Budget continues historic investments in NYSOFA services, expansion of the NORC program, enhancement of NYSOFA scams-prevention initiatives, recommendation on a one-stop for benefits and a broader set of age-friendly supports across agencies and programs addressing older adults' community needs
The New York State Office for the Aging (NYSOFA) today issued a wide-angle analysis of the Fiscal Year (FY) 27 New York State Enacted Budget and its many linkages to supportive, age-friendly initiatives for older adults and their families across agencies and programs.
Governor Kathy Hochul’s 2026-2027 policy agenda and the Enacted State Budget for New York families center on affordability, public safety, family support, and expanding opportunity for all New Yorkers – an agenda that is especially and uniquely supportive of older adults.
New York State Office for the Aging (NYSOFA) Director Greg Olsen said, “With the continuation of critical investments in NYSOFA and proactive policies and funding in other state agencies that older New Yorkers touch every day, Governor Hochul recognizes the value of older adults, as well as the value of community supports to keep this population healthy and their contributions in our state and communities. At NYSOFA, we analyze the entire state budget – not just the NYSOFA sections – because older New Yorkers touch a variety of systems and agencies.”
He added: "So why would NYSOFA highlight the Governor's expansion of childcare? Because there are almost 200,000 grandparents who are the primary caregivers for their grandchildren. Investments in childcare, school and summer meals, expansion of the child care tax credit and child-safety provisions will support older caregivers of children, continue to promote affordability, while also providing relief for all family caregivers who may be balancing care to children and an older adult at the same time."
He added: "We apply the same lens across the board, whether it's the importance of veterans services for the 70% of veterans who are 60 and older, housing policies that address both affordability and smart-growth community design principles that make it easier for older adults to access basic needs or social opportunities, auto insurance reforms that help older adults afford their insurance so they can keep a car and remain independent, health care services to maintain physical health, and so much more."
A snapshot of NYSOFA's analysis is below. Please read NYSOFA's full analysis here with further details about each provision.
New York State Office for the Aging (NYSOFA) Investments in the FY 27 Enacted State Budget
For NYSOFA specifically, the Enacted State Budget includes:
- $8 million in new funding to expand the NORC program. A Naturally Occurring Retirement Community (NORC) is a community or neighborhood with a growing population of older adults in which the dwellings were not purposefully intended for older adults when they were originally designed and/or built. The program is a New York innovation that brings together health care, social services, information and assistance, and other supports for residents in the designated community setting.
- Continuation of $68 million for older New Yorkers who are waiting for aging network services through NYSOFA due to lack of funding or workforce shortages.
- $11.5 million in funding for a variety of community-based organizations in the areas of elder abuse prevention, guardianship, holocaust survivor services, home share programs and respite, advocacy organizations, and more.
- Protecting individuals from scams and fraud, through training and a public awareness campaign being developed by NYSOFA.
- Developing recommendations for a one-stop for all benefits that older adults may be eligible for across state agencies.
Other Highlights
- Energy affordability for older adults and families: $1 billion in one-time energy rebate checks, a Ratepayer Protection Plan, and establishment of the RATES Commission to combat rising utility bills.
- Building more housing and protecting vulnerable renters and homeowners, including: $250 million to accelerate affordable housing development; $100 million to support the expansion of the MOVE-IN NY program and continued exploration of innovative emerging factory-built and modular construction technologies; $140 million for capital improvements to New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) developments and $75 million for public housing authorities outside New York City; clarifying anti-harassment laws for renters; and increasing income eligibility limits for New York’s Rent Freeze Program for both the Senior Citizen Rent Increase Exemption (SCRIE) and Disability Rent Increase Exemption (DRIE) from $50,000 to $75,000.
- Supporting workers of all ages by combating wage theft and increasing access to medical care for injured workers.
- Strengthening communities to make them more age-friendly by enhancing the Downtown Revitalization Initiative and New York Forward ($200 million total).
- Investing in critical health care services that older adults and families rely upon to stay healthy, including: an additional $1.5 billion in state support for hospitals, nursing homes, and assisted living programs that serve the needs of older adults and their families; reforms to prior authorizations to improve patient care and remove barriers; protecting immunization access; and more.
- Delivering universal childcare and new protections for kids on online platforms: Governor Hochul is putting New York State on a pathway toward universal childcare, beginning investments to support the delivery of affordable childcare to up to nearly 100,000 additional children. The Governor's landmark investment will increase funding by $1.7 billion, bringing the total FY 27 investment to $4.5 billion for childcare and pre-Kindergarten services statewide.
- Lowering car insurance for older adults, protecting affordability and access to a vehicle for independence: sweeping reforms designed to help drive down New York’s exorbitantly high auto insurance rates, addressing the root causes by targeting fraud and tackling runaway litigation. The Budget also includes provisions that enable prosecutors to seek criminal penalties against any individual responsible for organizing a staged accident, not just the particular individual behind the wheel.
- Helping New Yorkers put food on the table: by investing $51 million in the Department of Health’s (DOH) Hunger Prevention and Nutrition Assistance Program (HPNAP) program and protecting New Yorkers from theft of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits by upgrading New York’s EBT cards to secure chip-based technology that makes cards virtually impervious to skimming. (SNAP skimming steals hundreds of millions of dollars from families’ EBT cards.)
- Affordability for Veterans: allowing local governments the option to provide a full property tax exemption for Veterans within that locality who have a 100% permanent and total disability compensation rating from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA).
About the New York State Office for the Aging (NYSOFA)
The New York State Office for the Aging (NYSOFA) continuously works to help the state’s over 5 million older adults be as independent as possible for as long as possible, while also delivering support for the 4.1 million individuals providing uncompensated care for an older adult. NYSOFA achieves this through advocacy, development and delivery of person-centered, consumer-oriented, and cost-effective policies, programs, and services that support and empower older adults and their families, in partnership with the network of public and private organizations that serve them. Stay connected—visit the NYSOFA Facebook page, follow @NYSAGING on X, or visit aging.ny.gov.

