Citizen Portal
Sign In

Lifetime Citizen Portal Access — AI Briefings, Alerts & Unlimited Follows

Assembly passes fifth budget extender to keep state operations funded through April 22

New York State Assembly · April 20, 2026

Loading...

AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

The New York Assembly approved a fifth “extender” appropriations bill that funds state operations and key programs through April 22. Sponsor said it covers school aid, OPWDD, veterans programs and other state charges; the measure passed overwhelmingly, 136–0.

The New York State Assembly passed an appropriations extender on April 20 to keep state operations funded through April 22.

Assembly sponsor Mister Pretlow told members the bill is the fifth extender this year and would ensure continued payments for school districts, administrative payroll items, public health programs, unemployment insurance, OPWDD services, veterans programs and general state charges. Pretlow described the measure as an interim funding step while broader budget negotiations continue.

Assemblyman Mister Palmisano pressed the sponsor for details on the total appropriated to date and the increment added by this extender. Pretlow said the total appropriated via extenders is $12,600,000,000 and that this fifth extender increases that total by $5,100,000,000. The sponsor said the extender runs through April 22 and does not include payroll funding.

Members pressed on where negotiations stood and whether the governor had shared language on priority policy items such as payroll taxes, auto insurance reform, immigration changes, Tier 6, and climate measures. Pretlow said no specific language had been publicly circulated and argued that the legislature’s scope in budget negotiations is constrained by court precedent established in Pataki v. Silver, suggesting any rebalancing of executive–legislative authority would require a constitutional amendment.

After debate, the clerk recorded a roll-call vote: Ayes 136, Nays 0. The bill passed and will maintain funding through April 22 pending further action from the legislature and the governor.