Eric Adams announces sweeping NYC budget cuts due to migrant crisis, slashes NYPD to lowest levels since 1980s



New York City Mayor Eric Adams announced massive budget cuts for the Big Apple with far-reaching cuts to the NYPD force, education, and libraries. City officials say the deep budget cuts stem from the current migrant crisis, and warn there could be future financial restraints if the illegal immigrant situation continues.

Effective immediately, the New York Police Department must freeze all hiring and reduce the number of law enforcement officers from more than 33,000 to 30,000. The last time New York City had fewer than 30,000 officers was in 1984, according to the Independent Budget Office.

Patrick Hendry – NYC’s police union president – warned that the budget cuts would hamper the police department's ability to keep New Yorkers safe.

“This is truly a disaster for every New Yorker who cares about safe streets,” Hendry said. “Cops are already stretched to our breaking point, and these cuts will return us to staffing levels we haven’t seen since the crime epidemic of the ’80s and ’90s. We cannot go back there.”

While he was a mayoral candidate, Adams made campaign promises to beef up the police force and railed against the "Defund the Police" movement.

The New York Fire Department will have overtime limited. Any civilian and light-duty firefighter vacancies will be eliminated.

The budget cuts will slash the budget of the New York City Education Department by more than $1 billion – $547 million will be cut this fiscal year and another $600 million in 2025, according to Fox 5 New York. The outlet added, "There will be expansive 5% budget cuts at every city agency, which are expected to happen again two more times next year."

The city’s Summer Rising program – which provides children with recreational activities during the summer months – will be forced to reduce hours for middle school students.

The New York Times reported that the city is "eliminating thousands of spots for universal prekindergarten for 3-year-olds" and " community schools are being cut by $10 million in the current fiscal year."

Michael Mulgrew – president of the United Federation of Teachers – noted that the budget restraints would cause 653 schools to make midyear budget cuts — approximately 43% of the school system.

Mulgrew declared, "Class sizes will rise, and school communities will be needlessly damaged."

The NYC school system has already been stressed due to the migrant crisis after an additional 8,000 students enrolled in the city's public school system this year – the first enrollment increase in eight years.

Starting in December, public libraries will close branches on Sundays because of the budget cuts.

NYC library leaders stated, "We also will be reducing spending on library materials, programming, and building maintenance and repairs. Without sufficient funding, we cannot sustain our current levels of service, and any further cuts to the libraries’ budgets will, unfortunately, result in deeper service impacts."

Adams described the budget cuts as "the most painful exercise I’ve ever done in my professional life."

Adams said on Tuesday, "It is more than painful for New Yorkers — it’s painful for us. I’ve seen a great deal of just personal pain from the members of my team. These are initiatives that we fought hard for."

Adams called on the Biden administration to provide federal aid to the city for the migrant influx.

“No city should be left to handle a national humanitarian crisis largely on its own, and without the significant and timely support we need from Washington, D.C., today’s budget will be only the beginning," Adams said in a statement.

“For months, we have warned New Yorkers about the challenging fiscal situation our city faces,” Adams continued. “To balance the budget as the law requires, every city agency dug into their own budget to find savings, with minimal disruption to services,” he said. “And while we pulled it off this time, make no mistake: Migrant costs are going up, tax revenue growth is slowing and COVID stimulus funding is drying up.”

Adams warned that there would be even more budget cuts if the federal government doesn't provide more financial and logistical aid for the surge of illegal immigrants.

New York City has already spent $1.45 billion on the "asylum seeker humanitarian crisis."

Adams said the migrant crisis would cost New York City an estimated $11 billion over the next two years.

An estimated 10,000 illegal immigrants have recently funneled into New York City per month.

While on the campaign trail, Adams proclaimed that New York City would be a sanctuary city.

In October 2021, Adams declared: "We should protect our immigrants. Period. Yes, New York City will remain a sanctuary city under an Adams administration."

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NYC removes the city's last public pay phone, marking the end of an era



It’s the end of an era: The last standing public pay phone in New York City was removed from a street in Times Square on Monday.

City officials bid a public farewell to the iconic, coin-operated phone booth as a crane operator tore it from its place in the sidewalk at Seventh Avenue and West 50th Street Monday morning.

The New York Post reported that the phone booth’s removal marks the completion of New York City’s nearly decade-long attempt to replace pay phones with LinkNYC kiosks, which provide people on the streets with free wi-fi and domestic calling services, enable them to charge their mobile devices, allow people to place 911 and 311 calls, and other amenities.

Mark Levine, the president of the borough of Manhattan, who was present at the last pay phone’s removal, said that he hopes its replacement will bring more equitable technology access for New Yorkers. He also admitted the removal of the longtime fixture was bittersweet.

“I won’t miss all the dead dial tones, but gotta say I felt a twinge of nostalgia seeing it go,” he said.

Under former Mayor Bill de Blasio, in 2014 the mayor’s office put out a request for proposals for what to replace pay phones with. The mayor’s office noted that the goal was to replace the archaic technology with new infrastructure that offered free 24/7 public WIFI.

The CityBridge company's proposal to build a LinkNYC system was chosen the same year the request was sent out, and the city government began swapping pay phones for the new LinkNYC stations in 2016.

Most of the city’s old pay phones were sent to the scrapyard by 2020, and more than 7,500 of the public pay phones have been replaced with about 2,000 LinkNYC kiosks at this time.

The pay phone removed from Midtown will be sent to the Museum of the City of New York as a relic of the days before cell phones became widely used. It will be featured in the exhibit “Analog City: NYC B.C. (Before Computers)” that opened this past Friday.

The removed pay phone was the last-city owned public pay phone in New York City. A few private pay phones on public property still exist and are still in operation. Four enclosed phone booths have also been permanently saved from removal along West End Avenue on the Upper West Side.

CNBC reported that City Commissioner Matthew Fraser said, “Just like we transitioned from the horse and buggy to the automobile and from automobile to the airplane, the digital evolution has progressed from pay phones to high-speed wi-fi kiosks to meet the demands of our rapidly changing daily communication needs.”

NYC Mayor Eric Adams is considering a 2024 presidential run



Eric Adams, New York City’s recently elected Democratic Mayor, may be considering a presidential run if President Joe Biden does not seek a second term.

A person close to Adams said, “Eric has told me repeatedly that he thinks that he has a platform to run for national office, for president in 2024. He has said that repeatedly. He thinks New York is a national platform. He thinks the national party has gotten too far to the left, and he thinks he has a platform to win.”

The New York Post reported that a Democratic elected official in Brooklyn who frequently speaks with Adams said that the mayor was “considering a White House run in 2024 if Biden doesn’t seek re-election” and that Adams' advisor Ingrid Lewis-Martin was “running point” on the issue.

Adams' interest in pursuing a presidential run is reportedly due to the “growing chatter” that Biden — who is currently 79-years-old — may not seek re-election despite Biden’s insistence that he will.

A GOP lawmaker suggested that Adams could be a strong candidate for the presidency if he is successful in his attempt to reign in New York’s out-of-control crime.

The lawmaker said, “I said you really have to consider that you are young enough where you will have a life after the mayoralty and if you solve the crime problem there would be a lot of interest in a big city Democrat, African American with progressive values but who mediated the crime problem in a major city.”

Adams' “Big Apple Agenda” has put him at odds with many in the progressive wing of the Democratic Party as he explicitly campaigned for the mayorship as a pro-police candidate, vowed to dismantle state bail reform, and positioned himself as opposed to the increasing presence of the socialist wing of the Democratic Party.

If Adams were to seek the Democratic Party’s nomination for president, he would continue a long and storied tradition of New York mayors who sought the presidency. Bill de Blasio, Michael Bloomberg, and Rudy Giuliani, the three most recent mayors of New York, have also recently sought the presidency.

During an event in Harlem last week, Adams even joked that had he been screened early for dyslexia, “Right now, we would be not saying just ‘Mr. Mayor,’ you’d probably be saying ‘Mr. President.’”

Chris Coffey, Co-CEO of the political consulting firm Tusk Strategies, said, “[Adams] is one of the best-known black elected officials in the country. The play works if Adams makes progress on crime and the president decides not to run. I think he would [be] crazy not to consider it.”