NYC Sets Tax Hike to Offset Deficit
- Share via
NEW YORK — The City Council and the mayor have reached a tentative agreement on an 18% property tax hike to help fill a $1.1-billion budget deficit, Council Speaker Gifford Miller said Saturday.
Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg had proposed boosting property taxes by 25% to help balance the budget for this fiscal year, which ends June 30. But the City Council opposed such a large increase, administration officials said.
A vote on the agreement is expected before Thanksgiving, city officials said.
The tax hike would take effect in January.
“We don’t pretend it’s a painless measure. It’s a painful measure,” Miller said. “But when you are hemorrhaging money, you have to take painful measures.”
City Council members also agreed to find $844 million in savings through service cuts and debt re-servicing, Miller said, but the details of where the savings would come from differed somewhat from a plan Bloomberg released this month.
The tentative agreement calls for restoring some funding for libraries, the City University of New York, plus child-care programs and foster-care programs.
The plan also puts on hold Bloomberg’s plan to close eight of 478 fire companies.
Instead, Miller said, a commission will be appointed to study how the Fire Department can save $2.2 million, including determining which -- if any -- firehouses should be closed.
Bloomberg spokesman Ed Skyler confirmed the agreement has been reached with the mayor “in principle.”
The city’s budget woes don’t end with this fiscal year. A budget deficit of $6.4 billion is projected for next fiscal year.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.