News

01
Dec
2003
New York's per-capita property tax burden is more than $1,300 for every man, woman, and child in New York, the nation's fourth-heaviest property tax burden and 50 percent above average, according to the third briefing paper in The Public Policy Institute's Tax Watch '04 series
26
Nov
2003
The Chamber Alliance of New York State has elected five new board members and reelected four others. The new board members elected include: John D'Ambrosio, president, Orange County Chamber. Kevin Keeley, president and CEO, Chemung County Chamber
25
Nov
2003
New York is losing economic ground to states that tax their citizens and businesses less, according to a new paper in The Public Policy Institute's Tax Watch '04 series. Between 1992 and 2002, private-sector employment grew 21.1 percent nationwide, the paper said
21
Nov
2003
ALBANY—New York's business community thinks that The Business Council, the state's leading advocate for business, has been too weak in criticizing state government actions that worsen New York's business climate, a new Business Council survey shows. "New York's businesses want The Business Council to be sharper and blunter in criticizing bad policy decisions," said Heidi Nauleau, chairman of the Aarque Companies of Jamestown, Chautauqua County, and chairman of The Business Council
20
Nov
2003
ALBANY—A huge majority of New York State employers say the state's high taxes and high costs of health insurance, workers' compensation, and electricity are hurting their ability to do business, a new Business Council survey of New York employers shows. "This message from employers is an alarm that Albany cannot ignore," said Heidi Nauleau, chairman of the Aarque Companies of Jamestown, Chautauqua County, and chairman of The Business Council
19
Nov
2003
New York’s Labor Neutrality Act is part of a systematic, state-by-state attempt by unions to restrict employers’ free-speech rights and is preempted by the federal National Labor Relations Act, The Business Council has told a federal district court considering a challenge to the law
18
Nov
2003
ALBANY—New York State's taxes are the nation's highest, and this economic disadvantage drives jobs to other states and hurts New York's employers and working families, according to the first in a new series of papers to be published by The Public Policy Institute of New York State. Only elected officials' commitment to restrain government spending can reduce this burden on New Yorkers, the report added
10
Nov
2003
New York State is home to the highest local taxes in the nation, more than 70 percent above the national average, according to a new study by the Citizens Budget Commission (CBC). In fact, New York's overall tax burden, and its local taxes in particular, dwarf even those in comparably large and urbanized competitor states with similar economic profiles and histories, the study shows
07
Nov
2003
As a new poll showed that New Yorkers continue to prefer lower taxes and reduced government spending to higher taxes, Senate Majority Leader Joseph Bruno reaffirmed his commitment to rejecting tax increases in 2004. "We are not raising taxes, taxes are going to be reduced, we're going to stay with that,"Bruno (R-Rensselaer County) told New York Post reporter Fred Dicker on his WROW radio program Nov
05
Nov
2003
New York's taxes and debt burden are too high, New York's attorney general told business leaders last month. The Business Review, a business weekly newspaper circulating in the Capital Region, quoted Eliot Spitzer as saying, "We [in state government] have not shown the fiscal restraint that you in the private sector are obligated to show