Wednesday, May 4, 2011

An Alternative To The Bloomberg Budget

Here it is:

City Council members joined union representatives and social service advocates on the steps of City Hall today in support of a proposal to replace cuts to human services with measures to eliminate tax breaks for banks.

"This is the fairest budget I've ever seen," Council Member Jumaane Williams shouted as he brandished a copy of the budget proposal, compiled by the progressive umbrella May 12 Coalition. "If anybody, including the mayor or the governor, is not talking about this you are lying by omission."

The report's proposals include eliminating a provision exempting hedge fund profits from the unincorporated business tax, demanding that banks repay subsidies and tax credits intended to create jobs, and preserving the so-called millionaire's tax, which sunsets at the end of the year. The report's authors estimated that "subsidies, sweetheart deals and tax loopholes" for banks amount to about $1.5 billion.

Speakers warned of the implications of a proposed city budget that would cut nearly half a billion dollars from social services, from childcare centers to AIDS treatment programs. Many cast Mayor Michael Bloomberg as more sympathetic to business interests than to preserving services, referring repeatedly to the mayor's desire to protect his "rich friends."

"This budget is a budget that the city cannot afford," Council Member Daniel Dromm said. "The toll that is going to take on human services, on educational services, on daycare services, is too much for the city of New York to bear."


Of course Bloomberg opposes taxing rich people, ending subsidies to banks, and eliminating tax loopholes for hedge fundies.

But let's make him DEFEND those positions.

Couple these positions with all the scandals and stolen money Bloomberg's outside consultants are wheeling out of the city coffers in wheelbarrows and duffel bags, and Mayor 38% just may have a hard time sustaining support for his budget and layoffs.

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