CCC Responds to Governor Hochul’s 2024 State of the State Address
On Tuesday, January 9, Governor Hochul spoke to New Yorkers in her State of the State Address, commenting on several past and future investments and acknowledging current hardships faced by many across the state ahead of her budget proposal for Fiscal Year 2025.
As we regularly remark, budgets are moral documents and budget and policy choices matter. Acknowledging hardship is crucial, but we must use this opportunity to truly commit to investments that are proven to uplift families and children. Critical investments are needed to create stability in the health and human service workforce, to lift New Yorkers’ incomes, ensure food security for all, as well as to stabilize housing, and connect children to ECE, EI, and behavioral health care.
Citizens’ Committee for Children of New York (CCC) looks forward to working with the Governor on many issues she called attention to in her State of the State address. We are especially appreciative of the focus on investments in children’s behavioral health and efforts to have an extension of Medicaid for children 0-6 to prevent fall off for this population. These investments can have powerful impacts on families. However, we know that if we want to truly address the core issues we are seeing in New York, we must address the pervasive and consistent poverty families face. As our Statewide Index reported, 835,815 children in New York live in households below the Federal Poverty Level. Therefore, while the $50 million designated for anti-poverty measures in upstate cities is a positive step forward, we must be bolder in our focus, and commit greater resources to efforts that minimize poverty to support families and create a thriving State of New York.
We know pandemic recovery has been uneven and unequal where households hardest hit still struggle with loss of income, unstable housing and food insecurity. We know too that the health and human service sector is struggling to address persistently high demand for services. This sector has maintained care throughout the pandemic and is facing a crisis of workforce and funding. Due to these impediments, families, children and youth are met with unacceptable delays in access to cash and food aid, housing supports, early intervention, early care and education services, and behavioral health care. Furthermore, our state must support the migrants and asylum seekers to ensure their needs are met with humane and dignified supports.
Therefore, we urge the governor and state legislature to prioritize the following for the FY25 budget:
Strengthen Tax Policy to Lift Incomes
Expand Access to Public Benefits
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Improve Housing Stability
Support Child Health and Behavioral Health
Increase Access to Affordable Child Care
Invest in Child Welfare Prevention and Juvenile Justice Reform