Tax subsidy reforms stall in Albany

New York state lawmakers were poised to end the 2023 legislative session Friday with no action on a pair of bills that would have drastically reformed the state’s 107 industrial development agencies.

Industrial development agencies, or IDAs, are public benefit corporations that have the power to grant property, sales and mortgage tax breaks to corporations who apply for those benefits, often in exchange for creating new jobs. The eight counties of Western New York have 15 IDAs at both the county and municipal levels.

One bill, sponsored by Senator Sean Ryan, a Buffalo Democrat, would have barred IDAs from granting property tax breaks that affect schools. Property tax breaks tend to be the largest subsidies IDAs can grant to companies, and schools receive the lion’s share of property taxes.

A second bill, sponsored by Senator James Skoufis, an Orange County Democrat, would have regionalized IDAs, reducing the total number of agencies from 107 to 10. Under that bill, five Western New York counties — Erie, Niagara, Chautauqua, Cattaraugus and Allegany counties — would be served by a single IDA instead of 12.

“It looks like it’s getting blocked by the corporate interests and the IDA backers are really pushing back hard against it, so I’m not optimistic that it’s going to pass,” Ryan told Investigative Post in an interview Friday afternoon.

He blamed IDAs and trade groups working on their behalf for halting the bills before lawmakers could vote on them.

“As soon as the IDAs figured out [that] some of their ability to waste taxpayer dollars was going to be threatened, they all started contacting their legislators,” Ryan said.


Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram & YouTube


Recent reports from Investigative Post and a watchdog group have highlighted that New York schools, including several Western New York districts, forgo significant sums of revenue every year due to IDA and other property tax breaks.

In February, Washington D.C.-based Good Jobs First found that New York schools forgo $1.8 billion in revenue each year due to property tax breaks from cities and IDAs. That figure was based on an analysis of district financial disclosures.

Investigative Post, in a series published last week, detailed that four Western New York districts — Dunkirk City Schools, Niagara-Wheatfield CSD, Warsaw CSD and Letchworth CSD — forgo millions of dollars in revenue each year due to IDA subsidies. That means the districts have less funding for teachers, classrooms and extracurriculars. 

In Dunkirk, Warsaw and Letchworth schools, the forgone revenue means the districts have, on average, around $3,000 less to spend per student.

Investigative Post’s series further detailed research that found tax breaks don’t create jobs. Studies have shown that between 75 and 90 percent of jobs created via tax subsidies would have been created anyway.

IDAs, however, earn fees for every subsidy they approve, giving the agencies a “perverse incentive,” as Skoufis described it, to grant tax breaks to companies that don’t need the assistance.


Donate to support our nonprofit newsroom


In the final days of the legislative session, watchdog groups like Good Jobs First and Reinvent Albany joined with AFSCME New York, New York State United Teachers, the NYS Council of Churches and others to pressure lawmakers to pass the bill barring IDAs from granting tax breaks that affect schools.

Elizabeth Marcello, senior research analyst at Reinvent Albany, called the legislature’s failure to pass the reform bill “shameful.”

“It is a common sense bill that would stop the worst of what IDAs do, which is drain revenue that should go to schools to benefit corporations,” Marcello said in a statement Friday. “Time and time again, independent studies have shown that tax abatements and other corporate giveaways do not work.”

“Real investment in public services like education, transit, and clean water infrastructure are clearly superior uses of taxpayer dollars,” she added.

Ryan, noting that past IDA reform took years to move through Albany, said he plans to continue advocating for his reform legislation next year. Skoufis said he, too, would continue pushing for “broad IDA reform.”

“While we couldn’t rally the support needed to regionalize IDAs this year, I’ll continue working with colleagues to educate them on the importance of restoring taxpayer trust by holding these wasteful agencies to account, limiting their influence, and forcing wealthy developers to pay their damn taxes,” Skoufis said in a statement.

School districts, teachers and municipal workers, Ryan said, “are coming to the realization that they can’t hire staff, do programming or give raises because the IDA is giving away their money.”

“IDAs are ineffective and costly,” he added. “So we need to really rein them in.”

Subscribe to our free weekly newsletter


The post Tax subsidy reforms stall in Albany appeared first on Investigative Post.

Related articles

‘Cohen can’t remember how old his son is’: J.D. Vance days after Trump forgets son’s age



Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH) on Monday joined a gaggle of Donald Trump defenders — including Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-AL), Rep. Nicole Malliotakis, (R-NY) and the ex-president’s son Eric Trump — at the Manhattan Criminal Courthouse to attend the ongoing “hush money” trial.

At a press conference, Tuberville ranted against "supposedly American citizens" in the courtroom and claimed District Attorney Alvin Bragg is putting the former president through “mental anguish.”

Tuberville also said of former Trump fixer Michael Cohen: “This guy is giving an acting scene.”

Vance, in a series of tweets on X, assailed Cohen's credibility as a witness.

READ MORE: Tuberville slammed for berating 'supposedly American citizens' in Trump hush money courtroom

"Cohen can’t remember how old his son is or how old he was when he started to work for Trump but I’m sure he remembers extremely small details from years ago!" Vance wrote.

But his comment came just days after Trump, in an interview Thursday with Telemundo51, misstated son Barron Trump’s age as 17. Barron Trump turned 18 in March.

In that interview, Trump told reporter Marilys Llanos he’s “able to put [aside]” the ongoing trial and focus on “a lot of things at one time.”

“I’m very ambidextrous, so to speak,” Trump said last week.

READ MORE: 'Ambidextrous' Trump tells Telemundo his 18-year-old son is 17

Despite Trump’s claim that he’s able to compartmentalize the trial, allies like Vance are “[stepping] up attacks” in light of Merchan’s gag order — which the president has violated 10 times, NBC News reports.

“The president is expected to sit here for six weeks to listen to the Michael Cohens of the world,” Vance complained in his tweets. "I’m now convinced the main goal of this trial is psychological torture. But Trump is in great spirits."

The Ohio senator, a vice presidential contender, also appeared to defend Trump against claims he’s fallen asleep in the courtroom, The Arizona Republic reports.

"I’m 39 years old and I’ve been here for 26 minutes and I’m about to fall asleep," Vance wrote.

READ MORE: 'No record': French officials say Kristi Noem lied about cancelling meeting with Macron

Clint Eastwood Returned His Oscars and Cited ‘Woke Nonsense in Hollywood’?

Eastwood supposedly said of the decision, "I don't want to be associated with any of the woke nonsense in Hollywood."