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Assembly advances $10.6 billion debt service bill amid sharp budget debate

March 24, 2026 | 2026 Legislature NY, New York


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Assembly advances $10.6 billion debt service bill amid sharp budget debate
The Assembly voted to pass the debt service appropriation contained in Rules Report 89 (Assembly number 1,002‑A), a bill the sponsor said is necessary for the state to meet legally required debt service payments.

Sponsor Mr. Pretlow (S22) told the chamber the bill provides $10.6 billion in appropriations to support debt service payments and noted the state’s outstanding supported debt is roughly $72.2 billion. “This bill is necessary for the state to make legally required debt service payments on outstanding bonds and New York State supported bond issuances,” Pretlow said, and he answered numerous technical questions from members about timing and whether a full fiscal plan accompanied the appropriation bills.

Members across the aisle pressed for more financial detail and urged five‑way budget negotiations; questions touched on projected short‑term borrowing, the comptroller’s warning about extenders, and whether the legislature should require the governor to present a financial plan before votes on appropriation bills. One member noted the executive budget projects state related outstanding debt could approach $98–99 billion by fiscal 2031 and warned the trend is not sustainable.

Debate included discussion of public authority (so‑called "backdoor") borrowing and prepayments in the governor’s proposals. Pretlow said prepayments were being used to manage outstanding liability but defended the bill as routine to preserve the state’s fiscal standing with bond markets. Multiple members used their two‑minute explanations of vote to register broader budget objections while not opposing payment of legal obligations.

A party vote was recorded after explanation rounds; the clerk announced the result (Ayes 106, Nays 37) and stated the bill is passed. The bill contains language authorizing short‑term liquidity borrowing and indicates some prepayment authority; the last section on the floor read that the act "shall take effect immediately." The Assembly advanced the remaining calendar items and adjourned.

The passage authorizes appropriations required to meet upcoming debt service obligations; members urged continued negotiations on the remaining budget bills and requested more transparent fiscal plans in future appropriations.

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