StateWide e-News: New York lawmakers head home, no
deal on deficit (AP)
New York lawmakers headed
home Thursday without agreement on how to address the state's fiscal
crisis.
The
Legislature was in session all week — at a cost of about $70,000 a day — but
couldn't agree on how to close this fiscal year's $3.2 billion deficit. The
Assembly, Senate and Gov. David Paterson have been talking about steps that
would likely have to include cuts in spending on schools and health care, each
protected by powerful special interests.
But
the Senate's Democratic and Republican leaders were unified against any cuts in
school aid, which advocates said would result in layoffs and higher local
property taxes in the spring.
"It's not going to happen," said Sens. John Sampson, the Democratic
leader; and Dean Skelos, the Republican leader, in unison to
reporters.
Paterson said cuts to school aid and health are
critical because they represent 55 percent of the state
budget.
He
countered that more than 70 percent of school aid goes to salaries and benefits,
not instruction, and schools facing proposed cuts have reserves to cover the
loss. Leaving schools and health care uncut forces greater and unfair strain on
the remaining 45 percent of the budget, he said.
"This is the reason I'm holding out," Paterson told reporters. "What I want to do is
reduce this deficit in a way that our bond holders and our credit raters see
that we are on the road to recovery, not careening down a hill."
Legislative leaders plan to return to Albany on Monday to pass a deficit reduction
plan, if there is a deal among leaders. They could convene earlier if a deal is
struck.
Paterson said Wednesday
night he wasn't planning to compel lawmakers to stay in Albany any longer because
they were clearly negotiating in good faith.
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