Why Mayor Adams latest NYC budget is in far worse shape than it appears

Mayor Adams, who’s facing a tough reelection fight, plainly hopes the budget he rolled out Thursday will score him points for “investing” in programs New Yorkers want while maintaining diligent fiscal stewardship.Which, all too naturally, led to a plan that continues the city’s longtime practice of overspending while lowballing actual costs.Just look at its nominal $114.5 billion price tag.On quick glance, New Yorkers might think, Nice! The mayor held bottom-line growth to just $2 billion, or 1.8%, more than last year’s enacted budget.Indeed, the $114.5 billion is actually $2 billion less than he says City Hall will have spent when this fiscal year ends June 30 — but those figures aren’t real.As Citizens Budget Commission President Andrew Rein warns, “Next year’s spending plan does not reflect reality”: It’s “short nearly $4 billion needed to fund existing services.”And even this year’s revised budget is $700 million in the hole, mostly due to overtime.“Adjusted for underbudgeting and pre-payments, city-funded spending will grow 6.7% in fiscal year 2025 and 5% in fiscal year 2026,” flags Rein.

That’s way faster than inflation.And it doesn’t even count the extra funding drunken-sailor City Council members are sure to demand, unexpected cuts from state and Washington or a slower-than-anticipated economy.Subscribe to our daily Post Opinion newsletter! Please provide a valid email address.

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Similarly, while Adams’ projected future shortfalls — $4.2 billion in 2027, $5.4 billion in 2028 and $5.1 billion in 2029 — are scary enough, the actual gaps are at least 40% worse, totaling $25 billion or more.So the city will have to either cut back on services, scrape money from other areas or pray that unexpected cash magically appears from a supercharged economy, the state or th...

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Publisher: New York Post

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