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NYC Officials Seal Budget Deal


New York City officials have concluded their annual budget dance with an agreement that preserves child care, classrooms and other threatened programs, but uncertainty surrounding parts of the plan could lead to more than $600 million in cuts midway through the year.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg and City Council Speaker Christine Quinn sealed their deal with a handshake Monday, and by the time the council formally approved the $68.5 billion budget on Thursday, advocates and legislators were crowing about the city services that had been saved. Low-income child care programs were restored, as was money to keep libraries open five days a week. Twenty fire companies were taken off the chopping block.

But the deal hinges in part on $635 million in income from the sale of taxi medallions this year and $825 million more in income from sales over the following two years. That money may never materialize, depending on the outcome of a lawsuit accusing the mayor of illegally bypassing the City Council to get state lawmaker approval for a plan to sell more medallions and begin licensing livery cab drivers to allow them to accept street hails in less-trafficked areas of the city.

A judge has promised to rule on that lawsuit quickly, but a ruling in either direction could be followed by a lengthy appeals process. City officials have said they expect to ultimately win the case, but if it becomes clear the $635 million in sales won’t happen before June 30, 2013, the budget will have to be adjusted through cutbacks or new revenue. The city adjusts its financial plan several times throughout the year to reflect changing fiscal realities.

If the taxi sales are allowed to move forward, there’s some question whether the medallion auctions will bring in as much revenue as the city is anticipating. Originally, the city projected the sales would earn the city $1 billion for 2,000 medallions, but the budget deal raised the estimate to $1.46 billion. Officials said that by selling the medallions in separate auctions over three years, they expected to boost the price.

(Source: WCBSTV)



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