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By
Angela Montefinise
The
City Council was talking of “victories for the people,” while Mayor
Michael Bloomberg and City Council Speaker Gifford Miller excitedly shook
hands on June 19 to symbolically seal their budget agreement for Fiscal
Year 2003.

Queens
smokers will have to buck up an extra $1.50 when purchasing
cigarettes under the new city budget.
PRESS
Photo By Ira Cohen
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Yet
as the news was heralded this week, the tough question remained: What does
the budget really mean to the people of Queens?
City
Councilwoman Helen Sears told the PRESS and the people of
Queens plainly, “That budget, my God, it’s their life. It’s this
budget, when they walk out their front doors, that ensures that they have
a quality-of-life. That their children receive the best education, that
their basic services are provided, that they have senior centers to go to,
that they have day care slots to use . . . It’s this budget that
structures the lives of New Yorkers.”
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Queens
school officials fear that a $693 million cut to
Board of Education capital projects – school construction
– could delay the addition of 7,000 seats to the borough’s
over-crowded system.
PRESS Photo By Ira Cohen
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The
budget agreement made last week – which distributes $42.3 billion and
restores $475 million of the $1.4 billion originally slated to be cut by
Bloomberg – includes no cuts to Queens classrooms, six-day-a-week
library service, the continuation of paper and metal recycling, a $1.42
tax increase on cigarettes, and the continued operation of the borough’s
cultural programs, among other things.
However,
it also includes a $693 million cut to the Board of Education’s capital
plan, which school officials say will delay the construction of 7,000 new
school seats in Queens, something the borough is in desperate need of.
The
Council voted to pass the budget on June 21, and now the City is awaiting
Bloomberg’s signature, which at presstime was expected any day, but must
happen before June 30.
While
the City Council has been proudly discussing its restoration of nearly
$300 million in funding that Bloomberg proposed to cut in his executive
budget, Board of Education officials are warning Queens residents that a
major cut to capital projects could hurt the school system more than help
it.
According
to Queens Councilmembers, their ability to restore all $298 million in
proposed cuts to New York City classrooms was their proudest achievement
in the budget process. The highly-publicized restoration means ongoing
after-school and arts programs, better classroom technology, improved text
books and equipment, and a better school environment for Queens students,
according to Councilman David Weprin.
What
has not been publicized, however, is a $693 million cut from the Board of
Education’s capital plan, which funds school construction and is key in
stopping the borough’s severe school overcrowding problem.
Weprin
explained that the Board of Education’s capital budget cut was part of a
necessary $3 billion to $4 billion cut to the City’s overall capital
budget. He said, “No schools have been selected so far to be delayed
because of the cuts. We don’t know if Queens schools will be cut. Come
July 1, it’s all negotiable.”
Still,
Queens Board of Education member Terri Thomson told the PRESS,
“That will absolutely devastate Queens. All we’ve been hearing is that
schools have not been cut. Well in Queens alone, we are short 25,000
seats, and the budget cut to capital projects will delay the construction
of 7,000 new seats. We can’t delay these projects any further. We simply
cannot.”
Councilman
Leroy Comrie agreed with Thomson, and said, “Those cuts are going to
harm Queens more than any other place because we are so overcrowded . . .
That was a $700 million gap that we just couldn’t close because we
didn’t have enough tax revenues coming in.”
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Money
Saved For ‘Senior Borough’ |
While
focusing on children, the City also restored $14 million of Bloomberg’s
proposed $28 million cut for the New York City Department for the Aging,
allowing weekend meal service for seniors to continue and senior centers
to remain fully funded.
The
Queens senior center closest to being shut down because of budget cuts was
the JASA Whitestone Senior Center in Whitestone, one of seven specific
centers that the Department proposed to close as a result of Bloomberg’s
proposed cuts.
In
addition to senior centers, the Mayor restored $400,000 and the Council
$25,000 to the elder abuse program Walk the Walk in the budget. The
program includes a center for abused seniors that is currently being
constructed in Western Queens. In Bloomberg’s original budget, all
funding was pulled from the program, which would be the first of its kind
in the country. With the restored funding, the program can continue to
build its center, which is expected to open as scheduled.
Although
the restoration of funds to schools and seniors were at the top of almost
every Councilperson’s list of budget positives, Councilman Peter Vallone,
Jr., who is also the Council’s Public Safety Chairman, was most proud of
the fact that, “the streets will be safe because not one cop will be
cut.”
Bloomberg’s
proposed budget called for the next class of New York Police Department
recruits to enter the academy later in the year instead of July when they
are supposed to, delaying when they get out on the street. The budget that
passed last week keeps recruits entering the academy in July.
Cuts
were made to the Police Department and Fire Department, according to
Vallone, Jr., but he said, “The bottom-line is, nothing in the City was
going to go totally unaffected. But it’s important to have enough
officers on the street, and that’s what we were able to keep . . . Most
of the cuts, as in all the agencies, were administrative cuts.”
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Funding
Queens Fun, Both Indoors and Outdoors |
Queens’
cultural institutions – from Flushing Town Hall to Alley Pond
Environmental Center to the Queens Museum of Art to Bayside Historical
Society to P.S. 1 – were originally slated to be cut 15 percent in an
across-the-board cultural cut proposed by Bloomberg in his budget. Under
the new budget, the paintings, plays and programs that these institutions
offer will only be cut five percent.
In
addition, the New York City parks Department, an agency that has been cut
40 percent over the past 15 years, was slated for huge cuts to its
operating budget, but the City budget agreement restored $7.5 million.
This will allow full maintenance of Queens Parks to continue.
For
residents who want to stay indoors and read, the Queens Borough Public
Library will be able to stay open six days a week as a result of $7
million in funding that was restored in the new budget. Bloomberg’s
original budget cuts to libraries would have forced many branches to close
on Saturdays.
To
balance the budget, the Council instituted several taxes that will
“impact the lives of Queens residents directly,” according to Weprin.
Comrie said, “We needed revenue to balance the budget and we instituted
taxes. These are real taxes. People need to realize this.”
Queens
smokers will have to pay $1.42 more for a pack of cigarettes in the new
Fiscal Year, according to Weprin, because the cigarette tax has been
increased from eight cents to $1.50. There will also be a surcharge on
every phone call made from a cell phone in New York City, and parking
violation fines are scheduled to go up. Weprin said, “All sorts of fines
for violations will go up to get revenue. Sanitation violations and so on
will all cost people more.”
Vallone
Jr. said, “I’m proud of what the Council did without raising property
taxes.”
Although
most Councilmembers called the budget a “victory,” there were some
items that they did not win.
Some
councilmembers pointed to the budget’s addition of 3,000 day care slots
to the City system, and said they are not enough to meet the City’s
demand. Comrie said, “There is a waiting list for day care slots of
5,000 people in New York City. We just can’t meet the needs of everyone
in the City. We can’t build at a fast enough rate. That will definitely
impact my district.”
In
addition, although the budget agreement allowed paper and metal recycling
to continue, plastic recycling was suspended one year and glass recycling
was suspended two years.
Weprin said, “We really wanted to keep the recycling program in
full, and that was one of our sticking points. But barring any
legislation, those programs will be back after their suspended time.”
The following Queens programs are
among those funded in the FY 2003 budget:
•
$1 million to pay for a disparity study to determine if the City has
discriminated against Minority/Women Business Enterprises
•
$300,000 to help bring ferry service to the Rockaways
•
$7 million to the Queens Public Library system, ensuring six day-a-week
service
•
$924,000 to help keep the JASA Whitestone Senior Center open along with
subsidized meals for seniors throughout the borough
•
$2 million for the Immigrants Initiative, to help to provide English
language courses and legal services to new immigrants.
•
$ 6 million for parks throughout the City and additional funds for various
Queens parks and recreational program.
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