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Mayor Bill de Blasio outlined his yearly preliminary budget on Monday, taking advantage of the city's strong economic health to fund services for the less fortunate while also increasing resources to the city agencies that keep the nation's largest city safe. Government Affairs Reporter Melissa Russo reports. (Published Monday, Feb 9, 2015)
Updated 4 hours ago
Mayor Bill de Blasio outlined his yearly preliminary budget on Monday, taking advantage of the city's strong economic health to fund services for the less fortunate while also increasing resources to the city agencies that keep the nation's largest city safe.
De Blasio, a Democrat, outlined a $77.7 billion financial vision that, thanks to higher-than-projected revenues, closes a $1.8 billion deficit while not including any tax hikes, service cuts or layoffs of municipal workers and instead adds $2 billion in spending.
"When we make decisions to invest, we do so in a very targeted manner according to our priorities," he said during the budget presentation at City Hall. "The goal with each investment is to create a stronger city, a safer city, a fairer city."
The mayor was elected in 2013 on a promise to combat income inequality, and many of the spending plans de Blasio announced are meant to reinforce city agencies in that fight. More money would be sent to community health initiatives, particularly in poor neighborhoods, and to combat homelessness.
The city also would spend $340 million to expand the mayor's signature pre-kindergarten program so it can serve 70,000 students this fall. And de Blasio wants to devote $26.4 million to improving service and training at the Administration for Children's Services, which has been criticized over recent child fatalities.
Moreover, de Blasio earmarked $5 million to increase staffing to cut down on wait time for the city's new municipal identification card. Many of those who tried to sign up when the card launched last month were told they would experience lengthy delays, though de Blasio claimed Monday that most of the 260,000 requests will be filled within the next 90 days.
But the budget also displays a commitment to New York's first responders in the wake of de Blasio's recent public battles with the rank-and-file police. As part of their uneasy truce, the mayor has used the city's financial might to address some of the cops' requests, including millions to replace the NYPD's aged supply of bulletproof vests.
De Blaiso also wants to send an extra $10 million to the city's dwindling cadet program, which brings law-enforcement-minded college students into the department to groom them for careers as police officers. However, the new budget does not include a City Council proposal to hire 1,000 additional officers — an omission that left City Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito "disappointed."
"The Council believes that raising the headcount of NYPD is essential, and we will be advocating it strongly this budget cycle," said Mark-Viverito, a close de Blasio ally who praised much of the rest of the budget.
Additionally, the city is devoting additional resources to hire more Emergency Medical Services dispatchers and staff more ambulances shifts with aims of cutting the response times to medical emergencies. The Associated Press first reported the increased resources on Sunday.
The average response time was 6 minutes, 50 seconds in 2014, 3 seconds higher than the previous year. City officials said their goal is to cut the average to 6 minutes, 30 seconds.
De Blasio's plan does not include any tax hikes and incorporates the corporate tax reform enacted by the state last month, officials said. But while the budget largely painted a rosy picture of the city's economic health, de Blasio was critical of the state and federal governments for not sending New York its "fair share," particularly in education and infrastructure funding.
The preliminary presentation was a marked change from a year ago when de Blasio was focused on the fiscal threat posed by the expired labor contracts of all 150 municipal unions.
But the mayor has steadily brokered deals with the municipal workforce, first sealing an agreement with the massive teachers union last spring and watched many others fall in line. Today, 71 percent of the city's unions have new contracts. Those deals include health care savings which, along with a request for city agencies to eliminate unnecessary expenditures, provides much of the savings in the budget, officials said.
Budget hearings in the council, which is overwhelmingly Democratic, will begin in the next few weeks followed by a revised mayoral budget this spring before a final deal is struck in June. The budget covers the fiscal year that begins July 1.
Published at 11:07 PM EST on Feb 8, 2015
Copyright Associated Press / NBC New York
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