Mayor Eric Adams has canceled budget cuts that would have removed 9,000 litter baskets and eliminated the jobs of 1,400 seasonal parks staffers in another about-face that raised questions about whether the dramatic reductions were necessary in the first place.
The cuts to the sanitation and parks departments had threatened to undermine one of Adamsโ key policies: the war on rats.
โAs a result of these restorations, New Yorkers will continue to see fewer rats,โ Adams said Thursday.
The seasonal parks staffers were part of a six-month jobs program for low-income New Yorkers. DC37, the cityโs largest municipal union and an important Adams ally, had sued over the planned cuts.
Adamsโ press conference at City Hall came one day after he announced the restoration of $37 million in funding to the NYPD and FDNY, allowing both agencies to retain uniformed officers. Critics said those cuts hindered Adams’ public safety priorities.
The back-to-back reversals prompted questions about the mayorโs fiscal management.
โThe Council has said all along the money exists to avoid overly broad cuts and protect essential services relied upon by our constituents,โ City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams and Councilmember Justin Brannan, who chairs the finance committee, said in a statement. โThis latest move to restore litter basket services and the Parks Opportunity Program only reinforces the fact that these and many other mid-year cuts were unnecessary.โ
Adams is expected to announce more cuts next week when he releases next yearโs preliminary budget. Libraries and schools, which have already faced budget reductions, remain on the chopping block. Adams has said the cuts are necessary to close a $7 billion budget deficit tied to migrant spending and the end of federal pandemic aid.
โYouโre seeing fiscal intelligence,โ Adams said.
The mayor cited the cityโs upgraded bond rating last year as a sign of his administrationโs sound financial management.
The mayorโs…
Read the full article here
Leave a Reply