Health care spending grows in Adams’ $112B executive budget

Mayor Eric Adams’ nearly $112 billion executive budget, released Wednesday, includes more than $5 billion for health care initiatives, a figure that has grown by $172 million since his January preliminary budget.The revised plan avoids new spending cuts for city agencies and paints a rosier picture of the city’s future thanks to pared-down spending on migrants and an improving economy, Adams said Wednesday.Specific funding for mental health programming was unclear in his preliminary budget, but it saw a significant bump in the revised one. Adams dedicated $74 million toward supporting nearly 500 psychologists and social workers who provide care in schools or FY25 and beyond, and $9 million to provide more services in precincts that see high levels of gun violence. He also restored cuts to school-based mental health programs.The city Department of Health and Mental Hygiene also got an $89 million increase over the preliminary budget, to $2.2 billion. About $55 million is set to go toward a new public health laboratory, according to a summary of the executive budget. The budget for New York City Health + Hospitals has held steady at just over $3 billion.Despite these bumps, members of the City Council are pushing for more.Council Speaker Adrienne Adams criticized the mayor Wednesday for not including an additional $225 million for mental health initiatives which the council pushed for in its preliminary budget response earlier this month.“We are disappointed that critical... Continue reading at 'Crains New York'

[ Crains New York | 2024-04-25 09:33:07 UTC ]

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