Assembly approves $10.6 billion debt-service bill amid sharp fiscal debate
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Summary
The Assembly passed Assembly 1002A, the debt service appropriations bill, which funds legal requirements for state debt service and authorizes short-term borrowing. Debate centered on debt levels, prepayments, and fiscal sustainability; the bill passed after recorded votes.
Assemblymember Pretlow presented the debt service bill (Assembly 1002A), calling it a legally required appropriation that "provides for $10,600,000,000 in appropriations in support of debt service payments" and noting the payments support about $72.2 billion in outstanding debt. He said appropriations for debt service were expected to decrease by roughly $571 million from the prior year while remaining compliant with the Debt Service Reform Act of 2000.
Members used the floor debate to press the majority on the broader fiscal trajectory. Minority members framed their opposition as a protest to the state's growing debt load and the prevalence of public-authority borrowing. One member warned the state was headed toward unsustainable debt levels and described planned no votes as a message of concern. Supporters said paying debt on time protects the state's creditworthiness and is necessary to avoid disruptions in transportation, education and other projects financed by bonds. "Promises made, promises kept," one speaker said in explaining a yes vote.
Questions from the floor covered the proposed short-term liquidity borrowing the governor had requested ($3 billion), how much of the debt service payment is principal versus interest, and whether a financial plan or revenue scorecard would accompany forthcoming budget bills. Chairman Pretlow said some of those details remained under negotiation and that the 3-day review period for bills should be respected. He gave numerical figures for the state's outstanding debt, projected five-year debt and the debt-service cap and said some prepayments were being used to reduce interest costs.
The floor recorded a roll-call vote after members explained their positions. The clerk announced Ayes 106, Nays 37; the bill passed and the act will take effect immediately. Several members who voted no said their opposition was not to paying debts but to the state's broader fiscal policy and backdoor borrowing by public authorities. Supporters said passage was necessary to meet contractual obligations and protect the state's borrowing capacity.
Next steps: The debt service appropriation was enacted by the Assembly as recorded; the continuing budget process will consider remaining budget bills and financial plans referenced during debate.
