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Assembly advances short-term budget extender to keep state operations funded through April 30
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Summary
The Assembly advanced and passed a one-week appropriations extender (Assembly No. 11150) to fund state operations through April 30, 2026, a measure Chairman Pretlow said totals $12.6 billion and adds $2.5 billion above the previous extender. Lawmakers exchanged questions about timing and transparency for the full budget agreement.
The New York State Assembly on April 27 approved a short-term appropriations extender to keep state operations funded through April 30, 2026, the presiding officer announced.
Chairman Pretlow described the measure, Assembly No. 11150, as an "extender" that would ensure funding for institutional payrolls and programs pending completion of budget negotiations. "Today, we're doing another extender," Pretlow said, and told colleagues the bill would ensure operations "through 04/30/2026." He said the package includes funding for institutional payroll, public health programs, unemployment insurance, OPWDD services, veterans programs and general state charges.
Why it matters: lawmakers are still negotiating policy items in the budget, and an interim appropriation is required to avoid disruptions to payroll and services. Pretlow told the chamber the bill would take effect immediately and that the clerk would record the vote.
Several members questioned the timing and detail of budget talks. Representative Palmisano asked whether the extender covered payroll due at the end of April and pressed for clarity about table targets and progress on budget negotiations. Pretlow replied that policy negotiations remain ongoing and that dollar negotiations will begin only after policy issues are resolved; he said the legislative schedule would likely include extended sessions next week and that it could take several days to debate a finalized budget once negotiations conclude.
Palmisano pressed on the cumulative cost of repeated extenders, noting this was the seventh extender and asking how much total extenders have amounted to; Pretlow and members cited the immediate needs to maintain payroll and services. In the floor exchange, Pretlow confirmed the extender package totals $12.6 billion and that the increase in this extender over the previous one was $2.5 billion.
Not all criticism prevented passage. A member urged more transparency, calling repeated extenders "delay, delay, delay," but said she would vote for the bill to avoid furloughs or missed paychecks for state employees. The clerk recorded the vote after the final sections were read and announced the bill had passed.
Next steps: The extender funds operations only through April 30. Lawmakers said they expect further negotiation on policy to precede detailed dollar negotiations and that an additional floor schedule would follow once those talks conclude.
