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State budget deadline passes without agreement

Karen DeWitt
/
WRVO News (file photo)

The state budget will be late this year, but the question is, how late? Governor Andrew Cuomo and state lawmakers have yet to reach final agreement on a number of issues.

The Legislature is proposing $7 billion in new taxes on the wealthy and corporations, and $4 billion more in school aid. Cuomo’s tax and education aid plans are more modest.  

The governor’s budget director, Robert Mujica, appearing on Spectrum’s New York 1, was asked whether the spending plan will be late this year. He said only: “We’re going to get it done.”  

Sen. Jeremy Cooney, a freshman from Rochester, is among those pressing for a $3.5 billion fund in the budget to pay for employment and other services to undocumented New Yorkers who lost their jobs during the pandemic. He said he’d rather have the right budget a few days late. 

“If it means that hundreds and thousands of excluded workers have resources to put food on the table, I’m OK with that,” Cooney said.  

Lawmakers are also trying to piece together how to fit the billions of dollars in new funding from the federal stimulus package into the budget.

Karen DeWitt is Capitol Bureau Chief for New York State Public Radio, a network of 10 public radio stations in New York State. She has covered state government and politics for the network since 1990.