New
York state lawmakers reach budget deal
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[March 30, 2015]
NEW YORK (Reuters) - New York state
lawmakers agreed a budget plan late on Sunday night that includes
much-debated reforms to the education system and ethics standards for
lawmakers, state governor Andrew Cuomo and legislative leaders said in
statement.
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Cuomo proposed a $142 billion plan in January that keeps spending
growth below 2 percent and promises money for big-ticket
infrastructure projects while cutting property taxes.
The deal, ahead of the start of the state's financial year on
Wednesday, would mark the fifth consecutive on time budget in a
state previously known for fiscal dysfunction. Cuomo has made an on
time budget a barometer of effective government.
Cuomo lauded new ethics measures which he describes as "putting in
place the nation's strongest and most comprehensive rules for
disclosure of outside income by public officials."
Cuomo pushed ethics reform after the arrest of House speaker Sheldon
Silver on corruption charges in January in a bid to address Albany's
tarnished image.
Sheldon's tenure as speaker spanned two decades. Although he was
seen as a heavyweight in the budget negotiations, his removal did
not appear to have slowed the process. He denies wrongdoing.
New York has a very condensed budget window as it financial year
ends on March 31 compared to May 31 for most other states.
Other ethics reforms include changes to the per diem expense system,
with lawmakers required to prove they are in Albany in order to
claim expenses, creating the ability to revoke public pensions,
stopping the personal use of campaign funds, and addressing
transparency of independent expenditures.
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Cuomo also promised to push ahead with controversial education
reforms that have pitted him against powerful teachers' unions. He
has described New York as "leading the nation in education spending
but lagging in results."
The budget also caps spending growth at 2 percent for a fifth year.
The administration's focus on spending caps have helped the state
achieve its highest credit rating in 40 years. Standard & Poor's
rates the state AA+. The state was last rated above that in 1962
when it had a AAA rating.
Officials at the Cuomo's budget office were unable to say the last
time five consecutive budgets had been passed on time.
"It's been a very, very long time," said Morris Peters, a press
officer at the Division of the Budget. "We had to send someone into
the archives to figure out the answer to this exact question. I
don't think they've come out."
(Reporting by Edward Krudy; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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