 

 4           total operating budget.  We believe that the 

 5           $12 billion over two years is a reasonable 

 6           increase that would help us, you know, with 

 7           big infrastructure investments we have in the 

 8           BQE and our roads and bridges and building 

 9           the borough-based jails and many other things 

10           that we need.

11                  But there's a couple of critical 

12           things that are necessary.  One is stronger 

13           local policy to make sure we stay below the 

14           15 percent threshold.  One is some better 

15           planning on what our infrastructure needs 

16           are.  I know you've all been joking about 

17           AIM.  AIM for us is the annual assessment of 

18           our infrastructure, and we think it's more 

19           like "aimless."  

20                  So there are some other -- and as you 

21           know, we're working hard with you, and 

22           thank you for chairing the recent hearing, 

23           Chair Braunstein and Chair Thiele, to help us 

24           have better access to alternative delivery 


                                                                   319

 1           methods to bring down the cost of our capital 

 2           projects.

 3                  But yes, broadly, we think the 

 4           increase is needed with those provisos.

 5                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  So the 

 6           current debt cap is tied to property tax 

 7           revenue.  Is there a concern about property 

 8           tax revenue?  I mean --

 9                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  It's not tied 

10           to property tax revenue, it's tied to an 

11           estimate of the overall valuation of all real 

12           property in the city.  And the valuation is 

13           done by a state board appointed by the 

14           Governor that has a lot of quirks to it, it 

15           won't surprise you, in the way it values our 

16           co-ops and condos.

17                  So the short answer is no.  Like 

18           what's critical -- right now we're at about 

19           11 percent of our operating budget on debt 

20           service.  We need to keep that below 

21           15 percent, and we've got a lot of room to do 

22           so.  Adding the 12 billion over two years to 

23           the TFA is essentially an adjustment to the 

24           formula of the assessment of real estate, and 


                                                                   320

 1           we can do it consistent with keeping that 

 2           service below 15 percent of our budget.

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Okay.  When 

 4           we talk about the assessment of real estate, 

 5           there's been a change in behavior with -- 

 6           after the pandemic with people working from 

 7           home.  We know there's vacancies in 

 8           commercial real estate in Manhattan.  Is 

 9           there a projected concern about real estate 

10           property tax, I mean commercial real estate 

11           property tax, in the outyears?

12                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Let me 

13           separate this.  I don't think that what 

14           you're talking about is what is jeopardizing 

15           the debt limit.

16                  But sure, on tax revenues, Class B and 

17           C real estate that we're seeing, you know, 

18           significant vacancies in, we're keeping a 

19           sharp eye.  So far, overall real estate tax 

20           revenue in the city has continued to grow.  

21           But this is absolutely something that we're 

22           keeping a careful eye on.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Okay.  And 

24           the city counts -- or the city is projecting 


                                                                   321

 1           deficits in the outyears.  What are those 

 2           attributable to?

 3                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Expenses 

 4           rising faster than revenues.  Revenues 

 5           actually are rising.  I just want to be 

 6           clear, our revenues are rising, but expenses 

 7           are rising faster.  And that's, you know --

 8                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  I mean, are 

 9           there big expenses that you can -- that you 

10           point to that are driving that?

11                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Well, look, 

12           we gave a much-needed increase to 

13           public-sector workers, and that was about 

14           $17 billion over the four-year financial 

15           plan.  

16                  I mentioned a few big growing costs 

17           like uniformed overtime, Carter cases for 

18           kids with special needs, and shelter and 

19           services for asylum-seekers, which we had not 

20           anticipated before last year.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Okay.  And 

22           then just my final point is, you know, we 

23           talk about this, Comptroller Lander -- I know 

24           Councilmember Brannan -- talk about doing 


                                                                   322

 1           something about our broken property tax 

 2           system.  And while we ultimately have 

 3           authority to make that change up here, we 

 4           look to the city for guidance about what they 

 5           would like that property tax system to look 

 6           like.

 7                  Ideally, if there was a change 

 8           requested, a resolution or something from the 

 9           City Council would be helpful in, you know, 

10           moving us to take up that issue.  So -- and I 

11           know, you know, we could talk offline about 

12           commissions and things of that nature.  

13                  But ultimately this is going -- you 

14           know, if we're going to get this done, we 

15           need something driven from the city up.  It's 

16           going to be more challenging for us to do it 

17           from the top down.

18                  And then, finally, you talked about 

19           the alternative delivery.  We continue to 

20           have conversations.  It does not have a state 

21           fiscal impact, so I anticipate, you know, 

22           we'll take up that conversation sometime 

23           after we're done on April 1st.  So --

24                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  That would be 


                                                                   323

 1           great.  I wasn't pushing for it to be in the 

 2           budget --

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Yeah, I know, 

 4           I'm just --

 5                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  I'm just 

 6           encouraging it to -- along.

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN BRAUNSTEIN:  Okay, thank 

 8           you.

 9                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Thank you.

10                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Our Cities chair, 

11           Senator Sepúlveda.

12                  SENATOR SEPÚLVEDA:  Good afternoon, 

13           everyone.  Thank you for being here today.  

14           Good seeing everyone.

15                  So I first have a question for 

16           Comptroller Lander.  I asked the mayor 

17           similar questions earlier.  I have been on a 

18           mission to modify and change the property tax 

19           system in New York City.  As the Cities 1 

20           chair for the last two years, I have been 

21           hounding and harassing the mayor's office to 

22           provide a plan or something.  

23                  A couple of weeks ago I attended 

24           the -- at the Court of Appeals the hearing on 


                                                                   324

 1           the appeal on a case on the New York City 

 2           property tax system.  Based on my experience 

 3           as an attorney, I believe that the city is 

 4           going to lose that case.  

 5                  I believe you presented a plan, some 

 6           kind of plan to modify the property tax 

 7           system.  What is that plan?  Can you explain 

 8           what you're doing to put it into effect?  

 9           Because I think it's unconscionable that a 

10           resident in my community in the South Bronx 

11           is paying the same or more taxes than someone 

12           in affluent neighborhoods like Malba and 

13           Whitestone.  

14                  What are you going to do to make sure 

15           that we modify the property tax system?

16                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Thank you, 

17           Senator.  It's a good question, and I really 

18           agree.  And I know the speaker does, and I 

19           know the finance chair does.  

20                  And it's work that we have to and can 

21           do together, because you are right, we know 

22           the effective tax rate for someone in your 

23           neighborhood is three to four times the 

24           effective tax rate for someone in my 


                                                                   325

 1           neighborhood.  It does not pass a basic 

 2           fairness test.  And there's a whole history 

 3           of reasons why it evolved that way.  

 4                  But, you know, the pathway to fixing 

 5           it for homes, for one-to-four-family homes, 

 6           co-ops and condos, I believe was largely set 

 7           out by the commission that was, you know, 

 8           appointed in the prior administration that 

 9           came out the third-to-last day of the 

10           administration.  But they actually got a lot 

11           of the basics right, and we need to move to a 

12           system that has a uniform tax rate for all 

13           homeowners.  

14                  So if -- let's call it 1 percent, it's 

15           1 percent on the homes in your neighborhood 

16           and 1 percent on the homes in my 

17           neighborhood.  And there are various ways to 

18           move to that over time while you protect, you 

19           know, seniors or folks on fixed incomes who 

20           might be at risk.  But it can be done.  That 

21           report actually outlines a lot of what's 

22           needed on -- for homes, for homeownership.

23                  We've outlined a plan for multifamily 

24           development to replace 421-a that begins with 


                                                                   326

 1           parity between rentals and condos for future 

 2           development, and after that any tax 

 3           incentives for affordability have to be 

 4           underwritten to make sure you're actually 

 5           getting the affordability that's promised.  

 6           Glad to go into more details with you.

 7                  The challenge is just one of a lot of 

 8           parties -- the legislature, the governor, the 

 9           council, the mayor, the city all have to do 

10           this together.  It's challenging.  It has 

11           some, quote unquote, winners, people who over 

12           time would see a lower tax rate.  But it has 

13           some, quote unquote, losers, people who will 

14           wind up paying a higher effective tax rate.  

15           And of course a change like that is hard 

16           because people resist it.  I would love to 

17           work together with you and others to make it 

18           happen.

19                  SENATOR SEPÚLVEDA:  We've been working 

20           with a couple of groups, including Jonathan 

21           Lippman's group, on this issue.  

22                  Now, we know that -- at least the 

23           research that I've done indicates that if you 

24           have a fair property tax system in New York 


                                                                   327

 1           City you will spur affordable housing.  So, 

 2           Madam Speaker, can you tell us about the 

 3           efforts the City Council is doing to -- in 

 4           this measure, and compared vis-a-vis with the 

 5           issue of affordable housing and how this can 

 6           help develop it?

 7                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  Yeah.  

 8           Thank you very much for the question.  

 9                  I actually had legislation that passed 

10           recently, it was called -- it is called the 

11           Fair Housing Framework Law.  And it is a law, 

12           I call it a law of housing equity, something 

13           that we haven't seen I don't think ever, in 

14           that every single district is responsible for 

15           doing their fair share of making affordable 

16           housing possible in each district.

17                  As you know, we are the most diverse 

18           council, and it is noticeable that building 

19           has taken a different look across the board 

20           across the city.  There have been but a few 

21           select districts that have actually had 

22           affordable housing built over the years 

23           compared to others.  So what my legislation 

24           did was it advanced clear and set transparent 


                                                                   328

 1           local targets for housing production and 

 2           preservation and investments that serve as 

 3           tools of accountability for every single 

 4           district to equitably solve the housing 

 5           crisis.  

 6                  By setting these targets, though, 

 7           we're letting all stakeholders, elected 

 8           officials, land use applicants, our community 

 9           members, know that the objective expectation 

10           is for every single district.

11                  Our framework ensures that there is 

12           input by developers, by community boards, by 

13           elected officials.  And it also -- people 

14           talk about member deference a lot.  This 

15           actually gets us to where -- I always say we 

16           always want to get to a place of yes when it 

17           comes to affordable housing and building 

18           affordable housing equitably.  By ensuring 

19           that everybody has a place at the table, 

20           particularly our community that has felt left 

21           out of the process for so long.  They feel 

22           left out -- agencies can come to them, the 

23           city can come to them, and by the time they 

24           get to the community, the decision's already 


                                                                   329

 1           made.  It's already a done deal.

 2                  So communities have pretty much been, 

 3           you know, kind of X'd out of the process.  

 4           This legislation will ensure that communities 

 5           are a part of the entire process from A to Z, 

 6           and ensure equitability that has been lacking 

 7           in the city actually does take place.

 8                  SENATOR SEPÚLVEDA:  I hope to get more 

 9           into that with you and the comptroller about 

10           the issue of affordable housing and the 

11           property tax issue because, as I said, I've 

12           been on a mission to get this modified.

13                  The -- back in December, 

14           Comptroller Lander, you had indicated that 

15           you took away the mayor's power to enter into 

16           contracts with private contractors that 

17           provide housing, food and other services for 

18           asylum-seekers without prior approval.  Tell 

19           me about the pilot program that's been 

20           announced now for prepaid cards to purchase 

21           food, I believe it's about five -- it's a 

22           pilot program with 500 people.  

23                  But do you think the plan is 

24           effective?  Is it going to save the city 


                                                                   330

 1           money?  Are you for or against it?

 2                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  So in July of 

 3           2022 when asylum-seekers started to arrive, 

 4           City Hall requested and we granted 

 5           essentially a blanket prior approval.  We 

 6           were going to move quickly into emergency 

 7           procurement to find enough hotels and other 

 8           contractors.  And we granted that blanket 

 9           prior approval.

10                  And they've done, you know, 70 or so 

11           emergency procurements under that blanket 

12           prior approval, and a lot of them -- most of 

13           them were essentially for hotels.  But some 

14           of them required more scrutiny.  The biggest 

15           one that required more scrutiny was the 

16           $432 million contract to DocGo, a medical 

17           services staffing company with no experience 

18           in asylum seeker shelter or services that 

19           came through the door of that blanket prior 

20           approval.  

21                  And there were a lot of questions 

22           about that contract, so we revoked the 

23           blanket prior approval.  They can still come 

24           to us on a contract-by-contract basis; they 


                                                                   331

 1           did just this week, for some transportation 

 2           services.  And we very quickly, I think 

 3           within two days, granted their prior 

 4           approval.  

 5                  On these prepaid cards, we also 

 6           granted approval to use this contractor.  The 

 7           use of prepaid cards makes a lot of sense in 

 8           different circumstances.  But we didn't 

 9           evaluate the program itself.  We looked at 

10           the contractor:  Is it an appropriate 

11           contractor?  Do they provide the services at 

12           a reasonable procurement?  Yes.  Is the 

13           program a good idea?  It's brand-new.  We 

14           haven't yet evaluated it, and I'll have to 

15           get back to you when we have.

16                  SENATOR SEPÚLVEDA:  Thank you.

17                  One more question for Madam Speaker.  

18           Can you discuss the efforts in the City 

19           Council to help with the issue of the migrant 

20           crisis?  What are some of the steps that 

21           you've taken?  And what else we can do at the 

22           state level to help in that process.

23                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  Well, as 

24           far as the migrant crisis is concerned, you 


                                                                   332

 1           know, the council has been involved.  We have 

 2           continued to advocate that even though we got 

 3           this literally -- it feels like overnight, 

 4           but it's been two years.  And we're still 

 5           waiting for help from places in D.C. that 

 6           seem to be kind of out of space, but we 

 7           believe in that.

 8                  So we have actually continued to 

 9           advocate for shelter for our asylum-seekers, 

10           for migrants that have come into the city 

11           looking for a place to live, just like people 

12           have looked for a place to live forever, it 

13           seems.  We are -- we are glad the Governor 

14           has included the migrant situation in the 

15           budget, but we still need additional state 

16           funding to support and care for 

17           asylum-seekers.  

18                  Absent this federal aid we know is not 

19           promised -- and we don't see it anywhere 

20           coming around the corner to us, so any 

21           support or help that the state can give is 

22           completely welcome.  It's going to help us 

23           manage the continued influx.  And we spoke 

24           about it earlier with a question from 


                                                                   333

 1           Assemblymember Braunstein, in speaking to the 

 2           comptroller about the numbers and what are 

 3           the numbers and when are we going to see a 

 4           plateau and when are we going to see a peak.  

 5           We just don't know.  

 6                  So the council is going to continue to 

 7           advocate for sheltering for migrants, not 

 8           necessarily hotel sheltering, but through our 

 9           CityPHEPS program.  We want to move people 

10           into permanent housing.

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

12                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  Thank you.

13                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

14                  Assembly.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Assemblymember 

16           Simon for three minutes.

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  Thank you.  

18           Thank you very much.

19                  I have a couple of questions that I 

20           wanted to ask the comptroller, in particular, 

21           and that is that we have a persistent problem 

22           in New York -- you mentioned the Carter 

23           cases -- with parents shelling out money for 

24           these schools because there is no appropriate 


                                                                   334

 1           placement for them in New York City schools.  

 2           Borrowing money, incurring costs, settling 

 3           the case -- most of them settle -- and the 

 4           city then taking 18 months to pay them back.  

 5           They're already borrowing again for the 

 6           following school year.

 7                  What can your -- and the check comes 

 8           from the comptroller's office.  What part of 

 9           that can you fix to ensure that that stops 

10           happening?  It's been a persistent problem 

11           for decades, as you know.  That's one 

12           question.

13                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Yeah.  No, 

14           this is really critical.  And like you, I've 

15           talked to many families who wind up, you 

16           know, spending on the assessment, spending on 

17           the attorneys, spending on a year of tuition, 

18           and being out of pocket substantially just to 

19           get their kids the education they need.

20                  There is a class-action lawsuit here, 

21           and there are settlement negotiations 

22           actively underway that are pushing the 

23           Department of Education.  We're in dialogue 

24           with them.  You know, I can't talk about the 


                                                                   335

 1           settlement negotiations, but what I can tell 

 2           you is we have given DOE some expanded 

 3           authority to settle without having to come to 

 4           us.  We move very quickly when they do.  But 

 5           we are giving them some additional 

 6           flexibility.  Most of this is in changes that 

 7           DOE needs to make, and I'm hopeful that the 

 8           class-action settlement will make a lot of 

 9           them.

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  And then another 

11           question I have is about how the 

12           comptroller's office can help us figure out 

13           the costs of providing all this 

14           representation for people who have a right to 

15           representation in court.

16                  You know, I have a bill that would 

17           actually provide greater loan forgiveness for 

18           people who are lawyers representing people in 

19           the indigent legal services, as well as the 

20           prosecutor's offices.  But that's costing us 

21           money.  That's costing the city money if 

22           we're not giving people the representation 

23           they need and they are evicted or they suffer 

24           other noxious consequences.


                                                                   336

 1                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Let me -- 

 2           let's follow up and see what information we 

 3           have.  We did a report earlier this year on 

 4           special education services rather than on 

 5           tuition, but we didn't look at the legal 

 6           costs.  So let me see what we might be able 

 7           to do.

 8                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SIMON:  Okay.  Thank 

 9           you.

10                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

11                  Senator John Liu.

12                  SENATOR LIU:  Thank you, Madam Chair.

13                  Thank you, Madam Speaker and 

14           Mr. Comptroller, for joining us today.  

15                  This is a question for both of you.  

16           There's -- you know, the last few years ever 

17           since the Democratic Majority took over the 

18           State Senate, the State Budget has always had 

19           more money for schools all across the state, 

20           including the City of New York.  And yet 

21           there are these nagging reports that the city 

22           reduces funding for schools.  Not necessarily 

23           either of you being responsible for that, 

24           but, you know, my question for both of you 


                                                                   337

 1           is, is there some kind of violation of 

 2           maintenance of effort?  I mean, as the state 

 3           increases funding for schools, the city 

 4           shouldn't be using that increased funding to 

 5           reduce what the city was putting into 

 6           schools.

 7                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Parsing the 

 8           Department of Education budget, as you know 

 9           from your time as comptroller and now in the 

10           Senate, is --

11                  SENATOR LIU:  I was?

12                  (Laughter; overtalk.)

13                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  I lived by 

14           your documents at one time.

15                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  You know, a 

16           lot of the reductions to individual schools 

17           have been because the Fair Student Funding 

18           formula bases what your school is getting on 

19           how many students you have.  And when we saw 

20           some pandemic school declines, that led to 

21           that formula leading to cuts and good 

22           advocacy to restore much of that money.  

23                  The adjustments to the Fair Student 

24           Funding formula that got made are quite good.  


                                                                   338

 1           They put more money in for students in 

 2           temporary housing.  

 3                  But it is not so easy to evaluate the 

 4           maintenance of effort question that you're 

 5           asking, and I think it would be fair for the 

 6           Legislature to insist on a real parsing out 

 7           of what's coming from the state, what's 

 8           coming from the city and others --

 9                  SENATOR LIU:  Therefore for the State 

10           Legislature to demand maintenance of effort.

11                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  You guys can 

12           demand, yes, that's true.  We ask a lot in 

13           the comptroller's office.

14                  SENATOR LIU:  Okay.  Defer to the 

15           comptroller?  

16                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  I agree 

17           with everything the Comptroller said.

18                  SENATOR LIU:  You do, okay.

19                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  I do, 

20           imagine that.

21                  SENATOR LIU:  So I have one final 

22           question for the both of you.  Who is the 

23           second-most powerful person in New York City?

24                  (Laughter.)


                                                                   339

 1                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  John Liu.  

 2           Senator John Liu.

 3                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  The chair 

 4           already told us that the public advocate 

 5           committed a coup while we were here.

 6                  SENATOR LIU:  All right, whatever.  

 7           Thank you, Madam Chair.  

 8                  (Laughter.)

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  -- budget-related 

10           question, John Liu?  I don't think so.

11                  Assembly.

12                  SENATOR LIU:  It's been a nagging 

13           question for eons.

14                  (Laughter.)

15                  SENATOR LIU:  I figure everybody's 

16           collaborating so nicely.  The speaker says 

17           she agrees with everything the comptroller 

18           says --

19                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  I did.  I 

20           did.

21                  SENATOR LIU:  So you want to answer 

22           the question, Miss --

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  No, you don't.

24                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  He's the 


                                                                   340

 1           chair of the troublemakers committee in the 

 2           New York State Senate, I see.

 3                  SENATOR LIU:  Well, it's been a long 

 4           day.

 5                  (Laughter.)

 6                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  You had him all 

 7           those years, but we now have him, so --

 8                  (Laughter.)

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Assembly.

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Assemblymember 

11           Reilly, Cities ranker, for five minutes.

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN REILLY:  Thank you, 

13           Mr. Chair.  Thank you, Madam Speaker, 

14           Mr. Comptroller.  

15                  So, Mr. Comptroller, I have a question 

16           about -- we had Island Shores on 

17           Staten Island, basically, as an example, was 

18           a senior residence that was closed months 

19           before, and then it became a migrant shelter 

20           with a contract roughly eight, 10 months 

21           later.  They have a history, Homes for the 

22           Homeless, of doing this.  Five years ago they 

23           did it in Manhattan, where they closed down a 

24           senior residence and then opened up within 


                                                                   341

 1           days a homeless shelter.

 2                  How do we stop the incentives where 

 3           the contracts are that lucrative that it's 

 4           more beneficial for them to relocate our 

 5           senior population for homelessness?

 6                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  I mean, I'm 

 7           not familiar with the Island Shores, but I 

 8           think there are a number of places where we 

 9           don't have the incentives in the right place.  

10           I mentioned Medicaid funding for inpatient 

11           psychiatric beds.  Hospitals have been 

12           closing their inpatient psychiatric units 

13           because the Medicaid reimbursement rate is 

14           not good enough.  And they close those units 

15           and do something else with the beds when we 

16           urgently need it.

17                  So I guess I don't know the details 

18           here.  You would want the senior program to 

19           have adequate reimbursement that it could 

20           provide the revenues that would be needed to 

21           operate that program.  I mean --

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN REILLY:  It just seems 

23           like a pattern, especially -- you know, we 

24           talk -- when we relate this to like housing, 


                                                                   342

 1           right, we talk about bad actors, like the bad 

 2           landlords and bad tenants or whatever we call 

 3           them.  Right?  What about the bad actors in 

 4           the not-for-profit organizations that are 

 5           truly driven by the high incentive of making 

 6           money off of converting and moving from that 

 7           senior center -- senior residence?

 8                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  I mean, 

 9           again, I don't -- I can't speak to this 

10           individual case.  There's no doubt that one 

11           challenge of the surge of asylum-seekers is 

12           that the combination of the obligation to 

13           provide people the right to seek asylum with 

14           the city's right to shelter, like the city's 

15           facing a law here, you know --

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN REILLY:  Well, the city 

17           had the opportunity -- I spoke to the mayor 

18           earlier today and I asked him a question.  

19           The city had the opportunity, because of the 

20           Staten Island case that was decided and right 

21           to shelter was addressed -- they immediately 

22           appealed, the city, and then filed a right to 

23           shelter case in Manhattan.  

24                  So it doesn't -- you know, they had 


                                                                   343

 1           the opportunity to -- based on the judge's 

 2           decision that revamped a little bit of right 

 3           to shelter, gave them an out on it.  They 

 4           chose not to take it, the city.  Are you 

 5           aware of that?

 6                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  That's not 

 7           how I understand the legal proceedings.  

 8           So -- that's not how I understand them.

 9                  ASSEMBLYMAN REILLY:  Okay, fair 

10           enough.  Fair enough.

11                  Madam Speaker.

12                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  

13           Assemblyman.

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN REILLY:  Currently in the 

15           news with the assault on police officers and 

16           the incident that happened in Manhattan and 

17           over the next several days, one of the 

18           questions that I asked the mayor today was 

19           about the cooperation with federal 

20           immigration agencies and the New York City 

21           law.  I actually specifically asked him about 

22           if he would do an executive order that would 

23           allow, when a asylum seeker is arrested for a 

24           violent crime, that they notify federal 


                                                                   344

 1           authorities.  And remember, this isn't 

 2           targeting all migrants and asylum-seekers.  

 3           This is for those that commit those serious 

 4           crimes.

 5                  Would you be open to revisiting the 

 6           sanctuary city law and the notification 

 7           between law enforcement with federal agencies 

 8           when it comes to those serious felonies.

 9                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  Well, 

10           thank you for the question.  From what I 

11           understand, the sanctuary city laws -- 

12           sanctuary city just means welcoming to 

13           immigrants.  It has no uniform definition in 

14           the law per se.  So any crime committed by 

15           anyone should be adjudicated properly from A 

16           to Z, whether it's an immigrant or a 

17           non-immigrant.  

18                  In our estimation in the council, 

19           those that commit crimes should be held 

20           accountable for those crimes.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN REILLY:  So would you -- 

22           so would the cooperation between the NYPD, 

23           Department of Corrections, the court system 

24           notifying federal agencies like ICE when 


                                                                   345

 1           those individuals commit those serious 

 2           crimes -- they're prevented right now.  And 

 3           that's been on the books for years, even when 

 4           I was at the NYPD. 

 5                  Would you be open to considering 

 6           reopening that and looking at ways that we 

 7           can streamline that communication for the 

 8           most heinous crimes?

 9                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  I think 

10           that the council would be open to 

11           conversations and collaborating when it comes 

12           to the safety of New Yorkers at any time.

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN REILLY:  Thank you.

14                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

15                  Senator Weik.

16                  SENATOR WEIK:  Thank you.

17                  And thank you for being here today.  I 

18           appreciate your testimony.

19                  But I'm a little confused.  I'm 

20           listening, and your testimony clearly states 

21           that you can't afford the migrant crisis, yet 

22           you continue to welcome them.  And I've been 

23           listening to you have many, many financial 

24           asks on the state and the federal government, 


                                                                   346

 1           yet you have $53 million in prepaid credit 

 2           cards that you're giving migrants.  

 3                  Who's paying that?  Where's the money 

 4           coming from?

 5                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  I guess a few 

 6           things I'll say here.

 7                  I think in the long-term it will be 

 8           extremely beneficial for the City of 

 9           New York.  And I think if other 

10           municipalities and jurisdictions in New York 

11           State welcome people, it will be extremely 

12           economically beneficial for them.  All the 

13           evidence shows that when immigrants come, 

14           your economy generally grows and flourishes.

15                  We do have the short-term challenge of 

16           providing shelter and helping people --

17                  SENATOR WEIK:  So I'm sorry, just for 

18           the sake of time, because I have more 

19           questions -- 

20                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Where does 

21           the $53 million come from?

22                  SENATOR WEIK:  -- where is that money 

23           coming from?

24                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  From the City 


                                                                   347

 1           of New York.  Because the mayor is asking the 

 2           question -- rather than provide institutional 

 3           food, a lot of which gets wasted, would it 

 4           work to give people prepaid debit cards.  

 5           It's a small pilot program to see if it 

 6           works.

 7                  SENATOR WEIK:  So it's coming out of 

 8           the taxpayer's dollars, yes or no?

 9                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Of course.

10                  SENATOR WEIK:  Yes, of course.

11                  Okay.  And just a yes or no question, 

12           the congestion pricing.  Do you support it?

13                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  I do.

14                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  Do I 

15           support congestion pricing?

16                  SENATOR WEIK:  Uh-huh.

17                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  That's a 

18           loaded question for Queens.

19                  SENATOR WEIK:  It's just a yes or a no 

20           question.

21                  (Laughter.)

22                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  It's a 

23           loaded question for Queens.

24                  SENATOR WEIK:  So I'll take that as a 


                                                                   348

 1           yes?  

 2                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  You can 

 3           take it as it's a loaded question for Queens.  

 4           It's a -- it's a --

 5                  SENATOR WEIK:  Okay.

 6                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  We're 

 7           still -- we're still checking it out and 

 8           trying to figure it out.

 9                  SENATOR WEIK:  So with that in mind, 

10           I'm just curious -- and the cost of trains of 

11           course increasing, how do you envision 

12           New York City residents getting around town?

13                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Most -- the 

14           biggest way New York City residents get 

15           around town is by the subways and buses, 

16           which need investment, which is where the 

17           congestion pricing resources will go.

18                  SENATOR WEIK:  And how do you 

19           recommend they afford that?  We're talking 

20           about not the millionaires or the migrants 

21           who are getting --

22                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Well, if 

23           you're taking the subways or the buses, you 

24           won't pay the congestion charge.  And if your 


                                                                   349

 1           subways and buses get where you're going 

 2           faster, you'll be grateful for investment in 

 3           them.  We all want to keep the fares down.  

 4           That money doesn't come from the --

 5                  SENATOR WEIK:  The fares are rising, 

 6           correct?  Fares are rising?

 7                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  They rarely 

 8           go down.

 9                  SENATOR WEIK:  Right.  So they're 

10           rising, we have congestion pricing.  How do 

11           you suggest -- or what do you envision being 

12           the solution for the average New York City 

13           resident to get around town affordably?

14                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Well, here's 

15           what I'd love, if Albany could reach an 

16           affordable housing deal to help bring down 

17           the cost of housing --

18                  SENATOR WEIK:  Is that how come you 

19           asked for more money?

20                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  If Albany 

21           could provide the resources that help us have 

22           3-K or reduced childcare for our kids, if 

23           Albany could help make sure we're able to 

24           reduce energy costs, then it would be a lot 


                                                                   350

 1           easier for working New Yorkers to live in 

 2           New York City.

 3                  SENATOR WEIK:  It's like you want 

 4           Albany to run New York City financially.

 5                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  The housing 

 6           deal I don't think will cost you that much to 

 7           enable us to build more housing and protect 

 8           tenants.

 9                  SENATOR WEIK:  But that doesn't answer 

10           any of my questions about commuting around 

11           New York City.

12                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  No, I think I 

13           said it did.  We'll put the congestion 

14           pricing dollars in the subways and buses, 

15           which is by far the most affordable way to 

16           get around, way less than driving.

17                  SENATOR WEIK:  Thank you.

18                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Thank you.

19                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

20                  Assembly.

21                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Assemblyman Ra.

22                  (Reaction; general welcome.)

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Nobody noticed.

24                  (Overtalk; laughter.)


                                                                   351

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Ways and Means 

 2           Chair Helene Weinstein.  

 3                  (Applause.)

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  The claps don't 

 5           get you any more money, just so you know.

 6                  (Laughter.)

 7                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  We only have 

 8           paper cups.  We don't have tin cups out here 

 9           to ask, so --

10                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Assemblyman Ra.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you.  And 

12           welcome back, Chair Weinstein.  Good to have 

13           you.

14                  Nothing against Fred; it was nice 

15           having Fred over here for a few hours.

16                  (Laughter.)

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Glad to have you 

18           back.

19                  I want to go back, Comptroller, to the 

20           procurement issue that was raised earlier.  I 

21           know you mentioned that particular contract, 

22           and I don't know exactly what the 

23           circumstances were.  I know there was kind of 

24           a denial of that that was issued, but my 


                                                                   352

 1           understanding was that the mayor was able to 

 2           still follow through with the contract.  

 3                  And since -- you know, last year we 

 4           originally allocated a billion dollars; our 

 5           financial plan now reflects that at about 

 6           1.9 billion.  We have a proposal in this 

 7           budget for another 2.4.  So my question is, 

 8           do we need to, as we're doing that, perhaps 

 9           consider measures to ensure that there is 

10           oversight of these contracts when they're 

11           being given out?

12                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  We take the 

13           contract oversight very seriously.  That's 

14           part of why we revoked the blanket prior 

15           approval.  

16                  So we are doing more, you know, 

17           individual reviews on every emergency 

18           procurement, and we don't -- you know, 

19           sometimes we deny emergency procurement.  

20           That just means it has to go through the 

21           normal bidding method so that you make sure 

22           you're getting price competition and 

23           contractors with integrity.  So that's why we 

24           did that, and I think it was, you know, kind 


                                                                   353

 1           of a wise -- we're putting out now quarterly 

 2           reports on what all the contracts were.  

 3           We've got audits underway on several of those 

 4           contracts in realtime.  So we'll be glad to 

 5           keep providing them to you.  

 6                  You know, if the state believes 

 7           additional oversight is needed on resources 

 8           it provides to the city, we respect your 

 9           authority to get it.  But we're certainly in 

10           our office doing as much as we can to make 

11           sure you've got the transparency that you 

12           need.

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  And as you're looking 

14           at these contracts, I think one of the things 

15           that -- I think there were a couple of things 

16           that were eye-opening about that particular 

17           contract, one of which was obviously the 

18           inexperience of the operator with regard to 

19           these types of services.  But also just -- it 

20           seemed like the amount that they were seeking 

21           to benefit financially from it was kind of an 

22           eye-opening amount as well.

23                  So I assume those are the types of 

24           things you're looking at as you're going 


                                                                   354

 1           through these contracts?

 2                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Yes.  

 3                  And another example from that contract 

 4           is that they get $170 a night per hotel room 

 5           regardless of the cost of the actual hotel 

 6           room.  So if they can find hotel rooms that 

 7           rent for less, they get to keep the 

 8           difference.  So is that an incentive for them 

 9           to look everywhere in the state that they can 

10           to find the cheapest hotel rooms?  I mean, 

11           financially it functions like that. 

12                  You know, do they need a percentage 

13           above what the cost of the hotel room is to 

14           provide that service?  Sure.  But we should 

15           structure our contracts in ways that, you 

16           know, are the most cost-effective and provide 

17           the wisest incentives.

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  And then just going 

19           more generally to the city's budget, 

20           obviously we've had a lot of conversations 

21           around the impact of the migrant crisis and 

22           what it's costing the city and how that has 

23           impacted other services.  

24                  I think the city obviously has been 


                                                                   355

 1           dealing with something not that unlike what 

 2           we're dealing with at the state level in 

 3           terms of, you know, we had all this 

 4           pandemic-era aid and, you know, I would argue 

 5           perhaps that we started spending above where 

 6           our recurring revenues were going to 

 7           ultimately end up, and there's a rightsizing 

 8           that's going on.

 9                  Now, I know revenues have come in a 

10           little stronger, so some of those cuts have 

11           not been realized at this point.  But what is 

12           the outlook now if, you know, the revenues 

13           look like we're seeing them now in terms of, 

14           you know, fire services, NYPD, the other 

15           types of things that were going to be 

16           impacted by those proposed cuts?

17                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  Oh.  He's 

18           the money guy.

19                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Whichever.  I 

20           mean, I'm happy to -- if you want me to.

21                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  The impact 

22           because of the proposed cuts, from the 

23           council's perspective, is going to be 

24           significant.  We're going to continue, of 


                                                                   356

 1           course, in our capacity in oversight to do 

 2           whatever we can to get to the bottom of 

 3           whatever the reasoning behind the cuts are.  

 4                  But we are short-staffed when it comes 

 5           to city agencies right now because of cuts.  

 6           Services are not being delivered to 

 7           New Yorkers because of cuts.  We have had to 

 8           restore significant amounts of funding back 

 9           to places that have lost libraries, cultural 

10           arts systems, and a lot of other places that 

11           we actually put into the budget were taken 

12           out of the budget because of substantial 

13           cuts.

14                  So as far as the council is concerned, 

15           we're going to continue to advocate for 

16           restoration of whatever we can -- NYPD, FDNY, 

17           all of it -- DSNY -- to the best of our 

18           ability as a council.

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  All right.  Thank 

20           you, Madam Speaker.  And thank you, 

21           Mr. Comptroller.

22                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Senate.

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

24                  Senator Rhoads.


                                                                   357

 1                  SENATOR RHOADS:  Thank you so much, 

 2           Chairwoman.

 3                  And just to follow up on 

 4           Assemblyman Ra's point, where is the 

 5           rightsizing in the city's budget?  You have a 

 6           $7 billion budget deficit that's coming up 

 7           this year.  We know about budget deficits 

 8           here in Albany as well.  And by the way, to 

 9           Senator Weik's point, it's all taxpayer 

10           dollars.  Right?  No matter where it comes 

11           from.  Whether it comes from Albany, whether 

12           it comes from the City of New York, it's all 

13           taxpayer dollars.

14                  We hear about restoring services -- 

15           which we want to see happen, obviously.  But 

16           at some point in time, where is the 

17           rightsizing of the city's budget to meet its 

18           anticipated revenue?

19                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Well, first 

20           let me just correct the record.  For this 

21           year, fiscal year '24, the budget's in 

22           balance and the preliminary budget that the 

23           mayor presented for fiscal year '25 is also 

24           in balance.  So neither this year nor next 


                                                                   358

 1           year's budget has any deficit, much less 

 2           $7 billion --

 3                  SENATOR RHOADS:  If I could, just for 

 4           the sake of time, I'd like --

 5                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  For the 

 6           following fiscal year we project a $5 billion 

 7           deficit.

 8                  SENATOR RHOADS:  If I can ask --

 9                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  And a whole 

10           bunch of cuts have been made.  I was in the 

11           Flushing library on Saturday.  It's now 

12           closed on Sundays.  We've closed our 

13           libraries one weekend day when kids need 

14           them.  Unfortunately, there are a whole bunch 

15           of places that we have made significant cuts 

16           to services for New Yorkers because we're 

17           required by law to have a balanced budget, 

18           and we do.

19                  SENATOR RHOADS:  But don't we see that 

20           there's an issue with respect to the fact 

21           that the city plans this year alone on 

22           spending $4 billion on migrants?

23                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  I'm sorry, 

24           can you ask the question again?  I'm not sure 


                                                                   359

 1           I understand.

 2                  SENATOR RHOADS:  Sure.  Not a problem.

 3                  Don't we see that part of the issue 

 4           with having to cut services, part of the 

 5           reason why they're talking about cuts in the 

 6           FDNY, cuts in the NYPD, cuts in funding to 

 7           our schools, the fact that the libraries have 

 8           to be closed on Sunday -- is that not part of 

 9           the reason for that the fact that we are 

10           spending $4 billion -- the City of New York 

11           will spend $4 billion providing free housing, 

12           thousand-dollar food cards, providing free 

13           medical care, providing free education for 

14           migrants?

15                  NYC COUNCILMAN BRANNAN:  Senator, I 

16           would just say that a lot of the outyear gaps 

17           that we were seeing were there with or 

18           without the migrant crisis.  

19                  So you have to also remember that the 

20           city is grappling as well with the final 

21           sunset of COVID relief funds.  So that we had 

22           a lot of permanent programs that were set up 

23           by a prior administration that were built on 

24           temporary dollars.  So you have permanent 


                                                                   360

 1           programs with temporary dollars, we're 

 2           grappling with that as well.  

 3                  So the cuts to the police department, 

 4           the fire, everything you mentioned, all that 

 5           was restored, just as the council predicted, 

 6           when the administration acknowledged the 

 7           money that was already there.  That the money 

 8           that is sitting in the tax revenues right now 

 9           for the City of New York, those -- the 

10           restorations that you saw towards the -- last 

11           month, I guess, that the mayor did was 

12           because the administration recognized money 

13           that was already there.

14                  So all those cuts you're mentioning 

15           were never necessary in the first place, and 

16           they're not happening.

17                  SENATOR RHOADS:  I understand that for 

18           this year.  But I guess my larger concern is 

19           that there seems to be a disconnect with 

20           reality.  We're spending $4 billion on 

21           migrants.  We talk about the fact that 

22           New York City has a housing crisis, for 

23           example, right?

24                  Meanwhile, during your testimony, 


                                                                   361

 1           Madam Speaker, NYCHA has difficulty 

 2           collecting rents from 70,000 of its 

 3           residents.  Why would you want to be a 

 4           landlord in the City of New York when it is 

 5           impossible to evict a tenant who does not 

 6           pay, when limits are placed on their ability 

 7           to do all sorts of things as landlords?  Who 

 8           would want to make that investment in the 

 9           city?

10                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  Well, 

11           Senator, I don't disagree that there are 

12           several obstacles that make what you just 

13           said a reality as far as landlords and the 

14           difficulties these days.

15                  I would also say that, just like my 

16           Finance chair, Councilman Brannan just said, 

17           we were under -- we were under this water 

18           because of the pandemic, largely, beforehand, 

19           before we got to now.  So in seeing where we 

20           are right now, largely funding has come back 

21           for fiscal year 2024 and '25, and we're 

22           projecting out now deficits through '26.  

23                  So when we take a look at where we 

24           were and where we are, I think that the 


                                                                   362

 1           outlook really is more positive than negative 

 2           at this point.

 3                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  And I would 

 4           just add -- I mean, if we didn't have a right 

 5           to shelter, we would have some more money in 

 6           the city's bank account, and we would have 

 7           tens of thousands of people sleeping on the 

 8           streets of our city, as they do in 

 9           Los Angeles and Seattle and --

10                  SENATOR RHOADS:  You can always ask 

11           the Biden administration to do what they're 

12           supposed to do and take care of the problem 

13           they created.

14                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  -- Chicago.

15                  That wouldn't be better for New 

16           Yorkers.

17                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you, 

18           Senator.  Thank you, Comptroller.  Your time 

19           is up.

20                  Assembly.

21                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Assemblyman 

22           Epstein.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN EPSTEIN:  Thank you, 

24           Comptroller and Speaker.


                                                                   363

 1                  Speaker Adams, just on the NYCHA 

 2           piece, are you asking the state to try to pay 

 3           additional rent arrears in this year's 

 4           budget?  I saw your $167 million that accrued 

 5           the past several years, and 500 million -- 

 6           you know, we did give money, like you said, 

 7           last year.  Do you feel like there's 

 8           additional dollars that are needed this year 

 9           for NYCHA tenants?

10                  NYC COUNCIL CFO EDWARDS:  Yes.

11                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  Quick and 

12           easy.

13                  NYC COUNCIL CFO EDWARDS:  The 

14           money we -- the money -- 

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN EPSTEIN:  The 167, or the 

16           500 are you asking for?

17                  NYC COUNCIL CFO EDWARDS:  The 167 was 

18           the amount of the current outstanding need.  

19           And with that, it's a little -- we have over 

20           50,000 individuals, not households, that are 

21           in arrears.  And this amount has been 

22           growing.

23                  We do appreciate the funding that we 

24           were given last year, but we need more.


                                                                   364

 1                  ASSEMBLYMAN EPSTEIN:  Thank you.  

 2           Thank you.

 3                  So in the last couple of years that 

 4           we've been increasing funding to CUNY, and 

 5           we've seen over the past couple of years on 

 6           the city, even though we've been giving more 

 7           money, there have been cuts on the city level 

 8           to our CUNY program.  So I ask the 

 9           comptroller and the speaker, how do we 

10           guarantee CUNY the Foundation Aid that 

11           Senator Liu just raised earlier?  If we're 

12           going to increase giving money to the city, 

13           how do we guarantee that those won't result 

14           in cuts to services to our communities or to 

15           our public schools?

16                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  I think 

17           that from a council perspective -- and thank 

18           you for the question.  From a council 

19           perspective, we are going to continue to do 

20           whatever we can as a council to protect the 

21           funding that comes into CUNY.  CUNY is a 

22           tremendous priority for the City Council.

23                  Whatever cuts or whatever happens down 

24           the line as far as lessening what's done to 


                                                                   365

 1           CUNY is never done at the hands of the 

 2           City Council -- I never say never, but I just 

 3           did, because CUNY is such a tremendous 

 4           priority for us.  I don't know if the 

 5           comptroller wants to add to that, but the 

 6           City Council would never advocate for cuts 

 7           for CUNY.  Many of us come from CUNY.

 8                  ASSEMBLYMAN EPSTEIN:  You and me both.  

 9           Thank you.

10                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Yes.  I mean, 

11           you know, unfortunately, despite that 

12           leadership which the speaker has played 

13           during this administration, CUNY has seen, 

14           with the cuts that are now proposed in the 

15           preliminary budget, over $90 million in 

16           recurring annual cuts.

17                  We I think would welcome a kind of 

18           maintenance of effort approach:  If the 

19           state's going to put more money in, that the 

20           city doesn't cut.  

21                  And I urge folks to look at that 

22           REPAIR Act, which would provide so that, you 

23           know, Columbia and NYU, instead of receiving 

24           a $342 million annual property tax 


                                                                   366

 1           exemption -- at least, let's say, for the 

 2           dorms, which essentially function like 

 3           residential property -- would be taxed, and 

 4           those resources could be targeted to CUNY.

 5                  ASSEMBLYMAN EPSTEIN:  Well, thank you.  

 6           I know I'm out of time, but -- (no audio).

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Good afternoon.  

 8           I think I'm the last on the Senate side, just 

 9           double-checking.  Thank you all for 

10           attending.

11                  And I was sort of joking about they're 

12           couping the city since you're all up here.  

13           But I did see a large number of people here.  

14           I was like, hmm, who's at home?

15                  (Laughter.)

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  So Brad, you 

17           already answered the explanation for the 

18           capital borrowing as far as the dollar 

19           amounts that you believe are reasonable 

20           within the context of real estate values of 

21           the City of New York.  

22                  Do you think we need to clarify with 

23           you and the City Council what that money is 

24           being spent for when we decide we're going to 


                                                                   367

 1           support this ask?  Or do you feel like you 

 2           and the council have a legal role that 

 3           ensures that the people of the City of 

 4           New York agree with how $12 billion would be 

 5           borrowed and then have to be paid back?

 6                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Yeah.  I 

 7           mean, the capital budgeting process, it moves 

 8           through the same, you know, public 

 9           transparent budget process.  The council,  

10           you know, sees what's in it.  

11                  There is robust public debate.  This 

12           year I've heard from people who are pushing 

13           to make our schools more accessible.  You 

14           know, there's a whole range and -- that's not 

15           as much what people advocate for as the 

16           expense budget, but it is robust and 

17           transparent.

18                  Some of what City Hall has put forward 

19           as saying here's the need for that increase 

20           are not yet in the capital budget.  But the 

21           reality is we don't project actually hitting 

22           the limit till 2029, about five years out.  

23           So this is really paying attention to kind of 

24           that long-term outer limit.  Every year we'll 


                                                                   368

 1           make sure to -- you know, that there's good 

 2           oversight on the capital budget.

 3                  As I said, I do think we need actually 

 4           a better state of good repair assessment than 

 5           the city has.  We have an audit coming out 

 6           soon that's going to recommend some changes 

 7           at the city level to the way we do that.  And 

 8           I think we need some new city policies to 

 9           make sure we stay below that 15 percent 

10           threshold.

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  So when 

12           Senator Sepúlveda was here, he was talking 

13           about the lawsuit against the city and the 

14           property tax inequities, and I agree with 

15           that.  And you and I have had conversations 

16           about how perhaps we could improve the 

17           property tax formulas.

18                  We all talk about, though -- and the 

19           Governor in her budget proposal, even though 

20           she's a little vague on the numbers -- about 

21           creating additional housing programs that 

22           will provide tax credits and abatements from 

23           the New York City property tax for real 

24           estate in return for some formula of an 


                                                                   369

 1           X amount of affordable housing.  

 2                  And then I know that the real estate 

 3           industry is also lobbying us for a 

 4           significant tax abatement for any kind of 

 5           energy upgrades that they do.  That is also, 

 6           I think, an enormous number, potentially.

 7                  Who's looking at how much money from 

 8           property tax you, the City of New York, can 

 9           afford to give up for these things?  Even 

10           though I think we would all agree affordable 

11           housing is on the top of our list, and 

12           improved green energy is on the top of our 

13           list.  When does somebody go, Wait a second 

14           here, this will be 5 billion a year, can we 

15           actually afford to give that up?

16                  I'm just wondering whether the council 

17           and the comptroller's office have those 

18           discussions or have a role in that kind of 

19           decision-making if and when the State of 

20           New York moves forward with some of these 

21           proposals that the Governor seems to be 

22           supporting.

23                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  We do a lot 

24           of analysis.  And Francesco Brindisi, who's 


                                                                   370

 1           our executive deputy comptroller, is looking 

 2           at these things on a really regular basis.  

 3                  It's part of why we -- you know, we 

 4           raised concerns about 421-a, that it was 

 5           oversubsidizing without really attending on a 

 6           kind of deal-by-deal basis to whether there's 

 7           a good match between the affordability 

 8           benefit we're getting and the tax benefit 

 9           we're giving up.  It's why one of the things 

10           in our proposal is that on larger deals each 

11           one get underwritten, to make sure we're 

12           giving the right amount away, and not more.  

13                  We don't have power over the 

14           decision-making there, and we have not taken 

15           a look at the energy tax break that you are 

16           referring to, which I have also heard could 

17           be quite, quite expensive.

18                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Has the council 

19           taken a look at this from your perspective?

20                  NYC COUNCILMAN BRANNAN:  Thank you, 

21           Senator.  

22                  Yeah, I think it's important to -- not 

23           to divorce our housing crisis from our need 

24           for property tax reform.  And, you know, the 


                                                                   371

 1           council worked hard with the prior 

 2           administration on the blueprint for property 

 3           tax reform.  But, you know, we ultimately 

 4           need a dance partner.

 5                  But we are also -- we'd love to see 

 6           the administration put this as a priority as 

 7           well.  We're ready to go.  Many of, you know, 

 8           our colleagues -- this is a huge issue for 

 9           folks.  And if you're seeing the housing 

10           crisis fixing -- solving for the housing 

11           crisis through the lens of justice and 

12           equity, the property tax system as it exists 

13           right now is inequity hidden in plain sight.

14                  So something's got to get done, and 

15           we're ready to roll up our sleeves and work 

16           with you guys.

17                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

18                  So this will be a test, for those of 

19           us who are old enough to remember 

20           Senator Moynihan.  Any hands up in the 

21           audience?

22                  (Laughter.)

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you, I see 

24           a few hands.  Thank you.


                                                                   372

 1                  So he used to put out almost an annual 

 2           report on how much more money the State of 

 3           New York gave to Washington, D.C., than it 

 4           got back.  And I believe that in various 

 5           years comptrollers and others in the City of 

 6           New York did the same thing on how much more 

 7           we gave -- we as a New York City resident 

 8           gave Albany, versus getting back.

 9                  Are there any new numbers to work off 

10           of?  I'm just curious if anybody's looking at 

11           that.

12                  NYC EX. DEP. COMPTROLLER BRINDISI:  I 

13           am.

14                  (Inaudible; off the record.)

15                  NYC EX. DEP. COMPTROLLER BRINDISI:  I 

16           think the general sense of the balance of 

17           payment between the city and the state where, 

18           you know, the city is the economic engine, 

19           it's got a lot of jobs that are -- as part of 

20           the general business district, right, that 

21           are located in the city -- those dynamics are 

22           still very much in play.  They have not 

23           really changed significantly, even though 

24           there has been outmigration from the city to 


                                                                   373

 1           the suburbs.  Right?

 2                  So that, I think, you know, it's 

 3           something that -- although we don't have 

 4           numbers at our fingertips right now, it's 

 5           something that is still very much in play, 

 6           where the city sort of contributes to the 

 7           state budget more than it receives.

 8                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  So thank you.  I 

 9           think most of us in the Legislature believe 

10           we are elected to represent all 19.5 million 

11           New Yorkers even if our home base might or 

12           might not be New York City.  But sometimes 

13           when you sit up here in budget hearings 

14           enough time, you start to internalize, boy, 

15           all the money's going to New York City, it's 

16           always all about New York City.

17                  And I just really wanted to remind 

18           everyone that's not really true.  And in fact 

19           as you all heard, because you were all 

20           sitting here for the previous panel of 

21           upstate cities and the fact that they need 

22           more AIM -- and they do -- but we haven't 

23           given New York City AIM in years and years 

24           and years, even though we promised to put it 


                                                                   374

 1           back.  I remember, I was here.  We've cut the 

 2           formulas for administration of government 

 3           benefits and social services.  

 4                  As you talked about, I think, both the 

 5           tax intercept in relation to distressed 

 6           hospitals, does anybody have a sense of just 

 7           how much more you'd be getting from Albany if 

 8           we just hadn't done all of these inequitable 

 9           cuts to you that we didn't apply to anyone 

10           else?

11                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  It's a 

12           lot.  A lot.

13                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  We can get 

14           back to you with the details, for sure.

15                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I just think it's 

16           important to put all of that in perspective 

17           whenever we're talking about the needs of 

18           localities and what we're going to do in the 

19           state budget or not do in the state budget.

20                  And I think people haven't like added 

21           those numbers up in a while.  So I didn't 

22           really -- I wasn't trying to go stump you, I 

23           just think that would actually be good 

24           information for us to all have as we're 


                                                                   375

 1           negotiating a budget over the next month or 

 2           so.

 3                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  Thank you, 

 4           Senator.

 5                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  So I'm going to 

 6           cede back my time, and I really appreciate 

 7           your all being here today.

 8                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

 9                  We go to Assemblywoman Hyndman.

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN HYNDMAN:  Thank you, 

11           Chair Weinstein.

12                  Good afternoon.  Thank you for coming 

13           here today, all the way to Albany.

14                  I have a couple of questions.  I'm 

15           going to ask the comptroller first, and then 

16           Speaker Adams.

17                  I know -- I think -- I believe you 

18           support the increase of basement apartments 

19           around the City of New York.  Do you also 

20           support the -- raising the FAR ratio cap?  I 

21           know City Council supports it.

22                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Yes.  That 

23           would let the city then decide -- you know, I 

24           mean, it still is a city decision on where to 


                                                                   376

 1           map FAR, but that would enable the city to 

 2           have a higher one as it maps, yes.

 3                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN HYNDMAN:  I just also 

 4           wonder -- I know a lot of -- both of you, 

 5           from your testimony -- we've talked a lot 

 6           about the low-income in supports for the City 

 7           of New York.  But in the Governor's budget 

 8           she's zeroed out the HOPP program, the 

 9           housing opportunity program that helps 

10           homeowners maintain housing.  I don't know if 

11           you know that, but I would hope we could get 

12           some support in making sure that we get that 

13           back in.

14                  We haven't talked a lot about 

15           maintaining homeowners in the City of 

16           New York, because that is the population that 

17           is leaving.  I know Councilman Brannan and 

18           our districts really mirror each other, and 

19           these are the individuals that are paying the 

20           bulk of the property taxes that we use for 

21           everything in the city and the state of 

22           New York.

23                  NYC COUNCILMAN BRANNAN:  Absolutely.

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN HYNDMAN:  So please, I 


                                                                   377

 1           would really like your support on the HOPP 

 2           program.

 3                  And my last question is about mayoral 

 4           accountability.  I remember previous 

 5           comptrollers -- Betsy Gotbaum did a lot of 

 6           work and working groups and had a report when 

 7           it came to mayoral accountability.  And as 

 8           you know, that's also in the Governor's 

 9           budget where she's asked for four years.

10                  That's one policy I think the Assembly 

11           likes to remove from the budget and make it 

12           policy, standalone.  I just wanted to know 

13           where both of you stood on that.

14                  Thank you.  

15                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  You know, 

16           when I was in the council I was a long-time 

17           supporter of what we called municipal 

18           control.  You know, in which the mayor still 

19           has a lot of authority over the school 

20           system, but in which the council is a full 

21           partner.  And broadly, that is what I would 

22           like to -- what I would like to see.

23                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  For us 

24           right now, our focus hasn't been so much on 


                                                                   378

 1           that issue, it's more on maintaining and the 

 2           provision of keeping our programs together -- 

 3           our school aid, our 3-K.  That's been the 

 4           primary focus, you know, of the council.  

 5                  And the other part, we're waiting to 

 6           see what the state has to say.

 7                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN HYNDMAN:  Thank you.

 8                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  So there are no 

 9           more Senators, so we'll go to 

10           Assemblyman Weprin next.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN WEPRIN:  These are new 

12           mics, so we still have to get used to them by 

13           pushing harder.

14                  But it's great to see you all here.  I 

15           remember when I chaired the Finance Committee 

16           of the City Council and Tanisha Edwards was 

17           my counsel, I used to come up to Albany.  And 

18           one of the things that -- when Mayor 

19           Bloomberg was there, that we would come up on 

20           is making sure that we got our AIM and 

21           increased AIM a number of times.

22                  Senator Jackson brought up with the 

23           mayor about restoring AIM.  It was only 

24           supposed to be zeroed out for one year only, 


                                                                   379

 1           I think it was during Governor Cuomo's first 

 2           term, maybe it was.  And for some reason 

 3           people forgot that.  There was a commitment 

 4           it was only going to be eliminated for one 

 5           year.  

 6                  And that of course is unrestricted 

 7           funds, so even though the dollar amount might 

 8           not be as large as other dollar amounts of 

 9           aid to the city, that was a tremendous 

10           resource because it, you know, didn't have 

11           the restrictions that other aid has.

12                  And I know Senator Jackson brought it 

13           up with the mayor, and the mayor said he 

14           would support that.  Is there any talk about, 

15           you know, lobbying to restore AIM, which was 

16           only supposed to be eliminated for one year 

17           only?

18                  NYC COUNCIL CFO EDWARDS:  You raised a 

19           really good point.  We have, just like with 

20           the sales tax intercept, just like with the 

21           MTA cuts, just like with FMAP, which are 

22           generally recent cuts, AIM, that's still 

23           generally a high priority of the council 

24           because we would like that money back.  


                                                                   380

 1           Because as you've said, it's allowed us to do 

 2           whatever we want.  

 3                  But oftentimes -- you know, it 

 4           happened over a decade ago, so not that it's 

 5           less important, but just --

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN WEPRIN:  But it would be a 

 7           lot more money now.  It would have been, you 

 8           know, in the billions by now.

 9                  NYC COUNCIL CFO EDWARDS:  It's in 

10           the -- well, I think it was a little less 

11           than a billion by maybe $700 million.  But we 

12           had a lot of money.

13                  So we're still -- that's something 

14           that we have not forgotten about.  But there 

15           are sort of other recent priorities that we 

16           continue to fight for, and AIM will be one of 

17           them that we now will have a loud voice on.  

18           But unrestricted aid was huge then, and it 

19           should be now also.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN WEPRIN:  Well, I would 

21           like to support a campaign to bring it back, 

22           along with Senator Jackson, who raised it 

23           with the mayor.  So if you want to 

24           strategize on that, I'm willing to get 


                                                                   381

 1           involved.  

 2                  And I have 30 seconds left.  I just 

 3           want to put on Comptroller Lander's radar 

 4           when he mentioned the NYU tax exemption and 

 5           the Columbia tax exemption, I've had a bill 

 6           for many years, along with Senator Kavanagh 

 7           in the Senate, to eliminate Madison Square 

 8           Garden's tax exemption --

 9                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Amen.

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN WEPRIN:  -- which is a 

11           huge amount, and that's certainly much more 

12           private in their use than NYU and Columbia.

13                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  I support it.

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN WEPRIN:  Okay.  I have one 

15           second left.  

16                  (Laughter.)

17                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

18                  We go to Assemblywoman González-Rojas.

19                  (Pause.)

20                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  She stepped 

21           out, so we'll go to Assemblyman Otis.

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  Thank you.  Welcome 

23           back, Helene.

24                  So thank you all for your testimony.  


                                                                   382

 1           I want to talk about affordable housing.  And 

 2           two years ago, Comptroller Lander, you put 

 3           out a good report about the 421-a program 

 4           sort of detailing how it really wasn't 

 5           providing affordable housing to the income 

 6           ranges that we would call people in need of 

 7           affordable housing.

 8                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Yup.

 9                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  And so more 

10           broadly -- and this is a problem actually not 

11           just with 421-a, but with other kinds of 

12           affordable housing programs outside of 

13           New York City as well, where we're having 

14           programs that are dealing with folks who are 

15           sort of upper-middle-class incomes, and we're 

16           leaving out a lot of people at AMIs that are 

17           much lower.

18                  So comments about where you see that 

19           issue going.  And Madam Speaker, if you have 

20           comments on the same issue as well, you can 

21           both feed into that real dynamic.  Because we 

22           need to be providing affordable housing for a 

23           wider range of people who are working but 

24           have more moderate incomes.


                                                                   383

 1                  NYC COMPTROLLER LANDER:  Absolutely.  

 2           As you say -- and, you know, when we looked 

 3           at 421-a, the bulk of the units that have 

 4           been created in the last four years of the 

 5           program were in the outer borough, 

 6           130 percent AMI programs.  So still rental 

 7           housing, it wasn't even like a 

 8           homeownership -- it was rental housing, but 

 9           it was only affordable to the wealthiest 

10           25 percent of New York City residents.  And I 

11           just -- that didn't pass the smell test as 

12           affordable housing.  But we were still giving 

13           full tax -- 35-year tax exemptions for those 

14           developments.  

15                  And this is the kind of scrutiny we 

16           need of our affordable housing programs.  You 

17           know, I don't mind scaled incentives.  There 

18           certainly are middle-class families who, you 

19           know, can't afford to live in New York City.  

20           But we've got to focus our energy on kind of 

21           hardworking folks and really target -- I gave 

22           the example in my testimony on vouchers.  You 

23           know, the mayor actually talks often about 

24           how there's just a few hundred people who 


                                                                   384

 1           cycle through, are homeless and mentally ill, 

 2           cycle through Rikers, cycle through the 

 3           hospitals.  

 4                  So let's focus, you know, our vouchers 

 5           to make sure those folks get off the street, 

 6           stop spending so much money on jails and 

 7           hospitals -- and target our affordability 

 8           programs to the working families who really 

 9           need them.

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  Thank you.

11                  Madam Speaker?

12                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  Yes, and 

13           thank you.  I just believe that a program to 

14           incentivize affordable housing is absolutely 

15           imperative.  Anything that we can do to get 

16           there, we need to use all available tools 

17           that we can possibly have to help deliver 

18           affordable housing at all of the levels that 

19           New Yorkers need -- I think that we need to 

20           do that and do it together.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  Thank you very 

22           much.  Thank you both for your good work.

23                  NYC COUNCIL SPEAKER ADAMS:  Thank you.

24                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.


                                                                   385

 1                  Thank you all for being here.  Sorry I 

 2           missed the beginning of your presentations, 

 3           but I did see the written remarks.  So thank 

 4           you all for being up here today, and we're 

 5           going to move on to our panels of -- Panel C.  

 6           I'll just give you a few minutes to gather 

 7           your belongings.  

 8                  Thank you, Brad.

 9                  So our Panel C is going to be the 

10           New York State Conference of Mayors, 

11           Executive Director Barbara Van Epps; New York 

12           State Association of Counties, NYSAC, 

13           Executive Director Steven Acquario; and 

14           Association of Towns of the State of 

15           New York, Gerry Geist, executive director.

16                  We'll just take a few minutes as 

17           people stretch their legs and say hello and 

18           goodbye.

19                  (Pause.)

20                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  So we are ready 

21           to begin, thank you.  We can go in the order 

22           that we announced, Barbara first.  

23                  MS. VAN EPPS:  Sure.  Can you hear me?   

24                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  The ring needs 


                                                                   386

 1           to turn green.  Now -- you're green now, so 

 2           you should be okay.  

 3                  MS. VAN EPPS:  Okay, great.  Yes, 

 4           there it is.  

 5                  Assemblymember Weinstein, Senator 

 6           Krueger -- wherever she is -- and 

 7           distinguished members of the State 

 8           Legislature, thank you so much for giving me 

 9           the opportunity to testify in front of you on 

10           behalf of the 575 cities and villages that 

11           are members of NYCOM.  

12                  This is my first time testifying 

13           before you as the executive director, but I 

14           have worked with many of you over the years 

15           on a variety of issues, and I look forward to 

16           continuing to do that with those I have 

17           previously worked with and the rest of you 

18           going forward.  

19                  So you have my written testimony.  I'm 

20           not going to read from that.  I just want to 

21           highlight a few issues.  

22                  I'm sure you'll be shocked to see that 

23           the first issue in our testimony was AIM 

24           funding.  And I know you've spent a lot of 


                                                                   387

 1           time talking about AIM funding.  You've 

 2           already heard from all of the city mayors 

 3           earlier about AIM funding, but I just want to 

 4           echo some of their remarks.  As I think many 

 5           of them stated, we as mayors have the same 

 6           goals as the Governor in terms of both -- two 

 7           of the biggest goals being affordability and 

 8           public safety.  

 9                  We are on the frontlines of doing 

10           that.  But as the costs of everything 

11           continue to go up, particularly public 

12           safety, and every single one of our 

13           communities have -- that's our largest cost 

14           driver.  Whether it's EMS, whether it's 

15           police, whether it's fire, every single one 

16           of our communities are feeling the pressure 

17           of the rising costs as a result of public 

18           safety.  

19                  And we also have a tax cap to contend 

20           with.  But the only way we can address these 

21           issues, particularly the public safety 

22           issues, are by raising taxes.  We don't have 

23           AIM funding to help us fill those gaps.  It 

24           translates directly into property tax 


                                                                   388

 1           increases and putting an increasing burden on 

 2           our taxpayers.  

 3                  So I know we talked a lot about this 

 4           today, and I will say I don't know what the 

 5           answer is either.  We talked to 

 6           Assemblymember Thiele and Senator Martinez, 

 7           who were both at our conference yesterday, 

 8           about -- you have always been very generous 

 9           to us in your one-house budgets when it comes 

10           to AIM funding.  And one of the questions we 

11           had asked the two who came to our meeting 

12           yesterday was how do we -- what do we do to 

13           help you get this over the finish line?  

14                  We've talked about changing the name.  

15           We actually did change the name a couple of 

16           years ago; we called it the Municipal 

17           Investment Initiative, the MII.  We've talked 

18           about different criteria to put into the 

19           formula, which has been not withstood for 

20           several years.  We even talked about tying 

21           strings to how we use the money.  And maybe 

22           that's public safety, and maybe that's 

23           housing, but we are open to any and all 

24           suggestions.  


                                                                   389

 1                  We don't have to call it AIM anymore, 

 2           we just want to try to get something for our 

 3           communities.  Since it has been 15 years, our 

 4           costs are rising -- you know, the cost of 

 5           everything is going up.  We just need some 

 6           way to figure out how we plug this hole and 

 7           how we get this across the finish line.  

 8                  Mayor Sheehan pointed out that the 

 9           cost of living, she said, was in the 

10           30 percent range.  I think we did the 

11           adjustment.  It's closer to like 43 percent, 

12           based on the numbers we have.  That would 

13           call for a much bigger number than you are 

14           probably able to -- or the state is able to 

15           provide for us.  

16                  But as Mayor Sheehan and the other 

17           mayors said, we aren't looking for the full 

18           $309 million.  We'll take a 10 to 15 percent 

19           increase and maybe tie it to something so we 

20           can have something that we can rely on going 

21           forward.  

22                  Infrastructure obviously continues to 

23           be a huge issue -- even more so recently with 

24           the increased focus on housing, especially 


                                                                   390

 1           after last year.  Generally speaking, the 

 2           state has been good to us in terms of 

 3           infrastructure.  We've gotten the increases 

 4           in transportation funding over the years.  

 5           But unfortunately, our needs continue to far 

 6           outpace the resources we have available.  It 

 7           was already raised before.  

 8                  We also have these ADA requirements 

 9           for curb ramps that we talked about earlier.  

10           That is eating up more and more of our CHIPS 

11           allocations.  We have some communities that 

12           say those requirements alone are eating up 

13           their entire CHIPS allocation.  

14                  So we have concerns about needing more 

15           transportation funding, but even greater 

16           concerns about the cuts that are in the 

17           Governor's budget, the 60 million reduction 

18           to the CHIPS program and the 40 million to 

19           the Touring Routes program.  We have concerns 

20           about that, obviously.  We're hoping that we 

21           can get the Legislature to restore those 

22           cuts, but also increase those funding 

23           streams.  Because other than the Touring 

24           Routes, all of those other transportation 


                                                                   391

 1           programs that you've been funding go to every 

 2           single community.  We all benefit from that.  

 3                  In terms of water and sewer 

 4           infrastructure, that's another area where you 

 5           have been very generous to us.  Again, our 

 6           members find that money difficult to get 

 7           their hands on because most of it comes 

 8           through grants and loans and you have to 

 9           apply for those.  So we have asked for the 

10           last several years for a dedicated funding 

11           stream similar to CHIPS.  

12                  CHIPS is popular because it's 

13           reliable, it's based on a formula.  So we'd 

14           like to see a funding stream similar to that 

15           to go to communities that have public water 

16           and sewer systems so they can count on that 

17           money for maintenance and upgrades, so they 

18           don't have to wait for an emergency to try to 

19           get their hands on grant money.  So that's 

20           been something that's been very important to 

21           us.  

22                  We also think with, again, the 

23           increased pressure on housing, that will help 

24           in that regard as well, because 


                                                                   392

 1           infrastructure is a big issue.  It's a big 

 2           barrier when it comes to expanding housing.  

 3           So if we have the money to maintain and 

 4           upkeep that infrastructure, that would be 

 5           very helpful to us.  

 6                  And I just have to say, in speaking of 

 7           housing, we have come a long, long way in a 

 8           year.  I'm very glad I wasn't the executive 

 9           director last year when we were dealing with 

10           the housing compact, because you may recall 

11           some of our members were a little upset by 

12           that.  So we appreciate all the efforts you 

13           did to recognize that, you know, zoning needs 

14           to be a local issue, a local choice.  

15                  We think the pro-housing communities 

16           were happy to see that the Governor has 

17           turned her attention to a more 

18           incentive-based, roundup, you know, local 

19           option program when it comes to housing.  We 

20           have a lot of mayors who are out there and 

21           really want to do the right thing, and we 

22           think with some, you know, more 

23           enticements -- more money for infrastructure, 

24           more flexibility, removing some of those 


                                                                   393

 1           barriers -- that we are definitely heading in 

 2           the right direction.  

 3                  Illegal cannabis sales.  We have some 

 4           real concerns about that.  With the rollout 

 5           taking as long as it did at the state level, 

 6           there's obviously a lot more illegal cannabis 

 7           and illegal cannabis shops popping up around 

 8           in our communities.  

 9                  We were happy to see that the Governor 

10           put language in there that would not only 

11           strengthen the state's ability to combat 

12           those illegal sales, but also give local 

13           government the tools to do that.  We think 

14           that's very important.  That's something I 

15           know a lot of our mayors are going to be 

16           interested in taking advantage of.  

17                  And then the last thing I'll say is on 

18           the issues of mental health, homelessness, 

19           and substance use issues.  That has obviously 

20           become a much, much bigger issue for our 

21           communities, mostly as a result -- it was 

22           always an issue, but it's gotten 10 times 

23           worse, a lot worse since the pandemic.  

24                  From our perspective, one of the 


                                                                   394

 1           biggest challenges is a lot of these issues 

 2           are concentrated in cities, but a lot of the 

 3           resources are concentrated in the counties.  

 4           And that's just by function of the fact that 

 5           the counties are the social services arm of 

 6           the state.  

 7                  So we just want to see a little more 

 8           coordination there -- more of the money 

 9           flowing to cities; more, you know, creative 

10           ways of responding to this.  A lot of times 

11           it's our police officers that are responding 

12           at 2:00 in the morning because the county 

13           offices closed at 5:00, and how can we work 

14           together to make it so that the right people 

15           are there to deal with these folks and get 

16           them the right services and the right 

17           shelters that they need.  

18                  So we just want to have more of a 

19           collaboration, a seat at the table to talk 

20           about how we best deal with these issues.  

21                  So with that, I will cede my last 

22           two minutes to my colleagues.

23                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Steve?

24                  MR. ACQUARIO:  Thank you.  Just 


                                                                   395

 1           waiting for the green light to come on.  

 2                  Thank you.  My name is Steven 

 3           Acquario.  I'm the executive director of the 

 4           New York Association of Counties, or NYSAC, 

 5           as it's known.  

 6                  NYSAC is a 100-year municipal 

 7           association.  It was formed in 1925 by county 

 8           officials for county officials and provides 

 9           education, research, advocacy in a 

10           government-to-government collaboration with 

11           the state.  

12                  And it's wonderful to be with you 

13           here.  Thank you for the invitation to come 

14           here to report on the counties of New York -- 

15           the 57 counties and the City of New York, 

16           with its five boroughs, our members of the 

17           association.  

18                  I want to thank our Local Government 

19           chairs, Monica Martinez in the Senate, 

20           Fred Thiele in the Assembly; the ranking 

21           members, Senator Rhoads and Ari Brown.  I 

22           extend birthday wishes to Ari Brown.  There's 

23           nothing better than sitting through fiscal 

24           testimony on our birthday.  So happy 


                                                                   396

 1           birthday.  

 2                  (Laughter; inaudible response from 

 3           Assemblyman Brown.) 

 4                  MR. ACQUARIO:  Happy birthday.  

 5                  And thank you to the fiscal chairs, 

 6           Senator Krueger, Assemblywoman Weinstein.  

 7           It's wonderful to be with you here again.  

 8                  The counties of New York are evolving.  

 9           We've been here since the 1600s.  The late 

10           1600s, specifically, the counties were 

11           formed; there were 12 of them.  And they were 

12           a product of the King of England, and the 

13           names of those counties -- Rockland, Suffolk, 

14           and Nassau, the Boroughs of the City of 

15           New York, Dutchess, Ulster -- regal counties.  

16           They all come from the King of England.  

17                  But we've evolved and have different 

18           functions over the years as we've come into 

19           2024.  

20                  We are a general-purpose local 

21           government.  That's why you hear counties 

22           complaining all the time.  They want to use 

23           local resources for local programs and to 

24           address the needs in their community -- like 


                                                                   397

 1           the towns, the cities, and the villages.  

 2                  But we've become the administrative 

 3           arm of the State of New York since the 1960s, 

 4           providing every single service that the State 

 5           of New York pays for or partially pays for, 

 6           we have to deliver.  So we are your service 

 7           delivery agent.  Whether you're in the City 

 8           of New York, the County of Westchester, the 

 9           County of Suffolk, the County of Warren, we 

10           are delivering the state services.  

11                  So that's why there's a lot of tension 

12           going back and forth between counties and the 

13           state, because we want to use local resources 

14           for local purposes.  

15                  A couple of items -- as Barb 

16           mentioned, I won't go through our testimony.  

17           We have submitted it for you.  I just want to 

18           flag a few things.  

19                  One is on the short-term rentals:  

20           Airbnbs, your VRBOs.  This has taken us many, 

21           many, many years to work with governors to 

22           convince the state to allow sales tax to be 

23           collected.  What's collected now on a 

24           voluntary basis through certain companies is 


                                                                   398

 1           an occupancy tax.  

 2                  So this legislation that 

 3           Governor Hochul has introduced in this budget 

 4           would modernize the state sales tax code to 

 5           include the vacation rental industry.  These 

 6           changes would ensure short-term rentals are 

 7           treated the same as any other temporary 

 8           lodging, such as a hotel or an inn.  

 9                  So we're very supportive of that.  We 

10           thank the Governor.  We ask for your 

11           consideration in modernizing these 

12           short-term-rental sales tax laws.  

13                  In rem foreclosure, the United States 

14           Supreme Court ruled last year that surplus -- 

15           any surplus from a foreclosed property must 

16           be returned to the homeowner.  Okay.  That's 

17           the law of the land.  The Legislature 

18           introduced a bill that you passed last year 

19           to do a moratorium.  The Governor has now 

20           introduced language in the budget this year 

21           that we do strongly support.  

22                  It's a very complex issue on 

23           foreclosure.  Nobody wants to foreclose on 

24           anyone's property for failure to pay taxes.  


                                                                   399

 1           And the surplus that's generated on any tax 

 2           foreclosure will be returned to any prior 

 3           owner.  

 4                  It's very complicated to find that 

 5           owner and make sure legally it goes to the 

 6           proper owner and that there's no disputes 

 7           amongst family members or things of that 

 8           nature.  But administrative costs, the 

 9           penalties, all of these things are factored 

10           into the Governor's language.  So we very 

11           much support how the Governor is treating 

12           this issue and ask for your consideration on 

13           in rem foreclosure.  

14                  I'd like to ask you for $625 million, 

15           because that's the amount of money that was 

16           intercepted by the federal Medicaid program 

17           last year in 2023.  This was funds that we 

18           worked with United States Senate Majority 

19           Leader Schumer, dedicated for county 

20           governments -- it was intercepted by the 

21           state.  That's $625 million that we received 

22           in 2023, including the City of New York, that 

23           we do not receive today.  

24                  So I would like that to be discussed 


                                                                   400

 1           and considered in your deliberations.  These 

 2           are fundings that go for our most vulnerable 

 3           populations such as older Americans, our 

 4           workforce housing, children and special 

 5           healthcare needs, disabled veterans, and 

 6           counsel for disadvantaged communities.  We 

 7           urge the Legislature to continue those 

 8           discussions on the lost Medicaid monies.  

 9                  Rescuing EMS.  We continue to have a 

10           crisis in our volunteer fire, emergency 

11           medical system, advanced lifesaving systems, 

12           basic life systems in our ambulance systems, 

13           the amount of time it takes to get an 

14           ambulance to pick somebody up, whether you're 

15           in rural Warren County or urban 

16           Suffolk County.  There's an issue with 

17           recruitment, retention, how do we keep these 

18           systems running.  

19                  EMS is not traditionally a county 

20           function, and we do not want it to become a 

21           county function.  But in certain 

22           circumstances some counties have come 

23           forward -- Wayne County, Wyoming County, 

24           Greene County, Niagara County, 


                                                                   401

 1           Montgomery County, and a growing list of 

 2           others -- that need some reform, that need a 

 3           taxing district to help offset a property tax 

 4           impact to provide these services, working in 

 5           conjunction with our towns.  

 6                  So working very closely with the 

 7           EMS community, our towns, villages, and 

 8           cities, we think the package of legislation 

 9           that's been introduced by the Governor is a 

10           good start to have this discussion.  So we 

11           ask for your support in that regard.  

12                  Under some judicial-related issues, 

13           under indigent legal services -- again, a 

14           program that is the state's constitutional 

15           responsibility that they mandate the counties 

16           of New York and the City of New York provide.  

17           The state is sweeping 120 million out of the 

18           Office of Indigent Legal Services and 

19           depositing that into the General Fund.  

20                  We would ask that you use those funds 

21           to pay for the increases to the counties last 

22           year of 90 million for the increased hourly 

23           rates.  

24                  We also urge caution on the expansion 


                                                                   402

 1           of Supreme Court judges.  We oppose this 

 2           issue of expanding the number of 

 3           Supreme Court judges unless there's a fiscal 

 4           note tied to it.  The counties are 

 5           responsible for the capital costs of the 

 6           chambers and the courts to house the Supreme 

 7           Court judges.  We estimate it to be a 

 8           $240 million cost shift to the counties.  

 9                  So we would ask that that not be 

10           approved unless there's a fiscal tie to that 

11           and a plan, through the Office of Court 

12           Administration, on how to house these judges.  

13                  We support, as Barbara mentioned, the 

14           CHIPS funding for our local governments.  

15           It's a program that works very well amongst 

16           the towns, cities, counties, and villages.  

17           You have increased that; last year you added 

18           an extra 100 million.  We strongly support 

19           the restoration of those funds for our towns, 

20           counties, cities and villages in the CHIPS 

21           program.  

22                  Lastly, many counties have submitted 

23           shared-services programs in 2023.  The 

24           Governor is eliminating this program in this 


                                                                   403

 1           year's budget.  We would ask that -- we do 

 2           support the sunset of the program, but we ask 

 3           for your consideration:  18 counties 

 4           submitted a shared services with towns, 

 5           cities, villages and counties last year in 

 6           2023, and we would ask that those projects 

 7           that were previously submitted be given an 

 8           opportunity to receive funding.  

 9                  Thank you very much again for the 

10           invitation to be here today.  

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

12                  Who is next?   

13                  MR. GEIST:  Yes, good afternoon, 

14           Chairwoman Krueger and chairs of the local 

15           finance committee Fred Thiele and 

16           Senator Martinez.  Thank you.  And all the 

17           other members of the Legislature who are 

18           here, thank you on behalf of the Association 

19           of Towns, 933 towns across the state.  Thank 

20           you for allowing us to comment on the 

21           Governor's budget and how towns are fixed 

22           this year in 2024.  

23                  You know, this is going to be my last 

24           experience before you; I'm retiring on 


                                                                   404

 1           May 1st.  And nothing would please me better 

 2           than to tell my members, all 933, that we're 

 3           getting an AIM increase for the first time 

 4           since I've been in this chair.  

 5                  As my colleagues have mentioned, AIM 

 6           is so significant.  It represents a true 

 7           partnership with the State of New York and 

 8           its towns, villages, and cities.  And we 

 9           don't quite understand why the Governor's 

10           office has resisted.  

11                  We've tried -- as my colleague 

12           Barbara Van Epps has mentioned -- we tried to 

13           rename it, we tried to come up with different 

14           alternatives, we tried to do anything to make 

15           it more appealable.  

16                  You know, the thing is, in the state 

17           of the entire budget it's not a lot of 

18           dollars.  However, it's so significant to my 

19           members.  You know, we're all dealing with 

20           living under the construct of the tax cap.  

21           We have increased costs, increased service 

22           costs, salaries, pension, insurance, cost of 

23           fuel.  The cost of everything is going up, 

24           and we don't have an increase in 15 years.  


                                                                   405

 1                  And we do so much every day in terms 

 2           of public safety, public resources, 

 3           libraries, recreation.  We do so much every 

 4           day for our constituents.  This extra money 

 5           would make a significant difference.  

 6                  Everyone always says, Well, what would 

 7           an extra $20,000 mean to a town?  It could 

 8           mean a lot of things.  It could mean hiring a 

 9           grant writer so they could become, you know, 

10           part of the housing, the pro-housing 

11           community.  It could be a grant writer to get 

12           more funding for highway equipment.  It could 

13           be adding some more kids for the summer in 

14           the rec programs, or it could be doing more 

15           services in a library.  

16                  Money like this, to be given to our 

17           towns, makes a significant difference.  And I 

18           have to thank the two houses here, the 

19           Assembly and the Senate, for everything 

20           they've done for towns and continue to do so.  

21           You've been a tremendous advocate for us, and 

22           I hope that you can do something in your 

23           discussions with the second floor later this 

24           year to push this across.  It would mean a 


                                                                   406

 1           lot to me and my towns.  

 2                  Secondly, we've all heard about CHIPS.  

 3           And even though the Governor says it's flat, 

 4           it's really a reduction from last year 

 5           because she's cut out the monies that you 

 6           appropriated last year.  All you have to do 

 7           is travel the state from Eastern Long Island 

 8           to the top of the Adirondacks to Western 

 9           New York, and you'll see the roads need help.  

10                  And, you know, this is an interesting 

11           fact.  In our state, 85 percent of the roads 

12           throughout the towns are controlled by the 

13           towns.  And it's an incredible amount of 

14           roads and maintenance.  When I served as a 

15           town board member, what I learned was that 

16           the road maintenance review, they said the 

17           roads had to be maintained every 10 years.  

18           Well, I can tell you now it's every 20 years, 

19           because the monies have dried up.  

20                  And, you know, the school buses travel 

21           on the roads every day.  People need to get 

22           to work, to travel on the roads every day.  

23           Commerce, every day you see an Amazon truck 

24           go by.  So we need more help in roads, and we 


                                                                   407

 1           hope that you will restore those cuts and do 

 2           more.  And once again, we always appreciate 

 3           what you do for our roads and our members.  

 4                  And now I want to talk about water and 

 5           sewer infrastructure.  As was mentioned 

 6           earlier, a lot of the money through grant 

 7           programs is not good -- or able to be easily 

 8           obtained by a lot of the towns that are 

 9           smaller in size.  And my towns represent a 

10           range of difference:  There's a town of 

11           38 people -- it's the smallest one in the 

12           state -- up to almost 800,000 in Long Island.  

13           So we're all over the place geographically.  

14                  But what I can tell you is water and 

15           sewer, like a dedicated program for CHIPS, is 

16           so meaningful.  And all you have to do is 

17           pick up the newspaper or read what happened 

18           yesterday in the City of Los Angeles to know 

19           what's coming.  

20                  I have two children who live in 

21           Los Angeles.  Eight inches of rain in 

22           24 hours in downtown L.A.  Now, we all know 

23           the song "It Never Rains in Southern 

24           California," but try telling all of them 


                                                                   408

 1           yesterday what it was like out there.  

 2                  Climate change is real.  It's coming.  

 3           And there's no greater urgency for water and 

 4           sewer infrastructure and dedicated funding 

 5           for our efforts than what we saw last night 

 6           on the news.  We really need to do it, and I 

 7           urge you all to do that.  

 8                  Now, on a couple of other things.  

 9           Justice Court.  You know, the towns have been 

10           taking care of the Justice Court for years.  

11           When Governor Spitzer was governor, he did 

12           away with State Troopers prosecuting vehicle 

13           and traffic tickets, so the towns had to go 

14           out and hire prosecutors, for the most part.  

15                  They have not raised the fine money 

16           for local governments since 1997, that small 

17           portion of the V&T tickets.  So we're asking 

18           your permission to allow the Justice Court 

19           fees for small -- you know, for towns to be 

20           raised.  It doesn't come out of the state 

21           budget.  It would only be paid by the 

22           offending person.  And I think it's $12, 

23           which is the local portion.  I think we 

24           can -- let's raise it to 20 and help out the 


                                                                   409

 1           cost of running our court system so 

 2           importantly.  

 3                  We've heard about the EMS program.  

 4           The only thing -- we support the Governor's 

 5           proposal, but we don't want it to override 

 6           existing town or village EMS programs that 

 7           are already providing ambulance districts.  

 8                  In my town, because we didn't have 

 9           one, we created our own ambulance district.  

10           It works great.  So we're supportive of the 

11           new legislation, but let's not override or 

12           supersede what's already been done.  Let them 

13           work in harmony.  

14                  (Inaudible remark from Mr. Acquario.)

15                  MR. GEIST:  And I've spoken to the 

16           counties and NYCOM, we all agree on that 

17           part.  

18                  Now, the other thing we also support 

19           is on the vacation rentals.  We believe that 

20           that money should be allocated to the 

21           counties through the towns as well, the -- 

22           you know, for the legislation.  That's really 

23           important.  

24                  Interest rates on judgments.  We talk 


                                                                   410

 1           about this a lot.  It's 9 percent on a 

 2           judgment against a municipality.  We think 

 3           that should be modified and changed to be 

 4           consistent with the current market 

 5           conditions, whether it's the 1-Year Treasury 

 6           or some other reasonable Wall Street Journal 

 7           indices.  Because what happens is the longer 

 8           it takes for a matter to go on in litigation, 

 9           interest rate gets accrued from the beginning 

10           of the action.  At 9 percent, it's very 

11           costly for municipalities.  That's a real -- 

12           it's a real headache.  

13                  The other thing we would like to 

14           mention is that towns don't have the 

15           authority to regulate speeds on local roads.  

16           And where villages and cities have that 

17           authority, towns do not.  

18                  So in a best case example, in my town 

19           there's a road that's 30 miles an hour.  The 

20           road has the same name, it crosses over into 

21           the next governing entity, and it's 25.  But 

22           we can't change it without getting a report 

23           from the Department of Transportation and an 

24           act of the State Legislature.  So we would 


                                                                   411

 1           like your assistance in trying to get that -- 

 2           to get that fixed.  

 3                  And the last thing I'll say, in 

 4           wrapping up, is I want to thank each and 

 5           every one of you for your dedication and your 

 6           hard work for everybody in the State of 

 7           New York.  It's clear that what you do is not 

 8           just about your communities or who you 

 9           represent.  Each of you -- over the 

10           years I've spoken with many of you -- have 

11           always understood that you're responsible for 

12           everybody in this great state.  And I thank 

13           you for your support of towns throughout the 

14           years, and I look forward to working with you 

15           until I retire.  

16                  Thanks so much.  

17                  (Laughter.)   

18                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

19                  We go to the chair of our Local 

20           Governments, Assemblyman Thiele.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Good afternoon to 

22           all of you.  It's a pleasure to see you all, 

23           and it's been, you know, great to work with 

24           all of you through the last many years.  


                                                                   412

 1                  And Barbara, we've gotten to know each 

 2           other but it's your first time in the actual 

 3           seat there, so you did a great job and it was 

 4           a pleasure to hear from all of you.

 5                  I'm going to ask you all a question 

 6           that I couldn't get the mayors to answer 

 7           earlier, and that had to do with -- not very 

 8           much, anyway.  And I couldn't get them to 

 9           really talk about the changes post-pandemic 

10           that we made in the Open Meetings Law that 

11           allows for hybrid meetings and remote 

12           participation by the public but also, in 

13           limited circumstances, also by members of 

14           public bodies.

15                  When we did that, it was new, it was 

16           different.  You know, we were still getting 

17           used to the technology, and that's why it has 

18           a sunset date in it that comes up this year.  

19           The Governor has proposed to extend it.  You 

20           know, my question is really how has that 

21           worked out so far?  Are there any changes 

22           that you would recommend based on the 

23           experience that your members have had in this 

24           particular area?


                                                                   413

 1                  MR. GEIST:  Thank you for that 

 2           question.  

 3                  We support the extension of the video 

 4           conferencing.  Our data and our information, 

 5           from what we gather, is that people don't 

 6           abuse it and that it's an opportunity to 

 7           continue government in a modern way and that 

 8           it does not violate the principles of good 

 9           government.  And we support that proposition.

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Thank you.

11                  Barbara?

12                  (Pause.)

13                  MS. VAN EPPS:  I'm having trouble with 

14           the microphone, folks, I'm sorry.

15                  I echo Gerry's remarks.  We 

16           certainly -- what we're hearing from our 

17           members, it's increasing public 

18           participation, it's increasing access.  I 

19           certainly would say that we support an 

20           extender, if not making it permanent, because 

21           I think this is the way of the world now.  I 

22           think they're going to continue to have, you 

23           know, people who want to just be in their 

24           homes and participate that way.


                                                                   414

 1                  The only thing I will raise -- and 

 2           we've heard this from our members -- is that 

 3           there's some confusion over whether the 

 4           recordings suffice for minutes, if it's 

 5           sufficient for being minutes.  And I know 

 6           that's --

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  I've heard that 

 8           question also.

 9                  MS. VAN EPPS:  I think we've raised 

10           that with some of the legislators in the 

11           past, is that there's still -- according to 

12           our attorneys, there's still a requirement 

13           that minutes be produced and you can't just 

14           use the video recording.  But the language is 

15           a little confusing.

16                  And so, if anything, we would ask that 

17           maybe you could clarify that language.  But 

18           in terms of, you know, having the ability to 

19           do that, I think we would fully support the 

20           extension or making it permanent.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Thank you.

22                  Steve?

23                  MR. ACQUARIO:  Like the cities and 

24           villages and towns, we would also support the 


                                                                   415

 1           extension.  

 2                  We have the clerks of the legislative 

 3           boards in the LOB in two weeks; I'd like to 

 4           bring them to meet with you --

 5                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Sure.

 6                  MR. ACQUARIO:  -- and go over the very 

 7           technical specifics of how the bodies are 

 8           operating right now.

 9                  The preference is in-person governance 

10           at the county level.  That's the preference 

11           right now.

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  By members of 

13           public bodies.

14                  MR. ACQUARIO:  Yeah.  Yes.

15                  And we would support the continuation 

16           of this if not, as Barb mentioned, making it 

17           permanent.

18                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Okay, thank you.

19                  MR. ACQUARIO:  But we'll see you in 

20           two weeks.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  Okay.  

22                  You know, with regard to AIM, 

23           obviously the topic of the day from the 

24           electeds as well as from the associations.  


                                                                   416

 1           And, you know, Senator Martinez and I, you 

 2           know, are both committed in our respective 

 3           houses to continue to push this, you know, in 

 4           our one-house budget bills.  And I know 

 5           there's a lot of support among my colleagues 

 6           in local -- who, you know, represent towns, 

 7           villages, cities, for this.

 8                  You know, we'll try to be creative and 

 9           see if we can come up with something that 

10           breaks through this -- you know, climate 

11           change is real, but it hasn't been able to 

12           unfreeze AIM funding, right?

13                  (Laughter.)

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN THIELE:  So we'll see what 

15           we can do this year with regard to that.  

16           maybe, you know, phase something in over a 

17           period of years like what happened with 

18           Foundation Aid.  So we look forward to 

19           continuing to work with you on that.

20                  You know, on the issue of speed 

21           limits, Gerry, one of the things that I 

22           always find it very hard to explain to the 

23           local governments that I work with in my 

24           district is why the rules for speed limits 


                                                                   417

 1           are different for different levels of 

 2           government.  Why do villages get to do 

 3           something that towns can't do?  And, you 

 4           know, cities, it's something different.  And 

 5           it gets very confusing and, you know, we're 

 6           trying to protect public safety with having 

 7           the right level of speed limits.

 8                  So maybe we can talk with our -- in 

 9           our house with our Transportation chair, Bill 

10           Magnarelli, and talk about at least 

11           uniformity among all the levels of government 

12           as to how they can regulate speed limits.

13                  And my last point here is -- and I'm 

14           going to cede back a fair amount of time -- 

15           is the point that, you know, Steve made with 

16           regard to the shared-services program.  We've 

17           flagged this also in the Assembly.  You know, 

18           those that are in the pipeline already, we 

19           should keep our commitment to.  It's fine 

20           going forward.  I think there may be 

21           consensus that, you know, the time for this 

22           program has come to an end.

23                  But those that are in process, I think 

24           that is something we in the Legislature 


                                                                   418

 1           should meet that commitment to the counties 

 2           and all the local governments that have 

 3           worked together on these shared-services 

 4           plans.

 5                  So again, thank you for all your 

 6           efforts, and look forward to working with you 

 7           in the coming weeks as we try to get to a 

 8           final budget.  Thank you.

 9                  MULTIPLE PANELISTS:  Thank you.

10                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

11                  And our questioner is Chair Rachel 

12           May.

13                  SENATOR MAY:  Thank you.

14                  And thank you all for your testimony 

15           and your good work.

16                  Last year your organizations worked 

17           hard and were very successful in making sure 

18           that zoning would be kept as a purely local 

19           issue.  

20                  Also last year Syracuse, my city of 

21           Syracuse clocked in at number two in the 

22           country for concentrated poverty -- for child 

23           poverty, that is.  

24                  Also last year my committee on small 


                                                                   419

 1           and medium cities held a hearing about 

 2           concentrated poverty, and one of the things 

 3           we learned was that in Onondaga County 

 4           outside of Syracuse, only 1 percent of 

 5           buildable land is zoned for multifamily 

 6           housing.  Which says to me that the 

 7           municipalities outside of Syracuse are 

 8           working very hard to prevent low-income 

 9           families from settling there.

10                  And we also learned that concentrated 

11           poverty leads to profoundly differential 

12           outcomes in school success, in generational 

13           wealth, in life expectancy, in just every 

14           measure you can think of.

15                  So if zoning is off the table as a 

16           policy that the state can have any influence 

17           on, what is your solution to addressing 

18           concentrated poverty in our upstate cities?

19                  MR. GEIST:  Thank you very much for 

20           that question.  It's very thought-provoking, 

21           and I can tell you've spent a lot of time 

22           trying to analyze where we're going here.

23                  As a former town official, and now 

24           running the Towns organization, there are so 


                                                                   420

 1           many different ways that haven't been 

 2           utilized to incentivize local governments to 

 3           do more.  And when I was a town official, 

 4           what we decided to do locally to increase 

 5           housing and attract a different type of 

 6           population to our community was to tell all 

 7           developers that anytime they wanted to 

 8           develop in our town, they had to put a 

 9           set-aside for moderate- or low-income housing 

10           in the community.

11                  So -- and that worked in my town.  It 

12           really has.  And I think what's been missing 

13           from this whole top-down approach is no one 

14           has really spoken to us or asked us what 

15           ideas we have to incentivize, to fix some of 

16           these problems.  Because the reality is -- 

17           and you know this well, Senator -- that it's 

18           not just the zoning and the housing, it's the 

19           infrastructure.  But more important than 

20           that, it's also the education, it's the 

21           transportation.  It's whether we have water 

22           and sewer infrastructure to handle new 

23           housing.

24                  I've dealt with all those matters on a 


                                                                   421

 1           local level.  I think they all can be 

 2           overcome.  But we all need to work together.  

 3           And what I said last year, and I'll repeat it 

 4           today, we need to have some type of 

 5           comprehensive plan to get input from all the 

 6           locals to come up with new ideas that would 

 7           be incentivizing local governments to do more 

 8           on all these levels.

 9                  SENATOR MAY:  I will say one thing 

10           that I worked on very hard my first year in 

11           office was getting funding for a school in 

12           Syracuse that will be open to kids from the 

13           entire county that's kind of a magnet school 

14           for the arts and STEM.  And it's going to 

15           open next year.  I'm very excited about that.

16                  But are other counties doing that type 

17           of thing to try to get over the barriers 

18           that -- you know, between our school 

19           districts?  Because the differentials are so 

20           enormous between school districts within 

21           counties.

22                  MR. GEIST:  You know, Senator, in my 

23           earlier career I did a lot of work in 

24           childcare in Westchester County.  And 


                                                                   422

 1           childcare was so important then, but it's so 

 2           much more important now.  And the fights that 

 3           we did 30, 40 years ago in childcare -- 

 4           they're still there, but they've dwarfed 

 5           every -- it's so much more now.  

 6                  And that's why I say we need to 

 7           incorporate all these things:  Childcare, 

 8           education.  You know, zoning incentives.  

 9           Funding from the state.  Water and sewer 

10           infrastructure.  Because we're all a big tent 

11           and we've got to get everybody working on it 

12           together.

13                  And I think that if given the 

14           opportunity, we have a lot of information to 

15           give and a lot of good examples of what's 

16           worked well around the state.

17                  MS. VAN EPPS:  If I can just jump in, 

18           I just want to echo a couple of things Gerry 

19           said.  And I appreciate where you're coming 

20           from, Senator.  In fact, we came and talked 

21           to you soon after the housing compact was 

22           introduced and sort of had to disagree on 

23           some of the is it just NIMBY or is it really 

24           that these communities don't have the 


                                                                   423

 1           infrastructure, don't have the space to build 

 2           housing?  And I think for a lot of our 

 3           members that was truly the case.

 4                  But two things I would say, is the 

 5           resources.  We have to have resources there 

 6           for infrastructure.  Because the ones that do 

 7           want to do it, that's their biggest concern; 

 8           they just don't have the infrastructure to 

 9           support it.

10                  I also think, to Gerry's point, 

11           there's an educational component to this as 

12           well.  I think some of our smaller 

13           communities that were threatened by this fact 

14           that the state was going to come in and 

15           override their zoning -- they just need help 

16           in developing a comprehensive plan, seeing 

17           where that development can happen and still, 

18           you know, not put a strain on their 

19           communities or upset the character of their 

20           communities.  

21                  I think there's a way to do that.  But 

22           we're dealing with villages that, you know, 

23           have two and three staff and just don't have 

24           the capability of doing that.  So I think 


                                                                   424

 1           that's a very important component as well.

 2                  And then the two other things we heard 

 3           from some of the places that are trying to do 

 4           it are that the tax credits, we need -- we 

 5           need to take a look at the tax credits and 

 6           revise them a little to make them a little 

 7           more flexible and popular among developers.  

 8                  But also the fact that the process at 

 9           the state level -- and we did talk to the 

10           Budget Director and HCR about this -- the 

11           process of getting some of these approvals 

12           through is taking way, way too long.  We've 

13           had things in the pipeline for, you know, six 

14           months to a year, two years.  And they just 

15           thought if there's things they can do at the 

16           state level to keep things moving, that will 

17           help us get the results we need.

18                  SENATOR MAY:  So let me ask you, 

19           because I have a bill to streamline the 

20           Environmental Quality Review process so that 

21           it wouldn't be -- it would really focus on 

22           the environmental impacts of the buildings 

23           and would be less open to kind of frivolous 

24           lawsuits.  


                                                                   425

 1                  Which is something that holds back a 

 2           lot of multifamily housing development, is 

 3           people bringing lawsuits because they think, 

 4           you know, the traffic is going to get worse 

 5           or something like that.  You know, not 

 6           totally frivolous, necessarily, but used to 

 7           block those kinds of projects.

 8                  Would you be supportive of that kind 

 9           of legislation to make it easier to build 

10           this housing and --

11                  MS. VAN EPPS:  Yes, we would.  NYCOM 

12           would.  Streamlining it.  Not doing away with 

13           it, but certainly streamlining it, we would 

14           be supportive of.

15                  MR. GEIST:  And on behalf of Towns, 

16           you know, we would have to look at the 

17           legislation to see the wording.  But as long 

18           as it doesn't override but, you know, 

19           modernizes and makes things more efficient, 

20           with local input, you know, depending on the 

21           language, is something we could consider.

22                  SENATOR MAY:  It's designed to 

23           incentivize infill housing so that you don't 

24           get as much sprawl development, which has all 


                                                                   426

 1           kinds of environmental impacts of its own.  

 2           So trying to make sure that we're looking 

 3           globally at the environmental impacts of 

 4           building housing.

 5                  Yeah, okay.  Thank you very much.

 6                  MS. VAN EPPS:  Thank you.

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 8                  Assembly.

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Assemblyman 

10           Otis.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  Thank you all.  And 

12           like Fred Thiele, I know all of you and have 

13           worked with all of you on different issues 

14           and thank you for your good advocacy here.

15                  Steve and Gerry spoke about the EMS 

16           issue, but I want to give Barbara an 

17           opportunity to feed in on that.  And it is a 

18           complicated issue around the state, but one 

19           that has gotten to crisis proportions, and so 

20           want to make sure NYCOM is heard as well.

21                  MS. VAN EPPS:  I would love to chime 

22           in.  I should have, because it is in my 

23           testimony and I ceded my last two minutes and 

24           I could have covered EMS.


                                                                   427

 1                  So we are supportive of the Governor's 

 2           proposal.  Actually, this -- declaring EMS as 

 3           an essential service is actually part of our 

 4           legislative program this year.  We think it 

 5           deserves that recognition.  We think, you 

 6           know, it has to be taken seriously.  People 

 7           have to be able to get EMS services when they 

 8           need them.

 9                  In terms of working with the counties, 

10           I know the counties are required, I believe, 

11           under this legislation to put plans together.  

12           We are more than happy to work with them on 

13           that because, again, you know, we have these 

14           smaller villages that are having a terrible 

15           time recruiting and retaining EMS, 

16           firefighters, everything.  

17                  So that the last thing I'll say on 

18           that is the funding stream is something we're 

19           also concerned about.  If there's more 

20           funding -- you know, we've declared it an 

21           essential service, so now what are we going 

22           to do to help fund it?  

23                  Because while we were able to do some 

24           fees, those fees that you put in place two 


                                                                   428

 1           years ago under 207-b, I guess it was, of the 

 2           General Municipal Law that allows volunteer 

 3           fire departments to try to offset those costs 

 4           with fees, that legislation does sunset.  So 

 5           if that stream goes away, we're going to be 

 6           very concerned about being able to maintain 

 7           both our firefighters and our EMS services.

 8                  But generally speaking we support what 

 9           is in the Governor's proposal.

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  Thank you, Barbara.  

11                  And I'd say to Steve's comment, one of 

12           the things is -- the comment that you made, 

13           it's different in different ways.  We don't 

14           want to wipe away the things that are 

15           working.  So that is, I think, something we 

16           all subscribe to as well.

17                  But thank you.  I'll yield back the 

18           rest of my time.

19                  Gerry, you want to comment more?

20                  MR. GEIST:  The only thing I want to 

21           say is that in my town we created the 

22           ambulance EMS districts years ago, and what 

23           we did was we created the districts so the 

24           residents who are in that district pay a tax 


                                                                   429

 1           to do it.

 2                  And we think that we could work 

 3           definitely in concert with the counties and 

 4           the villages and the cities to have a unified 

 5           system, because there's too many gaps now.  

 6           And we think that this should be addressed in 

 7           this year's budget.

 8                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  Thank you.  Thank 

 9           you all.

10                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

11                  Senator Rolison.

12                  SENATOR ROLISON:  Thank you, 

13           Madam Chair.

14                  First question, for NYCOM.  And I -- 

15           we can talk about AIM.  We can all talk about 

16           AIM.  This is my first time talking about it.  

17           But I remember when I became a mayor in 2016 

18           and AIM was -- there was this sort of AIM 

19           being -- padding fund balances.  And then I 

20           think it was last year I heard that we got 

21           ARPA money we didn't need, an AIM increase.

22                  Do you have any sense of where that is 

23           today through whatever means you have of 

24           hearing why there's no AIM increase in the 


                                                                   430

 1           Governor's budget?

 2                  MS. VAN EPPS:  So first let me say 

 3           it's very nice to see you.  We miss you at 

 4           NYCOM.

 5                  I wish I had the answer to that 

 6           question.  But, you know, obviously when we 

 7           met with the administration prior to the 

 8           budget being -- the Executive Budget being 

 9           released, you know, we were warned it was 

10           going to be a tough budget year, there's a 

11           lot of difficult choices, and we certainly 

12           appreciate that.  

13                  I will say that in the briefing book 

14           for the Executive Budget there's commentary 

15           saying how local governments are on very 

16           strong financial footing, something to that 

17           effect.  And to your point, Senator, that has 

18           to do with the fact that, you know, sales tax 

19           has increased, and ARPA money, and the fact 

20           that so few local governments are on the 

21           Comptroller's fiscal distress or fiscally 

22           stressed list.  

23                  And I just -- the fact is that sales 

24           tax, yes, they've gone up, but they're 


                                                                   431

 1           starting to flatten.  The ARPA money has gone 

 2           away.  And I'm thrilled that there's only 

 3           14 local governments on the Comptroller's 

 4           list.  And I don't want us to be penalized 

 5           for trying to do the right thing.

 6                  And so that concerns me that, you 

 7           know, they're saying because you're not in 

 8           fiscal stress, you know, maybe you don't need 

 9           AIM funding.  And I don't want that to be the 

10           rationale.  I want them to -- you know, I 

11           want to be in a partnership with them -- with 

12           all of you.  I want to partner.  I want to 

13           continue to allow us to do what we need to do 

14           without having to pass it along to our 

15           taxpayers.

16                  So while I don't have a definitive 

17           answer, I mean, the fact that they see us as 

18           on strong financial footing I think has 

19           something to do with it.

20                  SENATOR ROLISON:  So I guess I should 

21           have asked for a carveout for the City of 

22           Poughkeepsie, then?  Because we were on the 

23           fiscal distress list.

24                  MS. VAN EPPS:  I'm sorry, I wasn't 


                                                                   432

 1           going to flag that you were one of the 14.

 2                  SENATOR ROLISON:  But it's gotten 

 3           better.  It's gotten better.

 4                  MS. VAN EPPS:  Yes.

 5                  SENATOR ROLISON:  And I just wanted 

 6           to, you know, end with this.  I like the idea 

 7           of specific targeted areas within a municipal 

 8           budget for that AIM funding.  It's going to 

 9           public safety.  It's going, say, to road 

10           repairs or infrastructure, whatever it may 

11           be.  But clearly I think the open-ended -- 

12           and not that there's anything wrong with 

13           that -- it does lend itself for people to say 

14           "Well, you really don't need it."  Well, 

15           yeah, yeah, we do.

16                  Oh, go ahead.  

17                  MR. GEIST:  Senator, there's one 

18           component of towns revenue that we haven't 

19           spoke about.  We've talked about sales tax, 

20           we've talked about AIM.  We haven't talked 

21           about the mortgage tax.

22                  And once again, if you read the 

23           newspapers, with mortgage rates over 

24           7 percent and inflation sky-high still, the 


                                                                   433

 1           Fed holding on to policies, the money that 

 2           we're going to receive this year from 

 3           mortgage tax revenue, I've spoken to our 

 4           members, is -- they've cut back on it because 

 5           it's too expensive.  So there's another 

 6           reason why AIM funding needs to be increased, 

 7           to make sure public services and public 

 8           safety in our towns is there.

 9                  SENATOR ROLISON:  Thank you.

10                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

11                  Okay, the next up is Assemblywoman 

12           Shimsky.

13                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SHIMSKY:  Thank you, 

14           everyone.  

15                  I just want to address the topic of 

16           infrastructure, especially with regard to 

17           climate change and climate resiliency.  You 

18           know, Gerry, it's not coming to us, it's 

19           already here.  We've had plenty of counties 

20           with washed-out roads and all kinds of things 

21           already.  And flooding is getting worse in an 

22           awfully large number of places.

23                  I have a three-part question.  And 

24           since I mentioned your name, it's the 


                                                                   434

 1           Marty Rogowsky Rule:  You get the right to 

 2           speak first.  But if anyone else wants to 

 3           jump in, that would be great.

 4                  Number one, what do you see as the 

 5           scope of need?  I mean, people may not have 

 6           thought about roads, while they might have 

 7           thought about sewers.  What kinds of work are 

 8           we going to have to do?  

 9                  What do you see the financial aid -- 

10           the financial need being as we move forward?  

11                  And third of all, would there be a 

12           need for at least some of our municipalities 

13           or counties to have a planning process to 

14           determine what choices are best for certain 

15           problems, what problems we prioritize and, 

16           God forbid, what we're going to have to let 

17           go?

18                  MR. GEIST:  So thank you for that 

19           question.  I know full well the Town and 

20           Village of Mamaroneck has always had flooding 

21           issues, as we all know.  And any parkway in 

22           Westchester County that has the word 

23           "River" -- the Hutch, the Saw Mill, or the 

24           Bronx River -- is always flooded.  So we all 


                                                                   435

 1           know those stories.

 2                  To answer your question is a lot, 

 3           because let's start with water and sewer.  

 4           And I talk about my town because I served 

 5           there for 24 years; I have a lot of -- I've 

 6           learned things like the word "tuberculated" 

 7           when I talk about the water system.  

 8                  You know, one thing about being from 

 9           Westchester, we did a lot of infrastructure 

10           improvements in the early 1900s because we 

11           had the need.  But these systems are 

12           antiquated.  They're not modernized.  They're 

13           not state of the art.  So we're punished for 

14           being first.  And we can't do anything to 

15           expand opportunities for development because 

16           there's no capacity.  

17                  So I think that's the first thing.  We 

18           need to have a real dedicated fund to allow 

19           people with existing systems or improvements 

20           to systems to expand.  That's smart growth 

21           opportunities.

22                  There's so many issues with roads and 

23           elevations.  And I know it probably was your 

24           district when you were in the county when you 


                                                                   436

 1           fixed the Saw Mill River Parkway and the exit 

 2           on Marble Avenue --

 3                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SHIMSKY:  That's just 

 4           north of me.

 5                  MR. GEIST:  But pretty close.

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN SHIMSKY:  Yes.

 7                  MR. GEIST:  But there's a great 

 8           example.  There's so many things that need to 

 9           be done in roads to elevate the roads, 

10           creating curbing, to make it safe for our 

11           seniors and our young.  

12                  And then the last thing is we just 

13           really have a comprehensive opportunity to 

14           present ideas on how we could get more 

15           funding to get to do the things to attack the 

16           infrastructure issue.

17                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

18                  The Senate?

19                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

20                  Ranker Rhoads.

21                  SENATOR RHOADS:  Thank you, 

22           Chairwoman.

23                  First off, Ms. Van Epps, I want to 

24           thank you for raising -- as a volunteer 


                                                                   437

 1           firefighter myself, I want to thank you for 

 2           raising the issue of making permanent the 

 3           ability for fire departments and ambulance 

 4           services to be able to charge for the 

 5           services they provide to nonresidents.  It's 

 6           critical.

 7                  And since EMS particularly is so 

 8           unbelievably expensive to fully equip and 

 9           operate an ambulance, you know, being able to 

10           recoup a part of those costs makes it 

11           possible for those companies to be able to 

12           provide that service to our residents.

13                  And in light of the fact -- I'm from 

14           Nassau, and we have a fairly robust EMS 

15           program.  But I understand in more rural 

16           parts of the state it's a real challenge to 

17           fill those gaps in coverage.  So that I want 

18           to thank you for mentioning that.  

19                  And that does have to be made 

20           permanent.  We can't permit that to sunset.

21                  I do want to ask a fairly loaded 

22           question.  And we did actually get into it a 

23           little bit.  But I would love each of you to 

24           be able to tell me, what do you believe are 


                                                                   438

 1           the three most significant unfunded mandates 

 2           that you find most challenging for your 

 3           members?  

 4                  I know as a former county legislator I 

 5           have my own list.  Any thoughts?

 6                  MR. ACQUARIO:  Well, for us it would 

 7           be obviously Medicaid.  We send -- which is 

 8           not factored into the State Budget -- 

 9           $6 billion a year to the State of New York 

10           from local taxes.  

11                  If you aggregate all of the mandates 

12           on the counties, and this evolution or 

13           devolution of government in New York State, 

14           we spend $14 billion to Albany for state 

15           programs and services.  Child welfare, 

16           preschool special education, Early 

17           Intervention and Medicaid would be the top 

18           ones.  Indigent defense would be another one, 

19           which is a growing cost to us.  And lastly, 

20           the safety net, which is a program that's 

21           provided after the Temporary Assistance to 

22           Needy Families program, the five years of 

23           federal funding expires, they come on to a 

24           safety net program which the counties pay 


                                                                   439

 1           two-thirds of.

 2                  SENATOR RHOADS:  Any other thoughts?

 3                  MS. VAN EPPS:  I'm going to let you go 

 4           next.

 5                  MR. GEIST:  It's a great question.  I 

 6           can tell you that running the Justice Courts 

 7           is very -- it's really, truly an unfunded 

 8           mandate because we don't get a lot of money 

 9           to basically represent the state in running 

10           those court systems for the vehicle and 

11           traffic laws.  So that's one.

12                  Town clerk's office handles an array 

13           of requirements from the state for processing 

14           birth certificates, death certificates, all 

15           sorts of permits and fees.  And even though 

16           our costs have gone up, our state portion of 

17           it hasn't been increased.

18                  And the same thing in our building 

19           department, with all the requirement of, you 

20           know, the building code, the fire codes, the 

21           training that's going in.  We don't get 

22           enough back from the state -- you know, we 

23           have to cover a lot of those essential 

24           services.


                                                                   440

 1                  MS. VAN EPPS:  All right, I'm going to 

 2           throw out there the ones that I think my 

 3           members -- I hear most from my members.  

 4                  Prevailing wage, because they keep 

 5           expanding it.  And I think we'd like to see, 

 6           you know, it tied to something -- you know, 

 7           we think there's got to be a better way of 

 8           determining what the prevailing wage actually 

 9           is.  Not just the union wage, but also, you 

10           know, the expansion of it needs to be looked 

11           at. 

12                  But I would also say the procurement 

13           thresholds just need to be adjusted.  You 

14           know, the fact that we have to go out to bid 

15           under procurement thresholds that are so low 

16           and haven't been looked at in some time, I 

17           think that's something that they would say is 

18           probably burdening themselves in terms of an 

19           unfunded mandate.

20                  SENATOR RHOADS:  Okay.  And just with 

21           the quick remaining time that I have left, 

22           just -- have you seen -- the prior 

23           administration's treatment of local 

24           governments wasn't exactly perfect in many 


                                                                   441

 1           assessments.  

 2                  What recent programs have you 

 3           advocated for on behalf of your members that 

 4           you feel are working -- and it's really not 

 5           fair to ask you this question with so little 

 6           time left, because you're not going to be 

 7           able to answer it.  So I'm just going to drop 

 8           it at that point. 

 9                  So thank you, Madam Chairwoman.

10                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

11                  Assemblywoman Levenberg.

12                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEVENBERG:  Thank you, 

13           Madam Chair.

14                  I wanted to follow up on one of the 

15           statements that was made by the counties with 

16           Gerry.  We heard about the in rem 

17           foreclosures, and I had gotten some feedback 

18           from a tax receiver that what was in the 

19           budget was not adequate to cover the costs 

20           that many towns will, you know, be on the 

21           line for.

22                  And I just wanted to see if you could 

23           offer some feedback on that.

24                  MR. GEIST:  Yeah.  So we do support 


                                                                   442

 1           the Governor's proposal because it's 

 2           consistent with the Supreme Court decision.  

 3                  And that's -- you know, offhand I 

 4           would say that your people's observations 

 5           about the inequities of this situation are 

 6           accurate.  But we're hamstrung because we 

 7           have a court decision by the Supreme Court of 

 8           the United States that has set limits.  So 

 9           the Governor's proposal is consistent with 

10           that.  And we're hamstrung by that.  

11                  So we do support the Governor.

12                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEVENBERG:  Okay.

13                  And also I appreciated my Senate 

14           colleague's questions about housing and some 

15           of the feedback about -- I know that we 

16           recently met with Westchester municipal 

17           officials, and they have like a subgroup on 

18           housing, and they had actually said that they 

19           did support the streamlined SEQR review -- 

20           which I think is your bill, Senator.

21                  And I would also just mention that my 

22           colleague Assemblyman Burdick and I are 

23           working on some bills, having met with a 

24           number of municipal leadership and housing, 


                                                                   443

 1           that would, you know, start to give -- it's 

 2           similar to the pro -- what's it called, the 

 3           Governor's pro --

 4                  MS. VAN EPPS:  Pro-housing 

 5           communities.

 6                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEVENBERG:  What is 

 7           that?

 8                  MS. VAN EPPS:  Pro-housing 

 9           communities.

10                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN LEVENBERG:  Yeah, 

11           pro-housing communities, but kind of expand 

12           it.  So would sort of require comprehensive 

13           plans or require an analysis to establish 

14           comprehensive plans statewide in all 

15           municipalities and decide, you know, case by 

16           case in municipalities if they needed to have 

17           them -- housing action plans similar to what 

18           was done for police reform.  

19                  And then smart growth, with an 

20           emphasis on climate-sensitive smart growth.  

21           So thinking about all of those things.

22                  So I'm hoping that you all have an 

23           opportunity to take a look at those and share 

24           them with your members when they're ready, 


                                                                   444

 1           ready for prime time.  Because I do think 

 2           that, you know, housing is certainly very 

 3           critical for all of our municipalities to be 

 4           considering and take responsibility for.

 5                  Thanks.

 6                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

 7                  To the -- six seconds isn't enough to 

 8           respond, so we'll send it to the Senate.

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay, thank you.

10                  I think to close for the Senate, 

11           Senator Tom O'Mara.

12                  SENATOR O'MARA:  All right, great.  

13           Thank you, Chair Krueger.

14                  Just to -- briefly here, with all of 

15           you, thank you for being here and your 

16           testimony.  

17                  CHIPS is always a hot topic of mine on 

18           this, and the cuts to CHIPS this year are 

19           very concerning.  If you could, you know, 

20           just maybe elaborate a little bit more on the 

21           impacts of what you see with these cuts to 

22           CHIPS to local roads' budgets, which is so 

23           critical.  

24                  And particularly Gerry, with the 


                                                                   445

 1           number of towns in -- I mean, your 

 2           organization represents towns larger than 

 3           most cities in this state, but also towns 

 4           that are vast and lightly populated.  And 

 5           some towns, a lot of which I represent in the 

 6           seven counties of the 58th Senate District, 

 7           the only budget they have for their roads is 

 8           the CHIPS money they get.

 9                  So if you could just elaborate for 

10           everybody here just how important that CHIPS 

11           funding is.

12                  MR. GEIST:  You know, thank you for 

13           that question, Senator.  CHIPS is so critical 

14           for our communities, our towns.  And as you 

15           stated -- your facts are correct -- towns are 

16           responsible for a great majority of the 

17           center-line highways throughout the state.  

18           You know, over half the state's population 

19           lives in towns.  And these roadways have to 

20           be maintained for the delivery of service and 

21           getting people to school.  

22                  And the need is critical because the 

23           roads haven't been maintained.  And what 

24           happens is when the roads aren't maintained 


                                                                   446

 1           properly, there's more accidents, more 

 2           delays.  And most times when I was a member 

 3           of the town board, the people who would come 

 4           up to me and talk to me about town issues, 

 5           nine times out of 10 it was always about 

 6           "Thanks for making that highway improvement," 

 7           "Thanks for, you know, painting the lines," 

 8           "Thanks for repaving that road."

 9                  It's essential.  It's not just a 

10           request, it's essential that we protect our 

11           roads and protect our communities.

12                  Thank you for that question.  

13                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Thank you.

14                  Would either of you two like to add on 

15           to that?

16                  MS. VAN EPPS:  I'll just reiterate the 

17           concerns I've heard among our membership is 

18           really the fact that because of the ADA 

19           requirements -- which everyone wants to abide 

20           by.  We have nothing against curb ramps.  We 

21           want to do that.  But the fact that these 

22           requirements have ramped up, the CHIPS 

23           funding is just not enough.  

24                  I mean, we had our conference 


                                                                   447

 1           yesterday and actually asked the question, 

 2           you know, how much can you actually do with 

 3           your CHIPS?  And they were like "Oh, a 

 4           quarter of our Main Street," in some of these 

 5           smaller villages, because everything's just 

 6           so expensive.  

 7                  So I know for our members, you know, 

 8           any reductions are going to be devastating.  

 9           But what we'd really like to see is an 

10           increase.

11                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Yeah, I think 

12           particularly with the inflation and costs of 

13           supplies, for sure.

14                  Steve, do you want to add anything on 

15           that?

16                  MR. ACQUARIO:  Well, you have been, 

17           Senator, a champion of CHIPS.  And I want to 

18           thank you and the Legislature, the Assembly 

19           and the Senate, for always advocating for 

20           local governments.  That's often the only 

21           revenue stream that we have to fix our roads 

22           and bridges.

23                  Counties are responsible for about 

24           9,000 bridges in the state.  And like the 


                                                                   448

 1           roads, the bridges are in constant need of 

 2           structural repair.

 3                  The CHIPS program is the only program 

 4           that I can think of that is the most 

 5           successful program that encompasses the 

 6           1605 local governments in the history of the 

 7           state.  There's no other program that works 

 8           and unites us together and treats us fairly.  

 9                  And it should be doubled in size 

10           because of its benefit in the communities of 

11           fixing the roads and bridges.  And it also 

12           helps the private sector, with all of the 

13           industry that's jobs that are created for 

14           this, for the men and women working out there 

15           on the roads and fixing the bridges.  It has 

16           an exponential effect in the engineering 

17           community, and our products and materials.

18                  So we greatly appreciate your being a 

19           constant champion on that.  It needs to be 

20           increased.  You could take water and sewer -- 

21           Assemblywoman Lupardo and Senator Hinchey 

22           have a bill to do a CHIPS program for 

23           drinking water and wastewater.  It makes 

24           sense.  The formula works.  And I would ask 


                                                                   449

 1           that you continue to put an emphasis on it.

 2                  SENATOR O'MARA:  We're certainly 

 3           looking into that.  And I know Senator 

 4           Tedisco had sponsored something like that a 

 5           few years ago as well.  And certainly very 

 6           supportive.

 7                  But I agree with you that the CHIPS is 

 8           really one of the most fundamentally fairly 

 9           distributed programs in the state because 

10           it's per lane mile it gets distributed.  No 

11           matter whether you're a county, a town, a 

12           city, you get a pro rate share based on the 

13           number of miles you have.  So I don't see any 

14           more fairly distributed program in the state.

15                  Thank you.

16                  MR. ACQUARIO:  Thank you.

17                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

18                  Assembly.

19                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  The last 

20           questioner on the Assembly side, Assemblyman 

21           Ari Brown.

22                  ASSEMBLYMEMBER ARI BROWN:  Thank you, 

23           Chairperson Weinstein.  

24                  This is going to be the quickest 


                                                                   450

 1           question.  Having served for a quarter of a 

 2           century in my own village and town, I 

 3           understand thoroughly what you're going 

 4           through.

 5                  So I ask the following question.  

 6           Would it be of assistance to your legal 

 7           residents -- your hardworking people of 

 8           your towns, villages, counties -- would it 

 9           help balance your budget and take care of 

10           infrastructure if we took $2.4 billion of 

11           improperly proposed state funding and 

12           distributed it to the 533 villages, 

13           933 towns, 62 counties?  Would that help at 

14           all in any way, shape or form?

15                  MS. VAN EPPS:  You can't say no to 

16           that.

17                  ASSEMBLYMEMBER ARI BROWN:  Beautiful.

18                  MR. GEIST:  I don't know where the 

19           2.4 -- did you say where it was coming from?

20                  ASSEMBLYMEMBER ARI BROWN:  It's being 

21           allocated to people who didn't work hard, 

22           didn't put in the effort, and don't 

23           understand the first thing about our 

24           infrastructure.


                                                                   451

 1                  MS. VAN EPPS:  Well, I wouldn't -- I 

 2           take that back.  I would love to see any more 

 3           money come to my communities, my cities, my 

 4           villages.  I don't know that I want to take 

 5           the money that has been spoken for for the 

 6           asylum-seekers and the migrants.

 7                  ASSEMBLYMEMBER ARI BROWN:  Oh, I guess 

 8           it's going to the counties, maybe.

 9                  MR. ACQUARIO:  We need the resources.  

10           Thank you.

11                  MR. GEIST:  Towns always welcomes 

12           additional revenue from the state, but we're 

13           not here to comment on that portion of the 

14           Executive's budget if it doesn't affect towns 

15           directly.

16                  ASSEMBLYMEMBER ARI BROWN:  Thank you.

17                  See, made it quick.

18                  MR. ACQUARIO:  Happy birthday.

19                  MR. GEIST:  And happy birthday.

20                  MR. ACQUARIO:  Thank you for inviting 

21           us and listening to us.  Thank you.

22                  MR. GEIST:  Thank you very much.

23                  MS. VAN EPPS:  Thank you.

24                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  


                                                                   452

 1           Thank you all for being here.  

 2                  And we're going to go to our last 

 3           panel, Panel D:  New York State Election 

 4           Commissioners Association, Dustin Czarny, the 

 5           Democratic Caucus chair; Fair Elections for 

 6           New York, Karen Wharton, democracy coalition 

 7           coordinator; League of Women Voters, 

 8           Erica Smitka, deputy director; and 

 9           Brennan Center for Justice at NYU School of 

10           Law, Joanna Zdanys, senior counsel.  

11                  (Pause.)

12                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  So if you can 

13           go in that order, starting with the 

14           Democratic Caucus chair.

15                  MR. CZARNY:  Thank you for letting me 

16           testify.  My name is Dustin Czarny, and I'm 

17           the Democratic Caucus chair of the New York 

18           State Election Commissioners Association.  In 

19           my --

20                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Can the people 

21           leaving please -- I'm sorry.

22                  MR. CZARNY:  Happy to wait.

23                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  The voices 

24           carry.  If people can just leave quietly.


                                                                   453

 1                  MR. CZARNY:  They're very excited for 

 2           my testimony today, is what I believe.

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  I think they're 

 4           excited because this is the last panel.

 5                  MR. CZARNY:  Well, that might be it.

 6                  (Laughter.)

 7                  MR. CZARNY:  I'll start again, if 

 8           that's okay.

 9                  My name's Dustin Czarny.  I'm the 

10           Democratic Caucus chair for the New York 

11           State Election Commissioners Association.  

12           However, today I'm testifying on behalf of 

13           the entire association as everything that I'm 

14           testifying for today is approved by both the 

15           Republican and Democratic caucuses.

16                  Our association represents all 

17           62 counties in New York State and the 

18           bipartisan election commissioners that run 

19           the Board of Elections.  

20                  We enter a very hectic and challenging 

21           year in 2024.  And let me set the stage for 

22           some of the requests that we're going to ask 

23           for.  In 2024, this presidential election, we 

24           are going to see a significant amount of 


                                                                   454

 1           voters that have not voted in person since 

 2           2016.  As we know, in presidential elections 

 3           there are presidential-only voters, and many 

 4           of those voters voted in 2020 via mail 

 5           ballots who will now be going back to voting 

 6           in person.  

 7                  This presents an enormous challenge 

 8           for boards of elections, as we are also 

 9           dealing with a lot of new reforms that we 

10           have to inform these voters of and prepare 

11           our offices for.  

12                  We want to applaud Governor Hochul for 

13           including in her Executive Budget $14 million 

14           for replacement of electronic poll books.  

15           This is vital.  In 2019 when we went to 

16           electronic poll books, those fifth-generation 

17           or sixth-generation iPads, those are now 

18           starting to age out.  And in fact Apple has 

19           told us that the next version of IOS, IOS 18, 

20           will not support the fifth- or 

21           sixth-generation iPads.  In laymen's terms, 

22           they're too old.  They need to be replaced. 

23                  So the $14 million that Governor 

24           Hochul put in her budget will help replace 


                                                                   455

 1           those before the 2025 June primary, and that 

 2           is why it's needed in this year's budget.

 3                  However, NYSECA would like to ask for 

 4           an additional $10 million that is left out of 

 5           Governor Hochul's budget in Aid to Localities 

 6           funding that will aid county boards of 

 7           elections.  This money will be used for 

 8           temporary workers for the 2024 election to be 

 9           able to address that surge in voting that we 

10           are going to have and especially have this 

11           presidential election as opposed to the last 

12           couple of presidential elections.

13                  With early voting by mail, expanded 

14           early voting hours, and also a 10-day 

15           registration limit, these are all things that 

16           we are going to address in a presidential 

17           election for the first time.  And this 

18           $10 million in extra funding that we are 

19           requesting, distributed by the State Board of 

20           Elections based on voter population, will 

21           allow the counties to have the flexibility 

22           they need to meet the needs that you, the 

23           Legislature, have asked us to do in this 

24           upcoming presidential election.  


                                                                   456

 1                  So thank you.

 2                  (Pause.)

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Karen?  Yeah.

 4                  (Laughter.)

 5                  MS. WHARTON:  Chairs Krueger and 

 6           Weinstein, my Assemblymember --

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Please pull the 

 8           mic toward you.  

 9                  MS. WHARTON:  Sure.  

10                  -- and members of the Legislature, 

11           good evening.  My name is Karen Wharton, and 

12           I thank you for the opportunity to testify on 

13           behalf of the Fair Elections for New York 

14           Coalition.

15                  In her Executive Budget this year, 

16           Governor Kathy Hochul allocated 

17           $114.5 million to the Public Campaign Finance 

18           Program, the PCFP.  Now, as budget 

19           negotiations get underway, we urge you to 

20           ensure the state's final budget matches the 

21           Governor's allocation for the PCFP.  This 

22           investment will help ensure that the program 

23           fulfills its promise to strengthen our 

24           democracy by elevating the voices of everyday 


                                                                   457

 1           New Yorkers in our political process and 

 2           delivering on issues that matter most.

 3                  Take housing.  Albany's failure to 

 4           address the housing crisis is largely due to 

 5           the corporate real estate interests that rule 

 6           the day -- interests that spent over 

 7           $8 million last year to defeat good cause 

 8           that would have protected tenants from 

 9           discrimination and helped keep New Yorkers 

10           housed.

11                  Corporate interests and the wealthy 

12           continue to spend huge sums on state 

13           elections, translating into disproportionate 

14           influence on our political process.  

15           According to the Brennan Center, 200 of 

16           New York's wealthiest residents contributed 

17           $16 million to the 2022 state elections.  

18           Meanwhile, over 200,000 New Yorkers who could 

19           only afford donations of $250 or less, 

20           donated $13 million.  So 200 gave much more 

21           than over 200,000.

22                  Now, if political contributions are a 

23           form of free speech, how can the poor and the 

24           working class be heard if the wealthiest big 


                                                                   458

 1           money drums out their voices?  Every voice 

 2           should have an equal say.  

 3                  And while we cannot stop big money 

 4           from putting its thumb on the scale, the way 

 5           to counteract its corrosive influence is by 

 6           having robust a system where small amounts of 

 7           money from regular people count as much and 

 8           are valued as much as the big checks.

 9                  The PCFP does that.  Candidates who 

10           rely on public funding may be more inclined 

11           to create more room in the budget for 

12           childcare workforce investment, and less room 

13           for special-interest spending and tax 

14           loopholes.  Combined with voting reforms, the 

15           PCFP brings more people into the democratic 

16           process and protects our democracy from bad 

17           actors.  

18                  Thank you for the opportunity today.

19                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

20                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

21                  MS. SMITKA:  Thank you for the 

22           opportunity to testify today.  My name is 

23           Erica Smitka, and I'm the deputy director of 

24           the League of Women Voters of New York State.  


                                                                   459

 1           The League is a nonprofit grassroots 

 2           organization with a mission to educate 

 3           voters.

 4                  The League is greatly appreciative of 

 5           the improvements that the Legislature and the 

 6           Governor have made to New York elections in 

 7           recent years.  We applaud the Governor's 

 8           Executive Budget for including adequate 

 9           funding for the State Board of Elections and 

10           the Public Campaign Finance Board.  However, 

11           many reforms have still not been sufficiently 

12           funded at the local level -- especially in 

13           light of the fact that the 2024 presidential 

14           election will add additional stress on local 

15           boards of elections.  

16                  Since the 2020 election we've seen 

17           misinformation, disinformation and denialism 

18           around our election process soar, while trust 

19           in our electoral process has only declined.  

20                  In New York State we have seen the 

21           proliferation of actions by bad actors 

22           looking to sow distrust in our election 

23           process, such as individuals falsely claiming 

24           to be representatives from the Board of 


                                                                   460

 1           Elections and intimidating voters, going door 

 2           to door.  Or the increase in threats to 

 3           election workers, making it difficult to 

 4           retain staff and recruit poll workers.

 5                  Our local boards are on the frontlines 

 6           of organizing and conducting our elections, 

 7           educating voters, and addressing any 

 8           logistical challenges.  Investing in local 

 9           boards of elections not only strengthens the 

10           democratic foundation of New York State, but 

11           it also reinforces public confidence in our 

12           electoral system.  

13                  The funding proposed in this year's 

14           Executive Budget for boards of elections is 

15           quite similar to last year, with funds set 

16           aside to invest in new electronic poll books, 

17           cover the cost of absentee and early 

18           vote-by-mail ballot postage.  

19                  And while the cost to run elections 

20           varies county to county, it would be 

21           unreasonable to assume that counties can run 

22           almost twice as many races this year with 

23           similar amounts of funding from the state -- 

24           especially when a portion of those races will 


                                                                   461

 1           be state elected positions.

 2                  Elections are often the last item on 

 3           the list when it comes to county budgets, and 

 4           many county boards operate with limited 

 5           resources.  The League urges the Legislature 

 6           to seriously consider the cost of new 

 7           election improvements when introducing your 

 8           proposed budgets, and to consider setting up 

 9           a yearly fund specifically dedicated to 

10           enhancing and supporting election reforms at 

11           the local level.

12                  We ask that a minimum of an additional 

13           $10 million in funding be allocated to county 

14           boards of elections so that they may make the 

15           upgrades necessary and hire the staff 

16           necessary to effectively run our elections in 

17           2024.

18                  Lastly, we'd like to note our strong 

19           support for the $114.5 million allocated for 

20           the Public Campaign Finance Board.  The 

21           funding for this program would ensure that it 

22           can level the playing field, amplify the 

23           voices of small donors, and reduce the impact 

24           of wealthy special-interest groups in 


                                                                   462

 1           New York State.  We urge you to include the 

 2           full 114.5 million in your one-house budgets, 

 3           and we urge you not to make changes to the 

 4           program.

 5                  Thank you.

 6                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Joanna?

 7                  MS. ZDANYS:  Good afternoon to the 

 8           chairs, ranking members, and members of the 

 9           Legislature.  My name is Joanna Zdanys, and I 

10           am senior counsel at the Brennan Center for 

11           Justice.

12                  I appreciate the opportunity to 

13           testify in support of funding for the state's 

14           Public Campaign Finance Program and other 

15           voting and elections infrastructure needs in 

16           this year's budget.

17                  We are grateful to this body for 

18           championing policies that break down barriers 

19           to the political process and expand access to 

20           the vote.  New York's leadership in fostering 

21           a stronger and more inclusive democracy has 

22           never been more urgent.  That's why the 

23           Brennan Center enthusiastically supports the 

24           Executive Budget's provision of 


                                                                   463

 1           $114.5 million for the Public Campaign 

 2           Finance Program.  

 3                  This program is the strongest response 

 4           we've seen enacted anywhere in the country to 

 5           counter the distorting influence of unlimited 

 6           wealth in our politics.  You passed this law 

 7           with the promise of ensuring, quote, a 

 8           government that is accountable to all of the 

 9           people of the state regardless of wealth or 

10           position.  Now you are delivering on that 

11           promise, and that is to be commended.

12                  This program promises to dramatically 

13           increase the importance of everyday 

14           New Yorkers in our elections.  Data shows 

15           that if the program had been in place in 

16           2022, small donors' share of funding in 

17           legislative races would have increased 

18           sixfold.  

19                  Preliminary analyses of the current 

20           cycle show the trend of greater inclusion in 

21           our democracy that this Legislature 

22           envisioned when it passed this law.  To date, 

23           publicly financed candidates have raised a 

24           greater share of their campaign funds from 


                                                                   464

 1           small donors than at this point in the 

 2           2022 cycle.  This is consistent with research 

 3           that shows that public financing enables 

 4           candidates to raise competitive sums while 

 5           relying on small donors, and to spend more 

 6           time campaigning for support in their 

 7           districts than fundraising from big donors.  

 8           To date, more than 200 candidates from across 

 9           the state and the political spectrum have 

10           enrolled in the program.

11                  As nonpartisan policy advisors to 

12           lawmakers nationwide, we know that other 

13           states are watching closely and looking to 

14           model their own pro-democracy reforms on 

15           New York's program.  Fully funding this 

16           program is important to secure candidate and 

17           public confidence and ensure that this first 

18           run is successful.  We ask you to reaffirm 

19           the commitment that you made to New Yorkers 

20           when you created this program by making sure 

21           that it's fully funded in this fiscal year.  

22                  We also urge you to ensure sufficient 

23           funding to support the implementation of the 

24           important voting reforms that you've secured 


                                                                   465

 1           in recent years and make sure that boards of 

 2           elections and the workers who are serving on 

 3           the frontlines of our democracy have the 

 4           resources that they need to provide excellent 

 5           voter service in this critical year.

 6                  Thank you for your continued 

 7           leadership in strengthening our democracy.  

 8           We stand ready to help, and thank you for the 

 9           opportunity.

10                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

11                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

12                  So for questions, we go first to 

13           Assemblywoman Walker, chair of the Assembly's 

14           Election Law Committee, for three minutes.

15                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WALKER:  Thank you.  

16           thank you, Madam Chairwoman, -women. 

17                  And thank you so much for your 

18           testimony today.

19                  The New York Early Mail Voter Act went 

20           into effect on January 1st of this year.  The 

21           Executive has proposed an additional funding 

22           of $7.7 million for prepaid return postage 

23           for this program.  

24                  The funding also includes the prepaid 


                                                                   466

 1           postage for absentee ballots.  In your 

 2           estimation, is this funding adequate to fund 

 3           prepaid return postage for both 

 4           mail-in-voting programs?

 5                  MS. ZDANYS:  (Mic issues.)  Oh, there 

 6           we go.  

 7                  Yes, I believe that this is a good 

 8           faith estimate for covering both of those 

 9           mail programs.  It is really hard to estimate 

10           what the populace is going to do in this 

11           presidential election.  Obviously we saw 

12           extensive use of mail voting in 2020.  The 

13           early vote-by-mail program with its universal 

14           approach should be well used by the public.  

15                  And I do note that yesterday's court 

16           ruling making it constitutional should ensure 

17           us to be able to promote that new feature to 

18           the public and use it.

19                  I believe it's a good estimate.  We 

20           just probably won't know until we get done 

21           with this in November, around 

22           Thanksgiving-time, how many people took 

23           advantage of this program.  But we'll get a 

24           good idea over the first two primaries and 


                                                                   467

 1           comparing to previous primaries as well.

 2                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WALKER:  Awesome.

 3                  Mandatory training of poll workers and 

 4           train-the-trainer programs will be 

 5           implemented this year.  The Executive has 

 6           provided funds to support the staff for these 

 7           programs.  

 8                  In your estimation, are the funds 

 9           provided to support the new employees 

10           sufficient, and have local boards of 

11           elections voiced any concerns regarding their 

12           ability to accomplish this new training?

13                  MR. CZARNY:  So it is my understanding 

14           that this training is going to be handled by 

15           the State Board of Elections.  The funds are 

16           there for them to do that training.  

17                  And we are going to send two 

18           representatives from each county to learn 

19           from them, get this train-the-trainer 

20           training, and then implement them into our 

21           current existing training programs, which 

22           should not add any cost to those programs.  

23           It's just making sure that the best practices 

24           are put forward in the training that we 


                                                                   468

 1           already do.

 2                  So I do believe that the funding is 

 3           adequate at this time.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WALKER:  Awesome.

 5                  And the last question I have is the 

 6           New York State Public Campaign Finance 

 7           Program has recently been implemented.  To 

 8           date, are you aware of how many candidates 

 9           have applied to participate in the program?  

10                  And do you believe the program -- how 

11           do you believe the program has fared so far?

12                  MR. CZARNY:  I'm going to defer to my 

13           colleagues on that.

14                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Just a quick 

15           answer.  And perhaps you'd like to follow up 

16           in writing to both the Assemblywoman and the 

17           committees.

18                  MS. WHARTON:  Sure.

19                  Based on the publicly available 

20           information, over 205 have -- last I looked, 

21           had signed up for the program.

22                  And so we're encouraged.  We're 

23           pleased with the rate and -- as well as the 

24           demographics.  It's upstate, downstate, 


                                                                   469

 1           incumbents, challengers, Republicans, 

 2           Democrats, everyone.  So we're pleased at 

 3           this point.

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

 5                  We go to the Senate.  Senator May?

 6                  SENATOR MAY:  Thank you.  

 7                  And thank you all for your testimony 

 8           and your good work.  

 9                  Petitioning is about to start, and I 

10           represent a number of rural communities where 

11           the weather can be terrible in March, and a 

12           lot of the petitioners are senior citizens, 

13           and it can be dangerous work.  I've got some 

14           proposals to reduce the thresholds or to have 

15           online petitioning.  I've heard other 

16           proposals for just a fee to get on the ballot 

17           or allowing local county committees to 

18           designate candidates.

19                  What is the best way to deal with 

20           petitioning, in your view?

21                  MR. CZARNY:  So the association hasn't 

22           taken an official position.  So anything that 

23           I say is for my personal position on this.

24                  I think we do need to take a hard look 


                                                                   470

 1           at petitioning as our only ballot access 

 2           method.  It is becoming harder and harder to 

 3           go to doors.  Ring cameras are making it 

 4           harder for volunteers to actually receive 

 5           those signatures.   

 6                  You know, other states do a variety of 

 7           different things.  They have petitions 

 8           available, but they also have filing fees 

 9           available, they also have versions of online 

10           petitioning available.  I think we should 

11           look at all of these methods to provide as 

12           many pathways to getting on the ballot so the 

13           voters can have their choice in the primary 

14           and fall elections.

15                  SENATOR MAY:  Thank you.

16                  Okay, then I have another question 

17           that maybe Dustin can't answer.  But --

18                  MR. CZARNY:  Okay, fine.

19                  SENATOR MAY:  -- in my county, the 

20           county legislature is talking about spending 

21           six figures to challenge the law that moved 

22           county and town elections to even years.  

23                  Is that a good use of taxpayer money?  

24           Does that -- will that promote more democracy 


                                                                   471

 1           or less democracy?

 2                  MR. CZARNY:  I'll -- I'm happy to 

 3           answer this.  It is my county, and it is my 

 4           legislature.  And as you may know, that the 

 5           legislature actually shorted the --

 6                  SENATOR MAY:  It's your taxpayer 

 7           dollars too.

 8                  MR. CZARNY:  It's my taxpayer dollars.  

 9                  And the legislature also shorted the 

10           board of elections a million dollars off our 

11           bipartisan request for funding this election.  

12           Yet they are putting in $100,000 of taxpayer 

13           money -- at least, is what they're saying -- 

14           to -- and they passed this today, to start a 

15           lawsuit.

16                  These lawsuits are usually brought by 

17           political parties and not taxpayer-funded 

18           lawsuits.  And I'm -- I would love to see 

19           that money spent elsewhere.  I have a lot of 

20           holes in my budget that I could fill with 

21           that.

22                  SENATOR MAY:  Thank you.

23                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

24                  We go to the Assembly, Assemblyman 


                                                                   472

 1           Jacobson.

 2                  ASSEMBLYMAN JACOBSON:  Thank you all 

 3           for your testimony. 

 4                  I represent parts of three counties:  

 5           Orange, Dutchess and Ulster.  The big 

 6           difference is not the population; you have 

 7           400,000, 300,000 and about 200,000.  The 

 8           problem is, is that the county boards of 

 9           elections do not support the boards of 

10           elections in the same way.

11                  And so it's so important that we get 

12           the money from the state, because as you 

13           mentioned -- because it was great -- we're 

14           curing ballots.  So once the boards got used 

15           to that and were able to get some people, now 

16           we're finally counting most of the votes 

17           before Election Day.  That means they had to 

18           take people off that and get more people.

19                  I'm proposing another 20 million that 

20           half would be for staff and half would be for 

21           equipment.  Because most of the equipment was 

22           bought in about 2019, and then -- and since 

23           then you have all these updates.  And I think 

24           that would be necessary.


                                                                   473

 1                  And just real quick, you want to 

 2           answer that, what you think?  I'll give you 

 3           15 -- just say -- yes is fine, and that's 

 4           good.

 5                  MS. ZDANYS:  The Brennan Center 

 6           certainly supports greater funding for county 

 7           boards of elections for personnel and for 

 8           infrastructure costs.

 9                  ASSEMBLYMAN JACOBSON:  Yeah.  I mean, 

10           that's the problem.  And it's hard to get 

11           inspectors.  It seemed like, when I was 

12           growing up, it was easier to get them at $35 

13           a day.  But at any rate, I think we have to 

14           consider raising that and getting the state 

15           to supply.  

16                  And I just want to get my personal 

17           opinion in concerning online petitioning.  I 

18           think it would line us up for fraud so 

19           much -- so easily.  And I would -- I don't 

20           want us to be like New Hampshire and the 

21           other states where you pay $100 and you're on 

22           the ballot, because then I think that by 

23           petitioning it shows support in the community 

24           and it means something.


                                                                   474

 1                  Because to have 20 people running for 

 2           any office is not really a choice either.  

 3           And, you know, you get so many people you 

 4           don't know what's going on. 

 5                  So I would hope that all of you would 

 6           consider that.  And of course my friend 

 7           Senator May and I will have a discussion 

 8           later.

 9                  (Laughter.)

10                  ASSEMBLYMAN JACOBSON:  But it's not to 

11           get into a debate, it's just that I know what 

12           would happen.  And I think it's important 

13           that we're -- in New York, we're different.  

14           You have to show support.  And we made it 

15           easy enough.  And I really think that that 

16           would be the way to go.

17                  If you want to comment on that, you 

18           may.  If you don't want to comment, that's 

19           fine.

20                  MR. CZARNY:  Well, I think like with 

21           any process that we put in place, sufficient 

22           fraud protections have to be put in place as 

23           well.

24                  I believe that we have really great 


                                                                   475

 1           minds here in the New York State Legislature.  

 2           We could find a way to do this without having 

 3           fraud --

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN JACOBSON:  You're getting 

 5           diplomatic in your old age.

 6                  (Laughter.)

 7                  ASSEMBLYMAN JACOBSON:  That's all I 

 8           have.  Thank you.

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.

10                  Our last questioner, Assemblyman 

11           Eachus.

12                  ASSEMBLYMAN EACHUS:  Thank you, 

13           Chairwoman.  

14                  Thank you for your testimony today.

15                  First of all, I agree we should do 

16           petitioning.  I just think it's the wrong 

17           time of the year to be doing petitioning.  

18           But that's another issue. 

19                  Dustin, this is for you.  And correct 

20           me if I'm wrong.  But you can register to 

21           vote up to 10 days before the general 

22           election.

23                  MR. CZARNY:  Correct.  

24                  ASSEMBLYMAN EACHUS:  Okay.  We have 


                                                                   476

 1           nine days of early voting and one day off.  

 2           That makes 10 days.  

 3                  So I have been approached by an 

 4           election inspector saying we should restrict 

 5           the election to 11 days before, because those 

 6           who come in on the 10th day to register then 

 7           must register -- or vote, rather, via 

 8           affidavit.

 9                  MR. CZARNY:  Only if they're not 

10           registered to vote and not in the poll books.  

11                  So this is what's referred to as 

12           "Golden Day."  I actually think it went off 

13           with a pretty good success in 2023.  The 

14           Legislature also codified Golden Day as well, 

15           that the preferred method for this would be 

16           affidavit-ballot voting.  

17                  And let's be clear.  Whether it was 11 

18           days or 12 days or any amount of days before 

19           the election that are right before the early 

20           voting, there's going to be a significant 

21           amount of people that have to vote by 

22           affidavit if they register at the last 

23           minute, because it takes time for the boards 

24           of elections to process those registrations 


                                                                   477

 1           and then push them out to the poll books.  

 2           It's not instant registration.  

 3                  That's why -- 

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN EACHUS:  No, I realize  

 5           that.  But the election inspectors -- and 

 6           it's only been a few -- have said to me they 

 7           could do it within 24 hours and would save 

 8           them a lot of work -- 

 9                  MR. CZARNY:  I don't believe any board 

10           of elections could register voters within 

11           24 hours that late to the election.  We're 

12           always running two to three days behind.  

13                  And that affidavit ballot is a proper 

14           use, because those are inspected and opened 

15           after Election Day under bipartisan review.  

16           And so --

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN EACHUS:  I would agree 

18           with that.  I don't have a problem with that.  

19           It was just trying to get them on the 

20           polls -- in the books beforehand.

21                  MR. CZARNY:  I understand that.

22                  ASSEMBLYMAN EACHUS:  Erica, I've got a 

23           question for you.  One of the main 

24           functions -- first of all, I have a very 


                                                                   478

 1           active League of Women Voters group in my 

 2           district, and I'm very proud of that.  One of 

 3           their main functions they consider is 

 4           election registration.  Okay?  But what 

 5           they're doing is having trouble getting into 

 6           some schools to actually do that.  Some 

 7           schools allow them in; some schools do not.

 8                  Are you, as the deputy director or as 

 9           the head group here in New York State, doing 

10           anything to help them with access in schools?

11                  MS. SMITKA:  Yes, we are.  That's a 

12           great question.  

13                  And we're actually working with 

14           Senator Mayer's office to work on the bill 

15           that was passed last year to create programs 

16           to work with students on preregistration in 

17           schools.  

18                  And so we've been working a lot with 

19           our local leagues on how we can work to move 

20           that program forward and make it that much 

21           easier for younger voters to get registered 

22           and preregistered.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN EACHUS:  Great.  Thank you 

24           very much.  


                                                                   479

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you.  

 2                  Don't leave just yet.  Assemblyman -- 

 3           our ranker, Assemblyman Ra.

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you.  

 5                  Just a quick question.  I know we 

 6           talked about, you know, faith in elections, 

 7           which I think is very important.  There's 

 8           been a lot of discussion and controversy 

 9           about these ExpressVote XL machines that were 

10           authorized by the state board.  

11                  I don't know if -- on the election 

12           side, I don't know if any counties have 

13           actually purchased them yet.  But if you -- I 

14           was just interested in your thoughts with 

15           regard to those machines.

16                  MR. CZARNY:  So I'm going to defer, 

17           only because they are certified machines by 

18           the State Board of Elections, certified to 

19           run in New York State Board of Elections.  

20                  I don't know of any county in New York 

21           that has put those into the field yet, but I 

22           know many are planning to -- or not many, but 

23           some are planning to.  And it's certified by 

24           the State Board of Elections, so I'm going to 


                                                                   480

 1           leave it at that.  

 2                  But I'll give it to the advocates on 

 3           that.

 4                  MS. SMITKA:  The League currently 

 5           doesn't have a position that would allow us 

 6           to support or oppose the machines.  I don't 

 7           know if the Brennan Center or --

 8                  MS. WHARTON:  We -- Fair Elections, 

 9           we're primarily -- or exclusively public 

10           campaign financing, and so we don't have a 

11           position on that.

12                  MS. ZDANYS:  And the Brennan Center, 

13           similarly, does not have a position in 

14           support or against these specific machines.  

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Okay, thanks.  

16                  And then Ms. Wharton, you may have 

17           mentioned this, but what do you think is the 

18           appropriate amount that we will need to cover 

19           the public campaign finance?  Because I would 

20           agree that -- you know, regardless of how you 

21           feel or anybody feels about the program, that 

22           the amount that has been appropriated, you 

23           know, last year and this year isn't -- if we 

24           get the participation that we're looking like 


                                                                   481

 1           we're on our way to getting, it's not going 

 2           to be sufficient.

 3                  MS. WHARTON:  Well, we think that the 

 4           amount that has been appropriated in the 

 5           Governor's budget is a good start.  And we -- 

 6           of course if you'd like to increase that, 

 7           feel free.  But we think this is a good start 

 8           for this cycle.  

 9                  And at the end of the cycle we'll have 

10           data that will inform our decisions going 

11           forward.  But based on all of the studies 

12           that the Brennan Center has done, and experts 

13           around the country, we're pleased with this 

14           amount.

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you.

16                  CHAIRWOMAN WEINSTEIN:  Thank you for 

17           all of your testimony today.  I want to thank 

18           my colleagues for being here.  

19                  This is going to conclude the Local 

20           Governments hearing.  Tomorrow at 9:30 we 

21           will be having the Environmental Conservation 

22           hearing, which will be starting first with 

23           agriculture and then moving to environmental 

24           conservation and energy.  So see you all 


                                                                   482

 1           tomorrow.  

 2                  Thank you all for being here today.

 3                  (Whereupon, at 5:35 p.m., the budget 

 4           hearing concluded.)

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