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New Taxes And Fees In Cuomo's Budget Irks Republicans

Mike Groll
/
AP
New York State Senate Majority Leader John Flanagan

The leader of the New York State Senate Republicans says he’s not happy with what he says is over $800 million in new taxes and fees tucked away in Governor Cuomo’s new state budget.

Senate Majority Leader John Flanagan says he’s upset about new fees proposed in Governor Cuomo’s budget that a preliminary analysis shows total $803 million, $250 million in new Department of Motor Vehicles fees alone. Flanagan says he’s also not happy with the way Cuomo presented his spending plan to lawmakers. He says in a private briefing at the executive mansion, Cuomo failed to mention all of the new fees.

“I’m not going to dance around it, I was very surprised,” said Flanagan. “When you tell me there’s basically nothing and then there’s $250 million in fees, that’s important for the public to know.”

The fees and other revenue raisers include increases for motor vehicle titles for cars and trucks, capping STAR property tax rebates, and new taxes on e-cigarettes. Flanagan says those new taxes and fees will balloon to $4.5 billion a year in the 2020-2021 fiscal year.

A spokesman for Governor Cuomo says the Senate’s numbers are misleading. Spokesman Rich Azzopardi says the $803 million includes the extension of the so called millionaire’s tax, which is worth just under $700 million. A top tax rate of 8 percent would continue, instead of being reduced to around 6 percent later this year.

“The Senate Republicans’ ‘new tax’ is an extension of the millionaire’s tax and they’re saying they would rather give a tax break to millionaires than a tax cut to the middle class and increase education funding,” he said. “We say New York’s children and middle class matter and should come before the Senate Republicans’ millionaires.”  

Governor Cuomo gave three speeches in Plattsburgh, Syracuse and Niagara Falls. He did not take any questions, but repeated large portions of his State of the State and budget messages, including his call for the extension of the tax on the rich. Cuomo says it would finance middle class tax cuts approved by the governor and legislature last year, and to help pay for a billion dollar increase in school aid.

“I want to extend that tax so the millionaire tax rate doesn’t drop and use that money in part to fund the middle class tax cut,” Cuomo said in Syracuse.

Senator Flanagan says he realizes that the governor will expect denators to come up with alternative ways to cut costs if they ultimately reject any of the new taxes and fees, including the millionaire’s tax. He says the Senate may have some ideas in its one house budget plan, to be released in a few weeks.

Karen has covered state government and politics for New York State Public Radio, a network of 10 New York and Connecticut stations, since 1990. She is also a regular contributor to the statewide public television program about New York State government, New York Now. She appears on the reporter’s roundtable segment, and interviews newsmakers.
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