Tuesday, January 18, 2022

Statement from NYGOP Chairman Nick Langworthy on Hochul's Fundraising Report

 

Statement from NYGOP Chairman Nick Langworthy on Kathy Hochul’s Grotesque $21.9 Million Fundraising Report


January 18, 2022


“The only way Kathy Hochul could have raised $21.9 million is by selling state government out her back door. It’s clear she perfected the corrupt art of pay-to-play politics using every trick she learned from her mentor Andrew Cuomo. No wonder she has been hiding her schedule and illegally using taxpayer-funded planes to fly to fundraisers. Kathy Hochul is Andrew Cuomo 2.0 where crooked deals are cut with lobbyists and special interests in exchange for campaign cash and New Yorkers are the collateral damage. Not that we needed it, but this is more proof that we must wipe out the stench of the entire Cuomo/Hochul administrations.” 


WILLIAMS RESPONDS TO GOVERNOR HOCHUL'S STATE BUDGET PROPOSAL

 

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"As we have seen throughout the pandemic, one-time investments and actions are critical to alleviating a moment of crisis, but they are insufficient in addressing the underlying issues that predate and were exacerbated by the pandemic, crises that will continue after federal money is depleted. While the state’s budget includes many necessary investments, these expenditures are buoyed by one-time federal investment rather than a long-term commitment to a renewed deal for New York. 


"As the Governor demonstrated by allowing the eviction moratorium to expire amid a winter surge and with neither good cause protections nor adequate investment in affordable housing, it has never been more clear that one-time, one-year actions simply do not cut it. Unfortunately, Governor Hochul is ignoring these lessons, relying on a one-time infusion of federal money to fund a series of temporary solutions to problems that aren’t going away. 


"The Governor’s insistence that we cannot create long-term programs because of a lack of funding is undercut by her refusal to include common-sense revenue raising measures in her budget.  Rather than continuing to placate wealthy donors and big-moneyed special interests at the expense of other New Yorkers, we need to ask them to do their civic duty by paying their fair share, raising billions in new revenue and allowing us to pay for programs that will dramatically impact the lives of hardworking families for the long-term. We need a budget and approach that makes longtime investments that improve people's lives – not just for a year but for the course of their lifetimes."


Governor Hochul Presents the Fiscal Year 2023 Executive Budget

 Governor Hochul delivers the FY 2023 Executive Budget

Governor Hochul: “This is a moment of a great possibility, a once-in-a-generation chance to reconsider what is possible for our state. And this really is the beginning of New York’s next great comeback. I declared a New Era for New York, and it continues today.”

Hochul: “For too many New Yorkers, the American dream is just that, a dream. And that has been even more true as a result of this pandemic. As I said in my State of the State speech, it's time for a better, fairer, and more inclusive version. I'm calling it the New York dream. By implementing the agenda I proposed two weeks ago, we can make it a reality. And this is with smart, strategic and a forward thinking plan, we will. This is a moment of great possibility. A once in a generation chance to reconsider what is possible for our state. And this really is the beginning of New York's next great comeback.”

Hochul: “We have the means to respond to this historic moment with an historic level of funding. What we have achieved with the blueprint I am presenting today is a plan that is both socially responsible and fiscally prudent.”

Hochul: “We hope to close the books on this winter surge soon, so we can turn the page and open the book on our 2023 Budget outlook and focus on the post-pandemic future.”


 Good morning, two weeks ago in my State of the State speech, I proposed a whole new era for New York. One in which my administration, my fellow statewide elected officials and the legislature will finally work together to deliver for New Yorkers. But before I deliver our positive budget trends, let's look at another trend, which is increasingly positive.

Today, positive COVID cases are at 22,312 down 75% from our peak of 90,132 on January 7th, less than two weeks ago and that's incredible. And cases dropped 34% in the last seven days while cases across the rest of the United States went down only by five percent. Our positivity rate is down to 12.48%, nearly an 11% drop from the peak on January 2nd and hospitalizations continue to trend downward as well.

So we hope to close the books on this winter surge soon. So we can turn the page and open the book on our 2023 budget outlook and focus on the post pandemic future. As I said, since I took office 147 days ago, my top priority is to confront this pandemic head-on and to save lives, protect the health of New Yorkers and protect the health of our economy.

But we also must pass a bold agenda that'll do more than just help us recover from this crisis. We need to embrace this moment of possibility and use it to redefine New York's destiny. How? First by rebuilding our healthcare and teacher workforces, providing tax relief to those who need it the most, speeding up economic growth and creating good paying middle-class jobs, strengthening our infrastructure and confronting climate change, securing public safety and protecting our communities, making housing more affordable and ensuring every New Yorker has a roof over their head, enacting bold reforms that will restore trust in state and we're changing the culture and creating workplaces that are free of harassment.

This is an extraordinary time and it will be met with extraordinary solutions. The policies I laid out two weeks ago are ambitious, but as I said, just as importantly, they're realistic and achievable. And we're in a position to fully fund them by making historic investment,  like record aid to education, the biggest capital plan for infrastructure that our state has ever seen, and a groundbreaking program to rebuild the healthcare industry. But we're also being smart and responsible recognizing that we need to fund our reserves to historic levels as well. So I'm proud to say that today we are submitting a balanced executive budget for fiscal year 2023 to the legislature.

Our state is in a strong financial position due to a combination of factors, increased tax receipts, a thriving stock market, and an influx of federal aid through the American rescue plan and the infrastructure act, some of which have already been received, some with more still to come. Looking forward, our base level forecasts are equally optimistic.

We predict we’ll be able to continue to balance the budget and be able to make these types of bold but necessary investments all the way through fiscal year 2027. And this is a big change from where we were just this time last year. When the division of budget projected deficits totaling $17 billion during that same timeframe.

So this is a once in a generation opportunity to make thoughtful, purpose-driven investments in our state and in our people that will pay dividends for decades. And that's exactly what my budget will do.

But this is also about meeting New Yorkers where they are now, frustrated by a persistent pandemic, anxious about rising prices for everything from milk to gas to housing, worried about whether or not their paycheck will be enough to make ends meet and stressed, most of all, about their kids, the quality of their education, affordability of childcare, and even thoughts about what their future will be in a world beset by climate change.

So New Yorkers, this budget is for you and about you. And how I propose to use the entirety of our $216 billion budget to directly address the immediate needs of New Yorkers and at the same time positively impact people's lives and livelihoods for decades to come first. First, we'll respond to this pandemic head-on by following the science and the data, and doing whatever it takes to ensure that our recovery is swift and far-reaching.

That's why we've set aside $2 billion for pandemic recovery initiatives. I'll work with the legislature to identify the most impactful use of these funds in the short term, whether that's held for struggling, small landlords and their tenants, or the hardest hurt industries and workers, or for other purposes.

Now let's talk about putting more money back into people's pockets. Rather than raise taxes, this is about tax relief. Accelerating a $1.2 billion tax cut originally scheduled to take effect between 2023 and 2025. This [means] way more than 6 million middle-class taxpayers getting their much-needed money a lot sooner.

At a time when inflation is robbing families of long awaited gains and income, and recognizing that property taxes are still too high, we will provide a $2 billion property tax rebate to more than 2 million middle-class homeowners. And we're delivering $250 million in tax credits for small businesses to help them pay for COVID related expenses.

In addition to that, we're having new support for farms and other small businesses, hit so hard by this pandemic. We need to help them not just survive, but to thrive. And using the unprecedented fusion of money from our leaders in Washington, starting with President Joe Biden, New York will see the largest investment in our state infrastructure ever through a $32.8 billion capital plan.

The boldness I outlined in my State of the State address will be realized. I'm putting the dollars behind making long-term overdo repairs to our roads, and our bridges, building new transit options, modernizing existing transit and hubs and revitalizing communities. I've also declared war on potholes. So here's the first shot across the bow: a $1 billion plan called Operation POP: Pave Our Potholes, and this strategy takes us from potholes to not-holes. For me, infrastructure is a quality of life issue. It's about creating connections, connecting neighborhoods, connecting people to jobs, connecting people to their family members and loved ones. And we'll finally be able to strengthen those bonds across our state, using cash rather than borrowing money. So future generations are not hamstrung by the commitments we make today.

One way we'll do that is by reconnecting neighborhoods that were severed by asphalt highways, and these all disproportionally impacted communities of color, like the Kensington Expressway in Buffalo, I-81 in Syracuse, the Inner Loop in Rochester, and the Cross Bronx Expressway. And one hard lesson we learned about what happens when there's a lack of investment is how our healthcare system crumbled under the stress of the pandemic.

And that's why we're making up for lost time and positioning the state to have better footing going forward with the largest investment in healthcare in State history, $10 billion. One of our shared values as New Yorkers is that everyone deserves the dignity of access to quality health care, especially during a public health crisis. In my State of the State speech, I promise to start by rebuilding our healthcare workforce. They're the heroes of this pandemic, so let's stop talking about the debt we owe them, and actually pay them what they deserve. And that includes more than $1 billion in bonuses. We'll also work to rebuild our medical facilities, nursing homes, and hospitals, which have been crushed by this pandemic, through a $1.6 billion capital program to help them make much needed upgrades.

We're also going to invest in education, strengthening our teacher workforce and supporting students' mental health. We'll provide more than $31 billion in aid for our schools. Continuing our commitment to fully fund education and foundation aid. And that brings us to the highest level the State has invested in education ever. And this should be used to continue expanding our pre-K program to school districts all across the state, and for much needed after school programs. Because working parents need all the support they can get. We're also increasing our investments in childcare, to more than $1.4 billion. This will make 400,000 more families eligible for childcare subsidies, and we'll invest more in childcare workers as well.

To boost our economy, we'll make significant investments in our workforce development programs, support for small businesses, and the revitalization of downtowns across the state. So we can be the most worker friendly and business friendly state in the nation, with all the different engines of our economy firing in all cylinders. And we'll ensure that the new businesses we're going to draw to New York will have access to a well-trained and educated workforce. And how we do that is by making our statewide higher education system, the very best in the entire nation.

We're going to increase operational support for SUNY and CUNY, the engines of social mobility, and we're adding $1.5 billion over the next five years. And we're investing $150 million into the expansion of the tuition assistance program, so it's available to part-time students giving them a chance, which means more students won't have to choose between work and getting their degree. We'll also make that assistance available to people in prison as part of our jails-to-jobs initiative.

And we're going to confront that climate crisis with the urgency that is required. That's why my budget includes $4 billion for the landmark Clean Water Clean Air and Green Jobs Environmental Bond act, in the largest ever investment in the Environmental Protection Fund. We must speed up our transition to clean energy and you are we'll lead the way by making a nation-leading $500 million investment in offshore wind energy.

And we have to confront the housing affordability crisis. And one way we'll do that is by advancing a new $25 billion five-year housing plan to create and preserve 100,000 affordable homes, including 10,000 homes with supportive services for vulnerable populations. And everyone deserves to feel safe on the streets, in schools, in their homes, and in their communities, and during their commutes, and in too many communities, they just don't. So we're going to prioritize public safety. Starting with $224 million investment into programs that will reduced gun violence and other programs to help children in our streets, and will confront the other public health crisis that is taking far too many New Yorkers lives and will take it on head-on because that is something that has destroyed the lives of too many of our loved ones.

So we're going to make a $400 million dollar multi-year investment in opioid and substance abuse addiction service. Of course, this is just a small sampling of everything that's included in the 2023 budget. But the bottom line is that we'll make smart investments to ensure we not only recover from this pandemic, but emerge from it stronger than ever before.

And I want to be very clear. We're going to do it by taking a fiscally responsible approach because we know that the federal funds will eventually run out. And that's why we're not banking on them for the future. We're not creating recurring expenses or new programs we can't pay for. So for the first time ever, with smart planning, New York will have no out year gaps.

All these commitments are either one-time expenditures or are supported by the expectation of a reasonable growth in revenue as projected by our division of budget. So we have the means to respond to this historic moment with a historic level of funding. And what we have achieved with the blueprint I'm printing today is both a plan that is socially responsible and fiscally prudent. And as I learned working on 14 balanced municipal budgets with much smaller numbers, but with the same philosophy, you have to prepare for the rainy days, even when there's not a cloud in the sky, because of the rain - or where I come from, the snow, eventually does fall.

So we're prepared for the downturns as well. Just remember where we were two years ago today, and suddenly how our world changed forever. As we assess the risks, we do have concerns about long-term economic erosion caused by the pandemic and the impact of inflation and even - hate to say it but possible resurgence of COVID. We just can't predict the future. But I want to share New Yorkers that we are prepared.

And that's why we're making these investments with those worst case scenario calculations built in. And committing resources every year until the state has reserves of at least 15% of operating spending. That's what the experts recommend, and it's what we're going to do. For the future leaders, for future generations, and for the future health of our state. But we're not letting this once in a generation moment pass us by. It's not simply enough to return to our pre pandemic world in way of life. That would be timid and unimaginative, and it would fail to honor our history and the legacy of the daring, visionary New Yorkers who came before us.

Leaders like FDR, who weathered some of the most intense storms the world has ever seen, always while keeping one eye fixed on the horizon, planning for the day when the clouds would part. And it wasn't through sheer luck that the policies he passed during those crises made an immediate difference in the short-term and a generational impact in the long-term. Through careful and strategic planning. And he embraced those times of crisis for what they were, a chance to re-imagine the future while correcting the mistakes of the past. And we must now have the same foresight and resolve to do the same because this pandemic did not create all the problems we're facing today.

It simply forced us to hold up a mirror and see the cracks in our society that have been too easy to ignore before. We cannot allow this virus to grip us so tightly that it constrains us from looking to the future or prevents us from mending those cracks. Since its founding, our state has been the home of the dreamers and the doers from all over the world who came here in pursuit of opportunity and a better life. But today for too many New Yorkers, the American dream is just that, a dream. And that has been even more true as a result of this pandemic.

As I said in my State of the State speech, it's time for a better, fairer, and more inclusive version. And I'm calling it the New York dream. And by implementing the agenda I proposed two weeks ago, we can make it a reality. And this is with smart, strategic and a forward thinking plan, we will. This is a moment of great possibility. A once in a generation chance to reconsider what is possible for our state. And this really is the beginning of New York's next great comeback.

I declared a new era for New York and it continues today. So New Yorkers, this budget's for you. You're going to hear more to more about it from our budget director, Robert Mujica, who'll go even deeper on the numbers and our current financial position later today.

Thank you, New Yorkers.

MAYOR ADAMS, DOT COMMISSIONER RODRIGUEZ, AND LYFT ANNOUNCE FREE CITI BIKE MEMBERSHIPS FOR HOSPITAL WORKERS

 

Citi commits to fund free two-month memberships for hospital employees on the front lines of the battle against COVID and the Omicron variant

 New York City Mayor Eric Adams, Department of Transportation (DOT) Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez, and Lyft today announced that Citi is committing funding to restart the Citi Bike Medical Workers Program, making free 60-day memberships available to hospital workers as they continue the fight against COVID-19 and the Omicron variant. Public and private hospital employees, including custodial workers and other support staff, will be eligible to sign up for the program through their place of employment until February 7, 2022.

“Our healthcare heroes are fighting for New Yorkers every day, and this is one way that we can say thank you,” said Mayor Eric Adams. “I know firsthand that riding a bike is good for physical and mental health, and I would encourage all the hard-working healthcare workers to take advantage if they can, keeping us rolling toward a real recovery for our city. Thank you to Citi and Lyft for providing this important opportunity.”

 

“We must work together as one city to support our frontline healthcare workers as they once again pull us through the pandemic. Today, New York City, Lyft, and Citi demonstrate just how this is done. Our City’s frontline healthcare workers get a free 60-day Citi membership to New York City’s bikeshare system. Thanks to this donation our critical care workers get no-cost access to critical mobility as they continue to tirelessly work to keep us all healthy and strong,” said Meera Joshi, Deputy Mayor for Operations.

 

As New York City and cities across the country respond to the rapidly evolving COVID-19 virus, while working to offer transportation options for essential workers, bikeshare systems continue to operate across the country. Meanwhile, the Citi Bike program has continued to set ridership records throughout the pandemic and in 2021, making it the 25th most ridden transit network in the United States, ahead of San Antonio and just behind the New Jersey PATH Train.

 

More than 33,000 first-responder, healthcare, and transit workers joined a previous version of this program when the pandemic first began in 2020, taking over 1.25 million rides in total. The bikeshare station at 68th Street and 1st Avenue – located near the Hospital for Special Surgery, New York-Presbyterian, Weill Cornell Medicine, and Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center – rose from the 59th most used station in the year before the pandemic to the single most used station in the Citi Bike system in 2020. Similarly, the bikeshare station at 33rd Street and 1st Avenue – also located near NYU Langone, Bellevue, and the VA New York Harbor Hospital – rose from the 58th most-used station to 10th. Given this increased demand, Lyft and the NYC DOT coordinated to add Citi Bike stations outside of Harlem Hospital and Lincoln Hospital. 

 

“Cycling has played a critical role in keeping New York City moving during the pandemic,” said Department of Transportation Commissioner Ydanis Rodriguez. “We thank Lyft and Citi for the Citi Bike Medical Workers Program, which will provide an equitable, safe, and enjoyable way to commute for our most essential workers on the frontlines fighting to keep us healthy and safe.”

 

Critical Workforce Membership Program Details:

  • Frontline medical professionals and support staff at select health/hospital systems in New York and New Jersey, who are not current bikeshare members, are eligible – including lapsed members and customers who have previously purchased a single ride or day pass or have previously participated in a free trial.
  • The free 60-day membership includes the same benefits as annual memberships: unlimited 45-minute rides on classic bicycles and discounted per minute fees if you choose to ride an e-bike. Extra time fees, e-bike fees, and lost bike fees are not included.
  • Eligible employers will have a specific link and offer code to provide employees.

 

“At Citi, we are extremely grateful for our hospital workers, who time and again throughout this global pandemic have relentlessly cared for New Yorkers and put themselves in harm’s way in doing so,” said Ed Skyler, Citi’s Head of Public Affairs. “Funding two-month memberships is one way for us to show our appreciation and help support our front-line healthcare heroes as cases rise once again.”

 

“Time and time again the Citi Bike system has proven to be an extremely resilient form of transit, whether it was providing critical rides during the first wave of the pandemic or breaking our daily ridership record the day after Hurricane Ida hit,” said Caroline Samponaro, Vice President of Micromobility and Transit Policy at Lyft. “Thanks to Citi, which has a history of supporting bikeshare in New York, we will be able to step up for our brave frontline healthcare workers, as they continue to take care of us during the latest wave of Covid cases caused by the omicron variant.”

 

Participating institutions include:

  • Center for Urban Community Services
  • Charles B. Wang Community Health Center, Inc.
  • CityMD
  • Columbia University Irving Medical Center
  • Community Health Network
  • Hospital for Special Surgery
  • Interfaith Medical Center
  • Memorial Sloan Kettering
  • Montefiore
  • Mount Sinai
  • New York - Presbyterian
  • Northwell Health
  • NYC Health + Hospitals
  • NYU Langone
  • Planned Parenthood of Greater NY
  • The Brooklyn Hospital Center
  • Wyckoff Heights Medical Center
  • Weill Cornell Medicine

Team AOC - It happened. I got COVID.

 

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez for Congress

So it happened, 

I got COVID, probably omicron. As of today I am thankfully recovered and wrapping up quarantine, but COVID was no joke. For a while I’ve noted the term “mild” is misleading when the bar is hospitalization and death. Even “mild” cases can result in long COVID, which includes a range of conditions like cognitive impairment, postural-orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS), and chronic fatigue.

This isn’t to be a downer or induce fear, just a reminder that we need to be careful — wear N95s in crowded indoor spaces like stores — and if you do get it, it’s key to care for yourself and REST. The idea of forcing people to work just five days after symptoms start is sociopathic and 100 percent informed by a culture that accepts sacrificing human lives for profit margins as a fair trade. The good news is that we have an antidote: community.

If you’ve noticed, much of the emphasis of media conversations on COVID are individualistic: wear a mask, get vaccinated to protect yourself, go back to work even with symptoms because you’re fine — and even if you’re not. And while some of these recommendations are good — like getting a vaccine and wearing masks where appropriate, the motivations for them shouldn’t just be selfish. It should also be because we actually give a damn about other people, like our disabled neighbors or our coworkers who haven’t said (and shouldn’t feel obligated to say) that they’re immunocompromised.

It’s truly bizarre to me that caring about other people is a polarizing political stance, but my dad used to say that life makes you repeat lessons until you learn them. And if there’s one lesson I think we as a country are repeating until we learn, it’s that community and collective good is our best shot through our greatest challenges — way more than discorded acts of “rugged individualism” and the bootstrap propaganda we’ve been spoon-fed since birth.

Individualism is inadequate for planetary forces like climate change or global pandemics, and even less for societal ones like healthcare, economic inequity and racism. But WE, as a collective, can confront them. In a world of MEs, let’s build team WE. ðŸ’™

Anyways that’s enough for today, stay healthy and blessed and let’s keep building.

Love & solidarity,

AOC

P.S. You can help ensure your health and safety, as well as that of others, by getting yourself tested frequently. You can order four free COVID rapid antigen tests per household to be delivered to your home from the USPS here (while supplies last).

Governor Hochul Announces Highlights of FY 2023 Budget

 Governor Hochul delivers the FY 2023 Executive Budget

$31 Billion Plan Will Strengthen Teacher Workforce and Invest in Schools    

Provides Tax Relief for Small Businesses and the Middle Class  

Record Five-Year $32.8 Billion DOT Capital Plan Will Leverage Federal Funding to Support Major Infrastructure Projects Throughout the State 

$900 Million in Childcare Stabilization Grants Will Cover Operational Costs for 15,000 Childcare Providers Statewide  

$1 Billion to Fund Innovative Small Businesses and Tax Credit for COVID-Related Expenses  

Invests $1.5 Billion in SUNY and CUNY Over Next Five Years and Expands TAP Eligibility  

Includes $4 Billion for Clean Water, Clean Air, and Green Jobs Environmental Bond Act and $500 Million for Offshore Wind    

Launches a New Five-Year, $25 Billion Comprehensive Housing Plan    

$224 Million to Fund Law Enforcement and Community-Based Gun Violence Initiatives  

FY 2023 Budget Book Available Here


 Governor Kathy Hochul today, with Division of the Budget Director Robert F. Mujica Jr., outlined her Fiscal Year (FY) 2023 Executive Budget. The FY 2023 Executive Budget maintains the Governor's commitment to passing a bold agenda that by rebuilds New York's healthcare and teacher workforces; provides tax relief to those who need it most; speeds up economic growth and creates good-paying middle-class jobs; strengthens the state's infrastructure and confronts climate change; secures public safety and protects communities; makes housing more affordable to ensure every New Yorker has a roof over their head; and enacts bold reforms to restore trust in State government.  

"We have the means to immediately respond to the COVID-19 pandemic as well as embrace this once-in-a-generation opportunity for the future with a historic level of funding that is both socially responsible and fiscally prudent," Governor Hochul said. "As I said in my State of the State speech: It's time for a better, fairer, and more inclusive version of the American Dream. I'm calling it the New York Dream. We will make that New York Dream real - and ensure that it can be realized by every single New Yorker."

"Governor Hochul's Executive Budget makes historic investments in critical areas while ensuring that we are equipped for future shocks," Budget Director Robert F. Mujica Jr. said, "Never again will the State find itself unprepared for the opportunities - or challenges - ahead. After years of unprecedented hardship, this Budget makes the State, from a financial perspective, as resilient as its spirit. It is the Budget that New Yorkers deserve and expect."  

A Balanced Budget 

Governor Hochul's FY 2023 budget proposal reflects New York's solid financial footing. As tax revenues rebound the budget is balanced for the entirety of the financial plan leading up to FY 2027, has no budget gaps, and holds spending growth in FY 2023 below inflation. 

Rebuilding the Health Care Workforce

To restore our depleted healthcare workforce and build the healthcare system of tomorrow, Governor Hochul will make a more-than-$10 billion, multi-year investment in healthcare, including more than $4 billion to support wages and bonuses for healthcare workers. Key components of this multi-year investment include:     

  • $1.2 billion of state support for healthcare and mental hygiene worker retention bonuses, with up to $3,000 bonuses going to full-time workers who remain in their positions for one year, and pro-rated bonuses for those working fewer hours;   
  • $500 million for Cost-of-Living Adjustments (COLAs) to help raise wages for human services workers;   
  • $2.4 billion for healthcare capital infrastructure and improved lab capacity; and   
  • Other investments in workforce and healthcare access and delivery.   

With these investments, Governor Hochul proposes to rebuild and grow the healthcare workforce by 20 percent over the next five years with a program designed to strengthen home care, improve the career pipeline, expand access to healthcare training and education, and recruit healthcare and direct support professionals to care for people in underserved areas.    

Strengthening the Teacher Workforce

School Aid: The FY 2023 Executive Budget provides $31.3 billion in total School Aid for SY 2023, the highest level of State aid ever. This investment represents a year-to-year increase of $2.1 billion (7.1 percent) compared to School Year (SY) 2022, including a $1.6 billion Foundation Aid increase and a $466 million increase in all other School Aid programs.   

Foundation Aid: Foundation Aid is the State's main education operating aid formula. It is focused on allocating State funds equitably to all school districts, especially high-need districts, based on student need, community wealth, and regional cost differences. The Executive Budget provides a $1.6 billion (8.1 percent) increase in Foundation Aid, supporting the second year of the three-year phase-in of full funding of the current Foundation Aid formula and ensuring each school district receives a minimum year-to-year increase of 3 percent.  

The Executive Budget provides SUNY and CUNY with $106 million - $53 million each - to hire additional full-time faculty at both four-year colleges and community colleges. This investment will fund an estimated 880 additional full-time faculty - 340 at SUNY and 540 at CUNY, including support for CUNY's plan to convert adjuncts to full-time faculty. 

MAYOR ADAMS, COMMISSIONER CAMPION ANNOUNCE EXCLUSIVE COVID-19 TESTING SITES AVAILABLE TO CITY WORKERS THROUGH OFFICE OF LABOR RELATIONS WORKWELL NYC PROGRAM

 

 Today, New York City Mayor Eric Adams and Office of Labor Relations Commissioner Renee Campion announced that in addition to the citywide COVID-19 testing available for all New Yorkers, exclusive testing sites will be available to City workers through WorkWell NYC, the City’s wellness program for municipal employees. Testing sites will be available in all five boroughs and are appointment-only. Testing is at no cost.

“We know that testing is a critical tool in stopping the spread of COVID-19 and protecting all New Yorkers,” said Mayor Adams. “These new testing sites show that we are leading by example to create safe environments for all City employees.”

 

“Keeping our workforce safe is our top priority,” said Commissioner Campion. “We are thrilled to announce this initiative, which will provide additional testing for the convenience of our workers.”

 

Testing is available for employees who have been exposed to COVID-19 but do not have symptoms. Employees who have symptoms are encouraged to stay home and self-isolate. More information on testing site locations and appointments is available here.


Free PPE and Sanitizer Giveaway in Riverdale by District Leader Candidate Ramdat Singh

 

In front of Riverdale's famous Metate Restaurant located at 3515 Johnson Avenue Democratic candidate for the 81st Assembly District Male District Leader Ramdat Singh was joined by friends George Espinal 72nd Assembly District Male District Leader candidate, and 80th Assembly District Male State Committeeman Christian Amato to give out 150 boxes of K95 face masks (50 per box for 7,500 total masks), and 120 containers of hand sanitizer. 


While he gave out the face masks and hand sanitizer candidate Singh put one of his cards with his phone number, mailing address, email address, and webpage on the front. On the back was Teacher, Neighbor, and Activist. Mr. Singh is a teacher at the Riverdale Kingsbridge Academy, resident of Kingsbridge, and a Community Activist. 


Ramdat Singh candidate for 81st A.D. Male District Leader talks to a woman before giving her a box of K95 masks, and a bottle of hand sanitizer. George Espinal candidate for 72nd A.D. Male District Leader repacks the table.


People line up for free face masks and hand sanitizer.


The pile of face mask pile has gone down as has the bottles of hand sanitizer.