Metropolis Council Speaker Adrienne Adams, Mayor Eric Adams, administration officers, and council members introduced a deal on the Fiscal 12 months 2026 adopted price range on Friday.
Picture by Lloyd Mitchell
The New York Metropolis Council’s 51 members unanimously accepted a $116 billion metropolis price range for fiscal yr 2026 on Monday, transferring town away from spending cuts and increasing service spending.
Although Mayor Eric Adams and Metropolis Council Speaker Adrienne Adams shook fingers on the price range final week and the council handed the laws overwhelmingly, some are involved that it ignores key funding threats dealing with town.
Comptroller Brad Lander, who just lately conceded within the race for mayor and can finish his time period in metropolis authorities in 2026, launched an announcement Saturday expressing concern that the price range’s lack of allocation to town’s Wet Day Fund and Common Reserve leaves New York Metropolis susceptible to federal funding cuts.
“New York City faces a critical moment as the Trump Administration prepares to eviscerate essential services, blow holes in New York City’s budget, and erode the rights and wellbeing of New Yorkers. Mayor Eric Adams has been an accomplice to many of those harms,” Lander wrote in his assertion. “While the FY26 budget agreement includes some improvements thanks to the Speaker and City Council’s advocacy, it still leaves New York City far too vulnerable to Trump’s ongoing assaults.”
The Senate accepted President Donald Trump’s “Big, Beautiful” reconciliation invoice on Tuesday with a tie-breaking vote by Vice President J.D. Vance. The invoice, which seeks to remove well being care protection and social providers for tens of millions of Individuals and lift the debt ceiling, will head again to the Home of Representatives for approval.
Trump has proposed ending the Housing Alternative Voucher Program, also called Part 8, which offers housing help and vouchers to low- and moderate-income households renting housing within the non-public market.
“The budget agreement adds nothing to the Rainy Day Fund or to the General Reserve, and therefore fails to protect the City from the pressing threat of federal budget cuts,” Lander wrote. “It is a dereliction of duty to the future of New York City to fail to shore up our reserves.”
The Wet Day Fund, formally named the Income Stabilization Fund, exists as backup financial savings for town when it encounters sudden monetary shortfalls. The Common Reserve is a portion of town’s price range put aside annually that isn’t allotted to any space specifically.
The Residents Price range Fee, a fiscally conservative nonprofit watchdog of town authorities’s spending, criticized the price range as being “unprepared for federal cuts.”
“The magnitude, programmatic specifics, and timing of the [federal] cuts are still uncertain. But the budget did not put aside any funds to mitigate the initial blow—to preserve some services as the City determines what it will do over time to absorb the recurring and growing fiscal impacts,” the CBC wrote in an announcement.
The CBC had really helpful that town deposit “at least” $2 billion into town’s Wet Day Fund “to help preserve services and stability during the next recession.”
Lander, who has more and more advocated for better contributions to town’s reserves amid federal cuts, praised Speaker Adams and the Metropolis Council for “insisting” on an extra $42 million for immigration authorized providers. The Comptroller has been outspoken in his opposition to current Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids at immigration courtroom homes throughout New York Metropolis, even exhibiting as much as courtroom to escort people out of their hearings. Lander was arrested in the course of a raid in June whereas observing proceedings and was held in detention for a number of hours.
“Along with the $50 million added in the New York State budget by Governor Hochul and legislative leaders, New York is in position to respond to the emergency created by Trump’s lawless assault on asylum seekers, whose fundamental rights are being stripped away every single day,” Lander wrote in his Saturday assertion.
The CBC’s Tuesday report famous that town outspent its income by $610 million in fiscal yr 2025, which ended Monday. In utilizing rollover income from previous years to compensate for the upper spending, the CBC argues, New York Metropolis is “spending more than it currently brings in and can only do this because of past good times—a bad sign for the future.”
The price range allocates $112 million in ongoing funding for town’s common pre-Ok and 3-Ok applications, offers sources for the NYPD to revive its workforce to 35,000 officers, and consists of $5 million to develop the FairFares half-priced MetroCard program to people incomes as much as 150% of the federal poverty degree. Progressive metropolis councilors have hailed the price range as indicating a “new era” of politics in New York Metropolis as Metropolis Corridor spending strikes away from Mayor Adams’ price range cuts.