This PDF file contains New York City Council's Response to the Fiscal 2024 Preliminary Budget and Fiscal 2023 Preliminary Mayor's Management Report (PMMR) as required by the New York City Charter section 247 (b) and 12 (e).
The City of New York is at a pivotal fiscal moment. Tax revenues for the current fiscal year are coming in far above projections, yielding a substantial surplus; however, neither the Mayor’s Office nor the Comptroller’s Office expect this trend to continue.
The Preliminary Budget closes the $2.88 billion budget gap projected in November, on the strength of an expected $2.77 billion surplus in FY 2022, derived primarily from $1.60 billion in additional tax revenues and savings of $866 million from the Program to Eliminate the Gap (PEG).
New York City’s current property tax system is notoriously opaque, unfair, and regressive. For the past four decades, rather than dealing with its structural flaws, New York State has layered on a patchwork of exemptions and abatements to lower tax rates for various owners.
Advancing the vision of a smaller, safer and fairer jail system remains one of the City’s most pressing challenges and will necessitate collective action on the part of all criminal legal system stakeholders.
Fiscal Year 2023 begins in a period of significant economic uncertainty. There are meaningful signs of continued recovery from the pandemic, with jobs at 96% of pre-pandemic levels, tourism and Broadway rebounding, record numbers of new business applications, and tax revenues coming in...
A quarterly cash report for New York City. At the close of FY 2022 (on June 30, 2022), the City recorded the end-of-year cash balance of $8.159 billion, compared to $8.469 billion a year ago. Daily cash balances during FY22 averaged $7.524 billion, $831 million below the prior year’s number.
Taking into consideration the strategic policy statements of the mayor and the borough presidents, relevant city-wide, borough and community plans adopted pursuant to Section 197-a, and reports pursuant to Section 257 comparing most recent 10-year capital strategy with capital budgets and programs.
Certificate establishing the maximum amount of debt, reserves, appropriations and expenditures for capital projects that the city may make in the ensuing fiscal year and three years following.
This is to reexamine internal processes and policies, use resources efficiently, and re-estimate expenses, and re-estimate expenses, all without sacrificing service delivery to New York City residents
Submission of the Modification to the Financial Plan for the City and Covered Organizations by the City to the Financial Control Board pursuant to Section 8.3 of the Financial Emergency Act.
April 2021 Executive Budget, Fiscal Year 2022 - Details of financial plan by Agency, personal service expense, other than personal service expense and funding.