• BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.cafe
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            2 days ago

            “The poor get all the breaks! It isn’t fair!”

            Right, taxing second homes worth $5 million or more. Are we supposed to feel sorry about rich people who can afford a SECOND home that’s over $5 million, when they are asked to pay a tiny bit extra?

            Those wealthy parasites would let everybody in NYC literally starve to death before they would pay an extra nickel. Fuck anyone who believes that, we should confiscate EVERYTHING from them, and throw them in prison.

    • krellor@fedia.io
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      3 days ago

      Gift article from the NY times explaining.

      But influx from the state, taxes on second homes, deferred payments to pension programs, and a host of compromises. He in no way raised $12Bn in new revenue through taxes to cover the deficit.

      • BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.cafe
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        2 days ago

        They also got rid of state financial obligations that Cuomo had stuck on the city, and cleaned up corruption from past administrations. Those were significant savings, too.

        The point is that governments can be substantially improved with even a little actual reform and not duplicitous reform like DOGE. We can have change, it just takes voting in responsible, ethical government managers, not carnival barkers.

      • sunstoned@lemmus.org
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        3 days ago

        The article linked above seems to roughly agree:

        • $6.5B state aid + school funding / life insurance payout shifts to state responsibility
        • $2.8B from the city via delayed pensions + taxes on second homes valued >$5M

        Earlier this year, Ms. Hochul committed $1.5 billion in state aid for a host of municipal services. The state budget, which has not yet been finalized, is also expected to include a host of policy changes and revenue increases that will funnel another $4 billion to the city over the next two years.

        The largest share — about $2.3 billion over two years — is expected to come from the city’s delaying certain pension payments, a change that requires state approval and buy-in from municipal unions.

        The mayor and governor also expect another half-billion dollars to flow from the new tax surcharge on second homes worth more than $5 million that Ms. Hochul recently announced. But the city comptroller recently argued that number might be overly optimistic, and New York City’s byzantine property valuation system means that the new tax would come with substantial implementation challenges.

        The city is expected to save another $1 billion over two years from several changes, including the state’s expected agreement to delay a class-size mandate in public schools (despite Mr. Mamdani’s support for the mandate as a candidate); more school aid from the state; and the assumption by the state of a larger share of death benefits for families of police officers, firefighters and emergency medical workers.

        • how_we_burned@lemmy.zip
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          2 days ago

          I bet most of the pension changes are probably for NYPD members.

          The NYPD pension provides retirement benefits based on years of service, salary history, and plan type, with average full-career retiree pensions exceeding $100,000 annually

          Holy fuck

          They get a over $100k USD pension, wtf.

      • MartianRecon@lemmus.org
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        2 days ago

        How is it a ‘bail out’ when NYC is the engine of the entire state and receives far less money per capita than other parts of the state do?