黑料不打烊 Note: Despite advocacy efforts from a host of national and state groups like 黑料不打烊, the House, Senate and White House have yet to reach an agreement. he The House won鈥檛 be voting till Friday on a 1+ trillion 5th Corona Virus allocation that would include desperately needed funding to state and localities. And the Senate and White House recently moved from an appearance of negotiations to announcing a 鈥榩ause鈥 over the weekend that might delay an agreement until after the Memorial Day recess.
Without any current sign that federal COVID-19 payments will be approved over the next few weeks, 黑料不打烊 State is poised to take action in the coming week to cut a proposed $8 billion in local aid and effect a 10% reduction in state operations spending. This could result in a significant across the board cuts to Medicaid and state aid funding that would have a devastating impact on all state funded services, including those delivered by behavioral health providers. In fact, some 黑料不打烊 members were being asked by some local county mental health officials as to how they鈥檇 make as high as a 20% reduction to their state/local aid funded programming.
Once the Governor releases a detailed proposal within the next few days, state legislators will have 10 days to propose a different approach.
The article below suggests a number of alternative strategies, including
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a short term loan from the Federal Reserve Bank of 黑料不打烊 until the federal funds come in
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a higher cut on state operations derived in part from delays in pending salary hikes
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increased taxes on wealthier 黑料不打烊ers
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delaying capital projects and shifting those funds to other state expenditures
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eliminating subsidies to corporation and the film industry
黑料不打烊 and our national and state advocacy colleagues will be continuing to urge federal leaders and the Governor to take prompt actions to avoid devastating cuts to our community healthcare systems. Stay tuned鈥
What To Expect In The State鈥檚 First Round Of Spending Cuts
The details are slim, but the state has options as it waits on the feds.
By REBECCA C. LEWIS City & State NY May 12, 2020
Regular viewers of Gov. Andrew Cuomo鈥檚 daily coronavirus press briefings have heard the governor say time and again that 黑料不打烊 state is broke. Revenue projections are way down and the state is facing a budget deficit that is set to grow even wider as the economic fallout of the pandemic is realized. Cuomo has repeatedly made appeals to the federal government to provide unrestricted aid to the state, lest he be forced to make deep spending cuts to schools and other programs.
The first round of those cuts are expected to be announced in the coming days based on data from the first month of the fiscal year. The Cuomo administration has said it plans to cut . That could include decreases in education and Medicaid funding. Even with federal aid, cuts will likely be unavoidable because the budget gap is only expected to grow in the coming years. While details are scant, the state has ways that it can reduce the impact of the budget cuts on the state鈥檚 most vulnerable people.
The state budget gave Cuomo鈥檚 budget director, Robert Mujica, the ability to reassess the state鈥檚 financial outlook three times during the year and make changes in the amounts allocated to aid to localities. The first period ended on April 30, and the administration is expected to release detailed cuts around May 15 that reflect the new fiscal reality. The state Legislature would then have 10 days from the release of the executive proposal to counter with its own plan to balance the budget.
Right now, the Cuomo administration estimates that tax revenues this fiscal year will be $13.3 billion less than what it had originally estimated in January. that was released in late April, the state has about a $10.1 billion hole it needs to fill through 鈥渂udget control actions.鈥 Additional federal aid, state agency budget reductions and other savings account for the other more than $3.1 billion. Unlike the other budget adjustments, the nearly $8.2 billion in cuts to aid to localities still has no details. Categories like 鈥淪chool Aid,鈥 鈥淢edicaid/Health鈥 and 鈥淪ocial Services鈥 have 鈥渢bd鈥 where the dollar amounts should be.
Localities are playing a waiting game to see where the cuts will take place and by how much. And the picture is grim. Without unrestricted federal aid 鈥 Cuomo is asking for , a sum that seems unlikely 鈥 the financial plan reads that 鈥渘early every activity funded by state government in the aid to localities budget 鈥 will face steep cuts.鈥 The plan also explained that the size of any particular cut would depend on how much is cut from other programs. If the state left school aid and Medicaid alone, for example, the average cuts to the remaining programs would likely range from 40% to 50%. If cuts were imposed on school aid and Medicaid, which make up about 80% of aid to localities, those average cuts in other categories would decrease to 20%-30%.
Given that calculation, neither nor Medicaid is likely to avoid steep cuts. 鈥淵ou cannot reduce the 黑料不打烊 state budget without reducing school aid to start with,鈥 said E.J McMahon, research director at the conservative think tank Empire Center for Public Policy. Although the budget in state spending on school aid, the federal government offset that amount through the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act, keeping funding for districts essentially flat compared to the previous year. This was already set to squeeze many districts where in the past year, and McMahon said that 鈥渁bsolutely, in no way, shape or form鈥 will districts across the state actually receive the amount of aid currently budgeted.
With that in mind, David Friedfel, director of state studies at the Citizens Budget Commission, suggested that it would be prudent for the state not to make uniform cuts to all school districts. He said that to avoid the most severe impacts, the Cuomo administration should target the most wealthy districts 鈥 those that rely the least on state aid 鈥 and cut the most from them. Simply cutting spending by 20%, which is what , Friedfel said the reductions would hit the poorest districts hardest. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important that in making these cuts 鈥 (the state) focuses on ensuring that districts have enough to fund a sound, basic education,鈥 Friedfel said. Districts that can achieve that standard with minimal state aid, he said, should be at the front of the line for budget cuts. Friedfel added that wealthier districts also have more ability to increase local school taxes to help recoup some of what they would lose in state aid.
As far as the other big spending category goes, McMahon said that cutting Medicaid will likely be trickier. He said state school funding is like a faucet that the state can turn on or off, whereas Medicaid has many moving parts that will make any sort of across the board cut difficult. The state鈥檚 enacted budget already included $2.2 billion in savings identified by Cuomo鈥檚 second Medicaid Redesign Team. And broad restructuring is prevented under federal legislation that provided the state with additional emergency Medicaid funding that currently represents about $1.4 billion in state savings.
Friedfel said that the most likely course of action for the state, with those restrictions in mind, is to cut Medicaid reimbursement rates across the board. Although he wouldn鈥檛 say definitively the impact that change would have, the hospitals that see the most Medicaid patients and thus rely on those state payments 鈥 public hospitals 鈥 stand to lose the most.
Although the financial plan focuses largely on slashing aid to localities, there are still other areas where the state can find savings to reduce the size of cuts to the major areas of school aid and Medicaid. One example is further reductions in state operations, the state鈥檚 third-largest expense. While Cuomo has threatened a 20% reduction in school aid, he has only cut state operations by 5.3%. 鈥淚f you look at the way (savings) targets played out, (Cuomo鈥檚) actually sparing his own state agencies compared to what is in local,鈥 McMahon said. The financial plan said the state has imposed a hiring freeze and placed limitations on new contracts or purchases. But a freeze on April 1 salary increases only will last three months. Withholding raises for a full year would result in $260 million in savings during the current fiscal year that would 鈥渙ffset the need for reductions elsewhere in the budget,鈥 according to the financial plan. Friedfel also said that potential furloughs should also be a part of the state鈥檚 playbook, even if they potentially come with their own complications.
Ron Deutsch, executive director at the labor-backed Fiscal Policy Institute, warned against further cuts to state agencies, since funding to those agencies has been flat for years. He said that would further squeeze agencies that he said are already at 鈥渂are-bone capacity.鈥 Deutsch suggested that the state should engage in short-term borrowing from the Federal Reserve Bank of 黑料不打烊 in order to offset some of the steepest immediate cuts before the arrival of potential federal aid or new revenue streams that may be approved by the state Legislature. As of now, the financial plan includes $4.5 billion in 鈥渓iquidity financing鈥 鈥 short-term borrowing to offset a 90-day delay in the income tax filing deadline. Friedfel warned that the state should avoid short-term debt now because of the possibility that it could become long-term debt, requiring taxpayers to pay off this year鈥檚 budget for decades.
All three budget experts agreed, however, that the state could eliminate or defer payments for any number of economic development programs, tax credits and subsidies. Although the budget , it was still funded at $420 million for film and television productions that shoot in 黑料不打烊. 鈥淢aybe we should be rethinking a lot of these subsidies that 黑料不打烊 offers corporations,鈥 Deutsch said. 鈥淭o me, that makes a lot more sense than, if you鈥檙e looking for things to cut, than cutting education or health care during a pandemic.鈥
Friedfel also said that the state could consider delaying capital projects, a part of the budget that the governor has great control over, and shifting those funds to other state expenditures to avoid cuts. The financial plan said 鈥渁ll current and planned capital projects will be reviewed and prioritized鈥 by the state Division of Budget and the executive chamber. It didn鈥檛 offer more details, but suggested that the state could reallocate money away from low-priority projects.
Of course, any decisions on cuts will be influenced by what comes out of Washington. The more money the federal government gives, the less 黑料不打烊 needs to slash. McMahon predicted that the Cuomo administration will propose the most severe cuts imaginable in a further escalation of his attempts to force Congress鈥 hand to provide $60 billion in unrestricted federal aid to 黑料不打烊. U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has vehemently opposed what he called a 鈥,鈥 while House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has been working on that would include $500 billion to $1 trillion in direct aid to state and local governments.
Whatever compromise is reached likely won鈥檛 be as much as Cuomo wants, an amount that would have allowed him to avoid any cuts. And while a smaller amount might help the state avoid immediate cuts this fiscal year, budget gaps in future years 鈥 $60.5 billion total through fiscal year 2024 鈥 would likely necessitate cuts as the economic impact of the coronavirus crisis grows.
Deutsch said the state should pass new taxes on the ultrawealthy, saying that 黑料不打烊 took similar action in 2001 after the 9/11 terror attacks and in 2008 during the Great Recession. McMahon warned against new taxes, pointing to the elimination of the federal state and local tax deductions, and the state鈥檚 already high tax rate. Friedfel agreed that new taxes would make sense, but said that since the 2008 millionaires tax is still in effect, rich 黑料不打烊ers may be wary that any new taxes would not be temporary either, and the move could cause some to relocate.
Deutsch rejected this idea, stating that the fact that the state hasn鈥檛 seen a mass exodus of millionaires since the imposition of the 2008 millionaires tax, one now seems unlikely. But even Deutsch admitted that it would take a perfect combination of federal aid and new taxes to avoid spending cuts altogether, given the state鈥檚 grim financial outlook.