Metr

exclusive

How Corey Johnson and Bill de Blasio spent your money like drunken sailors on their way out

July 5, 2021 | 6:19pm | Updated July 5, 2021 | 6:59pm

The Independence Day celebration started early for many New York activists and groups seeking taxpayer funding — thanks to the seasoned pork stuffed into the record-spending, $98.7 billion city budget just approved by Mayor Bill de Blasio and the City Council.

Awash with nearly $16 billion in federal coronavirus relief funds, a lame-duck de Blasio and many-term limited Council members rammed more discretionary funding into virtually every nook and cranny of the budget, documents reviewed by The Post reveal.

Council members have the authority to steer millions of dollars to pet programs — and boy, did they ever, likely saddling the next administration and New Yorkers with a yawning deficit.

The amount of funding spent via council initiatives exploded from $376 million last year to $516 million this year — a 37 percent increase, according to city budget documents. The overall increase is even up 13 percent over the $454 million spent in the pre-pandemic Fiscal Year 2020.

Mayor of New York City Bill de Blasio
Mayor Bill de Blasio just approved a $98.7 billion city budget.
Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty Images

“Some of the money seems to be burning a hole in people’s pockets,” said Andrew Rein, executive director of the Citizens Budget Commission.

Rein said that in general the mayor and council “are not spending the federal money wisely and strategically” and are leaving the next mayor and council with a projected $5 billion budget gap.

The budget documents show that Speaker Corey Johnson, in particular, is leaving the council with a bang.

General view of Empire State Building and Middle Manhattan
The boost wasn’t merely making up for cuts in spending during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Eduardo MunozAlvarez/VIEWpress via GettyImages

The funding under Johnson’s direct control — the Speaker’s Initiatives to Address Citywide Needs — skyrocketed from $6.79 million last year to $34.65 million in the Fiscal Year 2022 budget the council passed on June 30. That’s a 410-percent increase.

The boost in spending surfaced after critics privately grumbled that Johnson used his power over the budget as a slush fund to leverage support in his run for city comptroller, a position that is intended to serve as a fiscal watchdog for the city.

And the boost wasn’t merely making up for cuts in spending during the pandemic last year. Two years ago, the Speaker’s Fund spent $12.8 million — so, it’s still up 170 percent from pre-pandemic spending.

Mayor of New York City Bill de Blasio speaks during the opening of a vaccination center for Broadway workers in Times Square on April 12, 2021
Council members have the authority to steer millions of dollars to pet programs.
Noam Galai/Getty Images

“This dramatic increase in Corey Johnson’s use of taxpayer dollars to benefit his campaign is another example of corruption. Once again, Corey uses the budget to favor those who support him and to punish those who question him,” said Michelle Caruso-Cabrera, a rival in the Democratic primary for comptroller.

“Another reason why I insisted on more transparency in the budget process, before the primary when the speaker was using the budget to buy votes.”

Johnson, through his Council discretionary fund, pumped money into groups far and wide including:

Johnson’s fund also directed funding to LGBT groups including $50,000 to CUNY’s student LGBTQ Leadership program, $50,000 to LaGuardia Community College’s LGBTQ Public History Project, $150,000 to the New Pride Center’s Dignity for All project, $100,000 to the LGBT Network and $100,000 for for services and advocacy LGBT Elders.

Other council members funded groups that backed their campaigns for higher office:

“I spoke about this repeatedly during the campaign [for borough president]. Every community board should have an urban planner,” Kallos said.

Other initiatives:

Johnson and the Council defended the record spending and claimed the budget was fiscally responsible, noting that they added $500 million to the city’s Rainy Day Fund.

“This Council is proud to have negotiated the first ever deposit into the city’s new Rainy Day fund, bringing the total to $1 billion,” said Jennifer Fermino, a spokeswoman for the Johnson-led Council.

“The Council’s advocacy also led to major new investments in education and quality of life, including social workers in every school, more litter basket pickup, as well as anti-violence programs. We need to rebuild and reimagine New York City post-pandemic, and this budget paves the way to get us there,” said Fermino.

Budget negotiators said the Council’s discretionary spending did go up this year to make up for cutbacks last year because of the revenue shortfall caused by COVID-19 pandemic.

Insiders said the increases reflected the Council’s wish to support small and medium sized groups that were disproportionately impacted by the pandemic, including those who were most vulnerable residents.

Council officials acknowledged in some cases they boosted spending — not just restored cuts from last year — and added new programs such as the K-12 black studies curriculum and the anti-Asian bigotry campaign.

De Blasio spokesman Bill Neidhardt responded, “If investing in modern curriculum is not ‘using the money wisely and strategically’ then I really don’t know what the CBC wants out of life. We got a stimulus, we’re investing it in the working class. Cry about it.”

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio
Andrew Rein said that in general the mayor and council “are not spending the federal money wisely and strategically.”
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo