Calls for higher minimum wage, proposes small biz economic stimulus plan,
City
Comptroller John C. Liu today reported on the health of New York City’s
economy and put forth an ambitious plan to ensure that New York City’s
future benefits every
New Yorker, not just the well-connected few.
During his State of the City Address, Comptroller Liu called for raising the minimum wage from $7.25 to $11.50
per hour over the next five years in order to help the “working poor” climb out of poverty.
Liu
also outlined initiatives to sustain and rebuild the City’s middle
class, including lowering taxes and fines
on 90 percent of the City’s small businesses. In order to do so, Liu
called for an end to the corporate welfare being doled out annually by
the City’s Economic Development Corporation and the elimination of
outdated corporate tax loopholes, which cost the
City more than $500 million each year.
In addition to putting forward innovative solutions to impending economic problems, Liu outlined educational
policies that would better prepare our City’s youth for the challenges ahead, such as:
·
Free CUNY tuition to the top 10 percent of every NYC public high-school,
·
Using
City schools as community centers during non-school hours to offer
services like health clinics and financial literacy classes,
·
Expanding
of the Nurse Family Partnership, a program that increases children’s
cognitive skills, producing higher reading and math scores,
·
Expanding
the “Computers for Youth” program to every middle school at which at
least 75 percent of the students receive a free lunch, in order to
provide computers to
all low income families,
·
Creating
“sister college” relationships that pair every high school with one of
the City’s many colleges and universities, so that college and graduate
students can mentor
our high-school students.
Liu also highlighted a number of his office’s successes over the past year; such as the role his office played
in the City’s recoupment of $466 million in cost overruns from
CityTime, the identification of fraudulent billing on the City’s
911 call center upgrade, emergency spending approvals for the response
and recovery related to
Superstorm Sandy, and the more than $1 billion saved as part of City bond
refinancings.
Liu noted that the Mayor and City Council adopted his Capital Acceleration plan to rebuild City infrastructure
and spur job growth, an idea he proposed in his last State of the City Address.
Comptroller
Liu also announced that, in the coming weeks, his office will launch
Checkbook 2.0, an upgrade to
the current online transparency tool, Checkbook NYC, making New York
City the most financially transparent government in the United States.
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