Public Hearing - February 27, 2025

                                                                       1

 1  BEFORE THE NEW YORK STATE SENATE FINANCE
    AND ASSEMBLY WAYS AND MEANS COMMITTEES
 2  ------------------------------------------------------

 3          JOINT LEGISLATIVE HEARING

 4             In the Matter of the
            2025-2026 EXECUTIVE BUDGET
 5                   ON TAXES 
    
 6  ------------------------------------------------------

 7                              Hearing Room B
                                Legislative Office Building
 8                              Albany, New York
    
 9                             February 27, 2025
                               9:35 a.m.  
10  

11  PRESIDING:

12            Assemblyman G. Gary Pretlow
              Chair, Assembly Ways & Means Committee
13  
              Senator Liz Krueger 
14            Chair, Senate Finance Committee 
    
15  PRESENT:

16            Senator Thomas F. O'Mara
              Senate Finance Committee (RM)
17  
              Assemblyman Edward P. Ra 
18            Assembly Ways & Means Committee (RM)
    
19            Assemblywoman Jaime R. Williams 
              Chair, Committee on Real Property Taxation
20  
              Senator Andrew Gounardes
21            Chair, Senate Committee on Budget and Revenue
    
22            Assemblyman Brian D. Miller
    
23            Senator John C. Liu
    
24


                                                                   2

 1  2025-2026 Executive Budget
    Taxes
 2  2-27-25
    
 3  PRESENT:  (Continued)
    
 4            Assemblyman Erik M. Dilan
    
 5            Senator Gustavo Rivera
    
 6            Assemblyman Edward C. Braunstein
    
 7            Senator Shelley B. Mayer
    
 8            Assemblyman Steven Otis 
    
 9            Assemblywoman Andrea K. Bailey
    
10            Senator Robert Jackson
    
11            Assemblyman Brian Manktelow
    
12            Assemblyman Jonathan Rivera
    
13            Senator Pamela Helming
    
14  
    
15  
    
16  
    
17  
    
18  
    
19  
    
20  
    
21  
    
22  
    
23  
    
24  

                                                                   3

 1  2025-2026 Executive Budget
    Taxes
 2  2-27-25
    
 3                     LIST OF SPEAKERS
    
 4                                       STATEMENT   QUESTIONS
    
 5  Amanda Hiller 
    Acting Commissioner
 6  NYS Department of Taxation
     and Finance                              6           15
 7  
    Nathan Gusdorf
 8  Executive Director 
    Fiscal Policy Institute                
 9       -and-
    Charles Khan
10  Deputy Director
    Strong Economy for All 
11   Coalition
         -and-
12  Ron Deutsch
    Director
13  New Yorkers for Fiscal
     Fairness                                92          102
14  
    Ashley Ranslow
15  NYS Director
    National Federation of 
16   Independent Business (NFIB)
         -and-
17  Kari Siddiqui
    Project Director
18  Schuyler Center for Analysis
     and Advocacy
19       -and-
    Peter Cook
20  Executive Director
    New York State Council 
21   of Churches                           130          140
    
22  
    
23
    
24
    

                                                                   4

 1                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Good morning, and 

 2           welcome.  

 3                  I'm Assemblyman Gary Pretlow, chair of 

 4           the Assembly Ways and Means Committee, and 

 5           today we begin the 13th in a series of 

 6           hearings conducted by the joint fiscal 

 7           committees of the Legislature regarding the 

 8           Governor's proposed budget for fiscal year 

 9           '25-'26.  

10                  These hearings are conducted pursuant 

11           to New York State Constitution and 

12           Legislative Law.

13                  Today the Assembly Ways and Means 

14           Committee and the Senate Finance Committee 

15           will hear testimony concerning the Governor's 

16           budget proposal for Taxes.

17                  With us we have 

18           Assemblywoman Williams, the chair of our 

19           Taxation Committee, as well as 

20           Assemblyman Braunstein, Assemblyman Dilan, 

21           and Assemblyman Otis.

22                  Of course we have the chair of the 

23           Senate Finance Committee, Senator Liz 

24           Krueger, who will announce her members.


                                                                   5

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Good morning.  

 2                  I am joined by Senator Gounardes, 

 3           chair of Budget and Revenue; Senator 

 4           John Liu; Senator Jackson; Senator Mayer.  

 5                  And our ranker, Tom O'Mara, might 

 6           introduce -- no?  Just himself.  This is 

 7           Senator Tom Mare -- Tom O'Mara.

 8                  (Laughter.)

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I need some 

10           coffee.

11                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  And the ranker on 

12           Ways and Means.

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Good morning.  

14                  We are joined by Assemblywoman Bailey, 

15           who is our ranker on Real Property Taxes, as 

16           well as Assemblyman Miller.

17                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you.  

18                  Let's go over some of the ground 

19           rules.  The governmental witnesses have 

20           10 minutes for a presentation, and the chairs 

21           of the appropriate committees have 10 minutes 

22           for questioning.  

23                  All other members have three minutes 

24           for questions.  The rankers have five 


                                                                   6

 1           minutes.  

 2                  And I can tell we have one person 

 3           here, you're waiting patiently for us.  We 

 4           have your testimony, if you'd just like to 

 5           just summarize what your testimony is, then 

 6           leave room for questions.  Otherwise, do your 

 7           thing.

 8                  Thank you.  

 9                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  (Mic off) --  

10           thank you for this opportunity to discuss 

11           Governor Hochul --

12                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  They're turning 

13           it up.

14                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Oh, okay.  

15           It's not me, it's them?  Okay, great.

16                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Yeah.

17                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Thank you 

18           for this opportunity to discuss Governor 

19           Hochul's Executive Budget and the operations 

20           of the Tax Department.  

21                  As I suspect you know, the national 

22           and state economies showed unexpected 

23           resilience last year, including slowing 

24           inflation and steady job growth.  The 


                                                                   7

 1           Division of the Budget is now projecting a 

 2           significant budget surplus going into fiscal 

 3           year 2026, in large measure due to strong 

 4           personal income tax receipts.

 5                  Still, we are facing very real 

 6           economic and budgetary risks.  Nearly half of 

 7           New York's personal income tax receipts are 

 8           paid by fewer than 2 percent of New York's 

 9           personal taxpayers.  Our economic fortunes 

10           are tied to their economic fortunes.  When 

11           they have a good year, we see strong 

12           income tax receipts.

13                  It's too soon to tell how the current 

14           turmoil in Washington will play out, but we 

15           know that uncertainty itself can impact the 

16           economy.  We just saw an unexpected spike in 

17           the rate of inflation and a drop in consumer 

18           confidence.  The president is using trade 

19           tariffs to advance both economic and 

20           non-economic policy objectives.  And efforts 

21           to reshape federal spending and the federal 

22           government itself will have consequences for 

23           New York that we can't yet predict.

24                  What is certain is that affordability 


                                                                   8

 1           remains an enormous challenge in communities 

 2           across the state.  Governor Hochul has 

 3           proposed a fiscal year 2026 budget that is 

 4           focused on addressing these challenges.  As 

 5           part of her Affordability Agenda, the 

 6           Governor's Executive Budget advances several 

 7           proposals to deliver much-needed tax relief 

 8           to hardworking New York families.

 9                  First, Governor Hochul's Executive 

10           Budget would return $3 billion to New Yorkers 

11           in the form of a sales tax rebate.  Under 

12           this proposal, the Tax Department would 

13           deliver rebate payments to 8.6 million 

14           households this year, providing much-needed 

15           relief to help families meet every-increasing 

16           costs.  

17                  The Governor's proposed budget would 

18           also cut personal income tax rates for low- 

19           and middle-income taxpayers.  When fully 

20           phased in, the new rates for these taxpayers 

21           will be the lowest in nearly 70 years, 

22           providing nearly $1 billion in recurring tax 

23           relief to 8.3 million New Yorkers.

24                  At the same time, Governor Hochul is 


                                                                   9

 1           proposing to keep the state's top three tax 

 2           brackets in place for an additional five 

 3           years, providing consistency and 

 4           predictability in the tax treatment of these 

 5           tranches of taxpayers.

 6                  The third prong of Governor Hochul's 

 7           tax relief package is a historic expansion of 

 8           the Empire State Child Credit.  New York has 

 9           offered a child tax credit for decades, but 

10           the credit only covered children ages 4 to 

11           16.  The Governor and Legislature expanded 

12           the credit in 2023 to cover children under 

13           the age of 4, allowing us to reach nearly 

14           630,000 additional children.

15                  We know that a refundable child tax 

16           credit is one of the most effective ways of 

17           helping to address the needs of children 

18           living in poverty.  Building on the 

19           recommendations of the Child Poverty 

20           Reduction Advisory Council, Governor Hochul 

21           is proposing to decouple the state credit 

22           from the federal child credit in order to 

23           provide significantly greater benefits to 

24           even more families.


                                                                   10

 1                  We will be increasing the maximum 

 2           credit from $330 to $500 for children ages 4 

 3           to 16, and to $1,000 for children under 

 4           age 4.

 5                  We will also be changing the way the 

 6           credit phases out at higher income levels, 

 7           and we'll be eliminating the minimum earned 

 8           income requirement that historically 

 9           functioned to exclude some of our poorest 

10           families.  This initiative is a critical step 

11           in the state's commitment to cut child 

12           poverty in half by 2031.

13                  At the Tax Department we're working to 

14           make these child tax credits and other 

15           valuable tax programs more readily available 

16           to New York taxpayers.  

17                  I have long been frustrated that 

18           low-income taxpayers too often turn to 

19           expensive tax preparers to help them claim 

20           the refundable credits they are entitled to 

21           under the state's tax laws.  Exorbitant fees 

22           function to discount the value of these 

23           credits, diverting these tax expenditures 

24           away from the families they are intended to 


                                                                   11

 1           help.

 2                  This dynamic is one of the reasons 

 3           New York jumped at the opportunity to 

 4           participate in the Direct File pilot program 

 5           last year.  Direct File allows taxpayers to 

 6           prepare and file their federal tax returns 

 7           for free.  

 8                  New York was one of four states that 

 9           partnered with the Internal Revenue Service 

10           last year to pilot parallel direct-filing 

11           tools for state tax returns.  Although the 

12           pilot was limited in scope and availability, 

13           14,000 New Yorkers used the state filing app 

14           to prepare and submit their state tax returns 

15           for free, saving $260, about -- or $270.

16                  This year, Direct File is bigger and 

17           better.  More New Yorkers are eligible to use 

18           Direct File to prepare and file relatively 

19           simple federal and state returns.  Direct 

20           File now supports additional types of income 

21           and additional types of tax credits, and the 

22           income eligibility limits have expanded to 

23           cover single filers with incomes up to 

24           $200,000 and joint filers with incomes up to 


                                                                   12

 1           $250,000.

 2                  We launched the Tax Department's 

 3           mobile-friendly app when the tax filing 

 4           season began in late January and, to date, 

 5           thousands of New Yorkers have used it to file 

 6           their state returns -- 83 percent in less 

 7           than 15 minutes, and with a 97 percent 

 8           satisfaction rate.

 9                  In addition to Direct File, New York 

10           participates in the Free File program, a 

11           partnership with tax software providers that 

12           allows eligible taxpayers to use tax 

13           preparation software for free.  For many 

14           years we've run a companion taxpayer 

15           assistance program where members of Team Tax 

16           help eligible New Yorkers use Free File 

17           software to prepare and e-file their returns, 

18           building skills those taxpayers go on to 

19           share with their family and friends. 

20                  The team that built our Direct File 

21           app is part of an army of IT administrators 

22           and IT professionals who are replatforming 

23           and modernizing the core IT systems that 

24           power the Tax Department.  We are now in 


                                                                   13

 1           Year 4 of this five-year project, still 

 2           on time and on budget, and we're really 

 3           starting to see the fruits of their labor.

 4                  We are currently rolling out a new 

 5           wage and withholding system that employers 

 6           and payroll service providers will use later 

 7           this spring to file 600,000 first-quarter 

 8           wage and tax withholding reports covering 

 9           14 million employee records.

10                  This summer we'll be rolling out the 

11           new Real Property System Online, or RPSO, 

12           which will replace the outdated software used 

13           by assessors across the state with new, 

14           modern, cloud-based tools that will allow 

15           assessors to work more effectively and 

16           efficiently.  We've been working closely with 

17           the property tax assessment community to make 

18           sure the new tools will meet their needs and 

19           can't wait to see the system go live.

20                  This year Tax will also be launching 

21           Secure Choice, a state-sponsored retirement 

22           savings program for New Yorkers whose 

23           employers do not offer other retirement 

24           savings options.  These employers will be 


                                                                   14

 1           required to make Secure Choice available for 

 2           their employees, allowing those employees to 

 3           use payroll deduction to save for retirement.

 4                  We expect to begin on-boarding 

 5           employers into a limited pilot this June and, 

 6           assuming all goes well, we'll be rolling out 

 7           the program to all employers in the fall.

 8                  In addition to these signature 

 9           projects, Tax is always looking for 

10           opportunities to improve our interactions 

11           with taxpayers.  Many taxpayers engage with 

12           us online, including more than 7 million 

13           Online Services System accountholders.  We 

14           handled more than 2.2 million calls in 2024, 

15           with 431,000 taxpayers opting to get a 

16           call-back instead of hanging on hold.  More 

17           than 62,000 callers were assisted using 

18           interpretation services in 32 different 

19           languages, and we're currently working on 

20           changes to our integrated voice response 

21           menus so we can ascertain taxpayers' 

22           preferred language earlier in the process.  

23           In these and many other ways we continue to 

24           strive to improve the taxpayer experience.


                                                                   15

 1                  As I suspect you can tell, I'm 

 2           incredibly proud of Team Tax and the work we 

 3           are doing at the Tax Department.  I'm excited 

 4           about the initiatives we are pursuing and 

 5           look forward to working with you to move them 

 6           forward.  I'm happy to take any questions.

 7                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblywoman Jaime 

 8           Williams.

 9                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WILLIAMS:  Thank you.  

10                  So we'll start with questions 

11           regarding the Executive proposes to make 

12           various changes to the income and eligibility 

13           rules for the STAR program, including 

14           proposals to require only one resident owner 

15           of the property to be at least 65 years old 

16           to qualify for the Enhanced STAR; clarify 

17           eligibility rules so only income of the 

18           owners who as primary residents reside on the 

19           property is considered; allow certain 

20           property owners who are not required to file 

21           income tax returns to maintain their benefit 

22           without the need to file income verification 

23           worksheets.

24                  How many homeowners are currently 


                                                                   16

 1           enrolled in the STAR program?  And what is 

 2           the participation split between Basic and 

 3           Enhanced STAR?  

 4                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  I don't have 

 5           those numbers offhand, but I can certainly 

 6           get them to you.  And I know that we have 

 7           millions of properties that are receiving 

 8           STAR benefits.  But I can get you the exact 

 9           numbers.  

10                  Most properties are receiving the 

11           Basic STAR program.  The Enhanced STAR 

12           benefits are going to low-income senior 

13           citizens who are property owners.  I think 

14           the income tax -- combined income tax cutoff 

15           is 97,000.  And we have hundreds of thousands 

16           of Enhanced STAR recipients and millions of 

17           Basic STAR recipients across the state.

18                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WILLIAMS:  Has the 

19           New York State Assessors Association provided 

20           any feedback on this proposal?

21                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  I am not 

22           aware of any feedback we've received directly 

23           from the Assessors Association.  I would 

24           expect that they would be generally 


                                                                   17

 1           supportive.  

 2                  The -- one of the challenges that we 

 3           have in the STAR program, particularly with 

 4           regard to the Enhanced STAR program, is that 

 5           the eligibility rules are incredibly complex 

 6           and difficult for seniors to navigate.  

 7           They're difficult for anyone to navigate.  

 8                  We have a homeowner benefit portal on 

 9           our website in our Online Services System 

10           that folks can use, for example, to enroll in 

11           STAR direct deposit.  And one look at that, 

12           at the complexity of the registration 

13           process, will tell you that the rules around 

14           STAR are very complex.  And they're complex 

15           in ways that I don't think are achieving the 

16           overarching goals of the STAR program.  

17                  For example, we're talking about the 

18           income -- you know, which owner's income is 

19           considered when determining STAR eligibility.  

20           We look at the income of both the owners who 

21           are resident on the property and the owners 

22           who are not resident on the property and 

23           their spouses.  

24                  And so, first, if the -- you know, I 


                                                                   18

 1           inherited a home with my brother, my brother 

 2           lives in Arkansas, I'm the one who lived in 

 3           the house and cared for dad, I'm still in the 

 4           house, but it's not my income alone that 

 5           matters here.  Even though I'm the one who's 

 6           in the house and still living in the house, 

 7           we also need to try and measure the income of 

 8           the brother in Arkansas and that brother's 

 9           spouse.

10                  The Tax Department doesn't have the 

11           ability to verify that income efficiently 

12           because that income isn't being reported to 

13           New York.  So we're not effectively using 

14           that as a measure, and I don't think that 

15           measure is one that speaks to whether or not 

16           the occupants of that property, that home, 

17           are able to meet their tax obligations here 

18           in New York.  

19                  So by trying to ease that complexity, 

20           we think we will allow the Enhanced STAR 

21           benefit to reach the families that we want it 

22           to reach, as opposed to having people sort of 

23           default out of the system because it was too 

24           complex to navigate.  


                                                                   19

 1                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WILLIAMS:  Okay.  You've 

 2           actually answered other questions that I had, 

 3           too, as to the barriers and so forth.  And 

 4           it's really great that you guys acknowledge 

 5           that, because sometimes it can be very, very 

 6           confusing.

 7                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  I think the 

 8           STAR program has become very confusing.  It 

 9           dates back to the '90s, and every couple of 

10           years a new situation arises and then we do a 

11           legislative fix to address that situation.  

12           And what we have done is made the program 

13           very complex.  

14                  I think it's complex for every 

15           property owner, and especially complex for 

16           our seniors.  And I think our seniors -- 

17           we're providing enhanced benefits because we 

18           understand that our seniors are facing 

19           different challenges in terms of the 

20           affordability of their homes.  And that mix I 

21           think is just not where we want to go as a 

22           state.  

23                  This will ease administration for the 

24           Tax Department, for assessors, and for 


                                                                   20

 1           property owners, and we think that this is 

 2           the time to get it done.

 3                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN WILLIAMS:  Okay.  I 

 4           think I'll yield my time.  If there's any 

 5           other questions, I may come back.

 6                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Okay.  

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

 8                  Our chair, Senator Gounardes, from 

 9           Brooklyn.

10                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  Thank you.  Good 

11           morning, Commissioner.  How are you?  

12                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Good 

13           morning.

14                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  I want to start 

15           quickly with -- I have a bunch of things to 

16           cover.  

17                  But first, there was a proposal in the 

18           Governor's budget to eliminate the 

19           requirement that IDAs report the value of 

20           their sales tax exemptions to DTF.  And they 

21           argued that it was redundant, a redundant 

22           reporting mechanism.  

23                  Can you comment on that?  Is it 

24           redundant?  And do you need that information?


                                                                   21

 1                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Yeah.  So 

 2           IDAs report certain tax-related information 

 3           to the Tax Department, but they have much 

 4           more robust reporting requirements to the 

 5           Authorities Budget Office, including this 

 6           particular sales tax exemption information.  

 7                  The Tax Department is able to get that 

 8           information from the Authorities Budget 

 9           Office, either directly or through their 

10           online PARIS system.  And so we have access 

11           to the information, but it is a duplicative 

12           requirement that requires IDAs to report 

13           separately to us from their overarching ABO 

14           reporting requirements, and requires us to 

15           process those one-off reportings to us 

16           differently.  

17                  We think we can be more efficient and 

18           it will ease a burden on IDAs without 

19           changing in any way how we oversee IDAs.

20                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  Thank you.  

21                  And it's helpful looking at the tax  

22           expenditure report that your department puts 

23           out.  It's easy to see that that exemption, 

24           for example, last year was $86 million in 


                                                                   22

 1           foregone sales tax revenue.  Right?  

 2                  And so my initial concern is without 

 3           the reporting, we lose the finding there and 

 4           the publication of that finding.  And so even 

 5           if we remove this reporting requirement, will 

 6           you still be able and will you still publish 

 7           that value in the Tax Expenditure Report as 

 8           you guys have been?  

 9                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  I think as a 

10           practical matter we're using the ABO 

11           reporting now.

12                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  I'm sorry?

13                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  I think as a 

14           practical matter we're using the ABO 

15           reporting now.

16                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  Okay.

17                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  We receive 

18           it separately, but we can grab it from there 

19           in a one-stop that is easy for us to use.  So 

20           we're using that reporting.  

21                  We get those reports from IDAs, and we 

22           could lean back on them if for some reason 

23           the ABO stopped operating.  But I don't see 

24           that day.  I think the ABO is performing 


                                                                   23

 1           important functions for the state.  

 2                  And again, for IDAs, the sales tax 

 3           exemption reporting to the ABO is one piece 

 4           of a much larger set of reporting obligations 

 5           that IDAs have to the ABO.  So they're 

 6           undertaking that reporting to the ABO in a 

 7           different focused way than the one-off 

 8           exemptions that they're reporting to the 

 9           Tax Department.

10                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  Thank you.

11                  Going back to the Tax Expenditure 

12           Report, which I find illuminating, just a 

13           couple of weeks ago I kind of put out a quick 

14           analysis looking at some of the things that 

15           we exempt, some of the things that we forego 

16           in tax revenue, trying to total up some of 

17           the loose change that we leave on the table.  

18                  You know, found quite a bit of 

19           money -- you know, 3 billion-plus.  One of 

20           the things that I saw in just the report that 

21           you guys put out this week, you know, we 

22           forego more than $600 million in sales tax 

23           revenue because we exempt people who buy gold 

24           bars from paying that tax -- $600-plus 


                                                                   24

 1           million, according to your estimates in the 

 2           most recent fiscal year report.  

 3                  Do you have a sense of who's buying 

 4           those gold bars that we're giving that tax 

 5           break to?  

 6                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  I think -- 

 7           my understanding, although I've never gone to 

 8           see the space, I probably wouldn't be allowed 

 9           in, is that there are a couple of 

10           depositories for gold bullion deep 

11           underground in the city.  And the ownership 

12           of that gold bullion may change on paper, but 

13           the gold bullion itself does not move.  

14                  And that makes all those transactions 

15           that are happening here in New York that 

16           could be taxable if we imposed sales tax on 

17           them.  

18                  We are taxing capital gains on the 

19           trading in that gold bullion, so it's not 

20           that there isn't a pathway for taxation 

21           there.  But I think the historic rationale 

22           for this exemption, which was put in place 

23           long before I was involved with taxes in 

24           New York, is that it would be hard to move 


                                                                   25

 1           that gold, but it would be a one-time move.  

 2           And they could relocate that gold to another 

 3           state, and then all of the transactions about 

 4           the ownership of that gold -- which isn't 

 5           itself moving, it's not -- I don't buy it and 

 6           take it home, it just sits there in the same 

 7           place -- that a one-time move of that gold 

 8           bullion out of New York would drop away all 

 9           of that potential sales tax revenue that we 

10           think we might be getting if we remove the 

11           exemption, while further sort of diminishing 

12           the state's place in the financial services 

13           industry as a locus for that industry in the 

14           United States.  

15                  Our share of that industry is 

16           declining every year as the growth has 

17           happened -- you know, we're relatively steady 

18           in New York, but the growth in that industry 

19           is happening elsewhere.  And I think the gold 

20           bullion here is an example, an artifact of 

21           some of our place in banking and investment 

22           markets.  And if they figure out how to move 

23           it once, then it's over.

24                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:   Thank you.


                                                                   26

 1                  Last year there was a proposal to 

 2           basically continue a 50 percent -- I believe 

 3           it was a 50 percent credit towards charitable 

 4           contributions for income filers over 

 5           $10 million.  That's the only -- as I 

 6           understand it, the only item itemized 

 7           deduction that we let those high-income 

 8           earners continue to claim even a piece of.  I 

 9           think the rest of them kind of drop off 

10           around the 450, $500,000 income level, they 

11           start to drop off at the itemized level.  

12                  Do we have a sense of a breakdown by 

13           income bracket who is claiming that itemized 

14           deduction?

15                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  For 

16           charitable contributions?

17                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  For charitable 

18           contributions.

19                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  I certainly 

20           don't have that offhand.  We might be able to 

21           get that from our study files.  I can 

22           certainly talk to our data analytics folks 

23           and see if we can figure that out.  I would 

24           assume that we can identify that on our 


                                                                   27

 1           returns.

 2                  You know, I think this is -- we don't 

 3           have the same limitations on deductions as 

 4           the federal government does.  But we have a 

 5           particular limitation on these deductions 

 6           here in New York.  We also have some other 

 7           provisions to make sure, for example, that we 

 8           don't attribute charitable contributions that 

 9           occur in New York to help determine residency 

10           here in New York.  I think that's because we 

11           do have a significant sort of philanthropic 

12           activity in New York, and we want to balance 

13           the investments in, for example, our cultural 

14           institutions against the cost to the state of 

15           allowing those deductions.  

16                  That's a balance that certainly the 

17           Tax Department doesn't choose.  But we can 

18           certainly try to get you information about 

19           that.

20                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  Yeah, I'm just 

21           curious about the breakdown.  

22                  And similarly in that same vein, you 

23           know -- I guess you don't have this 

24           information handy, but I'd also appreciate 


                                                                   28

 1           follow-up on the bracket breakdown for filers 

 2           who claim the college credit tuition 

 3           deduction -- I mean, itemize that -- as well 

 4           as the mortgage interest deduction.  

 5                  Because it's my understanding that 

 6           90 percent of New York filers are not 

 7           itemizing, and so I want to just get a sense 

 8           of that 10 percent, what is the income 

 9           distribution of that 10 percent who are 

10           itemizing.  

11                  And these are costly deductions.  They 

12           might be the right investments, but I think 

13           we need to know who's getting these 

14           investments.

15                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Sure.  Sure, 

16           absolutely.  We can certainly try to get that 

17           information.  

18                  Again, I think that that will be a 

19           data analytics exercise against our study 

20           files.

21                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  And switching in 

22           the last couple of moments here, there's 

23           obviously a lot happening at the federal 

24           level right now, there's a lot of churn.


                                                                   29

 1                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Yes.

 2                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  A lot of churn.  

 3           What -- with all the discussions around the 

 4           renewal of the TCJA, what are you paying most 

 5           attention to, what is the department paying 

 6           most attention to with this renewal?  What 

 7           should we have on our radar as it relates to 

 8           the impacts on New York's code -- where we've 

 9           decoupled, where are we still coupled, 

10           et cetera?  

11                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  I think 

12           we're looking at the non-TCJA provisions that 

13           are at issue most.  I mean, we're certainly 

14           paying attention to the SALT cap, which has 

15           had devastating impacts on the state and 

16           state taxpayers.  

17                  But for the most part, we took action 

18           in 2018 to respond to the 2017 tax cuts, and 

19           we're in a relatively okay place with regard 

20           to those tax changes that are set to expire.  

21                  And what worries me are the other 

22           potential tax changes that could come 

23           together, especially last minute as final 

24           deals are being made, because we don't -- we 


                                                                   30

 1           didn't have very much time to respond to the 

 2           2017 TCJA tax changes, and that forced us to 

 3           make some very broad-based changes.  We 

 4           broadly decoupled from a lot of federal tax 

 5           changes because we didn't have time to have a 

 6           more measured approach to those tax changes 

 7           to decide which ones would work for us and 

 8           which ones wouldn't.  And then we had to go 

 9           back the next year and the year after that to 

10           sort of fine-tune those choices.

11                  And so if we find ourselves again 

12           where tax changes are being made without a 

13           lead time for the impact of those changes, we 

14           may find ourselves jammed with potentially 

15           significant changes to our underlying tax 

16           base because the federal tax base is 

17           changing.  

18                  So changes to the income tax base, 

19           changes to the appropriate tax base could all 

20           have flow-through consequence to New York if 

21           we don't just broadly decouple.  And I don't 

22           think broad decoupling is ever really the 

23           right answer.  We -- I think we want to have 

24           enough time to be deliberate in how we 


                                                                   31

 1           navigate the changing landscape in the 

 2           federal tax code.

 3                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  Okay, thank you.  

 4           I'll have a couple more for Round 2.  Thank 

 5           you.

 6                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblymember 

 7           Bailey for five minutes.

 8                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BAILEY:  Good morning.  

 9           Thank you very much.  It is -- I appreciate 

10           you being here.  And I just have to say real 

11           quick I was a former county clerk, and 

12           working with your team over the years, 

13           they've been great.  So please share that 

14           with them.  I appreciate that.

15                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Absolutely.  

16           We have a great team at Tax.

17                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BAILEY:  My question 

18           initially is going to be around outmigration 

19           and the implications that that could have 

20           potentially on us.  

21                  So the Governor is proposing the 

22           five-year extension on the increased taxes on 

23           the -- for the ultra-millionaire tax.  And 

24           every year we seem to face troubling data on 


                                                                   32

 1           the number of individuals who are no longer 

 2           here.  You had mentioned in your testimony 

 3           that nearly half of New York's personal 

 4           income tax receipts are paid by fewer than 

 5           2 percent of our taxpayers.  

 6                  Since these rates were first enacted 

 7           in 2021, what is your office seeing in terms 

 8           of the number of filers with incomes of more 

 9           than $1 million per year?

10                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  The number 

11           of taxpayers -- we call them income 

12           millionaires, or sometimes just millionaires.  

13           But we're talking about taxpayers who report 

14           a million dollars in income, not who have a 

15           million dollars in assets.  I think that's 

16           very different and an important distinction 

17           to make.  

18                  We saw a huge uptick in the number of 

19           income millionaires in New York in 2021 

20           because it was a huge capital gains year.  

21           That dropped away in 2022.  I'm told that in 

22           twenty-twenty -- so we just finished our 

23           analysis of Tax Year '23, which are the 

24           returns that were processed in 2024.  So it's 


                                                                   33

 1           also important to remember that there is a 

 2           bit of a lag in that data because we're 

 3           looking at returns that are retrospective 

 4           reporting of tax income -- of income and 

 5           deductions in behavior.  

 6                  In -- I'm told in Tax Year '23 we had 

 7           five more income millionaires than we did the 

 8           year before, bringing us to about 86,000.  

 9           And that trend again sort of depends on the 

10           economy in a particular year.  

11                  We have a lot of people who may go 

12           just above that million threshold or just 

13           below that million-dollar threshold from one 

14           year to the next, and so we can see 

15           variability.  One particular taxpayer might 

16           be above and then below and then above and 

17           then below, depending on their particular tax 

18           situation.  And a lot of our income 

19           millionaires are receiving a significant 

20           amount of their income through capital gains 

21           and other unearned income sources that vary 

22           with the economy in a different way than wage 

23           income tends to.

24                  So we have a relatively steady number.  


                                                                   34

 1           We see outmigration of millionaires.  We see 

 2           outmigration of New Yorkers, net outmigration 

 3           of all New Yorkers at every income level.  

 4           There is data on our website, we have 

 5           Tax Facts data, we just updated it this week 

 6           with the information from the Tax Year '23 

 7           study file.  

 8                  And I encourage you to go there and 

 9           look at that.  We have data, we have tables, 

10           we have charts, some of them are really 

11           colorful --

12                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BAILEY:  Thank you very 

13           much.  I did look at that, and it appears 

14           that most folks are heading down south.  It 

15           looked like Florida, Texas.

16                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  We do -- I 

17           think Florida and Texas are certainly places.  

18           I think we all know people who have made that 

19           move to the Sun Belt for a lot of different 

20           reasons -- some for economic reasons, some 

21           because the weather's better.

22                  You know, I think one of the things I 

23           found most startling is that we have net 

24           outmigration.  We have people who leave and 


                                                                   35

 1           people who come in.  Florida has people who 

 2           leave and people who come in.  We have more 

 3           people leave New York than leave Florida, but 

 4           that differential isn't huge.  It's an 

 5           in-migration problem that is driving our net 

 6           outmigration numbers.

 7                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BAILEY:  I have one more 

 8           question I want to get in, and I have a 

 9           minute and 13 seconds left.

10                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Sure.

11                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BAILEY:  So I'm going to 

12           shift back to STAR real quick.

13                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Of course.

14                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BAILEY:  It is nice to 

15           see that that -- some of the complexity is 

16           coming down in that.  

17                  One question I do have.  When we're 

18           looking at that, do we know what that impact 

19           is going to have on your department as far as 

20           being able to determine the eligibility for 

21           these individuals now?  Because I am assuming 

22           we're going to see an increase in who are 

23           going to be eligible for STAR.  

24                  And what -- will that also have an 


                                                                   36

 1           impact on our local assessors?

 2                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  We think it 

 3           will reduce the complexity of income 

 4           eligibility determinations both for the 

 5           Tax Department and for local assessors.  

 6                  The Tax Department does income 

 7           eligibility verification for all STAR 

 8           beneficiaries, both exemption and credit 

 9           recipients.  Assessors assist property owners 

10           in navigating that process.  And we also have 

11           some taxpayers who don't file tax returns.  

12                  One of the things that we're also 

13           simplifying here, for property owners who 

14           don't have a tax filing obligation because 

15           their incomes are too low or their income 

16           sources aren't taxable, they file income 

17           worksheets with us.  And we have to do that 

18           process every year.  It is a manual process, 

19           it's complicated.  And we -- we're going to 

20           eliminate that.  If you've qualified twice, 

21           you're going to be done.

22                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you.

23                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BAILEY:  Thank you very 

24           much.


                                                                   37

 1                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Senator?  

 2                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

 3                  Senator John Liu.

 4                  SENATOR LIU:  Thank you, Madam Chair.  

 5           And thank you, Commissioner, for coming 

 6           today.  

 7                  How long have you been acting 

 8           commissioner?  You should be real 

 9           commissioner.  

10                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  I've been 

11           acting commissioner for nearly four years.  

12           As I think some of you know -- 

13                  SENATOR LIU:  Okay.  I'm not sure why 

14           the delay.  You clearly are qualified for 

15           this.  So hopefully the Governor will -- 

16                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  There are 

17           actually some retirement consequences for me 

18           if I moved into the commissioner role.  And 

19           as I joke --

20                  SENATOR LIU:  Oh, so you don't want to 

21           be.

22                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  As I joke 

23           often, you want people with good judgment in 

24           a role like mine.  And I would lose some 


                                                                   38

 1           significant retirement benefits if I moved 

 2           there, and I just can't get there.

 3                  SENATOR LIU:  I see.  Got it.  So 

 4           that's your preference, then.

 5                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Yes, 

 6           absolutely.

 7                  SENATOR LIU:  I see, all right.  

 8                  I wanted you to talk about this new 

 9           program that I don't know why I haven't heard 

10           of before, Secure Choice.  So is that 

11           something that's going to be rolled out in 

12           Tax Year 2025?

13                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  We expect to 

14           roll it out this year.  

15                  The Secure Choice journey has been a 

16           long one.  I think the legislation 

17           authorizing Secure Choice was first enacted 

18           in 2018, but it was enacted in a way that 

19           made the program untenable.  The program as 

20           originally enacted was voluntary for 

21           employers, so employers would have an option 

22           to provide a pathway --

23                  SENATOR LIU:  So this program is 

24           compulsory.


                                                                   39

 1                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  It is 

 2           compulsory --

 3                  SENATOR LIU:  For?

 4                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  For 

 5           employers with 10 or more employees who do 

 6           not offer retirement options.  They aren't 

 7           paying anything, but they have to make the 

 8           program available to their employees.

 9                  SENATOR LIU:  And will the state -- 

10           meaning your department -- keep track of the 

11           accounts, the contributions from the 

12           employees?  

13                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  We have a 

14           program administrator that we have contracted 

15           with to be the basic administrator of the 

16           program.  

17                  If any of you, for example, might have 

18           participated in the state's deferred 

19           compensation program, that -- if you go to 

20           their website, that website is being operated 

21           by Nationwide, is the program administrator.  

22           It's responsible for the core accounting 

23           under the supervision of a board.

24                  SENATOR LIU:  So the employees in 


                                                                   40

 1           this -- participating in the Secure Choice 

 2           program, would they also get the tax benefits 

 3           such as --

 4                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Yes, 

 5           absolutely.  It's sort of an auto-IRA 

 6           program.  We had to go back and amend the 

 7           original 2018 law in 2021 to require 

 8           employers to make this program an option for 

 9           their employees.

10                  SENATOR LIU:  And do they get tax 

11           {unintelligible} just for New York State 

12           income tax or federal income taxes?

13                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  For both.  

14           For both state and federal.

15                  SENATOR LIU:  I see.  That's good.

16                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  It is -- it 

17           is a retirement -- it's similar to a 401(k) 

18           or a 457B or other type of retirement 

19           program.  

20                  We think it's an important 

21           opportunity.  It took a little while, again, 

22           to get it off the ground, but we have 

23           contracts in place for a program 

24           administrator and --


                                                                   41

 1                  SENATOR LIU:  Well, thank you.  

 2           hopefully we get this off the ground.

 3                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Yeah, 

 4           absolutely.

 5                  SENATOR LIU:  Just a real quick 

 6           response to one of your statements.  You said 

 7           we have a net outmigration --

 8                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Yes.

 9                  SENATOR LIU:  -- of millionaires.

10                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Of 

11           everybody.

12                  SENATOR LIU:  Okay.  But would you -- 

13           so it's a net migration --

14                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Yes.

15                  SENATOR LIU:  -- of millionaires?  

16           Because there are lots of millionaires moving 

17           to New York also.

18                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  We have -- 

19           we have a net outmigration in all income 

20           categories.  Except, I think, a couple of 

21           young people -- young people --

22                  SENATOR LIU:  Thank you.  

23                  (Unintelligible overtalk.)

24                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you, 


                                                                   42

 1           Madam Acting Commissioner.

 2                  Assemblyman Otis.

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  Thank you, 

 4           Commissioner.  And thank you for your very 

 5           thorough answers to everybody's questions.  I 

 6           think people appreciate that.  

 7                  My question relates to a sense of the 

 8           state of play in terms of cybersecurity 

 9           threats and how the department is working 

10           with other state agencies to continue to 

11           protect us in an evolving situation.  

12                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  New York 

13           State -- the New York State Tax Department is 

14           supported by the Office of Information 

15           Technology Services.  The state has a chief 

16           cybersecurity officer, and ITS is responsible 

17           for the core cybersecurity initiatives that 

18           are safeguarding state information, including 

19           state tax data.  

20                  We have -- we are subject to rigorous 

21           state and federal data security requirements 

22           around tax data.  And we work closely with 

23           our colleagues at ITS to make sure that we 

24           are properly safeguarding that data.  Those 


                                                                   43

 1           requirements aren't new, but they evolve 

 2           every year.  And I think our state 

 3           cybersecurity efforts continue to evolve as 

 4           the threats keep on changing.

 5                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  That's great.  So 

 6           you're confident that we're doing everything 

 7           we need to be doing for the moment.  

 8                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  I am -- I 

 9           think we're doing everything we need to be 

10           doing.  

11                  I remain always concerned that despite 

12           all of our best cybersecurity efforts, a 

13           careless action by an individual could expose 

14           a state system.  And so we are constantly 

15           training employees at Tax around being 

16           cautious in their handling of other seemingly 

17           routine things.  We train to make sure that 

18           people don't click on links, because it's 

19           easy to expose a system.  And at the Tax 

20           Department we are incredibly focused on 

21           making sure that our employees aren't 

22           creating those risks.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN OTIS:  Thank you for that 

24           answer, and thank you for the great job 


                                                                   44

 1           you're doing.

 2                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Thank you.

 3                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you.  

 4                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 5                  Next, Gustavo Rivera.

 6                  SENATOR RIVERA:  Thank you, 

 7           Madam Chair.  

 8                  Hello, Commissioner.

 9                  You were cut off right at the end of 

10           Senator Liu's questions, but I was very 

11           interested in the answer.  If you can tell us 

12           a little bit more about outmigration, 

13           in-migration, and some of the folks that are 

14           leaving, particularly since we hear endlessly 

15           about how tax policies make, you know, 

16           wealthy people run away, when there's many of 

17           us who believe that there's other policies 

18           that we follow that make it harder for 

19           working-class folks to remain in the state.  

20                  But tell us about some of them just in 

21           straight-up numbers.

22                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  So I think 

23           the first and mainly main thing I want to do 

24           is I want to refer you to our website.  


                                                                   45

 1                  On our website we have a tax data 

 2           drop-down, and that will bring you to what we 

 3           call Tax Facts.  And there are a lot of 

 4           charts and tables around tax migration.  One 

 5           of my -- we have a chart that is looking at 

 6           in-migration and outmigration rates 

 7           historically.  

 8                  Our rate of net outmigration dropped, 

 9           has dropped in the last couple of years.  We 

10           saw it really spike during the pandemic, 

11           which I don't think surprises any of us.  But 

12           we are seeing our outmigration rates return 

13           to more historic pre-pandemic levels.

14                  We did see a spike in outmigration of 

15           our highest-income New Yorkers in the year we 

16           increased our tax brackets.  And then it 

17           dropped down to -- it started returning more 

18           towards historic levels.

19                  I'm not in that tax bracket, so I'm 

20           not sure exactly why.  But my assumption is 

21           that the people who were sensitive to those 

22           tax changes left and those who weren't 

23           sensitive to those tax changes are still 

24           here.  And so they stopped leaving.  They 


                                                                   46

 1           weren't sensitive to that.

 2                  We have also a heat map, I think they 

 3           call it, that is looking at -- where you can 

 4           see visually, based on shading, where the 

 5           hotspots are for outmigration by age and 

 6           income level.  So we see in-migration for 

 7           young people in sort of those 

 8           upper-middle-class brackets, folks who are 

 9           coming and landing their job in New York.  

10           And we see outmigration in most other age and 

11           income brackets.  

12                  But I think that that's a really good 

13           way to get a sense of that.  And I really 

14           encourage you to look at some of those charts 

15           because I think that you'll find that really 

16           informative about where these changes are.  

17                  But again, when I look at the data, it 

18           looks to me like our rates of outmigration, 

19           while significant, have always been true.  We 

20           have always had outmigration in New York.  

21                  SENATOR RIVERA:  Tell me, just because 

22           we have so little time --

23                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Sure.

24                  SENATOR RIVERA:  -- it's the -- which 


                                                                   47

 1           website again?  Just because I'm -- 

 2                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  So if you go 

 3           to tax.ny.gov, there's a tax data and 

 4           statistics drop-down.  And when you get 

 5           there, there is -- one of the first things 

 6           you get is Tax Facts.

 7                  SENATOR RIVERA:  Got it.

 8                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  And you'll 

 9           see a ton of charts and graphs and tables.  

10           You can view things as charts and as data 

11           tables.  Take a look.  It's great.

12                  SENATOR RIVERA:  Thank you so much.

13                  Thank you, Madam Chair.  

14                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you.  

15                  Assemblymember Miller.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN MILLER:  Thank you.  

17                  And thank you, Acting Commissioner, 

18           for your testimony.

19                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Thank you.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN MILLER:  My question is on 

21           the Farm Employee Overtime Credit.

22                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Sure.

23                  ASSEMBLYMAN MILLER:  The Farm Employee 

24           Overtime Credit was the Governor's solution 


                                                                   48

 1           to keep New York State farms viable after the 

 2           state implemented harmful, costly regulations 

 3           on farm overtime.  However, not all New York 

 4           State farms are eligible for the credit, 

 5           creating a dire economic hardship for these 

 6           farms.

 7                  The Senate and the Assembly 

 8           unanimously passed a bill last year to fix 

 9           this so all farms would be eligible.  The 

10           Governor vetoed the bill and instructed the 

11           Departments of Ag and Markets and Tax and 

12           Finance to work with the Legislature to put a 

13           solution in the budget.

14                  Okay.  Commissioner Ball shared with 

15           us that his department is working to find a 

16           solution.  What is your department doing to 

17           find a solution?

18                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  We are also 

19           working to find a solution.  

20                  I think it's important to understand 

21           that the legislation that the Legislature 

22           passed last year was -- would not have 

23           changed eligibility for the Farmworker 

24           Overtime Credit.  There were some technical 


                                                                   49

 1           issues with that legislation that meant that 

 2           it would not have actually changed anything 

 3           about the eligibility for the credit.  

 4                  And that's because the credit is 

 5           framed for taxpayers who earn their living 

 6           from farming, who are farmers.  And so 

 7           although the legislation I think was intended 

 8           to capture those farmers who use a separate 

 9           entity to manage their labor costs, those 

10           separate entities aren't farmers.  

11                  And so where the underlying 

12           eligibility test is are you a farmer, that 

13           wasn't being changed in that legislation.  

14           And so that legislation was not going to 

15           expand eligibility for anyone.

16                  I think that test of "are you a 

17           farmer" is an important one.  It's been in 

18           place for a long time in New York across a 

19           range of benefits that are driven to farmers.  

20           But it gets a little tricky when we try to 

21           expand that concept to capture other entities 

22           that are providing labor to a farm, 

23           particularly in the context of overtime.  

24                  I expect that we will be engaging with 


                                                                   50

 1           your teams as part of the budget process when 

 2           the negotiations sort of take off in earnest, 

 3           and I'm confident we'll find a solution.

 4                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN MILLER:  Okay.  So I'll 

 5           just answer the question:  There is a viable 

 6           path moving forward -- 

 7                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  It's a 

 8           complicated one.  I think it's going to be a 

 9           complicated one and we're probably going to 

10           have some serious conversations about how to 

11           craft a solution that reaches those entities 

12           while ensuring that we're only paying for 

13           farmworker overtime that -- you know, for 

14           overtime wages that are being triggered by 

15           farming.

16                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN MILLER:  So do we feel 

17           that that's something that we can accomplish 

18           even though it's relatively -- 

19                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Yeah, I'm 

20           confident we can get there.  I think, you 

21           know, we're leaning in, I'm sure Ag & Markets 

22           is leaning in, and I think we'll get there.

23                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN MILLER:  Thank you, 

24           Commissioner.


                                                                   51

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Tom O'Mara.

 2                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Thank you.  

 3                  Good morning.

 4                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Good 

 5           morning.

 6                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Thanks for being with 

 7           us.

 8                  An area that's been a significant 

 9           concern of mine in recent years is the loss 

10           of financial services jobs from the state.  I 

11           think in the last two years Texas now has 

12           more financial services jobs than New York 

13           State for the first time ever.  Very 

14           concerning.  

15                  Even more concerning now is that the 

16           New York Stock Exchange has announced they're 

17           going to open a Dallas exchange.  

18                  What are we doing from a tax 

19           perspective to protect the financial industry 

20           that we have in New York State and the loss 

21           of that to other states?  You know, it's 

22           about 20 percent of our total tax receipts in 

23           the state; 84 percent of that is from 

24           personal income taxes.  So every job we lose 


                                                                   52

 1           to Texas is a loss of a -- presumably a 

 2           high-income earner going.

 3                  So what are your thoughts on the loss 

 4           of these jobs and the significant portion of 

 5           our total tax revenues that we get from this 

 6           industry?  

 7                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  One, as I 

 8           think I mentioned earlier, we certainly at 

 9           Tax are paying attention to changes in the 

10           financial services industry because it is 

11           such an important component of the state's 

12           economy and a significant source of state tax 

13           receipts.

14                  And to be clear, New York remains the 

15           center of the financial services industry in 

16           this country.  But we're seeing growth in 

17           that industry in other states instead of in 

18           New York.  And I believe --

19                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Well, they have more 

20           jobs in Texas than New York -- 

21                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Right, where 

22           those jobs are going in other places.  

23                  I think there's a combination of 

24           things.  One, we enacted significant 


                                                                   53

 1           corporate tax reforms in 2015.  We finally 

 2           finished the regulatory process for that in 

 3           2023.  It's been a 20-plus-year journey to 

 4           restructure our tax code to align with 

 5           federal changes that allowed for financial 

 6           service entities to be engaged in activities 

 7           that crossed our historic tax types.  And so 

 8           we combined them together.

 9                  Before those reforms, we were getting 

10           about half of our tax receipts from complex 

11           corporate taxpayers in the financial services 

12           industry on audit, because it was very 

13           difficult to fit their activities into our 

14           tax structures under the law.  And although 

15           in some cases they are paying more in taxes, 

16           the certainty around the corporate tax law 

17           changes that we made I think are really 

18           making it possible for those industries to 

19           comply in a much more orderly and predictable 

20           way, and that that was an incredibly 

21           important step that we took.

22                  SENATOR O'MARA:  How can you take that 

23           position when we're losing jobs to other 

24           states and Texas has now surpassed New York 


                                                                   54

 1           on other jobs?  That doesn't add up.

 2                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  I think 

 3           there are a couple of different things.  

 4                  One, I think that we have -- in terms 

 5           of our tax policy, we have made tax 

 6           compliance easier for these entities.  

 7           Although they in some cases are paying more, 

 8           they are paying more in a predictable way, 

 9           and that predictability is itself of value.

10                  But there are certainly other aspects 

11           of our state's economy and the economy in 

12           other states that are driving these changes.  

13           Just as we were talking about people who are 

14           moving to other parts of the country for tax 

15           and other reasons, including affordability 

16           challenges, housing challenges and the like, 

17           we are seeing financial services firms make a 

18           calculation that it's easier for them to grow 

19           their business in other parts of the country 

20           than to grow them here.

21                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Well -- and I'm 

22           running out of time and I thank you for your 

23           answers.  And I've got one more area I wanted 

24           to get to.  


                                                                   55

 1                  But, you know, I think perhaps that 

 2           predictability and knowing that they're going 

 3           to pay more taxes in New York is leading them 

 4           to leave New York because they know they're 

 5           going to continue to pay more.

 6                  But one positive area, an area that we 

 7           worked on the last couple of years, is 

 8           reviewing the Excelsior Jobs Program.  And 

 9           the report and review of that showed a 

10           positive return on investment of $5.25 for 

11           every dollar invested.  

12                  And I'm glad we're continuing that 

13           program, extending it, and I think that's 

14           been a very successful program over the 

15           years.  

16                  But another one that was also reported 

17           on was the Film Tax Credit.  And we get a 

18           31-cent return on every dollar, yet we're 

19           continuing to waste $700 million a year on 

20           that industry.  

21                  Can you justify why we're continuing 

22           to spend $700 million on a program that has a 

23           negative rate of return?  

24                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  I think 


                                                                   56

 1           you're referring to the Independent Tax 

 2           Expenditure Study that the department 

 3           commissioned at the direction of the Governor 

 4           and Legislature.  

 5                  I think that report itself took a very 

 6           narrow view of the return on investment from 

 7           our tax expenditures, and measured that 

 8           return on investment only in terms of the 

 9           actual number of dollars, state tax dollars 

10           that were generated by the state tax 

11           investment we made.  

12                  But that report made clear in the 

13           context of the film credit and other credits 

14           that there are intangible benefits to these 

15           investments that are not just metric in terms 

16           of state tax receipts that are generated.

17                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you.

18                  Assemblyman Ra.

19                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you.  

20                  We've talked about this issue a number 

21           of times.  You know, we had enacted these 

22           restrictions a few years ago on flavored 

23           e-cigarettes.  Obviously there is a 

24           dichotomy, I call it maybe even an 


                                                                   57

 1           inconsistency in the way we enforce tobacco 

 2           and enforce these types of products.  

 3                  And I know there are a lot of illegal 

 4           products out there that come from China; 

 5           they're not FDA-approved, so we don't even 

 6           know what's in them.  And I know you're not 

 7           one to really offer an opinion necessarily 

 8           about what we should be doing.  

 9                  But, I mean, does it make sense to 

10           maybe consolidate the enforcement of both of 

11           these types of products under Tax & Finance?  

12           Because it seems like you guys have the 

13           resources and are out there and doing a good 

14           job, whereas DOH doesn't necessarily have 

15           that when they're trying to deal with these 

16           types of products.

17                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  So thank you 

18           for that question.  

19                  The Tax Department enforces taxes.  We 

20           have specific provisions in our tax laws that 

21           authorize us to engage in very specific kinds 

22           of criminal enforcement with regard to 

23           tobacco taxes and with regard to cannabis 

24           taxes.


                                                                   58

 1                  We do have taxes on vapor products, 

 2           but there are no enforcement provisions in 

 3           the Tax Law associated with them beyond 

 4           penalties for filing a late return and the 

 5           like.  We do not have the same kind of 

 6           enforcement responsibilities or authority 

 7           that we do for tobacco and for cannabis under 

 8           the law.  

 9                  There certainly are tax issues here.  

10           If a vapor product is being sold illegally, 

11           it's unlikely to be properly taxed too.  But 

12           in order to have the Tax Department engage in 

13           the kind of civil and criminal enforcement 

14           responsibilities, we would have to be 

15           enforcing a regulatory scheme around vapor 

16           that doesn't exist in the law today.

17                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Okay.  A totally 

18           different subject.  

19                  The pass-through entity tax, I know 

20           businesses have been asking for flexibility 

21           on the election date.  We have this proposal 

22           in the Executive Budget to extend to 

23           September 15th.  But I have heard some 

24           concerns about this new provision that the 


                                                                   59

 1           election could be invalidated for nontimely 

 2           payment.  

 3                  Is the department considering these 

 4           concerns?  Is the availability of penalties 

 5           and interest sufficient rather than, you 

 6           know, invalidation?

 7                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  We have 

 8           certainly heard those concerns.  

 9                  I mean, I think that the businesses 

10           that avail themselves of PTET have long been 

11           seeking to have the election moved to 

12           September from March because it allows them 

13           to have a better sense of whether PTET would 

14           help them.  

15                  I think it's always been a cash-flow 

16           concern for the state because that first 

17           estimated payment comes in March, at the end 

18           of one fiscal year, and moving the election 

19           to the end of September moves that payment 

20           into the next fiscal year.  So there's a 

21           spin-down effect from moving that.  

22                  The language in the Executive Budget 

23           is the same language that we had in 2022 when 

24           the election date was moved from March to 


                                                                   60

 1           September.  And I think the intention there 

 2           is to ensure that we don't have significant 

 3           disruptions to our cash flow by moving the 

 4           election date.

 5                  I'm certainly open to finding ways to 

 6           work through those issues with your staff and 

 7           the business community.  I think that's how 

 8           we are trying to approach every one of the 

 9           business tax proposals that we have and 

10           generally try to do business.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  All right, thank you.

12                  And then in December 2023, by 

13           contract, we had the comprehensive report 

14           issued on economic development tax credits.  

15           I know many of us have expressed concerns, 

16           you know, yesterday to Commissioner Knight 

17           with regard to a lot of these programs.  

18                  But I do note that the -- you know, we 

19           required, obviously, this report, but even 

20           the authors kind of commented on the overly 

21           broad scope.  So just wondering if you have 

22           any take on whether a reporting requirement 

23           that we were looking more in depth at a 

24           smaller number, rather than trying to be so 


                                                                   61

 1           broad in looking at all of these programs at 

 2           once, if that would get us better information 

 3           as to the effectiveness of the programs.

 4                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  You know, I 

 5           don't know if it would get better 

 6           information.  I think the challenge is in 

 7           defining the goals for the investments we're 

 8           making and then figuring out how to measure 

 9           whether those goals are being achieved.  

10                  And I think, you know, at the end of 

11           the day the Tax Department isn't making these 

12           programs available.  And so we can -- I 

13           sometimes -- you ask me about these programs 

14           and I have to guess at why we're doing them.  

15           I think that's where the challenge would lie.

16                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  We do sometimes too 

17           have to guess.

18                  Thank you.

19                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Senator Shelley 

20           Mayer.

21                  SENATOR MAYER:   Good morning, 

22           Commissioner.  Good to see you.  

23                  On the Enhanced STAR changes, do you 

24           have a sense of how many additional people 


                                                                   62

 1           will be eligible for Enhanced STAR under this 

 2           change if it's enacted?  

 3                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  I think we 

 4           estimate the total fiscal for the state at 

 5           about $9 million in changes.  Which, you 

 6           know, about $1100 a family, is -- you know, 

 7           there's some math there.  We could figure 

 8           that out.

 9                  It's -- I think the main point here is 

10           that the -- the eligibility constructs that 

11           we're using here are functioning to exclude 

12           people that I think we always intended to 

13           have be eligible for Enhanced STAR.  And that 

14           complexity is deterring people from entering 

15           into the process.

16                  SENATOR MAYER:  Yes.

17                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  And so we -- 

18           it's going to be a very modest gain.  But it 

19           will be a significant simplification for 

20           folks.

21                  SENATOR MAYER:  Right.  But you don't 

22           have right now the number --

23                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  No, but I 

24           could probably do it in my head.


                                                                   63

 1                  SENATOR MAYER:  Co-ops will still be 

 2           included, co-ops and condominiums?  

 3                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Yes.  Yeah, 

 4           we're not changing the scope of coverage of 

 5           these programs, we're just changing like 

 6           which incomes we're looking at.

 7                  SENATOR MAYER:  Yes, understood.

 8                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Yeah.

 9                  SENATOR MAYER:  What about the process 

10           of challenging a determination of Tax & 

11           Finance?  Does this require additional staff 

12           on your part?  And how long does the 

13           department have to make a decision on an 

14           appeal?

15                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  We handle 

16           those appeals expeditiously.  It's not going 

17           to take additional staff for us.  If 

18           anything, we expect that the number of 

19           challenges will likely go down.

20                  One of the things that is certainly 

21           frustrating for us is that I think there are 

22           a lot of tax property owners who don't 

23           understand why they were not eligible when it 

24           was an income disqualification.  And we're 


                                                                   64

 1           looking at their tax return, and you're not 

 2           qualified, based on that.

 3                  So we don't see a ton of reversals of 

 4           appeals of these eligibility determinations, 

 5           because for the most part they're really 

 6           straightforward.  We looked at your tax 

 7           filing, and your tax filing said this, and 

 8           therefore you're not eligible.  

 9                  SENATOR MAYER:  I understand.  

10                  But is there a requirement in your 

11           proposal as to how quickly you must 

12           determine -- from a consumer point of view.

13                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  I don't 

14           believe so.  I don't believe so.  

15                  There are -- I think there are a 

16           myriad of changes we could make to start to 

17           simplify it, and that could include some 

18           additional changes to the STAR program that I 

19           think would make the protest process more 

20           straightforward.  

21                  I think not consistent between the 

22           credit and the exemption, between the basic 

23           exemption and the enhanced exemption, because 

24           those laws have evolved at different times.  


                                                                   65

 1           And we could also strive to simplify that.  

 2           You might see that proposal next year.

 3                  SENATOR MAYER:  We need 

 4           simplification.  It's extremely hard for an 

 5           individual homeowner to figure out.

 6                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  It's very 

 7           hard, yes.

 8                  SENATOR MAYER:  So I'm interested in 

 9           that.

10                  I have one more question.  How much 

11           staff does Tax & Finance have?  

12                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  We have just 

13           under 4,000 right now.

14                  SENATOR MAYER:  Okay, thank you.  

15                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you, Senator.  

16                  I just have a couple of questions, 

17           Madam Commissioner.

18                  The Governor is proposing a 

19           middle-class tax cut for certain taxpayers.  

20           It's a three-part question.  First, who is 

21           not eligible for this?  I never know who the 

22           certain taxpayers are.  So who is not 

23           eligible for this tax cut?  

24                  When will it kick in?  And will you be 


                                                                   66

 1           adjusting the tax rate tables this year, or 

 2           is it next year?  

 3                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  The proposal 

 4           would cover taxpayers up through -- I think 

 5           it's 323,000 for married filing jointly.

 6                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Right.  Right.

 7                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Those tax 

 8           brackets.  So the tax brackets above that are 

 9           6.85 or 9.3 or 10 point -- 9.65 or 10.3 and 

10           our 10.9 brackets would remain unchanged.  

11           For taxpayers reporting more than $323,000 

12           for joint filers, it's ties about 160 -- 

13                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Taxpayers under 

14           that, that max, that aren't eligible, who 

15           would that be?

16                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  For the tax 

17           credit, those would be those taxpayers --

18                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  So everyone that 

19           makes less than $323,000 is eligible?

20                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Yes, they 

21           would all -- the proposal is to reduce our 

22           income tax brackets by one basis point this 

23           year and by another basis point next year.  

24           The proposal would bring our tax rates to 


                                                                   67

 1           the -- to essentially the lowest tax rates 

 2           since 1934.  We had a zero rate in 1958, 

 3           which makes it a blip.  But otherwise we're 

 4           going back to 1934 when we imposed the income 

 5           tax.

 6                  The first tax rate change would be for 

 7           tax year '25, for this year.  The second 

 8           basis point change would be for next year.  

 9           That would be recurring relief going forward 

10           from there.  

11                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Okay.  And the 

12           Governor is also proposing a -- I think we're 

13           calling it an inflation refund that totals 

14           around $3 billion for people earning less 

15           than $300,000 -- taxpayers filing less than 

16           $300,000.  

17                  When will those checks be sent out to 

18           the taxpayers, do you know?  

19                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  We would be 

20           sending them out later this year.  

21                  I think the specific timing would have 

22           to fall around our STAR check mailings.  We 

23           have some timing obligations under the law 

24           around when we deliver STAR credits as 


                                                                   68

 1           compared to their billing cycle, so we would 

 2           be sliding these rebate checks in around that 

 3           mailing schedule.

 4                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  And what recourse 

 5           will the taxpayers have if they don't receive 

 6           a check by the end of the year?  

 7                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  These 

 8           rebates are structurally income tax credits.  

 9           That's how we deliver these kinds of check 

10           programs historically.  And so they would 

11           have all of the recourse that would be 

12           available to them for any personal income tax 

13           matter.

14                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Okay.  And just a 

15           back of the envelope calculation in your 

16           head, if we reduce the max income from 

17           300,000 to 150,000, do you know -- can you 

18           estimate what that number would be?  I know 

19           there would be more people less than than 

20           above, so it wouldn't be half.

21                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Yeah, I 

22           mean, we're -- the program is intended to 

23           deliver -- as proposed would deliver checks 

24           to 8.6 million households.  It's joint filers 


                                                                   69

 1           with incomes up to $300,000 and single filers 

 2           with incomes up to $150,000.  

 3                  I think if we dropped the income level 

 4           we would see a marginal decrease, but not -- 

 5           it wouldn't drop in half because we have more 

 6           taxpayers in lower brackets.

 7                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Right.  Exactly, 

 8           yeah.

 9                  So it wouldn't be that beneficial --

10                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  You know, if 

11           we dropped it in half we might drop from 

12           8,000 to -- 8 million to 6 million, maybe.  

13                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Okay.  Pass-through 

14           entities, the Governor is proposing a change 

15           in them from April to September filing.  How 

16           would that affect cash flow?  

17                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  So I think 

18           that the significant impact of a changed 

19           election deadline from March to September 

20           would be a cash-flow impact.  

21                  Essentially, a one-year cash-flow 

22           spin-down, because entities that are electing 

23           now in March make a March estimated payment 

24           that comes in at the end of the current 


                                                                   70

 1           fiscal year.  And if that election is moved 

 2           to September and their associated estimated 

 3           payments are moved to September, that makes 

 4           those payments fall in the next fiscal year.

 5                  So that's a cash-flow impact, not 

 6           an -- and there are some financial plan 

 7           ramifications for that.  But the Division of 

 8           Budget tells me that we have enough cash on 

 9           hand to manage that cash-flow impact, and 

10           that makes this year a good year to make this 

11           change.  

12                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  All righty.  

13           Yesterday we heard from people in the 

14           entertainment industry, and they were 

15           actually supporting the Governor's proposal 

16           to amend the tax credit and extension of the 

17           tax credit.  

18                  Does the state really benefit from 

19           this program?  Because some people said that 

20           we're just giving away money.  Some people 

21           are saying that it enhances our 

22           respectability in the world.  You know, there 

23           are different comments on it.  

24                  In your estimation, are we making a 


                                                                   71

 1           significant amount of revenue going toward 

 2           the state to make this whole program 

 3           worthwhile?

 4                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Well, one of 

 5           the great things about my job is that that's 

 6           not my call.  

 7                  (Laughter.)

 8                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  I'm going to let 

 9           that answer stand.  Okay?

10                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  I do like 

11           movies.

12                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  No, that answer 

13           stands.  I'm not going to pursue that.  

14                  As a matter of fact, that was such a 

15           good answer I'm going to move on to 

16           Senator Krueger.

17                  (Laughter.)

18                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Well, it was 

19           factually correct.  I can't blame you there.

20                  So the Governor is -- well, let me 

21           start again.  We're all very interested in 

22           tax exemptions, tax credits, how they impact 

23           the state, whether they are legitimate public 

24           policy or giveaways.  


                                                                   72

 1                  And there's been frustration that even 

 2           for those of us who actually look forward to 

 3           your Tax Expenditure Report every year -- I 

 4           know that Senator Gounardes and I are fans of 

 5           actually reading it.  Don't talk about us -- 

 6           it's very hard to understand how you evaluate 

 7           with your -- you know, your letter codes in 

 8           the columns.  

 9                  Is there a better way to share 

10           information with us about what the findings 

11           are from each of these tax credits and 

12           exemptions?  

13                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  So when 

14           we're reporting -- so folks are talking 

15           about -- we're talking about the Tax 

16           Expenditure Report, the most recent one was 

17           just posted last week, together with the 

18           30-day amendments.

19                  The reliability level of our exemption 

20           estimates depends on how that information 

21           comes to us and how clearly defined it is 

22           when we get it.  We have incredible 

23           reliability with regard to some, and some of 

24           it we have to estimate in a slightly 


                                                                   73

 1           different way.  And we always want to be 

 2           transparent about that, so we have some 

 3           obscure coding on the side that helps folks 

 4           understand that reliability.  

 5                  We're confident in our estimates, but 

 6           we want to make sure folks understand that 

 7           there are different levels of reliability 

 8           based on the different methodologies we need 

 9           to bring to the table to reach those 

10           expenditure estimates.

11                  That said, again, we're pretty 

12           confident in those expenditures.  I think the 

13           larger question underlying your question is 

14           whether it's worth it.

15                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Right.

16                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  And again, 

17           you know, we can certainly help folks 

18           understand how much we're spending, but the 

19           goals for why we're making those expenditures 

20           aren't necessarily in the purview of the 

21           Tax Department.  And so that requires a 

22           different set of questions to be asked and 

23           information to be identified.  

24                  You know, if we had a really clear 


                                                                   74

 1           understanding of why we're pursuing a 

 2           particular program, then we could measure 

 3           whether we're meeting those goals.  But I 

 4           think for a lot of the expenditures we have, 

 5           we've had them in place for decades.  I think 

 6           we -- in some cases it's really clear why 

 7           we're doing it.  We're providing a child tax 

 8           credit because we want to support low-income 

 9           families with children.  Some of the --

10                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Right.  I'm going 

11           to cut you off just because I have more 

12           questions.

13                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Of course.

14                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  So -- but along 

15           that line.  So the Governor -- so our own 

16           research that we have from a study that we've 

17           already referenced was that the Excelsior Tax 

18           Credit is one of our more successful 

19           programs.  

20                  But the Governor is expanding it this 

21           year and sort of creating a subprogram which 

22           will have different guidelines of eligibility 

23           and return.  I think it will just muddy the 

24           waters.  


                                                                   75

 1                  Can't we just call it a different name 

 2           and not say "And now Excelsior is this also"?  

 3           Doesn't that make it just harder to evaluate?  

 4                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  I'm not sure 

 5           yet that it will be harder to evaluate or not 

 6           because we aren't even there yet.  It might 

 7           be that we can evaluate it as effectively.

 8                  I think one of the reasons why the 

 9           Excelsior program is as successful as it is, 

10           is because it has a little more flexibility 

11           within the program to target our tax credit 

12           investments to particular industries.  And as 

13           compared to tax expenditures that, you know, 

14           were made for good reasons 30 years ago and 

15           we just continue to do it, I think we have 

16           the ability in Excelsior to be a little more 

17           nimble.  

18                  And I defer to my colleagues at ESD.  

19           If they believe that having this -- the new 

20           investments in the semiconductor industry be 

21           a program within Excelsior and that that will 

22           be an effective way to address that, I don't 

23           feel like I can second-guess that.  I think 

24           that this is a program that they're 


                                                                   76

 1           administering successfully, and I would defer 

 2           to them.

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And you already 

 4           answered my colleague about the changing of 

 5           the timelines for the pass-through entity tax 

 6           flexibility.

 7                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Sure.

 8                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  But am I hearing 

 9           you right, this is really just a way to shift 

10           revenue into the following year from this 

11           year?  

12                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  I don't 

13           think that we're doing it for the purpose of 

14           shifting revenue.  I think that taxpayers who 

15           are availing themselves of the pass-through 

16           entity tax, it's hard to know in March 

17           whether it will be a good year or not a good 

18           year for those entities.  And so they're 

19           better able to determine whether the 

20           pass-through entity tax will be an effective 

21           tool for them as we move further along in the 

22           tax year.  

23                  And so by allowing -- for some, they 

24           know now that it's going to be a good program 


                                                                   77

 1           and they're electing now, because then they 

 2           can make orderly estimated tax payments.  But 

 3           by moving the election deadline to September, 

 4           we're giving them the opportunity to have a 

 5           better view into their year and know whether 

 6           this is going to work for them.

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Do we think there 

 8           will be more entities filing because of this?  

 9                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  I doubt it.  

10           I doubt it.

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay.

12                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  I think that 

13           the program is a fairly mature program at 

14           this point.

15                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Okay.

16                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  I think 

17           that, if anything, we will find some -- maybe 

18           fewer filing, because they took a shot in 

19           March and had to guess whether it would work 

20           for them and they were going to be -- it was 

21           going to be off the table if they didn't 

22           elect in.  And now, by waiting till September 

23           they might not elect in because they have a 

24           better sense that it's not going to be 


                                                                   78

 1           effective for them.

 2                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Got it.  So we 

 3           already talked a little bit about the 

 4           coupling or decoupling with the feds and who 

 5           knows what the feds are going to do.  And I 

 6           get it, it's hard to know unless you know.  

 7                  We do know that the feds have already 

 8           announced they're radically reducing the 

 9           staff at the IRS, which will I assume 

10           radically reduce the number of people to both 

11           respond to taxpayer questions and correct 

12           things before they go wrong.  But also it 

13           will reduce audits.  

14                  So much of what we end up doing is 

15           playing off of what the feds did with our 

16           federal tax returns.  What do you think this 

17           is going to do here in New York?  Are we 

18           going to see a lower return on taxes because 

19           people think "Oh, I don't have to file taxes 

20           anymore, even, I don't have to follow the 

21           rules because the feds aren't looking?"  

22                  Or is it going to make more work for 

23           us to stay on top of everything?  What's your 

24           gut?  


                                                                   79

 1                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Look, I am 

 2           deeply frustrated and disappointed by the 

 3           cuts at the IRS.  The IRS has been 

 4           systemically defunded for decades in order to 

 5           essentially prevent tax enforcement.  

 6                  And so I've always felt really sort of 

 7           demoralized by the job that my colleagues at 

 8           the IRS need to do in order to function.  

 9           Their technology is massively outdated, they 

10           were really understaffed.  It was very, very 

11           hard to get a phone call answered.  I'm not 

12           saying that it's easy to get a phone call 

13           answered at New York Tax, but it was 

14           essentially impossible to get a phone call 

15           answered at the IRS.  

16                  And so there was an infusion of funds 

17           under the Inflation Reduction Act, and that's 

18           certainly being undone.  And I find that 

19           really frustrating.

20                  You know, at New York Tax we engage 

21           with our federal colleagues.  We do get 

22           reports of federal audit changes that can 

23           trigger state audit changes.  But for the 

24           most part, although our tax forms are aligned 


                                                                   80

 1           with the Federal Tax Code, our administration 

 2           of those tax returns is an independent state 

 3           function.  It is the quintessential state 

 4           sovereign function, and we aren't engaging 

 5           day-to-day with the IRS around that.

 6                  I think your question also speaks to I 

 7           think maybe a more sociological challenge 

 8           that we face, which is that there is this 

 9           sense that tax compliance is maybe not 

10           mandatory.

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Correct.

12                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  And we have 

13           a system where -- in New York our estimate is 

14           that about 96 percent of our tax revenues 

15           across all tax types is being paid, we call 

16           it voluntarily.  It's not really voluntarily.  

17           It's being paid by people who understand they 

18           have an obligation to pay taxes under the law 

19           and are meeting those obligations without 

20           compulsion.  And that's 96 percent of our 

21           taxes.  

22                  And then we spend all of our agency 

23           budget collecting the other 4 percent.

24                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Right.


                                                                   81

 1                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  And there's 

 2           a balance there.  And when you shift that 

 3           balance, I think that makes it harder for 

 4           everybody.  Now we're going to need to devote 

 5           more resources to enforcement.  If the 

 6           receipts that are coming in from taxpayers 

 7           without compulsion drops down from 96 to 94, 

 8           that's going to be a significant change in 

 9           our allocation of resources to try to make up 

10           for that revenue drop.

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And the federal 

12           data is that the return on auditing wealthier 

13           Americans at the federal level is a 12-to-1 

14           of what you spend versus what you get, and it 

15           also changes behavior.  

16                  And it's clear to me that the feds are 

17           going to stop doing audits on higher-income 

18           filers.  And I think personally that it's 

19           going to translate very problematically to us 

20           here in New York, and we're going to have to 

21           need to focus more on, just like you said, 

22           the changing of the behavioral expectations 

23           that no one's looking.

24                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Absolutely.  


                                                                   82

 1           I think there's a very real --  

 2                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I only have 

 3           30 seconds left.  I just have to -- sorry.  

 4           ITIN filers, people who don't have 

 5           Social Security numbers, do you know how many 

 6           we have and how much revenue we bring in?

 7                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  I don't know 

 8           how many we have.  I can certainly get you 

 9           that.

10                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

11                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  We do take 

12           in --

13                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Appreciate it.

14                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  -- returns 

15           from ITIN filers.

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And finally, in 

17           15 seconds, so Elon Musk has all our tax 

18           information.  How much do we care?  I thought 

19           we were always very protective of everybody's 

20           tax information.

21                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  We are 

22           incredibly --

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Now everybody 

24           will have that.


                                                                   83

 1                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  -- 

 2           Protective of tax information here in 

 3           New York.  For the most part the information 

 4           we have in New York is similar -- essentially 

 5           the same information that the federal 

 6           government has under -- from federal tax 

 7           returns.

 8                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And now a private 

 9           company who can sell whatever they want.

10                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  I -- there 

11           are federal laws that safeguard that 

12           information.  I'm going to guess that they're 

13           not going to be rigorously enforced in the 

14           near term.

15                  (Overtalk.)

16                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I have to cut 

17           myself off.  We'll actually remember living 

18           in a world where federal law mattered, 

19           apparently that's --

20                  (Overtalk.)

21                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Senator --

22                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

23                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  -- you do get an 

24           extra three minutes.  Which I'm going to use 


                                                                   84

 1           right now, my three minutes, just for one 

 2           quick question having to do -- it's a 

 3           follow-up to Senator Krueger's questions.  

 4                  And that's that if a taxpayer files 

 5           their New York State income taxes late and is 

 6           due a refund, the Tax Department does not 

 7           give them that refund.  Why is that?  How 

 8           long has this been going on?  And is it fair?

 9                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  If a 

10           taxpayer is entitled to a refund and --

11                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Right.  If I file 

12           my 2020 taxes today and I'm due a refund, 

13           everything is proper on the form but the 

14           individual does not -- the Tax Department 

15           withholds the refund.

16                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  So we -- if 

17           you're due a refund, we'll pay you that 

18           refund unless you have outstanding debts to 

19           the state or federal government, in which 

20           case we will offset that refund to pay those 

21           other debts.

22                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Well, that's not 

23           the case, they just don't -- I'll contact you 

24           offline with --


                                                                   85

 1                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  I would be 

 2           happy to address because we are in the 

 3           business of delivering refunds.  We deliver 

 4           millions of refunds every year, most within 

 5           30 days or less.  We pay interest if we don't 

 6           pay refunds on time.  

 7                  And if there's a particular taxpayer 

 8           who's due a refund and hasn't received it, we 

 9           would be happy to look at that.

10                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you.  

11                  Senator?  

12                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Yes, Senator 

13           Gounardes for a second round of 

14           three minutes.

15                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  Thank you.  I have 

16           just two questions and a quick comment.  

17                  Great to hear about all the progress 

18           on Direct File.  I know we talked about that 

19           a little bit last year.  It's very exciting 

20           to see that -- 

21                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  It's very 

22           exciting.

23                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  -- that progress.  

24                  As it relates to the Governor's 


                                                                   86

 1           proposal for the inflation refund checks, 

 2           right, it's been framed as sales tax is 

 3           booming because inflation is up and we're 

 4           going to give you back that money.  

 5                  Have we seen an actual appreciable 

 6           change in sales tax collections?

 7                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  We actually 

 8           have seen a change in sales tax collections.  

 9           I believe that the Division of Budget 

10           calculated the nut for the inflation tax 

11           rebate at $3 billion because that was the 

12           growth in sales tax revenues over the assumed 

13           inflation rate that they had expected.  And 

14           that that's what created that nut.

15                  But that's not a recurring nut.  

16           That's -- you know, we've seen that.  As 

17           we've seen changes in the economy, we're 

18           seeing changes in consumption.  And so we 

19           don't have certainty that we're going to see 

20           that revenue in outyears, which I think is 

21           why the Governor is proposing to deliver that 

22           particular bucket of funds in a one-time 

23           relief as opposed to recurring relief.

24                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  Got it.  Thank 


                                                                   87

 1           you.  

 2                  And then on the Secure Choice program, 

 3           also excited to see this finally coming off 

 4           the ground, a little bit delayed but -- you 

 5           mentioned that there will be a start with a 

 6           limited program this June, hopefully.

 7                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Yup.

 8                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:   Last year the 

 9           Governor signed -- I think it was last year; 

10           maybe two years ago now -- expanding that 

11           program eligibility to independent workers, 

12           workers who don't have an employer.  

13                  What's the plan for the rollout for 

14           freelancers, who are now eligible to invest 

15           in that program?  

16                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  So the 

17           legislation that was enacted last year or the 

18           year before authorized the Secure Choice 

19           Board, which is comprised of Governor's and 

20           legislative appointees, to expand the program 

21           to freelancers under their authority when we 

22           get there.  

23                  We're rolling it out in the first 

24           instance to employers because that's where 


                                                                   88

 1           there's complexity around setting up portals 

 2           for employers to transmit the funds that are 

 3           being deducted from employee paychecks and 

 4           the like.  There's just some administrative 

 5           complexity to how that will work.  

 6                  And our program administrator will be 

 7           building out the interfaces for the 

 8           management of the funds and the like.  Once 

 9           that's in place, I expect the Secure Choice 

10           Board will expand it to freelancers.  

11                  It's a slightly different 

12           implementation because freelancers aren't 

13           paid on a regular schedule.  They will be 

14           making -- they'll be coming in to make a 

15           deposit when they're able to make a deposit, 

16           and not having just an automatic payroll 

17           deduction flowing into their account.  So 

18           it's going to be a slightly different 

19           implementation, which is why it's being 

20           phased to come after the initial rollout.

21                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  So the rough 

22           timeline -- in the last eight seconds, rough 

23           timeline for the freelance piece?

24                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  So we expect 


                                                                   89

 1           to roll this out to employers in the fall; 

 2           we're going to start with limited 

 3           employees -- limited employers.  And then 

 4           hopefully the following year.  

 5                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  Thank you.

 6                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

 7                  Assembly?  

 8                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  We're done.

 9                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Then I'm taking 

10           my next three minutes, thank you.

11                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Okay.

12                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I just never run 

13           out of tax questions.

14                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Always here.

15                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  So I don't think 

16           this affects the state, but I wanted to ask 

17           your opinion.  

18                  So some of us are exploring how you 

19           deal with the property tax debt on people all 

20           over the state who are cash poor but real 

21           estate rich because the value of their house 

22           went up so much over the years -- and they 

23           often have now gone into actually fixed 

24           incomes and have lower cash than they ever 


                                                                   90

 1           had before -- and discussions of allowing 

 2           towns to do liens that upon sale or transfer 

 3           of deed, probably in some cases at the death 

 4           of the older people living in the house, 

 5           that's when the money comes to the towns.  

 6                  So it would delay their receiving the 

 7           property taxes they owe, but some people 

 8           think it could actually stabilize people 

 9           being able to stay in their homes.

10                  Is there a state reason to be 

11           concerned about this?

12                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  I think 

13           that -- I think that that would be 

14           challenging.  That might be feasible in some 

15           communities and could be really challenging 

16           in other communities.

17                  New York has some of the highest 

18           property tax burdens in the country, but 

19           about two-thirds of the taxes that we pay are 

20           school taxes.  And so if you're proposing to 

21           have school districts delay collection of a 

22           core source of revenue for them, that could 

23           have cascading impacts that I don't feel in a 

24           position to predict.  I can foresee them, but 


                                                                   91

 1           I don't know what they would look like.

 2                  I think that -- you know, if instead 

 3           we were saying that a county would make a 

 4           school district whole for the missing taxes 

 5           and then be the holder of those liens, we 

 6           also have significant challenges in county 

 7           finances that, again, are primarily supported 

 8           by property taxes, although counties also 

 9           have sales tax and other tax revenue that are 

10           helping to support their operations.  

11                  But I think we're coming into a time 

12           when we could see significant fiscal 

13           challenges for counties because they are our 

14           partners in delivering a wide range of social 

15           services that are primarily federally funded.  

16           And if we see reductions there, we may see 

17           additional financial challenges at the local 

18           level.

19                  So I would be really cautious about 

20           that.  I certainly can't imagine advancing 

21           something in that realm without having it be 

22           at local option.

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I would agree, 

24           local option.


                                                                   92

 1                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  But I think  

 2           that that becomes complicated because 

 3           especially -- in many parts of the state the 

 4           relationship between school districts and 

 5           counties is not always great.  And I think 

 6           the school districts are the places where 

 7           this would hit most profoundly absent some 

 8           real thoughtful and careful balancing of 

 9           where those impacts are going to lie.

10                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

11                  Thank you.

12                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you.  

13                  And this concludes this section of our 

14           hearing.  Commissioner, I want to thank you 

15           for your participation.

16                  DTF COMMISSIONER HILLER:  Absolutely.

17                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  And I'm calling up 

18           now Panel A:  The Fiscal Policy Institute; 

19           Strong Economy for All Coalition; and 

20           New Yorkers for Fiscal Fairness.

21                  Gentlemen, good morning.

22                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Good morning.  

23                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Just for the sake 

24           of the people in the audiovisual booth, could 


                                                                   93

 1           you just state your names quickly so they'll 

 2           know which names to put up on the screen?  

 3           And then when we start your testimony, we'll 

 4           start from my right, your left, and work that 

 5           way. 

 6                  MR. GUSDORF:  I'm Nathan Gusdorf.  I'm 

 7           the executive director of the Fiscal Policy 

 8           Institute.  

 9                  You couldn't hear me?  I'm Nathan 

10           Gusdorf, executive director of the 

11           Fiscal Policy Institute.

12                  MR. KHAN:  Charles Khan, the deputy 

13           director of the Strong Economy for All 

14           Coalition.

15                  MR. DEUTSCH:  Ron Deutsch, director, 

16           New Yorkers for Fiscal Fairness.

17                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you.  

18                  You each have three minutes.

19                  MR. GUSDORF:  All right, I want to 

20           speak to a lot of items in the 

21           Executive Budget, so I'm going to move 

22           quickly through a list of items here.

23                  First of all, in terms of the 

24           Executive Budget proposals, FPI is strongly 


                                                                   94

 1           of the view that there should not be an 

 2           income tax cut at a time of substantial 

 3           federal funding risks.  It doesn't make sense 

 4           to impose a permanent billion-dollar revenue 

 5           loss.  There's never going to be political 

 6           will to raise the tax rates on those income 

 7           brackets.  

 8                  Most of that tax cut, as well, goes to 

 9           upper income groups -- not the rich, but 

10           about 65 percent, by our calculation, goes to 

11           households making over $150,000.  So we don't 

12           think that's really a rational use of the 

13           state's resources.

14                  Second point, the corporate tax is set 

15           to expire, the current top rate is set to 

16           expire in 2026.  That's another 

17           billion-dollar revenue loss, beginning within 

18           the outyears of this financial plan.  That's 

19           $2 billion in combined revenue losses at a 

20           time when the Legislature has been tasked 

21           with coming up with about $2 billion for the 

22           MTA.  That math doesn't make sense.

23                  The inflation refund is also not a 

24           wise use of the state's resources.  That's 


                                                                   95

 1           about the whole surplus for this fiscal year 

 2           spread over 93 percent of taxpayers.  The 

 3           checks that people receive are not really on 

 4           the scale of cost increases from recent 

 5           inflation.  And the money could be put to 

 6           better uses like investing in affordable 

 7           housing, paying down the Unemployment 

 8           Insurance Trust debt, or just saving it 

 9           because of the likely need to bridge funding 

10           gaps from federal cuts in the near term.

11                  Second, in terms of MTA funding, to 

12           the extent that new sources of revenue are 

13           sought, we would point to two things:  One, 

14           reducing the rebate of the pass-through 

15           entity tax.  It doesn't need to be at a 

16           100-percent rebate for that tax to work.

17                  And second, targeting multinational 

18           profit shifting, in particular by following 

19           the federal taxation of global and tangible 

20           low-taxed income.

21                  Moving on to the discussion of 

22           outmigration in my last minute, FPI has done 

23           consistent research over the past few years 

24           showing that this is largely a myth.  


                                                                   96

 1                  The top 1 percent of earners move at 

 2           about one-fourth of the rate of all other 

 3           households.  Evidence shows that they don't 

 4           really move in response to tax increases.  

 5                  The last tax increase came up in the 

 6           acting commissioner's testimony -- but that 

 7           was during COVID, and the 2021 outmigration 

 8           rate came down compared to 2022.  I think 

 9           it's hard to say that that was about taxes.

10                  Finally, the other big concern around 

11           top earners and progressive tax increases is 

12           this fairness question, or the 

13           disproportionality question.  So I'll just 

14           point out that we have about 1.5 percent of 

15           taxpayers who are millionaire taxpayers.  

16           They earn about a third of all of the income 

17           earned in the state, and they pay about 

18           45 percent of all tax liability.  That's 

19           basically proportional and reflects a modest 

20           degree of progressivity in the income tax, 

21           but it's not prohibitive of further 

22           progressivity.

23                  MR. KHAN:  So thank you.  Good 

24           morning.  I want to spend actually most of my 


                                                                   97

 1           time talking about some of the federal risks 

 2           that Nathan alluded to.  I think right now 

 3           we've all maybe been watching the news too 

 4           much if we've been seeing that a budget 

 5           reconciliation package is quickly moving 

 6           through Congress with the goal of being 

 7           passed in the next 30 days.  

 8                  And unfortunately New York has been 

 9           named specifically in some of these 

10           documents, and in our current fiscal 

11           situation we are not well-prepared to respond 

12           to this bill.

13                  And just to talk about the scale of 

14           how New Yorkers could be impacted in some of 

15           the things that they've been proposing, the 

16           biggest pieces are the cuts of at least 

17           $880 billion to Medicaid.  Seven million 

18           New Yorkers rely on Medicaid.  These are 

19           about 45 percent of children in New York 

20           receive healthcare because of Medicaid.  Our 

21           grandmas and grandpas and elderly get 

22           healthcare through Medicaid.  

23                  And that's just -- it's an enormous, 

24           enormous number.  The cuts that they've 


                                                                   98

 1           proposed could easily blow a 5 or $10 billion 

 2           hole in the New York State budget.  

 3                  In addition to healthcare cuts and 

 4           Medicaid cuts, there's also 3 million 

 5           New Yorkers that rely on SNAP for food 

 6           assistance that are facing cuts.  Thousands 

 7           of New Yorkers that are on Head Start for 

 8           childcare, they're facing cuts.  A million 

 9           New Yorkers that are receiving rental 

10           assistance because of this aid from the 

11           federal government.

12                  All of this is on the chopping block.  

13           All of this is included in the budget 

14           reconciliation package and the menus that 

15           they have been putting forth. 

16                  And again, I will say that we're not 

17           well-prepared, and government takes some time 

18           to act, and I want to implore all of us that 

19           we need to act in some way this year in order 

20           to be prepared for those cuts.

21                  By the time the cuts happen, it will 

22           be too late to stop millions of people from 

23           being harmed.  Even if we raise the revenue 

24           next year, millions of people already will 


                                                                   99

 1           have seen benefit cuts.  And because we're 

 2           talking about healthcare, we're talking about 

 3           life or death decisions that millions of 

 4           New Yorkers will be facing.

 5                  It's not a wait-and-see scenario the 

 6           way typical federal budgets have been.  I'd 

 7           also point to -- Elon Musk has been mentioned 

 8           a couple of times.  Some of these funding 

 9           cuts are not coming through budgetary 

10           processes, they're coming through alternative 

11           processes that are happening overnight.  And 

12           New York's typical reliance on the federal 

13           government for some of this funding is no 

14           longer a viable option to provide services 

15           that millions of New Yorkers are depending on 

16           to make ends meet.

17                  There's a number of ways in which we 

18           could start to prepare for this, right?  In 

19           the Taxes hearing, as Nathan said, as Ron 

20           will probably say, there's a lot of revenue 

21           options.  We have record millionaires, record 

22           billionaires in New York State.

23                  MR. DEUTSCH:  All right.  My name is 

24           Ron Deutsch, New Yorkers for Fiscal Fairness.  


                                                                   100

 1           Thank you all for the opportunity to be with 

 2           you here today.

 3                  I want to highlight what we call our 

 4           Share Our Wealth proposals that we are 

 5           pushing for in terms of higher marginal tax 

 6           rates on the superrich.  I think one thing 

 7           that brings us together and unites many 

 8           across the political spectrum is this notion 

 9           that the wealthy are not paying their fair 

10           share and that the superrich certainly are 

11           not paying their fair share in taxes and can 

12           do more to help us.

13                  So a number of different proposals are 

14           being advanced right now.  One is on the 

15           income tax rates, and we would increase 

16           marginal tax rates for those making over 

17           5 million and those making over 25 million, 

18           the two top brackets, by half a percent each.  

19           That would generate nearly a billion dollars 

20           in revenue.  

21                  And also on the corporate tax we'd be 

22           looking to increase the rates from the 

23           current 7.25 for businesses with incomes over 

24           $5 million to 9 percent, which brings us in 


                                                                   101

 1           line with states like Pennsylvania, 

 2           New Jersey, California, and other surrounding 

 3           states.  This would raise about $2 billion a 

 4           year.

 5                  The corporate tax increase that was 

 6           put in place in 2024 is set to expire in '26, 

 7           and we need to make sure that that does not 

 8           happen at a time when we are needing revenue.

 9                  We would also like to see these 

10           changes made permanent and to not have us 

11           continually come back and fight for these 

12           changes.  Senator Gounardes has introduced a 

13           bill -- two bills, actually, S4437 and S3943, 

14           and Assemblymember Solages has introduced a 

15           same-as in the Assembly.

16                  Supporting this legislation are a 

17           number of unions, faith groups and community 

18           groups, not the least of which is NYSUT, New 

19           York State AFL-CIO, 1199, AFSCME, CWA, NYSNA, 

20           UUP, PSC, DC37, FPWA, Human Services Council, 

21           the New York State Council of Churches, and 

22           many others.

23                  These proposals may sound familiar to 

24           you because they are not new.  As a matter of 


                                                                   102

 1           fact, they were taken from your one-house 

 2           budgets last year.  So there seems to be 

 3           broad agreement among the majorities in both 

 4           houses that this is indeed a good plan.

 5                  It only impacts the top quarter of 

 6           1 percent of taxpayers in New York -- 

 7           26,500 taxpayers.  So the folks who would be 

 8           impacted by this are not going to pick up 

 9           stakes and move away, but the revenue 

10           generated would go a long way to keeping the 

11           folks who are struggling in New York here.

12                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  To question, 

13           Assemblyman Ra.

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you.

15                  For FPI, you mentioned about -- saying 

16           that the pass-through entities shouldn't be a 

17           100 percent rebate.  Do you have a number in 

18           mind?  

19                  MR. GUSDORF:  Yes, thanks for the 

20           question.  So I take it you're familiar with 

21           the tax and motivation for creating the tax.  

22                  A 90 percent rebate or an 85 percent 

23           rebate would basically match us to what 

24           Massachusetts and Connecticut do.  And the 


                                                                   103

 1           revenue calculation, that is very easy 

 2           because we know what PTET revenues are, so 

 3           that gets you about a billion and a half 

 4           dollars a year.  

 5                  And one thing I'd add to that, if you 

 6           don't mind, is even though it's likely that 

 7           there will be a change in SALT deductibility 

 8           under the federal rules, it's very unlikely 

 9           that we'll go back to unlimited SALT 

10           deductibility.  And even a $20,000 or 

11           $30,000 change at the federal level has no 

12           effect on the incentive of that top taxpayer 

13           class to elect to pay the PTET.  

14                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you.  

15                  So generally I think, you know, we're 

16           going to agree to disagree on a lot of things 

17           when it comes to our tax policy, but I do 

18           always appreciate your testimony.  

19                  But in particular, you know, that 

20           corporate rate -- New York was a massive 

21           outlier nationwide in taking that action 

22           post-pandemic.  There was really no other 

23           state -- every other state was cutting these 

24           tax rates, and New York raised it.  You know, 


                                                                   104

 1           we're a year out from that expiration, and as 

 2           you know -- and perhaps you disagree -- but, 

 3           you know, our business community is 

 4           struggling with the cost of operating 

 5           businesses in this state.  

 6                  We have many metrics that consistently 

 7           rank us near the bottom.  And regardless of 

 8           what's coming at the federal level, I think 

 9           our competitiveness as a state is something 

10           that we always have to keep in mind to bring 

11           in businesses.  Because at the end of the 

12           day, that's how we grow our revenues and 

13           that's how we have the assets to invest in so 

14           many of the things that are in this budget 

15           that I'm very supportive of -- childcare, you 

16           know, all those types of things.

17                  MR. GUSDORF:  Yeah, thank you.  I also 

18           enjoy our exchanges at these hearings.  

19                  A few important points about the 

20           corporate tax.  The rate that we had in place 

21           prior to that increase was a historically low 

22           rate for New York State and actually a very 

23           low rate by state-to-state comparisons.  We 

24           were at 6.5 percent; it had been decreased 


                                                                   105

 1           just a few years before.  And there are 

 2           actually many states that have a rate in the 

 3           8 to 10 percent range.  So it's still not a 

 4           super-high corporate tax rate by state 

 5           comparisons.  

 6                  Second, most businesses these days are 

 7           not organized as corporations.  The most 

 8           recent analysis done on federal data, which 

 9           was about 10 years ago, suggests that about 

10           95 percent of businesses are pass-throughs.

11                  So then you have a pretty small set of 

12           corporations --

13                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  I'm going to run out 

14           of time.  But again, as you mentioned the tax 

15           cut, remember, lots of small businesses are 

16           filing under those provisions and --

17                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  You have run out of 

18           time, Assemblyman.

19                  Senator?  

20                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Senator 

21           Gounardes.

22                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  Thank you very 

23           much.  

24                  I have the same question for all three 


                                                                   106

 1           of you.  You know, there's -- we always talk 

 2           about revenue raising, increasing tax rates.  

 3           Everyone has a back-and-forth and that's an 

 4           important part of the conversation.  But I 

 5           think there's also a conversation to be had 

 6           about finding the change within the cushions, 

 7           right, and where are we leaking money, where 

 8           are we otherwise spending money on tax 

 9           breaks, exemptions, deductions, et cetera, 

10           that might not be the best investment.  

11                  So I'd like to ask all three of you:  

12           In your estimation, what is the most 

13           egregious tax giveaway in our current tax 

14           code that we should be looking at as a way to 

15           reclaim some revenue to help us fund a lot of 

16           the things that many of us up here care 

17           about?

18                  MR. DEUTSCH:  I mean -- I would start.  

19           I mean, I've read the report that you so ably 

20           put together.  I think, you know, when you 

21           look at things like tax breaks for yachts, 

22           tax breaks for gold bullion, tax breaks for 

23           private jets, those are certainly things -- 

24           tax breaks for no sales tax on the purchase 


                                                                   107

 1           of thoroughbred horses -- all of these things 

 2           are just absolutely ridiculous and I think 

 3           should be taken away.  

 4                  But the reality is that they're not 

 5           going to generate probably enough revenue to 

 6           make a huge difference as to what's coming 

 7           down the pike right now, so I think that's 

 8           part of the solution, to be examining all of 

 9           those ridiculous tax breaks that we're 

10           providing, especially to the uber-wealthy, 

11           and reverse that trend.

12                  MR. KHAN:  I'd say something similar.  

13           I would definitely say economic development.  

14           I think the metrics that we use to track 

15           economic development are opaque and they are 

16           hard to quantify and different programs use 

17           them differently.  

18                  And so I do think that that program, 

19           there's quite a bit of waste there, but would 

20           also say I think it's part of the solution.  

21           And even that money, if we completely fix 

22           that program, wouldn't generate the type of 

23           resources we'll need to, you know, fix the 

24           Medicaid gap.


                                                                   108

 1                  MR. GUSDORF:  So, yeah, I would make a 

 2           few additional specific comments.  

 3                  First of all, I do think that the sort 

 4           of statewide system of economic development 

 5           authorities that are allowed to reduce 

 6           property taxes and other sorts of local taxes 

 7           is not an efficient form of tax policy from 

 8           any perspective, including from a very 

 9           fiscally conservative perspective.  

10                  It would be preferable to broaden the 

11           base and have lower rates for all businesses 

12           than to do selective tax breaks that end up 

13           being very costly.  

14                  The second thing, which is the sort of 

15           annoying truth of the tax-breaks calculation 

16           is most of the big ones are things that sound 

17           good to people, like the home mortgage 

18           interest deduction and the charitable 

19           deduction.  The ones that sound really bad 

20           normally are a very small amount of money.  

21                  So there's a good strategy there, 

22           though, which is you reduce the value of the 

23           deduction for very-high-income taxpayers 

24           because they get most of the benefit of a lot 


                                                                   109

 1           of these deductions.  And so if you took that 

 2           approach, you could come up with some serious 

 3           money.

 4                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  Thank you.

 5                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblymember 

 6           Bailey.

 7                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BAILEY:  Good morning.  

 8           Thank you very much.  

 9                  My question is going to be for Nathan.  

10           And it's in and around the Governor's 

11           proposed inflation rebate checks.  We know 

12           that, you know, 500 for couples who are 

13           married and filing jointly, with an income 

14           less than 300,000, and then 300 for 

15           individuals with an income of less than 

16           150,000.  So -- and that's based on the 

17           taxpayers 2023.  And that's using some of the 

18           surplus -- or the revenue that we have.

19                  So some critics, you know, argue that 

20           the one-time payments are gimmicky and 

21           instead it should be used for something else.  

22           Where -- where do you see that the best use 

23           for that could potentially be?

24                  MR. GUSDORF:  So I'll go through three 


                                                                   110

 1           things.  The most quotidian one is this is 

 2           not a bad time for the state to be saving 

 3           money.  I mean, we think that it's a 

 4           reasonable use of reserves to bridge the 

 5           federal funding gaps that we expect to see 

 6           very soon.  

 7                  So we're not opposed to spending down 

 8           those reserves, but that's -- this is a good 

 9           moment to be holding onto cash.

10                  There are two other things that we 

11           think are really good policy options.  One, 

12           the Executive Budget includes a proposal for 

13           a revolving lending facility to finance 

14           mixed-income housing.  We think that's a good 

15           idea.  But there's only $50 million proposed 

16           to go into the fund.  If you put billions of 

17           dollars into that, it starts to make a more 

18           meaningful difference in housing production, 

19           which is necessary to lower the cost of 

20           housing.  

21                  The other thing that is a 

22           multi-billion-dollar issue is the state's 

23           Unemployment Insurance Trust Fund debt to the 

24           federal government.  Now, this will be paid 


                                                                   111

 1           off by businesses over the next few years.  

 2           Paying it off is necessary to improve the 

 3           benefits payout, and the state also needs to 

 4           raise the tax base for the Unemployment 

 5           Insurance system because it simply doesn't 

 6           put enough money into the program.  

 7                  We're already seeing laid off federal 

 8           workers, we're likely to see economic 

 9           volatility under this presidential 

10           administration's economic policies.  And so 

11           we think it is very important that the state 

12           get its UI system into proper functioning 

13           mode as quickly as possible.  

14                  That may mean that some of the benefit 

15           can flow to businesses, but it would have to 

16           be part of a deal that is paired with 

17           appropriate increases to the benefit level 

18           and to the overall tax rolls so that 

19           prospectively we don't continue to end up in 

20           the situation that the state has faced time 

21           and time again where it just is not able to 

22           adequately finance its Unemployment Insurance 

23           system.

24                  ASSEMBLYWOMAN BAILEY:  Okay.  And I 


                                                                   112

 1           was just going off of the executive summary 

 2           from your organization and, you know, it 

 3           indicates the one, you know, putting it into 

 4           the state's Unemployment Insurance debt from 

 5           the federal government.  And obviously that's 

 6           coming out of COVID where we saw that large 

 7           increase.  

 8                  So, you know, we will see -- you know, 

 9           I don't disagree with that from that 

10           standpoint.  Thank you.

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

12                  Senator Rivera.  

13                  SENATOR RIVERA:  Thank you, 

14           Madam Chair.  

15                  So we've talked for a while, 

16           gentlemen, about the cuts that are definitely 

17           coming from the federal government, so it 

18           is -- and most of the conversation we have 

19           today is about revenue-generating ideas.  And 

20           I want to talk about one -- I wanted to give 

21           you an opportunity to talk about one related 

22           to capital gains.  

23                  And considering that since we have a 

24           lot of wealthy folks in the State of New York 


                                                                   113

 1           and a lot of wealthy folks who are probably 

 2           going to get all sorts of tax breaks from the 

 3           federal government, could you talk a little 

 4           bit about capital gains, about population in 

 5           the State of New York, what would that mean 

 6           as it relates to revenue for the state?  

 7                  Anybody can take it.

 8                  MR. GUSDORF:  So we've done estimates 

 9           on it.  You know, a quick overview.  

10                  The first thing is a very substantial 

11           federal tax benefit for capital gains, right?  

12           The top federal income tax rate is 

13           37 percent.  That's actually -- you know, it 

14           used to be 39.6 percent until Trump cut it.  

15           The top capital gains rate is 20 percent, 

16           setting aside an Obamacare tax.  But there's 

17           still a very substantial federal tax benefit 

18           for investment income.  

19                  So in equity terms -- 

20                  SENATOR RIVERA:  This is already.  

21           This already exists.

22                  MR. GUSDORF:  Yeah, this has been 

23           going on for a hundred years.

24                  SENATOR RIVERA:  Gotcha.


                                                                   114

 1                  MR. GUSDORF:  So there's a very strong 

 2           fairness argument for higher taxes on 

 3           investment income.  Sometimes that scares 

 4           people because they say, Well, working people 

 5           have 401(k)s; you know, what about my stock 

 6           portfolio?  The unsurprising reality is about 

 7           80 percent of all capital gains in New York 

 8           State -- this is New York tax data, this 

 9           isn't like national data -- 80 percent of 

10           capital gains in New York State go to people 

11           making over a million dollars a year.  Right?  

12           It's overwhelmingly earned by the very rich.  

13                  And interestingly, the rich taxpayers 

14           mostly earn their income from investment 

15           income and from business ownership.  They 

16           earn a small amount of the wage income earned 

17           in New York.  So that's the concentration of 

18           capital gains.

19                  You could -- I believe there are 

20           proposals in the Legislature to do a full 

21           offset of the federal benefit.  That's like a 

22           $15 billion a year revenue proposal.  

23                  But even at a low rate, because of the 

24           high amount of investment income earned, you 


                                                                   115

 1           can get into the $1 billion to $4 billion a 

 2           year revenue estimate range based on, say, a 

 3           2 to 3 percent surtax on investment income 

 4           for the top income brackets.

 5                  SENATOR RIVERA:  Go ahead.  

 6                  MR. KHAN:  I would, I think, add that 

 7           sort of the way that income and wealth has 

 8           been accumulated in New York State is 

 9           probably the best math to show that the gap 

10           between capital gains and income tax rate is 

11           just accumulating at the top.  

12                  Since 2017, where we saw cuts to sort 

13           of both of those cuts to a lot of different 

14           rates for wealthy individuals, we saw a 

15           74 increase in the wealth of billionaires in 

16           New York State.  Right?  So they have 

17           74 percent more money in 2025 than they did 

18           in 2017.

19                  SENATOR RIVERA:  And with only five 

20           seconds, I say let's go get it.

21                  MR. KHAN:  Yes.

22                  SENATOR RIVERA:  Let's go get it.

23                  MR. KHAN:  We have a record number of 

24           billionaires, and so that's where the 


                                                                   116

 1           resources are.

 2                  SENATOR RIVERA:  Thank you.  

 3                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblymember 

 4           Manktelow.

 5                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  Thank you.  

 6                  Nathan, back to a question for you.  

 7           Let's go back to the unemployment insurance.  

 8                  Back when COVID hit, a lot of our 

 9           businesses were asked to close, lay their 

10           people off, put them on unemployment.  A lot 

11           of that was mandated from our former 

12           governor.  And now these businesses that were 

13           essential stayed open and they continued to 

14           provide wage-earning wages to their 

15           employees.  

16                  But the constant call I get back all 

17           the time is, why does New York State not pay 

18           for our unemployment debt back to the federal 

19           government?  Why is my business being held 

20           responsible for that and not New York State, 

21           who put them in the position they're at?  

22                  Do you feel that New York State should 

23           cover that expense and not the businesses 

24           back home?


                                                                   117

 1                  MR. GUSDORF:  So what may be a mildly 

 2           complicated answer is I think it's 

 3           appropriate for --

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  I don't mean 

 5           to interrupt, it's not really that 

 6           complicated.  I've listened to all of you 

 7           earlier, and you guys are smart individuals 

 8           there.  It's not complicated.  

 9                  What's complicated is why New York 

10           State will not take care of that debt.

11                  MR. GUSDORF:  Well, it's a -- you 

12           know, businesses fund the unemployment 

13           insurance system through a tax on wages.  So 

14           it's appropriate for businesses to pay that 

15           tax and for it to be a liability of 

16           employers, which economically, right, there's 

17           a significant incidence on the workers.  So 

18           it's not like it's a tax on their business 

19           profits.

20                  The issues that we see in the current 

21           system, which you might agree with, are that 

22           because of the very low taxable wage base and 

23           because of the experience rating, it's a 

24           system that kind of unfairly dings small 


                                                                   118

 1           businesses and employers in very volatile 

 2           industries like if you work in construction 

 3           and you just sort of hire people seasonally 

 4           and then lay them off, that's the nature of 

 5           the industry.  Right?  You can't change that.

 6                  So the -- I believe that the 

 7           rationalized version of this tax, it's still 

 8           a business tax, but it should be one with a 

 9           higher taxable wage base that is just spread 

10           over, right, broadly over employers.  That's 

11           the broad-based low rate concept that gets 

12           more money into the system and it sort of 

13           reduces some of the penalty to being one of 

14           these businesses that we think is not 

15           appropriately targeted by the current system.

16                  So that's like the necessary tax 

17           reform.  

18                  Then there's the question of what to 

19           do with the debt.  Again, in principle, I 

20           don't think it's wrong or unfair for that to 

21           be a burden of businesses.  The issue is just 

22           that this is a very timely problem, right, 

23           it's a multi-billion-dollar issue.  And it 

24           makes more sense to do a deal where you get 


                                                                   119

 1           the right benefit reforms and tax reforms and 

 2           bring down the debt.

 3                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  Thank you.  I 

 4           hate to interrupt you, but I only have 

 5           seven seconds.  

 6                  I agree with that.  But if our 

 7           businesses are able to grow, they can put 

 8           more employees on and we could crack that nut 

 9           as well, in that direction.

10                  MR. GUSDORF:  Yeah.

11                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  Thank you for 

12           answering my question.

13                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Senator?  

14                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Senator Shelley 

15           Mayer.

16                  SENATOR MAYER:  Good morning.  

17                  I'm not sure who can answer this 

18           question.  

19                  Have any of you done -- based on the 

20           House bill that was just passed this week -- 

21           the likely dollar impact on New York's 

22           Medicaid program, based on the assumptions 

23           that are in that bill?

24                  MR. KHAN:  So the bill that passed 


                                                                   120

 1           this week, it put sort of a blueprint.  And 

 2           so it has some actually bottom-line figures 

 3           on healthcare.

 4                  SENATOR MAYER:  Yes.

 5                  MR. KHAN:  It will probably be about 

 6           another 30 days that we'll have the details 

 7           where we'll be able to, with any type of real 

 8           accuracy, determine like the dollar figure 

 9           amount.  But it's quite large.

10                  SENATOR MAYER:  Right.  So then the 

11           second part is, other than the tax issue, 

12           which you've all talked about, it's very 

13           likely that it's a short-term -- it's a 

14           this-year problem in New York, this loss of 

15           Medicaid funds, particularly FMAP or whatever 

16           they choose to do.  

17                  Other than the tax issues, which I 

18           know you all want to talk about, none of you 

19           have talked about any application of the 

20           rainy day fund or any other place where money 

21           is situated in New York State as a possible 

22           solution.  What are your views on that?

23                  MR. GUSDORF:  So our views at FPI are 

24           the state, by the Executive Budget 


                                                                   121

 1           accounting, has about $21 billion in reserve.  

 2           There's additional money in the General Fund, 

 3           so by our accounting it's really 34 billion.  

 4           Right?  And that's assuming that the 

 5           current-year surplus is all spent, so you 

 6           could potentially have even more.

 7                  I think the basic outline of the 

 8           strategy should be prepare to spend down a 

 9           significant amount of those reserves in order 

10           to bridge federal funding losses.  And then 

11           there has to be a contingency plan on the 

12           spending side to do something permanently, 

13           that the reserves are basically a short-term 

14           solution.  

15                  That means looking at, I mean, 

16           potentially serious broad-based revenue 

17           raisers -- maybe something like doing a sales 

18           tax on services.  Right?  We don't -- our 

19           sales tax doesn't apply to services.  You do 

20           a low rate, but that's the kind of policy 

21           that many other counties use to raise really 

22           substantial revenue.  New York needs to 

23           consider those sorts of options if it comes 

24           to a dilemma of losing $15 billion in 


                                                                   122

 1           Medicaid funding versus trying to backfill 

 2           it.

 3                  SENATOR MAYER:  Any others?  Yes.

 4                  MR. DEUTSCH:  I would say yeah, I 

 5           totally agree with what Nathan just said.  

 6           Utilizing the economic stabilization funds 

 7           and the rainy day funds, as well as the 

 8           additional revenue that we are holding right 

 9           now makes a lot of sense to weather this 

10           initial storm.

11                  But in the long term, we're going to 

12           need to figure out how to generate the type 

13           of revenue we need to make sure we're 

14           providing the residents of this state the 

15           services that they so desperately need.  And 

16           asking the wealthiest, who are very likely 

17           going to be doing very well under the new tax 

18           cut package that it looks like Congress is 

19           pulling together, it seems to make sense for 

20           us to ask our wealthiest residents to pay a 

21           little bit more, yeah.

22                  SENATOR MAYER:  Thank you.

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Assembly?  

24                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  I believe I have no 


                                                                   123

 1           further questions, just maybe a comment.

 2                  Is it being suggested by any of you 

 3           that if -- and I know "if" is not the right 

 4           word -- when the federal government cuts our 

 5           Medicaid funding, that the state backfill 

 6           what the feds are not doing?

 7                  MR. GUSDORF:  Yes.

 8                  MR. KHAN:  Yes.

 9                  MR. DEUTSCH:  Yes.

10                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  So if they cut us 

11           10 billion, you would expect the state to 

12           raise taxes to make up for that 10 billion?

13                  MR. DEUTSCH:  It will be raining, so a 

14           good time to use rainy day funds, I suppose.  

15                  MR. GUSDORF:  Yeah, in terms --

16                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  But this is more 

17           than just rain, this is more of a flood.  And 

18           Noah's Ark isn't big enough to get us out of 

19           it.

20                  MR. GUSDORF:  And so, you know, you 

21           can think about the sort of range of cuts in 

22           the -- we might see a few billion dollars of 

23           cuts.  That's something that we all 

24           understand --


                                                                   124

 1                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  I hate to say a 

 2           billion dollars is small potatoes.

 3                  MR. DEUTSCH:  Yeah, exactly.

 4                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  But when you're 

 5           talking about forty -- the Medicaid is around 

 6           47 percent of the state's budget of 

 7           $257 billion.  So we're looking at over $100 

 8           billion of Medicaid monies.  If the feds cut 

 9           half of that, you're looking at a $70 billion 

10           hole.

11                  PIT is not going to take care of it, 

12           the rainy day fund's not going to take care 

13           of it.  Nothing is going to take care of it.  

14           The only way that we can maybe -- maybe -- 

15           make this work is if the feds cut their 

16           income taxes, the state's going to have to 

17           raise its income taxes -- which I know you're 

18           all opposed to doing -- and then we're going 

19           to be in the same boat.  

20                  So we're in a world of trouble right 

21           now, and people aren't really recognizing 

22           what the issue is.  You know, in Alaska it is 

23           said that they put their elderly out on the 

24           ice.  That's what's going to happen here.  


                                                                   125

 1           Because the bulk of our Medicaid funding goes 

 2           for long-term care, which is our senior 

 3           citizens.  And if we don't have the funding 

 4           available -- and we're not going to be able 

 5           to tax our way out of this.  If we don't have 

 6           the funding available to take care of our 

 7           most vulnerable, unfortunately they're going 

 8           to perish.  And I hate to sound like this, 

 9           but that's what I think is going to happen.

10                  MR. GUSDORF:  If I could add.  I do 

11           have an answer to that.

12                  If we're -- we're looking at 

13           $90 billion of federal funding in this 

14           upcoming year's budget, 70 billion of which 

15           is Medicaid.  

16                  It's unlikely that we would lose 

17           $70 billion in Medicaid funding.  If we end 

18           up in $10 to $15 billion revenue loss 

19           situation from federal funding -- I mean, 

20           it's a shift in tax policy, but that is 

21           doable, given the size of the state economy.  

22                  But you're not going to get 

23           $15 billion by only taxing people who make 

24           over $5 million a year.  That's why we've 


                                                                   126

 1           pointed to broad-based business taxation, 

 2           including pass-throughs, sales taxes on 

 3           services, and broad-based income tax 

 4           increases.  Which no one's going to be a fan 

 5           of.  But that is a realistic, stable path to 

 6           finding another $15 billion a year where it 

 7           is viable to backfill it.  You know, two to 

 8           three times that is -- who knows.  But that's 

 9           still in range.

10                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  But, see, but your 

11           numbers are off because -- I have to cut 

12           myself off.

13                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I'll continue it, 

14           if that's okay, because I have three minutes.  

15                  So I was going to go down that same 

16           road, because I think it's overly optimistic 

17           that they would only cut us $15 billion at 

18           the rate they're going and the rapidity by 

19           which they all folded on $2 trillion cuts at 

20           the federal level the other night.

21                  So I'm just curious, because you're 

22           all tax experts.  You don't have to answer it 

23           now, but you have to help me.  The governor 

24           of Maine said:  If Donald Trump stops federal 


                                                                   127

 1           funding to Maine, we, the people of Maine, 

 2           will take our federal taxes from all 

 3           paychecks and no taxes will be paid to the 

 4           federal government, so we can pay for things 

 5           ourselves.  

 6                  Will any of you explore whether we can 

 7           put that into law and do that?

 8                  MR. GUSDORF:  Well, so I am a tax 

 9           attorney.  I have not studied the issue.  My 

10           guess is that you're not allowed to do that.

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  And yet they 

12           don't seem to recognize law.  So I'm not sure 

13           I do either.

14                  MR. GUSDORF:  I mean, it --

15                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  So I'm just 

16           saying --

17                  MR. GUSDORF:  In the event of a civil 

18           war, it's a good idea.

19                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  -- I'm sharing my 

20           colleague's position, we're not going to be 

21           able to produce this money ourselves unless 

22           we are substituting money that now goes to 

23           Washington and will no longer come back with 

24           our needs.  


                                                                   128

 1                  So, you know, I'm only half joking -- 

 2           it was a governor who said this -- to see if 

 3           we can pull this off.

 4                  MR. DEUTSCH:  I think there is a very 

 5           large imbalance between what we send to the 

 6           federal government versus what we get back.

 7                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Yes.

 8                  MR. DEUTSCH:  And certainly the 

 9           Comptroller does reports on that all the 

10           time, so we know what those numbers are.

11                  But I think, you know, we need to 

12           rethink how we do business here in New York 

13           as we move forward in this new world that we 

14           find ourselves in -- a new funding world, a 

15           new political world.  But, you know, New York 

16           is spending $10 billion a year on poor 

17           economic development programs, both at the 

18           state and local level.  That should be pared 

19           back dramatically, if not -- you know, we 

20           should be looking at using that money to fund 

21           other services like childcare, like higher 

22           education.  Things that have a greater return 

23           on investment for the public than funding, 

24           say, an Amazon warehouse, which makes 


                                                                   129

 1           absolutely no sense whatsoever.

 2                  So we need to rethink how we're 

 3           spending the money that we are spending right 

 4           now, cutting out the waste.  And I'm not 

 5           talking about a DOGE Commission here by any 

 6           stretch of the imagination.  But we know 

 7           where we're spending money in places that we 

 8           shouldn't.  We've brought that up to you many 

 9           times.

10                  MR. GUSDORF:  I would just add, you 

11           know, the $2 trillion of cuts is over the 

12           10-year CBO forecasting window, so it's $200 

13           billion a year spread over 50 states.  So 

14           it's real money for New York, but it's 

15           probably not $30 billion for New York.  

16                  So I actually think the right window 

17           to look at is the, like -- you know, a few 

18           billion to, maybe if they went really far, 

19           the ten to $15 billion range.  

20                  And I would just point out that the 

21           state economy is robust enough to raise that 

22           through new revenue measures.

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.  

24                  Thank you.  The Senate is done.


                                                                   130

 1                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you.  The 

 2           Assembly is done.

 3                  Gentlemen, thank you for your 

 4           participation.

 5                  PANEL MEMBERS:  Thank you.  

 6                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  We're now calling 

 7           up Panel B.  Panel B:  National Coin and 

 8           Bullion Association; the National Federation 

 9           of Independent Businesses; Schuyler Center 

10           for Analysis and Advocacy; and the New York 

11           State Council of Churches.

12                  (Pause; discussion off the record.)  

13                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Welcome.  Please 

14           state your names so the people in the 

15           audiovisual room know whose name to put up 

16           when you speak.

17                  And if you'd just introduce yourselves 

18           starting from my right, your left, so we just 

19           know who you are.

20                  MR. COOK:  Hi, I'm Peter Cook and I am 

21           the executive director of the New York State 

22           Council of Churches.

23                  MS. SIDDIQUI:  Good morning.  I'm Kari 

24           Siddiqui.  I'm a project director at the 


                                                                   131

 1           Schuyler Center for Analysis and Advocacy.

 2                  MS. RANSLOW:  Ashley Ranslow.  I'm the 

 3           New York State director for the National 

 4           Federation of Independent Business.

 5                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Welcome all.

 6                  You can start on either side.

 7                  MS. RANSLOW:  I can go ahead.  Thank 

 8           you.  All right.

 9                  Well, good morning, everybody.  Thank 

10           you for having me.  Thank you, Senator 

11           Krueger, Assemblymember Pretlow, and members 

12           of the Senate and Assembly and legislative 

13           staff for having us here today.

14                  NFIB is a member-driven organization 

15           representing more than 11,000 members in 

16           New York State.  NFIB members are the 

17           businesses that define our neighborhoods and 

18           strengthen our communities with character and 

19           value -- local hardware stores, independent 

20           restaurants, florists, barbers, retailers, 

21           dry cleaners, convenience stores, farmers, 

22           roofers, landscapers.  This is just a sample 

23           of NFIB members, and the typical small 

24           business owner is a member of NFIB.  The 


                                                                   132

 1           average size of our members is 10 employees 

 2           or less.

 3                  There are close to 500,000 small 

 4           businesses in the State of New York.  They 

 5           employ 40 percent of the state's 

 6           private-sector workforce, over 3 million 

 7           New Yorkers.  And their production accounts 

 8           for nearly half of the state's GDP.  A 

 9           staggering 98 percent of businesses in 

10           New York have 100 employees or less.

11                  Small businesses are also the 

12           backbones of their communities.  Ninety 

13           percent of small business owners have 

14           financially supported community or civic 

15           groups; 63 percent have provided in-kind 

16           contributions; and 76 percent have reported 

17           volunteering for their local community 

18           organizations.

19                  I'm going to focus today's testimony 

20           on a topic that got quite a bit of attention 

21           during the last panel, and that is 

22           unemployment insurance.  The state does have 

23           currently a $6.3 billion debt to the federal 

24           government as a result of COVID.  The state 


                                                                   133

 1           needed to borrow money because of the 

 2           unprecedented amounts of business closures we 

 3           saw during COVID that were mandated by state 

 4           public policy decisions.

 5                  Those closures obviously led to a 

 6           drastic amount of layoffs in a short period 

 7           of time.  The unemployment system was quickly 

 8           overwhelmed.  The state needed to borrow 

 9           money to pay out unemployment insurance 

10           benefits.  We still have 6.3 billion that we 

11           owe back to the federal government.

12                  The Governor's Executive Budget 

13           proposal has allocated $165 million to pay 

14           the interest assessment surcharge, which NFIB 

15           strongly supports.  This surcharge is 

16           assessed once a year on employers to just pay 

17           the interest on the state's debt.  That 

18           notice goes out in the summer.  Last year it 

19           was about $15 per employee.

20                  We support the Governor's initiative 

21           to pay this -- for the state to pay this, 

22           because small businesses have been 

23           shouldering the burden of paying back the 

24           UI debt by themselves without any assistance.  


                                                                   134

 1                  This is contrary to what 36 other 

 2           states have done.  They used COVID relief 

 3           funds to address their UI debt, to pay it 

 4           off, to get it back to solvency, and to 

 5           restore UI tax levels.  

 6                  Small businesses are also paying $105 

 7           in increased federal UI taxes, they're paying 

 8           $250 per employee in state UI taxes.  This is 

 9           a big problem, and New York State does need 

10           to address it sooner than later.

11                  Thank you for your time today, and I'm 

12           happy to answer questions.

13                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you.

14                  MS. SIDDIQUI:  All right, good 

15           morning.  And thank you for the opportunity 

16           to testify today.

17                  My name is Kari Siddiqui.  I am a 

18           project director with the Schuyler Center for 

19           Analysis and Advocacy, where I focus on our 

20           child poverty reduction work.

21                  The Schuyler Center is a 152-year-old 

22           statewide nonprofit organization based here 

23           in Albany and dedicated to policy analysis 

24           and advocacy in support of public systems 


                                                                   135

 1           that meet the needs of children and families, 

 2           particularly those living in poverty.

 3                  I'm going to take a turn from what we 

 4           just talked about and talk about how the tax 

 5           code can better support New York's kids and 

 6           families.  And this year we have a tremendous 

 7           opportunity to make a real substantial change 

 8           to our child tax credit so that it can better 

 9           help and support children and families and 

10           make New York State an affordable home for 

11           our families.

12                  Backing up just a tiny bit, in 2021 

13           the Legislature passed, you all passed and 

14           Governor Hochul signed into law the 

15           Child Poverty Reduction Act, which commits 

16           the state to reduce child poverty by 

17           50 percent by 2031.  It also established the 

18           Child Poverty Reduction Advisory Council, 

19           which just this past December released a set 

20           of really strong recommendations that would 

21           help New York State achieve that goal.

22                  And key among their recommendations 

23           was an expansion to the Empire State Child 

24           Credit, which is our child tax credit here in 


                                                                   136

 1           New York.  

 2                  In January the Governor included an 

 3           expansion of the tax credit in her Executive 

 4           Budget, a proposal that, if passed, would be 

 5           the largest expansion of the credit since its 

 6           establishment, and one that is a great first 

 7           step towards a stronger, more impactful child 

 8           tax credit.

 9                  The Governor's proposal is 

10           broad-based.  It reaches both our 

11           lowest-income and middle-class families and 

12           extends the credit to lower-income families 

13           who actually, due to their low income level, 

14           were previously excluded from receiving the 

15           full credit amount.

16                  But while the Governor's proposal is a 

17           great starting place, we can and must do more 

18           to make our tax credit work better for 

19           families and have a stronger poverty-fighting 

20           potential.  The child tax credit expansion 

21           recommended by the Child Poverty Reduction 

22           Advisory Council would provide a larger 

23           amount, $1500 per child per year for all 

24           children zero to 18, while still eliminating 


                                                                   137

 1           that income requirement that has excluded the 

 2           lowest-income families from the full credit 

 3           amount.

 4                  It's also critical to index the credit 

 5           to inflation so that families can continue to 

 6           benefit from the full value of the credit for 

 7           years to come.  The expansion that is 

 8           recommended by the Child Poverty Reduction 

 9           Advisory Council is estimated to reduce child 

10           poverty by 23 percent compared to an 

11           estimated 8 percent reduction from the 

12           Governor's proposal.

13                  I will point out that the 

14           Working Families Tax Credit, sponsored by 

15           Senator Gounardes and by Assemblymember 

16           Hevesi, would encompass all of the changes in 

17           the CPRAC recommendation and go even further 

18           to put money into families' pockets, 

19           including by paying the credit out throughout 

20           the year.

21                  I'll end as I began, which is to say 

22           that we have a real opportunity this year to 

23           start to make New York State an affordable 

24           place and the best place to raise a family.  


                                                                   138

 1           Research on this topic has shown us again and 

 2           again that tax credits work.

 3                  Thank you.

 4                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Thank you.

 5                  Ed?  Assemblyman Ra?

 6                  (Discussion off the record.)

 7                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Oh, oh, I'm sorry.

 8                  MR. COOK:  No worries.  No worries.

 9                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  I'm looking at the 

10           clock here.  Okay.

11                  MR. COOK:  Yeah, my name's Peter Cook.  

12           I serve as executive director of the New York 

13           State Council of Churches, founded in 1893.  

14           We represent 7500 congregations and nine 

15           denominations all over the State of New York.

16                  Since the early 20th century, our 

17           council, shaped by the Social Gospel, has 

18           fought hard for a strong social safety net 

19           because we recognize the charity offered by 

20           church-based institutions could only go so 

21           far and that government programs were 

22           essential for permanently lifting people out 

23           of poverty and restoring our economy.

24                  Unfortunately, the Trump 


                                                                   139

 1           administration, embracing the widely 

 2           discredited supply side economics, seeks to 

 3           severely cut that social safety net to give 

 4           enormous tax cuts for the very wealthiest 

 5           based on the mistaken assumption that it will 

 6           help our economy.

 7                  To raise revenue, invest in our social 

 8           safety net and put more money in the pockets 

 9           of low-wealth and middle-class New Yorkers, 

10           we offer three proposals.  

11                  One, as members of the Share Our 

12           Wealth Campaign, we call for an increase in 

13           New York's top income tax rates for those 

14           earning over 5 million and over 25 million by 

15           0.5 percent, and increase the top corporate 

16           tax rate by 1.75 percent.  And we seek to 

17           make these changes permanent.

18                  Second, we strongly urge you to pass a 

19           bill that no longer rebates the stock 

20           transfer tax.  The state began rebating the 

21           tax in 1979, and since 1981 the tax is 

22           100 percent rebated back to Wall Street.  No 

23           longer rebating what is essentially a 

24           minuscule sales tax could result in 10 to 


                                                                   140

 1           14 billion in additional revenue.

 2                  And finally, in order to relieve 

 3           pressure on the most crushing property taxes 

 4           in the country and invest in our social 

 5           safety net, we ask that industrial area 

 6           councils, IDAs, no longer be given tax breaks 

 7           without the express approval from affected 

 8           school boards.  This we think will help 

 9           reduce pressure on property taxes and also 

10           spawn more economic growth that comes through 

11           the expansion of the social safety net.

12                  Thank you.

13                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

14                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblyman Ra?

15                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you.

16                  Ashley, so you ran out of time a 

17           little bit.  But if you could further detail 

18           regarding, you know, what the kind of all-in 

19           cost is to our businesses given now, you 

20           know, the Federal Unemployment Tax Act offset 

21           credit reduction will double.  

22                  So we're not just looking at the 

23           impact of them paying very high rates, 

24           there's a number of things that impact them 


                                                                   141

 1           the longer we keep this debt on our books and 

 2           on the backs of our small businesses.

 3                  MS. RANSLOW:  Yes, you're correct.  

 4                  So New York is approaching the 

 5           five-year mark of having outstanding debt.  

 6           There is a provision in federal law, when you 

 7           have five years of outstanding debt, what 

 8           they call the FUTA offset is adjusted.  They 

 9           call this the benefit-cost ratio or the 

10           benefits-cost rate.

11                  So what's going to happen is right now 

12           we're at 1.2 percent in a FUTA offset, so 

13           that equals about an extra $105 per employee 

14           for federal UI taxes.  So that's going to 

15           double next year if the state still has its 

16           debt.  So we're going to go from 1.2 percent 

17           to 2.3 percent.  So businesses are going to 

18           be looking at a sizable jump in their federal 

19           UI taxes.

20                  They do this as a way to pay the debt 

21           off faster, right?  But I think it's really 

22           important to note that these federal UI tax 

23           offsets are in addition to businesses being 

24           in the highest possible state UI tax 


                                                                   142

 1           brackets, which average about an extra $250 

 2           per employee per year.  So you're talking 

 3           hundreds of extra dollars per employee per 

 4           year.

 5                  So small businesses have poured out 

 6           thousands of additional dollars to fix 

 7           New York State's UI problem -- which again, 

 8           to remind everybody, was a result of state 

 9           public policy decisions.  Right?  The state 

10           shut down businesses.  

11                  And unlike 30-plus other states, 

12           New York just said, Oh, well, businesses, 

13           you're on the hook to pay it back.  Other 

14           states used COVID relief funds to address 

15           their UI problems; New York hasn't.  

16                  And this is, again -- to the points 

17           that were made earlier as well, you cannot 

18           adjust the weekly benefit UI rate with the 

19           state's outstanding debt.

20                  So the longer we let this go on, you 

21           can't do anything for workers either.  You 

22           cannot -- the federal government will not 

23           allow you to increase UI weekly benefit rates 

24           as long as New York has this unemployment 


                                                                   143

 1           insurance problem.  It's in the best 

 2           interests of the state to address this 

 3           problem now and to not let it continue.

 4                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  And real quick, the 

 5           manual workers issue -- obviously we had a 

 6           provision that didn't make it over the finish 

 7           line last year.  Is it just large businesses 

 8           or are there a lot of small businesses that 

 9           are getting these lawsuits and dealing with 

10           them?

11                  MS. RANSLOW:  It's also small 

12           businesses.  

13                  You're right, there's a provision in 

14           the Governor's budget to address lawsuits 

15           over manual workers and the frequency at 

16           which they're being paid.  It is not unique 

17           to big business; it is impacting small 

18           businesses who are facing multi-million- 

19           dollar lawsuits.  And it should be addressed 

20           in this year's budget.

21                  ASSEMBLYMAN RA:  Thank you.

22                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

23                  Senator Gounardes.

24                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  Thank you very 


                                                                   144

 1           much.

 2                  My question is for Kari.

 3                  You talked about the Governor's 

 4           proposal on the child tax credit, and you 

 5           pointed to the Working Families Tax Credit 

 6           proposal as well.  I'll just note, under the 

 7           Governor's proposal, by my math, 86 percent 

 8           of kids would only see a $170 boost, or their 

 9           families would see a boost of $170, which if 

10           they're lucky might pay for a cable bill for 

11           half a month.

12                  So I think you rightfully pointed out 

13           that we can do a lot better.  But my question 

14           is, with the discussion at the federal level 

15           right now around the extension of the TCJA, 

16           and the expiration of the enhanced federal 

17           child tax credit and then the dropping back 

18           down of the value of the credit -- or the 

19           potential drop-down -- do you have any 

20           analysis as to what that impact might be on 

21           child poverty?  

22                  And New York almost leads the country 

23           for child poverty.  If that child -- if the 

24           federal credit drops to a thousand, again, 


                                                                   145

 1           what's going to be the impact on New York's 

 2           children?

 3                  MS. SIDDIQUI:  Yeah, that's a really 

 4           great question.  

 5                  We don't have specific analysis yet on 

 6           that.  But we can get it.  And I also think 

 7           that we have some really strong things to 

 8           look to, as you may know, as you know for 

 9           sure, when the federal government expanded 

10           the child tax credit during COVID where 

11           families were getting monthly payments into 

12           their banks automatically every month, we saw 

13           child poverty, here in New York State and 

14           nationally, cut in half.  Like by half.  Half 

15           the amount of kids were living in poverty 

16           during that time.

17                  And when that was allowed to expire 

18           and not renewed, we saw those child poverty 

19           rates rebound and actually go beyond where 

20           they were before.  

21                  So we can only extrapolate from that 

22           right now to say that, you know, that losing 

23           federal tax credit benefits would have a real 

24           impact on families' lives and on our child 


                                                                   146

 1           poverty rate here in New York State.

 2                  SENATOR GOUNARDES:  Thank you.

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Assembly.

 4                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  Assemblyman 

 5           Manktelow.

 6                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  Thank you.

 7                  Actually, a question back to small 

 8           businesses.  I know we've talked about 

 9           unemployment and what that is doing to our 

10           small businesses.  So if we can take care of 

11           that problem in this year's budget, what's 

12           the next best thing we can do to support 

13           these small businesses back home -- help them 

14           grow, help them put more employees on, and in 

15           turn that helps the state as well.  What 

16           would be the next thing we could look at?

17                  MS. RANSLOW:  So unemployment 

18           insurance is obviously a key issue, as you 

19           reference.  I think there are other things 

20           laid out in our testimony.

21                  A couple of years ago New York did 

22           increase the small businesses deduction from 

23           5 to 15 percent.  It didn't do anything on 

24           the C corp side for small businesses, and 


                                                                   147

 1           there are some small businesses organized as 

 2           C corps, so I think that that's something 

 3           that the state should look at, tax 

 4           parity-wise.  Right?

 5                  I think also for small manufacturers 

 6           we did cut tax rates from large C corp 

 7           manufacturers many, many, many years ago.  We 

 8           did not do the same for small manufacturers, 

 9           who are typically organized as pass-throughs:  

10           LLCs, S corps, that kind of thing.

11                  So again, just looking at that tax 

12           parity, right, we sort of have cut taxes here 

13           a little bit, cut taxes there a little bit, 

14           to help certain businesses in certain areas.  

15           But I think we should take a step back and 

16           look at that and make sure that there is some 

17           real tax parity going on and that, you know, 

18           just how you're organized and your tax code 

19           doesn't necessarily dictate where you land, 

20           right, as a small business owner.

21                  So I think we need to take a look at 

22           that.

23                  I also think that in this conversation 

24           of revenue raisers we have to be really, 


                                                                   148

 1           really careful about what that could mean for 

 2           small business owners.  Right?  

 3                  Just -- I always say like you've got 

 4           to use a scalpel instead of a sledgehammer.  

 5           Right?  The answer isn't just to increase 

 6           taxes on corporations, increase taxes on this 

 7           area or that area.  You really have to look 

 8           at how businesses are organized and also, you 

 9           know, who you're trying to target.  Right?  

10                  Because small business owners -- I 

11           heard in the last panel, right, like, Well, 

12           our economy can handle it, right, tax 

13           increases.  But I challenge anyone to walk 

14           into a small business owner and ask them how 

15           they're doing and how their business is going 

16           and how they're feeling.  And they're going 

17           to tell you that they can't afford a tax 

18           increase.

19                  So I'd just caution that.

20                  ASSEMBLYMAN MANKTELOW:  Yeah, you're 

21           absolutely right.  Talking to the small 

22           businesses, every little tax, every little 

23           extra piece that they have to do takes away 

24           from their business, takes away from their 


                                                                   149

 1           employees having the ability or the chance to 

 2           make more money.  And if they can make more 

 3           money, that adds money to the state side as 

 4           well.

 5                  And I honestly believe if we can help 

 6           that happen, we can grow those businesses and 

 7           grow New York.

 8                  So thank you.  Thank you all for your 

 9           testimony.  

10                  Thank you, Chairwoman.  

11                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Thank you.

12                  Senator Tom O'Mara.

13                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Thanks.  

14                  Good morning, everyone.  Thanks for 

15           being here.

16                  Ashley, just to follow-up on the 

17           manufacturers tax and trying to get that 

18           parity with the C corps and the pass-through 

19           entities.  We've talked about it in years 

20           past.  

21                  I've talked about it with 

22           Commissioner Hiller in years past; didn't get 

23           a chance to get to it today.  But in years 

24           past she had raised an issue of maybe a 


                                                                   150

 1           difficulty in defining manufacturing to tell 

 2           who would qualify for that as a pass-through 

 3           entity.

 4                  If you could comment on that and 

 5           whether there's been any -- whether your 

 6           group has had any discussions with the 

 7           Tax Department on how to possibly handle that 

 8           type of a definition.

 9                  But also there was discussion earlier 

10           about changing the tax reporting time for 

11           pass-through entities and how the proposal in 

12           the budget and how that would be helpful or 

13           not to these pass-through entities.

14                  MS. RANSLOW:  So in terms of -- there 

15           has been some discussion with the 

16           Tax Department about how do you define 

17           manufacturing and how do you do that for 

18           pass-through entities.

19                  There's not an answer yet on how to do 

20           that.  I think that there are people that are 

21           smarter than I am, quite frankly, that are 

22           trying to figure that out in terms of tax 

23           policy.  So I think it's ongoing, right, how 

24           can we find a reasonable solution to 


                                                                   151

 1           accomplish what we're trying to accomplish 

 2           here.  So I would say stay tuned on that 

 3           front.

 4                  In terms of reporting for pass-through 

 5           entities, I'd have to get back to you on that 

 6           one.

 7                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Okay.  On the UI debt 

 8           that's outstanding, I think the commissioner 

 9           of Labor said that the amounts are even 

10           higher than the $6.3 billion you're 

11           referencing today.  

12                  But we know that about 36 other states 

13           used their federal COVID relief to pay this 

14           down, and New York did not, they chose to 

15           carry it.  Of those states that weren't in 

16           that 36 that used the COVID relief, do you 

17           know where they stand?  As compared to paying 

18           that down, are they dragging it out like 

19           New York State is, or are they making a more 

20           concerted effort to eliminate that debt?

21                  MS. RANSLOW:  Some states didn't have 

22           to borrow money.  Some states' UI trust funds 

23           were actually so robust that they were able 

24           to get through COVID without having to borrow 


                                                                   152

 1           money.  

 2                  Some states paid -- used some to pay 

 3           off their debt, right, some COVID relief 

 4           money, then some money from, you know, 

 5           increased business taxes to pay off their 

 6           debt.

 7                  And then there's only one other state 

 8           in addition to New York that has outstanding 

 9           debt.  It's us and California.  We're the 

10           only two left that have UI debt to repay.  

11           everyone else is -- has paid off advances or 

12           didn't borrow it to begin with.

13                  SENATOR O'MARA:  And in your testimony 

14           you say that it's going to get more difficult 

15           for small businesses to deal with as that 

16           repayment amount increases year to year, 

17           correct?

18                  MS. RANSLOW:  Correct.  And also you 

19           risk an economic downturn, right, in -- if 

20           there are just natural economic downturns and 

21           layoffs and the state has to look at 

22           borrowing more money, which just puts us 

23           further in the hole.

24                  SENATOR O'MARA:  Thank you.


                                                                   153

 1                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Any members?

 2                  So we have Senator Jackson.

 3                  SENATOR JACKSON:  So I was going to 

 4           say good afternoon.  It's almost good 

 5           afternoon.  Thank you for staying the course 

 6           and making sure that who you represent are 

 7           being heard here today.

 8                  Did I hear correctly that all three 

 9           organizations' representatives agree that we 

10           should look at getting resources by taxing 

11           the wealthiest New Yorkers -- not the small 

12           business people, not the churches and not the 

13           analysis organization that you work for, but 

14           where the resources are, and taxing the 

15           wealthiest New Yorkers?

16                  Did I hear you correctly that you 

17           support that, and looking at the issues and 

18           concerns that impact the State of New York as 

19           far as, you know, dealing with the 

20           unemployment insurance hole that we are in, 

21           and also looking at the needs of our children 

22           and families that exist?  

23                  Am I correct in that all three of you 

24           are in favor of taxing the wealthiest 


                                                                   154

 1           New Yorkers just a little bit in order to 

 2           help their brothers and sisters of New York 

 3           State?

 4                  MR. COOK:  Yes, absolutely.  And we 

 5           really think that taxing the wealthiest a 

 6           little bit more is actually going to be more 

 7           economically productive in terms of improving 

 8           the social safety net, which helps to 

 9           mitigate high costs which cause people to 

10           leave the state and also affect our 

11           businesses at all levels.

12                  MS. SIDDIQUI:  Yeah, I would just echo 

13           what Peter said.

14                  SENATOR JACKSON:  I'm sorry, I could 

15           not hear you.

16                  MS. SIDDIQUI:  I'd just echo what 

17           Peter said.

18                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Okay.  And 

19           Director Ranslow?

20                  MS. RANSLOW:  In terms of the UI debt, 

21           yes, we obviously support paying that down.  

22                  And in terms of tax policy, I think 

23           that, you know, to my comments earlier, when 

24           we talk about revenue raisers, you have to be 


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 1           very discerning about where you're getting 

 2           the revenue from and if it's going to have an 

 3           impact on small business owners.

 4                  SENATOR JACKSON:  And that's why I 

 5           indicated as far as -- I thought I heard you 

 6           say that the issues and concerns of small 

 7           businesses have to be taken into 

 8           consideration.  Everyone says small 

 9           businesses are the backbone of our society. 

10                  And so I'm not talking about the small 

11           businesses, though, I'm talking about the 

12           wealthiest New Yorkers.

13                  MS. RANSLOW:  I hear you.  I think it 

14           gets difficult when you talk about personal 

15           income taxes.  There are a lot of small 

16           businesses who pay their taxes via personal 

17           income taxes.  They themselves may not be a 

18           multi-millionaire, right, but they pay their 

19           taxes via personal income taxes.  So you have 

20           to be very careful about that.

21                  SENATOR JACKSON:  Thank you.  

22                  Thank you, all three, for coming in.

23                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  Senator Pam 

24           Helming.


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 1                  SENATOR HELMING:  Thank you, 

 2           Senator Krueger.

 3                  This question is for Ashley.  Thank 

 4           you all for being here.

 5                  It's always dangerous when you come in 

 6           at the very end and throw out a question.  

 7           But Ashley, I hear from small businesses 

 8           across my district all the time about the 

 9           challenges of doing business in New York 

10           State, whether it's the costly mandates that 

11           are pushed down on them, including the 

12           all-electric mandates; uncertainty 

13           surrounding a number of regulations that are 

14           constantly in flux; and of course high taxes.  

15                  And now, in the budget, there are 

16           programs that will incentivize new 

17           businesses, the CATALIST NY program.  In my 

18           district, because I'm so close to Micron, my 

19           companies want to know where is their Micron 

20           bonus, right? 

21                  So I'm just wondering, from your 

22           perspective, do you see any challenges for 

23           our small businesses, existing businesses, 

24           when new businesses receive so many 


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 1           incentives?

 2                  MS. RANSLOW:  This is an issue that is 

 3           near and dear to NFIB's heart.  

 4                  I testified a couple of months ago 

 5           before many of you on economic development 

 6           programs.  Most of -- if you look at most of 

 7           New York's economic development programs, 

 8           they are very specific to often larger 

 9           businesses.  They are geared towards certain 

10           industries, right.  And I often categorize it 

11           that New York has gotten into the business of 

12           picking winners and losers.  Right?  Who we 

13           want to give money to and who we don't want 

14           to give money to.

15                  If you're an existing small business, 

16           third generation, fourth generation, you've 

17           been around for hundreds of years, paid 

18           taxes, done everything -- you qualify for 

19           practically nothing from New York State.  

20           Right?  Maybe a loan program, if you want to.

21                  So from an economic development 

22           perspective, if you're an existing small 

23           business and you have been for a long time, 

24           no, you're probably not getting anything in 


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 1           terms of economic development.

 2                  SENATOR HELMING:  Thank you.

 3                  CHAIRWOMAN KRUEGER:  I think the 

 4           Senate is done, just looking quickly.  

 5                  So I pass it back to the Assembly and 

 6           thank you very much for your participation 

 7           today.

 8                  CHAIRMAN PRETLOW:  The Assembly's also 

 9           done, and I want to thank the three of you 

10           for your participation.

11                  And this formally ends this hearing on 

12           Taxes.  Thank you very much.

13                  PANEL MEMBERS:  Thank you.  

14             (Whereupon, the budget hearing concluded 

15           at 11:57 a.m.)

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