Oppositon from The Business Council helped defeat a bill that would have
weakened a key employer-friendly provision of the unemployment insurance
(UI) reform of 1998.
Governor Pataki vetoed the bill late last month. The Council had urged
a veto in a Dec. 22 letter to the Pataki administration
Governor Pataki today called for renewed efforts to cut taxes and stimulate growth in jobs, with a special emphasis on the needs of the Upstate economy.
In his State of the State message opening the annual session of the Legislature, the Governor said New York has made major strides in improving its economy
Workers' Compensation Comparative Costs
Lower Cost
Average Cost
Higher Cost
State
Index
Rank
State
Index
Rank
State
Index
Rank
Utah
0.414
1
Iowa
0.841
14
Maine
1.193
33
Arizona
0
Subject
Executive
Budget
Senate
Majority
Senate
Minority
Assembly
Majority
Assembly
Minority
Alternative minimum tax
Reduce AMT from currently scheduled 3% to 2.5% as of July 2000.
Reduce AMT from currently scheduled 3% to 2.5% as of July 2000
By Governor George E. Pataki
Cutting taxes has been key to New York's economic recovery. But cutting taxes is more than just an issue of economics. For us, cutting taxes is a matter of fulfilling government's fundamental obligation to the people.
It all comes down to one simple question: whose money is it anyway? The people's hard-fought earnings belong to the PEOPLE and not the government
To: The New York State Senate
From: Daniel B. Walsh, President and CEO
Re: Our concerns about new mandates and new entitlements
I am writing to recommend that the Senate reject the health-care bill before you, at least until the Legislature and the public have had time to analyze fully the long-range cost implications of this bill, and to consider alternative ways of expanding health-care coverage
ALBANY—In 1966, Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller proposed, and the
Legislature adopted, a health care program the Governor said would be
“the most comprehensive program of its kind in the nation.”
But the cost quickly escalated beyond even the wildest fears of its few
opponents
Governor Pataki and the legislative leaders announced on Friday afternoon
, December 17, that they had reached agreement on a proposal that will
make modest reductions in the surcharges that employers pay to support
hospitals-and that will also expand health insurance coverage in the
state, financed in part by a stiff increase in cigarette taxes
ALBANY—New York's Medicaid program, the nation's most costly by
far, has become "a monstrous, $24.5 billion budget-buster at both the
state and local levels," a new report from The Public Policy Institute
of New York State says.
To ensure its economic health and the health of all New Yorkers, New
York must rein in Medicaid spending, according to Medicaid: Wreaking
Havoc in Health Care, the new report