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Hochul to announce preliminary agreement on state budget

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul and legislative leaders are scheduled to announce a preliminary state budget agreement on Monday.

The roughly $237 billion spending package includes a landmark deal aimed at significantly increasing the state’s housing supply, as well as a victory for Mr. Hochul’s efforts to crack down on school and Medicaid funding. It can also be stored.

A conceptual agreement between Hochul, House Speaker Carl Heastie (D-Bronx), and Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins ​​(D-Westchester) will go before the full House of Representatives on Monday, moving the plan forward. seems to have enough support.


Congressional leaders were instrumental in opposing Hochul’s inclusion of Eric Adams’ request to extend the mayor’s powers for four years in the state budget. AP

Kathy Hochul
Gov. Kathy Hochul rejected the Legislature’s proposal to increase taxes on high earners in the state budget. zumapress.com

Hochul is expected to announce a preliminary agreement on Monday afternoon, suggesting broad agreement has been finalized on policy and funding terms, with technical details to be worked out over the coming days. Barring a major breakdown in negotiations, the governor is expected to sign the budget into effect by the end of the week.

Mr. Hochul, Mr. Heastie and Mr. Stewart-Cousins ​​on Friday unveiled an early version of a major housing deal, which lawmakers said specifically related to tenant protections through “just cause evictions” and upgrades to rent-stabilized apartments. It raised serious issues surrounding the clause.

The deal is not expected to include any new taxes, a policy Gov. Cathy Hochul maintained despite demands from both the House and Senate to make the billionaires pay more taxes. These requests were particularly vulnerable to rejection, and in the middle of negotiations, the latest revenue projections increased the budget by nearly $1.3 billion.

Sources said Hochul and Mr. Hochul agreed to include an additional $2.4 billion to help New York City fight thousands of immigrants, despite pushback from Mr. Adams, who called for additional contributions from Albany. It is said that there was almost no discussion in Congress.

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