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New York City mayor presents "doomsday" budget
By Jeremy Johnson
19 April 2003
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On April 15 New York Citys billionaire Mayor Michael
Bloomberg unveiled plans to ruthlessly slash city services and
jobs in order to fill a projected $3.8 billion gap in the citys
$45 billion budget. The cuts were presented in two tiers. The
first, cutting $620 million in services and 4,800 jobs, was characterized
as inevitable. The second, described as the doomsday
budget, adds an additional $1 billion to the service cuts along
with 10,231 more layoffs. The doomsday plan was presented
as what would be necessary in the event that the city fails to
obtain all of the $2.7 billion in state aid it is requesting,
as well as $600 million in concessions from the citys unions.
The cuts classed as inevitable will in themselves be devastating
to already struggling working class and middle class families.
Hardest hit will be the public schools, losing $178.7 million
and 2,395 jobs. Classrooms will be directly affected, with the
loss of 800 full-time aides, as well as 1001 part-time aides who
monitor hallways, yards and bathrooms. Also on the chopping block
are the jobs of 327 paraprofessionals who work with children experiencing
poor attendance, low academic performance or behavioral problems,
as well as 300 cafeteria workers. Seventy-seven substance abuse
prevention counselors are being laid off, and $6 million will
be lopped off the budget for custodial services. Summer school
will no longer be open to the many students who have passed the
previous grade, but still need help.
To add insult to injury, a fund that gives teachers $200 a
year to reimburse them for supplies they purchase for their students
is being eliminated. Union representatives estimate that teachers
spend an average of $500 a year out of their own pockets buying
books and other basic supplies which the schools lack.
Also hard hit will be the four health and social welfare departmentsChildrens
Services, Social Services, Homeless Services, and Health and Mental
Hygieneshedding a combined 776 jobs saving $102.8 million.
One third of the cleaning staff at homeless shelters are to be
laid off, leading to even more deplorable conditions, while 53
percent of the funds are to be cut from programs that help those
placed in permanent housing from returning to the shelters.
The city will cut reimbursement rates another 5 percent for
foster parents. Cuts of 15 percent previously implemented have
already caused Brookwood Child Care, which oversees 400 foster
home placements in the poor Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn,
to announce the termination of its well-regarded program. Another
600 beds in group foster homes will be eliminated under the Bloomberg
budget.
Children will also be especially hard hit by the $25.9 million
in cuts to the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. Twelve
of the 30 city-funded childrens health clinics located in
housing projects, each treating thousands of children a year,
are slated for closure. Those deprived of care at the clinics
will inevitably be shunted to the already overcrowded hospital
emergency rooms. In addition, $3.3 million will be cut from substance
abuse and mental health programs.
The city will also see trash piling up on its streets, due
to a reduction in pickups from twice to once a week in the boroughs
of Queens and Staten Island, as well as from three times a week
to twice weekly in parts of Brooklyn. Recycling pickups, now scheduled
weekly, will be cut back to every two weeks. Four centers where
residents can dump trash that is too big to be left for curbside
pickup are to be closed. In all, 202 sanitation workers will be
laid off, with 75 other jobs lost through attrition.
Cuts in the Parks and Recreation Department include eliminating
over 1,000 seasonal workers who mow and water lawns, along with
155 playground attendants. All but emergency tree pruning will
be eliminated, as will city subsidies to operate the Prospect
Park and Queens Zoos, which are especially popular with schoolchildren.
After Bloombergs budget press conference, Parks Commissioner
Adrian Benape acknowledged, The conditions of the parks
and playgrounds would certainly decline. There would be more litter,
more graffiti, more nonworking drinking fountains.
The $26.5 million cut from the Fire Department incorporates
the closing of six fire houses and two engine companies announced
the prior week, plus the additional cut of 33 fire marshals. Another
194 civilian jobs will also be eliminated.
In the Department of Transportation, pink slips will go out
to 83 workers, mostly at city parking lots and at the Staten Island
ferry, which would see its already crowded rush-hour service reduced
by 25 percent. In addition, Bloomberg is seeking state approval
to reduce or eliminate legally mandated city subsidies to the
Metropolitan Transit Authority. Any reductions would put further
pressure on subway and bus fares, which are already being raised
effective May 4 from $1.50 to $2.00 a ride.
Arts groups, which have already been devastated in previous
rounds of budget cuts, will see their funding reduced a further
24 to 35 percent. The Department of Aging will close two senior
centers, as well as eliminate a program that provides 7,500 elderly
citizens frozen meals for the weekend, when the centers are closed.
Draconian as they are, these cuts pale in comparison to the
doomsday budget plan. Sweeping cuts under this proposal
include the total elimination of after-school programs, the padlocking
of all 31 outdoor swimming pools and 21 out of 27 recreation centers,
and the shuttering of another 35 to 40 firehouses, along with
a 20 percent reduction in manning of 54 engine companies.
Especially cruel would be the elimination of the citys
Emergency Food Assistance Program, which provided 14.7 million
pounds of food to the citys 1,200 food pantries and soup
kitchens. As it is, 300,000 people had to be turned away hungry
last year for want of food supplies, as demand has skyrocketed
by 45 percent over the last two years while donations have dropped.
Another 1,426 school aides would go, along with 701 school
nurses, with nurses office hours reduced to half days. Subsidized
bus and subway fares for the elderly and the disabled would vanish,
as would 21 outreach teams and eight drop-in centers for homeless
people who do not use the citys shelters.
Branch library hours, already less than five full days a week,
would be cut another half day. The remaining 18 childrens
health clinics would close, as would 15 more senior centers and
outpatient pharmacies at all diagnostic and treatment centers.
Another 846 uniformed sanitation workers would be laid off, while
streetlights in city parks would be turned off at night.
Either of the two plans would have a drastic impact on millions
of ordinary New Yorkers. But media baron Bloomberg and his wealthy
cronies, who do not ride the subways or send their children to
public school, will not be affectedexcept insofar as the
value of their investment portfolio rises from the improvement
in the citys business climate. As a city teacher
told one reporter, [Bloomberg] has a pool in his backyard,
what does he care?
A particularly hypocritical moment of the mayors press
presentation came when he displayed a slide containing quotes
of three unnamed union officials in opposition to contract concessions,
followed by his expression of anger at the selfishness of those
who do not see that we are all going to have to make sacrifices
together.
Budget analysts project much greater deficits of $5.4 billion
and $5.8 billion in fiscal years beginning in July 2005 and July
2006. Bloomberg indirectly alluded to the bleak future in store
when, after promising better times when the economy turned around,
he said there was no way of knowing whether that would happen
in 2004, 2005 or even 2006.
What neither Bloomberg nor the mainstream media reports refer
to, however, are the huge tax breaks given to big business throughout
the 1990s, supposedly as an incentive to keep them from moving
out of the city. A study by the Center for an Urban Future examined
80 such deals, costing the city $2 billion. It found that within
a few years of receiving these incentives, 39 companies had either
carried out a major layoff or merged, with a similar job loss.
One example is the $28.5 million given in 1997 to the stock brokerage
house Merrill Lynch, supposedly to retain 3,888 jobs and to create
2,000 more. While no large block of jobs was ever added, the firm
cut 1,800 jobs in 2000 followed by another 1,000 in 2001.
Another giveaway was the elimination of the transfer tax on
stock trades. Bloomberg has rejected out of hand calls to reinstate
the tax, which advocates claim would raise $800 million a year,
pleading, improbably, that Wall Street brokers would leave the
city and execute their trades elsewhere.
See Also:
New York City schools to ax 3,200 jobs
[12 April 2003]
New York City mayor announces 3,400 layoffs
Six firehouses, two companies to be closed
[9 April 2003]
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