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Lawmakers hear complaints from local gov'ts on Cuomo's budget

Mayors from around the state came to complain about Governor Cuomo’s budget, as the first day of legislative hearings on the spending plan kicked off in Albany. First up, following tradition, was New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg. He focused his criticism on Governor Cuomo’s plan to deny the City $240 million dollars in school aid, because the Bloomberg Administration and the teachers union did not agree to a new teacher evaluation plan before the governor’s deadline of January 17th.

Bloomberg’s exchange with Assembly Education Committee Chair Kathy Nolan became heated, when  Nolan asked the Mayor why 99% of the other school districts from around the state WERE able to agree on a new teacher evaluation plan by the deadline , while the City of New York did not.  Nolan, who has a son in the public schools, appeared to take personal offense.

“What do I tell my son, it’s my son who is in the New York City public schools, that I choose to send him. What do I say?” Nolan demanded.  "Everybody else made an agreement but the city.  Because everybody else is just interested in getting the money,” Bloomberg answered. “And committing what I would call fraud. This is not fair to the public."

Mayor Bloomberg told lawmakers the other teacher evaluation plan agreements are “jokes”, because the pacts last for just one year, but he says it takes at least two years under current processes, to remove an incompetent teacher.

Bloomberg blamed the teachers union President,  Michael Mulgrew ,and State Education Commissioner John King  for the failed agreement and what the mayor views as a flawed teacher evaluation process, but he refrained from directly criticizing Governor Cuomo.

Upstate mayors, whose schools did agree to teacher evaluation plans, instead have concerns about ever growing pension payments.

Governor Cuomo, in his budget, proposes a plan to “smooth” out pension payments for local governments, by allowing them to sign on to a 25 year fixed rate payment plan. The localities, and schools, who opt in would pay less for pension payments now, but more in later years.

Syracuse Mayor Stephanie Miner, who is also Governor Cuomo’s hand picked Democratic Party Co-Chair, told lawmakers she still isn’t sold on Cuomo’s pension stabilization plan.

“I said at the time that this budget proposal came out that I had more questions than answers,”Miner said. “And that still exists today.”

Miner says there’s no guarantee that cities will actually save money in the long run, because no one knows the exact labor force numbers for localities in the future, or where the stock market, which drives pension costs, will be in the years ahead.

Miner called the governor’s pension payment “smoother” a “Hobson’s choice” for fiscally strapped localities, and says it’s not a “panacea” for the cities’ larger financial problems.

The Syracuse Mayor says she’d not phased by the reaction to  her comments, including a visit to her city by Lieutenant Governor Robert Duffy, who suggested the city submit to a financial control board.    

“One of the benefits of being a mayor is that you’re used to blow back,” Miner said. “It happens in my life every day.”

Mayor Miner says she wants to continue in her role as a Co-Leader of the Democratic Party, but says that’s up to the governor and the state Democratic committee. She characterizes her relationship with Governor Cuomo as “professional” , but says they have not spoken since Cuomo released his budget. She claims the media has blown the disagreement all out of proportion. 

Rochester Mayor Tom Richards , who is also a Democrat, also testified before the legislative fiscal committees. Richards was much more positive about the governor’s pension smoother proposal.

“I’m not here to complain about the pension payments,” said Richards. “What I’m here to do, is support a program that helps us manage it.”

But Richards concedes that cities have large structural problems. He says spending, over time, is not keeping up with revenue. And he says demographics work against large upstate cities.  Rochester has one of highest concentrations of poverty in this country and the highest in the state.

The Rochester Mayor says the state and local government in New York are going to have to find more lasting solutions.

Karen DeWitt is Capitol Bureau Chief for New York State Public Radio, a network of 10 public radio stations in New York State. WBFO listeners are accustomed to hearing DeWitt’s insightful coverage throughout the day, including expanded reports on Morning Edition.