STATE OF NEW YORK
________________________________________________________________________
S. 8003--D A. 9003--D
SENATE - ASSEMBLY
January 18, 2022
___________
IN SENATE -- A BUDGET BILL, submitted by the Governor pursuant to arti-
cle seven of the Constitution -- read twice and ordered printed, and
when printed to be committed to the Committee on Finance -- committee
discharged, bill amended, ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted
to said committee -- committee discharged, bill amended, ordered
reprinted as amended and recommitted to said committee -- committee
discharged, bill amended, ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted
to said committee -- committee discharged, bill amended, ordered
reprinted as amended and recommitted to said committee
IN ASSEMBLY -- A BUDGET BILL, submitted by the Governor pursuant to
article seven of the Constitution -- read once and referred to the
Committee on Ways and Means -- committee discharged, bill amended,
ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted to said committee --
again reported from said committee with amendments, ordered reprinted
as amended and recommitted to said committee -- again reported from
said committee with amendments, ordered reprinted as amended and
recommitted to said committee -- again reported from said committee
with amendments, ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted to said
committee
AN ACT making appropriations for the support of government
AID TO LOCALITIES BUDGET
The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-bly, do enact as follows:
1 Section 1. a) The several amounts specified in this chapter for aid to
2 localities, or so much thereof as shall be sufficient to accomplish the
3 purposes designated by the appropriations, are hereby appropriated and
4 authorized to be paid as hereinafter provided, to the respective public
5 officers and for the several purposes specified.
6 b) Where applicable, appropriations made by this chapter for expendi-
7 tures from federal grants for aid to localities may be allocated for
8 spending from federal grants for any grant period beginning, during, or
EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
[] is old law to be omitted.
LBD12653-09-2
2 12653-09-2
1 prior to, the state fiscal year beginning on April 1, 2022 except as
2 otherwise noted.
3 c) The several amounts named herein, or so much thereof as shall be
4 sufficient to accomplish the purpose designated, being the undisbursed
5 and/or unexpended balances of the prior year's appropriations, are here-
6 by reappropriated from the same funds and made available for the same
7 purposes as the prior year's appropriations, unless herein amended, for
8 the fiscal year beginning April 1, 2022. Certain reappropriations in
9 this chapter are shown using abbreviated text, with three leader dots
10 (an ellipsis) followed by three spaces (... ) used to indicate where
11 existing law that is being continued is not shown. However, unless a
12 change is clearly indicated by the use of brackets [] for deletions and
13 underscores for additions, the purposes, amounts, funding source and all
14 other aspects pertinent to each item of appropriation shall be as last
15 appropriated.
16 For the purpose of complying with the state finance law, the year,
17 chapter and section of the last act reappropriating a former original
18 appropriation or any part thereof is, unless otherwise indicated, chap-
19 ter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021.
20 d) No moneys appropriated by this chapter shall be available for
21 payment until a certificate of approval has been issued by the director
22 of the budget, who shall file such certificate with the department of
23 audit and control, the chairperson of the senate finance committee and
24 the chairperson of the assembly ways and means committee.
25 e) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, for purposes
26 of any appropriation made by this chapter which authorizes spending in
27 an amount net of refunds, rebates, reimbursements, credits, repayments,
28 and/or disallowances, "refunds" shall mean funds received to the state
29 resulting from the overpayment of monies, "rebates" shall mean funds
30 received to the state resulting from a return of a full or partial
31 amount previously paid, as for goods or services, serving as a
32 reduction, discount or rebate to the original payment amount,
33 "reimbursements" shall mean funds received to the state as repayment in
34 an equivalent amount for goods or services, including but not limited to
35 personal service costs, incurred by the state in the first instance
36 being provided to a third party for their benefit and partially or in
37 full financed by such third party, "credit" shall mean monies made
38 available to the state that reduce the amount owed to a third party,
39 including but not limited to billing errors, rebates, and prior overpay-
40 ments, "repayment" shall mean the return of monies as pay back for
41 expenses incurred, and "disallowance" shall mean monies made available
42 to the state that were not allowed or accepted officially by the
43 intended recipient, based on a determination the payment is not accepta-
44 ble and/or valid. When the office of the state comptroller receives any
45 such refunds, rebates, reimbursements, credits, repayments, and/or
46 disallowances, he or she shall credit the refunded, rebated, reimbursed,
47 credited, repaid, and disallowed amount back to the original appropri-
48 ation and reduce expenditures in the year which such credit is received
49 regardless of the timing of the initial expenditure.
50 f) Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the contrary, if the
51 state or any agency thereof incurs any costs associated with administer-
52 ing the rent regulation program in accordance with subdivision (c) of
53 section 8 of chapter 576 of the laws of 1974, as amended, for a city
54 having a population of one million or more, the director of the budget
55 may direct any other state agency or agencies making payments to such
56 city, or any department, agency, or instrumentality thereof, to perma-
3 12653-09-2
1 nently reduce the amount of any other payment or payments owed to such
2 city or any department, agency, or instrumentality thereof pursuant to
3 any appropriation set forth in this chapter. Provided however, that such
4 reduction shall be in an amount equal to the costs incurred by the state
5 or agency thereof in accordance with subdivision (c) of section 8 of
6 chapter 576 of the laws of 1974 and provided further that such direction
7 shall be made in writing by the director of the budget. If the director
8 of the budget makes such direction pursuant to the authority set forth
9 herein, the impacted city shall not make the payments required by subdi-
10 vision (c) of section 8 of chapter 576 of the laws of 1974, as amended,
11 and the division of housing and community renewal shall notify such city
12 in writing of what payment or payments will be reduced and the amount of
13 such reduction. To the extent a city of one million or more or any
14 department, agency, or instrumentality thereof is entitled to any cash
15 disbursement authorized by any appropriation contained in this chapter,
16 such entitlement shall be reduced commensurate with reductions in
17 payments made in accordance with this part.
18 g) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, upon enact-
19 ment of this chapter of the laws of 2022 containing the aid to locali-
20 ties budget bill for the state fiscal year 2022-2023, all appropriations
21 and reappropriations contained in chapter 53 of the laws of 2021, which
22 would otherwise lapse by operation of law on March 31, 2023 are hereby
23 repealed.
24 h) The appropriations contained in this chapter shall be available for
25 the fiscal year beginning on April 1, 2022 except as otherwise noted.
4 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For payment according to the following schedule:
2 APPROPRIATIONS REAPPROPRIATIONS
3 General Fund ....................... 181,525,500 198,921,513
4 Special Revenue Funds - Federal .... 114,985,000 224,812,000
5 Special Revenue Funds - Other ...... 980,000 0
6 ---------------- ----------------
7 All funds ........................ 297,490,500 423,733,513
8 ================ ================
9 SCHEDULE
10 COMMUNITY SERVICES PROGRAM ................................. 297,490,500
11 --------------
12 General Fund
13 Local Assistance Account - 10000
14 For services and expenses, including the
15 payment of liabilities incurred prior to
16 April 1, 2022, related to the community
17 services for the elderly grant program.
18 Notwithstanding subparagraph (1) of para-
19 graph (b) of subdivision 4 of section 214
20 of the elder law and any other provision
21 of law to the contrary, up to $3,500,000
22 of the funds appropriated herein may, at
23 the discretion of the director of the
24 budget, be used by the state to reimburse
25 counties for more than the 75 percent of
26 the total annual expenditures of approved
27 community services for the elderly
28 programs. No expenditures shall be made
29 from this appropriation until the director
30 of the budget has approved a plan submit-
31 ted by the office outlining the amounts
32 and purposes of such expenditures and the
33 allocation of funds among the counties.
34 Notwithstanding any provision of law, rule
35 or regulation to the contrary, subject to
36 the approval of the director of the budg-
37 et, funds appropriated herein for the
38 community services for the elderly program
39 (CSE) and the expanded in-home services
40 for the elderly program (EISEP) may be
41 used in accordance with a waiver or
42 reduction in county maintenance of effort
43 requirements established pursuant to
44 section 214 of the elder law, except for
45 base year expenditures. To the extent that
46 funds hereby appropriated are sufficient
5 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 to exceed the per capita limit established
2 in section 214 of the elder law, the
3 excess funds shall be available to supple-
4 ment the existing per capita level in a
5 uniform manner consistent with statutory
6 allocations.
7 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision
8 of law except pursuant to a chapter of the
9 laws of 2022 authorizing a 5.4 percent
10 cost of living adjustment, for the period
11 commencing on April 1, 2022 and ending
12 March 31, 2023 the director shall not
13 apply any other cost of living adjustment
14 for the purpose of establishing rates of
15 payments, contracts or any other form of
16 reimbursement (10318) ....................... 33,617,000
17 For planning and implementation, including
18 the payment of liabilities incurred prior
19 to April 1, 2022, of a program of expanded
20 in-home, case management and ancillary
21 community services for the elderly
22 (EISEP).
23 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision
24 of law to the contrary, including but not
25 limited to the state reimbursement and
26 county maintenance of effort requirements
27 specified in the elder law, up to
28 $15,000,000 of the funds appropriated
29 herein shall be used to address the unmet
30 needs of the elderly as reported to the
31 office for the aging through the reporting
32 requirements set forth in state elder law
33 section 214. Subject to the approval of
34 the director of the budget, up to
35 $15,000,000 hereby appropriated may be
36 interchanged or transferred with any other
37 general fund appropriation within the
38 office for the aging to address the unmet
39 needs of the elderly as reported to the
40 office for the aging through the reporting
41 requirements set forth in state elder law
42 section 214. The office for the aging
43 shall provide an annual report to the
44 governor, the temporary president of the
45 senate, and the speaker of the assembly by
46 September 1, 2023 that shall include the
47 area agencies on aging that have received
48 these funds, the amount of funds received
49 by each area agency on aging, the number
50 of participants served, and the services
51 provided.
6 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision
2 of law to the contrary, including but not
3 limited to the state reimbursement and
4 county maintenance of effort requirements
5 specified in the elder law, subject to the
6 approval of the director of the budget, up
7 to $2,000,000 of the amount appropriated
8 herein, may be transferred to state oper-
9 ations for the administration of programs.
10 No expenditures shall be made from this
11 appropriation until the director of the
12 budget has approved a plan submitted by
13 the office outlining the amounts and
14 purposes of such expenditures and the
15 allocation of funds among the counties,
16 including the city of New York.
17 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision
18 of law except pursuant to a chapter of the
19 laws of 2022 authorizing a 5.4 percent
20 cost of living adjustment, for the period
21 commencing on April 1, 2022 and ending
22 March 31, 2023 the director shall not
23 apply any other cost of living adjustment
24 for the purpose of establishing rates of
25 payments, contracts or any other form of
26 reimbursement (10319) ....................... 67,498,000
27 For services and expenses of grants to area
28 agencies on aging for the establishment
29 and operation of caregiver resource
30 centers (10321) ................................ 353,000
31 For services and expenses, including the
32 payment of liabilities incurred prior to
33 April 1, 2022, associated with the well-
34 ness in nutrition (WIN) program, formerly
35 known as the supplemental nutrition
36 assistance program (SNAP), including a
37 suballocation to the department of agri-
38 culture and markets to be transferred to
39 state operations for administrative costs
40 of the farmers market nutrition program.
41 Up to $200,000 of this appropriation may
42 be made available to the Council of Senior
43 Centers and Services of New York City to
44 provide outreach within the older adult
45 SNAP initiative. No expenditure shall be
46 made from this appropriation until the
47 director of the budget has approved a plan
48 submitted by the office outlining the
49 amounts and purpose of such expenditures
50 and the allocation of funds among the
51 counties.
7 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision
2 of law except pursuant to a chapter of the
3 laws of 2022 authorizing a 5.4 percent
4 cost of living adjustment, for the period
5 commencing on April 1, 2022 and ending
6 March 31, 2023 the director shall not
7 apply any other cost of living adjustment
8 for the purpose of establishing rates of
9 payments, contracts or any other form of
10 reimbursement (10322) ....................... 33,474,000
11 Local grants for services and expenses of
12 the long-term care ombudsman program
13 (10323) ...................................... 1,190,000
14 For state aid grants to providers of respite
15 services to the elderly. Funding priority
16 shall be given to the renewal of existing
17 contracts with the state office for the
18 aging. No expenditures shall be made from
19 this appropriation until the director of
20 the budget has approved a plan submitted
21 by the office outlining the amounts to be
22 distributed by provider (10328) ................ 656,000
23 For state aid grants to providers of social
24 model adult day services. Funding priority
25 shall be given to the renewal of existing
26 contracts with the state office for the
27 aging. No expenditures shall be made from
28 this appropriation until the director of
29 the budget has approved a plan submitted
30 by the office outlining the amounts to be
31 distributed by provider (10329) .............. 1,072,000
32 For state aid grants to naturally occurring
33 retirement communities (NORC). Funding
34 priority shall be given to the renewal of
35 existing contracts with the state office
36 for the aging. No expenditures shall be
37 made from this appropriation until the
38 director of the budget has approved a plan
39 submitted by the office outlining the
40 amounts to be distributed by provider
41 (10330) ...................................... 2,027,500
42 For state aid grants to neighborhood
43 naturally occurring retirement communities
44 (NNORC). Funding priority shall be given
45 to the renewal of existing contracts with
46 the state office for the aging. No expend-
47 itures shall be made from this appropri-
48 ation until the director of the budget has
49 approved a plan submitted by the office
50 outlining the amounts to be distributed by
51 provider any activities or provide any
52 services (10331) ............................. 2,027,500
8 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For grants in aid to the 59 designated area
2 agencies on aging for transportation oper-
3 ating expenses related to serving the
4 elderly. Funds shall be allocated from
5 this appropriation pursuant to a plan
6 prepared by the director of the state
7 office for the aging and approved by the
8 director of the budget (10885) ............... 1,121,000
9 For grants to the area agencies on aging for
10 the health insurance information, coun-
11 seling and assistance program (10335) ........ 1,000,000
12 For state matching funds for services and
13 expenses to match federally funded model
14 projects and/or demonstration grant
15 programs, a portion of which may be trans-
16 ferred to state operations or to other
17 entities as necessary to meet federal
18 grant objectives (10336) ....................... 175,000
19 For the managed care consumer assistance
20 program for the purpose of providing
21 education, outreach, one-on-one coun-
22 seling, monitoring of the implementation
23 of medicare part D, and assistance with
24 drug appeals and fair hearings related to
25 medicare part D coverage for persons who
26 are eligible for medical assistance and
27 who are also beneficiaries under part D of
28 title XVIII of the federal social security
29 act and for participants of the elderly
30 pharmaceutical insurance coverage program
31 (EPIC) in accordance with the following:
32 Medicare Rights Center (10340) ................... 793,000
33 New York StateWide Senior Action Council,
34 Inc. (10341) ................................... 354,000
35 New York Legal Assistance Group (10342) .......... 222,000
36 Legal Aid Society of New York (10343) ............ 111,000
37 Empire Justice Center (10345) .................... 155,000
38 Community Service Society (10346) ................ 132,000
39 For services and expenses of the retired and
40 senior volunteer program (RSVP) (10324) ........ 216,500
41 For services and expenses of the EAC/Nassau
42 senior respite program (10325) ................. 118,500
43 For services and expenses of the home aides
44 of central New York, Inc. senior respite
45 program (10326) ................................. 71,000
46 For services and expenses of the New York
47 foundation for senior citizens home shar-
48 ing and respite care program (10327) ............ 86,000
49 For services and expenses of the foster
50 grandparents program (10332) .................... 98,000
51 For services and expenses related to an
52 elderly abuse education and outreach
9 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 program in accordance with section 219 of
2 the elder law funding priority shall be
3 given to the renewal of existing contracts
4 with the state office for the aging
5 (10333) ........................................ 745,000
6 For services and expenses related to the
7 livable New York initiative to create
8 neighborhoods that consider the evolving
9 needs and preferences of all their resi-
10 dents (10866) .................................. 122,500
11 For services and expenses of the New York
12 state adult day services association, inc.
13 related to providing training and techni-
14 cal assistance to social adult day
15 services programs in New York state
16 regarding the quality of services (10867) ...... 122,500
17 For services and expenses related to the
18 congregate services initiative. No expend-
19 itures shall be made from this appropri-
20 ation until the director of the budget has
21 approved a plan submitted by the office
22 outlining the amounts and purposes of such
23 expenditures and the allocation of funds
24 among the counties (10320) ..................... 403,000
25 For services and expenses of New York State-
26 wide Senior Action Council, Inc. for the
27 patients' rights hotline and advocacy
28 project (10334) ................................. 31,500
29 For services and expenses for Lifespan of
30 Greater Rochester, Inc. for sustainability
31 and expansion of Enhanced Multi-Discipli-
32 nary Teams as implemented under the feder-
33 al Elder Abuse Preventions Interventions
34 Initiative and related data collection and
35 reporting (10833) .............................. 500,000
36 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision
37 of law, subject to the approval of the
38 director of the budget, up to the amount
39 appropriated herein, may be transferred to
40 the general fund state purposes account
41 for services and expenses of the Associ-
42 ation on Aging in New York State to
43 provide training, education and technical
44 assistance to the area agencies on aging
45 and aging network service contractor staff
46 for professional development which must
47 include but not be limited to developing
48 priority training needs of all aging
49 network staff, submitting an implementa-
50 tion plan for approval by the office for
51 the aging in advance, prioritizing expan-
52 sion of state certified aging network
10 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 staff, and developing contracts and vouch-
2 ers in a timely manner (10810) ................. 250,000
3 Notwithstanding subparagraph (1) of para-
4 graph (b) of subdivision 4 of section 214
5 of the elder law or any other provision of
6 law for additional services and expenses
7 related to the community services for the
8 elderly grant program (10301) ................ 1,500,000
9 For additional services and expenses for
10 state aid grants to naturally occurring
11 retirement communities (NORC). Funding
12 priority shall be given to supplemental
13 allocations to existing contracts (10800) .... 2,000,000
14 For additional services and expenses for
15 state aid grants to neighborhood naturally
16 occurring retirement communities (NNORC).
17 Funding priority shall be given to supple-
18 mental allocations to existing contracts
19 (10801) ...................................... 2,000,000
20 Notwithstanding subparagraph (1) of para-
21 graph (b) of subdivision 4 of section 214
22 of the elder law or any other provision of
23 law for additional services and expenses
24 related to the community services for the
25 elderly grant program (10303) .................. 750,000
26 For services and expenses of the Holocaust
27 Survivors Initiative. Funds shall be used
28 to support case management services for
29 holocaust survivors statewide and may
30 include, but not be limited to, mental
31 health services, trauma informed care,
32 crisis prevention, legal services and
33 entitlement counseling, emergency finan-
34 cial assistance for food, housing,
35 prescriptions, medical and dental care,
36 socialization programs, training and
37 support for caregivers and home health
38 aides working with survivors, and end of
39 life care including hospice and ethical
40 wills (10715) ................................ 1,000,000
41 For services and expenses related to the
42 development of a State Master Plan on
43 Aging.
44 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision
45 of law to the contrary, subject to the
46 approval of the director of the budget, up
47 to $500,000 of the amount appropriated
48 herein, may be transferred to state oper-
49 ations ......................................... 500,000
50 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision
51 of law to the contrary, including but not
52 limited to the state reimbursement and
11 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 county maintenance of effort requirements
2 specified in the elder law, up to
3 $8,000,000 of the funds appropriated here-
4 in shall be used to address the unmet
5 needs of the elderly as reported to the
6 office for the aging through the reporting
7 requirements set forth in state elder law
8 section 214. Subject to the approval of
9 the director of the budget, up to
10 $8,000,000 hereby appropriated may be
11 interchanged or transferred with any other
12 general fund appropriation within the
13 office for the aging to address the unmet
14 needs of the elderly as reported to the
15 office for the aging through the reporting
16 requirements set forth in state elder law
17 section 214. No expenditures shall be made
18 from this appropriation until the director
19 of the budget has approved a plan submit-
20 ted by the office outlining the amounts
21 and purposes of such expenditures and the
22 allocation of funds among the counties,
23 including the city of New York (10716) ....... 8,000,000
24 For services and expenses related to elder
25 abuse outreach, education and mitigation
26 of Lifespan of Great Rochester ................. 250,000
27 For services and expenses related to the
28 expansion of online classes for GetSetUp
29 to combat social isolation, improve health
30 and wellness and provide lifelong learning
31 opportunities .................................. 350,000
32 For services and expenses for Joy for All
33 Companion Pets to reduce social isolation ...... 350,000
34 For services and expenses related to the
35 expansion of online classes for Self Help,
36 Inc to combat social isolation, improve
37 health and wellness and provide lifelong
38 learning opportunities ......................... 200,000
39 For service and expenses for ElliQ related
40 to accessing digital technology and
41 assisting with accessing affordable inter-
42 net services for low-income older adults ....... 700,000
43 For services and expenses to TRUALTA for
44 caregiver training and supports ................ 400,000
45 For services and expenses for GoGo Grandpar-
46 ent for transportation expansion and
47 capacity building .............................. 500,000
48 For services and expenses to LTCOP and
49 HIICAP to expand stipend program to retain
50 volunteers ..................................... 150,000
51 For services and expenses of the Holocaust
52 Survivors Initiatives ........................ 1,600,000
12 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of Colonie Senior
2 Service Center ................................. 150,000
3 For additional services and expenses of the
4 New York foundation for senior citizens
5 home sharing and respite care program ........... 86,000
6 For additional services and expenses of the
7 long-term care ombudsman program ............. 2,500,000
8 For services and expenses for India Home .......... 50,000
9 For services and expenses for Jewish Associ-
10 ation for Services for the Aged Coney
11 Island ......................................... 100,000
12 For services and expenses for Jewish Associ-
13 ation for Services for the Aged for the
14 Bay Eden Senior Center .......................... 20,000
15 For additional services and expenses of
16 Lifespan of Greater Rochester, Inc ............. 375,000
17 For services and expenses for LiveOn NY .......... 200,000
18 For services and expenses for Metropolitan
19 NY Coordinating Council on Jewish Poverty ...... 900,000
20 For additional services and expenses for
21 state aid grants to naturally occurring
22 retirement communities (NORC) and neigh-
23 borhood naturally occurring retirement
24 communities (NNORC). Funding priority
25 shall be given to supplemental allocations
26 to existing contracts for nursing services ..... 825,000
27 For services and expenses of Older Adults
28 Technology Services, Inc ....................... 200,000
29 For services and expenses for Project Guar-
30 dianship ....................................... 112,000
31 For services and expenses of Regional Aid
32 for Interim Needs, Inc. ........................ 200,000
33 For services and expenses of Regional Aid
34 for Interim Needs, Inc. ........................ 665,000
35 For services and expenses of the SAGE LGBT
36 Welcoming Elder Housing Program ................ 100,000
37 For services and expenses for Saratoga
38 Senior Center ................................... 50,000
39 For services and expenses for SelfHelp ........... 100,000
40 For services and expenses for Sephardic
41 Bikur Holim Community Services Network .......... 75,000
42 For services and expenses for Services Now
43 for Adult Persons .............................. 100,000
44 For services and expenses for Spring Creek
45 Senior Partners (NORC) .......................... 50,000
46 For additional services and expenses of New
47 York Statewide Senior Action Council, Inc.
48 for the patients' rights hotline and advo-
49 cacy project ................................... 100,000
50 For services and expenses for Wayside Out-
51 Reach Development, Inc ......................... 100,000
13 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For services and expenses, grants in aid, or
2 for contracts with certain municipalities
3 and/or not-for-profit institutions for
4 various aging initiatives. Notwithstanding
5 section 24 of the state finance law or any
6 provision of law to the contrary, funds
7 from this appropriation shall be allocated
8 only pursuant to a plan (i) approved by
9 the speaker of the Assembly and the direc-
10 tor of the budget which sets forth either
11 an itemized list of grantees with the
12 amount to be received by each, or the
13 methodology for allocating such appropri-
14 ation, and (ii) which is thereafter
15 included in an Assembly resolution calling
16 for the expenditure of such funds, which
17 resolution must be approved by a majority
18 vote of all members elected to the Assem-
19 bly upon a roll call vote .................... 3,500,000
20 For services and expenses, grants in aid, or
21 for contracts with certain municipalities
22 and/or not-for-profit institutions.
23 Notwithstanding section 24 of the state
24 finance law or any provision of law to the
25 contrary, funds from this appropriation
26 shall be allocated only pursuant to a plan
27 (i) approved by the temporary president of
28 the senate and the director of the budget
29 which sets forth either an itemized list
30 of grantees with the amount to be received
31 by each, or the methodology for allocating
32 such appropriation, and (ii) which is
33 thereafter included in a senate resolution
34 calling for the expenditure of such funds,
35 which resolution must be approved by a
36 majority vote of all members elected to
37 the senate upon a roll call vote ............. 1,000,000
38 For additional services and expenses of New
39 York State Senior Action Council, Inc .......... 100,000
40 For additional services and expenses of the
41 center for Elder Law and Justice for the
42 prevention of elder abuse ...................... 325,000
43 For services and expenses of Gay, Lesbian,
44 Bisexual, and Transgender Elders (SAGE) ........ 200,000
45 For services and expenses of Jewish Communi-
46 ty Council of Greater Coney Island, Inc ........ 350,000
47 --------------
48 Program account subtotal ................. 181,525,500
49 --------------
50 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
51 Federal Health and Human Services Fund
14 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 FHHS Aid to Localities Account - 25177
2 For programs provided under the titles of
3 the federal older Americans act and other
4 health and human services programs.
5 Title III-b social services (10894) ........... 26,000,000
6 Title III-c nutrition programs, including a
7 suballocation to the department of health
8 to be transferred to state operations for
9 nutrition program activities (10893) ........ 41,385,000
10 Title III-e caregivers (10892) ................ 12,000,000
11 Health and human services programs (10891) ..... 9,000,000
12 Nutrition services incentive program (10890) .. 17,000,000
13 --------------
14 Program account subtotal ................. 105,385,000
15 --------------
16 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
17 Federal Miscellaneous Operating Grants Fund
18 Office for the Aging Federal Grants Account - 25300
19 For services and expenses related to the
20 provision of aging services programs
21 (10883) ........................................ 600,000
22 --------------
23 Program account subtotal ..................... 600,000
24 --------------
25 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
26 Federal Miscellaneous Operating Grants Fund
27 Senior Community Service Employment Account - 25444
28 For the senior community service employment
29 program provided under title V of the
30 federal older Americans act (10887) .......... 9,000,000
31 --------------
32 Program account subtotal ................... 9,000,000
33 --------------
34 Special Revenue Funds - Other
35 Combined Expendable Trust Fund
36 Aging Grants and Bequest Account - 20196
37 For services and expenses of the state
38 office for the aging (81034) ................... 980,000
39 --------------
40 Program account subtotal ..................... 980,000
41 --------------
15 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 COMMUNITY SERVICES PROGRAM
2 General Fund
3 Local Assistance Account - 10000
4 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
5 For services and expenses, including the payment of liabilities
6 incurred prior to April 1, 2021, related to the community services
7 for the elderly grant program. Notwithstanding subparagraph (1) of
8 paragraph (b) of subdivision 4 of section 214 of the elder law and
9 any other provision of law to the contrary, up to $3,500,000 of the
10 funds appropriated herein may, at the discretion of the director of
11 the budget, be used by the state to reimburse counties for more than
12 the 75 percent of the total annual expenditures of approved communi-
13 ty services for the elderly programs. No expenditures shall be made
14 from this appropriation until the director of the budget has
15 approved a plan submitted by the office outlining the amounts and
16 purposes of such expenditures and the allocation of funds among the
17 counties. Notwithstanding any provision of law, rule or regulation
18 to the contrary, subject to the approval of the director of the
19 budget, funds appropriated herein for the community services for the
20 elderly program (CSE) and the expanded in-home services for the
21 elderly program (EISEP) may be used in accordance with a waiver or
22 reduction in county maintenance of effort requirements established
23 pursuant to section 214 of the elder law, except for base year
24 expenditures. To the extent that funds hereby appropriated are
25 sufficient to exceed the per capita limit established in section 214
26 of the elder law, the excess funds shall be available to supplement
27 the existing per capita level in a uniform manner consistent with
28 statutory allocations.
29 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law except a chapter of
30 the laws of 2021 authorizing a 1 percent cost of living adjustment
31 increase, but including section 1 of part C of chapter 57 of the
32 laws of 2006, as amended by section 1 of part I of chapter 60 of the
33 laws of 2014, for the period commencing on April 1, 2021 and ending
34 March 31, 2022 the director shall not apply any other cost of living
35 adjustment for the purpose of establishing rates of payments,
36 contracts or any other form of reimbursement (10318) ...............
37 29,801,000 ....................................... (re. $28,990,000)
38 For planning and implementation, including the payment of liabilities
39 incurred prior to April 1, 2021, of a program of expanded in-home,
40 case management and ancillary community services for the elderly
41 (EISEP).
42 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law to the contrary,
43 including but not limited to the state reimbursement and county
44 maintenance of effort requirements specified in the elder law, up to
45 $15,000,000 of the funds appropriated herein shall be used to
46 address the unmet needs of the elderly as reported to the office for
47 the aging through the reporting requirements set forth in state
48 elder law section 214. Subject to the approval of the director of
49 the budget, up to $15,000,000 hereby appropriated may be inter-
50 changed or transferred with any other general fund appropriation
16 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 within the office for the aging to address the unmet needs of the
2 elderly as reported to the office for the aging through the report-
3 ing requirements set forth in state elder law section 214. The
4 office for the aging shall provide an annual report to the governor,
5 the temporary president of the senate, and the speaker of the assem-
6 bly by September 1, 2022 that shall include the area agencies on
7 aging that have received these funds, the amount of funds received
8 by each area agency on aging, the number of participants served, and
9 the services provided.
10 No expenditures shall be made from this appropriation until the direc-
11 tor of the budget has approved a plan submitted by the office
12 outlining the amounts and purposes of such expenditures and the
13 allocation of funds among the counties, including the city of New
14 York.
15 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law except a chapter of
16 the laws of 2021 authorizing a 1 percent cost of living adjustment
17 increase, but including section 1 of part C of chapter 57 of the
18 laws of 2006, as amended by section 1 of part I of chapter 60 of the
19 laws of 2014, for the period commencing on April 1, 2021 and ending
20 March 31, 2022 the director shall not apply any other cost of living
21 adjustment for the purpose of establishing rates of payments,
22 contracts or any other form of reimbursement (10319) ...............
23 65,120,000 ....................................... (re. $62,485,000)
24 For services and expenses of grants to area agencies on aging for the
25 establishment and operation of caregiver resource centers (10321)
26 ... 353,000 ......................................... (re. $304,000)
27 For services and expenses, including the payment of liabilities
28 incurred prior to April 1, 2021, associated with the wellness in
29 nutrition (WIN) program, formerly known as the supplemental nutri-
30 tion assistance program (SNAP), including a suballocation to the
31 department of agriculture and markets to be transferred to state
32 operations for administrative costs of the farmers market nutrition
33 program. Up to $200,000 of this appropriation may be made available
34 to the Council of Senior Centers and Services of New York City to
35 provide outreach within the older adult SNAP initiative. No expendi-
36 ture shall be made from this appropriation until the director of the
37 budget has approved a plan submitted by the office outlining the
38 amounts and purpose of such expenditures and the allocation of funds
39 among the counties.
40 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law except a chapter of
41 the laws of 2021 authorizing a 1 percent cost of living adjustment
42 increase, but including section 1 of part C of chapter 57 of the
43 laws of 2006, as amended by section 1 of part I of chapter 60 of the
44 laws of 2014, for the period commencing on April 1, 2021 and ending
45 March 31, 2022 the director shall not apply any other cost of living
46 adjustment for the purpose of establishing rates of payments,
47 contracts or any other form of reimbursement (10322) ...............
48 28,281,000 ....................................... (re. $26,663,000)
49 Local grants for services and expenses of the long-term care ombudsman
50 program (10323) ... 1,190,000 ..................... (re. $1,083,000)
51 For state aid grants to providers of respite services to the elderly.
52 Funding priority shall be given to the renewal of existing contracts
17 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 with the state office for the aging. No expenditures shall be made
2 from this appropriation until the director of the budget has
3 approved a plan submitted by the office outlining the amounts to be
4 distributed by provider (10328) ... 656,000 ......... (re. $656,000)
5 For state aid grants to providers of social model adult day services.
6 Funding priority shall be given to the renewal of existing contracts
7 with the state office for the aging. No expenditures shall be made
8 from this appropriation until the director of the budget has
9 approved a plan submitted by the office outlining the amounts to be
10 distributed by provider (10329) ... 1,072,000 ..... (re. $1,072,000)
11 For state aid grants to naturally occurring retirement communities
12 (NORC). Funding priority shall be given to the renewal of existing
13 contracts with the state office for the aging. No expenditures shall
14 be made from this appropriation until the director of the budget has
15 approved a plan submitted by the office outlining the amounts to be
16 distributed by provider (10330) ... 2,027,500 ..... (re. $2,027,500)
17 For state aid grants to neighborhood naturally occurring retirement
18 communities (NNORC). Funding priority shall be given to the renewal
19 of existing contracts with the state office for the aging. No
20 expenditures shall be made from this appropriation until the direc-
21 tor of the budget has approved a plan submitted by the office
22 outlining the amounts to be distributed by provider any activities
23 or provide any services (10331) ... 2,027,500 ..... (re. $2,027,500)
24 For grants in aid to the 59 designated area agencies on aging for
25 transportation operating expenses related to serving the elderly.
26 Funds shall be allocated from this appropriation pursuant to a plan
27 prepared by the director of the state office for the aging and
28 approved by the director of the budget (10885) .....................
29 1,121,000 ......................................... (re. $1,053,000)
30 For grants to the area agencies on aging for the health insurance
31 information, counseling and assistance program (10335) .............
32 1,000,000 ......................................... (re. $1,000,000)
33 For state matching funds for services and expenses to match federally
34 funded model projects and/or demonstration grant programs, a portion
35 of which may be transferred to state operations or to other entities
36 as necessary to meet federal grant objectives (10336) ..............
37 175,000 ............................................. (re. $175,000)
38 For the managed care consumer assistance program for the purpose of
39 providing education, outreach, one-on-one counseling, monitoring of
40 the implementation of medicare part D, and assistance with drug
41 appeals and fair hearings related to medicare part D coverage for
42 persons who are eligible for medical assistance and who are also
43 beneficiaries under part D of title XVIII of the federal social
44 security act and for participants of the elderly pharmaceutical
45 insurance coverage program (EPIC) in accordance with the following:
46 Medicare Rights Center (10340) ... 793,000 ............ (re. $595,000)
47 New York StateWide Senior Action Council, Inc. (10341) ...............
48 354,000 ............................................. (re. $194,000)
49 New York Legal Assistance Group (10342) ... 222,000 ... (re. $113,000)
50 Legal Aid Society of New York (10343) ... 111,000 ..... (re. $111,000)
51 Empire Justice Center (10345) ... 155,000 ............. (re. $155,000)
52 Community Service Society (10346) ... 132,000 ......... (re. $132,000)
18 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of the retired and senior volunteer program
2 (RSVP) (10324) ... 216,500 .......................... (re. $216,500)
3 For services and expenses of the EAC/Nassau senior respite program
4 (10325) ... 118,500 .................................. (re. $93,000)
5 For services and expenses of the home aides of central New York, Inc.
6 senior respite program (10326) ... 71,000 ............ (re. $71,000)
7 For services and expenses of the New York foundation for senior citi-
8 zens home sharing and respite care program (10327) .................
9 86,000 ............................................... (re. $86,000)
10 For services and expenses of the foster grandparents program (10332)
11 ... 98,000 ........................................... (re. $98,000)
12 For services and expenses related to an elderly abuse education and
13 outreach program in accordance with section 219 of the elder law
14 funding priority shall be given to the renewal of existing contracts
15 with the state office for the aging (10333) ........................
16 745,000 ............................................. (re. $745,000)
17 For services and expenses related to the livable New York initiative
18 to create neighborhoods that consider the evolving needs and prefer-
19 ences of all their residents (10866) ...............................
20 122,500 ............................................. (re. $122,500)
21 For services and expenses of the New York state adult day services
22 association, inc. related to providing training and technical
23 assistance to social adult day services programs in New York state
24 regarding the quality of services (10867) ..........................
25 122,500 ............................................. (re. $122,500)
26 For services and expenses related to the congregate services initi-
27 ative. No expenditures shall be made from this appropriation until
28 the director of the budget has approved a plan submitted by the
29 office outlining the amounts and purposes of such expenditures and
30 the allocation of funds among the counties (10320) .................
31 403,000 ............................................. (re. $393,000)
32 For services and expenses of New York Statewide Senior Action Council,
33 Inc. for the patients' rights hotline and advocacy project (10334)
34 ... 31,500 ........................................... (re. $31,500)
35 For services and expenses for Lifespan of Greater Rochester, Inc. for
36 sustainability and expansion of Enhanced Multi-Disciplinary Teams as
37 implemented under the federal Elder Abuse Preventions Interventions
38 Initiative and related data collection and reporting (10833) .......
39 500,000 ............................................. (re. $500,000)
40 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, subject to the
41 approval of the director of the budget, up to the amount appropri-
42 ated herein, may be transferred to the general fund state purposes
43 account for services and expenses of the Association on Aging in New
44 York State to provide training, education and technical assistance
45 to the area agencies on aging and aging network service contractor
46 staff for professional development which must include but not be
47 limited to developing priority training needs of all aging network
48 staff, submitting an implementation plan for approval by the office
49 for the aging in advance, prioritizing expansion of state certified
50 aging network staff, and developing contracts and vouchers in a
51 timely manner (10810) ... 250,000 ................... (re. $250,000)
19 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 Notwithstanding subparagraph (1) of paragraph (b) of subdivision 4 of
2 section 214 of the elder law or any other provision of law for addi-
3 tional services and expenses related to the community services for
4 the elderly grant program (10301) ..................................
5 1,500,000 ......................................... (re. $1,500,000)
6 For additional services and expenses for state aid grants to naturally
7 occurring retirement communities (NORC). Funding priority shall be
8 given to supplemental allocations to existing contracts (10800) ...
9 2,000,000 ......................................... (re. $2,000,000)
10 For additional services and expenses for state aid grants to neighbor-
11 hood naturally occurring retirement communities (NNORC). Funding
12 priority shall be given to supplemental allocations to existing
13 contracts (10801) ... 2,000,000 ................... (re. $2,000,000)
14 Notwithstanding subparagraph (1) of paragraph (b) of subdivision 4 of
15 section 214 of the elder law or any other provision of law for addi-
16 tional services and expenses related to the community services for
17 the elderly grant program (10303) ... 750,000 ....... (re. $750,000)
18 For services and expenses, grants in aid, or for contracts with
19 certain municipalities and/or not-for-profit institutions. Notwith-
20 standing section twenty-four of the state finance law or any
21 provision of law to the contrary, funds from this appropriation
22 shall be allocated only pursuant to a plan approved by the speaker
23 of the assembly and the director of the budget which sets forth
24 either an itemized list of grantees with the amount to be received
25 by each, or the methodology for allocating such appropriation
26 (10714) ... 4,000,000 ............................. (re. $3,990,000)
27 For services and expenses of the Holocaust Survivors Initiative. Funds
28 shall be used to support case management services for holocaust
29 survivors statewide and may include, but not be limited to, mental
30 health services, trauma informed care, crisis prevention, legal
31 services and entitlement counseling, emergency financial assistance
32 for food, housing, prescriptions, medical and dental care, sociali-
33 zation programs, training and support for caregivers and home health
34 aides working with survivors, and end of life care including hospice
35 and ethical wills (10715) ... 1,000,000 ........... (re. $1,000,000)
36 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law to the contrary,
37 including but not limited to the state reimbursement and county
38 maintenance of effort requirements specified in the elder law, up to
39 $8,000,000 of the funds appropriated herein shall be used to address
40 the unmet needs of the elderly as reported to the office for the
41 aging through the reporting requirements set forth in state elder
42 law section 214. Subject to the approval of the director of the
43 budget, up to $8,000,000 hereby appropriated may be interchanged or
44 transferred with any other general fund appropriation within the
45 office for the aging to address the unmet needs of the elderly as
46 reported to the office for the aging through the reporting require-
47 ments set forth in state elder law section 214. No expenditures
48 shall be made from this appropriation until the director of the
49 budget has approved a plan submitted by the office outlining the
50 amounts and purposes of such expenditures and the allocation of
51 funds among the counties, including the city of New York (10716) ...
52 8,000,000 ......................................... (re. $8,000,000)
20 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For additional services and expenses of the center for Elder Law and
2 Justice for the prevention of elder abuse (10713) ..................
3 175,000 ............................................. (re. $175,000)
4 For additional services and expenses of the New York foundation for
5 senior citizens home sharing and respite care program (10306) ......
6 86,000 ............................................... (re. $86,000)
7 For services and expenses of the Holocaust Survivors Initiative
8 (10703) ... 350,000 ................................. (re. $300,000)
9 For services and expenses of Jewish Association for Services for the
10 Aged for the Bay Eden Senior Center (10849) ........................
11 20,000 ............................................... (re. $20,000)
12 For services and expenses of Jewish Community Council of Greater Coney
13 Island, Inc (10719) ... 50,000 ....................... (re. $50,000)
14 For services and expenses of Lifespan of Greater Rochester, Inc
15 (10847) ... 250,000 ................................. (re. $215,000)
16 For services and expenses of LiveOn-NY (10842) .......................
17 200,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
18 For additional local grants for services and expenses of the long-term
19 care ombudsman program (10878) ... 250,000 .......... (re. $250,000)
20 For additional services and expenses for state aid grants to naturally
21 occurring retirement communities (NORC) and neighborhood naturally
22 occurring retirement communities (NNORC). Funding priority shall be
23 given to supplemental allocations to existing contracts for nursing
24 services (10717) ... 675,000 ........................ (re. $675,000)
25 For services and expenses of Regional Aid for Interim Needs, Inc.
26 (10852) ... 200,000 ................................. (re. $200,000)
27 For services and expenses of the SAGE LGBT Welcoming Elder Housing
28 program (10701) ... 100,000 ......................... (re. $100,000)
29 For additional services and expenses of the New York Statewide Senior
30 Action Council, Inc. for the patients' rights hotline and advocacy
31 project (10305) ... 100,000 ......................... (re. $100,000)
32 For services and expenses for Visiting Neighbors, Inc (10718) ........
33 15,000 ............................................... (re. $15,000)
34 For services and expenses for Wayside Out-Reach Development, Inc.
35 (10846) ... 100,000 ................................. (re. $100,000)
36 For services and expenses for the An-Noor Social Center (10723) ......
37 10,000 ............................................... (re. $10,000)
38 For services and expenses for Haber House Senior Center (10724) ......
39 10,000 ............................................... (re. $10,000)
40 For services and expenses for Jewish Community Council of Greater
41 Coney Island (Jay Harama Senior Center) (10725) ....................
42 10,000 ............................................... (re. $10,000)
43 For services and expenses for Newtown Senior Center (10706) ..........
44 10,000 ............................................... (re. $10,000)
45 For services and expenses for SelfHelp (10727) .......................
46 10,000 ............................................... (re. $10,000)
47 For services and expenses for Pete McGuiness Senior Center in Green-
48 point (10728) ... 18,000 ............................. (re. $18,000)
49 For services and expenses for HANAC, Inc (10829) .....................
50 20,000 ............................................... (re. $20,000)
51 For services and expenses of Harlem Advocates for Seniors, Inc (10705)
52 ... 20,000 ........................................... (re. $20,000)
21 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses for India Home (10726) .....................
2 30,000 ............................................... (re. $30,000)
3 For services and expenses for Interfaith Works (10729) ...............
4 25,000 ............................................... (re. $25,000)
5 For services and expenses for Tropicalfete, Inc. (10730) .............
6 25,000 ............................................... (re. $25,000)
7 For services and expenses for Vision Urbana (10731) ..................
8 25,000 ............................................... (re. $25,000)
9 For services and expenses for The William Hodson Senior Center (10732)
10 ... 30,000 ........................................... (re. $30,000)
11 For services and expenses for Guardianship Corp (10733) ..............
12 40,000 ............................................... (re. $40,000)
13 For services and expenses for Louis S. Wolk Jewish Community Center
14 (10734) ... 50,000 ................................... (re. $50,000)
15 For services and expenses of Regional Aid for Interim Needs, Inc
16 (10711) ... 90,000 ................................... (re. $90,000)
17 For services and expenses of Jewish Association for Services for the
18 Aged (10837) ... 90,000 .............................. (re. $90,000)
19 For services and expenses of Riverdale Senior Services, Inc (10309)
20 ... 110,000 ......................................... (re. $110,000)
21 For services and expenses of Selfhelp Clearview Senior Center (10707)
22 ... 95,000 ........................................... (re. $95,000)
23 For additional services and expenses of the New York Statewide Senior
24 Action Council, Inc. for the patients' rights hotline and advocacy
25 project (10710) ... 100,000 ......................... (re. $100,000)
26 For services and expenses of the Bay Ridge Center, Inc (10856) .......
27 100,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
28 For additional services and expenses of Lifespan of Greater Rochester,
29 Inc. (10709) ... 125,000 ............................ (re. $125,000)
30 For services and expenses of Samuel Field YM and YWHA, Inc. (10825)
31 ... 125,000 ......................................... (re. $125,000)
32 For services and expenses of the Holocaust Survivors Initiative
33 (10712) ... 150,000 ................................. (re. $150,000)
34 For additional services and expenses of the center for Elder Law and
35 Justice for the prevention of elder abuse (10708) ..................
36 175,000 ............................................. (re. $175,000)
37 For services and expenses for Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender
38 Elders (SAGE) (10830) ... 200,000 ................... (re. $200,000)
39 For services and expenses for Search and Care, Inc (10720) ...........
40 225,000 ............................................. (re. $225,000)
41 For services and expenses of Jewish Community Council of Greater Coney
42 Island, Inc (10823) ... 250,000 ..................... (re. $250,000)
43 For additional services and expenses for state aid grants to naturally
44 occurring retirement communities (NORC) and neighborhood naturally
45 occurring retirement communities (NNORC). Funding priority shall be
46 given to supplemental allocations to existing contracts for nursing
47 services (10721) ... 325,000 ........................ (re. $325,000)
48 For services and expenses of the state office for the aging to imple-
49 ment subdivision 3-c of section 1 of part C of chapter 57 of the
50 laws of 2006, as amended by part I of chapter 60 of the laws of
51 2014, by part Q chapter 57 of the laws of 2017, by part N of chapter
52 57 of the laws of 2018, and by part Y of chapter 57 of the laws of
22 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 2019, to provide funding for a cost of living adjustment for the
2 purpose of establishing rates of payments, contracts or any other
3 form of reimbursement increases for the period April 1, 2021 through
4 March 31, 2022. Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the
5 contrary, and subject to the approval of the director of the budget,
6 the amounts appropriated herein may be increased or decreased by
7 interchange or transfer without limit to any local assistance appro-
8 priation, and may include advances to local governments and volun-
9 tary agencies, to accomplish this purpose (10722) ..................
10 2,022,013 ......................................... (re. $2,022,013)
11 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
12 For services and expenses, including the payment of liabilities
13 incurred prior to April 1, 2020, related to the community services
14 for the elderly grant program. Notwithstanding subparagraph (1) of
15 paragraph (b) of subdivision 4 of section 214 of the elder law and
16 any other provision of law to the contrary, up to $3,500,000 of the
17 funds appropriated herein may, at the discretion of the director of
18 the budget, be used by the state to reimburse counties for more than
19 the 75 percent of the total annual expenditures of approved communi-
20 ty services for the elderly programs. No expenditures shall be made
21 from this appropriation until the director of the budget has
22 approved a plan submitted by the office outlining the amounts and
23 purposes of such expenditures and the allocation of funds among the
24 counties. Notwithstanding any provision of law, rule or regulation
25 to the contrary, subject to the approval of the director of the
26 budget, funds appropriated herein for the community services for the
27 elderly program (CSE) and the expanded in-home services for the
28 elderly program (EISEP) may be used in accordance with a waiver or
29 reduction in county maintenance of effort requirements established
30 pursuant to section 214 of the elder law, except for base year
31 expenditures. To the extent that funds hereby appropriated are
32 sufficient to exceed the per capita limit established in section 214
33 of the elder law, the excess funds shall be available to supplement
34 the existing per capita level in a uniform manner consistent with
35 statutory allocations.
36 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, including section 1
37 of part C of chapter 57 of the laws of 2006, as amended by section 1
38 of part I of chapter 60 of the laws of 2014, for the period commenc-
39 ing on April 1, 2020 and ending March 31, 2021 the director shall
40 not apply any cost of living adjustment for the purpose of estab-
41 lishing rates of payments, contracts or any other form of reimburse-
42 ment (10318) ... 29,801,000 ....................... (re. $2,426,000)
43 For planning and implementation, including the payment of liabilities
44 incurred prior to April 1, 2020, of a program of expanded in-home,
45 case management and ancillary community services for the elderly
46 (EISEP).
47 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law to the contrary,
48 including but not limited to the state reimbursement and county
49 maintenance of effort requirements specified in the elder law, up to
50 $15,000,000 of the funds appropriated herein shall be used to
51 address the unmet needs of the elderly as reported to the office for
23 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 the aging through the reporting requirements set forth in state
2 elder law section 214. Subject to the approval of the director of
3 the budget, up to $15,000,000 hereby appropriated may be inter-
4 changed or transferred with any other general fund appropriation
5 within the office for the aging to address the unmet needs of the
6 elderly as reported to the office for the aging through the report-
7 ing requirements set forth in state elder law section 214. The
8 office for the aging shall provide an annual report to the governor,
9 the temporary president of the senate, and the speaker of the assem-
10 bly by September 1, 2021 that shall include the area agencies on
11 aging that have received these funds, the amount of funds received
12 by each area agency on aging, the number of participants served, and
13 the services provided.
14 No expenditures shall be made from this appropriation until the direc-
15 tor of the budget has approved a plan submitted by the office
16 outlining the amounts and purposes of such expenditures and the
17 allocation of funds among the counties, including the city of New
18 York.
19 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, including section 1
20 of part C of chapter 57 of the laws of 2006, as amended by section 1
21 of part I of chapter 60 of the laws of 2014, for the period commenc-
22 ing on April 1, 2020 and ending March 31, 2021 the director shall
23 not apply any cost of living adjustment for the purpose of estab-
24 lishing rates of payments, contracts or any other form of reimburse-
25 ment (10319) ... 65,120,000 ....................... (re. $7,372,000)
26 For services and expenses, including the payment of liabilities
27 incurred prior to April 1, 2020, associated with the wellness in
28 nutrition (WIN) program, formerly known as the supplemental nutri-
29 tion assistance program (SNAP), including a suballocation to the
30 department of agriculture and markets to be transferred to state
31 operations for administrative costs of the farmers market nutrition
32 program. Up to $200,000 of this appropriation may be made available
33 to the Council of Senior Centers and Services of New York City to
34 provide outreach within the older adult SNAP initiative. No expendi-
35 ture shall be made from this appropriation until the director of the
36 budget has approved a plan submitted by the office outlining the
37 amounts and purpose of such expenditures and the allocation of funds
38 among the counties.
39 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, including section 1
40 of part C of chapter 57 of the laws of 2006, as amended by section 1
41 of part I of chapter 60 of the laws of 2014, for the period commenc-
42 ing on April 1, 2020 and ending March 31, 2021 the director shall
43 not apply any cost of living adjustment for the purpose of estab-
44 lishing rates of payments, contracts or any other form of reimburse-
45 ment (10322) ... 28,281,000 ....................... (re. $1,555,000)
46 Local grants for services and expenses of the long-term care ombudsman
47 program (10323) ... 1,190,000 ....................... (re. $542,000)
48 For state aid grants to providers of respite services to the elderly.
49 Funding priority shall be given to the renewal of existing contracts
50 with the state office for the aging. No expenditures shall be made
51 from this appropriation until the director of the budget has
24 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 approved a plan submitted by the office outlining the amounts to be
2 distributed by provider (10328) ... 656,000 ......... (re. $514,000)
3 For state aid grants to providers of social model adult day services.
4 Funding priority shall be given to the renewal of existing contracts
5 with the state office for the aging. No expenditures shall be made
6 from this appropriation until the director of the budget has
7 approved a plan submitted by the office outlining the amounts to be
8 distributed by provider (10329) ... 1,072,000 ....... (re. $696,000)
9 For state aid grants to naturally occurring retirement communities
10 (NORC). Funding priority shall be given to the renewal of existing
11 contracts with the state office for the aging. No expenditures shall
12 be made from this appropriation until the director of the budget has
13 approved a plan submitted by the office outlining the amounts to be
14 distributed by provider (10330) ... 2,027,500 ..... (re. $2,027,500)
15 For state aid grants to neighborhood naturally occurring retirement
16 communities (NNORC). Funding priority shall be given to the renewal
17 of existing contracts with the state office for the aging. No
18 expenditures shall be made from this appropriation until the direc-
19 tor of the budget has approved a plan submitted by the office
20 outlining the amounts to be distributed by provider any activities
21 or provide any services (10331) ... 2,027,500 ..... (re. $1,976,000)
22 For grants in aid to the 59 designated area agencies on aging for
23 transportation operating expenses related to serving the elderly.
24 Funds shall be allocated from this appropriation pursuant to a plan
25 prepared by the director of the state office for the aging and
26 approved by the director of the budget (10885) .....................
27 1,121,000 ............................................ (re. $36,000)
28 For grants to the area agencies on aging for the health insurance
29 information, counseling and assistance program (10335) .............
30 1,000,000 ........................................... (re. $273,000)
31 For state matching funds for services and expenses to match federally
32 funded model projects and/or demonstration grant programs, a portion
33 of which may be transferred to state operations or to other entities
34 as necessary to meet federal grant objectives (10336) ..............
35 175,000 ............................................. (re. $175,000)
36 For the managed care consumer assistance program for the purpose of
37 providing education, outreach, one-on-one counseling, monitoring of
38 the implementation of medicare part D, and assistance with drug
39 appeals and fair hearings related to medicare part D coverage for
40 persons who are eligible for medical assistance and who are also
41 beneficiaries under part D of title XVIII of the federal social
42 security act and for participants of the elderly pharmaceutical
43 insurance coverage program (EPIC) in accordance with the following:
44 New York StateWide Senior Action Council, Inc. (10341) ...............
45 354,000 .............................................. (re. $99,501)
46 Legal Aid Society of New York (10343) ... 111,000 ...... (re. $84,000)
47 Empire Justice Center (10345) ... 155,000 .............. (re. $32,000)
48 Community Service Society (10346) ... 132,000 .......... (re. $65,000)
49 For services and expenses of the retired and senior volunteer program
50 (RSVP) (10324) ... 216,500 ........................... (re. $14,000)
51 For services and expenses of the EAC/Nassau senior respite program
52 (10325) ... 118,500 .................................. (re. $10,000)
25 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of the home aides of central New York, Inc.
2 senior respite program (10326) ... 71,000 ............. (re. $5,000)
3 For services and expenses of the New York foundation for senior citi-
4 zens home sharing and respite care program (10327) .................
5 86,000 ............................................... (re. $86,000)
6 For services and expenses of the foster grandparents program (10332)
7 ... 98,000 ........................................... (re. $46,000)
8 For services and expenses related to an elderly abuse education and
9 outreach program in accordance with section 219 of the elder law
10 funding priority shall be given to the renewal of existing contracts
11 with the state office for the aging (10333) ........................
12 745,000 ............................................. (re. $383,000)
13 For services and expenses related to the livable New York initiative
14 to create neighborhoods that consider the evolving needs and prefer-
15 ences of all their residents (10866) ...............................
16 122,500 ............................................. (re. $122,500)
17 For services and expenses of the New York state adult day services
18 association, inc. related to providing training and technical
19 assistance to social adult day services programs in New York state
20 regarding the quality of services (10867) ..........................
21 122,500 ............................................. (re. $122,500)
22 For services and expenses related to the congregate services initi-
23 ative. No expenditures shall be made from this appropriation until
24 the director of the budget has approved a plan submitted by the
25 office outlining the amounts and purposes of such expenditures and
26 the allocation of funds among the counties (10320) .................
27 403,000 .............................................. (re. $47,000)
28 For services and expenses of New York Statewide Senior Action Council,
29 Inc. for the patients' rights hotline and advocacy project (10334)
30 ... 31,500 ........................................... (re. $31,500)
31 For services and expenses for Lifespan of Greater Rochester, Inc. for
32 sustainability and expansion of Enhanced Multi-Disciplinary Teams as
33 implemented under the federal Elder Abuse Preventions Interventions
34 Initiative and related data collection and reporting (10833) .......
35 500,000 ............................................. (re. $377,000)
36 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, subject to the
37 approval of the director of the budget, up to the amount appropri-
38 ated herein, may be transferred to the general fund state purposes
39 account for services and expenses of the Association on Aging in New
40 York State to provide training, education and technical assistance
41 to the area agencies on aging and aging network service contractor
42 staff for professional development which must include but not be
43 limited to developing priority training needs of all aging network
44 staff, submitting an implementation plan for approval by the office
45 for the aging in advance, prioritizing expansion of state certified
46 aging network staff, and developing contracts and vouchers in a
47 timely manner (10810) ... 250,000 ................... (re. $183,000)
48 For additional services and expenses for state aid grants to naturally
49 occurring retirement communities (NORC). Funding priority shall be
50 given to supplemental allocations to existing contracts (10800) ...
51 2,000,000 ......................................... (re. $2,000,000)
26 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For additional services and expenses for state aid grants to neighbor-
2 hood naturally occurring retirement communities (NNORC). Funding
3 priority shall be given to supplemental allocations to existing
4 contracts (10801) ... 2,000,000 ................... (re. $1,891,000)
5 For additional services and expenses of the New York foundation for
6 senior citizens home sharing and respite care program (10306) ......
7 86,000 ............................................... (re. $86,000)
8 For services and expenses of the Holocaust Survivors Initiatives
9 (10703) ... 300,000 ................................. (re. $300,000)
10 For services and expenses of Jewish Association for Services for the
11 Aged for the Bay Eden Senior Center (10849) ........................
12 20,000 ............................................... (re. $20,000)
13 For services and expenses of Lifespan of Greater Rochester, Inc
14 (10847) ... 215,000 ................................. (re. $215,000)
15 For services and expenses of LiveOn-NY (10842) .......................
16 100,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
17 For services and expenses of Older Adults Technology Services, Inc
18 (10835) ... 200,000 ................................. (re. $200,000)
19 For services and expenses of Regional Aid for Interim Needs, Inc.
20 (10852) ... 200,000 ................................. (re. $200,000)
21 For services and expenses of the SAGE LGBT Welcoming Elder Housing
22 program (10701) ... 100,000 ......................... (re. $100,000)
23 For additional services and expenses of the New York Statewide Senior
24 Action Council, Inc. for the patients' rights hotline and advocacy
25 project (10305) ... 100,000 ......................... (re. $100,000)
26 For services and expenses of the Holocaust Survivors Initiative
27 (10712) ... 150,000 ................................. (re. $150,000)
28 For additional services and expenses of the center for Elder Law and
29 Justice for the prevention of elder abuse (10713) ..................
30 175,000 ............................................. (re. $175,000)
31 For services and expenses related to providing state aid grants to
32 fund "eligible services," including but not limited to health care
33 management and assistance and/or health promotion and linkages to
34 prevention services and screenings, at naturally occurring retire-
35 ment communities (NORC) and neighborhood naturally occurring retire-
36 ment communities (NNORC) as required by section 209 of the Elder
37 Law. Funding priority shall be given to supplemental allocations to
38 existing contracts (10864) ... 325,000 .............. (re. $325,000)
39 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020, as added by chapter 50,
40 section 4, of the laws of 2020:
41 For services and expenses of Regional Aid for Interim Needs, Inc
42 (10711) ... 90,000 ................................... (re. $90,000)
43 For services and expenses of Riverdale Senior Services, Inc (10309)
44 ... 90,000 ........................................... (re. $90,000)
45 For services and expenses of the Bay Ridge Center, Inc (10856) .......
46 100,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
47 For services and expenses of Selfhelp Clearview Senior Center (10707)
48 110,000 ............................................. (re. $110,000)
49 For additional services and expenses of the New York Statewide Senior
50 Action Council, Inc. for the patients' rights hotline and advocacy
51 project (10710) ... 100,000 ......................... (re. $100,000)
27 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of Lifespan of Greater Rochester, Inc.
2 (10709) ... 125,000 ................................. (re. $125,000)
3 For services and expenses for Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender
4 Elders (SAGE) (10830) ... 200,000 ................... (re. $200,000)
5 For services and expenses of Jewish Community Council of Greater Coney
6 Island, Inc. (10823) ... 250,000 .................... (re. $250,000)
7 For services and expenses of Jewish Association for Services for the
8 Aged (10837) ... 90,000 .............................. (re. $90,000)
9 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
10 For services and expenses, including the payment of liabilities
11 incurred prior to April 1, 2019, related to the community services
12 for the elderly grant program. Notwithstanding subparagraph (1) of
13 paragraph (b) of subdivision 4 of section 214 of the elder law and
14 any other provision of law to the contrary, up to $3,500,000 of the
15 funds appropriated herein may, at the discretion of the director of
16 the budget, be used by the state to reimburse counties for more than
17 the 75 percent of the total annual expenditures of approved communi-
18 ty services for the elderly programs. No expenditures shall be made
19 from this appropriation until the director of the budget has
20 approved a plan submitted by the office outlining the amounts and
21 purposes of such expenditures and the allocation of funds among the
22 counties. Notwithstanding any provision of law, rule or regulation
23 to the contrary, subject to the approval of the director of the
24 budget, funds appropriated herein for the community services for the
25 elderly program (CSE) and the expanded in-home services for the
26 elderly program (EISEP) may be used in accordance with a waiver or
27 reduction in county maintenance of effort requirements established
28 pursuant to section 214 of the elder law, except for base year
29 expenditures. To the extent that funds hereby appropriated are
30 sufficient to exceed the per capita limit established in section 214
31 of the elder law, the excess funds shall be available to supplement
32 the existing per capita level in a uniform manner consistent with
33 statutory allocations.
34 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, including section 1
35 of part C of chapter 57 of the laws of 2006, as amended by section 1
36 of part I of chapter 60 of the laws of 2014, for the period commenc-
37 ing on April 1, 2019 and ending March 31, 2020 the director shall
38 not apply any cost of living adjustment for the purpose of estab-
39 lishing rates of payments, contracts or any other form of reimburse-
40 ment (10318) ... 28,933,000 ......................... (re. $354,000)
41 For planning and implementation, including the payment of liabilities
42 incurred prior to April 1, 2019, of a program of expanded in-home,
43 case management and ancillary community services for the elderly
44 (EISEP).
45 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law to the contrary,
46 including but not limited to the state reimbursement and county
47 maintenance of effort requirements specified in the elder law, up to
48 $15,000,000 of the funds appropriated herein shall be used to
49 address the unmet needs of the elderly as reported to the office for
50 the aging through the reporting requirements set forth in state
51 elder law section 214. Subject to the approval of the director of
28 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 the budget, up to $15,000,000 hereby appropriated may be inter-
2 changed or transferred with any other general fund appropriation
3 within the office for the aging to address the unmet needs of the
4 elderly as reported to the office for the aging through the report-
5 ing requirements set forth in state elder law section 214. The
6 office for the aging shall provide an annual report to the governor,
7 the temporary president of the senate, and the speaker of the assem-
8 bly by September 1, 2020 that shall include the area agencies on
9 aging that have received these funds, the amount of funds received
10 by each area agency on aging, the number of participants served, and
11 the services provided.
12 No expenditures shall be made from this appropriation until the direc-
13 tor of the budget has approved a plan submitted by the office
14 outlining the amounts and purposes of such expenditures and the
15 allocation of funds among the counties, including the city of New
16 York.
17 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, including section 1
18 of part C of chapter 57 of the laws of 2006, as amended by section 1
19 of part I of chapter 60 of the laws of 2014, for the period commenc-
20 ing on April 1, 2019 and ending March 31, 2020 the director shall
21 not apply any cost of living adjustment for the purpose of estab-
22 lishing rates of payments, contracts or any other form of reimburse-
23 ment (10319) ... 65,120,000 ....................... (re. $1,249,000)
24 For services and expenses of grants to area agencies on aging for the
25 establishment and operation of caregiver resource centers (10321)
26 ... 353,000 ........................................... (re. $2,000)
27 For services and expenses, including the payment of liabilities
28 incurred prior to April 1, 2019, associated with the wellness in
29 nutrition (WIN) program, formerly known as the supplemental nutri-
30 tion assistance program (SNAP), including a suballocation to the
31 department of agriculture and markets to be transferred to state
32 operations for administrative costs of the farmers market nutrition
33 program. Up to $200,000 of this appropriation may be made available
34 to the Council of Senior Centers and Services of New York City to
35 provide outreach within the older adult SNAP initiative. No expendi-
36 ture shall be made from this appropriation until the director of the
37 budget has approved a plan submitted by the office outlining the
38 amounts and purpose of such expenditures and the allocation of funds
39 among the counties.
40 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, including section 1
41 of part C of chapter 57 of the laws of 2006, as amended by section 1
42 of part I of chapter 60 of the laws of 2014, for the period commenc-
43 ing on April 1, 2019 and ending March 31, 2020 the director shall
44 not apply any cost of living adjustment for the purpose of estab-
45 lishing rates of payments, contracts or any other form of reimburse-
46 ment (10322) ... 27,483,000 ........................... (re. $5,000)
47 Local grants for services and expenses of the long-term care ombudsman
48 program (10323) ... 1,190,000 ........................ (re. $99,000)
49 For state aid grants to providers of respite services to the elderly.
50 Funding priority shall be given to the renewal of existing contracts
51 with the state office for the aging. No expenditures shall be made
52 from this appropriation until the director of the budget has
29 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 approved a plan submitted by the office outlining the amounts to be
2 distributed by provider (10328) ... 656,000 ......... (re. $222,000)
3 For state aid grants to providers of social model adult day services.
4 Funding priority shall be given to the renewal of existing contracts
5 with the state office for the aging. No expenditures shall be made
6 from this appropriation until the director of the budget has
7 approved a plan submitted by the office outlining the amounts to be
8 distributed by provider (10329) ... 1,072,000 ....... (re. $428,000)
9 For state aid grants to naturally occurring retirement communities
10 (NORC). Funding priority shall be given to the renewal of existing
11 contracts with the state office for the aging. No expenditures shall
12 be made from this appropriation until the director of the budget has
13 approved a plan submitted by the office outlining the amounts to be
14 distributed by provider (10330) ... 2,027,500 ....... (re. $916,000)
15 For state aid grants to neighborhood naturally occurring retirement
16 communities (NNORC). Funding priority shall be given to the renewal
17 of existing contracts with the state office for the aging. No
18 expenditures shall be made from this appropriation until the direc-
19 tor of the budget has approved a plan submitted by the office
20 outlining the amounts to be distributed by provider any activities
21 or provide any services (10331) ... 2,027,500 ..... (re. $1,049,000)
22 For grants in aid to the 59 designated area agencies on aging for
23 transportation operating expenses related to serving the elderly.
24 Funds shall be allocated from this appropriation pursuant to a plan
25 prepared by the director of the state office for the aging and
26 approved by the director of the budget (10885) .....................
27 1,121,000 ............................................. (re. $5,000)
28 For grants to the area agencies on aging for the health insurance
29 information, counseling and assistance program (10335) .............
30 1,000,000 ............................................. (re. $8,000)
31 For state matching funds for services and expenses to match federally
32 funded model projects and/or demonstration grant programs, a portion
33 of which may be transferred to state operations or to other entities
34 as necessary to meet federal grant objectives (10336) ..............
35 175,000 ............................................. (re. $175,000)
36 For the managed care consumer assistance program for the purpose of
37 providing education, outreach, one-on-one counseling, monitoring of
38 the implementation of medicare part D, and assistance with drug
39 appeals and fair hearings related to medicare part D coverage for
40 persons who are eligible for medical assistance and who are also
41 beneficiaries under part D of title XVIII of the federal social
42 security act and for participants of the elderly pharmaceutical
43 insurance coverage program (EPIC) in accordance with the following:
44 Medicare Rights Center (10340) ... 793,000 ............ (re. $591,000)
45 Empire Justice Center (10345) ... 155,000 ............... (re. $8,000)
46 For services and expenses of the retired and senior volunteer program
47 (RSVP) (10324) ... 216,500 ............................ (re. $8,000)
48 For services and expenses of the foster grandparents program (10332)
49 ... 98,000 ............................................ (re. $3,000)
50 For services and expenses related to an elderly abuse education and
51 outreach program in accordance with section 219 of the elder law
52 funding priority shall be given to the renewal of existing contracts
30 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 with the state office for the aging (10333) ........................
2 745,000 ............................................... (re. $3,000)
3 For services and expenses related to the livable New York initiative
4 to create neighborhoods that consider the evolving needs and prefer-
5 ences of all their residents (10866) ... 122,500 .... (re. $122,500)
6 For services and expenses of the New York state adult day services
7 association, inc. related to providing training and technical
8 assistance to social adult day services programs in New York state
9 regarding the quality of services (10867) ..........................
10 122,500 .............................................. (re. $20,000)
11 For services and expenses related to the congregate services initi-
12 ative. No expenditures shall be made from this appropriation until
13 the director of the budget has approved a plan submitted by the
14 office outlining the amounts and purposes of such expenditures and
15 the allocation of funds among the counties (10320) .................
16 403,000 .............................................. (re. $21,000)
17 For services and expenses for Lifespan of Greater Rochester, Inc. for
18 sustainability and expansion of Enhanced Multi-Disciplinary Teams as
19 implemented under the federal Elder Abuse Preventions Interventions
20 Initiative and related data collection and reporting (10833) .......
21 500,000 ............................................. (re. $123,000)
22 For additional services and expenses for state aid grants to naturally
23 occurring retirement communities (NORC). Funding priority shall be
24 given to supplemental allocations to existing contracts (10800) ...
25 2,000,000 ......................................... (re. $1,239,000)
26 For additional services and expenses for state aid grants to neighbor-
27 hood naturally occurring retirement communities (NNORC). Funding
28 priority shall be given to supplemental allocations to existing
29 contracts (10801) ... 2,000,000 ..................... (re. $595,000)
30 For services and expenses related to providing state aid grants to
31 fund "eligible services," including but not limited to health care
32 management and assistance and/or health promotion and linkages to
33 prevention services and screenings, at naturally occurring retire-
34 ment communities (NORC) and neighborhood naturally occurring retire-
35 ment communities (NNORC) as required by section 209 of the Elder
36 Law. Funding priority shall be given to supplemental allocations to
37 existing contracts (10864) ... 325,000 .............. (re. $301,000)
38 For additional services and expenses for Regional Aid for Interim
39 Needs, Inc (10700) ... 200,000 ...................... (re. $200,000)
40 For services and expenses of LiveOn-NY (10842) .......................
41 100,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
42 For services and expenses of Wayside Out- Reach Development, Inc
43 (10846) ... 75,000 ................................... (re. $21,000)
44 For services and expenses of Jewish Association for Services for the
45 Aged for the Bay Eden Senior Center (10849) ........................
46 20,000 ............................................... (re. $15,000)
47 For services and expenses of the Holocaust Survivors Initiative
48 (10703) ... 400,000 ................................. (re. $220,000)
49 For services and expenses of Jewish Association for Services for the
50 Aged (10837) ... 90,000 .............................. (re. $41,000)
51 For services and expenses of Regional Aid for Interim Needs, Inc
52 (10852) ... 90,000 ................................... (re. $90,000)
31 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of Common Point Queens (10704) .............
2 10,000 ............................................... (re. $10,000)
3 For services and expenses of Harlem Advocates for Seniors, Inc (10705)
4 90,000 ............................................... (re. $25,000)
5 For services and expense of Newtown Senior Center (10706) ............
6 50,000 ............................................... (re. $28,000)
7 For services and expenses of Selfhelp Clearview Senior Center (10707)
8 110,000 ............................................. (re. $110,000)
9 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018:
10 For planning and implementation, including the payment of liabilities
11 incurred prior to April 1, 2018, of a program of expanded in-home,
12 case management and ancillary community services for the elderly
13 (EISEP). No expenditures shall be made from this appropriation until
14 the director of the budget has approved a plan submitted by the
15 office outlining the amounts and purposes of such expenditures and
16 the allocation of funds among the counties, including the city of
17 New York.
18 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, including section 1
19 of part C of chapter 57 of the laws of 2006, as amended by section 1
20 of part I of chapter 60 of the laws of 2014, for the period commenc-
21 ing on April 1, 2018 and ending March 31, 2019 the director shall
22 not apply any cost of living adjustment for the purpose of estab-
23 lishing rates of payments, contracts or any other form of reimburse-
24 ment (10319) ... 50,120,000 ....................... (re. $1,284,000)
25 For services and expenses of grants to area agencies on aging for the
26 establishment and operation of caregiver resource centers (10321)
27 ... 353,000 ........................................... (re. $2,000)
28 For services and expenses, including the payment of liabilities
29 incurred prior to April 1, 2018, associated with the wellness in
30 nutrition (WIN) program, formerly known as the supplemental nutri-
31 tion assistance program (SNAP), including a suballocation to the
32 department of agriculture and markets to be transferred to state
33 operations for administrative costs of the farmers market nutrition
34 program. Up to $200,000 of this appropriation may be made available
35 to the Council of Senior Centers and Services of New York City to
36 provide outreach within the older adult SNAP initiative. No expendi-
37 ture shall be made from this appropriation until the director of the
38 budget has approved a plan submitted by the office outlining the
39 amounts and purpose of such expenditures and the allocation of funds
40 among the counties.
41 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, including section 1
42 of part C of chapter 57 of the laws of 2006, as amended by section 1
43 of part I of chapter 60 of the laws of 2014, for the period commenc-
44 ing on April 1, 2018 and ending March 31, 2019 the director shall
45 not apply any cost of living adjustment for the purpose of estab-
46 lishing rates of payments, contracts or any other form of reimburse-
47 ment (10322) ... 27,483,000 ........................... (re. $9,000)
48 Local grants for services and expenses of the long-term care ombudsman
49 program (10323) ... 1,190,000 ......................... (re. $2,000)
50 For state aid grants to providers of respite services to the elderly.
51 Funding priority shall be given to the renewal of existing contracts
32 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 with the state office for the aging. No expenditures shall be made
2 from this appropriation until the director of the budget has
3 approved a plan submitted by the office outlining the amounts to be
4 distributed by provider (10328) ... 656,000 .......... (re. $72,000)
5 For state aid grants to providers of social model adult day services.
6 Funding priority shall be given to the renewal of existing contracts
7 with the state office for the aging. No expenditures shall be made
8 from this appropriation until the director of the budget has
9 approved a plan submitted by the office outlining the amounts to be
10 distributed by provider (10329) ... 1,072,000 ....... (re. $298,000)
11 For state aid grants to naturally occurring retirement communities
12 (NORC). Funding priority shall be given to the renewal of existing
13 contracts with the state office for the aging. No expenditures shall
14 be made from this appropriation until the director of the budget has
15 approved a plan submitted by the office outlining the amounts to be
16 distributed by provider (10330) ... 2,027,500 ........ (re. $67,000)
17 For state aid grants to neighborhood naturally occurring retirement
18 communities (NNORC). Funding priority shall be given to the renewal
19 of existing contracts with the state office for the aging. No
20 expenditures shall be made from this appropriation until the direc-
21 tor of the budget has approved a plan submitted by the office
22 outlining the amounts to be distributed by provider any activities
23 or provide any services (10331) ... 2,027,500 ....... (re. $191,000)
24 For grants in aid to the 59 designated area agencies on aging for
25 transportation operating expenses related to serving the elderly.
26 Funds shall be allocated from this appropriation pursuant to a plan
27 prepared by the director of the state office for the aging and
28 approved by the director of the budget (10885) .....................
29 1,121,000 ............................................. (re. $5,000)
30 For state matching funds for services and expenses to match federally
31 funded model projects and/or demonstration grant programs, a portion
32 of which may be transferred to state operations or to other entities
33 as necessary to meet federal grant objectives (10336) ..............
34 175,000 ............................................. (re. $138,000)
35 For the managed care consumer assistance program for the purpose of
36 providing education, outreach, one-on-one counseling, monitoring of
37 the implementation of medicare part D, and assistance with drug
38 appeals and fair hearings related to medicare part D coverage for
39 persons who are eligible for medical assistance and who are also
40 beneficiaries under part D of title XVIII of the federal social
41 security act and for participants of the elderly pharmaceutical
42 insurance coverage program (EPIC) in accordance with the following:
43 Empire Justice Center (10345) ... 155,000 .............. (re. $34,000)
44 For services and expenses related to the livable New York initiative
45 to create neighborhoods that consider the evolving needs and prefer-
46 ences of all their residents (10866) ... 122,500 ..... (re. $23,000)
47 For services and expenses of the New York state adult day services
48 association, inc. related to providing training and technical
49 assistance to social adult day services programs in New York state
50 regarding the quality of services (10867) ..........................
51 122,500 .............................................. (re. $15,000)
33 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses related to the congregate services initi-
2 ative. No expenditures shall be made from this appropriation until
3 the director of the budget has approved a plan submitted by the
4 office outlining the amounts and purposes of such expenditures and
5 the allocation of funds among the counties (10320) .................
6 403,000 ............................................... (re. $6,000)
7 For additional services and expenses for state aid grants to naturally
8 occurring retirement communities (NORC). Funding priority shall be
9 given to supplemental allocations to existing contracts (10800) ...
10 2,000,000 ......................................... (re. $1,729,000)
11 For additional services and expenses for state aid grants to neighbor-
12 hood naturally occurring retirement communities (NNORC). Funding
13 priority shall be given to supplemental allocations to existing
14 contracts (10801) ... 2,000,000 ................... (re. $1,603,000)
15 For services and expenses of the foster grandparents program (10332)
16 ... 98,000 ........................................... (re. $22,000)
17 For services and expenses of Jewish Association for Services for the
18 Aged for the Bay Eden Senior Center (10849) ........................
19 20,000 ............................................... (re. $16,000)
20 For services and expenses of LiveOn-NY ... 100,000 ..... (re. $29,000)
21 For services and expenses of Older Adults Technology Services, Inc ...
22 250,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
23 For services and expenses of Selfhelp Community Services, Inc. .......
24 50,000 ............................................... (re. $30,000)
25 For services and expenses of United Jewish organizations of Williams-
26 burg, Inc ... 50,000 ................................. (re. $24,000)
27 For services and expenses of Wayside Out-Reach Development, Inc ...
28 75,000 ............................................... (re. $75,000)
29 For services and expenses of Wayside Out-Reach Development, Inc
30 (10846) ... 75,000 ................................... (re. $75,000)
31 For services and expenses of Agudath Israel of American Community
32 Services for the Brookdale Senior Center (10855) ...................
33 10,000 ............................................... (re. $10,000)
34 For services and expenses of Allerton Avenue Homeowners and Tenants
35 Association related to the operation of a senior center (10832)
36 30,000 ............................................... (re. $13,000)
37 For services and expenses of Bayside Senior Center (Catholic Charities
38 Brooklyn and Queens) (10838) ... 15,000 .............. (re. $15,000)
39 For services and expenses of the Brooklyn Chinese-American Associ-
40 ation, Inc. ... 50,000 ............................... (re. $50,000)
41 For services and expenses of the Clearview Assistance Program (10858)
42 100,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
43 For services and expenses of Emerald Isle Immigration Center, Inc
44 (10822) ... 100,000 ................................. (re. $100,000)
45 For services and expenses of Friends of Catherine M. Sheridan Senior
46 Center (10859) ... 50,000 ............................ (re. $50,000)
47 For services and expenses of Hillcrest Senior Center (Catholic Chari-
48 ties Brooklyn and Queens) (10836) ... 100,000 ....... (re. $100,000)
49 For services and expenses of Hope for the Hopeful (10860) ............
50 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
51 For services and expenses of the Institute for the Puerto Rican
52 Hispanic Elderly, Inc. (10861) ... 100,000 .......... (re. $100,000)
34 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of Jewish Community Council of Greater Coney
2 Island, Inc. ... 200,000 ............................. (re. $83,000)
3 For services and expenses of Lifespan of Greater Rochester, Inc ......
4 200,000 .............................................. (re. $75,000)
5 For services and expenses of Queens Community House (10844) ..........
6 140,000 ............................................. (re. $140,000)
7 For services and expenses of Riverdale Senior Services, Inc (10309)
8 ... 100,000 ........................................... (re. $2,000)
9 For services and expenses of Selfhelp Community Services, Inc.
10 (10862) ... 15,000 ................................... (re. $15,000)
11 For services and expenses of Spanish Speaking Elderly Council (RAICES)
12 (10863) ... 50,000 ................................... (re. $50,000)
13 For services and expenses of Wayside Out-Reach Development, Inc
14 (10845) ... 50,000 ................................... (re. $50,000)
15 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2017:
16 For additional services and expenses of the New York foundation for
17 senior citizens home sharing and respite care program (10306) ......
18 86,000 ................................................ (re. $3,000)
19 For services and expenses of the Neighborhood Self-Help by Older
20 Persons Project, Inc. (10834) ... 75,000 ............. (re. $75,000)
21 For services and expenses of Allerton Avenue Homeowners and Tenants
22 Association related to the operation of a senior center (10832) ...
23 20,000 ................................................ (re. $3,000)
24 For services and expenses of Bayside Senior Center (Catholic Charities
25 Brooklyn and Queens) (10838) ... 15,000 .............. (re. $15,000)
26 For services and expenses of B'nai Yosef Synagogue (10839) ...........
27 50,000 ............................................... (re. $10,000)
28 For services and expense of Crown Heights Jewish Community Council,
29 Inc. (10840) ... 50,000 .............................. (re. $10,000)
30 For services and expenses of Hillcrest Senior Center (Catholic Chari-
31 ties Brooklyn and Queens) (10836) ... 15,000 ......... (re. $15,000)
32 For services and expenses of Jewish Association for Services for the
33 Aged (JASA) (10837) ... 50,000 ........................ (re. $3,000)
34 For services and expenses of Jewish Community Council of Greater Coney
35 Island, Inc. ... 200,000 ............................. (re. $28,000)
36 For services and expenses of Queens Community House ..................
37 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
38 For services and expenses of Services Now for Adult Persons, Inc .....
39 300,000 ............................................. (re. $144,000)
40 For services and expenses of Wayside Out-Reach Development, Inc ......
41 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
42 For services and expenses of Wayside Out-Reach Development, Inc
43 (10846) ... 75,000 ................................... (re. $75,000)
44 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2017, as amended by chapter 53,
45 section 1, of the laws of 2018:
46 For services and expense of Greater Whitestone Taxpayers Community
47 Center, Inc. (10812) ... 50,000 ...................... (re. $18,000)
48 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2015:
35 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For additional services and expenses of the New York foundation for
2 senior citizens home sharing and respite care program (10306) ......
3 86,000 ................................................ (re. $7,000)
4 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2014:
5 For services and expenses of the home aides of central New York, Inc.
6 senior respite program ... 71,000 ..................... (re. $9,000)
7 For additional services and expenses of the New York foundation for
8 senior citizens home sharing and respite care program ..............
9 86,000 ............................................... (re. $44,000)
10 For services and expenses of the office of the aging to implement
11 subdivision 3-d of section 1 of part C of chapter 57 of the laws of
12 2006 as added by a chapter of the laws of 2014 to provide funding
13 for salary increases for the period April 1, 2014 through March 31,
14 2015. Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the contrary,
15 and subject to the approval of the director of the budget, the
16 amounts appropriated herein may be increased or decreased by inter-
17 change or transfer without limit to any local assistance appropri-
18 ation, and may include advances to local governments and voluntary
19 agencies, to accomplish this purpose ... 930,000 .... (re. $782,000)
20 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2013:
21 For additional services and expenses to providers of social model
22 adult day services ... 200,000 ....................... (re. $49,000)
23 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2012:
24 For additional state aid grants to neighborhood naturally occurring
25 retirement communities (NNORC). Funding priority shall be given to
26 the renewal of existing contracts with the state office for the
27 aging. No expenditures shall be made from this appropriation until
28 the director of the budget has approved a plan submitted by the
29 office outlining the amounts to be distributed by provider .........
30 229,000 ............................................. (re. $111,000)
31 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
32 Federal Health and Human Services Fund
33 FHHS Aid to Localities Account - 25177
34 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
35 For programs provided under the titles of the federal older Americans
36 act and other health and human services programs.
37 Title III-b social services (10894) ..................................
38 26,000,000 ....................................... (re. $26,000,000)
39 Title III-c nutrition programs, including a suballocation to the
40 department of health to be transferred to state operations for
41 nutrition program activities (10893) ...............................
42 41,385,000 ....................................... (re. $41,238,000)
43 Title III-e caregivers (10892) ... 12,000,000 ...... (re. $12,000,000)
44 Health and human services programs (10891) ...........................
45 9,000,000 ......................................... (re. $8,787,000)
46 Nutrition services incentive program (10890) .........................
47 17,000,000 ....................................... (re. $17,000,000)
36 12653-09-2
OFFICE FOR THE AGING
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
2 For programs provided under the titles of the federal older Americans
3 act and other health and human services programs.
4 Title III-b social services (10894) ..................................
5 26,000,000 ....................................... (re. $23,653,000)
6 Title III-c nutrition programs, including a suballocation to the
7 department of health to be transferred to state operations for
8 nutrition program activities (10893) ...............................
9 41,385,000 ....................................... (re. $36,169,000)
10 Title III-e caregivers (10892) ... 12,000,000 ...... (re. $11,481,000)
11 Health and human services programs (10891) ...........................
12 9,000,000 ......................................... (re. $6,296,000)
13 Nutrition services incentive program (10890) .........................
14 17,000,000 ....................................... (re. $10,590,000)
15 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
16 For programs provided under the titles of the federal older Americans
17 act and other health and human services programs.
18 Title III-b social services (10894) ..................................
19 26,000,000 ........................................ (re. $8,867,000)
20 Title III-c nutrition programs, including a suballocation to the
21 department of health to be transferred to state operations for
22 nutrition program activities (10893) ...............................
23 41,385,000 ........................................ (re. $1,633,000)
24 Title III-e caregivers (10892) ... 12,000,000 ....... (re. $3,908,000)
25 Health and human services programs (10891) ...........................
26 9,000,000 ......................................... (re. $4,476,000)
27 Nutrition services incentive program (10890) .........................
28 17,000,000 ........................................... (re. $40,000)
29 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
30 Federal Miscellaneous Operating Grants Fund
31 Senior Community Service Employment Account - 25444
32 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
33 For the senior community service employment program provided under
34 title V of the federal older Americans act (10887) .................
35 9,000,000 ......................................... (re. $8,616,000)
36 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
37 For the senior community service employment program provided under
38 title V of the federal older Americans act (10887) .................
39 9,000,000 ......................................... (re. $4,058,000)
37 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For payment according to the following schedule:
2 APPROPRIATIONS REAPPROPRIATIONS
3 General Fund ....................... 52,987,000 61,209,900
4 Special Revenue Funds - Federal .... 20,000,000 40,000,000
5 ---------------- ----------------
6 All Funds ........................ 72,987,000 101,209,900
7 ================ ================
8 AGRICULTURAL BUSINESS SERVICES PROGRAM ...................... 72,987,000
9 --------------
10 General Fund
11 Local Assistance Account - 10000
12 For services and expenses of the New York
13 state veterinary diagnostic laboratory at
14 Cornell university including but not
15 limited to animal health surveillance and
16 control, avian disease, cattle health,
17 milk production, johnes disease and salmo-
18 nella dublin bacteria, genomic surveil-
19 lance, and forensic pathology programs ....... 8,270,000
20 For additional services and expenses of the
21 New York state veterinary diagnostic labo-
22 ratory at Cornell university ................... 481,000
23 Cornell university berry research (11416) ........ 263,000
24 Cornell university honeybee research (11455) ..... 152,000
25 Cornell university maple research (11456) ......... 76,000
26 For additional services and expenses of the
27 Cornell university maple research ............... 75,000
28 Cornell university onion research (10948) ......... 51,000
29 For additional services and expenses of the
30 Cornell university onion research ............... 20,000
31 Cornell university vegetable research
32 (11401) ......................................... 51,000
33 For additional services and expenses of the
34 Cornell university vegetable research ........... 75,000
35 Cornell university hard cider research
36 (11441) ........................................ 202,000
37 Cornell university for concord grape
38 research (11444) ............................... 202,000
39 For additional services and expenses of the
40 Cornell university concord grape research ....... 50,000
41 Cornell university Geneva experiment station
42 barley evaluation and field testing
43 program (11466) ................................ 303,000
44 For additional services and expenses of the
45 Cornell university Geneva experiment
46 station barley evaluation and field test-
47 ing program ..................................... 50,000
38 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 Cornell university hops breeding research
2 and extension program .......................... 300,000
3 Cornell university golden nematode program
4 (10932) ......................................... 63,000
5 For services and expenses of Cornell univer-
6 sity, including but not limited to, work-
7 force development and education for the
8 hemp industry, including the extension of
9 cannabidiol; and the research and develop-
10 ment for the growth of hemp and varietal
11 development .................................. 1,000,000
12 Cornell university agriculture in the class-
13 room to support nutritional education
14 programs (10938) ............................... 500,000
15 Cornell university future farmers of America
16 (10939) ...................................... 1,000,000
17 Cornell university association of agricul-
18 tural educators for teacher recruitment,
19 professional development, and administra-
20 tive assistance (10940) ........................ 500,000
21 Cornell university farmnet program for farm
22 family assistance (10926) .................... 1,000,000
23 Cornell university pro-dairy program (11470) ... 1,213,000
24 For additional services and expenses of the
25 Cornell university pro-dairy program ........... 250,000
26 Cornell university small farms program for
27 veterans (11417) ............................... 116,000
28 Cornell university farm labor specialist to
29 assist farmers with labor law compliance
30 (11425) ........................................ 202,000
31 For additional services and expenses of the
32 Cornell university farm labor specialist
33 to assist farmers with labor law compli-
34 ance ........................................... 199,000
35 For services and expenses of Cornell Univer-
36 sity New York City urban agriculture
37 education and outreach ......................... 250,000
38 For services and expenses of the Harvest New
39 York program ................................... 600,000
40 Cornell Small Farms Equitable Farm Futures
41 Initiative ..................................... 500,000
42 For services and expenses of a legal clinic
43 within the Elisabeth Haub School of Law at
44 Pace University to provide pro bono legal
45 assistance to small farms and related food
46 and beverage businesses and nonprofits ......... 225,000
47 New York farm viability institute (10916) ...... 1,000,000
48 For additional services and expenses of the
49 New York farm viability institute .............. 850,000
50 New York farm viability institute, for
51 services and expenses of New York state
52 berry growers association (11462) ............... 61,000
39 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 New York farm viability institute, for
2 services and expenses of New York corn and
3 soybean growers (11454) ......................... 76,000
4 For services and expenses of programs to
5 promote agricultural economic development.
6 All or a portion of this appropriation may
7 be suballocated to any department, agency,
8 or public authority. Notwithstanding any
9 other provision of law, the director of
10 the budget is hereby authorized to trans-
11 fer up to $1,000,000 of this appropriation
12 to state operations (10902) .................. 2,020,000
13 New York state brewers association (11428) ........ 76,000
14 New York cider association (11429) ................ 76,000
15 New York state distillers guild (11430) ........... 76,000
16 New York wine and grape foundation (10915) ..... 1,075,000
17 Christmas tree farmers association of New
18 York for programs to promote Christmas
19 trees (11461) .................................. 126,000
20 New York state apple growers association
21 (10943) ........................................ 483,000
22 For additional services and expenses of the
23 New York state apple growers association ....... 279,000
24 Maple producers association for programs to
25 promote maple syrup (10945) .................... 152,000
26 For additional services and expenses of the
27 maple producers association ..................... 75,000
28 For services and expenses of the New York
29 state apple research and development
30 program, in consultation with the apple
31 research and development advisory board
32 (11400) ........................................ 505,000
33 For services and expenses of programs to
34 promote dairy excellence, including but
35 not limited to programs at Cornell univer-
36 sity.
37 Notwithstanding any other provision of law,
38 the director of the budget is hereby
39 authorized to transfer up to $150,000 of
40 this appropriation to state operations for
41 programs including administration of dairy
42 profit teams (11495) ........................... 374,000
43 For services and expenses of the electronic
44 benefits transfer program administered by
45 the Farmers' Market Federation of NY
46 (11412) ........................................ 139,000
47 For services and expenses of programs to
48 create new and support existing MANRRS
49 (minorities in agriculture, natural
50 resources, and related science) chapters
51 at colleges and universities in New York
52 state ........................................... 50,000
40 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For services, expenses, and grants related
2 to the farmers' market resiliency grant
3 program, including but not limited to the
4 increasing farmers' markets resiliency
5 through the development and enhancement of
6 farmers' market infrastructure and on-line
7 sales and delivery capabilities across the
8 state .......................................... 700,000
9 Black farmers united of New York state, for
10 services and expenses of programs to
11 support capacity building and assist farms
12 and food businesses owned by people of
13 color in New York state ........................ 100,000
14 For additional services and expenses of
15 Black farmers united of New York state ......... 100,000
16 For services, expenses, and grants related
17 to the urban farms and community gardens
18 grant program, including but not limited
19 to the development and enhancement of
20 community gardens, school gardens and
21 urban farms across the state ................... 800,000
22 For marketing, advertising, and retail oper-
23 ations to promote local agritourism and
24 New York produced food and beverage goods
25 and products, including but not limited to
26 up to $125,000 for the City of Geneva, up
27 to $375,000 for the NY Wine and Culinary
28 Center, $350,000 for Cornell Cooperative
29 Extension of Broome County, up to $350,000
30 for the Montgomery County Chapter of
31 NYARC, Inc., up to $485,000 for Cornell
32 Cooperative Extension of Nassau County, up
33 to $350,000 for the Lake George Regional
34 Chamber of Commerce, up to $450,000 for
35 the Cornell Cooperative Extension of
36 Columbia and Greene Counties, up to
37 $950,000 for the Cornell Cooperative
38 Extension of Sullivan County, up to
39 $475,000 for Cornell Cooperative Extension
40 of Erie County, up to $850,000 for the
41 Thousand Islands Bridge Authority, and up
42 to $190,000 for Cornell Cooperative Exten-
43 sion of Cayuga County. At the direction of
44 the director of the budget, all or a
45 portion of this appropriation may be
46 suballocated to any department, agency, or
47 public authority or transferred to state
48 operations (21672) ........................... 6,000,000
49 For services and expenses of a program to
50 develop farm to school initiatives that
51 will help schools purchase more food from
41 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 local farmers and expand access to healthy
2 local food for school children. The funds
3 shall be awarded through a competitive
4 process (11405) ................................ 758,000
5 For additional services and expenses of a
6 program to develop farm to school initi-
7 atives that will help schools purchase
8 more food from local farmers and expand
9 access to healthy local food for school
10 children ....................................... 750,000
11 New York federation of growers and process-
12 ors agribusiness child development program
13 (10913) ..................................... 10,300,000
14 For reimbursement for the promotion of agri-
15 culture and domestic arts in accordance
16 with article 24 of the agriculture and
17 markets law (10914) ............................ 500,000
18 On-farm health and safety program adminis-
19 tered by Mary Imogene Basset hospital
20 (11473) ........................................ 250,000
21 Volunteers Improving Neighborhood Environ-
22 ment ............................................ 75,000
23 For the Pitney Meadows Community Farm ............. 50,000
24 For the Comfort Food Community .................... 50,000
25 Empire sheep producers association ................ 50,000
26 Hop Growers of New York to promote New York
27 hops ............................................ 50,000
28 American Farmland Trust for Farmland for a
29 New Generation ................................. 500,000
30 For services and expenses of the turfgrass
31 environmental stewardship fund adminis-
32 tered by the New York state greengrass
33 association .................................... 150,000
34 For the Dutchess County Cornell Cooperative
35 Extension ...................................... 100,000
36 Northern New York agricultural development
37 program administered by Cornell cooper-
38 ative extension of Jefferson County ............ 300,000
39 For additional grants in aid to certain
40 agricultural organizations. Notwithstand-
41 ing section 24 of the state finance law or
42 any provision of law to the contrary,
43 funds from this appropriation shall be
44 allocated only pursuant to a plan (i)
45 approved by the temporary president of the
46 senate and the director of the budget
47 which sets forth either an itemized list
48 of grantees with the amount to be received
49 by each, or the methodology for allocating
50 such appropriation, and (ii) which is
51 thereafter included in a senate resolution
42 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 calling for the expenditure of such funds,
2 which resolution must be approved by a
3 majority vote of all members elected to
4 the senate upon roll call vote ................. 250,000
5 For the Cornell Cooperative extension bridg-
6 ing the upstate-downstate food network
7 divide .......................................... 84,000
8 Northeast Organic Farming Association of New
9 York ........................................... 150,000
10 New York Cannabis Growers and Producers
11 Association ..................................... 88,000
12 John May Farm Safety Fund ........................ 100,000
13 For grants to beginning farmers. The depart-
14 ment of agriculture and markets shall
15 consult with organizations working with or
16 representing beginning farmers, and a farm
17 credit bureau or member of the farm credit
18 system or a banking institution with a
19 demonstrated ability to provide financial
20 assistance and service to agricultural
21 producers to establish criteria governing
22 the award of such grants.
23 Such criteria shall include, but not be
24 limited to, farmers who have not operated
25 a farm for more than ten years, and who
26 will materially and substantially partic-
27 ipate in operating a farm within a region
28 of the state and may include urban farm-
29 ers. Grants shall be awarded on a compet-
30 itive basis. Grants shall not be less than
31 five thousand dollars and may not exceed
32 two hundred and fifty thousand dollars for
33 any single beneficiary. Grants shall be
34 issued with a required match from the
35 recipient of no more than twenty percent
36 of the grant amount.
37 The department is authorized to enter into
38 agreements with municipalities, public
39 benefit corporations, local development
40 corporations, or not-for-profit organiza-
41 tions that provide financial assistance,
42 including capital assistance for the
43 administration of the grant program. Up to
44 fifteen percent of the total appropriation
45 amount may be made available for the
46 services and expenses of such organization
47 directly related to the administration of
48 the grant program.
49 Such grants may be awarded for purposes
50 including, but not limited to, the start-
51 up, improvement or expansion of a farm
52 operation, worker or apprenticeship train-
43 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 ing, marketing activities, the purchase of
2 agricultural land and physical structures
3 thereon, the purchase of machinery, equip-
4 ment or livestock, or the construction or
5 improvement of physical structures,
6 including semi-permanent structures.
7 Grants may be awarded for projects on land
8 leased by the recipient.
9 The department shall submit a report annual-
10 ly on December thirty-first to the direc-
11 tor of the budget, the temporary president
12 of the senate, the speaker of the assem-
13 bly, the minority leader of the senate and
14 the minority leader of the assembly
15 detailing (a) the total amount of funds
16 committed to each applicant; (b) the
17 location of each applicant; and (c) such
18 other information as established in such
19 criteria ..................................... 1,000,000
20 For grants to socially and economically
21 disadvantaged farmers. The department of
22 agriculture and markets shall consult with
23 organizations working with or representing
24 socially and economically disadvantaged
25 farmers, and a farm credit bureau or
26 member of the farm credit system or a
27 banking institution with a demonstrated
28 ability to provide financial assistance
29 and service to agricultural producers and
30 to establish criteria governing the award
31 of such grants. For the purposes of this
32 grant program, "socially disadvantaged"
33 shall mean individuals who have been
34 subject to discrimination by virtue of
35 their membership of a particular group
36 which may include, but not be limited to
37 Black or African American, American Indian
38 or Alaska Native, Hispanic or Latino, and
39 Asian or Pacific Islander; "economically
40 disadvantaged" shall mean socially disad-
41 vantaged individuals whose ability to
42 enter into farming or whose farm enter-
43 prise has been impaired due to diminished
44 capital, credit opportunities or access to
45 land, among other things, as compared to
46 other similarly situated individuals who
47 are not socially disadvantaged.
48 Such criteria shall include, but not be
49 limited to, farmers who will materially
50 and substantially participate in operating
51 a farm within the state and may include
52 urban farmers. Grants shall be awarded on
44 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 a competitive basis. Grants shall not be
2 less than five thousand dollars and may
3 not exceed two hundred and fifty thousand
4 dollars for any single beneficiary. Grants
5 shall be issued with a required match from
6 the recipient of no more than twenty
7 percent of the grant amount.
8 The department is authorized to enter into
9 agreements with municipalities, public
10 benefit corporations, local development
11 corporations, or not-for-profit organiza-
12 tions that provide financial assistance,
13 including capital assistance for the
14 administration of the grant program. Up to
15 fifteen percent of the total appropriation
16 amount may be made available for the
17 services and expenses of such organization
18 directly related to the administration of
19 the grant program. Such grants may be
20 awarded to socially and economically
21 disadvantaged farmers for purposes includ-
22 ing, but not limited to, the start-up,
23 improvement or expansion of a farm opera-
24 tion, worker or apprenticeship training,
25 marketing activities, the purchase of
26 agricultural land and physical structures
27 thereon, the purchase of machinery, equip-
28 ment or livestock, or the construction or
29 improvement of physical structures,
30 including semi-permanent structures.
31 Grants may be awarded for projects on land
32 leased by the recipient.
33 The department shall submit a report annual-
34 ly on December thirty-first to the direc-
35 tor of the budget, the temporary president
36 of the senate, the speaker of the assem-
37 bly, the minority leader of the senate and
38 the minority leader of the assembly
39 detailing (a) the total amount of funds
40 committed to each applicant; (b) the
41 location of each applicant; and (c) such
42 other information as established in such
43 criteria ..................................... 4,000,000
44 --------------
45 Program account subtotal .................. 52,987,000
46 --------------
47 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
48 Federal USDA-Food and Nutrition Services Fund
49 Federal Agriculture and Markets Account - 25021
45 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of non-point
2 source pollution control, farmland preser-
3 vation, and other agricultural programs
4 including suballocation to other state
5 departments and agencies including liabil-
6 ities incurred prior to April 1, 2022.
7 Notwithstanding section 51 of the state
8 finance law and any other provision of law
9 to the contrary, the funds appropriated
10 herein may be increased or decreased by
11 transfer from/to appropriations for any
12 prior or subsequent grant period within
13 the same federal fund/program and between
14 state operations and aid to localities to
15 accomplish the intent of this appropri-
16 ation, as long as such corresponding
17 prior/subsequent grant periods within such
18 appropriations have been reappropriated as
19 necessary (11498) ........................... 20,000,000
20 --------------
21 Program account subtotal .................. 20,000,000
22 --------------
46 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 AGRICULTURAL BUSINESS SERVICES PROGRAM
2 General Fund
3 Local Assistance Account - 10000
4 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
5 New York state veterinary diagnostic laboratory at Cornell university
6 animal health surveillance and control program (10920) .............
7 4,425,000 ......................................... (re. $4,425,000)
8 New York state veterinary diagnostic laboratory at Cornell university
9 New York state cattle health assurance program (10922) .............
10 360,000 ............................................. (re. $360,000)
11 New York state veterinary diagnostic laboratory at Cornell university
12 quality milk production services program (10921) ...................
13 1,174,000 ......................................... (re. $1,174,000)
14 New York state veterinary diagnostic laboratory at Cornell university
15 Johnes disease program (10923) ... 480,000 .......... (re. $480,000)
16 New York state veterinary diagnostic laboratory at Cornell university
17 rabies program (10925) ... 50,000 .................... (re. $50,000)
18 New York state veterinary diagnostic laboratory at Cornell university
19 Avian disease program (10924) ... 252,000 ........... (re. $252,000)
20 Cornell university berry research (11416) ............................
21 260,000 ............................................. (re. $260,000)
22 Cornell university honeybee research (11455) .........................
23 150,000 ............................................. (re. $150,000)
24 Cornell university maple research (11456) ............................
25 75,000 ............................................... (re. $75,000)
26 Cornell university onion research (10948) ............................
27 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
28 Cornell university vegetable research (11401) ........................
29 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
30 Cornell university hard cider research (11441) .......................
31 200,000 ............................................. (re. $200,000)
32 Cornell university for concord grape research (11444) ................
33 200,000 ............................................ (re. $200,000)
34 Cornell university Geneva experiment station barley evaluation and
35 field testing program (11466) ... 300,000 ........... (re. $300,000)
36 Cornell university agriculture in the classroom to support nutritional
37 education programs (10938) ... 380,000 .............. (re. $380,000)
38 Cornell university future farmers of America (10939) .................
39 842,000 ............................................. (re. $842,000)
40 Cornell university association of agricultural educators for teacher
41 recruitment, professional development, and administrative assistance
42 (10940) ... 416,000 ................................. (re. $416,000)
43 Cornell university farmnet program for farm family assistance (10926)
44 ... 664,000 ......................................... (re. $664,000)
45 Cornell university pro-dairy program (11470) .........................
46 1,201,000 ......................................... (re. $1,201,000)
47 Cornell university small farms program for veterans (11417) ..........
48 115,000 ............................................. (re. $115,000)
49 Cornell university farm labor specialist to assist farmers with labor
50 law compliance (11425) ... 200,000 .................. (re. $200,000)
47 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 New York farm viability institute (10916) ............................
2 800,000 ............................................. (re. $800,000)
3 New York farm viability institute, for services and expenses of New
4 York state berry growers association (11462) .......................
5 60,000 ............................................... (re. $60,000)
6 New York farm viability institute, for services and expenses of New
7 York corn and soybean growers (11454) ... 75,000 ..... (re. $75,000)
8 For services and expenses of programs to promote agricultural economic
9 development. All or a portion of this appropriation may be suballo-
10 cated to any department, agency, or public authority. Notwithstand-
11 ing any other provision of law, the director of the budget is hereby
12 authorized to transfer up to $1,000,000 of this appropriation to
13 state operations (10902) ...........................................
14 2,000,000 ......................................... (re. $2,000,000)
15 New York state brewers association (11428) ...........................
16 75,000 ............................................... (re. $75,000)
17 New York cider association (11429) ... 75,000 .......... (re. $75,000)
18 New York state distillers guild (11430) ... 75,000 ..... (re. $75,000)
19 New York wine and grape foundation (10915) ...........................
20 1,073,000 ........................................... (re. $751,000)
21 Christmas tree farmers association of New York for programs to promote
22 Christmas trees (11461) ... 125,000 ................. (re. $125,000)
23 New York state apple growers association (10943) .....................
24 478,000 .............................................. (re. $83,000)
25 Maple producers association for programs to promote maple syrup
26 (10945) ... 150,000 ................................. (re. $139,000)
27 For services and expenses of the New York state apple research and
28 development program, in consultation with the apple research and
29 development advisory board (11400) ... 500,000 ...... (re. $500,000)
30 For services and expenses of programs to promote dairy excellence,
31 including but not limited to programs at Cornell university.
32 Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the director of the budget
33 is hereby authorized to transfer up to $150,000 of this appropri-
34 ation to state operations for programs including administration of
35 dairy profit teams (11495) .........................................
36 370,000 ............................................. (re. $370,000)
37 For services and expenses of the electronic benefits transfer program
38 administered by the Farmers' Market Federation of NY (11412) .......
39 138,000 ............................................. (re. $138,000)
40 For services and expenses of a program to develop farm to school
41 initiatives that will help schools purchase more food from local
42 farmers and expand access to healthy local food for school children.
43 The funds shall be awarded through a competitive process (11405) ...
44 750,000 ............................................. (re. $750,000)
45 New York federation of growers and processors agribusiness child
46 development program (10913) ... 8,275,000 ......... (re. $8,275,000)
47 For reimbursement for the promotion of agriculture and domestic arts
48 in accordance with article 24 of the agriculture and markets law
49 (10914) ... 420,000 ................................. (re. $420,000)
50 On-farm health and safety program administered by Mary Imogene Basset
51 hospital (11473) ... 125,000 ........................ (re. $125,000)
48 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For additional services and expenses for the on-farm health and safety
2 program administered by Mary Imogene Basset hospital (11303) .......
3 125,000 ............................................. (re. $125,000)
4 For additional services and expenses of the New York state veterinary
5 diagnostic laboratory at Cornell university (10908) ................
6 1,000,000 ......................................... (re. $1,000,000)
7 For additional services and expenses of the New York state veterinary
8 diagnostic laboratory at Cornell university rabies program (11468)
9 ... 350,000 ......................................... (re. $350,000)
10 New York state veterinary diagnostic laboratory at Cornell university
11 for whole herd and bulk milk testing to eradicate salmonella dublin
12 bacteria (11445) ... 200,000 ........................ (re. $200,000)
13 For additional services and expenses of Cornell university vegetable
14 research (11300) ... 50,000 .......................... (re. $50,000)
15 For additional services and expenses of Cornell university for concord
16 grape research (11301) ... 50,000 .................... (re. $50,000)
17 For additional services and expenses of the Cornell university program
18 for farm family assistance (11469) ... 336,000 ...... (re. $336,000)
19 For services and expenses of the Harvest New York program (11434) ...
20 600,000 ............................................. (re. $600,000)
21 For additional services and expenses of the New York farm viability
22 institute (10917) ... 1,050,000 ................... (re. $1,021,000)
23 For additional services and expenses of New York state apple growers
24 association (11458) ... 272,000 ..................... (re. $163,000)
25 For additional services and expenses of the maple producers associ-
26 ation for programs to promote maple syrup (11302) ..................
27 75,000 ............................................... (re. $75,000)
28 For services and expenses of the turfgrass environmental stewardship
29 fund administered by the New York state greengrass association
30 (11472) ... 150,000 ................................. (re. $150,000)
31 For additional services and expenses of the New York Federation of
32 growers and processors agribusiness child development program
33 (10905) ... 1,025,000 ............................. (re. $1,025,000)
34 Cornell university golden nematode program (10932) ...................
35 62,000 ............................................... (re. $62,000)
36 For services and expenses of Cornell University New York City urban
37 agriculture education and outreach (11304) .........................
38 250,000 ............................................. (re. $250,000)
39 For additional services and expenses of the New York wine and grape
40 foundation (11457) ... 2,000 .......................... (re. $2,000)
41 Empire sheep producers association (11306) ...........................
42 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
43 Northern New York agricultural development program administered by
44 Cornell cooperative extension of Jefferson County (10941) ..........
45 300,000 ............................................. (re. $300,000)
46 For additional services and expenses of Cornell University onion
47 research (10949) ... 20,000 .......................... (re. $20,000)
48 Teens for Food Justice (11435) ... 20,000 .............. (re. $20,000)
49 Cornell forensic pathology program (11307) ...........................
50 460,000 ............................................. (re. $460,000)
51 Cornell Small Farms Equitable Farm Futures Initiative (11308) ........
52 400,000 ............................................. (re. $400,000)
49 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For additional reimbursements for the promotion of agriculture and
2 domestic arts in accordance with article 24 of the agriculture and
3 markets law (11453) ... 80,000 ....................... (re. $80,000)
4 For Walkway Over the Hudson, including $15,000 to plan for a farmers
5 market, $30,000 to renovate the Friends Pavilion, and $75,000 for a
6 farm to market project manager (11309) ... 120,000 .. (re. $120,000)
7 For the Madison County Cornell Cooperative Extension (11310) .........
8 40,000 ............................................... (re. $40,000)
9 For the Craft Beverages Trail of the Catskills (11311) ...............
10 100,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
11 For the Cornell Cooperative extension bridging the upstate-downstate
12 food network divide (11312) ... 84,000 ............... (re. $84,000)
13 For the Comfort Food Community (11313) ... 50,000 ...... (re. $50,000)
14 For the Pitney Meadows Community Farm (11314) ........................
15 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
16 For additional services and expenses of Cornell university for maple
17 research (11316) ... 50,000 .......................... (re. $50,000)
18 For additional services and expenses of Cornell university Geneva
19 experiment station barley evaluation and field testing program
20 (11451) ... 50,000 ................................... (re. $50,000)
21 Cornell university hops breeding research and extension program
22 (11315) ... 300,000 ................................. (re. $300,000)
23 Hop Growers of New York to promote New York hops (11317) .............
24 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
25 American Farmland Trust for Farmland for a New Generation (11443) ....
26 500,000 ............................................. (re. $500,000)
27 Volunteers Improving Neighborhood Environment (11318) ................
28 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
29 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
30 Cornell university berry research (11416) ............................
31 260,000 ............................................. (re. $260,000)
32 Cornell university honeybee research (11455) .........................
33 150,000 ............................................. (re. $150,000)
34 Cornell university maple research (11456) ... 75,000 ... (re. $75,000)
35 Cornell university onion research (10948) ... 50,000 ... (re. $50,000)
36 For additional services and expenses of Cornell University onion
37 research (10949) ... 20,000 .......................... (re. $20,000)
38 Cornell university vegetable research (11401) ........................
39 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
40 For additional services and expenses of Cornell university vegetable
41 research (11300) ... 50,000 .......................... (re. $50,000)
42 Cornell university hard cider research (11441) .......................
43 200,000 ............................................. (re. $200,000)
44 Cornell university for concord grape research (11444) ................
45 200,000 ............................................. (re. $200,000)
46 For additional services and expenses of Cornell university for concord
47 grape research (11301) ... 50,000 .................... (re. $50,000)
48 Cornell university Geneva experiment station hop and barley evaluation
49 and field testing program (11466) ... 300,000 ....... (re. $300,000)
50 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For additional services and expenses of Cornell university Geneva
2 experiment station hop and barley evaluation and field resting
3 program (11451) ... 50,000 ........................... (re. $50,000)
4 Cornell university agriculture in the classroom to support nutritional
5 education programs (10938) ... 380,000 .............. (re. $380,000)
6 Cornell university future farmers of America (10939) .................
7 842,000 ............................................. (re. $842,000)
8 Cornell university association of agricultural educators for teacher
9 recruitment, professional development, and administrative assistance
10 (10940) ... 416,000 ................................. (re. $416,000)
11 Cornell university farmnet program for farm family assistance (10926)
12 664,000 ............................................. (re. $156,000)
13 For additional services and expenses of the Cornell university farmnet
14 program for farm family assistance (11469) .........................
15 118,000 ............................................. (re. $118,000)
16 Cornell university golden nematode program (10932) ...................
17 62,000 ............................................... (re. $12,400)
18 Cornell university pro-dairy program (11470) .........................
19 1,201,000 ......................................... (re. $1,201,000)
20 Cornell university small farms program for veterans (11417) ..........
21 115,000 ............................................. (re. $115,000)
22 Cornell university farm labor specialist to assist farmers with labor
23 law compliance (11425) ... 200,000 .................. (re. $200,000)
24 New York farm viability institute (10916) ............................
25 800,000 ............................................. (re. $590,000)
26 New York farm viability institute, for services and expenses of New
27 York state berry growers association (11462) .......................
28 60,000 ............................................... (re. $60,000)
29 New York farm viability institute, for services and expenses of New
30 York corn and soybean growers (11454) ... 75,000 ..... (re. $75,000)
31 For services and expenses of programs to promote agricultural economic
32 development. All or a portion of this appropriation may be suballo-
33 cated to any department, agency, or public authority.
34 Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the director of the budget
35 is hereby authorized to transfer up to $1,000,000 of this appropri-
36 ation to state operations (10902) ..................................
37 2,000,000 ......................................... (re. $2,000,000)
38 New York state brewers association (11428) ... 75,000 .. (re. $75,000)
39 New York cider association (11429) ... 75,000 .......... (re. $75,000)
40 New York state distillers guild (11430) ... 75,000 ..... (re. $75,000)
41 New York wine and grape foundation (10915) ...........................
42 1,073,000 ........................................... (re. $215,000)
43 Christmas tree farmers association of New York for programs to promote
44 Christmas trees (11461) ... 125,000 ................. (re. $125,000)
45 Maple producers association for programs to promote maple syrup
46 (10945) ... 150,000 ................................. (re. $150,000)
47 For additional services and expenses of the Maple producers associ-
48 ation for programs to promote maple syrup, including $65,000 for the
49 replacement of the Maple Experience Truck (11302) ..................
50 96,000 ............................................... (re. $96,000)
51 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of the New York state apple research and
2 development program, in consultation with the apple research and
3 development advisory board (11400) ... 500,000 ...... (re. $142,000)
4 For services and expenses of the turfgrass environmental stewardship
5 fund administered by the New York State greengrass association
6 (11472) ... 125,000 ................................. (re. $125,000)
7 Northern New York agricultural development program administered by
8 Cornell cooperative extension of Jefferson County (10941) ..........
9 300,000 ............................................. (re. $300,000)
10 For services and expenses of programs to promote dairy excellence,
11 including but not limited to programs at Cornell university.
12 Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the director of the budget
13 is hereby authorized to transfer up to $150,000 of this appropri-
14 ation to state operations for programs including administration of
15 dairy profit teams (11495) ... 370,000 .............. (re. $370,000)
16 For services and expenses of the electronic benefits transfer program
17 administered by the Farmers' Market Federation of NY (11412) .......
18 138,000 ............................................. (re. $ 21,000)
19 For services and expenses of a program to develop farm to school
20 initiatives that will help schools purchase more food from local
21 farmers and expand access to healthy local food for school children.
22 The funds shall be awarded through a competitive process (11405) ...
23 750,000 ............................................. (re. $724,000)
24 New York federation of growers and processors agribusiness child
25 development program (10913) ... 8,275,000 ........... (re. $305,000)
26 For reimbursement for the promotion of agriculture and domestic arts
27 in accordance with article 24 of the agriculture and markets law
28 (10914) ... 420,000 ................................. (re. $360,000)
29 On-farm health and safety program administered by Mary Imogene Basset
30 hospital (11473) ... 125,000 ........................ (re. $125,000)
31 For additional services and expenses of the On-farm health and safety
32 program administered by Mary Imogene Basset hospital (11303) .......
33 125,500 ............................................. (re. $125,500)
34 American farmland trust for a farmland for a new generation resource
35 center (11442) ... 200,000 .......................... (re. $200,000)
36 American farmland trust for a farmland for a new generation regional
37 navigator (11443) ... 200,000 ....................... (re. $200,000)
38 For services and expenses of the Harvest New York program (11434)
39 300,000 ............................................. (re. $300,000)
40 For services and expenses of Cornell cooperative extension New York
41 City for urban agriculture education and outreach (11304) ..........
42 250,000 ............................................. (re. $250,000)
43 New York organic farmers association for database modernization
44 (11305) ... 80,000 ................................... (re. $80,000)
45 By chapter 54, section 1, of the laws of 2020, as amended by chapter 50,
46 section 4, of the laws of 2020:
47 For additional services and expenses of the New York farm viability
48 institute (10917) ... 250,000 ....................... (re. $213,000)
49 For additional services and expenses of the New York federation of
50 growers and processors agribusiness child development program
51 (10905) ... 1,000,000 ............................. (re. $1,000,000)
52 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of institutions, not-for-profit corpo-
2 rations, municipalities, or any other entity that provides agricul-
3 tural services. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law,
4 funds from this appropriation shall be allocated only pursuant to a
5 plan approved by the temporary president of the senate and the
6 director of the budget which sets forth either an itemized list of
7 grantees with the amount to be received by each, or the methodology
8 for allocating such appropriation (10901) ..........................
9 500,000 ............................................. (re. $500,000)
10 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
11 Cornell university honeybee research (11455) .........................
12 150,000 .............................................. (re. $81,000)
13 Cornell university maple research (11456) ............................
14 125,000 ............................................... (re. $9,000)
15 Cornell university onion research (10948) ... 70,000 ... (re. $22,000)
16 Cornell university vegetable research (11401) ........................
17 100,000 ............................................... (re. $2,000)
18 Cornell university hard cider research (11441) .......................
19 200,000 ............................................... (re. $5,000)
20 Cornell university for concord grape research (11444) ................
21 250,000 ............................................. (re. $115,000)
22 Cornell university Geneva experiment station hop and barley evaluation
23 and field testing program (11466) ... 400,000 ......... (re. $2,000)
24 Cornell university agriculture in the classroom to support nutritional
25 education programs (10938) ... 380,000 .............. (re. $232,000)
26 Cornell university future farmers of America (10939) .................
27 842,000 ............................................. (re. $324,000)
28 Cornell university association of agricultural educators for teacher
29 recruitment, professional development, and administrative assistance
30 (10940) ... 416,000 ................................. (re. $233,000)
31 Cornell university farmnet program for farm family assistance (10926)
32 872,000 .............................................. (re. $66,000)
33 Cornell university small farms program for veterans (11417)...........
34 115,000 .............................................. (re. $55,000)
35 Cornell university farm labor specialist to assist farmers with labor
36 law compliance (11425) ... 200,000 ................... (re. $82,000)
37 New York farm viability institute (10916) ............................
38 1,900,000 ........................................... (re. $998,000)
39 New York farm viability institute, for services and expenses of New
40 York state berry growers association (11462) .......................
41 60,000 ................................................ (re. $1,000)
42 New York farm viability institute, for services and expenses of New
43 York corn and soybean growers (11454) ... 75,000 ...... (re. $5,000)
44 For services, expenses and grants related to the taste New York
45 program, including but not limited to marketing and advertising to
46 promote New York produced food and beverage goods and products,
47 including but not limited to up to $550,000 for the New York wine
48 and culinary center, provided that moneys hereby appropriated shall
49 be available to the program net of refunds, rebates, reimbursements,
50 credits, and deductions taken by contractors for fees associated
51 with operating the taste New York program. All or a portion of this
53 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 appropriation may be suballocated to any department, agency, or
2 public authority. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the
3 director of the budget is hereby authorized to transfer up to
4 $1,100,000 of this appropriation to state operations (11450) .......
5 1,100,000 ......................................... (re. $1,100,000)
6 For services and expenses of programs to promote agricultural economic
7 development, including but not limited to farmland viability and up
8 to $500,000 for Cornell University Maple Program at Arnot Forest, in
9 accordance with a programmatic and financial plan to be approved by
10 the director of the budget. Notwithstanding any other provision of
11 law, the director of the budget is hereby authorized to transfer up
12 to $1,000,000 of this appropriation to state operations (10902)
13 1,000,000 ......................................... (re. $1,000,000)
14 New York state brewers association (11428) ... 75,000 .. (re. $75,000)
15 New York cider association (11429) ... 75,000 .......... (re. $75,000)
16 New York state distillers guild (11430) ... 75,000 ..... (re. $75,000)
17 For services and expenses of the New York state apple research and
18 development program, in consultation with the apple research and
19 development advisory board (11400) ... 500,000 ....... (re. $24,000)
20 Northern New York agricultural development program administered by
21 Cornell cooperative extension of Jefferson County (10941) ..........
22 300,000 ............................................. (re. $179,000)
23 For services and expenses of programs to promote dairy excellence,
24 including but not limited to programs at Cornell university.
25 Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the director of the budget
26 is hereby authorized to transfer up to $150,000 of this appropri-
27 ation to state operations for programs including administration of
28 dairy profit teams (11495) ... 370,000 .............. (re. $102,000)
29 For services and expenses of the electronic benefits transfer program
30 administered by the Farmers' Market Federation of NY (11412) .......
31 138,000 .............................................. (re. $40,000)
32 For services and expenses of a program to develop farm to school
33 initiatives that will help schools purchase more food from local
34 farmers and expand access to healthy local food for school children.
35 The funds shall be awarded through a competitive process (11405) ...
36 750,000 ............................................. (re. $499,000)
37 New York federation of growers and processors agribusiness child
38 development program (10913) ... 9,275,000 ........... (re. $396,000)
39 Tractor rollover protection program administered by Mary Imogene
40 Basset hospital (11473) ... 250,000 ................. (re. $227,000)
41 American farmland trust for a farmland for a new generation resource
42 center (11442) ... 200,000 ........................... (re. $39,000)
43 American farmland trust for a farmland for a new generation regional
44 navigator (11443) ... 200,000 ......................... (re. $9,000)
45 Teens for Food Justice (11435) ... 20,000 .............. (re. $20,000)
46 Met Council Kosher Food Network (11446) ... 50,000 ..... (re. $50,000)
47 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018:
48 For additional services and expenses of the Cornell university Geneva
49 experiment station hop and barley evaluation and field testing
50 program (11451) ... 260,000 ........................... (re. $9,000)
54 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For additional services and expenses of Cornell university association
2 of agricultural educators for teacher recruitment, professional
3 development, and administrative assistance (11439) .................
4 113,000 ............................................. (re. $113,000)
5 For services and expenses of dairy profit teams and dairy education
6 programs administered by the New York farm viability institute
7 (11459) ... 220,000 ................................... (re. $8,000)
8 For services, expenses and grants related to the taste New York
9 program, including but not limited to marketing and advertising to
10 promote New York produced food and beverage goods and products,
11 including but not limited to up to $550,000 for the New York wine
12 and culinary center, provided that moneys hereby appropriated shall
13 be available to the program net of refunds, rebates, reimbursements
14 and credits. All or a portion of this appropriation may be suballo-
15 cated to any department, agency, or public authority. Notwithstand-
16 ing any other provision of law, the director of the budget is hereby
17 authorized to transfer up to $1,100,000 of this appropriation to
18 state operations (11450) ... 1,100,000 ............... (re. $48,000)
19 For services and expenses of a program to develop farm to school
20 initiatives that will help schools purchase more food from local
21 farmers and expand access to healthy local food for school children.
22 The funds shall be awarded through a competitive process (11405) ...
23 750,000 ............................................. (re. $291,000)
24 To the Adirondack North Country Association for a program to develop
25 farm to school initiatives that will help schools purchase more food
26 from local farmers (11415) ... 300,000 ............... (re. $26,000)
27 For redevelopment of the wool center at the New York state fair.
28 Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the director of the budget
29 is hereby authorized to transfer up to $25,000 of this appropriation
30 to state operations (11440) ... 25,000 ............... (re. $11,000)
31 Tractor rollover protection program administered by Mary Imogene
32 Basset hospital (11473) ... 250,000 .................. (re. $37,000)
33 For services and expenses of the New York state apple research and
34 development program, in consultation with the apple research and
35 development advisory board (11400) ... 500,000 ....... (re. $15,000)
36 New York farm viability institute, for services and expenses of New
37 York state berry growers association (11462) .......................
38 60,000 ............................................... (re. $12,000)
39 Cornell university berry research (11416) ............................
40 260,000 .............................................. (re. $65,000)
41 New York farm viability institute, for services and expenses of New
42 York corn and soybean growers (11454) ... 75,000 ...... (re. $9,000)
43 Cornell university vegetable research (11401) ........................
44 100,000 .............................................. (re. $11,000)
45 Suffolk county soil and water conservation district-deer fencing
46 matching grants program (11480) ... 200,000 .......... (re. $10,000)
47 For services and expenses of the eastern equine encephalitis program
48 administered by Oswego county, including suballocation to other
49 state departments and agencies. Notwithstanding any other provision
50 of law, the director of the budget is hereby authorized to transfer
51 up to $175,000 of this appropriation to state operations (11467) ...
52 175,000 .............................................. (re. $50,000)
55 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 Grown on Long Island (11404) ... 100,000 .............. (re. $100,000)
2 For services and expenses of the north country low cost vaccine
3 program administered by the St. Lawrence and Jefferson county public
4 health departments. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the
5 director of the budget is hereby authorized to transfer up to
6 $25,000 of this appropriation to state operations (11460) ..........
7 25,000 ............................................... (re. $15,000)
8 Cornell university small farms program for veterans (11417) ..........
9 115,000 .............................................. (re. $10,000)
10 St. Lawrence-Lewis BOCES north country agriculture academy (11418) ...
11 200,000 ............................................... (re. $4,000)
12 Cornell university farm labor specialist to assist farmers with labor
13 law compliance (11425) ... 200,000 ................... (re. $21,000)
14 Seeds of success award to promote and recognize school gardens and
15 gardening programs across New York state. Notwithstanding any other
16 provision of law, the director of the budget is hereby authorized to
17 transfer up to $100,000 of this appropriation to state operations
18 (11427) ... 100,000 .................................. (re. $33,000)
19 New York state brewers association (11428) ... 75,000 .. (re. $19,000)
20 New York state distillers guild (11430) ... 75,000 ..... (re. $75,000)
21 For services and expenses of the New York state senior farmers market
22 nutrition program. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the
23 director of the budget is hereby authorized to transfer up to
24 $180,000 of this appropriation to state operations (11409) .........
25 500,000 ............................................. (re. $500,000)
26 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2017:
27 For additional services and expenses of the Cornell university farmnet
28 program for farm family assistance (11469) .........................
29 416,000 .............................................. (re. $16,000)
30 For additional services and expenses of the Cornell university Geneva
31 experiment station hop and barley evaluation and field testing
32 program (11451) ... 160,000 ........................... (re. $1,000)
33 For services and expenses of programs to promote dairy excellence,
34 including but not limited to programs at Cornell university.
35 Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the director of the
36 budget is hereby authorized to transfer up to $150,000 of this
37 appropriation to state operations for programs including adminis-
38 tration of dairy profit teams (11495) ... 150,000 .... (re. $66,000)
39 For services, expenses and grants related to the taste New York
40 program, including but not limited to marketing and advertising to
41 promote New York produced food and beverage goods and products,
42 including but not limited to up to $550,000 for the New York wine
43 and culinary center, provided that moneys hereby appropriated shall
44 be available to the program net of refunds, rebates, reimbursements
45 and credits. All or a portion of this appropriation may be suballo-
46 cated to any department, agency, or public authority. Notwithstand-
47 ing any other provision of law, the director of the budget is hereby
48 authorized to transfer up to $1,100,000 of this appropriation to
49 state operations (11450) ... 1,100,000 ............... (re. $17,000)
50 For services and expenses of a program to develop farm to school
51 initiatives that will help schools purchase more food from local
56 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 farmers and expand access to healthy local food for school children.
2 The funds shall be awarded through a competitive process (11405) ...
3 750,000 ............................................. (re. $153,000)
4 Tractor rollover protection program administered by Mary Imogene
5 Basset hospital (11473) ... 250,000 .................. (re. $31,000)
6 For services and expenses of the New York State apple research and
7 development program, in consultation with the apple research and
8 development advisory board (11400) ... 500,000 ........ (re. $8,000)
9 New York farm viability institute, for services and expenses of New
10 York State berry growers association (11462) .......................
11 60,000 ............................................... (re. $17,000)
12 Cornell university berry research (11416) ............................
13 260,000 ............................................... (re. $4,000)
14 New York farm viability, for services and expenses of New York corn
15 and soybean growers (11454) ... 75,000 ............... (re. $31,000)
16 Suffolk county soil and water conservation district-deer fencing
17 matching grants program (11480) ... 200,000 ........... (re. $1,000)
18 Grown on Long Island (11404) ... 100,000 .............. (re. $100,000)
19 Cornell university small farm programs for veterans (11417) ..........
20 115,000 .............................................. (re. $59,000)
21 St. Lawrence-Lewis BOCES north country agriculture academy (11418) ...
22 200,000 ............................................... (re. $2,000)
23 For services and expenses of the farm to table trail program, includ-
24 ing suballocation to other state departments and agencies (11424)
25 ... 50,000 ........................................... (re. $14,000)
26 Cornell university farm labor specialist to assist farmers with labor
27 law compliance (11425) ... 200,000 ................... (re. $11,000)
28 Cornell university farmer muck boot camp program (11426) .............
29 100,000 .............................................. (re. $54,000)
30 Seeds of success award to promote and recognize school gardens and
31 gardening programs across New York state. Notwithstanding any other
32 provision of law, the director of the budget is hereby authorized to
33 transfer up to $100,000 of this appropriation to state operations
34 (11427) ... 100,000 .................................. (re. $29,000)
35 Cornell university sheep farming program (11432) .....................
36 10,000 ................................................ (re. $1,000)
37 For services and expenses of the New York state senior farmers market
38 nutrition program. Notwithstanding any other provision of the law,
39 the director of the budget is hereby authorized to transfer up to
40 $180,000 of this appropriation to state operations (11409) .........
41 500,000 ............................................. (re. $484,000)
42 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2016:
43 Cornell university farmnet program for farm family assistance (10926)
44 ... 384,000 ........................................... (re. $4,000)
45 Cornell university Geneva experiment station hop and barley evaluation
46 and field testing program (11466) ... 40,000 .......... (re. $6,000)
47 For additional services and expenses of the Cornell university Geneva
48 experiment station hop and barley evaluation and field testing
49 program (11451) ... 160,000 ........................... (re. $2,000)
50 For services and expenses of a program to develop farm to school
51 initiatives that will help schools purchase more food from local
57 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 farmers and expand access to healthy local food for school children.
2 The funds shall be awarded through a competitive process (11405) ...
3 250,000 ............................................... (re. $9,000)
4 Tractor rollover protection program administered by Mary Imogene
5 Basset hospital (11473) ... 250,000 .................. (re. $98,000)
6 New York farm viability institute, for services and expenses of New
7 York State berry growers association (11462) .......................
8 60,000 ................................................ (re. $5,000)
9 Cornell university berry research (11416) ............................
10 260,000 .............................................. (re. $18,000)
11 New York farm viability, for services and expenses of New York corn
12 and soybean growers (11454) ... 75,000 ............... (re. $15,000)
13 For services and expenses of the eastern equine encephalitis program
14 administered by Oswego county, including suballocation to other
15 state departments and agencies. Notwithstanding any other provision
16 of law, the director of the budget is hereby authorized to transfer
17 up to $175,000 of this appropriation to state operations (11467) ...
18 175,000 ............................................... (re. $6,000)
19 For services and expenses of dairy profit teams administered by the
20 New York farm viability institute (11459) ..........................
21 220,000 ............................................. (re. $137,000)
22 Long Island farm bureau (11463) ... 100,000 ........... (re. $100,000)
23 For services and expenses of the north country low cost vaccine
24 program administered by the St. Lawrence and Jefferson county public
25 health departments. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the
26 director of the budget is hereby authorized to transfer up to
27 $25,000 of this appropriation to state operations (11460) ..........
28 25,000 ................................................ (re. $6,000)
29 Northern New York agricultural development program administered by
30 Cornell cooperative extension of Jefferson County (10941) ..........
31 600,000 .............................................. (re. $46,000)
32 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2015:
33 Cornell university Geneva experiment station hop and barley evaluation
34 and field testing program (11466) ... 40,000 .......... (re. $7,000)
35 Cornell university agriculture in the classroom (10938) ..............
36 80,000 ................................................ (re. $2,000)
37 For services and expenses of a program to develop farm to school
38 initiatives that will help schools purchase more food from local
39 farmers and expand access to healthy local food for school children.
40 The funds shall be awarded through a competitive process (11405) ...
41 250,000 .............................................. (re. $13,000)
42 Tractor rollover protection program administered by Mary Imogene
43 Basset hospital (11473) ... 250,000 .................. (re. $48,000)
44 For services and expenses of the New York State apple research and
45 development program, in consultation with the apple research and
46 development advisory board (11400) ... 500,000 ....... (re. $79,000)
47 Cornell university maple research (11456) ... 125,000 ... (re. $4,000)
48 Cornell university vegetable research (11401) ........................
49 100,000 ............................................... (re. $2,000)
50 Suffolk county soil and water conservation district - deer fencing
51 matching grants program (11480) ... 200,000 ........... (re. $3,000)
58 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of the eastern equine encephalitis program
2 administered by Oswego county, including suballocation to other
3 state departments and agencies. Notwithstanding any other provision
4 of law, the director of the budget is hereby authorized to transfer
5 up to $175,000 of this appropriation to state operations (11467) ...
6 175,000 .............................................. (re. $51,000)
7 For services and expenses of dairy profit teams administered by the
8 New York farm viability institute (11459) ..........................
9 220,000 ............................................. (re. $129,000)
10 Long Island farm bureau (11463) ... 100,000 ........... (re. $100,000)
11 For services and expenses of the north country low cost vaccine
12 program administered by the St. Lawrence and Jefferson county public
13 health department. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the
14 director of the budget is hereby authorized to transfer up to
15 $25,000 of this appropriation to state operations (11460) ..........
16 25,000 ............................................... (re. $13,000)
17 For services and expenses of the agriculture environmental management
18 certified planner quality assurance and control program. Notwith-
19 standing any other provision of law, the director of the budget is
20 hereby authorized to transfer up to $250,000 of this appropriation
21 to state operations (11408) ... 250,000 ............. (re. $250,000)
22 For the development of regional food hubs to facilitate the transpor-
23 tation of locally grown produce to urban markets, including the
24 development of cooperative food hubs. Notwithstanding any other
25 provision of the law, the director of the budget is hereby author-
26 ized to transfer up to $175,000 of this appropriation to state oper-
27 ations (11410) ... 1,064,000 ......................... (re. $49,000)
28 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2014:
29 For additional services and expenses of the Cornell university farmnet
30 program for farm family assistance (11469) .........................
31 216,000 ............................................... (re. $2,000)
32 For additional services and expenses of the Cornell university Geneva
33 experiment station hop and barley evaluation and field testing
34 program (11451) ... 160,000 ........................... (re. $7,000)
35 For services and expenses of dairy profit teams administered by the
36 New York farm viability institute (11459) ..........................
37 220,000 .............................................. (re. $92,000)
38 For services and expenses of the New York State apple research and
39 development program, in consultation with the apple research and
40 development advisory board (11400) ... 500,000 ....... (re. $36,000)
41 Cornell university vegetable research (11401) ........................
42 100,000 ............................................... (re. $7,000)
43 Grown on Long Island (11404) ... 100,000 .............. (re. $100,000)
44 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2013:
45 Cornell university Geneva experiment station hop evaluation and field
46 testing program (11466) ... 40,000 .................... (re. $3,000)
47 Cornell university pro-dairy program (11470) .........................
48 822,000 .............................................. (re. $28,000)
49 For services and expenses of the eastern equine encephalitis program,
50 including suballocation to other state departments and agencies.
59 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the director of the budget
2 is hereby authorized to transfer up to $150,000 of this appropri-
3 ation to state operations (11467) ..................................
4 150,000 .............................................. (re. $10,000)
5 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2012:
6 For services and expenses of programs to promote agricultural economic
7 development, including but not limited to farmland viability, in
8 accordance with a programmatic and financial plan to be approved by
9 the director of the budget. Notwithstanding any other provision of
10 law, the director of the budget is hereby authorized to transfer up
11 to $3,000,000 of this appropriation to state operations (10902) ...
12 3,000,000 ........................................... (re. $513,000)
13 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2011:
14 Cornell university farm family assistance (10926) ....................
15 384,000 ............................................... (re. $2,000)
16 Cornell university agriculture in the classroom (10938) ..............
17 80,000 ................................................ (re. $7,000)
18 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2010:
19 Cornell university agriculture in the classroom (10938) ..............
20 80,000 ............................................... (re. $10,000)
21 For services and expenses related to establishing, improving, and
22 promoting farmer's markets in Monroe, Ontario, Livingston, Orleans,
23 Genesee, Wyoming, Steuben, Yates and Wayne counties, in accordance
24 with a programmatic and financial plan submitted by the commissioner
25 of agriculture and markets and approved by the director of the budg-
26 et. No moneys of this appropriation shall be made available until
27 the Genesee valley regional market authority makes a transfer to the
28 general fund of the state, as provided for in a chapter of the laws
29 of 2010 (11494) ... 3,000,000 ........................ (re. $65,000)
30 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2009:
31 For services and expenses of programs to promote agricultural economic
32 development, including but not limited to farmland viability, in
33 accordance with a programmatic and financial plan to be approved by
34 the director of the budget. Notwithstanding any other provision of
35 law, the director of the budget is hereby authorized to transfer up
36 to $600,000 of this appropriation to state operations (10902) ......
37 600,000 ............................................. (re. $218,000)
38 New York state cattle health assurance program (10922) ...............
39 360,000 .............................................. (re. $31,000)
40 Cornell university Geneva experiment station (10928) .................
41 400,000 ............................................... (re. $3,000)
42 For additional services and expenses of golden nematode control,
43 including a contract with empire state potato growers. Notwithstand-
44 ing any other provision of law, the director of the budget is hereby
45 authorized to transfer up to $30,000 of this appropriation to state
46 operations (10935) ... 30,000 ......................... (re. $5,000)
60 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2009, as amended by chapter 55,
2 section 1, of the laws of 2010:
3 For services and expenses of an organic farming program. Notwithstand-
4 ing any other provision of law, the director of the budget is hereby
5 authorized to transfer up to 96,000 of this appropriation to state
6 operations (10937) ... 96,000 ........................ (re. $91,000)
7 New York seafood council (10946) ... 25,000 ............. (re. $2,000)
8 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2008:
9 center for dairy excellence administered by the New York farm viabil-
10 ity institute (10918) ... 245,000 .................... (re. $28,000)
11 Cornell university onion research (10948) ... 98,000 .... (re. $2,000)
12 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2008, as amended by chapter
13 496, section 6, of the laws of 2008:
14 For services and expenses of programs to promote agricultural economic
15 development, including but not limited to farmland viability, in
16 accordance with a programmatic and financial plan to be approved by
17 the director of the budget. Notwithstanding any other provision of
18 law, the director of the budget is hereby authorized to transfer up
19 to $2,357,000 of this appropriation to state operations, provided,
20 however, that the amount of this appropriation available for expend-
21 iture and disbursement on and after September 1, 2008 shall be
22 reduced by six percent of the amount that was undisbursed as of
23 August 15, 2008 (10902) ... 1,809,000 ............... (re. $197,000)
24 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2008, as amended by chapter 1,
25 section 4, of the laws of 2009:
26 For services and expenses related to the marketing and promotion of
27 New York state wine in conjunction with the New York wine and grape
28 foundation including suballocation to other state departments and
29 agencies, and in accordance with a programmatic and financial plan
30 to be approved by the director of the budget. Notwithstanding any
31 other provision of law, the director of the budget is hereby author-
32 ized to transfer up to $1,684,000 to state operations (10944) ...
33 1,684,000 ............................................ (re. $34,000)
34 For additional services and expenses of the center for dairy excel-
35 lence administered by the New York farm viability institute (10918)
36 ... 376,000 .......................................... (re. $28,000)
37 For services and expenses of the plum pox virus eradication and indem-
38 nity program. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the direc-
39 tor of the budget is hereby authorized to transfer up to $376,000 of
40 this appropriation to state operations (11481) .....................
41 376,000 ............................................. (re. $334,000)
42 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2008, as amended by chapter 53,
43 section 1, of the laws of 2015:
44 Cornell University for services and expenses of extension and research
45 programs managed by the Hudson Valley Research Laboratory, Inc
46 (11478) ... 63,900 ................................... (re. $40,000)
61 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2008, as amended by chapter 55,
2 section 1, of the laws of 2010:
3 For services and expenses of the cluster based industry and agribusi-
4 ness development grants program (11479) ... 94,000 ... (re. $94,000)
5 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2007:
6 For additional services and expenses of programs to promote agricul-
7 tural economic development, including but not limited to farmland
8 viability, in accordance with a programmatic and financial plan to
9 be approved by the director of the budget. Notwithstanding any other
10 provision of law, the director of the budget is hereby authorized to
11 transfer up to $118,000 of this appropriation to state operations
12 (11487) ... 118,000 ................................. (re. $110,000)
13 For services and expenses of NY Agritourism (11496) ..................
14 1,130,000 ........................................... (re. $202,000)
15 For services and expenses of the center for dairy excellence adminis-
16 tered by the New York state farm viability institute (10918) .......
17 750,000 .............................................. (re. $53,000)
18 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2006:
19 For services and expenses of NY Agritourism (11496) ..................
20 1,000,000 ........................................... (re. $140,000)
21 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2006, as amended by chapter
22 108, section 5, of the laws of 2006:
23 For payment to agricultural or horticultural corporations and county
24 extension service associations that are eligible to receive premium
25 reimbursement pursuant to section 286 of the agriculture and markets
26 law for the costs of construction, renovation, alteration, rehabili-
27 tation, improvements or repair of fairground buildings or facilities
28 used to house and promote agriculture, to be allocated by the
29 commissioner such that each eligible agricultural and horticultural
30 corporation or county extension service shall receive for a fair or
31 exposition an amount of thirty thousand dollars plus a portion of
32 the remaining amount available, based upon the average five-year
33 total attendance of each such event from 2001 through 2005 (11497)
34 ... 3,000,000 ........................................ (re. $96,000)
35 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
36 Federal USDA-Food and Nutrition Services Fund
37 Federal Agriculture and Markets Account - 25021
38 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
39 For services and expenses of non-point source pollution control, farm-
40 land preservation, and other agricultural programs including subal-
41 location to other state departments and agencies including liabil-
42 ities incurred prior to April 1, 2021. Notwithstanding section 51 of
43 the state finance law and any other provision of law to the contra-
44 ry, the funds appropriated herein may be increased or decreased by
45 transfer from/to appropriations for any prior or subsequent grant
46 period within the same federal fund/program and between state oper-
47 ations and aid to localities to accomplish the intent of this appro-
62 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 priation, as long as such corresponding prior/subsequent grant peri-
2 ods within such appropriations have been reappropriated as necessary
3 (11498) ............................................................
4 20,000,000 ....................................... (re. $20,000,000)
5 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
6 For services and expenses of non-point source pollution control, farm-
7 land preservation, and other agricultural programs including subal-
8 location to other state departments and agencies including liabil-
9 ities incurred prior to April 1, 2020. Notwithstanding section 51 of
10 the state finance law and any other provision of law to the contra-
11 ry, the funds appropriated herein may be increased or decreased by
12 transfer from/to appropriations for any prior or subsequent grant
13 period within the same federal fund/program and between state oper-
14 ations and aid to localities to accomplish the intent of this appro-
15 priation, as long as such corresponding prior/subsequent grant peri-
16 ods within such appropriations have been reappropriated as necessary
17 (11498) ... 20,000,000 ........................... (re. $20,000,000)
18 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2009, as amended by chapter 55,
19 section 1, of the laws of 2010:
20 General Fund
21 Community Projects Fund - 007
22 Account EE
23 Maintenance Undistributed
24 For services and expenses or for contracts with municipalities and/or
25 private not-for-profit agencies for the amounts herein provided:
26 RENSSELAER COUNTY AGRICULTURAL and HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY .............
27 2,500 ................................................. (re. $2,500)
28 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2008, as amended by chapter 53,
29 section 1, of the laws of 2011:
30 Maintenance Undistributed
31 For services and expenses or for contracts with municipalities and/or
32 private not-for-profit agencies for the amounts herein provided:
33 General Fund
34 Community Projects Fund - 007
35 Account AA
36 Afton Driving Park and Agricultural Assoc. Inc. ......................
37 7,500 ................................................. (re. $7,500)
38 Greater Binghamton SCORE Chapter 217 ... 5,000 .......... (re. $3,600)
39 Mohawk and Hudson River Humane Society ... 50,000 ...... (re. $23,100)
63 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 Saugerties Farmers Market ... 2,500 ..................... (re. $2,500)
2 Western NY Wool Cooperative ... 10,000 ................. (re. $10,000)
3 Wyoming County Fair Association ... 25,000 ............. (re. $25,000)
4 General Fund
5 Community Projects Fund - 007
6 Account EE
7 GENESEE COUNTY AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY, INC. ... 1,000 ..... (re. $1,000)
8 RENAISSANCE FARMER'S MARKET ... 600 ....................... (re. $600)
9 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2007, as amended by chapter 53,
10 section 1, of the laws of 2012:
11 Maintenance Undistributed
12 For services and expenses or for contracts with municipalities and/or
13 private not-for-profit agencies for the amounts herein provided:
14 General Fund
15 Community Projects Fund - 007
16 Account AA
17 Chautauqua County Beekeepers Association ... 500 .......... (re. $500)
18 Project Renewal, Inc. ... 25,000 ....................... (re. $25,000)
19 General Fund
20 Community Projects Fund - 007
21 Account EE
22 HERKIMER COUNTY FAIR ASSOCIATION ... 5,000 .............. (re. $5,000)
23 By chapter 54, section 1, of the laws of 2002, as amended by chapter 55,
24 section 1, of the laws of 2002:
25 General Fund
26 Community Projects Fund - 007
27 Account EE
28 Cornell Cooperative Extension Dutchess County ........................
29 25,000 ............................................... (re. $25,000)
30 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2000:
31 Maintenance Undistributed
32 General Fund
33 Community Projects Fund - 007
34 Account AA
35 For services and expenses, grants in aid, or for contracts with muni-
36 cipalities and/or private not-for-profit agencies. The funds appro-
64 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND MARKETS
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 priated hereby may be suballocated to any department, agency or
2 public authority ... 1,000,000 .................... (re. $1,000,000)
3 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 1999, as amended by chapter 55,
4 section 1, of the laws of 2008:
5 Maintenance Undistributed
6 General Fund
7 Community Projects Fund - 007
8 Account AA
9 For services and expenses, grants in aid, or for contracts with muni-
10 cipalities and/or private not-for-profit agencies. The funds appro-
11 priated hereby may be suballocated to any department, agency or
12 public authority ... 1,000,000 .................... (re. $1,000,000)
65 12653-09-2
ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For payment according to the following schedule:
2 APPROPRIATIONS REAPPROPRIATIONS
3 Special Revenue Funds - Other ...... 50,000,000 0
4 ---------------- ----------------
5 All Funds ........................ 50,000,000 0
6 ================ ================
7 CANNABIS MANAGEMENT PROGRAM ................................. 50,000,000
8 --------------
9 Special Revenue Funds - Other
10 New York State Cannabis Revenue Fund
11 New York State Cannabis Revenue Account - 24800
12 The sum of $50,000,000 is hereby appropri-
13 ated for the investment, whether directly
14 or indirectly, in a private debt or equity
15 fund selected pursuant to subdivision 32
16 of section 1678 of public authorities law
17 or to cover capital costs associated with
18 establishing conditional adult-use canna-
19 bis retail dispensaries for operation by
20 social equity licensees duly licensed
21 pursuant to article 2 of the cannabis law,
22 including the payment of liabilities
23 incurred related to such costs, prior to
24 April 1, 2022.
25 Such capital costs shall include all costs,
26 including closely related ancillary costs,
27 related to the leasing, planning, design,
28 construction, reconstruction, rehabili-
29 tation, improvement, furnishing, and
30 equipping of such conditional adult-use
31 cannabis retail dispensaries, to the
32 extent such work has been undertaken or
33 costs for such work incurred by: (i) the
34 office of cannabis management and the
35 cannabis control board, (ii) the dormitory
36 authority of the state of New York, or any
37 subsidiary thereof, under agreement with
38 the office of cannabis management and the
39 cannabis control board, or with the
40 private debt or equity fund formed pursu-
41 ant to subdivision 32 of section 1678 of
42 public authorities law or (iii) the
43 private debt or equity fund formed pursu-
44 ant to subdivision 32 of section 1678 of
45 public authorities law. All or a portion
46 of this appropriation may be suballocated
66 12653-09-2
ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 or transferred to any department, agency,
2 or public authority ......................... 50,000,000
3 --------------
67 12653-09-2
COUNCIL ON THE ARTS
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For payment according to the following schedule:
2 APPROPRIATIONS REAPPROPRIATIONS
3 General Fund ....................... 92,605,000 73,419,000
4 Special Revenue Funds - Federal .... 1,413,000 2,975,000
5 Special Revenue Funds - Other ...... 496,000 496,000
6 ---------------- ----------------
7 All Funds ........................ 94,514,000 76,890,000
8 ================ ================
9 SCHEDULE
10 COUNCIL ON THE ARTS PROGRAM ................................. 44,294,000
11 --------------
12 General Fund
13 Local Assistance Account - 10000
14 For state financial assistance for the arts.
15 Notwithstanding any other section of law
16 to the contrary, this appropriation may be
17 used for state financial assistance to
18 nonprofit cultural organizations offering
19 services to the general public, including
20 but not limited to, orchestras, dance
21 companies, museums and theatre groups
22 including nonprofit cultural organiza-
23 tions, botanical gardens, zoos, aquariums
24 and public benefit corporations offering
25 programs of arts related education for
26 elementary and secondary school pupils
27 provided that, notwithstanding any incon-
28 sistent provision of law, $100,000 shall
29 be interchanged to the Nelson A. Rockefel-
30 ler empire state plaza performing arts
31 center corporation in support of programs
32 for performing arts and other cultural
33 events, and related uses for the benefit
34 of the citizens of New York state. Such
35 programs may include activities directly
36 undertaken by the grantee, or indirectly
37 by regranting of state funds by regional
38 or local arts councils, among other organ-
39 izations, to nonprofit cultural organiza-
40 tions.
41 Grants, including capital grants, awarded
42 may be used for programs and activities
43 relating to arts disciplines including,
44 but not limited to, architecture, dance,
45 design, music, theater, media, literature,
68 12653-09-2
COUNCIL ON THE ARTS
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 museum activities, visual arts, folk arts,
2 and arts in education programs (12111) ...... 40,635,000
3 For services and expenses of stabilization
4 grants up to $50,000 to support the oper-
5 ating expenses of small and mid-sized arts
6 organizations ................................ 1,000,000
7 For additional grants in aid to certain
8 not-for-profit arts and cultural organiza-
9 tions. Notwithstanding section 24 of the
10 state finance law or any provision of law
11 to the contrary, funds from this appropri-
12 ation shall be allocated only pursuant to
13 a plan (i) approved by the temporary pres-
14 ident of the senate and the director of
15 the budget which sets forth either an
16 itemized list of grantees with the amount
17 to be received by each, or the methodology
18 for allocating such appropriation, and
19 (ii) which is thereafter included in a
20 senate resolution calling for the expendi-
21 ture of such funds, which resolution must
22 be approved by a majority vote of all
23 members elected to the senate upon a roll
24 call vote ...................................... 750,000
25 --------------
26 Program account subtotal .................. 42,385,000
27 --------------
28 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
29 Federal Miscellaneous Operating Grants Fund
30 Council on the Arts Account - 25376
31 For financial assistance to nonprofit
32 cultural organizations (12111) ............... 1,413,000
33 --------------
34 Program account subtotal ................... 1,413,000
35 --------------
36 Special Revenue Funds - Other
37 Arts Capital Grants Fund
38 Arts Capital Grants Account - 21850
39 For services and expenses of the arts capi-
40 tal grants fund (12111) ........................ 196,000
41 --------------
42 Program account subtotal ..................... 196,000
43 --------------
44 Special Revenue Funds - Other
45 Dedicated Miscellaneous Special Revenue Account
46 Gifts to the Arts Account - 23814
69 12653-09-2
COUNCIL ON THE ARTS
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of the arts fund
2 pursuant to section 97-yyyy of the state
3 finance law (12111) ............................ 300,000
4 --------------
5 Program account subtotal ..................... 300,000
6 --------------
7 ARTS AND CULTURAL ORGANIZATION RECOVERY GRANT PROGRAM ....... 50,000,000
8 --------------
9 General Fund
10 Local Assistance Account - 10000
11 For services and expenses related to the
12 recovery of the New York arts and cultural
13 community. These funds shall provide
14 grants to support the operations budget of
15 arts and cultural nonprofit organizations
16 statewide and be administered by the New
17 York state council on the arts. Funds are
18 to be used for the general costs of oper-
19 ating arts and cultural nonprofit organ-
20 izations in a COVID-19 compliant environ-
21 ment, including expenses of artistic,
22 programmatic, administrative and other
23 personnel, space (rent, mortgage, utili-
24 ties, costs of temporary or permanent
25 outdoor performance spaces), talent,
26 artistic and other contractual fees,
27 equipment, and other operating costs such
28 as marketing and communications costs.
29 Funds shall be spent by the organizations
30 within a period no greater than three
31 years as determined by the New York state
32 council on the arts in its procurement
33 guidelines. Such programs may include
34 activities directly undertaken by the
35 grantee, or indirectly by regranting of
36 state funds by regional or local arts
37 councils, among other organizations, to
38 nonprofit cultural organizations. Grants
39 awarded may be used for programs and
40 activities relating to arts disciplines
41 including, but not limited to, architec-
42 ture, dance, design, music, theater,
43 media, literature, museum activities,
44 visual arts, folk arts, and arts in educa-
45 tion programs. Funds shall be administered
46 in a competitive process. The New York
47 state council on the arts shall establish
48 procurement guidelines including a process
49 to ensure that no expenses funded by the
70 12653-09-2
COUNCIL ON THE ARTS
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 New York state council on the arts are
2 also funded through another state, local
3 or federal government fund and the evalua-
4 tive criteria and review process for
5 awards prior to council approval of
6 awards. The guidelines for the program and
7 competitive process shall ensure that such
8 funding is made available for uses
9 throughout the state and takes into
10 account regional distribution, includes no
11 match requirement, is not limited to prior
12 recipients of council grants, and gives
13 priority to small to midsize eligible
14 nonprofit arts and cultural organizations
15 (12118) ..................................... 40,000,000
16 For grants to Regional Arts and Cultural
17 Councils outside of New York City related
18 to the recovery of the New York arts and
19 cultural community, including not less
20 than $1,000,000 for ArtsWestchester, not
21 less than $1,000,000 for Arts Services
22 Initiative of Western New York, not less
23 than $1,000,000 for Arts Mid-Hudson, not
24 less than $1,000,000 for Huntington Arts
25 Council, not less than $1,000,000 for Arts
26 Center of the Capital Region, not less
27 than $1,000,000 for Genesee Valley Council
28 on the Arts, and not less than $1,000,000
29 for CNY Arts ................................ 10,000,000
30 --------------
31 Program account subtotal .................. 50,000,000
32 --------------
33 EMPIRE STATE PLAZA PERFORMING ARTS CENTER CORPORATION
34 PROGRAM ...................................................... 220,000
35 --------------
36 General Fund
37 Local Assistance Account - 10000
38 For state financial assistance for the
39 empire state plaza performing arts center
40 corporation (12105) ............................ 220,000
41 --------------
71 12653-09-2
COUNCIL ON THE ARTS
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 ARTS AND CULTURAL ORGANIZATION RECOVERY GRANT PROGRAM
2 General Fund
3 Local Assistance Account - 10000
4 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
5 For services and expenses related to the recovery of the New York arts
6 and cultural community. These funds shall provide grants to support
7 the operations budget of arts and cultural nonprofit organizations
8 statewide and be administered by the New York state council on the
9 arts. Funds are to be used for the general costs of operating arts
10 and cultural nonprofit organizations in a COVID-19 compliant envi-
11 ronment, including expenses of artistic, programmatic, administra-
12 tive and other personnel, space (rent, mortgage, utilities, costs of
13 temporary or permanent outdoor performance spaces), talent, artistic
14 and other contractual fees, equipment, and other operating costs
15 such as marketing and communications costs. Funds shall be spent by
16 the organizations within a period no greater than three years as
17 determined by the New York state council on the arts in its procure-
18 ment guidelines. Such programs may include activities directly
19 undertaken by the grantee, or indirectly by regranting of state
20 funds by regional or local arts councils, among other organizations,
21 to nonprofit cultural organizations. Grants awarded may be used for
22 programs and activities relating to arts disciplines including, but
23 not limited to, architecture, dance, design, music, theater, media,
24 literature, museum activities, visual arts, folk arts, and arts in
25 education programs. Funds shall be administered in a competitive
26 process. The New York state council on the arts shall establish
27 procurement guidelines including a process to ensure that no
28 expenses funded by the New York state council on the arts are also
29 funded through another state, local or federal government fund and
30 the evaluative criteria and review process for awards prior to coun-
31 cil approval of awards. The guidelines for the program and compet-
32 itive process shall ensure that such funding is made available for
33 uses throughout the state and takes into account regional distrib-
34 ution, includes no match requirement, is not limited to prior recip-
35 ients of council grants, and gives priority to small to midsize
36 eligible nonprofit arts and cultural organizations (12118) ...
37 40,000,000 ....................................... (re. $40,000,000)
38 COUNCIL ON THE ARTS PROGRAM
39 General Fund
40 Local Assistance Account - 10000
41 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
42 For state financial assistance for the arts. Notwithstanding any other
43 section of law to the contrary, this appropriation may be used for
44 state financial assistance to nonprofit cultural organizations
45 offering services to the general public, including but not limited
46 to, orchestras, dance companies, museums and theatre groups includ-
47 ing nonprofit cultural organizations, botanical gardens, zoos,
72 12653-09-2
COUNCIL ON THE ARTS
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 aquariums and public benefit corporations offering programs of arts
2 related education for elementary and secondary school pupils
3 provided that, notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law,
4 $100,000 shall be interchanged to the Nelson A. Rockefeller empire
5 state plaza performing arts center corporation in support of
6 programs for performing arts and other cultural events, and related
7 uses for the benefit of the citizens of New York state. Such
8 programs may include activities directly undertaken by the grantee,
9 or indirectly by regranting of state funds by regional or local arts
10 councils, among other organizations, to nonprofit cultural organiza-
11 tions.
12 Grants, including capital grants, awarded may be used for programs and
13 activities relating to arts disciplines including, but not limited
14 to, architecture, dance, design, music, theater, media, literature,
15 museum activities, visual arts, folk arts, and arts in education
16 programs (12111) ... 40,635,000 .................. (re. $30,654,000)
17 For additional state financial assistance for the arts. Notwithstand-
18 ing any other section of law to the contrary, this appropriation may
19 be used for state financial assistance to nonprofit cultural organ-
20 izations offering services to the general public, including but not
21 limited to, orchestras, dance companies, museums and theatre groups
22 including nonprofit cultural organizations, botanical gardens, zoos,
23 aquariums and public benefit corporations offering programs of arts
24 related education for elementary and secondary school pupils. Such
25 programs may include activities directly undertaken by the grantee,
26 or indirectly by regranting of state funds by regional or local arts
27 councils, among other organizations, to nonprofit cultural organiza-
28 tions. Grants, including capital grants, awarded may be used for
29 programs and activities relating to arts disciplines including, but
30 not limited to, architecture, dance, design, music, theater, media,
31 literature, museum activities, visual arts, folk arts, and arts in
32 education programs ... 2,500,000 .................... (re. $322,000)
33 For services and expenses of stabilization grants up to $50,000 to
34 support the operating expenses of small and mid-sized arts organiza-
35 tions ... 1,000,000 ............................... (re. $1,000,000)
36 For additional grants in aid to certain not-for-profit arts and
37 cultural organizations. Notwithstanding section twenty-four of the
38 state finance law or any provision of law to the contrary, funds
39 from this appropriation shall be allocated only pursuant to a plan
40 (i) approved by the temporary president of the senate and the direc-
41 tor of the budget which sets forth either an itemized list of gran-
42 tees with the amount to be received by each, or the methodology for
43 allocating such appropriation, and (ii) which is thereafter included
44 in a senate resolution calling for the expenditure of such funds,
45 which resolution must be approved by a majority vote of all members
46 elected to the senate upon a roll call vote ........................
47 771,000 ............................................. (re. $771,000)
48 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
49 For state financial assistance for the arts. Notwithstanding any other
50 section of law to the contrary, this appropriation may be used for
51 state financial assistance to nonprofit cultural organizations
73 12653-09-2
COUNCIL ON THE ARTS
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 offering services to the general public, including but not limited
2 to, orchestras, dance companies, museums and theatre groups includ-
3 ing nonprofit cultural organizations, botanical gardens, zoos,
4 aquariums and public benefit corporations offering programs of arts
5 related education for elementary and secondary school pupils
6 provided that, notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law,
7 $100,000 shall be interchanged to the Nelson A. Rockefeller empire
8 state plaza performing arts center corporation in support of
9 programs for performing arts and other cultural events, and related
10 uses for the benefit of the citizens of New York state. Such
11 programs may include activities directly undertaken by the grantee,
12 or indirectly by regranting of state funds by regional or local arts
13 councils, among other organizations, to nonprofit cultural organiza-
14 tions.
15 Grants, including capital grants, awarded may be used for programs and
16 activities relating to arts disciplines including, but not limited
17 to, architecture, dance, design, music, theater, media, literature,
18 museum activities, visual arts, folk arts, and arts in education
19 programs (12111) ... 40,635,000 ................... (re. $2,444,000)
20 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020, as amended by chapter 50,
21 section 4, of the laws of 2020:
22 For services and expenses of the Museum of the City of New York ...
23 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
24 For services and expenses of the Bronx Museum of the Arts ............
25 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
26 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
27 For state financial assistance for the arts. Notwithstanding any other
28 section of law to the contrary, this appropriation may be used for
29 state financial assistance to nonprofit cultural organizations
30 offering services to the general public, including but not limited
31 to, orchestras, dance companies, museums and theatre groups includ-
32 ing nonprofit cultural organizations, botanical gardens, zoos,
33 aquariums and public benefit corporations offering programs of arts
34 related education for elementary and secondary school pupils
35 provided that, notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law,
36 $100,000 shall be interchanged to the Nelson A. Rockefeller empire
37 state plaza performing arts center corporation in support of
38 programs for performing arts and other cultural events, and related
39 uses for the benefit of the citizens of New York state. Such
40 programs may include activities directly undertaken by the grantee,
41 or indirectly by regranting of state funds by regional or local arts
42 councils, among other organizations, to nonprofit cultural organiza-
43 tions.
44 Grants, including capital grants, awarded may be used for programs and
45 activities relating to arts disciplines including, but not limited
46 to, architecture, dance, design, music, theater, media, literature,
47 museum activities, visual arts, folk arts, and arts in education
48 programs (12111) ... 40,635,000 ..................... (re. $160,000)
49 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018:
74 12653-09-2
COUNCIL ON THE ARTS
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For state financial assistance for the arts. Notwithstanding any other
2 section of law to the contrary, this appropriation may be used for
3 state financial assistance to nonprofit cultural organizations
4 offering services to the general public, including but not limited
5 to, orchestras, dance companies, museums and theatre groups includ-
6 ing nonprofit cultural organizations, botanical gardens, zoos,
7 aquariums and public benefit corporations offering programs of arts
8 related education for elementary and secondary school pupils
9 provided that, notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law,
10 $100,000 shall be interchanged to the Nelson A. Rockefeller empire
11 state plaza performing arts center corporation in support of
12 programs for performing arts and other cultural events, and related
13 uses for the benefit of the citizens of New York state. Such
14 programs may include activities directly undertaken by the grantee,
15 or indirectly by regranting of state funds by regional or local arts
16 councils, among other organizations, to nonprofit cultural organiza-
17 tions.
18 Grants, including capital grants, awarded may be used for programs and
19 activities relating to arts disciplines including, but not limited
20 to, architecture, dance, design, music, theater, media, literature,
21 museum activities, visual arts, folk arts, and arts in education
22 programs (12111) ... 40,635,000 ...................... (re. $65,000)
23 For services and expenses of CNY Arts, Inc. ..........................
24 100,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
25 For services and expenses of Cayuga County Arts Council ..............
26 60,000 ............................................... (re. $60,000)
27 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2017:
28 For state financial assistance for the arts. Notwithstanding any other
29 section of law to the contrary, this appropriation may be used for
30 state financial assistance to nonprofit cultural organizations
31 offering services to the general public, including but not limited
32 to, orchestras, dance companies, museums and theatre groups includ-
33 ing nonprofit cultural organizations, botanical gardens, zoos,
34 aquariums and public benefit corporations offering programs of arts
35 related education for elementary and secondary school pupils
36 provided that, notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law,
37 $100,000 shall be interchanged to the Nelson A. Rockefeller empire
38 state plaza performing arts center corporation in support of
39 programs for performing arts and other cultural events, and related
40 uses for the benefit of the citizens of New York state. Such
41 programs may include activities directly undertaken by the grantee,
42 or indirectly by regranting of state funds by regional or local arts
43 councils, among other organizations, to nonprofit cultural organiza-
44 tions.
45 Grants, including capital grants, awarded may be used for programs and
46 activities relating to arts disciplines including, but not limited
47 to, architecture, dance, design, music, theater, media, literature,
48 museum activities, visual arts, folk arts, and arts in education
49 programs (12111) ... 40,635,000 ...................... (re. $96,000)
50 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
75 12653-09-2
COUNCIL ON THE ARTS
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 Federal Miscellaneous Operating Grants Fund
2 Council on the Arts Account - 25376
3 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
4 For financial assistance to nonprofit cultural organizations (12111)
5 ... 1,413,000 ..................................... (re. $1,413,000)
6 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
7 For financial assistance to nonprofit cultural organizations (12111)
8 ... 1,413,000 ....................................... (re. $725,000)
9 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
10 For financial assistance to nonprofit cultural organizations (12111)
11 ... 1,413,000 ....................................... (re. $167,000)
12 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018:
13 For financial assistance to nonprofit cultural organizations (12111)
14 ... 1,413,000 ....................................... (re. $670,000)
15 Special Revenue Funds - Other
16 Arts Capital Grants Fund
17 Arts Capital Grants Account - 21850
18 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
19 For services and expenses of the arts capital grants fund (12111) ...
20 196,000 ............................................. (re. $196,000)
21 Special Revenue Funds - Other
22 Dedicated Miscellaneous Special Revenue Account
23 Gifts to the Arts Account - 23814
24 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
25 For services and expenses of the arts fund pursuant to section 97-yyyy
26 of the state finance law ... 300,000 ................ (re. $300,000)
76 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF AUDIT AND CONTROL
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For payment according to the following schedule:
2 APPROPRIATIONS REAPPROPRIATIONS
3 General Fund ....................... 32,025,000 0
4 ---------------- ----------------
5 All Funds ........................ 32,025,000 0
6 ================ ================
7 SCHEDULE
8 STATE OPERATIONS PROGRAM .................................... 32,025,000
9 --------------
10 General Fund
11 Local Assistance Account - 10000
12 For state reimbursements to cities, towns,
13 or villages for payments made for special
14 accidental death benefits made pursuant to
15 section 208-f of the general municipal
16 law, including the payment of liabilities
17 incurred prior to April 1, 2022 and for
18 state reimbursement to New York city for
19 payments made for special accidental death
20 benefits to beneficiaries of first respon-
21 ders to the world trade center attack made
22 pursuant to section 208-f of the general
23 municipal law, including the payment of
24 liabilities incurred prior to April 1,
25 2022. Notwithstanding the provisions of
26 any other law to the contrary, for state
27 fiscal year 2022-2023 the liability of the
28 state and the amount to be distributed or
29 otherwise expended by the state pursuant
30 to section 208-f of the general municipal
31 law shall be limited to the amount appro-
32 priated (81003) ............................. 32,025,000
33 --------------
77 12653-09-2
CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For payment according to the following schedule:
2 APPROPRIATIONS REAPPROPRIATIONS
3 General Fund ....................... 1,848,157,600 14,434,000
4 ---------------- ----------------
5 All Funds ........................ 1,848,157,600 14,434,000
6 ================ ================
7 SCHEDULE
8 CITY UNIVERSITY--COMMUNITY COLLEGES ........................ 239,310,000
9 --------------
10 General Fund
11 Local Assistance Account - 10000
12 OPERATING ASSISTANCE
13 For state financial assistance, net of
14 disallowances, for operating expenses of
15 community colleges to be expended pursuant
16 to regulations developed jointly by the
17 state university trustees and the city
18 university trustees and approved by the
19 director of the budget, which shall
20 include funds available on a matching
21 basis to implement programs for the
22 provision of education and training
23 services to individuals eligible under the
24 federal personal responsibility and work
25 opportunity reconciliation act of 1996.
26 Notwithstanding any other provision of law,
27 rule or regulation, aid payable from this
28 appropriation to community colleges shall
29 be distributed to the colleges according
30 to guidelines established by the city
31 university trustees; provided that no
32 community college shall receive less than
33 100 percent of the base aid funding that
34 it had received in the college fiscal year
35 2021-22.
36 Notwithstanding any other law, rule, or
37 regulation to the contrary, full funding
38 for aidable community college enrollment
39 for the college fiscal year 2022-23 and
40 heretofore as provided under this appro-
41 priation shall be determined by the oper-
42 ating aid formulas defined in rules and
43 regulations developed jointly by the
44 boards of trustees of the state and city
45 universities and approved by the director
78 12653-09-2
CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 of the budget, provided that the local
2 sponsor may use funds contained in
3 reserves for excess student revenue for
4 operating support of a community college
5 program even though said expenditures may
6 cause expenses and student revenues to
7 exceed one-third of the college's net
8 operating budget for the college fiscal
9 year 2022-23, provided that such funds do
10 not cause the college's revenue from the
11 local sponsor's contribution in aggregate
12 to be less than the comparable amounts for
13 the previous community college fiscal
14 year, and further provided that pursuant
15 to standards and regulations of the state
16 university trustees and the city universi-
17 ty trustees for the college fiscal year
18 2022-23, community colleges may increase
19 tuition and fees above the amount allow-
20 able under the education law if such stan-
21 dards and regulations require that in
22 order to exceed the tuition limit other-
23 wise set forth in the education law, local
24 sponsor contributions either in the aggre-
25 gate or for each full-time equivalent
26 student shall be no less than the compara-
27 ble amounts for the previous community
28 college fiscal year (15496) ................ 217,232,000
29 Notwithstanding any provision of law to the
30 contrary, next generation job linkage
31 funds shall be made available to community
32 colleges based on a workforce development
33 plan submitted by the city university of
34 New York for approval by the director of
35 the budget (15543) ........................... 2,000,000
36 CATEGORICAL PROGRAMS
37 For the payment of aid for community college
38 categorical programs to be distributed to
39 the colleges according to guidelines
40 established by the city university trus-
41 tees:
42 For services and expenses related to the
43 establishment, renovation, alteration,
44 expansion, improvement or operation of
45 child care centers for the benefit of
46 students at the community college campuses
47 of the city university of New York,
48 provided that matching funds of at least
49 35 percent from nonstate sources be made
50 available (15497) ............................ 1,715,000
79 12653-09-2
CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For services and expenses related to the
2 establishment of child care centers at
3 additional campuses .......................... 1,200,000
4 For payment of rental aid (15498) .............. 8,948,000
5 For state financial assistance for community
6 college contract courses and work force
7 development (15536) .......................... 1,880,000
8 For student financial assistance to expand
9 opportunities in the community colleges of
10 the city university for the educationally
11 and economically disadvantaged in accord-
12 ance with section 6452 of the education
13 law (15537) .................................. 1,781,000
14 For additional student financial assistance
15 to expand opportunities in the community
16 colleges of the city university for the
17 educationally and economically disadvan-
18 taged in accordance with section 6452 of
19 the education law ............................... 54,000
20 For services and expenses of the accelerated
21 study in associates program (15545) .......... 2,500,000
22 For services and expenses of the apprentice
23 CUNY program to support CUNY Community
24 Colleges in establishing and developing
25 registered apprenticeship programs with
26 area businesses, which may include educa-
27 tional opportunity centers (15406) ........... 2,000,000
28 --------------
29 CITY UNIVERSITY--SENIOR COLLEGES ......................... 1,600,847,600
30 --------------
31 General Fund
32 Local Assistance Account - 10000
33 CITY UNIVERSITY--SENIOR COLLEGE PROGRAMS
34 For the costs of the state share, as
35 prescribed herein, as reimbursement to the
36 city of New York to be paid during the
37 state fiscal year beginning April 1, 2022
38 for the operating expenses of the senior
39 college approved programs and services of
40 the city university of New York as defined
41 in section 6230 of the education law.
42 Notwithstanding paragraphs 3 and 4 of subdi-
43 vision A of section 6221 of the education
44 law, the amount appropriated herein shall
45 constitute the maximum state payment for
46 the 2022-23 state fiscal year beginning
47 April 1, 2022 to the city of New York, of
48 which $428,000,000 is a state liability to
80 12653-09-2
CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 the city for the period beginning April 1,
2 2022 through June 30, 2023, for reimburse-
3 ment of costs incurred by the city at any
4 time during the 2021-22 academic year.
5 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision
6 of law, the dormitory authority of the
7 state of New York may issue bonds for the
8 purpose of reimbursing equipment disburse-
9 ments subject to subdivision 14 of section
10 1680 of the public authorities law, and
11 upon transfer of bond proceeds for equip-
12 ment disbursements, from the city univer-
13 sity special revenue fund, facilities and
14 planning income reimbursable account (NA)
15 to an account of the city of New York, the
16 general fund appropriations herein shall
17 be reduced by amounts equivalent to such
18 transfers but in no event less than
19 $20,000,000 for the 12-month period begin-
20 ning July 1, 2022; the transfer of such
21 bond proceeds shall immediately and equiv-
22 alently reduce the general fund amounts
23 appropriated herein; and the portions of
24 such general fund appropriations so
25 affected shall have no further force or
26 effect.
27 The state share of operating expenses, a
28 portion of which is appropriated herein as
29 reimbursement to New York city, shall be
30 an amount equal to the net operating
31 expenses of the senior college approved
32 programs and services which shall equal
33 the total operating expenses of approved
34 programs and services less:
35 (a) all excess tuition and instructional and
36 noninstructional fees attributable to the
37 senior colleges received from the city
38 university construction fund;
39 (b) miscellaneous revenue and fees, includ-
40 ing bad debt recoveries and income fund
41 reimbursable cost recoveries;
42 (c) pursuant to section 6221 of the educa-
43 tion law, a representative share of the
44 operating costs of those activities within
45 central administration and university-wide
46 programs which, as determined by the state
47 budget director, relate jointly to the
48 senior colleges and community colleges,
49 and New York city support for associate
50 degree programs at the College of Staten
51 Island and Medgar Evers College and
52 notwithstanding any other provision of
81 12653-09-2
CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 law, rule or regulation, New York city
2 support for associate degree programs at
3 New York city college of technology and
4 John Jay college, with such support based
5 on the 2019-20 full-time equivalent (FTE)
6 associate degree enrollments at these
7 campuses and calculated using the New York
8 city contribution per city university
9 community college FTE in the 2019-20 base
10 year, totaling $32,275,000;
11 Items (a) and (b) of the foregoing shall be
12 hereafter referred to as the senior
13 college revenue offset, and item (c) as
14 the central administration and universi-
15 ty-wide programs offset.
16 In no event shall the state support for the
17 operating expenses of the senior college
18 approved programs and services for the 12
19 month period beginning July 1, 2022 exceed
20 1,664,678,500 (15422) .................... 1,563,614,100
21 For services and expenses of the CUNY school
22 of labor and urban studies (15499) ........... 3,500,000
23 For nonrecurring strategic investments in
24 senior colleges and community colleges,
25 including but not limited to investments
26 to improve academic programs, increase
27 enrollment, enhance student support
28 services and modernize campus operations;
29 provided that such funds shall be allo-
30 cated pursuant to a plan approved by the
31 director of the budget ...................... 30,000,000
32 For additional services and expenses of the
33 CUNY school of labor and urban studies ....... 1,125,000
34 For services and expenses of the CUNY Law
35 School W. Haywood Burns Chair in Human and
36 Civil Rights ................................... 262,500
37 For additional services and expenses related
38 to the expansion of nursing programs ........... 750,000
39 For additional services and expenses of the
40 SEEK program ................................... 846,000
41 For additional services and expenses of
42 increasing mental health services .............. 750,000
43 --------------
44 CITY UNIVERSITY--SENIOR COLLEGE PENSION PAYMENTS ............. 2,000,000
45 --------------
46 General Fund
47 Local Assistance Account - 10000
48 For payment of financial assistance to the
49 city of New York for certain costs of
82 12653-09-2
CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 retirement incentive programs and other
2 liabilities attributable to employee
3 retirement systems and for special pension
4 payments attributable to employees of the
5 senior colleges of the city university of
6 New York pursuant to chapters 975, 976,
7 and 977 of the laws of 1977, in accordance
8 with section 6231 of the education law and
9 chapter 958 of the laws of 1981, as
10 amended (15500) .............................. 2,000,000
11 --------------
12 METROPOLITAN COMMUTER TRANSPORTATION MOBILITY TAX ............ 6,000,000
13 --------------
14 General Fund
15 Local Assistance Account - 10000
16 For payment of the metropolitan commuter
17 transportation mobility tax pursuant to
18 article 23 of the tax law for the period
19 July 1, 2022 to June 30, 2023 on behalf of
20 those senior college employees employed in
21 the commuter transportation district.
22 Notwithstanding any other law to the
23 contrary, this appropriation may not be
24 decreased by interchange with any other
25 appropriation (15481) ........................ 6,000,000
26 --------------
83 12653-09-2
CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 CITY UNIVERSITY--COMMUNITY COLLEGES
2 General Fund
3 Local Assistance Account - 10000
4 OPERATING ASSISTANCE
5 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
6 Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, next generation
7 job linkage funds shall be made available to community colleges
8 based on a workforce development plan submitted by the city univer-
9 sity of New York for approval by the director of the budget (15543)
10 ... 2,000,000 ..................................... (re. $2,000,000)
11 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
12 Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, next generation
13 job linkage funds shall be made available to community colleges
14 based on a workforce development plan submitted by the city univer-
15 sity of New York for approval by the director of the budget (15543)
16 ... 2,000,000 ..................................... (re. $1,920,000)
17 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
18 Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, next generation
19 job linkage funds shall be made available to community colleges
20 based on a workforce development plan submitted by the city univer-
21 sity of New York for approval by the director of the budget (15543)
22 ... 2,000,000 ........................................ (re. $80,000)
23 CATEGORICAL PROGRAMS
24 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
25 For the payment of aid for community college categorical programs to
26 be distributed to the colleges according to guidelines established
27 by the city university trustees:
28 For state financial assistance for community college contract courses
29 and work force development (15536) ... 1,880,000 .. (re. $1,880,000)
30 For services and expenses of the apprentice CUNY program to support
31 CUNY Community Colleges in establishing and developing registered
32 apprenticeship programs with area businesses which may include
33 educational opportunity centers (15406) ............................
34 2,000,000 ......................................... (re. $2,000,000)
35 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
36 For the payment of aid for community college categorical programs to
37 be distributed to the colleges according to guidelines established
38 by the city university trustees:
39 For state financial assistance for community college contract courses
40 and work force development (15536) ... 1,880,000 .. (re. $1,880,000)
41 For services and expenses of the apprentice CUNY program to support
42 CUNY Community Colleges in establishing and developing registered
43 apprenticeship programs with area businesses which may include
84 12653-09-2
CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 educational opportunity centers (15406) ............................
2 2,000,000 ......................................... (re. $1,819,000)
3 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
4 For services and expenses of the family empowerment community college
5 pilot program to provide a comprehensive system of supports includ-
6 ing priority on-campus childcare for single parents. Funding shall
7 be awarded according to a plan developed by the chancellor of the
8 city university of New York and approved by the director of the
9 budget that aligns a comprehensive system of supports for single
10 parents, including on-campus childcare, with the accelerated study
11 in associate program (15414) ... 2,000,000 .......... (re. $800,000)
12 For state financial assistance for community college contract courses
13 and work force development (15536) ... 1,880,000 .. (re. $1,880,000)
14 For services and expenses of the apprentice CUNY program to support
15 CUNY Community Colleges in establishing and developing registered
16 apprenticeship programs with area businesses which may include
17 educational opportunity centers (15406) ............................
18 2,000,000 ........................................... (re. $175,000)
85 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL SERVICE
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For payment according to the following schedule:
2 APPROPRIATIONS REAPPROPRIATIONS
3 General Fund ....................... 2,000,000 4,349,000
4 ---------------- ----------------
5 All Funds ........................ 2,000,000 4,349,000
6 ================ ================
7 SCHEDULE
8 ADMINISTRATION AND INFORMATION MANAGEMENT PROGRAM ............ 2,000,000
9 --------------
10 General Fund
11 Local Assistance Account - 10000
12 For payment to public authorities or munici-
13 pal corporations that are eligible to
14 receive reimbursement pursuant to section
15 92-d of the general municipal law for
16 costs of providing sick leave for officers
17 and employees with a qualifying world
18 trade center condition. Amounts appropri-
19 ated herein may be suballocated, pursuant
20 to a plan approved by the division of
21 budget, to the department of civil service
22 state operations for appropriate adminis-
23 trative costs (16604) ........................ 2,000,000
24 --------------
86 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL SERVICE
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 ADMINISTRATION AND INFORMATION MANAGEMENT PROGRAM
2 General Fund
3 Local Assistance Account - 10000
4 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
5 For payment to public authorities or municipal corporations that are
6 eligible to receive reimbursement pursuant to section 92-d of the
7 general municipal law for costs of providing sick leave for officers
8 and employees with a qualifying world trade center condition.
9 Amounts appropriated herein may be suballocated, pursuant to a plan
10 approved by the division of budget, to the department of civil
11 service state operations for appropriate administrative costs
12 (16604) ... 2,000,000 ............................. (re. $1,999,000)
13 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
14 For payment to public authorities or municipal corporations that are
15 eligible to receive reimbursement pursuant to section 92-d of the
16 general municipal law for costs of providing sick leave for officers
17 and employees with a qualifying world trade center condition.
18 Amounts appropriated herein may be suballocated, pursuant to a plan
19 approved by the division of budget, to the department of civil
20 service state operations for appropriate administrative costs
21 (16604) ... 2,000,000 ............................. (re. $1,994,000)
22 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018:
23 For payment to public authorities or municipal corporations that are
24 eligible to receive reimbursement pursuant to section 92-d of the
25 general municipal law for costs of providing sick leave for officers
26 and employees with a qualifying world trade center condition.
27 Amounts appropriated herein may be suballocated, pursuant to a plan
28 approved by the division of budget, to the department of civil
29 service state operations for appropriate administrative costs
30 (16604) ... 1,000,000 ............................... (re. $356,000)
87 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS AND COMMUNITY SUPERVISION
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For payment according to the following schedule:
2 APPROPRIATIONS REAPPROPRIATIONS
3 General Fund ....................... 28,013,000 55,423,000
4 Internal Service Funds ............. 9,000,000 19,057,000
5 ---------------- ----------------
6 All Funds ........................ 37,013,000 74,480,000
7 ================ ================
8 SCHEDULE
9 COMMUNITY SUPERVISION PROGRAM ............................... 17,133,000
10 --------------
11 General Fund
12 Local Assistance Account - 10000
13 For payment of services and expenses relat-
14 ing to the operation of a program with the
15 center for employment opportunities to
16 assist with vocational or employment
17 skills training or the attainment of
18 employment (17576) ........................... 1,029,000
19 For costs associated with the provision of
20 treatment, residential stabilization and
21 other related services for offenders in
22 the community, including residential
23 stabilization for sex offenders, pursuant
24 to existing contracts or to be distributed
25 through a competitive process, and a pilot
26 program which provides direct payments of
27 temporary weekly stipends, to proprietors
28 of households, to offset housing costs.
29 By April 1 of each year, the department of
30 corrections and community supervision
31 shall provide the chairs of the senate
32 committee on crime victims, crime, and
33 corrections, and the assembly committee on
34 correction with an annual report on the
35 pilot program. The report shall include,
36 but not be limited to, the number of
37 participants, average time in the program,
38 and number of permanent housing placements
39 (17570) ...................................... 7,104,000
40 --------------
41 Program account subtotal ................... 8,133,000
42 --------------
43 Internal Service Funds
44 Agencies Internal Service Fund
45 Neighborhood Work Project Account - 55059
88 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS AND COMMUNITY SUPERVISION
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For services and expenses related to estab-
2 lishing and administering a vocational
3 training program for parolees, other
4 offenders, or former incarcerated individ-
5 uals from city of New York jails partic-
6 ipating in community based programs with
7 the center for employment opportunities.
8 Notwithstanding any other provision of law
9 to the contrary, the chairman of the board
10 of parole, or a designated officer of the
11 department of corrections and community
12 supervision may authorize participants to
13 perform service projects at sites made
14 available by any state or local government
15 or public benefit corporation (17569) ........ 9,000,000
16 --------------
17 Program account subtotal ................... 9,000,000
18 --------------
19 HEALTH SERVICES PROGRAM ..................................... 14,000,000
20 --------------
21 General Fund
22 Local Assistance Account - 10000
23 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision
24 of law, the money hereby appropriated may
25 be used for the payment of prior year
26 liabilities and may be increased or
27 decreased by interchange or transfer with
28 any other general fund appropriation with-
29 in the department of corrections and
30 community supervision with the approval of
31 the director of the budget. A portion of
32 these funds may be transferred or suballo-
33 cated to the department of health or other
34 state agencies.
35 For the state share of medical assistance
36 services expenses incurred by the depart-
37 ment of corrections and community super-
38 vision related to the provision of medical
39 assistance services to incarcerated indi-
40 viduals (17503) ............................. 14,000,000
41 --------------
42 PROGRAM SERVICES PROGRAM ....................................... 680,000
43 --------------
44 General Fund
45 Local Assistance Account - 10000
89 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS AND COMMUNITY SUPERVISION
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of a program at
2 the Albion correctional facility, and
3 other correctional facilities related to
4 family televisiting (Osborne Association)
5 (17567) ........................................ 430,000
6 For services and expenses of a program at
7 the Queensboro correctional facility,
8 and/or other correctional facilities as
9 determined by the commissioner, related to
10 re-entry with a focus on family (Osborne
11 Association) (17504) ........................... 250,000
12 --------------
13 SUPPORT SERVICES PROGRAM ..................................... 5,200,000
14 --------------
15 General Fund
16 Local Assistance Account - 10000
17 For services and expenses of localities for
18 the housing and board of felony offenders
19 pursuant to section 601-c of the
20 correction law (17501) ....................... 5,200,000
21 --------------
90 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS AND COMMUNITY SUPERVISION
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 COMMUNITY SUPERVISION PROGRAM
2 General Fund
3 Local Assistance Account - 10000
4 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
5 For payment of services and expenses relating to the operation of a
6 program with the center for employment opportunities to assist with
7 vocational or employment skills training or the attainment of
8 employment (17576) ... 1,029,000 .................. (re. $1,029,000)
9 For costs associated with the provision of treatment, residential
10 stabilization and other related services for offenders in the commu-
11 nity, including residential stabilization for sex offenders, pursu-
12 ant to existing contracts or to be distributed through a competitive
13 process (17570) ... 4,584,000 ..................... (re. $3,903,000)
14 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
15 For costs associated with the provision of treatment, residential
16 stabilization and other related services for offenders in the commu-
17 nity, including residential stabilization for sex offenders, pursu-
18 ant to existing contracts or to be distributed through a competitive
19 process (17570) ... 4,584,000 ..................... (re. $2,017,000)
20 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
21 For costs associated with the provision of treatment, residential
22 stabilization and other related services for offenders in the commu-
23 nity, including residential stabilization for sex offenders, pursu-
24 ant to existing contracts or to be distributed through a competitive
25 process (17570) ... 4,584,000 ..................... (re. $2,424,000)
26 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018:
27 For costs associated with the provision of treatment, residential
28 stabilization and other related services for offenders in the commu-
29 nity, including residential stabilization for sex offenders, pursu-
30 ant to existing contracts or to be distributed through a competitive
31 process (17570) ... 4,584,000 ..................... (re. $1,563,000)
32 Internal Service Funds
33 Agencies Internal Service Fund
34 Neighborhood Work Project Account - 55059
35 The appropriation made by chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021, is
36 hereby amended and reappropriated to read:
37 For services and expenses related to establishing and administering a
38 vocational training program for parolees, other offenders, or former
39 [inmates] incarcerated individuals from city of New York jails
40 participating in community based programs with the center for
41 employment opportunities. Notwithstanding any other provision of law
42 to the contrary, the chairman of the board of parole, or a desig-
43 nated officer of the department of corrections and community super-
44 vision may authorize participants to perform service projects at
91 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS AND COMMUNITY SUPERVISION
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 sites made available by any state or local government or public
2 benefit corporation (17569) ........................................
3 9,000,000 ......................................... (re. $9,000,000)
4 The appropriation made by chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020, is
5 hereby amended and reappropriated to read:
6 For services and expenses related to establishing and administering a
7 vocational training program for parolees, other offenders, or former
8 [inmates] incarcerated individuals from city of New York jails
9 participating in community based programs with the center for
10 employment opportunities.
11 Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the contrary, the chair-
12 man of the board of parole, or a designated officer of the depart-
13 ment of corrections and community supervision may authorize partic-
14 ipants to perform service projects at sites made available by any
15 state or local government or public benefit corporation (17569)
16 9,000,000 ......................................... (re. $3,198,000)
17 The appropriation made by chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019, is
18 hereby amended and reappropriated to read:
19 For services and expenses related to establishing and administering a
20 vocational training program for parolees, other offenders, or former
21 [inmates] incarcerated individuals from city of New York jails
22 participating in community based programs with the center for
23 employment opportunities. Notwithstanding any other provision of law
24 to the contrary, the chairman of the board of parole, or a desig-
25 nated officer of the department of corrections and community super-
26 vision may authorize participants to perform service projects at
27 sites made available by any state or local government or public
28 benefit corporation (17569) ........................................
29 9,000,000 ......................................... (re. $2,055,000)
30 The appropriation made by chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018, is
31 hereby amended and reappropriated to read:
32 For services and expenses related to establishing and administering a
33 vocational training program for parolees, other offenders, or former
34 [inmates] incarcerated individuals from city of New York jails
35 participating in community based programs with the center for
36 employment opportunities. Notwithstanding any other provision of law
37 to the contrary, the chairman of the board of parole, or a desig-
38 nated officer of the department of corrections and community super-
39 vision may authorize participants to perform service projects at
40 sites made available by any state or local government or public
41 benefit corporation (17569) ........................................
42 9,000,000 ......................................... (re. $1,075,000)
43 The appropriation made by chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2017, is
44 hereby amended and reappropriated to read:
45 For services and expenses related to establishing and administering a
46 vocational training program for parolees, other offenders, or former
47 [inmates] incarcerated individuals from city of New York jails
48 participating in community based programs with the center for
92 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS AND COMMUNITY SUPERVISION
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 employment opportunities. Notwithstanding any other provision of law
2 to the contrary, the chairman of the board of parole, or a desig-
3 nated officer of the department of corrections and community super-
4 vision may authorize participants to perform service projects at
5 sites made available by any state or local government or public
6 benefit corporation (17569) ........................................
7 9,000,000 ......................................... (re. $1,962,000)
8 The appropriation made by chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2016, is
9 hereby amended and reappropriated to read:
10 For services and expenses related to establishing and administering a
11 vocational training program for parolees, other offenders, or former
12 [inmates] incarcerated individuals from city of New York jails
13 participating in community based programs with the center for
14 employment opportunities. Notwithstanding any other provision of law
15 to the contrary, the chairman of the board of parole, or a desig-
16 nated officer of the department of corrections and community super-
17 vision may authorize participants to perform service projects at
18 sites made available by any state or local government or public
19 benefit corporation (17569) ........................................
20 9,000,000 ......................................... (re. $1,767,000)
21 HEALTH SERVICES PROGRAM
22 General Fund
23 Local Assistance Account - 10000
24 The appropriation made by chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021, is
25 hereby amended and reappropriated to read:
26 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, the money hereby
27 appropriated may be used for the payment of prior year liabilities
28 and may be increased or decreased by interchange or transfer with
29 any other general fund appropriation within the department of
30 corrections and community supervision with the approval of the
31 director of the budget. A portion of these funds may be transferred
32 or suballocated to the department of health or other state agencies.
33 For the state share of medical assistance services expenses incurred
34 by the department of corrections and community supervision related
35 to the provision of medical assistance services to [inmates] incar-
36 cerated individuals (17503) ... 14,000,000 ....... (re. $13,999,000)
37 The appropriation made by chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020, is
38 hereby amended and reappropriated to read:
39 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, the money hereby
40 appropriated may be used for the payment of prior year liabilities
41 and may be increased or decreased by interchange or transfer with
42 any other general fund appropriation within the department of
43 corrections and community supervision with the approval of the
44 director of the budget. A portion of these funds may be transferred
45 or suballocated to the department of health or other state agencies.
46 For the state share of medical assistance services expenses incurred
47 by the department of corrections and community supervision related
93 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS AND COMMUNITY SUPERVISION
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 to the provision of medical assistance services to [inmates] incar-
2 cerated individuals (17503) ... 14,000,000 ....... (re. $13,946,000)
3 The appropriation made by chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019, is
4 hereby amended and reappropriated to read:
5 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, the money hereby
6 appropriated may be used for the payment of prior year liabilities
7 and may be increased or decreased by interchange or transfer with
8 any other general fund appropriation within the department of
9 corrections and community supervision with the approval of the
10 director of the budget. A portion of these funds may be transferred
11 or suballocated to the department of health or other state agencies.
12 For the state share of medical assistance services expenses incurred
13 by the department of corrections and community supervision related
14 to the provision of medical assistance services to [inmates] incar-
15 cerated individuals (17503) ... 14,000,000 ...... (re. $13,993,000)
16 The appropriation made by chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018, is
17 hereby amended and reappropriated to read:
18 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, the money hereby
19 appropriated may be used for the payment of prior year liabilities
20 and may be increased or decreased by interchange or transfer with
21 any other general fund appropriation within the department of
22 corrections and community supervision with the approval of the
23 director of the budget. A portion of these funds may be transferred
24 or suballocated to the department of health or other state agencies.
25 For the state share of medical assistance services expenses incurred
26 by the department of corrections and community supervision related
27 to the provision of medical assistance services to [inmates] incar-
28 cerated individuals (17503) ... 14,000,000 ......... (re. $701,000)
29 PROGRAM SERVICES PROGRAM
30 General Fund
31 Local Assistance Account - 10000
32 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
33 For services and expenses of a program at the Albion correctional
34 facility, and other correctional facilities related to family tele-
35 visiting (Osborne Association) (17567) .............................
36 430,000 ............................................. (re. $430,000)
37 For services and expenses of a program at the Queensboro correctional
38 facility, and/or other correctional facilities as determined by the
39 commissioner, related to re-entry with a focus on family (Osborne
40 Association) (17504) ... 250,000 .................... (re. $250,000)
41 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
42 For services and expenses of a program at the Albion correctional
43 facility, and other correctional facilities related to family tele-
44 visiting (Osborne Association) (17567) .............................
45 430,000 .............................................. (re. $22,000)
94 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS AND COMMUNITY SUPERVISION
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of a program at the Queensboro correctional
2 facility, and/or other correctional facilities as determined by the
3 commissioner, related to re-entry with a focus on family (Osborne
4 Association) (17504) ... 250,000 ..................... (re. $51,000)
5 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
6 For services and expenses of a program at the Albion correctional
7 facility, and other correctional facilities related to family tele-
8 visiting (Osborne Association) (17567) .............................
9 430,000 .............................................. (re. $29,000)
10 For services and expenses of a program at the Queensboro correctional
11 facility, and/or other correctional facilities as determined by the
12 commissioner, related to re-entry with a focus on family (Osborne
13 Association) (17504) ... 250,000 ..................... (re. $13,000)
14 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018:
15 For services and expenses of a program at the Queensboro correctional
16 facility, and/or other correctional facilities as determined by the
17 commissioner, related to re-entry with a focus on family (Osborne
18 Association) (17504) ... 250,000 ..................... (re. $14,000)
19 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018, as amended by chapter 53,
20 section 1, of the laws of 2020:
21 For services and expenses of the Osborne Association Familyworks
22 program in Buffalo (17514) ... 180,000 ................ (re. $3,000)
23 SUPPORT SERVICES PROGRAM
24 General Fund
25 Local Assistance Account - 10000
26 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
27 For services and expenses of localities for the housing and board of
28 felony offenders pursuant to section 601-c of the correction law
29 (17501) ... 5,200,000 ............................. (re. $1,036,000)
95 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For payment according to the following schedule:
2 APPROPRIATIONS REAPPROPRIATIONS
3 General Fund ....................... 291,387,259 251,636,228
4 Special Revenue Funds - Federal .... 29,900,000 129,471,000
5 Special Revenue Funds - Other ...... 77,084,000 104,376,509
6 ---------------- ----------------
7 All Funds ........................ 398,371,259 485,483,737
8 ================ ================
9 SCHEDULE
10 CRIME PREVENTION AND REDUCTION STRATEGIES PROGRAM .......... 398,371,259
11 --------------
12 General Fund
13 Local Assistance Account - 10000
14 For payment to the New York state prosecu-
15 tors training institute for services and
16 expenses related to the prosecution of
17 crimes and the provision of continuing
18 legal education, training, and support for
19 medicaid fraud prosecution. The funds
20 hereby appropriated are to be available
21 for payment of liabilities heretofore
22 accrued or hereafter accrued (20242) ......... 2,078,000
23 For services and expenses of the New York
24 state district attorneys association. The
25 funds hereby appropriated are to be avail-
26 able for payment of liabilities heretofore
27 accrued or hereafter accrued (39798) ........... 100,000
28 For services and expenses associated with a
29 witness protection program pursuant to a
30 plan developed by the commissioner of the
31 division of criminal justice services. The
32 funds hereby appropriated are to be avail-
33 able for payment of liabilities heretofore
34 accrued or hereafter accrued (20243) ........... 287,000
35 For grants to counties for district attorney
36 salaries. Notwithstanding the provisions
37 of subdivisions 10 and 11 of section 700
38 of the county law or any other law to the
39 contrary, for state fiscal year 2022-23
40 the state reimbursement to counties for
41 district attorney salaries shall be
42 distributed according to a plan developed
43 by the commissioner of criminal justice
44 services, and approved by the director of
45 the budget (20244) ........................... 4,212,000
96 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 Payment of state aid for expenses of the
2 special narcotics prosecutor. The funds
3 hereby appropriated are to be available
4 for payment of liabilities heretofore
5 accrued or hereafter accrued (20245) ........... 825,000
6 For payment of state aid for expenses of
7 crime laboratories for accreditation,
8 training, capacity enhancement and lab
9 related services to maintain the quality
10 and reliability of forensic services to
11 criminal justice agencies, to be distrib-
12 uted pursuant to a plan prepared by the
13 commissioner of the division of criminal
14 justice services and approved by the
15 director of the budget. Some of these
16 funds herein appropriated may be trans-
17 ferred to state operations and may be
18 suballocated to other state agencies
19 (20205) ...................................... 6,273,000
20 For reimbursement of the services and
21 expenses of municipal corporations, public
22 authorities, the division of state police,
23 authorized police departments of state
24 public authorities or regional state park
25 commissions for the purchase of ballistic
26 soft body armor vests, such sum shall be
27 payable on the audit and warrant of the
28 state comptroller on vouchers certified by
29 the commissioner of the division of crimi-
30 nal justice services and the chief admin-
31 istrative officer of the municipal corpo-
32 ration, public authority, or state entity
33 making requisition and purchase of such
34 vests. A portion of these funds may be
35 transferred to state operations and may be
36 suballocated to other state agencies. The
37 funds hereby appropriated are to be avail-
38 able for payment of liabilities heretofore
39 accrued or hereafter accrued (20207) ......... 1,350,000
40 For services and expenses of programs aimed
41 at reducing the risk of re-offending, to
42 be distributed pursuant to a plan prepared
43 by the commissioner of the division of
44 criminal justice services and approved by
45 the director of the budget (20249) ........... 3,842,000
46 For services and expenses of project GIVE as
47 allocated pursuant to a plan prepared by
48 the commissioner of criminal justice
49 services and approved by the director of
50 the budget which will include an evalu-
51 ation of the effectiveness of such
52 program. A portion of these funds may be
97 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 transferred to state operations or subal-
2 located to other state agencies (20942) ..... 18,190,000
3 For payment of state aid to counties and the
4 city of New York for the operation of
5 local probation departments subject to the
6 approval of the director of the budget.
7 Notwithstanding any other provisions of law,
8 the state aid for probationary services to
9 counties and the city of New York shall be
10 distributed to counties and the city of
11 New York pursuant to a plan prepared by
12 the commissioner of the division of crimi-
13 nal justice services and approved by the
14 director of the budget which shall be to
15 the greatest extent possible, distributed
16 in a manner consistent with the prior year
17 distribution amounts (21038) ................ 44,876,000
18 For payment of state aid to counties and the
19 city of New York for local alternatives to
20 incarceration, including those that
21 provide alcohol and substance abuse treat-
22 ment programs, and other related inter-
23 ventions pursuant to article 13-A of the
24 executive law. Notwithstanding any other
25 provisions of law, state assistance shall
26 be distributed pursuant to a plan submit-
27 ted by the commissioner of the division of
28 criminal justice services and approved by
29 the director of the budget. A portion of
30 these funds may be transferred to state
31 operations and may be suballocated to
32 other state agencies (21037) ................. 5,217,000
33 For payment to not-for-profit and government
34 operated programs providing alternatives
35 to incarceration, community supervision
36 and/or employment programs to be distrib-
37 uted pursuant to a plan prepared by the
38 commissioner of the division of criminal
39 justice services and approved by the
40 director of the budget. Eligible services
41 shall include, but not be limited to
42 offender employment, offender assessments,
43 treatment program placement and partic-
44 ipation, monitoring client compliance with
45 program interventions, TASC program
46 services, and alternatives to prison. A
47 portion of these funds may be transferred
48 to state operations and may be suballo-
49 cated to other state agencies (20239) ....... 13,819,000
50 For residential centers providing services
51 to individuals on probation and for commu-
52 nity corrections programs to be distrib-
98 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 uted in the same manner as the prior year
2 or through a competitive process (21000) ....... 945,000
3 For services and expenses of the establish-
4 ment, or continued operation by existing
5 grantees, of regional Operation S.N.U.G.
6 programs, pursuant to a plan prepared by
7 the division of criminal justice services
8 and approved by the director of the budg-
9 et. A portion of these funds may be trans-
10 ferred to state operations (20250) .......... 20,965,000
11 For services and expenses of rape crisis
12 centers for services to rape victims and
13 programs to prevent rape, to be distrib-
14 uted pursuant to a plan prepared by the
15 commissioner of the division of criminal
16 justice services and approved by the
17 director of the budget. A portion or all
18 of these funds may be transferred or
19 suballocated to other state agencies
20 (39718) ...................................... 3,553,000
21 For additional services and expenses of rape
22 crisis centers for services to rape
23 victims and programs to prevent rape ........... 147,000
24 For payment to district attorneys who
25 participate in the crimes against revenue
26 program to be distributed according to a
27 plan developed by the commissioner of the
28 division of criminal justice services, in
29 consultation with the department of taxa-
30 tion and finance, and approved by the
31 director of the budget (20235) .............. 13,521,000
32 For payment to not-for-profit and government
33 operated programs providing services
34 including but not limited to defendant
35 screening, assessment, referral, monitor-
36 ing, and case management, to be distrib-
37 uted pursuant to a plan submitted by the
38 commissioner of the division of criminal
39 justice services and approved by the
40 director of the budget. A portion of these
41 funds may be transferred to state oper-
42 ations (39744) ................................. 946,000
43 For services and expenses of law enforcement
44 agencies, for gang prevention youth
45 programs in Nassau and/or Suffolk counties
46 and law enforcement agencies may consult
47 with community-based organizations and/or
48 schools, pursuant to a plan by the commis-
49 sioner of criminal justice services
50 (20238) ........................................ 500,000
51 For services and expenses related to state
52 and local crime reduction, youth justice
99 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 and gang prevention programs, including
2 but not limited to street outreach, crime
3 analysis, research, and shooting/violence
4 reduction programs, provided that up to
5 $2,500,000 shall be made available for the
6 Office of Gun Violence Prevention. Funds
7 appropriated herein shall be expended
8 pursuant to a plan developed by the
9 commissioner of criminal justice services
10 and approved by the director of the budg-
11 et. A portion of these funds may be trans-
12 ferred to state operations and/or suballo-
13 cated to other state agencies (39797) ....... 31,063,000
14 For services and expenses related to the
15 operation of crime analysis centers,
16 including but not limited to the estab-
17 lishment of crime gun intelligence
18 centers. Funds appropriated herein shall
19 be expended pursuant to a plan submitted
20 by the commissioner of the division of
21 criminal justice services and approved by
22 the director of the budget. A portion of
23 these funds may be transferred to state
24 operations and may be suballocated to
25 other state agencies ........................ 14,950,000
26 For services and expenses related to part-
27 nerships and programs operated by and
28 between government and community-based
29 organizations to respond, repair and
30 rebuild in the aftermath of violence, and
31 serve the needs of communities and resi-
32 dents victimized by crimes involving guns,
33 to be distributed through a community
34 engagement process pursuant to a plan
35 submitted by the commissioner of division
36 of criminal justice services and approved
37 by the director of the budget ............... 20,000,000
38 For payment to not-for-profit and government
39 operated programs providing pretrial
40 services, including but not limited to
41 screening, assessments, and supervision,
42 to be distributed pursuant to a plan
43 submitted by the commissioner of the divi-
44 sion of criminal justice services and
45 approved by the director of the budget. A
46 portion of these funds may be transferred
47 to state operations and/or suballocated to
48 other state agencies ........................ 10,000,000
49 For services and expenses related to discov-
50 ery implementation, including but not
51 limited to digital evidence transmission
52 technology, administrative support,
100 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 computers, hardware and operating soft-
2 ware, data connectivity, development of
3 training materials, staff training, over-
4 time costs, and litigation readiness.
5 Eligible entities shall include, but not be
6 limited to counties, cities with popu-
7 lations less than one million, and law
8 enforcement and prosecutorial entities
9 within towns and villages. These funds
10 shall be distributed pursuant to a plan
11 submitted by the commissioner of the divi-
12 sion of criminal justice services and
13 approved by the director of the budget ...... 40,000,000
14 For services and expenses of community safe-
15 ty and restorative justice programs, which
16 include but are not limited to, support
17 for survivors of sexual assault, domestic
18 violence, gun violence prevention, legal
19 services, alternatives to incarceration,
20 community supervision and re-entry initi-
21 atives, gang and crime reduction strate-
22 gies managed by local governments and/or
23 community-based not-for-profits service
24 providers. Notwithstanding section 24 of
25 the state finance law or any provision of
26 law to the contrary, funds from this
27 appropriation shall be allocated only
28 pursuant to a plan (i) approved by the
29 temporary president of the senate and the
30 director of the budget which sets forth
31 either an itemized list of grantees with
32 the amount to be received by each, or the
33 methodology for allocating such appropri-
34 ation, and (ii) which is thereafter
35 included in a senate resolution calling
36 for the expenditure of such funds, which
37 resolution must be approved by a majority
38 vote of all members elected to the senate
39 upon a roll call vote ........................ 7,300,000
40 For services and expenses of criminal and/or
41 civil legal services in counties upstate
42 New York. Notwithstanding section 24 of
43 the state finance law or any provision of
44 law to the contrary, funds from this
45 appropriation shall be allocated only
46 pursuant to a plan (i) approved by the
47 temporary president of the senate and the
48 director of the budget which sets forth
49 either an itemized list of grantees with
50 the amount to be received by each, or the
51 methodology for allocating such appropri-
52 ation, and (ii) which is thereafter
101 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 included in a senate resolution calling
2 for the expenditure of such funds, which
3 resolution must be approved by a majority
4 vote of all members elected to the senate
5 upon a roll call ............................. 3,500,000
6 For additional services and expenses of gun
7 violence prevention, street outreach, anti
8 violence shooting/violence reduction
9 programs managed by local governments
10 and/or community-based not-for-profits
11 service providers. Notwithstanding section
12 24 of the state finance law or any
13 provision of law to the contrary, funds
14 from this appropriation shall be allocated
15 only pursuant to a plan (i) approved by
16 the temporary president of the senate and
17 the director of the budget which sets
18 forth either an itemized list of grantees
19 with the amount to be received by each, or
20 the methodology for allocating such appro-
21 priation, and (ii) which is thereafter
22 included in a senate resolution calling
23 for the expenditure of such funds, which
24 resolution must be approved by a majority
25 vote of all members elected to the senate
26 upon a roll call vote ........................ 1,540,000
27 For services and expenses of the Bronx Legal
28 Services (Legal Services NYC) .................. 100,000
29 For services and expenses of the Brooklyn
30 Legal Services ................................. 300,000
31 For services and expenses of the Capital
32 District Womens Bar Association Legal
33 Project Inc .................................... 160,000
34 For services and expenses of the Center for
35 Court Innovation - Redhook Community
36 Justice Center ................................. 100,000
37 For services and expenses of the Center for
38 Family Representation .......................... 125,000
39 For services and expenses of Firemen's Asso-
40 ciation of the State of New York ............... 250,000
41 For services and expenses of the Friends of
42 Island Academy Inc .............................. 90,000
43 For services and expenses of the Greenburger
44 Center for Social and Criminal Justice ......... 100,000
45 For services and expenses of Huntington
46 Youth Bureau Youth Development Research
47 Institute Inc .................................. 135,000
48 For services and expenses of the Lenox Hill
49 Neighborhood House Inc - Housing Assist-
50 ance and Legal Assistance ...................... 115,000
51 For services and expenses of Mobilization
52 for Justice .................................... 290,000
102 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of Nassau Suffolk
2 Law Services .................................... 60,000
3 For services and expenses of Neighborhood
4 Legal Services Inc .............................. 80,000
5 For services and expenses of New York County
6 Defender Services .............................. 175,000
7 For services and expenses of New Yorkers
8 Against Gun Violence Inc ........................ 70,000
9 For services and expenses of Osborne Associ-
10 ation Familyworks Program in Buffalo ........... 180,000
11 For services and expenses of Prisoner's
12 Legal Services of New York ..................... 750,000
13 For services and expenses of Richmond County
14 District Attorney's Office ..................... 100,000
15 For services and expenses of Treatment
16 Alternatives for Safer Communities of the
17 Capital District ............................... 200,000
18 For services and expenses of Westchester
19 County Policing Program ...................... 2,600,000
20 For additional payments to not-for-profit
21 and government operated programs providing
22 pretrial services, including, but not
23 limited to screening, assessments, super-
24 vision, job placement, counseling, drug
25 treatment, legal services, and restorative
26 justice services. Notwithstanding section
27 24 of the state finance law or any
28 provision of law to the contrary, funds
29 from this appropriation shall be allocated
30 only pursuant to a plan (i) approved by
31 the speaker of the Assembly and the direc-
32 tor of the budget which sets forth either
33 an itemized list of grantees with the
34 amount to be received by each, or the
35 methodology for allocating such appropri-
36 ation, and (ii) which is thereafter
37 included in an assembly resolution calling
38 for the expenditure of such funds, which
39 resolution must be approved by a majority
40 vote of all members elected to the assem-
41 bly upon a roll call ......................... 5,000,000
42 For additional payment to New York State
43 Defenders association for services and
44 expenses related to the provision of
45 training and other assistance ................ 2,100,000
46 For additional payment to Prisoners' Legal
47 Services for services and expenses related
48 to legal representation and assistance to
49 indigent inmates ............................. 1,200,000
50 For services and expenses of the New York
51 Wing Civil Air Patrol .......................... 200,000
103 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of Brooklyn
2 Conflicts Office ............................... 250,000
3 For services and expenses for Center for
4 Employment Opportunities ........................ 75,000
5 For services and expenses of Child Care
6 Center of New York ............................. 250,000
7 For services and expenses of the Next-Door
8 Project ........................................ 250,000
9 For services and expenses of the Fortune
10 Society ........................................ 275,000
11 For services and expenses of Common Justice,
12 Inc. ........................................... 200,000
13 For services and expenses related to the
14 Legal Education Opportunity Program. All
15 or a portion of these funds may be trans-
16 ferred to state operations and suballo-
17 cated to the Judiciary ......................... 225,000
18 For services and expenses of the Brooklyn
19 Defender ....................................... 175,000
20 For services and expenses of New York County
21 Defender Services .............................. 150,000
22 For services and expenses of Friends of the
23 Island Academy ................................. 150,000
24 For services and expenses of the Correction-
25 al Association ATI ............................. 127,000
26 For services and expenses of Goddard River-
27 side Community Center .......................... 125,000
28 For services and expenses of Bailey House -
29 Project FIRST .................................. 100,000
30 For services and expenses of the John Jay
31 College ........................................ 100,000
32 For services and expenses of Groundswell .......... 75,000
33 For services and expenses of the Mohawk
34 Consortium ...................................... 75,000
35 For services and expenses of Exodus Transi-
36 tional Community ................................ 50,000
37 For services and expenses of S.N.U.G. Wyan-
38 danch .......................................... 100,000
39 For services and expenses of Shalom Task
40 Force Inc ...................................... 100,000
41 For services and expenses of Elmcor Youth
42 and Adult Activities Program .................... 31,000
43 For services and expenses of the Osborne
44 Association ..................................... 20,000
45 For services and expenses related to NYU
46 Veteran's Entrepreneurship Program .............. 26,000
47 For services and expenses of Bergen Basin
48 Community Development Corporation .............. 200,000
49 For services and expenses of Jacob Riis
50 Settlement House ............................... 100,000
51 For services and expenses of the Greenburger
52 Center for Social and Criminal Justice ......... 100,000
104 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of Mobilization
2 for Justice .................................... 100,000
3 For services and expenses of NYPD Law
4 Enforcement Explorers-Bronx ..................... 80,000
5 For services and expenses of Neighborhood
6 Legal Services, Inc of Buffalo ................. 400,000
7 For services and expenses of the Glendale
8 Civilian Patrol ................................. 25,000
9 For services and expenses of the Bronx Legal
10 Services ....................................... 150,000
11 For services and expenses of Kingsbridge
12 Heights Community Center ....................... 250,000
13 For services and expenses of Moshoula
14 Montefiore Community Center .................... 250,000
15 For services and expenses of The BARD Prison
16 Initiative ..................................... 250,000
17 For services and expenses of Kings Against
18 Violence Initiative (K.A.V.I) .................. 100,000
19 For services and expenses of Suffolk County
20 Police Hispanic Society ......................... 20,000
21 For services and expenses of Staten Island
22 Legal Services ................................. 150,000
23 For services and expenses of Nassau/Suffolk
24 Law Services Committee, Inc .................... 120,000
25 For services and expenses of Rehabilitation
26 Through the Arts ............................... 150,000
27 For services and expenses of the Center for
28 Court Innovation Youth SOS - Crown Heights
29 ................................................ 100,000
30 For services and expenses of Legal Action
31 Center .......................................... 75,000
32 For services and expenses of Cityline Ozone
33 Park Civilian Patrol ............................ 50,000
34 For services and expenses of Center for
35 Family Representation .......................... 100,000
36 For services and expenses of the Albany Law
37 School - Immigration Clinic .................... 150,000
38 For services and expenses of Legal Aid Soci-
39 ety - Immigration Law Unit ..................... 150,000
40 For services and expenses of Legal Services
41 NYC - DREAM Clinics ............................ 150,000
42 For services and expenses of Haitian-Ameri-
43 cans United for Progress Inc ................... 150,000
44 For services and expenses of programs that
45 prevent domestic violence or aid victims
46 of domestic violence:
47 Domestic Violence Law Project of Rockland
48 County .......................................... 45,722
49 Empire Justice Center ............................. 52,251
50 Legal Aid Society of Mid-New York ................. 45,729
51 Legal Aid Society of New York - Domestic
52 Violence Services ............................... 71,831
105 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 Legal Services for New York City - Brooklyn ....... 45,722
2 Legal Services for New York City - Queens ........ 45,722
3 My Sisters' Place ................................. 45,722
4 Nassau Coalition Against Domestic Violence,
5 Inc. ............................................ 45,722
6 Neighborhood Legal Services Inc. of Erie
7 County .......................................... 45,722
8 Sanctuary for Families ............................ 59,976
9 Rochester Legal Aid Society ....................... 59,159
10 Volunteer Legal Services Project of Monroe
11 County .......................................... 45,722
12 --------------
13 Program account subtotal ................. 291,387,259
14 --------------
15 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
16 Federal Miscellaneous Operating Grants Fund
17 Crime Identification and Technology Account - 25475
18 For services and expenses related to iden-
19 tification technology grants including,
20 but not limited to, crime lab improvement
21 and DNA programs. A portion of these funds
22 may be transferred to state operations and
23 may be suballocated to other state agen-
24 cies (20204) ................................. 2,250,000
25 --------------
26 Program account subtotal ................... 2,250,000
27 --------------
28 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
29 Federal Miscellaneous Operating Grants Fund
30 DCJS Miscellaneous Discretionary Account - 25470
31 Funds herein appropriated may be used to
32 disburse unanticipated federal grants in
33 support of state and local programs to
34 prevent crime, support law enforcement,
35 improve the administration of justice, and
36 assist victims. A portion of these funds
37 may be transferred to state operations and
38 may be suballocated to other state agen-
39 cies (20202) ................................ 13,000,000
40 --------------
41 Program account subtotal .................. 13,000,000
42 --------------
43 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
44 Federal Miscellaneous Operating Grants Fund
45 Edward Byrne Memorial Grant Account - 25540
106 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For services and expenses related to the
2 federal Edward Byrne memorial justice
3 assistance formula program, including
4 enhanced prosecution, enhanced defense,
5 local law enforcement programs, youth
6 violence and/or crime reduction programs,
7 crime laboratories, re-entry services, and
8 judicial diversion and alternative to
9 incarceration programs. A portion of these
10 funds may be transferred to state oper-
11 ations and/or suballocated to other state
12 agencies (20209) ............................. 5,400,000
13 For services and expenses of drug, violence,
14 and crime control and prevention programs.
15 Notwithstanding section 24 of the state
16 finance law or any provision of law to the
17 contrary, funds from this appropriation
18 shall be allocated only pursuant to a
19 plan (i) approved by the speaker of the
20 Assembly and the director of the budget
21 which sets forth either an itemized list
22 of grantees with the amount to be received
23 by each, or the methodology for allocat-
24 ing such appropriation, and (ii) which is
25 thereafter included in an assembly resol-
26 ution calling for the expenditure of such
27 funds, which resolution must be approved
28 by a majority vote of all members elected
29 to the assembly upon a roll call vote .......... 300,000
30 For services and expenses of drug, violence,
31 and crime control and prevention programs,
32 law enforcement and alternatives to incar-
33 ceration programs. Notwithstanding section
34 24 of the state finance law or any
35 provision of law to the contrary, funds
36 from this appropriation shall be allocated
37 only pursuant to a plan (i) approved by
38 the temporary president of the senate and
39 the director of the budget which
40 sets forth either an itemized list of
41 grantees with the amount to be received
42 by each, or the methodology for allocat-
43 ing such appropriation, and (ii) which
44 is thereafter included in a senate
45 resolution calling for the expenditure of
46 such funds, which resolution must be
47 approved by a majority vote of all
48 members elected to the senate upon a roll
49 call vote ...................................... 300,000
50 --------------
51 Program account subtotal ................... 6,000,000
52 --------------
107 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
2 Federal Miscellaneous Operating Grants Fund
3 Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Formula
4 Account - 25436
5 For payment of federal aid to localities
6 pursuant to the provisions of the federal
7 juvenile justice and delinquency
8 prevention act in accordance with a
9 distribution plan determined by the juve-
10 nile justice advisory group and affirmed
11 by the commissioner of the division of
12 criminal justice services. A portion of
13 these funds may be transferred to state
14 operations and may be suballocated to
15 other state agencies (20213) ................. 2,050,000
16 For payment of federal aid to localities
17 pursuant to the provisions of title V of
18 the juvenile justice and delinquency
19 prevention act of 1974, as amended for
20 local delinquency prevention programs,
21 including sub-allocation to state oper-
22 ations for the administration of this
23 grant in accordance with a distribution
24 plan determined by the juvenile justice
25 advisory group and affirmed by the commis-
26 sioner of the division of criminal justice
27 services.
28 For services and expenses associated with
29 the juvenile justice and delinquency
30 prevention formula account. A portion of
31 these funds may be transferred to state
32 operations and may be suballocated to
33 other state agencies (20215) ................... 100,000
34 --------------
35 Program account subtotal ................... 2,150,000
36 --------------
37 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
38 Federal Miscellaneous Operating Grants Fund
39 Violence Against Women Account - 25477
40 For payment of federal aid to localities
41 pursuant to an expenditure plan developed
42 by the commissioner of the division of
43 criminal justice services, provided howev-
44 er that up to 10 percent of the amount
45 herein appropriated may be used for
46 program administration. A portion of these
47 funds may be transferred to state oper-
48 ations and may be suballocated to other
49 state agencies (20216) ....................... 6,500,000
108 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 --------------
2 Program account subtotal ................... 6,500,000
3 --------------
4 Special Revenue Funds - Other
5 Indigent Legal Services Fund
6 Indigent Legal Services Account - 23551
7 For payment to New York state defenders
8 association for services and expenses
9 related to the provision of training and
10 other assistance. The funds hereby appro-
11 priated are to be available for payment of
12 liabilities heretofore accrued or hereaft-
13 er accrued (20247) ........................... 1,030,000
14 For defense services to be distributed in
15 the same manner as the prior year or
16 through a competitive process. The funds
17 hereby appropriated are to be available
18 for payment of liabilities heretofore
19 accrued or hereafter accrued (20246) ......... 7,658,000
20 For payment to prisoner's legal services for
21 services and expenses related to legal
22 representation and assistance to indigent
23 incarcerated individuals. The funds hereby
24 appropriated are to be available for
25 payment of liabilities heretofore accrued
26 or hereafter accrued (20979) ................. 2,200,000
27 --------------
28 Program account subtotal .................. 10,888,000
29 --------------
30 Special Revenue Funds - Other
31 Medical Cannabis Fund
32 Medical Cannabis Law Enforcement - 23753
33 For a program of discretionary grants to
34 state and local law enforcement agencies
35 that demonstrate a need relating to title
36 5-A of article 33 of the public health
37 law. A portion of these funds may be
38 transferred to state operations and may be
39 suballocated to other state agencies
40 (20235) ........................................ 200,000
41 --------------
42 Program account subtotal ..................... 200,000
43 --------------
44 Special Revenue Funds - Other
45 Miscellaneous Special Revenue Fund
46 Criminal Justice Improvement Account - 21945
109 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For grants to rape crisis centers for
2 services to rape victims and programs to
3 prevent rape. A portion of these funds may
4 be transferred or suballocated to other
5 state agencies, and distributed pursuant
6 to a plan prepared by the commissioner or
7 director of the recipient agency and
8 approved by the director of the budget
9 (39718) ...................................... 2,788,000
10 --------------
11 Program account subtotal ................... 2,788,000
12 --------------
13 Special Revenue Funds - Other
14 Miscellaneous Special Revenue Fund
15 Criminal Justice Discovery Compensation Account - 22248
16 For services and expenses related to discov-
17 ery implementation, including but not
18 limited to digital evidence transmission
19 technology, administrative support,
20 computers, hardware and operating soft-
21 ware, data connectivity, development of
22 training materials, staff training, over-
23 time costs, litigation readiness, and
24 pretrial services. Eligible entities shall
25 include, but not be limited to counties,
26 cities with populations less than one
27 million, and law enforcement and prosecu-
28 torial entities within towns and villages.
29 These funds shall be distributed pursuant
30 to a plan submitted by the commissioner of
31 the division of criminal justice services
32 and approved by the director of the budget
33 (39799) ..................................... 40,000,000
34 --------------
35 Program account subtotal .................. 40,000,000
36 --------------
37 Special Revenue Funds - Other
38 Miscellaneous Special Revenue Fund
39 Drug Enforcement Task Force Account - 22102
40 For distribution to the state's political
41 subdivisions and for services and expenses
42 of the drug enforcement task forces. Some
43 of these funds may be transferred to state
44 operations appropriations (20235) .............. 100,000
45 --------------
46 Program account subtotal ..................... 100,000
47 --------------
110 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 Special Revenue Funds - Other
2 Miscellaneous Special Revenue Fund
3 Legal Services Assistance Account - 22096
4 For prosecutorial services of counties, to
5 be distributed pursuant to a plan prepared
6 by the commissioner of the division of
7 criminal justice services and approved by
8 the director of the budget. The funds
9 hereby appropriated are to be available
10 for payment of liabilities heretofore
11 accrued or hereafter accrued (20241) ........ 12,549,000
12 For services and expenses of the district
13 attorney and indigent legal services
14 attorney loan forgiveness program pursuant
15 to section 679-e of the education law.
16 These funds may be suballocated to the
17 higher education services corporation
18 (20220) ...................................... 2,430,000
19 For services and expenses of the Legal
20 Action Center (20376) .......................... 180,000
21 For services, expenses or reimbursement of
22 expenses incurred by local government
23 agencies and/or not-for-profit providers
24 or their employees providing civil or
25 criminal legal services in accordance with
26 the following schedule:
27 Brooklyn Bar Association .......................... 49,574
28 Caribbean Women's Health Association .............. 22,574
29 Center for Family Representation ................. 112,872
30 Day One New York .................................. 34,313
31 Empire Justice Center ............................ 174,725
32 Family and Children's Association ................. 39,496
33 Frank H. Hiscock Legal Aid Society ................ 21,942
34 Goddard Riverside Community Center ................ 53,605
35 Greenhope Services for Women ...................... 33,352
36 Harlem Legal Services ............................. 99,992
37 Her Justice ....................................... 75,000
38 Legal Aid Bureau of Buffalo ....................... 54,548
39 Legal Aid Society of Mid New York ................. 65,827
40 Legal Aid Society of Northeastern New York ........ 48,272
41 Legal Aid Society of Rochester .................... 89,425
42 Legal Aid Society of Rockland County .............. 21,942
43 Legal Information for Families Today (LIFT) ....... 39,496
44 Legal Project of the Cap. Dist. Women's Bar ....... 85,782
45 Legal Services for New York City (LSNY) .......... 118,488
46 Legal Services of Central New York ................ 13,364
47 Legal Services of the Hudson Valley .............. 151,667
48 MFY Legal Services ................................ 43,885
49 Monroe County Legal Assistance Center ............. 35,108
50 Nassau/Suffolk Law Services Committee, Inc. ....... 48,272
51 Neighborhood Legal Services ....................... 80,000
111 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 New York Legal Assistance Group (NYLAG) ........... 25,000
2 New York Legal Assistance Group (NYLAG) -
3 Tenants' Right Unit ............................ 120,000
4 New York City Legal Aid ........................... 25,000
5 New York City Legal Aid .......................... 263,307
6 Northern Manhattan Improvement Corp ............... 89,425
7 Osborne Association El Rio Program ................ 35,985
8 Project Guardianship ............................. 138,208
9 Rural Law Center of New York ...................... 21,942
10 Sanctuary for Families ........................... 163,994
11 Southern Tier Legal Services ...................... 61,438
12 Transgender Legal Defense and Education Fund ...... 75,000
13 Volunteers of Legal Service (VOLS) ................ 39,496
14 Volunteer Legal Services Project of Monroe
15 County .......................................... 21,942
16 Western New York Law Center ....................... 60,634
17 Worker's Justice Law Center of New York,
18 Inc. ............................................ 35,108
19 Chemung County Neighborhood Legal Services ........ 40,000
20 For services and expenses or reimbursement
21 of expenses incurred by local government
22 agencies and/or not-for-profit service
23 providers or their employees providing
24 civil or criminal legal services, which
25 include but are not limited to, legal
26 services for survivors of domestic
27 violence and legal assistance and repre-
28 sentation to indigent individuals on
29 parole. Notwithstanding section 24 of
30 the state finance law or any provision of
31 law to the contrary, funds from this
32 appropriation shall be allocated only
33 pursuant to a plan (i) approved by the
34 temporary president of the senate and the
35 director of the budget which sets
36 forth either an itemized list of grantees
37 with the amount to be received by each,
38 or the methodology for allocating such
39 appropriation, and (ii) which is there-
40 after included in a senate resolution
41 calling for the expenditure of such
42 funds, which resolution must be approved
43 by a majority vote of all members
44 elected to the senate upon a roll call vote .. 1,370,000
45 --------------
46 Program account subtotal .................. 19,359,000
47 --------------
48 Special Revenue Funds - Other
49 State Police Motor Vehicle Law Enforcement and Motor
50 Vehicle Theft and Insurance Fraud Prevention Fund
51 Motor Vehicle Theft and Insurance Fraud Account - 22801
112 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For services and expenses associated with
2 local anti-auto theft programs, in accord-
3 ance with section 89-d of the state
4 finance law, distributed through a compet-
5 itive process (20235) ........................ 3,749,000
6 --------------
7 Program account subtotal ................... 3,749,000
8 --------------
113 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 CRIME PREVENTION AND REDUCTION STRATEGIES PROGRAM
2 General Fund
3 Local Assistance Account - 10000
4 The appropriation made by chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021, is
5 hereby amended and reappropriated to read:
6 For payment to the New York state prosecutors training institute for
7 services and expenses related to the prosecution of crimes and the
8 provision of continuing legal education, training, and support for
9 medicaid fraud prosecution. The funds hereby appropriated are to be
10 available for payment of liabilities heretofore accrued or hereafter
11 accrued (20242) ... 2,078,000 ..................... (re. $2,078,000)
12 For services and expenses of the New York state district attorneys
13 association. The funds hereby appropriated are to be available for
14 payment of liabilities heretofore accrued or hereafter accrued
15 (39798) ... 100,000 .................................. (re. $75,000)
16 For services and expenses associated with a witness protection program
17 pursuant to a plan developed by the commissioner of the division of
18 criminal justice services. The funds hereby appropriated are to be
19 available for payment of liabilities heretofore accrued or hereafter
20 accrued (20243) ... 287,000 ......................... (re. $287,000)
21 For grants to counties for district attorney salaries. Notwithstanding
22 the provisions of subdivisions 10 and 11 of section 700 of the coun-
23 ty law or any other law to the contrary, for state fiscal year
24 2021-22 the state reimbursement to counties for district attorney
25 salaries shall be distributed according to a plan developed by the
26 commissioner of criminal justice services, and approved by the
27 director of the budget (20244) ... 4,212,000 ......... (re. $56,000)
28 Payment of state aid for expenses of the special narcotics prosecutor.
29 The funds hereby appropriated are to be available for payment of
30 liabilities heretofore accrued or hereafter accrued (20245) ........
31 825,000 ............................................. (re. $825,000)
32 For payment of state aid for expenses of crime laboratories for
33 accreditation, training, capacity enhancement and lab related
34 services to maintain the quality and reliability of forensic
35 services to criminal justice agencies, to be distributed pursuant to
36 a plan prepared by the commissioner of the division of criminal
37 justice services and approved by the director of the budget. Some of
38 these funds herein appropriated may be transferred to state oper-
39 ations and may be suballocated to other state agencies (20205) .....
40 6,273,000 ......................................... (re. $6,273,000)
41 For reimbursement of the services and expenses of municipal corpo-
42 rations, public authorities, the division of state police, author-
43 ized police departments of state public authorities or regional
44 state park commissions for the purchase of ballistic soft body armor
45 vests, such sum shall be payable on the audit and warrant of the
46 state comptroller on vouchers certified by the commissioner of the
47 division of criminal justice services and the chief administrative
48 officer of the municipal corporation, public authority, or state
49 entity making requisition and purchase of such vests. A portion of
50 these funds may be transferred to state operations and may be subal-
114 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 located to other state agencies. The funds hereby appropriated are
2 to be available for payment of liabilities heretofore accrued or
3 hereafter accrued (20207) ..........................................
4 1,350,000 ......................................... (re. $1,350,000)
5 For services and expenses of programs aimed at reducing the risk of
6 re-offending, to be distributed pursuant to a plan prepared by the
7 commissioner of the division of criminal justice services and
8 approved by the director of the budget (20249) .....................
9 3,842,000 ......................................... (re. $3,842,000)
10 For services and expenses of project GIVE as allocated pursuant to a
11 plan prepared by the commissioner of criminal justice services and
12 approved by the director of the budget which will include an evalu-
13 ation of the effectiveness of such program. A portion of these funds
14 may be transferred to state operations or suballocated to other
15 state agencies (20942) ... 14,390,000 ............ (re. $14,390,000)
16 For payment of state aid to counties and the city of New York for the
17 operation of local probation departments subject to the approval of
18 the director of the budget.
19 Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, the state aid for proba-
20 tionary services to counties and the city of New York shall be
21 distributed to counties and the city of New York pursuant to a plan
22 prepared by the commissioner of the division of criminal justice
23 services and approved by the director of the budget which shall be
24 to the greatest extent possible, distributed in a manner consistent
25 with the prior year distribution amounts (21038) ...................
26 44,876,000 ....................................... (re. $21,110,000)
27 For payment of state aid to counties and the city of New York for
28 local alternatives to incarceration, including those that provide
29 alcohol and substance abuse treatment programs, and other related
30 interventions pursuant to article 13-A of the executive law.
31 Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, state assistance shall
32 be distributed pursuant to a plan submitted by the commissioner of
33 the division of criminal justice services and approved by the direc-
34 tor of the budget. A portion of these funds may be transferred to
35 state operations and may be suballocated to other state agencies
36 (21037) ... 5,217,000 ............................. (re. $5,217,000)
37 For payment to not-for-profit and government operated programs provid-
38 ing alternatives to incarceration, community supervision and/or
39 employment programs to be distributed pursuant to a plan prepared by
40 the commissioner of the division of criminal justice services and
41 approved by the director of the budget. Eligible services shall
42 include, but not be limited to offender employment, offender assess-
43 ments, treatment program placement and participation, monitoring
44 client compliance with program interventions, TASC program services,
45 and alternatives to prison. A portion of these funds may be trans-
46 ferred to state operations and may be suballocated to other state
47 agencies (20239) ... 13,819,000 .................. (re. $13,419,000)
48 For residential centers providing services to individuals on probation
49 and for community corrections programs to be distributed in the same
50 manner as the prior year or through a competitive process (21000)
51 ... 945,000 ......................................... (re. $945,000)
115 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of the establishment, or continued operation
2 by existing grantees, of regional Operation S.N.U.G. programs,
3 pursuant to a plan prepared by the division of criminal justice
4 services and approved by the director of the budget. A portion of
5 these funds may be transferred to state operations (20250) .........
6 4,865,000 ......................................... (re. $4,865,000)
7 For services and expenses of rape crisis centers for services to rape
8 victims and programs to prevent rape, to be distributed pursuant to
9 a plan prepared by the commissioner of the division of criminal
10 justice services and approved by the director of the budget. A
11 portion or all of these funds may be transferred or suballocated to
12 other state agencies (39718) ... 3,553,000 ........ (re. $3,553,000)
13 For additional services and expenses of rape crisis centers for
14 services to rape victims and programs to prevent rape (39773) ......
15 147,000 ............................................. (re. $147,000)
16 For payment to district attorneys who participate in the crimes
17 against revenue program to be distributed according to a plan devel-
18 oped by the commissioner of the division of criminal justice
19 services, in consultation with the department of taxation and
20 finance, and approved by the director of the budget (20235) ........
21 13,521,000 ....................................... (re. $13,521,000)
22 For payment to not-for-profit and government operated programs provid-
23 ing services including but not limited to defendant screening,
24 assessment, referral, monitoring, and case management, to be
25 distributed pursuant to a plan submitted by the commissioner of the
26 division of criminal justice services and approved by the director
27 of the budget. A portion of these funds may be transferred to state
28 operations (39744) ... 946,000 ...................... (re. $946,000)
29 For services and expenses of law enforcement agencies, for gang
30 prevention youth programs in Nassau and/or Suffolk counties and law
31 enforcement agencies may consult with community-based organizations
32 and/or schools, pursuant to a plan by the commissioner of criminal
33 justice services (20238) ... 500,000 ................ (re. $500,000)
34 For services and expenses related to state and local crime reduction,
35 youth justice and gang prevention programs, including but not limit-
36 ed to street outreach, crime analysis, research, and
37 shooting/violence reduction programs. Funds appropriated herein
38 shall be expended pursuant to a plan developed by the commissioner
39 of criminal justice services and approved by the director of the
40 budget. A portion of these funds may be transferred to state oper-
41 ations and/or suballocated to other state agencies (39797) .........
42 10,000,000 ........................................ (re. $3,500,000)
43 For additional services of State and local crime reduction, youth
44 justice and gang prevention programs, including but not limited to
45 street outreach, crime analysis, research, and shooting/violence
46 reduction programs. Notwithstanding section twenty-four of the state
47 finance law or any provision of law to the contrary, funds from this
48 appropriation shall be allocated only pursuant to a plan (i)
49 approved by the speaker of the Assembly and the director of the
50 budget which sets forth either an itemized list of grantees with the
51 amount to be received by each, or the methodology for allocating
52 such appropriation, and (ii) which is thereafter included in an
116 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 assembly resolution calling for the expenditure of such funds, which
2 resolution must be approved by a majority vote of all members
3 elected to the assembly upon a roll call vote (60107) ..............
4 8,500,000 ......................................... (re. $8,500,000)
5 For additional payment to New York state defenders association for
6 services and expenses related to the provision of training and other
7 assistance (20999) ... 1,059,000 .................. (re. $1,059,000)
8 For additional payment to prisoners' legal services for services and
9 expenses related to legal representation and assistance to indigent
10 inmates (39709) ... 750,000 ......................... (re. $750,000)
11 For services and expenses of the Albany Law School - Immigration Clin-
12 ic (39730) ... 150,000 .............................. (re. $150,000)
13 For services and expenses of Legal Aid Society - Immigration Law Unit
14 (20944) ... 150,000 ................................. (re. $150,000)
15 For services and expenses of Legal Services NYC - DREAM Clinics
16 (20968) ... 150,000 ................................. (re. $150,000)
17 For services and expenses of Haitian-Americans United for Progress Inc
18 (60061) ... 150,000 ................................. (re. $150,000)
19 For services and expenses of Neighborhood Legal Services (20393) .....
20 400,000 ............................................. (re. $400,000)
21 Brooklyn Conflicts Office (39742) ... 250,000 ......... (re. $250,000)
22 For services and expenses of Child Care Center of New York (39756) ...
23 250,000 ............................................. (re. $250,000)
24 For services and expenses of Community Service Society - Record Repair
25 Counseling Corps (20203) ... 250,000 ................ (re. $250,000)
26 For services and expenses related to the Legal Education Opportunity
27 Program. All or a portion of these funds may be transferred to state
28 operations and suballocated to the Judiciary (39723) ...............
29 225,000 ............................................. (re. $225,000)
30 For services and expenses of the Fortune Society (20941) .............
31 200,000 ............................................. (re. $200,000)
32 For services and expenses of Common Justice, Inc. (60002) ............
33 200,000 ............................................. (re. $200,000)
34 For services and expenses of the Brooklyn Defender (20939) ...........
35 175,000 ............................................. (re. $175,000)
36 For services and expenses of New York County Defender Services (60063)
37 ... 150,000 ......................................... (re. $150,000)
38 For services and expenses of Friends of the Island Academy (20210) ...
39 150,000 ............................................. (re. $150,000)
40 For services and expenses of the Correctional Association (20947) ....
41 127,000 ............................................. (re. $127,000)
42 For services and expenses of Goddard Riverside Community Center
43 (20373) ... 125,000 ................................. (re. $125,000)
44 For services and expenses of Bailey House - Project FIRST (20943) ....
45 100,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
46 For services and expenses of the John Jay College (20966) ............
47 100,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
48 For services and expenses of S.N.U.G. Wyandanch (39775) ..............
49 100,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
50 For services and expenses of the Greenburger Center for Social and
51 Criminal Justice (60064) ... 100,000 ................ (re. $100,000)
117 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of Mobilization for Justice (60005) ........
2 100,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
3 For services and expenses of the Center for Court Innovation Youth SOS
4 - Crown Heights (60007) ... 100,000 ................. (re. $100,000)
5 For services and expenses of Groundswell (20938) .....................
6 75,000 ............................................... (re. $75,000)
7 For services and expenses of the Mohawk Consortium (39726) ...........
8 75,000 ............................................... (re. $75,000)
9 For services and expenses for Center for Employment Opportunities
10 (60065) ... 75,000 ................................... (re. $75,000)
11 For services and expenses of Exodus Transitional Community (39727) ...
12 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
13 For services and expenses of Elmcor Youth and Adult Activities Program
14 (20258) ... 31,000 ................................... (re. $31,000)
15 For services and expenses of the Osborne Association (20946) .........
16 20,000 ............................................... (re. $20,000)
17 For services and expenses related to NYU Veteran's Entrepreneurship
18 Program (39725) ... 26,000 ........................... (re. $26,000)
19 For services and expenses of Bergen Basin Community Development Corpo-
20 ration (20996) ... 200,000 .......................... (re. $200,000)
21 For services and expenses of Jacob Riis Settlement House (20260) .....
22 100,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
23 For services and expenses of NYPD Law Enforcement Explorers-Bronx
24 (60008) ... 80,000 ................................... (re. $80,000)
25 For services and expenses of the Glendale Civilian Patrol (60009) ....
26 25,000 ............................................... (re. $25,000)
27 For services and expenses of the Bronx Legal Services (60108) ........
28 150,000 ............................................. (re. $150,000)
29 For services and expenses of Kingsbridge Heights Community Center
30 (60109) ... 250,000 ................................. (re. $250,000)
31 For services and expenses of Mosholu Montefiore Community Center
32 (60110) ... 250,000 ................................. (re. $250,000)
33 For services and expenses of The BARD Prison Initiative (21016) ......
34 250,000 ............................................. (re. $250,000)
35 For services and expenses of Kings Against Violence Initiative
36 (K.A.V.I) (60111) ... 100,000 ....................... (re. $100,000)
37 For services and expenses of Suffolk County Police Hispanic Society
38 (60112) ... 20,000 ................................... (re. $20,000)
39 For services and expenses of Staten Island Legal Services (60004) ....
40 150,000 ............................................. (re. $150,000)
41 For services and expenses of Nassau/Suffolk Law Services Committee,
42 Inc (20391) ... 100,000 ............................. (re. $100,000)
43 For services and expenses of Shalom Task Force Inc (60049) ...........
44 100,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
45 For services and expenses of rehabilitation through the arts (60113)
46 ... 150,000 ......................................... (re. $150,000)
47 For services and expenses of programs that prevent domestic violence
48 or aid victims of domestic violence:
49 Domestic Violence Law Project of Rockland County (21047) .............
50 45,722 ............................................... (re. $45,722)
51 Empire Justice Center (21046) ... 52,251 ............... (re. $52,251)
52 Legal Aid Society of Mid-New York (21045) ... 45,729 ... (re. $45,729)
118 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 Legal Aid Society of New York - Domestic Violence Services (20334) ...
2 71,831 ............................................... (re. $71,831)
3 Legal Services for New York City - Brooklyn (20333) ..................
4 45,722 ............................................... (re. $45,722)
5 Legal Services for New York City - Queens (20337) ....................
6 45,722 ............................................... (re. $45,722)
7 My Sisters' Place (20340) ... 45,722 ................... (re. $45,722)
8 Nassau Coalition Against Domestic Violence, Inc. (20341) .............
9 45,722 ............................................... (re. $45,722)
10 Neighborhood Legal Services Inc. of Erie County (20336) ..............
11 45,722 ............................................... (re. $45,722)
12 Sanctuary for Families (21042) ... 59,976 .............. (re. $59,976)
13 Rochester Legal Aid Society (20335) ... 59,159 ......... (re. $59,159)
14 Volunteer Legal Services Project of Monroe County (21043) ............
15 45,722 ............................................... (re. $45,722)
16 For services and expenses of 100 Suits for 100 Men Inc. (60068) ......
17 20,000 ............................................... (re. $20,000)
18 For services and expenses of 100 Suits for 100 Men Inc. (60067) ......
19 16,000 ............................................... (re. $16,000)
20 For services and expenses of 100 Suits for 100 Men Inc. - SNUG (60114)
21 ... 20,000 ........................................... (re. $20,000)
22 For services and expenses of 67th Precinct Clergy Council Inc.
23 (60080) ... 45,000 ................................... (re. $45,000)
24 For services and expenses expenses of Able Body of Believers Alliance
25 Leadership Center (ABBA) (60115) ... 10,000 .......... (re. $10,000)
26 For services and expenses of Black Vets for Social Justice (60098) ...
27 24,000 ............................................... (re. $24,000)
28 For services and expenses of Bronx Immigration Partnership (60116) ...
29 23,000 ............................................... (re. $23,000)
30 For services and expenses of Bronx Legal Services (60117) ............
31 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
32 For services and expenses of Bronx Legal Services NYC (60118) ........
33 150,000 ............................................. (re. $150,000)
34 For services and expenses of Brooklyn Defenders (60119) ..............
35 40,000 ............................................... (re. $40,000)
36 For services and expenses of Brooklyn Legal Services (60120) .........
37 10,000 ............................................... (re. $10,000)
38 For services and expenses of Brooklyn Legal Services (BLS) (60121) ...
39 51,000 ............................................... (re. $51,000)
40 For services and expenses of Brooklyn Legal Services Corporation A
41 (60122) ... 50,000 ................................... (re. $50,000)
42 For services and expenses of Brooklyn Legal Services Corp A. (39780)
43 ... 24,000 ........................................... (re. $24,000)
44 For services and expenses of Brooklyn Legal Services Corp A. (20212)
45 ... 62,500 ........................................... (re. $62,500)
46 For services and expenses of Brooklyn Legal Services Corp A. (60123)
47 ... 25,000 ........................................... (re. $25,000)
48 For services and expenses of Brooklyn Legal Services, Inc. (60093) ...
49 250,000 ............................................. (re. $250,000)
50 For services and expenses of Brownsville Think Tank Matters (60081)
51 ... 5,000 ............................................. (re. $5,000)
119 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of Capital District Women's Bar Association
2 Legal Project for Domestic Violence (60089) ........................
3 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
4 For services and expenses of Capital District Women's Bar Association
5 Legal Project for Domestic Violence (60124) ........................
6 24,000 ............................................... (re. $24,000)
7 For services and expenses of Capital District Women's Bar Association
8 Legal Project for Immigration Program (60125) ......................
9 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
10 For services and expenses of Capital District Women's Bar Association
11 Legal Project Inc. (60040) ... 160,000 .............. (re. $160,000)
12 For services and expenses of Center for Court Innovation - Redhook
13 Community Justice Center (60044) ... 100,000 ........ (re. $100,000)
14 For services and expenses of Center for Court Innovation (Brownsville
15 Community Justice Center) (60082) ... 25,000 ......... (re. $25,000)
16 For services and expenses of Center for Family Representation (20297)
17 ... 125,000 ......................................... (re. $125,000)
18 For services and expenses of Center for Family Representation (CFR)
19 (60126) ... 15,000 ................................... (re. $15,000)
20 For services and expenses of Center for Family Representation (CFR)
21 (60127) ... 20,000 ................................... (re. $20,000)
22 For services and expenses of Center for Family Representation (CFR)
23 (60128) ... 20,000 ................................... (re. $20,000)
24 For services and expenses of Center for Safety and Change Inc. (60090)
25 ... 24,000 ........................................... (re. $24,000)
26 For services and expenses of Central Family Life Center Inc (60026)
27 ... 250,000 ......................................... (re. $250,000)
28 For services and expenses of Common Justice (60129) ..................
29 10,000 ............................................... (re. $10,000)
30 For services and expenses of Common Justice (60130) ..................
31 20,000 ............................................... (re. $20,000)
32 For services and expenses of Cornell University - Criminal Justice
33 Employment Initiative (60042) ... 100,000 ........... (re. $100,000)
34 For services and expenses of Elite Learners Inc. (60083) .............
35 40,000 ............................................... (re. $40,000)
36 For services and expenses of Elmcor Youth and Adult Activities Inc.
37 (60069) ... 156,666 ................................. (re. $156,666)
38 For services and expenses of Family Justice Center Forensic Medical
39 Unit (60131) ... 100,000 ............................ (re. $100,000)
40 For services and expenses of Family Residence and Essential Enterprise
41 Inc. (FREE) (39788) ... 15,000 ....................... (re. $15,000)
42 For services and expenses of Family Services of Westchester Inc.
43 (60086) ... 4,000 ..................................... (re. $4,000)
44 For services and expenses of Father's Alive In The Hood (F.A.I.T.H)
45 Inc. (60071) ... 20,000 .............................. (re. $20,000)
46 For services and expenses of Father's Alive In The Hood (F.A.I.T.H)
47 Inc. (60070) ... 10,000 .............................. (re. $10,000)
48 For services and expenses of Father's Alive In The Hood (F.A.I.T.H)
49 Inc.- SNUG (60132) ... 10,000 ........................ (re. $10,000)
50 For services and expenses of Fearless! (60133) .......................
51 65,000 ............................................... (re. $65,000)
120 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of Firemen's Association of the State of New
2 York (39758) ... 250,000 ............................ (re. $250,000)
3 For services and expenses of Friends of Island Academy Inc. (60059)
4 ... 90,000 ........................................... (re. $90,000)
5 For services and expenses of Girls Vow Inc. (60057) ..................
6 150,000 ............................................. (re. $150,000)
7 For services and expenses of Glen Cove Police Dept. (60134) ..........
8 8,000 ................................................. (re. $8,000)
9 For services and expenses of Glendale Civilian Observation Patrol
10 (60135) ... 5,000 ..................................... (re. $5,000)
11 For services and expenses of Good Shepherd Services B.R.A.G. program
12 (60136) ... 30,000 ................................... (re. $30,000)
13 For services and expenses of Good Shepherd Services (60087) ..........
14 4,000 ................................................. (re. $4,000)
15 For services and expenses of Greenburger Center for Social and Crimi-
16 nal Justice (60003) ... 100,000 ..................... (re. $100,000)
17 For services and expenses of Gun Violence Research Institute or other
18 gun violence programs(60033) ... 250,000 ........... (re. $250,000)
19 For services and expenses of Her Justice. (60028) ....................
20 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
21 For services and expenses of Her Justice - Immigrant Access to
22 Justice. (60137) ... 100,000 ........................ (re. $100,000)
23 For services and expenses of Hope's Door. (60138) ....................
24 70,000 ............................................... (re. $70,000)
25 For services and expenses of Housing Conservation Coordinators (20374)
26 ... 10,000 ........................................... (re. $10,000)
27 For services and expenses of Housing Court Answers Inc. (60039) .....
28 135,000 ............................................. (re. $135,000)
29 For services and expenses of Huntington Youth Bureau Youth Development
30 Research Institute Inc. (60048) ... 135,000 ......... (re. $135,000)
31 For services and expenses of Hudson Valley Justice Center (60139) ....
32 100,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
33 For services and expenses of It's A Process Inc. (60072) .............
34 16,667 ............................................... (re. $16,667)
35 For services and expenses of Jacob A Riis Neighborhood Settlement 696
36 Building Queensbridge (60043) ... 25,000 ............. (re. $25,000)
37 For services and expenses of Jewish Community Council of Greater Coney
38 Island Inc. (39768) ... 250,000 ..................... (re. $250,000)
39 For services and expenses of Jewish Community Council of Marine Park.
40 (60140) ... 20,000 ................................... (re. $20,000)
41 For services and expenses of King of Kings Foundation Inc. (60073) ...
42 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
43 For services and expenses of King of Kings Foundation Inc. (60074) ...
44 10,000 ............................................... (re. $10,000)
45 For services and expenses of King of Kings Foundation Inc. - SNUG
46 (60141) ... 10,000 ................................... (re. $10,000)
47 For services and expenses of Kings Against Violence Initiative (KAVI)
48 Inc. (60025) ... 40,000 .............................. (re. $40,000)
49 For services and expenses of Legal Action Center (20376) .............
50 5,000 ................................................. (re. $5,000)
51 For services and expenses of Legal Aid Society (60021) ...............
52 12,000 ............................................... (re. $12,000)
121 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of Legal Aid Society aid for survivors of
2 domestic violence (60142) ... 10,000 ................. (re. $10,000)
3 For services and expenses of Legal Aid Society of Rochester. (20381)
4 ... 175,000 ......................................... (re. $175,000)
5 For services and expenses of Legal Aid Society of Rockland County Inc.
6 (20309) ... 24,000 ................................... (re. $24,000)
7 For services and expenses of Legal Services for New York City (LSNY)
8 (20312) ... 100,000 ................................. (re. $100,000)
9 For services and expenses of Legal Services NYC (20385) ..............
10 100,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
11 For services and expenses of Legal Services of the Hudson Valley -
12 Domestic Violence Legal Services Project (60047) ...................
13 90,000 ............................................... (re. $90,000)
14 For services and expenses of Lenox Hill Neighborhood House Inc - Hous-
15 ing Assistance and Legal Assistance (60041) ........................
16 115,000 ............................................. (re. $115,000)
17 For services and expenses of Life Camp Inc. (60075) ..................
18 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
19 For services and expenses of Life Camp Inc. (60076) ..................
20 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
21 For services and expenses of Life progressive services. (60143) ......
22 5,000 ................................................. (re. $5,000)
23 For services and expenses of Long Beach Coalition To Prevent Underage
24 Drinking Inc (60144) ... 5,000 ........................ (re. $5,000)
25 For services and expenses of LSNY Bronx Corporation (60101) ..........
26 44,000 ............................................... (re. $44,000)
27 For services and expenses of Make the Road NY (20389) ................
28 90,000 ............................................... (re. $90,000)
29 For services and expenses of Manhattan Legal Services (39784) ........
30 40,000 ............................................... (re. $40,000)
31 For services and expenses of Mobilization for Justice Inc. (60023) ...
32 290,000 ............................................. (re. $290,000)
33 For services and expenses of Nassau Suffolk Law Services (21067) .....
34 60,000 ............................................... (re. $60,000)
35 For services and expenses of Neighborhood Defender Services of Harlem
36 Inc. (20392) ... 24,000 .............................. (re. $24,000)
37 For services and expenses of Neighborhood Legal Services Inc. (60011)
38 ... 80,000 ........................................... (re. $80,000)
39 For services and expenses of New York County Defender Services (39755)
40 ... 175,000 ......................................... (re. $175,000)
41 For services and expenses of New York County Defender Services (NYCDS)
42 (60145) ... 40,000 ................................... (re. $40,000)
43 For services and expenses of New York Legal Assistance Group (NYLAG)
44 (20320) ... 50,000 ................................... (re. $50,000)
45 For services and expenses of New York Legal Assistance Group (NYLAG)
46 (60030) ... 25,000 ................................... (re. $25,000)
47 For services and expenses of New York Legal Assistance Group (NYLAG) -
48 Survivors of Domestic Violence (60146) ... 25,000 .... (re. $25,000)
49 For services and expenses of New Yorkers Against Gun Violence Inc.
50 (60056) ... 70,000 ................................... (re. $70,000)
51 For services and expenses of Northern Manhattan Improvement Corp
52 (20324) ... 54,000 ................................... (re. $54,000)
122 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of NY County Defenders (60147) .............
2 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
3 For services and expenses of NY County Defenders (60148) .............
4 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
5 For services and expenses of NY County Defenders (60149) .............
6 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
7 For services and expenses of NYIC (60150) ... 10,000 ... (re. $10,000)
8 For services and expenses of NYIC (60151) ... 40,000 ... (re. $40,000)
9 For services and expenses of NYIC (60152) ... 65,000 ... (re. $65,000)
10 For services and expenses of NYPD 61st Precinct At-Risk Youth Mentor-
11 ship Program (60153) ... 10,000 ...................... (re. $10,000)
12 For services and expenses of NYPD 73rd Precinct Youth Violence
13 Reduction Initiative (60154) ... 10,000 .............. (re. $10,000)
14 For services and expenses of Ods Against Violence (60155) ............
15 10,000 ............................................... (re. $10,000)
16 For services and expenses of Opportunities for A Better Tomorrow Inc.
17 (60046) ... 100,000 ................................. (re. $100,000)
18 For services and expenses of Osborne Association FamilyWorks Program
19 in Buffalo (60105) ... 180,000 ...................... (re. $180,000)
20 For services and expenses of Pace Women's Justice Center (60104) .....
21 24,000 ............................................... (re. $24,000)
22 For services and expenses of Prisoner's Legal Services of New York
23 (60156) ... 50,000 ................................... (re. $50,000)
24 For services and expenses of Prisoner's Legal Services of New York
25 (60038) ... 550,000 ................................. (re. $550,000)
26 For services and expenses of Queens Defenders for Youth Justice Court
27 (60157) ... 20,000 ................................... (re. $20,000)
28 For services and expenses of Queens Law Associates Not-For-Profit
29 Corporation (60100) ... 24,000 ....................... (re. $24,000)
30 For services and expenses of Regional Economic Community Action
31 Program Inc. (60035) ... 270,000 .................... (re. $270,000)
32 For services and expenses of Richmond County District Attorney's
33 Office (39700) ... 100,000 .......................... (re. $100,000)
34 For services and expenses of Rise Up Rochester (60158) ...............
35 5,000 ................................................. (re. $5,000)
36 For services and expenses of Rochester Police Accountability Board -
37 PAB (60159) ... 500,000 ............................. (re. $500,000)
38 For services and expenses of Rockaway Development & Revitalization
39 Corporation (60077) ... 30,000 ....................... (re. $30,000)
40 For services and expenses of Rockaway Youth Task Force Inc. (60078)
41 ... 30,000 ........................................... (re. $30,000)
42 For services and expenses of S.T.R.O.N.G Youth Inc. (39774) ..........
43 60,000 ............................................... (re. $60,000)
44 For services and expenses of Safe Horizon Inc. (60092) ...............
45 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
46 For services and expenses of Safe Passage Project (60160) ............
47 60,000 ............................................... (re. $60,000)
48 For services and expenses of Save Our Streets a/k/a S.O.S (60084) ....
49 45,000 ............................................... (re. $45,000)
50 For services and expenses of Sheltering Arms Children and Family
51 Services (60079) ... 11,000 .......................... (re. $11,000)
123 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of Sheltering Arms Children and Family
2 Services - SNUG (60161) ... 12,000 ................... (re. $12,000)
3 For services and expenses of Southside United Housing Development Fund
4 Corp (60099) ... 24,000 .............................. (re. $24,000)
5 For services and expenses of The Doe Fund Inc. (60171) ...............
6 25,000 ............................................... (re. $25,000)
7 For services and expenses of The M.K. Gandhi Institute for Nonvi-
8 olence. (60162) ... 10,000 ........................... (re. $10,000)
9 For services and expenses of The Police Athletic League (60163) ......
10 85,000 ............................................... (re. $85,000)
11 For services and expenses of The Reentry Association of Western NY
12 (RAWNY) (60164) ... 10,000 ........................... (re. $10,000)
13 For services and expenses of The Safe Center LI Inc. (60051) ........
14 160,000 ............................................. (re. $160,000)
15 For services and expenses of Touro Law School (60095) ................
16 24,000 ............................................... (re. $24,000)
17 For services and expenses of Treatment Alternative for Safer Communi-
18 ties of the Capital District (60058) ...............................
19 200,000 ............................................. (re. $200,000)
20 For services and expenses of Tri-County Community Partnership Inc.
21 (60103) ... 8,000 ..................................... (re. $8,000)
22 For services and expenses of Ujamaa Community Development Corporation
23 (60088) ... 9,000 ..................................... (re. $9,000)
24 For services and expenses of Vera House Inc. (60097) .................
25 5,000 ................................................. (re. $5,000)
26 For services and expenses of Victims Information Bureau of Suffolk
27 Inc. (60096) ... 24,000 .............................. (re. $24,000)
28 For services and expenses of Washington Heights CORNER Project, Inc.
29 (60091) ... 4,000 ..................................... (re. $4,000)
30 For services and expenses of Westchester County Policing Program
31 (20206) ... 2,235,000 ............................. (re. $2,235,000)
32 For services and expenses of Hispanic Counseling Center (60165) ......
33 20,000 ............................................... (re. $20,000)
34 For services and expenses of Richmond County District Attorney (RCDA)
35 Trauma-Informed Support Services for High-Risk Victims of Domestic
36 Violence Program (60166) ... 100,000 ................ (re. $100,000)
37 For services and expenses of The Jewish Board (60167) ................
38 15,000 ............................................... (re. $15,000)
39 For services and expenses of Willow Domestic Violence Center of Great-
40 er Rochester (60168) ... 40,000 ...................... (re. $40,000)
41 For services and expenses or reimbursement of expenses incurred by
42 local government agencies and/or not-for-profit service providers or
43 their employees providing civil or criminal legal services and/or
44 public safety programs and services. Notwithstanding any law to the
45 contrary, up to $3,500,000 shall be made available to counties
46 upstate New York. Notwithstanding section 24 of the state finance
47 law or any provision of law to the contrary, funds from this appro-
48 priation shall be allocated only pursuant to a plan (i) approved by
49 the temporary president of the Senate and the director of the budget
50 which sets forth either an itemized list of grantees with the amount
51 to be received by each or the methodology for allocating such appro-
52 priation (60169) ... 4,130,000 .................... (re. $4,130,000)
124 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses or reimbursement of expenses incurred by
2 local government agencies and/or not-for-profit providers providing
3 gun violence prevention programs and/or Operation SNUG programs in
4 Kings County. Notwithstanding section 24 of the state finance law or
5 any provision of law to the contrary, funds from this appropriation
6 shall be allocated only pursuant to a plan (i) approved by the
7 temporary president of the Senate and the director of the budget
8 which sets forth either an itemized list of grantees with the amount
9 to be received by each or the methodology for allocating such appro-
10 priation (60170) ... 200,000 ........................ (re. $200,000)
11 The appropriation made by chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020, is
12 hereby amended and reappropriated to read:
13 For payment to the New York state prosecutors training institute for
14 services and expenses related to the prosecution of crimes and the
15 provision of continuing legal education, training, and support for
16 medicaid fraud prosecution. The funds hereby appropriated are to be
17 available for payment of liabilities heretofore accrued or hereafter
18 accrued (20242) ... 2,078,000 ..................... (re. $1,048,000)
19 For services and expenses associated with a witness protection program
20 pursuant to a plan developed by the commissioner of the division of
21 criminal justice services. The funds hereby appropriated are to be
22 available for payment of liabilities heretofore accrued or hereafter
23 accrued (20243) ... 287,000 ......................... (re. $287,000)
24 For grants to counties for district attorney salaries. Notwithstanding
25 the provisions of subdivisions 10 and 11 of section 700 of the coun-
26 ty law or any other law to the contrary, for state fiscal year
27 2020-21 the state reimbursement to counties for district attorney
28 salaries shall be distributed according to a plan developed by the
29 commissioner of criminal justice services, and approved by the
30 director of the budget (20244) ... 4,212,000 ......... (re. $56,000)
31 Payment of state aid for expenses of the special narcotics prosecutor.
32 The funds hereby appropriated are to be available for payment of
33 liabilities heretofore accrued or hereafter accrued (20245) ........
34 825,000 .............................................. (re. $37,000)
35 For payment of state aid for expenses of crime laboratories for
36 accreditation, training, capacity enhancement and lab related
37 services to maintain the quality and reliability of forensic
38 services to criminal justice agencies, to be distributed pursuant to
39 a plan prepared by the commissioner of the division of criminal
40 justice services and approved by the director of the budget. Some of
41 these funds herein appropriated may be transferred to state oper-
42 ations and may be suballocated to other state agencies (20205) .....
43 6,273,000 ......................................... (re. $1,522,000)
44 For reimbursement of the services and expenses of municipal corpo-
45 rations, public authorities, the division of state police, author-
46 ized police departments of state public authorities or regional
47 state park commissions for the purchase of ballistic soft body armor
48 vests, such sum shall be payable on the audit and warrant of the
49 state comptroller on vouchers certified by the commissioner of the
50 division of criminal justice services and the chief administrative
51 officer of the municipal corporation, public authority, or state
125 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 entity making requisition and purchase of such vests. A portion of
2 these funds may be transferred to state operations and may be subal-
3 located to other state agencies. The funds hereby appropriated are
4 to be available for payment of liabilities heretofore accrued or
5 hereafter accrued (20207) ... 1,350,000 ........... (re. $1,350,000)
6 For services and expenses of programs aimed at reducing the risk of
7 re-offending, to be distributed pursuant to a plan prepared by the
8 commissioner of the division of criminal justice services and
9 approved by the director of the budget (20249) .....................
10 3,842,000 ......................................... (re. $2,600,000)
11 For services and expenses of project GIVE as allocated pursuant to a
12 plan prepared by the commissioner of criminal justice services and
13 approved by the director of the budget which will include an evalu-
14 ation of the effectiveness of such program. A portion of these funds
15 may be transferred to state operations or suballocated to other
16 state agencies (20942) ... 14,390,000 ............. (re. $4,671,000)
17 For payment of state aid to counties and the city of New York for
18 local alternatives to incarceration, including those that provide
19 alcohol and substance abuse treatment programs, and other related
20 interventions pursuant to article 13-A of the executive law.
21 Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, state assistance shall
22 be distributed pursuant to a plan submitted by the commissioner of
23 the division of criminal justice services and approved by the direc-
24 tor of the budget. A portion of these funds may be transferred to
25 state operations and may be suballocated to other state agencies
26 (21037) ... 5,217,000 ............................. (re. $5,217,000)
27 For payment to not-for-profit and government operated programs provid-
28 ing alternatives to incarceration, community supervision and/or
29 employment programs to be distributed pursuant to a plan prepared by
30 the commissioner of the division of criminal justice services and
31 approved by the director of the budget. Eligible services shall
32 include, but not be limited to offender employment, offender assess-
33 ments, treatment program placement and participation, monitoring
34 client compliance with program interventions, TASC program services,
35 and alternatives to prison. A portion of these funds may be trans-
36 ferred to state operations and may be suballocated to other state
37 agencies (20239) ... 13,819,000 ... ............... (re. $8,322,000)
38 For residential centers providing services to individuals on probation
39 and for community corrections programs to be distributed in the same
40 manner as the prior year or through a competitive process (21000)
41 ... 945,000 ......................................... (re. $538,000)
42 For services and expenses of the establishment, or continued operation
43 by existing grantees, of regional Operation S.N.U.G. programs,
44 pursuant to a plan prepared by the division of criminal justice
45 services and approved by the director of the budget. A portion of
46 these funds may be transferred to state operations (20250) .........
47 4,865,000 ......................................... (re. $3,788,000)
48 For services and expenses of rape crisis centers for services to rape
49 victims and programs to prevent rape, to be distributed pursuant to
50 a plan prepared by the commissioner of the division of criminal
51 justice services and approved by the director of the budget. A
126 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 portion or all of these funds may be transferred or suballocated to
2 other state agencies (39718) ... 3,553,000 ........ (re. $2,075,000)
3 For additional services and expenses of rape crisis centers for
4 services to rape victims and programs to prevent rape (39773) ......
5 147,000 ............................................. (re. $147,000)
6 For payment to district attorneys who participate in the crimes
7 against revenue program to be distributed according to a plan devel-
8 oped by the commissioner of the division of criminal justice
9 services, in consultation with the department of taxation and
10 finance, and approved by the director of the budget (20235) ........
11 13,521,000 ........................................ (re. $9,222,000)
12 For payment to not-for-profit and government operated programs provid-
13 ing services including but not limited to defendant screening,
14 assessment, referral, monitoring, and case management, to be
15 distributed pursuant to a plan submitted by the commissioner of the
16 division of criminal justice services and approved by the director
17 of the budget. A portion of these funds may be transferred to state
18 operations (39744) ... 946,000 ...................... (re. $734,000)
19 For services and expenses of law enforcement agencies, for gang
20 prevention youth programs in Nassau and/or Suffolk counties and law
21 enforcement agencies may consult with community-based organizations
22 and/or schools, pursuant to a plan by the commissioner of criminal
23 justice services (20238) ... 500,000 ................ (re. $500,000)
24 For services and expenses related to state and local crime reduction,
25 youth justice and gang prevention programs, including but not limit-
26 ed to street outreach, crime analysis, research, and shooting/
27 violence reduction programs. Funds appropriated herein shall be
28 expended pursuant to a plan developed by the commissioner of crimi-
29 nal justice services and approved by the director of the budget. A
30 portion of these funds may be transferred to state operations and/or
31 suballocated to other state agencies (39797) .......................
32 10,000,000 ........................................ (re. $6,370,000)
33 For additional payment to New York state defenders association for
34 services and expenses related to the provision of training and other
35 assistance (20999) ... 1,059,000 .................... (re. $694,000)
36 For services and expenses of the Albany Law School - Immigration Clin-
37 ic (39730) ... 150,000 .............................. (re. $150,000)
38 For services and expenses of Legal Aid Society-Immigration Law Unit
39 (20944) ... 150,000 ................................. (re. $150,000)
40 For services and expenses of Legal Services NYC-DREAM Clinics (20968)
41 ... 150,000 ......................................... (re. $150,000)
42 For services and expenses of Haitian-Americans United for Progress Inc
43 (60061) ... 150,000 ................................. (re. $150,000)
44 For services and expenses of Neighborhood Legal Services (20393) .....
45 400,000 ............................................. (re. $400,000)
46 Brooklyn Conflicts Office (39742) ... 250,000 ......... (re. $250,000)
47 For services and expenses of Southside United HDFC (60062) ...........
48 250,000 ............................................. (re. $250,000)
49 For services and expenses of Child Care Center of New York (39756) ...
50 250,000 ............................................. (re. $250,000)
51 For services and expenses of Community Service Society-Record Repair
52 Counseling Corps (20203) ... 250,000 ................ (re. $250,000)
127 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses related to the Legal Education Opportunity
2 Program. All or a portion of these funds may be transferred to state
3 operations and suballocated to the Judiciary (39723) ...............
4 225,000 ............................................. (re. $225,000)
5 For services and expenses of the Fortune Society (20941) .............
6 200,000 .............................................. (re. $51,000)
7 For services and expenses of Common Justice, Inc. (60002) ............
8 200,000 ............................................. (re. $200,000)
9 For services and expenses of the Brooklyn Defender (20939) ...........
10 175,000 ............................................. (re. $175,000)
11 For services and expenses of New York County Defender Services (60063)
12 ... 175,000 ......................................... (re. $104,000)
13 For services and expenses of Friends of the Island Academy (20210) ...
14 150,000 ............................................. (re. $150,000)
15 For services and expenses of Greenpoint Outreach Domestic and Family
16 Intervention Program (20965) ... 150,000 ............ (re. $150,000)
17 For services and expenses of the Correctional Association (20947) ....
18 127,000 ............................................. (re. $127,000)
19 For services and expenses of Goddard Riverside Community Center
20 (20373) ... 125,000 ................................. (re. $125,000)
21 For services and expenses of Bailey House-Project FIRST (20943) ......
22 100,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
23 For services and expenses of the John Jay College (20966) ............
24 100,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
25 For services and expenses of S.N.U.G. Wyandanch (39775) ..............
26 100,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
27 For services and expenses of the Greenburger Center for Social and
28 Criminal Justice (60064) ... 100,000 ................ (re. $100,000)
29 For services and expenses of Mobilization for Justice (60005) ........
30 100,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
31 For services and expenses of the Center for Court Innovation Youth SOS
32 - Crown Heights (60007) ... 100,000 ................. (re. $100,000)
33 For services and expenses of Groundswell (20938) .....................
34 75,000 ............................................... (re. $75,000)
35 For services and expenses of the Mohawk Consortium (39726) ...........
36 75,000 ............................................... (re. $75,000)
37 For services and expenses for Center for Employment Opportunities
38 (60065) ... 75,000 ................................... (re. $75,000)
39 For services and expenses of Exodus Transitional Community (39727) ...
40 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
41 For services and expenses of Elmcor Youth and Adult Activities Program
42 (20258) ... 44,000 ................................... (re. $44,000)
43 For services and expenses of the Osborne Association (20946) .........
44 31,000 ............................................... (re. $31,000)
45 For services and expenses related to NYU Veteran's Entrepreneurship
46 Program (39725) ... 30,000 ........................... (re. $30,000)
47 For services and expenses of Bergen Basin Community Development Corpo-
48 ration (20996) ... 26,000 ............................ (re. $26,000)
49 For services and expenses of Jacob Riis Settlement House (20260) .....
50 20,000 ............................................... (re. $20,000)
51 For services and expenses of NYPD Law Enforcement Explorers-Bronx
52 (60008) ... 80,000 ................................... (re. $80,000)
128 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of the Glendale Civilian Patrol (60009) ....
2 25,000 ............................................... (re. $25,000)
3 For services and expenses of programs that prevent domestic violence
4 or aid victims of domestic violence:
5 Domestic Violence Law Project of Rockland County (21047) .............
6 45,722 ............................................... (re. $45,722)
7 Empire Justice Center (21046) ... 52,251 ............... (re. $52,251)
8 Legal Aid Society of Mid-New York (21045) ... 45,729 ... (re. $45,729)
9 Legal Aid Society of New York - Domestic Violence Services (20334) ...
10 71,831 ............................................... (re. $71,831)
11 Legal Services for New York City - Brooklyn (20333) ..................
12 45,722 ............................................... (re. $45,722)
13 Legal Services for New York City - Queens (20337) ....................
14 45,722 ............................................... (re. $45,722)
15 My Sisters' Place (20340) ... 45,722 ................... (re. $45,722)
16 Nassau Coalition Against Domestic Violence, Inc. (20341) .............
17 45,722 ............................................... (re. $45,722)
18 Neighborhood Legal Services Inc. of Erie County (20336) ..............
19 45,722 ............................................... (re. $45,722)
20 Sanctuary for Families (21042) ... 59,976 .............. (re. $59,976)
21 Rochester Legal Aid Society (20335) ... 59,159 ......... (re. $59,159)
22 Volunteer Legal Services Project of Monroe County (21043) ............
23 45,722 ............................................... (re. $45,722)
24 For payment of state aid for Westchester County Policing Program
25 (20206) ... 2,235,000 ............................. (re. $1,243,000)
26 For services and expenses related to the Gun Violence Research Insti-
27 tute to be disbursed in collaboration with higher education insti-
28 tutions or other gun violence programs(60033) .....................
29 250,000 ............................................. (re. $250,000)
30 For services and expenses of Firemen's Association of the State of New
31 York (39758) ... 250,000 ............................ (re. $250,000)
32 For services and expenses of Regional Economic Community Action
33 Program Inc (60035) ... 200,000 ..................... (re. $200,000)
34 For services and expenses of 100 Suits for 100 Men (60067) ...........
35 15,667 ............................................... (re. $15,667)
36 For services and expenses of 100 Suits for 100 Men (60068) ...........
37 20,000 ............................................... (re. $20,000)
38 For services and expenses of Elmcor Youth and Adult Activities, Inc
39 (60069) ... 156,666 ................................. (re. $156,666)
40 For services and expenses of Father's Alive In The Hood (F.A.I.T.H)
41 Inc. (60070) ... 10,000 .............................. (re. $10,000)
42 For services and expenses of Father's Alive In The Hood (F.A.I.T.H)
43 Inc (60071) ... 20,000 ............................... (re. $20,000)
44 For services and expenses of It's A Process Inc (60072) ..............
45 16,667 ............................................... (re. $16,667)
46 For services and expenses of King of Kings Foundation Inc (60073) ....
47 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
48 For services and expenses of King of Kings Foundation Inc. (60074) ...
49 10,000 ............................................... (re. $10,000)
50 For services and expenses of LIFE Camp Inc (60075) ...................
51 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
129 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of LIFE Camp Inc (60076) ...................
2 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
3 For services and expenses of Rockaway Development & Revitalization
4 Corporation (60077) ... 30,000 ....................... (re. $30,000)
5 For services and expenses of Rockaway Youth Task Force, Inc. (60078)
6 ... 30,000 ........................................... (re. $30,000)
7 For services and expenses of Sheltering Arms Children and Family
8 Services (60079) ... 11,000 .......................... (re. $11,000)
9 For services and expenses of 67th Precinct Clergy Council Inc (60080)
10 ... 45,000 ........................................... (re. $45,000)
11 For services and expenses of Brownsville Think Tank Matters (60081)
12 ... 5,000 ............................................. (re. $5,000)
13 For services and expenses of Center for Court Innovation (Brownsville
14 Community Justice Center) (60082) ... 25,000 ......... (re. $25,000)
15 For services and expenses of Elite Learners Inc. (60083) .............
16 40,000 ............................................... (re. $40,000)
17 For services and expenses of Kings Against Violence Initiative (KAVI)
18 Inc (60025) ... 40,000 ............................... (re. $40,000)
19 For services and expenses of Save Our Streets (S.O.S) (60084) ........
20 45,000 ............................................... (re. $45,000)
21 For services and expenses of Central Family Life Center Inc (60026)
22 ... 250,000 ......................................... (re. $250,000)
23 For services and expenses of Jewish Community Center of Greater Coney
24 Island Inc (39779) ... 250,000 ...................... (re. $250,000)
25 For services and expenses of Shalom Task Force Inc. (60049) ..........
26 175,000 ............................................. (re. $175,000)
27 For services and expenses of Family Services of Westchester Inc
28 (60086) ... 4,000 ..................................... (re. $4,000)
29 For services and expenses of Good Shepherd Services (60087) ..........
30 4,000 ................................................. (re. $4,000)
31 For services and expenses of Ujamaa Community Development Corporation
32 (60088) ... 9,000 ..................................... (re. $9,000)
33 For services and expenses of Center for Family Representation (20297)
34 ... 125,000 ......................................... (re. $125,000)
35 For services and expenses of Neighborhood Defender Service of Harlem
36 Inc (20392) ... 24,000 ............................... (re. $24,000)
37 For services and expenses of Capital District Women's Bar Association
38 Legal Project for Domestic Violence Legal Services (60089) .........
39 24,000 ............................................... (re. $24,000)
40 For services and expenses of Capital District Women's Bar Association
41 Legal Project Inc (60040) ... 160,000 ............... (re. $160,000)
42 For services and expenses of Treatment Alternatives for Safer Communi-
43 ties of the Capital District (60058) ... 200,000 .... (re. $200,000)
44 For services and expenses of Center for Safety and Change Inc (60090)
45 ... 24,000 ........................................... (re. $24,000)
46 For services and expenses of Legal Services of the Hudson Valley-
47 Domestic Violence Legal Service Projects (60047) ...................
48 90,000 ............................................... (re. $90,000)
49 For services and expenses of Huntington Youth Bureau Youth Development
50 Research Institute Inc. (60048) ... 135,000 ......... (re. $135,000)
51 For services and expenses of Jacob A Riis Neighborhood Settlement 696
52 Building Queensbridge (60043) ... 25,000 ............. (re. $25,000)
130 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of New York County Defender Services (39755)
2 ... 175,000 ......................................... (re. $175,000)
3 For services and expenses of Washington Heights CORNER Project, Inc
4 (60091) ... 4,000 ..................................... (re. $4,000)
5 For services and expenses of Safe Horizon, Inc. (60092) ..............
6 30,000 ............................................... (re. $30,000)
7 For services and expenses of Northern Manhattan Improvement Corp
8 (20324) ... 100,000 ................................. (re. $100,000)
9 For services and expenses of The Safe Center LI Inc. (60051) .........
10 160,000 ............................................. (re. $160,000)
11 For services and expenses of New Yorkers Against Gun Violence Inc
12 (60056) ... 70,000 ................................... (re. $70,000)
13 For services and expenses of Legal Aid Society (60021) ...............
14 12,000 ............................................... (re. $12,000)
15 For services and expenses of Brooklyn Legal Services (60093) .........
16 250,000 ............................................. (re. $250,000)
17 For services and expenses of Neighborhood Legal Services Inc. (60011)
18 ... 80,000 ........................................... (re. $80,000)
19 For services and expenses of Safe Horizon, Inc. (60094) ..............
20 30,000 ............................................... (re. $30,000)
21 For services and expenses of Lenox Hill Neighborhood House Inc- Hous-
22 ing Assistance and Legal Assistance (60041) ........................
23 115,000 ............................................. (re. $115,000)
24 For services and expenses of Housing Court Answers Inc. (60039) ......
25 135,000 ............................................. (re. $135,000)
26 For services and expenses of Touro Law School (60095) ................
27 24,000 ............................................... (re. $24,000)
28 For services and expenses of Victims Information Bureau of Suffolk Inc
29 (60096) ... 24,000 ................................... (re. $24,000)
30 For services and expenses of Vera House Inc. (60097) .................
31 5,000 ................................................. (re. $5,000)
32 For services and expenses of Black Vets for Social Justice (60098) ...
33 24,000 ............................................... (re. $24,000)
34 For services and expenses of Center for Court Innovation - Redhook
35 Community Justice Center (60044) ... 100,000 ........ (re. $100,000)
36 For services and expenses of Cornell University - Criminal Justice
37 Employment Initiative (60042) ... 100,000 ........... (re. $100,000)
38 For services and expenses of Brooklyn Legal Services Corp A (20212)
39 ... 62,500 ........................................... (re. $62,500)
40 For services and expenses of Mobilization for Justice (60023) ........
41 60,000 ............................................... (re. $60,000)
42 For services and expenses of Brooklyn Legal Service Corp A (39780) ...
43 24,000 ............................................... (re. $24,000)
44 For services and expenses of Girl Vow Inc (60057) ....................
45 150,000 ............................................. (re. $150,000)
46 For services and expenses of Southside United Housing Development Fund
47 Corp (60099) ... 24,000 .............................. (re. $24,000)
48 For services and expenses of Make the Road NY (20389) ................
49 90,000 ............................................... (re. $90,000)
50 For services and expenses of Opportunities for A Better Tomorrow Inc
51 (60046) ... 100,000 ................................. (re. $100,000)
131 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of Queens Law Associates Not-For-Profit
2 Corporation (60100) ... 24,000 ....................... (re. $24,000)
3 For services and expenses of Richmond County District Attorney's
4 Office (39700) ... 100,000 .......................... (re. $100,000)
5 For services and expenses of Prisoner Legal Services of NY (60038) ...
6 150,000 ............................................. (re. $150,000)
7 For services and expenses of LSNY Bronx Corporation (60101) ..........
8 44,000 ............................................... (re. $44,000)
9 For services and expenses of Mohawk Consortium - Hamilton College
10 (60060) ... 90,000 ................................... (re. $90,000)
11 For services and expenses of Friends of Island Academy Inc. (60059)
12 ... 90,000 ........................................... (re. $90,000)
13 For services and expenses of Greenburger Center for Social and Crimi-
14 nal Justice (60003) ... 100,000 ..................... (re. $100,000)
15 For services and expenses of Legal Services NYC (20385) ..............
16 24,000 ............................................... (re. $24,000)
17 For services and expenses of Legal Services for New York City (LSNY)
18 (20312) ... 100,000 ................................. (re. $100,000)
19 For services and expenses of Regional Economic Community Action
20 Program Inc (60102) ... 70,000 ....................... (re. $70,000)
21 For services and expenses of Tri- County Community Partnership Inc
22 (60103) ... 8,000 ..................................... (re. $8,000)
23 For services and expenses of Legal Aid Society of Rockland County Inc
24 (20309) ... 24,000 ................................... (re. $24,000)
25 For services and expenses of Pace Women's Justice Center (60104) .....
26 24,000 ............................................... (re. $24,000)
27 For services and expenses of Osborne Association Inc. FamilyWorks
28 Program in Buffalo (60105) ... 180,000 .............. (re. $180,000)
29 For services, expenses or reimbursement of expenses incurred by local
30 government agencies including law enforcement agencies, and/or not-
31 for-profit providers or their employees providing programs designed
32 to reduce crime and prevent gang violence through community engage-
33 ment. Notwithstanding section 24 of the state finance law or any
34 provision of law to the contrary, funds from this appropriation
35 shall be allocated only pursuant to a plan approved by the temporary
36 president of the Senate and the director of the budget which sets
37 forth either an itemized list of grantees with the amount to be
38 received by each or the methodology for allocating such appropri-
39 ation (60106) ... 600,000 ........................... (re. $600,000)
40 For services, expenses or reimbursement of expenses incurred by local
41 government agencies and/or not-for-profit providers or their employ-
42 ees providing civil or criminal legal services. Notwithstanding
43 section 24 of the state finance law or any provision of law to the
44 contrary, funds from this appropriation shall be allocated only
45 pursuant to a plan approved by the temporary president of the Senate
46 and the director of the budget which sets forth either an itemized
47 list of grantees with the amount to be received by each or the meth-
48 odology for allocating such appropriation (20982) ..................
49 150,000 ............................................. (re. $150,000)
50 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020, as amended by chapter 50,
51 section 4, of the laws of 2020:
132 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For additional payment to prisoners' legal services for services and
2 expenses related to legal representation and assistance to indigent
3 inmates (39709) ... 750,000 ......................... (re. $750,000)
4 The appropriation made by chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019, is
5 hereby amended and reappropriated to read:
6 For prosecutorial services of counties, to be distributed in the same
7 manner as the prior year or through a competitive process. The funds
8 hereby appropriated are to be available for payment of liabilities
9 heretofore accrued or hereafter accrued (20241) ....................
10 8,957,000 ........................................... (re. $246,000)
11 For payment to the New York state district attorneys association and
12 the New York state prosecutors training institute for services and
13 expenses related to the prosecution of crimes and the provision of
14 continuing legal education, training, and support for medicaid fraud
15 prosecution. The funds hereby appropriated are to be available for
16 payment of liabilities heretofore accrued or hereafter accrued
17 (20242) ... 2,178,000 ............................... (re. $125,000)
18 For services and expenses associated with a witness protection program
19 pursuant to a plan developed by the commissioner of the division of
20 criminal justice services. The funds hereby appropriated are to be
21 available for payment of liabilities heretofore accrued or hereafter
22 accrued (20243) ... 287,000 ......................... (re. $287,000)
23 For grants to counties for district attorney salaries. Notwithstanding
24 the provisions of subdivisions 10 and 11 of section 700 of the coun-
25 ty law or any other law to the contrary, for state fiscal year
26 2019-20 the state reimbursement to counties for district attorney
27 salaries shall be distributed according to a plan developed by the
28 commissioner of criminal justice services, and approved by the
29 director of the budget (20244) ... 4,212,000 ......... (re. $56,000)
30 For payment of state aid for expenses of crime laboratories for
31 accreditation, training, capacity enhancement and lab related
32 services to maintain the quality and reliability of forensic
33 services to criminal justice agencies, to be distributed pursuant to
34 a plan prepared by the commissioner of the division of criminal
35 justice services and approved by the director of the budget. Some of
36 these funds herein appropriated may be transferred to state oper-
37 ations and may be suballocated to other state agencies (20205) .....
38 6,273,000 ........................................... (re. $275,000)
39 For reimbursement of the services and expenses of municipal corpo-
40 rations, public authorities, the division of state police, author-
41 ized police departments of state public authorities or regional
42 state park commissions for the purchase of ballistic soft body armor
43 vests, such sum shall be payable on the audit and warrant of the
44 state comptroller on vouchers certified by the commissioner of the
45 division of criminal justice services and the chief administrative
46 officer of the municipal corporation, public authority, or state
47 entity making requisition and purchase of such vests. A portion of
48 these funds may be transferred to state operations and may be subal-
49 located to other state agencies. The funds hereby appropriated are
50 to be available for payment of liabilities heretofore accrued or
51 hereafter accrued (20207) ... 1,350,000 ............. (re. $598,000)
133 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of programs aimed at reducing the risk of
2 re-offending, to be distributed pursuant to a plan prepared by the
3 commissioner of the division of criminal justice services and
4 approved by the director of the budget (20249) .....................
5 3,842,000 ........................................... (re. $930,000)
6 For services and expenses of project GIVE as allocated pursuant to a
7 plan prepared by the commissioner of criminal justice services and
8 approved by the director of the budget which will include an evalu-
9 ation of the effectiveness of such program. A portion of these funds
10 may be transferred to state operations or suballocated to other
11 state agencies (20942) ... 14,390,000 ............... (re. $637,000)
12 For payment of state aid to counties and the city of New York for
13 local alternatives to incarceration, including those that provide
14 alcohol and substance abuse treatment programs, and other related
15 interventions pursuant to article 13-A of the executive law.
16 Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, state assistance shall
17 be distributed pursuant to a plan submitted by the commissioner of
18 the division of criminal justice services and approved by the direc-
19 tor of the budget. A portion of these funds may be transferred to
20 state operations and may be suballocated to other state agencies
21 (21037) ... 5,217,000 ............................. (re. $2,869,000)
22 For payment to not-for-profit and government operated programs provid-
23 ing alternatives to incarceration, community supervision and/or
24 employment programs to be distributed pursuant to a plan prepared by
25 the commissioner of the division of criminal justice services and
26 approved by the director of the budget. Eligible services shall
27 include, but not be limited to offender employment, offender assess-
28 ments, treatment program placement and participation, monitoring
29 client compliance with program interventions, TASC program services,
30 and alternatives to prison. A portion of these funds may be suballo-
31 cated to other state agencies (20239) ..............................
32 13,819,000 ........................................ (re. $3,201,000)
33 For residential centers providing services to individuals on probation
34 and for community corrections programs to be distributed in the same
35 manner as the prior year or through a competitive process (21000)
36 ... 945,000 ......................................... (re. $183,000)
37 For services and expenses of the establishment, or continued operation
38 by existing grantees, of regional Operation S.N.U.G. programs,
39 pursuant to a plan prepared by the division of criminal justice
40 services and approved by the director of the budget. A portion of
41 these funds may be transferred to state operations (20250) .........
42 4,815,000 ......................................... (re. $2,211,000)
43 For services and expenses of rape crisis centers for services to rape
44 victims and programs to prevent rape, to be distributed pursuant to
45 a plan prepared by the commissioner of the division of criminal
46 justice services and approved by the director of the budget. A
47 portion or all of these funds may be transferred or suballocated to
48 other state agencies (39718) ... 3,553,000 .......... (re. $623,000)
49 For additional services and expenses of rape crisis centers for
50 services to rape victims and programs to prevent rape (39773) ......
51 147,000 ............................................... (re. $6,000)
134 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For payment to district attorneys who participate in the crimes
2 against revenue program to be distributed according to a plan devel-
3 oped by the commissioner of the division of criminal justice
4 services, in consultation with the department of taxation and
5 finance, and approved by the director of the budget (20235) ........
6 13,521,000 ........................................ (re. $1,159,000)
7 For payment to not-for-profit and government operated programs provid-
8 ing services including but not limited to defendant screening,
9 assessment, referral, monitoring, and case management, to be
10 distributed pursuant to a plan submitted by the commissioner of the
11 division of criminal justice services and approved by the director
12 of the budget. A portion of these funds may be transferred to state
13 operations (39744) ... 946,000 ...................... (re. $348,000)
14 For services and expenses of law enforcement agencies, for gang
15 prevention youth programs in Nassau and/or Suffolk counties and law
16 enforcement agencies may consult with community-based organizations
17 and/or schools, pursuant to a plan by the commissioner of criminal
18 justice services (20238) ... 500,000 ................ (re. $500,000)
19 For services and expenses related to state and local crime reduction,
20 youth justice and gang prevention programs, including but not limit-
21 ed to street outreach, crime analysis, research, and shooting/
22 violence reduction programs, such that $1,000,000 shall be made
23 available to Long Island and $1,500,000 shall be made available to
24 gun violence street outreach programs administered by the city of
25 New York. Funds appropriated herein shall be expended pursuant to a
26 plan developed by the commissioner of criminal justice services and
27 approved by the director of the budget. A portion of these funds may
28 be transferred to state operations and/or suballocated to other
29 state agencies (39797) ... 10,000,000 ............ (re. $10,000,000)
30 For services and expenses related to the gun violence research insti-
31 tute to be disbursed in collaboration with higher education insti-
32 tutions or other gun violence programs (60033) .....................
33 250,000 ............................................. (re. $250,000)
34 For services and expenses of Yeshiva University - Kathryn O. Greenberg
35 Immigration Justice Clinic at Cardozo Law School (60034) ...........
36 150,000 ............................................. (re. $150,000)
37 For services and expenses of Make the Road NY (20389) ................
38 90,000 ............................................... (re. $90,000)
39 For services and expenses of Cure Violence (SNUG) within Kings County
40 (60036) ... 200,000 ................................. (re. $200,000)
41 For services and expenses of the establishment of S.N.U.G. programs
42 within Queens County (60037) ... 470,000 ............ (re. $470,000)
43 For services and expenses of Cure Violence New York (SNUG) - Staten
44 Island (39762) ... 350,000 ........................... (re. $43,000)
45 For services and expenses of Jewish Community Council of Greater Coney
46 Island Inc. - SNUG for Brooklyn (39779) ............................
47 250,000 ............................................... (re. $8,000)
48 For additional payment to Prisoners Legal Services of New York (60038)
49 ... 150,000 .......................................... (re. $13,000)
50 For services and expenses of Brooklyn Legal Services Corp A (20212)
51 ... 125,000 .......................................... (re. $31,000)
135 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of Capital District Womens Bar Association
2 Legal Project Inc. (60040) ... 160,000 ............... (re. $10,000)
3 For services and expenses of Cornell University - Criminal Justice and
4 Employment Initiative (60042) ... 100,000 ........... (re. $100,000)
5 For services and expenses of Jacob A Riis Neighborhood Settlement -
6 696 Build Queensbridge (60043) ... 50,000 ............ (re. $50,000)
7 For services and expenses of the Center for Court Innovation - Red
8 Hook Community Justice Center (60044) ... 100,000 ... (re. $100,000)
9 For services and expenses of the establishment of Prisoners Legal
10 Services of New York - Newburgh office (60045) .....................
11 200,000 ............................................. (re. $181,000)
12 For services and expenses of Opportunities For A Better Tomorrow Inc.
13 (60046) ... 100,000 .................................. (re. $22,000)
14 For services and expenses of Huntington Youth Bureau Youth Development
15 Research Institute Inc. (60048) ... 135,000 ......... (re. $102,000)
16 For services and expenses of The Safe Center Li Inc. (60051) .........
17 160,000 .............................................. (re. $60,000)
18 For services and expenses of the Richmond County District Attorney's
19 Office (39700) ... 100,000 .......................... (re. $100,000)
20 For services and expenses of Fortune Society, Inc - Seniors Released
21 to Services (60053) ... 125,000 ...................... (re. $32,000)
22 For services and expenses of New York County Defender Services (39755)
23 ... 175,000 .......................................... (re. $27,000)
24 For services and expenses of Girl Vow Inc. (60057) ...................
25 150,000 ............................................... (re. $3,000)
26 For services and expenses of Treatment Alternatives For Safer Communi-
27 ties of the Capital District (60058) ... 200,000 ...... (re. $8,000)
28 For services and expenses of Friends Of Island Academy Inc. (60059)
29 ... 100,000 .......................................... (re. $40,000)
30 For services and expenses of Greenburger Center For Social And Crimi-
31 nal Justice (60003) ... 100,000 ..................... (re. $100,000)
32 For services and expenses of the Mohawk Consortium - Hamilton College
33 (60060) ... 90,000 ................................... (re. $90,000)
34 For payments to the Firemen's Association of the State of New York to
35 provide grant awards to volunteer fire departments within the state
36 to assist with recruitment and retention of membership within such
37 districts (39758) ... 250,000 ....................... (re. $250,000)
38 For additional payment to New York state defenders association for
39 services and expenses related to the provision of training and other
40 assistance (20999) ... 1,059,000 ..................... (re. $83,000)
41 For services and expenses of Legal Aid Society - Immigration Law Unit
42 (20944) ... 150,000 ................................. (re. $150,000)
43 For services and expenses of Legal Services NYC - DREAM Clinics
44 (20968) ... 150,000 .................................. (re. $28,000)
45 For services and expenses of Haitian-Americans United for Progress Inc
46 (60061) ... 150,000 ................................... (re. $6,000)
47 For services and expenses of Neighborhood Legal Services (20393) .....
48 400,000 ............................................. (re. $390,000)
49 For services and expenses of Southside United HDFC (60062) ...........
50 250,000 ............................................. (re. $109,000)
51 For services and expenses of Child Care Center of New York (39756) ...
52 250,000 ............................................. (re. $139,000)
136 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of Community Service Society - Record Repair
2 Counseling Corps (20203) ... 250,000 .................. (re. $1,000)
3 For services and expenses of the Fortune Society (20941) .............
4 200,000 .............................................. (re. $66,000)
5 For services and expenses of the Legal Action Center (20376) .........
6 180,000 ............................................... (re. $2,000)
7 For services and expenses of the Brooklyn Defender (20939) ...........
8 175,000 ............................................. (re. $132,000)
9 For services and expenses of New York County Defender Services (60063)
10 ... 175,000 .......................................... (re. $89,000)
11 For services and expenses of Goddard Riverside Community Center
12 (20373) ... 125,000 ................................. (re. $125,000)
13 For services and expenses of Bailey House - Project FIRST (20943) ...
14 100,000 ............................................... (re. $5,000)
15 For services and expenses of the John Jay College (20966) ............
16 100,000 ............................................... (re. $1,000)
17 For services and expenses of S.N.U.G. Wyandanch (39775) ..............
18 100,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
19 For services and expenses of the Greenburger Center for Social and
20 Criminal Justice (60064) ... 100,000 ................ (re. $100,000)
21 For services and expenses of the Center for Court Innovation Youth SOS
22 - Crown Heights (60007) ... 100,000 ................. (re. $100,000)
23 For services and expenses of the Mohawk Consortium (39726) ...........
24 75,000 ............................................... (re. $51,000)
25 For services and expenses of Exodus Transitional Community (39727) ...
26 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
27 For services and expenses of Elmcor Youth and Adult Activities Program
28 (20258) ... 44,000 ................................... (re. $26,000)
29 For services and expenses of the Osborne Association (20946) .........
30 31,000 ................................................ (re. $5,000)
31 For services and expenses of Bergen Basin Community Development Corpo-
32 ration (20996) ... 26,000 ............................ (re. $26,000)
33 For services and expenses of Jacob Riis Settlement House (20260) .....
34 20,000 ............................................... (re. $20,000)
35 For services and expenses of NYPD Law Enforcement Explorers-Bronx
36 (60008) ... 80,000 ................................... (re. $57,000)
37 For services and expenses of the Glendale Civilian Patrol (60009) ....
38 25,000 ............................................... (re. $25,000)
39 Empire Justice Center (21046) ... 52,251 ................ (re. $2,000)
40 Legal Aid Society of Mid-New York (21045) ... 45,729 ... (re. $45,729)
41 Legal Aid Society of New York - Domestic Violence Services (20334) ...
42 71,831 ................................................ (re. $1,000)
43 My Sisters' Place (20340) ... 45,722 .................... (re. $6,000)
44 Nassau Coalition Against Domestic Violence, Inc. (20341) .............
45 45,722 ................................................ (re. $6,000)
46 Neighborhood Legal Services Inc. of Erie County (20336) ..............
47 45,722 ................................................ (re. $1,000)
48 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019, as amended by chapter 53,
49 section 1, of the laws of 2020:
50 For services and expenses related to the Legal Education Opportunity
51 Program. All or a portion of these funds may be transferred to state
137 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 operations and suballocated to the Judiciary (39723) ...............
2 225,000 ............................................. (re. $225,000)
3 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018:
4 For prosecutorial services of counties, to be distributed in the same
5 manner as the prior year or through a competitive process. The funds
6 hereby appropriated are to be available for payment of liabilities
7 heretofore accrued or hereafter accrued (20241) ....................
8 9,957,000 ............................................ (re. $72,000)
9 For payment to the New York state district attorneys association and
10 the New York state prosecutors training institute for services and
11 expenses related to the prosecution of crimes and the provision of
12 continuing legal education, training, and support for medicaid fraud
13 prosecution. The funds hereby appropriated are to be available for
14 payment of liabilities heretofore accrued or hereafter accrued
15 (20242) ... 2,178,000 ................................. (re. $5,000)
16 For services and expenses associated with a witness protection program
17 pursuant to a plan developed by the commissioner of the division of
18 criminal justice services. The funds hereby appropriated are to be
19 available for payment of liabilities heretofore accrued or hereafter
20 accrued (20243) ... 287,000 ......................... (re. $287,000)
21 For payment of state aid for expenses of crime laboratories for
22 accreditation, training, capacity enhancement and lab related
23 services to maintain the quality and reliability of forensic
24 services to criminal justice agencies. Some of these funds herein
25 appropriated may be transferred to state operations and may be
26 suballocated to other state agencies (20205) .......................
27 6,273,000 ............................................ (re. $66,000)
28 For services and expenses of programs aimed at reducing the risk of
29 re-offending, to be distributed through a competitive process, which
30 will include an evaluation of the effectiveness of such programs
31 (20249) ... 3,842,000 ............................... (re. $600,000)
32 For services and expenses of project GIVE as allocated pursuant to a
33 plan prepared by the commissioner of criminal justice services and
34 approved by the director of the budget which will include an evalu-
35 ation of the effectiveness of such program. A portion of these funds
36 may be transferred to state operations or suballocated to other
37 state agencies (20942) ... 14,390,000 ............... (re. $541,000)
38 For additional defense services (39772) ... 441,000 .... (re. $12,000)
39 For payment of state aid to counties and the city of New York for
40 local alternatives to incarceration, including those that provide
41 alcohol and substance abuse treatment programs, and other related
42 interventions pursuant to article 13-A of the executive law.
43 Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, state assistance shall
44 be distributed pursuant to a plan submitted by the commissioner of
45 the division of criminal justice services and approved by the direc-
46 tor of the budget. A portion of these funds may be transferred to
47 state operations and may be suballocated to other state agencies
48 (21037) ... 5,217,000 ............................. (re. $2,925,000)
49 For payment to not-for-profit and government operated programs provid-
50 ing alternatives to incarceration, community supervision and/or
51 employment programs to be distributed pursuant to a plan prepared by
138 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 the commissioner of the division of criminal justice services and
2 approved by the director of the budget. Eligible services shall
3 include, but not be limited to offender employment, offender assess-
4 ments, treatment program placement and participation, monitoring
5 client compliance with program interventions, TASC program services,
6 and alternatives to prison. A portion of these funds may be suballo-
7 cated to other state agencies (20239) ..............................
8 13,819,000 ........................................ (re. $4,725,000)
9 For residential centers providing services to individuals on probation
10 and for community corrections programs to be distributed in the same
11 manner as the prior year or through a competitive process (21000)
12 ... 945,000 ......................................... (re. $945,000)
13 For services and expenses of the establishment, or continued operation
14 by existing grantees, of regional Operation S.N.U.G. programs,
15 pursuant to a plan prepared by the division of criminal justice
16 services and approved by the director of the budget. A portion of
17 these funds may be transferred to state operations (20250) .........
18 3,815,000 ........................................... (re. $325,000)
19 For services and expenses of the establishment, or continued opera-
20 tion, of a regional Operation S.N.U.G. program within Bronx county
21 (39760) ... 615,000 ................................. (re. $308,000)
22 For services and expenses of Cure Violence New York (SNUG) - City of
23 Poughkeepsie (39765) ... 300,000 ...................... (re. $5,000)
24 For services and expenses of Jacobi Medical Center Auxiliary, Inc. for
25 an anti-violence initiative in the Throggs Neck New York City Hous-
26 ing Authority, Bronx County (60000) ... 85,000 ....... (re. $85,000)
27 For services and expenses of rape crisis centers for services to rape
28 victims and programs to prevent rape. A portion or all of these
29 funds may be transferred or suballocated to other state agencies
30 (39718) ... 3,553,000 ............................... (re. $203,000)
31 For additional services and expenses of rape crisis centers for
32 services to rape victims and programs to prevent rape (39773) ......
33 147,000 .............................................. (re. $31,000)
34 For payment to district attorneys who participate in the crimes
35 against revenue program to be distributed according to a plan devel-
36 oped by the commissioner of the division of criminal justice
37 services, in consultation with the department of taxation and
38 finance, and approved by the director of the budget (20235) ........
39 13,521,000 .......................................... (re. $385,000)
40 For payment to not-for-profit and government operated programs provid-
41 ing services including but not limited to defendant screening,
42 assessment, referral, monitoring, and case management, to be
43 distributed pursuant to a plan submitted by the commissioner of the
44 division of criminal justice services and approved by the director
45 of the budget. A portion of these funds may be transferred to state
46 operations (39744) ... 946,000 ...................... (re. $946,000)
47 For services and expenses of law enforcement agencies, for gang
48 prevention youth programs in Nassau and/or Suffolk counties and law
49 enforcement agencies may consult with community-based organizations
50 and/or schools, pursuant to a plan by the commissioner of criminal
51 justice services (20238) ... 500,000 ................ (re. $302,000)
139 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For additional payment to New York state defenders association for
2 services and expenses related to the provision of training and other
3 assistance (20999) ... 1,059,000 ...................... (re. $7,000)
4 For additional payment to prisoners' legal services for services and
5 expenses related to legal representation and assistance to indigent
6 inmates (39709) ... 750,000 ........................... (re. $4,000)
7 For additional payments to experienced not-for-profit service provid-
8 ers to generate and implement a diversity of innovative models that
9 could be brought to scale if proven successful in providing alterna-
10 tives to detention, alternatives to incarceration, and other reentry
11 programs and services, such that no one in need of these programs
12 and services is excluded based solely on risk, location, or super-
13 vision status (60001) ... 500,000 ................... (re. $500,000)
14 For services and expenses of Legal Services NYC DREAM Clinics (20968)
15 ... 150,000 .......................................... (re. $27,000)
16 For services and expenses of Brooklyn Legal Services Corp A (20212)
17 ... 250,000 ........................................... (re. $2,000)
18 For services and expenses of Child Care Center of New York (39756) ...
19 250,000 .............................................. (re. $76,000)
20 For services and expenses of the Fortune Society (20941) .............
21 200,000 ............................................... (re. $8,000)
22 For services and expenses of the Brooklyn Defender (20939) ...........
23 175,000 ............................................... (re. $1,000)
24 For services and expenses of Goddard Riverside Community Center
25 (20373) ... 250,000 ................................. (re. $250,000)
26 For services and expenses of Bailey House - Project FIRST (20943) ....
27 100,000 ............................................... (re. $8,000)
28 For services and expenses of the John Jay College (20966) ............
29 100,000 ............................................... (re. $1,000)
30 For services and expenses of Exodus Transitional Community (39727) ...
31 50,000 ................................................ (re. $1,000)
32 For services and expenses of Bergen Basin Community Development Corpo-
33 ration (20996) ... 26,000 ............................ (re. $26,000)
34 For services and expenses of Jacob Riis Settlement House (20260) .....
35 20,000 ............................................... (re. $10,000)
36 For services and expenses of Cure Violence New York (SNUG) Wyndanch
37 (39775) ... 100,000 .................................. (re. $59,000)
38 For services and expenses of Staten Island Legal Services (60004) ....
39 200,000 ............................................. (re. $200,000)
40 For services and expenses of the Center for Court Innovation Youth SOS
41 - Crown Heights (60007) ... 100,000 ................... (re. $1,000)
42 For services and expenses of NYPD Law Enforcement Explorers-Bronx
43 (60008) ... 80,000 ................................... (re. $31,000)
44 For services and expenses of the Glendale Civilian Patrol (60009) ....
45 25,000 ................................................ (re. $1,000)
46 For services and expenses of programs that prevent domestic violence
47 or aid victims of domestic violence:
48 Domestic Violence Law Project of Rockland County (21047) .............
49 45,722 ............................................... (re. $45,722)
50 Legal Services for New York City - Brooklyn (20333) ..................
51 45,722 ............................................... (re. $45,722)
52 My Sisters' Place (20340) ... 45,722 ................... (re. $45,722)
140 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 Nassau Coalition Against Domestic Violence, Inc. (20341) .............
2 45,722 ................................................ (re. $1,000)
3 For services and expenses of law enforcement, anti-drug, anti-vio-
4 lence, crime control and prevention programs. Notwithstanding
5 section 24 of the state finance law or any provision of law to the
6 contrary, funds from this appropriation shall be allocated only
7 pursuant to a plan (i) approved by the temporary president of the
8 Senate and the director of the budget which sets forth either an
9 itemized list of grantees with the amount to be received by each, or
10 the methodology for allocating such appropriation, and (ii) which is
11 thereafter included in a senate resolution calling for the expendi-
12 ture of such funds, which resolution must be approved by a majority
13 vote of all members elected to the senate upon a roll call vote
14 (20967) ... 2,971,000 ............................... (re. $309,000)
15 For services and expenses of programs that prevent domestic violence
16 or aid the victims of domestic violence. Notwithstanding section 24
17 of the state finance law or any provision of law to the contrary,
18 funds from this appropriation shall be allocated only pursuant to a
19 plan (i) approved by the temporary president of the Senate and the
20 director of the budget which sets forth either an itemized list of
21 grantees with the amount to be received by each, or the methodology
22 for allocating such appropriation, and (ii) which is thereafter
23 included in a senate resolution calling for the expenditure of such
24 funds, which resolution must be approved by a majority vote of all
25 members elected to the senate upon a roll call vote (21002) ........
26 1,609,000 ........................................... (re. $111,000)
27 For services and expenses of law enforcement and emergency services
28 agencies for equipment and technology enhancements. Notwithstanding
29 section 24 of the state finance law or any provision of law to the
30 contrary, funds from this appropriation shall be allocated only
31 pursuant to a plan (i) approved by the temporary president of the
32 Senate and the director of the budget which sets forth either an
33 itemized list of grantees with the amount to be received by each, or
34 the methodology for allocating such appropriation, and (ii) which is
35 thereafter included in a senate resolution calling for the expendi-
36 ture of such funds, which resolution must be approved by a majority
37 vote of all members elected to the senate upon a roll call vote
38 (39717) ... 860,750 .................................. (re. $52,000)
39 Finger Lakes Law Enforcement and Emergency Services (20284) ..........
40 500,000 ............................................... (re. $6,000)
41 Southern Tier Law Enforcement and Emergency Services (60050) .........
42 500,000 .............................................. (re. $11,000)
43 For services and expenses of the New York State Civil Air Patrol
44 (39777) ... 300,000 .................................. (re. $32,000)
45 For payments to the Firemen's Association of the state of New York to
46 provide grant awards to volunteer fire departments within the state
47 to assist with recruitment and retention of membership within such
48 districts (39758) ... 250,000 ......................... (re. $2,000)
49 For services and expenses of Nassau Suffolk Law Services Committee
50 Incorporated-Veterans Rights Project (60012) .......................
51 200,000 ............................................... (re. $1,000)
141 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of Hatzolah Incorporated DBA Chevra Hatzo-
2 lah-Chevra Hatzolah Boro Park Division (60013) .....................
3 125,000 ............................................. (re. $125,000)
4 For payment to the counties of Rensselaer, Saratoga, Columbia and
5 Washington to provide Ambulance/Emergency Medical Services (EMS)
6 qualifying public safety/first responder entities with Active Shoot-
7 er Response Kits (60016) ... 100,000 .................. (re. $5,000)
8 For services and expenses of Flatbush Shomrim Safety Patrol (60018)
9 ... 75,000 ............................................ (re. $1,000)
10 For services and expenses of City of New York Police Department
11 (60020) ... 10,000 ................................... (re. $10,000)
12 District Attorney Office - Queens County (39701) .....................
13 100,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
14 District Attorney Office - Rockland County (39702) ...................
15 100,000 ............................................... (re. $2,000)
16 District Attorney Office - Bronx County (20954) ......................
17 100,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
18 Legal Aid Society (60021) ... 50,000 .................... (re. $3,000)
19 Youth Represent, Incorporated (39781) ... 50,000 ....... (re. $50,000)
20 Immigrant Justice Corps, Incorporated (60022) ........................
21 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
22 South Brooklyn Legal Services Incorporated (60024) ...................
23 100,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
24 Kings Against Violence Initiative, Incorporated (60025) ..............
25 100,000 .............................................. (re. $10,000)
26 For services and expenses of Bronx Veteran Mentors, Incorporated
27 (39747) ... 15,000 .................................... (re. $9,000)
28 Neighborhood Initiatives Development Corporation (39719) .............
29 147,000 ............................................. (re. $147,000)
30 Central Family Life Center (60026) ... 356,000 ......... (re. $45,000)
31 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018, as amended by chapter 53,
32 section 1, of the laws of 2020:
33 For services and expenses related to the Legal Education Opportunity
34 Program. All or a portion of these funds may be transferred to state
35 operations and suballocated to the Judiciary (39723) ...............
36 250,000 ............................................. (re. $250,000)
37 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018, as amended by chapter 53,
38 section 1, of the laws of 2019:
39 For services and expenses including but not limited to, legal services
40 and individual supportive services. The funds appropriated herein
41 may be transferred and suballocated to Department of State (60027)
42 ... 5,000,000 ........................................ (re. $40,000)
43 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2017:
44 For prosecutorial services of counties, to be distributed in the same
45 manner as the prior year or through a competitive process (20241)
46 ... 9,957,000 ....................................... (re. $100,000)
47 For payment to the New York state district attorneys association and
48 the New York state prosecutors training institute for services and
49 expenses related to the prosecution of crimes and the provision of
142 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 continuing legal education, training, and support for medicaid fraud
2 prosecution (20242) ... 2,178,000 ................... (re. $639,000)
3 For services and expenses associated with a witness protection program
4 pursuant to a plan developed by the commissioner of the division of
5 criminal justice services (20243) ... 287,000 ....... (re. $221,000)
6 For payment of state aid for expenses of crime laboratories for
7 accreditation, training, capacity enhancement and lab related
8 services to maintain the quality and reliability of forensic
9 services to criminal justice agencies. Some of these funds herein
10 appropriated may be transferred to state operations and may be
11 suballocated to other state agencies (20205) .......................
12 6,273,000 ............................................ (re. $83,000)
13 For services and expenses of programs aimed at reducing the risk of
14 re-offending, to be distributed through a competitive process, which
15 will include an evaluation of the effectiveness of such programs
16 (20249) ... 3,842,000 ............................... (re. $174,000)
17 For services and expenses of project GIVE as allocated pursuant to a
18 plan prepared by the commissioner of criminal justice services and
19 approved by the director of the budget which will include an evalu-
20 ation of the effectiveness of such program. A portion of these funds
21 may be transferred to state operations or suballocated to other
22 state agencies (20942) ... 14,390,000 ............... (re. $144,000)
23 For defense services to be distributed in the same manner as the prior
24 year or through a competitive process (20246) ......................
25 5,066,000 ........................................... (re. $122,000)
26 For additional defense services (39772) ... 441,000 .... (re. $15,000)
27 For payment of state aid to counties and the city of New York for
28 local alternatives to incarceration, including those that provide
29 alcohol and substance abuse treatment programs, and other related
30 interventions pursuant to article 13-A of the executive law.
31 Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, state assistance shall
32 be distributed pursuant to a plan submitted by the commissioner of
33 the division of criminal justice services and approved by the direc-
34 tor of the budget. A portion of these funds may be transferred to
35 state operations and may be suballocated to other state agencies
36 (21037) ... 5,217,000 ............................... (re. $298,000)
37 For payment to not-for-profit and government operated programs provid-
38 ing alternatives to incarceration, community supervision and/or
39 employment programs to be distributed pursuant to a plan prepared by
40 the commissioner of the division of criminal justice services and
41 approved by the director of the budget. Eligible services shall
42 include, but not be limited to offender employment, offender assess-
43 ments, treatment program placement and participation, monitoring
44 client compliance with program interventions, TASC program services,
45 and alternatives to prison. A portion of these funds may be suballo-
46 cated to other state agencies (20239) ..............................
47 13,819,000 ........................................ (re. $3,918,000)
48 For residential centers providing services to individuals on probation
49 and for community corrections programs to be distributed in the same
50 manner as the prior year or through a competitive process (21000)
51 ... 945,000 ......................................... (re. $300,000)
143 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of the establishment, or continued operation
2 by existing grantees, of regional Operation S.N.U.G. programs,
3 pursuant to a plan prepared by the division of criminal justice
4 services and approved by the director of the budget. A portion of
5 these funds may be transferred to state operations (20250) .........
6 3,815,000 ............................................ (re. $98,000)
7 For services and expenses of rape crisis centers for services to rape
8 victims and programs to prevent rape. A portion or all of these
9 funds may be transferred or suballocated to other state agencies
10 (39718) ... 2,553,000 ............................... (re. $390,000)
11 For additional services and expenses of rape crisis centers for
12 services to rape victims and programs to prevent rape (39773) ......
13 147,000 .............................................. (re. $29,000)
14 For payment to district attorneys who participate in the crimes
15 against revenue program to be distributed according to a plan devel-
16 oped by the commissioner of the division of criminal justice
17 services, in consultation with the department of taxation and
18 finance, and approved by the director of the budget (20235) ........
19 13,521,000 .......................................... (re. $101,000)
20 For payment to not-for-profit and government operated programs provid-
21 ing services including but not limited to defendant screening,
22 assessment, referral, monitoring, and case management, to be
23 distributed pursuant to a plan submitted by the commissioner of the
24 division of criminal justice services and approved by the director
25 of the budget. A portion of these funds may be transferred to state
26 operations (39744) ... 946,000 ...................... (re. $392,000)
27 For additional payments to not-for-profits and government operated
28 programs providing alternatives to incarceration to be distributed
29 pursuant to existing contracts (21028) ... 500,000 ... (re. $69,000)
30 For services and expenses of S.T.R.O.N.G. Youth, Inc. (39774) ........
31 300,000 .............................................. (re. $20,000)
32 For services and expenses of Child Care Center of New York (39756) ...
33 250,000 .............................................. (re. $11,000)
34 For services and expenses of the Fortune Society (20941) .............
35 200,000 .............................................. (re. $58,000)
36 For services and expenses of Friends of the Island Academy (20210) ...
37 150,000 ............................................... (re. $2,000)
38 For services and expenses of Bailey House - Project FIRST (20943) ....
39 100,000 ............................................... (re. $2,000)
40 For services and expenses of Exodus Transitional Community (39727) ...
41 50,000 ................................................ (re. $1,000)
42 For services and expenses of Bergen Basin Community Development Corpo-
43 ration (20996) ... 26,000 ............................ (re. $26,000)
44 For services and expenses of Jacob Riis Settlement House (20260) .....
45 20,000 ................................................ (re. $7,000)
46 For services and expenses of Cure Violence New York (SNUG) Wyndanch
47 (39775) ... 50,000 .................................... (re. $5,000)
48 For services and expenses of programs that prevent domestic violence
49 or aid victims of domestic violence:
50 Empire Justice Center (21046) ... 52,251 ................ (re. $1,000)
51 Legal Services for New York City - Queens (20337) ....................
52 45,722 ................................................ (re. $1,000)
144 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 Neighborhood Legal Services Inc. of Erie County (20336) ..............
2 45,722 ................................................ (re. $2,000)
3 For services and expenses of law enforcement, anti-drug, anti-vio-
4 lence, crime control and prevention programs. Notwithstanding
5 section twenty-four of the state finance law or any provision of law
6 to the contrary, funds from this appropriation shall be allocated
7 only pursuant to a plan (i) approved by the temporary president of
8 the Senate and the director of the budget which sets forth either an
9 itemized list of grantees with the amount to be received by each, or
10 the methodology for allocating such appropriation, and (ii) which is
11 thereafter included in a senate resolution calling for the expendi-
12 ture of such funds, which resolution must be approved by a majority
13 vote of all members elected to the senate upon a roll call vote
14 (20967) ... 2,891,000 ............................... (re. $153,000)
15 For services and expenses of programs that prevent domestic violence
16 or aid the victims of domestic violence. For services and expenses
17 of law enforcement, anti-drug, anti-violence, crime control and
18 prevention programs. Notwithstanding section twenty-four of the
19 state finance law or any provision of law to the contrary, funds
20 from this appropriation shall be allocated only pursuant to a plan
21 (i) approved by the temporary president of the Senate and the direc-
22 tor of the budget which sets forth either an itemized list of gran-
23 tees with the amount to be received by each, or the methodology for
24 allocating such appropriation, and (ii) which is thereafter included
25 in a senate resolution calling for the expenditure of such funds,
26 which resolution must be approved by a majority vote of all members
27 elected to the senate upon a roll call vote (21002) ................
28 1,609,000 ............................................ (re. $86,000)
29 For services and expenses of law enforcement and emergency services
30 agencies for equipment and technology enhancements. Notwithstanding
31 section twenty-four of the state finance law or any provision of law
32 to the contrary, funds from this appropriation shall be allocated
33 only pursuant to a plan (i) approved by the temporary president of
34 the Senate and the director of the budget which sets forth either an
35 itemized list of grantees with the amount to be received by each, or
36 the methodology for allocating such appropriation, and (ii) which is
37 thereafter included in a senate resolution calling for the expendi-
38 ture of such funds, which resolution must be approved by a majority
39 vote of all members elected to the senate upon a roll call vote
40 (39717) ... 730,000 .................................. (re. $39,000)
41 Finger Lakes Law Enforcement and Emergency Services (20284) ..........
42 500,000 ............................................... (re. $8,000)
43 Southern Tier Law Enforcement and Emergency Services (60050) .........
44 500,000 .............................................. (re. $16,000)
45 For payment to the Firemen's Association of the State of New York to
46 provide grant awards to volunteer fire departments within the state
47 to assist with recruitment and retention of membership within such
48 districts (39758) ... 250,000 ......................... (re. $4,000)
49 For services and expenses of the New York State Civil Air Patrol
50 (39777) ... 300,000 .................................. (re. $14,000)
51 Jewish Community Council of Greater Coney Island, Inc. - SNUG for
52 Brooklyn (39779) ... 200,000 .......................... (re. $4,000)
145 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 District Attorney Office - Bronx County (20954) ......................
2 100,000 ............................................... (re. $2,000)
3 Fortune Society, Incorporated (39757) ... 100,000 ...... (re. $16,000)
4 Bronx Veteran Mentors, Incorporated (39747) ..........................
5 15,000 ................................................ (re. $7,000)
6 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2017, as amended by chapter 53,
7 section 1, of the laws of 2019:
8 For services and expenses of Cure Violence New York (SNUG) - Wyandanch
9 (60066) ... 50,000 ................................... (re. $50,000)
10 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2017, as amended by chapter 53,
11 section 1, of the laws of 2018:
12 For services and expenses of Jacobi Medical Center Auxiliary Inc. for
13 an anti-violence initiative in the Throggs Neck New York City Hous-
14 ing Authority, Bronx County (60000) ... 85,000 ....... (re. $85,000)
15 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2016:
16 For prosecutorial services of counties, to be distributed in the same
17 manner as the prior year or through a competitive process (20241)
18 ... 10,680,000 ....................................... (re. $50,000)
19 For payment to the New York state district attorneys association and
20 the New York state prosecutors training institute for services and
21 expenses related to the prosecution of crimes and the provision of
22 continuing legal education, training, and support for medicaid fraud
23 prosecution (20242) ... 2,304,000 .................... (re. $99,000)
24 For payment of state aid for expenses of crime laboratories for
25 accreditation, training, capacity enhancement and lab related
26 services to maintain the quality and reliability of forensic
27 services to criminal justice agencies, distributed through a compet-
28 itive process, which includes an evaluation of the effectiveness of
29 such process. Some of these funds herein appropriated may be trans-
30 ferred to state operations and may be suballocated to other state
31 agencies (20205) ... 6,635,000 ....................... (re. $19,000)
32 For services and expenses of project GIVE as allocated pursuant to a
33 plan prepared by the commissioner of criminal justice services and
34 approved by the director of the budget which will include an evalu-
35 ation of the effectiveness of such program. A portion of these funds
36 may be transferred to state operations (20942) .....................
37 15,219,000 ........................................... (re. $61,000)
38 For defense services to be distributed in the same manner as the prior
39 year or through a competitive process (20246) ......................
40 5,507,000 ............................................ (re. $11,000)
41 For payment of state aid to counties and the city of New York for
42 local alternatives to incarceration, including those that provide
43 alcohol and substance abuse treatment programs, and other related
44 interventions pursuant to article 13-A of the executive law.
45 Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, the total amount for
46 state assistance shall be to the greatest extent possible, distrib-
47 uted in a manner consistent with the prior year distribution
48 amounts, pursuant to a plan submitted by the commissioner of the
49 division of criminal justice services and approved by the director
146 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 of the budget. A portion of these funds may be transferred to state
2 operations and may be suballocated to other state agencies (21037)
3 ... 5,518,000 ....................................... (re. $298,000)
4 For payment to not-for-profit and government operated programs provid-
5 ing alternatives to incarceration, community supervision and/or
6 employment programs to be distributed pursuant to a plan prepared by
7 the commissioner of the division of criminal justice services and
8 approved by the director of the budget. Eligible services shall
9 include, but not be limited to offender employment, offender assess-
10 ments, treatment program placement and participation, monitoring
11 client compliance with program interventions, TASC program services,
12 and alternatives to prison. A portion of these funds may be suballo-
13 cated to other state agencies (20239) ..............................
14 14,616,000 ........................................ (re. $3,397,000)
15 For residential centers providing services to individuals on probation
16 and for community corrections programs to be distributed in the same
17 manner as the prior year or through a competitive process (21000)
18 ... 1,000,000 ....................................... (re. $148,000)
19 For services and expenses of the establishment, or continued opera-
20 tion, of a regional Operation S.N.U.G. program within Bronx County
21 (39760) ... 600,000 .................................. (re. $60,000)
22 For services and expenses of rape crisis centers for services to rape
23 victims and programs to prevent rape. Notwithstanding any provision
24 to the contrary contained in section 163 of state finance law or in
25 any other law, funding shall be made available to such rape crisis
26 centers pursuant to a plan developed by the division of criminal
27 justice services, the office of victim services and the department
28 of health and approved by the director of the budget. A portion or
29 all of these funds may be transferred or suballocated to other state
30 agencies (39718) ... 2,700,000 ...................... (re. $474,000)
31 For payment to district attorneys who participate in the crimes
32 against revenue program to be distributed according to a plan devel-
33 oped by the commissioner of the division of criminal justice
34 services, in consultation with the department of taxation and
35 finance, and approved by the director of the budget (20235) ........
36 14,300,000 .......................................... (re. $699,000)
37 For payment to not-for-profit and government operated programs provid-
38 ing services including but not limited to defendant screening,
39 assessment, referral, monitoring, and case management, to be
40 distributed pursuant to a plan submitted by the commissioner of the
41 division of criminal justice services and approved by the director
42 of the budget. A portion of these funds may be transferred to state
43 operations (39744) ... 1,000,000 .................... (re. $652,000)
44 For services and expenses of law enforcement, anti-drug, anti-vio-
45 lence, crime control and prevention programs. Notwithstanding
46 section twenty-four of the state finance law or any provision of law
47 to the contrary, funds from this appropriation shall be allocated
48 only pursuant to a plan (i) approved by the temporary president of
49 the Senate and the director of the budget which sets forth either an
50 itemized list of grantees with the amount to be received by each, or
51 the methodology for allocating such appropriation, and (ii) which is
52 thereafter included in a senate resolution calling for the expendi-
147 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 ture of such funds, which resolution must be approved by a majority
2 vote of all members elected to the senate upon a roll call vote
3 (20967) ... 2,891,000 ............................... (re. $187,000)
4 For services and expenses of programs that prevent domestic violence
5 or aid the victims of domestic violence. For services and expenses
6 of law enforcement, anti-drug, anti-violence, crime control and
7 prevention programs. Notwithstanding section twenty-four of the
8 state finance law or any provision of law to the contrary, funds
9 from this appropriation shall be allocated only pursuant to a plan
10 (i) approved by the temporary president of the Senate and the direc-
11 tor of the budget which sets forth either an itemized list of gran-
12 tees with the amount to be received by each, or the methodology for
13 allocating such appropriation, and (ii) which is thereafter included
14 in a senate resolution calling for the expenditure of such funds,
15 which resolution must be approved by a majority vote of all members
16 elected to the senate upon a roll call vote (21002) ................
17 1,609,000 ............................................ (re. $95,000)
18 Finger Lakes Law Enforcement (20284) .................................
19 500,000 ............................................... (re. $5,000)
20 District Attorney Office - Bronx County (20954) ......................
21 100,000 ............................................... (re. $3,000)
22 For services and expenses of Fortune Society, Incorporated (39757) ...
23 100,000 ............................................... (re. $7,000)
24 For services and expenses of Bronx Veteran Mentors, Incorporated
25 (39747) ... 15,000 .................................... (re. $7,000)
26 For additional payments to not-for-profits and government operated
27 programs providing alternatives to incarceration to be distributed
28 pursuant to existing contracts (21028) ... 703,000 ... (re. $96,000)
29 For services and expenses of Child Care Center of New York (39756) ...
30 250,000 ............................................... (re. $3,000)
31 For services and expenses related to NYPD Training: Museum of Toler-
32 ance New York-Tools for Tolerance Program (39724) ..................
33 200,000 ............................................. (re. $200,000)
34 For services and expenses of New York County Defender Services (39755)
35 ... 175,000 .......................................... (re. $17,000)
36 For services and expenses of the Goddard Riverside Community Center
37 (20373) ... 125,000 .................................. (re. $21,000)
38 For services and expenses of Bailey House-Project FIRST (20943) ......
39 100,000 ............................................... (re. $4,000)
40 For services and expenses of the Fortune Society (20941) .............
41 150,000 .............................................. (re. $15,000)
42 For services and expenses of the John Jay College (20966) ............
43 100,000 ............................................... (re. $2,000)
44 For services and expenses of Exodus Transitional Community (39727) ...
45 50,000 ................................................ (re. $5,000)
46 For services and expenses of Cure Violence New York (SNUG) - Brooklyn
47 (39761) ... 600,000 ................................. (re. $103,000)
48 For services and expenses of Cure Violence New York (SNUG) - Manhattan
49 (39763) ... 300,000 .................................. (re. $70,000)
50 For payment to the Fireman's Association of the State of New York to
51 provide grant awards to volunteer fire departments within the state
148 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 to assist with recruitment and retention of membership within such
2 districts (39758) ... 250,000 ......................... (re. $2,000)
3 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2016, as amended by chapter 53,
4 section 1, of the laws of 2017:
5 For services and expenses of law enforcement and emergency services
6 agencies for equipment and technology enhancements. Notwithstanding
7 section twenty-four of the state finance law or any provision of law
8 to the contrary, funds from this appropriation shall be allocated
9 only pursuant to a plan (i) approved by the temporary president of
10 the Senate and the director of the budget which sets forth either an
11 itemized list of grantees with the amount to be received by each, or
12 the methodology for allocating such appropriation, and (ii) which is
13 thereafter included in a senate resolution calling for the expendi-
14 ture of such funds, which resolution must be approved by a majority
15 vote of all members elected to the senate upon a roll call vote
16 (39717) ... 604,000 ................................. (re. $107,000)
17 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
18 Federal Miscellaneous Operating Grants Fund
19 Crime Identification and Technology Account - 25475
20 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
21 For services and expenses related to identification technology grants
22 including, but not limited to, crime lab improvement and DNA
23 programs. A portion of these funds may be transferred to state oper-
24 ations and may be suballocated to other state agencies (20204) .....
25 2,250,000 ......................................... (re. $2,250,000)
26 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
27 For services and expenses related to identification technology grants
28 including, but not limited to, crime lab improvement and DNA
29 programs. A portion of these funds may be transferred to state oper-
30 ations and may be suballocated to other state agencies (20204) .....
31 2,250,000 ......................................... (re. $2,101,000)
32 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
33 For services and expenses related to identification technology grants
34 including, but not limited to, crime lab improvement and DNA
35 programs. A portion of these funds may be transferred to state oper-
36 ations and may be suballocated to other state agencies (20204) .....
37 2,250,000 ......................................... (re. $1,873,000)
38 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018:
39 For services and expenses related to identification technology grants
40 including, but not limited to, crime lab improvement and DNA
41 programs. A portion of these funds may be transferred to state oper-
42 ations and may be suballocated to other state agencies (20204) .....
43 2,250,000 ........................................... (re. $978,000)
44 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2017:
149 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses related to identification technology grants
2 including, but not limited to, crime lab improvement and DNA
3 programs. A portion of these funds may be transferred to state oper-
4 ations and may be suballocated to other state agencies (20204) .....
5 2,250,000 ......................................... (re. $1,860,000)
6 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2016:
7 For services and expenses related to identification technology grants
8 including, but not limited to, crime lab improvement and DNA
9 programs. A portion of these funds may be transferred to state oper-
10 ations and may be be suballocated to other state agencies (20204)
11 ... 2,250,000 ..................................... (re. $1,871,000)
12 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2015:
13 For services and expenses related to identification technology grants
14 including, but not limited to, crime lab improvement and DNA
15 programs. A portion of these funds may be transferred to state oper-
16 ations and may be suballocated to other state agencies (20204) .....
17 2,250,000 ......................................... (re. $1,910,000)
18 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
19 Federal Miscellaneous Operating Grants Fund
20 DCJS Miscellaneous Discretionary Account - 25470
21 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
22 Funds herein appropriated may be used to disburse unanticipated feder-
23 al grants in support of state and local programs to prevent crime,
24 support law enforcement, improve the administration of justice, and
25 assist victims. A portion of these funds may be transferred to state
26 operations and may be suballocated to other state agencies (20202)
27 ... 13,000,000 ................................... (re. $13,000,000)
28 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
29 Funds herein appropriated may be used to disburse unanticipated feder-
30 al grants in support of state and local programs to prevent crime,
31 support law enforcement, improve the administration of justice, and
32 assist victims. A portion of these funds may be transferred to state
33 operations and may be suballocated to other state agencies (20202)
34 ... 13,000,000 ................................... (re. $13,000,000)
35 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
36 Funds herein appropriated may be used to disburse unanticipated feder-
37 al grants in support of state and local programs to prevent crime,
38 support law enforcement, improve the administration of justice, and
39 assist victims. A portion of these funds may be transferred to state
40 operations and may be suballocated to other state agencies (20202)
41 ... 13,000,000 ................................... (re. $12,307,000)
42 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018:
43 Funds herein appropriated may be used to disburse unanticipated feder-
44 al grants in support of state and local programs to prevent crime,
45 support law enforcement, improve the administration of justice, and
150 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 assist victims. A portion of these funds may be transferred to state
2 operations and may be suballocated to other state agencies (20202)
3 ... 13,000,000 ................................... (re. $12,274,000)
4 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2017:
5 Funds herein appropriated may be used to disburse unanticipated feder-
6 al grants in support of state and local programs to prevent crime,
7 support law enforcement, improve the administration of justice, and
8 assist victims. A portion of these funds may be transferred to state
9 operations and may be suballocated to other state agencies (20202)
10 ... 13,000,000 .................................... (re. $9,252,000)
11 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2016:
12 Funds herein appropriated may be used to disburse unanticipated feder-
13 al grants in support of state and local programs to prevent crime,
14 support law enforcement, improve the administration of justice, and
15 assist victims. A portion of these funds may be transferred to state
16 operations and may be suballocated to other state agencies (20202)
17 ... 13,000,000 ...................................... (re. $626,000)
18 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2015:
19 Funds herein appropriated may be used to disburse unanticipated feder-
20 al grants in support of state and local programs to prevent crime,
21 support law enforcement, improve the administration of justice, and
22 assist victims. A portion of these funds may be transferred to state
23 operations and may be suballocated to other state agencies (20202)
24 ... 13,000,000 ...................................... (re. $596,000)
25 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
26 Federal Miscellaneous Operating Grants Fund
27 Edward Byrne Memorial Grant Account - 25540
28 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
29 For services and expenses related to the federal Edward Byrne memorial
30 justice assistance formula program, including enhanced prosecution,
31 enhanced defense, local law enforcement programs, youth violence
32 and/or crime reduction programs, crime laboratories, re-entry
33 services, and judicial diversion and alternative to incarceration
34 programs. A portion of these funds may be transferred to state oper-
35 ations and/or suballocated to other state agencies (20209) .........
36 5,400,000 ......................................... (re. $5,400,000)
37 For services and expenses of drug, violence, and crime control and
38 prevention programs. Notwithstanding section twenty-four of the
39 state finance law or any provision of law to the contrary, funds
40 from this appropriation shall be allocated only pursuant to a plan
41 (i) approved by the speaker of the assembly and the director of the
42 budget which sets forth either an itemized list of grantees with the
43 amount to be received by each, or the methodology for allocating
44 such appropriation (60032) ... 300,000 .............. (re. $300,000)
45 For services and expenses of drug, violence, and crime control and
46 prevention programs, law enforcement and alternatives to incarcera-
47 tion programs. Notwithstanding section 24 of the state finance law
151 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 or any provision of law to the contrary, funds from this appropri-
2 ation shall be allocated only pursuant to a plan (i) approved by the
3 temporary president of the Senate and the director of the budget
4 which sets forth either an itemized list of grantees with the amount
5 to be received by each or the methodology for allocating such appro-
6 priation (20997) ... 300,000 ... .................... (re. $300,000)
7 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
8 For services and expenses related to the federal Edward Byrne memorial
9 justice assistance formula program, including enhanced prosecution,
10 enhanced defense, local law enforcement programs, youth violence
11 and/or crime reduction programs, crime laboratories, re-entry
12 services, and judicial diversion and alternative to incarceration
13 programs. A portion of these funds may be transferred to state oper-
14 ations and/or suballocated to other state agencies (20209) .........
15 5,400,000 ......................................... (re. $5,400,000)
16 For services and expenses of drug, violence, and crime control and
17 prevention programs. Notwithstanding section twenty-four of the
18 state finance law or any provision of law to the contrary, funds
19 from this appropriation shall be allocated only pursuant to a plan
20 approved by the speaker of the assembly and the director of the
21 budget which sets forth either an itemized list of grantees with the
22 amount to be received by each, or the methodology for allocating
23 such appropriation (60032) ... 300,000 .............. (re. $300,000)
24 For services and expenses of drug, violence, and crime control and
25 prevention programs, law enforcement and alternatives to incarcera-
26 tion programs. Notwithstanding section 24 of the state finance law
27 or any provision of law to the contrary, funds from this appropri-
28 ation shall be allocated only pursuant to a plan approved by the
29 temporary president of the Senate and the director of the budget
30 which sets forth either an itemized list of grantees with the amount
31 to be received by each or the methodology for allocating such appro-
32 priation (20997) ... 300,000 ........................ (re. $300,000)
33 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
34 For services and expenses related to the federal Edward Byrne memorial
35 justice assistance formula program, including enhanced prosecution,
36 enhanced defense, local law enforcement programs, youth violence
37 and/or crime reduction programs, crime laboratories, re-entry
38 services, and judicial diversion and alternative to incarceration
39 programs. Funds appropriated herein shall be expended pursuant to a
40 plan developed by the commissioner of criminal justice services and
41 approved by the director of the budget. A portion of these funds may
42 be transferred to state operations and/or suballocated to other
43 state agencies (20209) ... 5,400,000 .............. (re. $5,400,000)
44 For services and expenses of drug, violence, and crime control and
45 prevention programs.
46 Notwithstanding section twenty-four of the state finance law or any
47 provision of law to the contrary, funds from this appropriation
48 shall be allocated only pursuant to a plan (i) approved by the
49 speaker of the assembly and the director of the budget which sets
50 forth either an itemized list of grantees with the amount to be
152 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 received by each, or the methodology for allocating such appropri-
2 ation, and (ii) which is thereafter included in a assembly resol-
3 ution calling for the expenditure of such funds, which resolution
4 must be approved by a majority vote of all members elected to the
5 assembly upon a roll call vote (60032) .............................
6 300,000 ............................................. (re. $300,000)
7 For services and expenses of drug, violence, and crime control and
8 prevention programs.
9 Notwithstanding section twenty-four of the state finance law or any
10 provision of law to the contrary, funds from this appropriation
11 shall be allocated only pursuant to a plan (i) approved by the
12 temporary president of the senate and the director of the budget
13 which sets forth either an itemized list of grantees with the amount
14 to be received by each, or the methodology for allocating such
15 appropriation, and (ii) which is thereafter included in a senate
16 resolution calling for the expenditure of such funds, which resol-
17 ution must be approved by a majority vote of all members elected to
18 the senate upon a roll call vote (20997) ...........................
19 300,000 ............................................. (re. $300,000)
20 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018:
21 For services and expenses related to the federal Edward Byrne memorial
22 justice assistance formula program, including enhanced prosecution,
23 enhanced defense, local law enforcement programs, youth violence
24 and/or crime reduction programs, crime laboratories, re-entry
25 services, and judicial diversion and alternative to incarceration
26 programs. Funds appropriated herein shall be expended pursuant to a
27 plan developed by the commissioner of criminal justice services and
28 approved by the director of the budget. A portion of these funds may
29 be transferred to state operations and/or suballocated to other
30 state agencies (20209) ... 5,400,000 .............. (re. $5,400,000)
31 For services and expenses of drug, violence, and crime control and
32 prevention programs.
33 Notwithstanding section 24 of the state finance law or any provision
34 of law to the contrary, funds from this appropriation shall be allo-
35 cated only pursuant to a plan (i) approved by the speaker of the
36 assembly and the director of the budget which sets forth either an
37 itemized list of grantees with the amount to be received by each, or
38 the methodology for allocating such appropriation, and (ii) which is
39 therafter included in an assembly resolution calling for the expend-
40 iture of such funds, which resolution must be approved by a majority
41 vote of all members elected to the assembly upon a roll call vote
42 (60032) ... 300,000 ................................. (re. $300,000)
43 For services and expenses of drug, violence, and crime control and
44 prevention programs. Notwithstanding section 24 of the state finance
45 law or any provision of law to the contrary, funds from this appro-
46 priation shall be allocated only pursuant to a plan (i) approved by
47 the temporary president of the Senate and the director of the budget
48 which sets forth either an itemized list of grantees with the amount
49 to be received by each, or the methodology for allocating such
50 appropriation, and (ii) which is thereafter included in a senate
51 resolution calling for the expenditure of such funds, which resol-
153 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 ution must be approved by a majority vote of all members elected to
2 the senate upon a roll call vote (20997) ...........................
3 300,000 ............................................. (re. $300,000)
4 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
5 Federal Miscellaneous Operating Grants Fund
6 Edward Byrne Memorial Grant Account - 25300(M)
7 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2017:
8 For services and expenses related to the federal Edward Byrne memorial
9 justice assistance formula program, including enhanced prosecution,
10 enhanced defense, local law enforcement programs, youth violence
11 and/or crime reduction programs, crime laboratories, re-entry
12 services, and judicial diversion and alternative to incarceration
13 programs. Funds appropriated herein shall be expended pursuant to a
14 plan developed by the commissioner of criminal justice services and
15 approved by the director of the budget. A portion of these funds may
16 be transferred to state operations and/or suballocated to other
17 state agencies (20209) ... 5,400,000 .............. (re. $2,439,000)
18 For services and expenses of drug, violence, and crime control and
19 prevention programs. Notwithstanding section twenty-four of the
20 state finance law or any provision of law to the contrary, funds
21 from this appropriation shall be allocated only pursuant to a plan
22 (i) approved by the temporary president of the Senate and the direc-
23 tor of the budget which sets forth either an itemized list of gran-
24 tees with the amount to be received by each, or the methodology for
25 allocating such appropriation, and (ii) which is thereafter included
26 in a senate resolution calling for the expenditure of such funds,
27 which resolution must be approved by a majority vote of all members
28 elected to the senate upon a roll call vote (20997) ................
29 300,000 ............................................. (re. $105,000)
30 For services and expenses of drug, violence, and crime control and
31 prevention programs in accordance with the following schedule:
32 Judicial Process Commission (39713) ... 17,500 .......... (re. $1,000)
33 Family Residences and Essential Enterprises, Inc (39788) .............
34 17,500 ............................................... (re. $17,500)
35 City of Ogdensburg Police Department (39789) .........................
36 30,000 ............................................... (re. $30,000)
37 Clinton County (39790) ... 17,500 ...................... (re. $17,500)
38 City of Newburgh Police Department (20253) ... 17,500 .. (re. $17,500)
39 City of Poughkeepsie Police Department (20255) .......................
40 17,500 ............................................... (re. $17,500)
41 North and West Area Athletic and Education Centers (39736) ...........
42 15,000 ............................................... (re. $15,000)
43 ACR Health (39791) ... 10,000 ........................... (re. $1,000)
44 Town of Cheektowaga (39792) ... 17,500 .................. (re. $1,000)
45 Council for Prevention (39793) ... 6,250 ................ (re. $1,000)
46 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2016:
47 For services and expenses related to the federal Edward Byrne memorial
48 justice assistance formula program, including enhanced prosecution,
49 enhanced defense, local law enforcement programs, youth violence
154 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 and/or crime reduction programs, crime laboratories, re-entry
2 services, and judicial diversion and alternative to incarceration
3 programs. Funds appropriated herein shall be expended pursuant to a
4 plan developed by the commissioner of criminal justice services and
5 approved by the director of the budget. A portion of these funds may
6 be transferred to state operations and/or suballocated to other
7 state agencies (20209) ... 5,400,000 .............. (re. $1,703,000)
8 For services and expenses of drug, violence, and crime control and
9 prevention programs. Notwithstanding section twenty-four of the
10 state finance law or any provision of law to the contrary, funds
11 from this appropriation shall be allocated only pursuant to a plan
12 (i) approved by the temporary president of the Senate and the direc-
13 tor of the budget which sets forth either an itemized list of gran-
14 tees with the amount to be received by each, or the methodology for
15 allocating such appropriation, and (ii) which is thereafter included
16 in a senate resolution calling for the expenditure of such funds,
17 which resolution must be approved by a majority vote of all members
18 elected to the senate upon a roll call vote (20997) ................
19 300,000 ............................................... (re. $8,000)
20 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2016, as amended by chapter 53,
21 section 1, of the laws of 2017:
22 For services and expenses of drug, violence, and crime control and
23 prevention programs in accordance with the following schedule:
24 Cambridge/Greenwich Police Department (39739) ........................
25 5,000 ................................................. (re. $5,000)
26 Jacob Riis Settlement House (20260) ... 20,000 .......... (re. $1,000)
27 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
28 Federal Miscellaneous Operating Grants Fund
29 Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Formula Account - 25436
30 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
31 For payment of federal aid to localities pursuant to the provisions of
32 the federal juvenile justice and delinquency prevention act in
33 accordance with a distribution plan determined by the juvenile
34 justice advisory group and affirmed by the commissioner of the divi-
35 sion of criminal justice services. A portion of these funds may be
36 transferred to state operations and may be suballocated to other
37 state agencies (20213) ... 2,050,000 .............. (re. $2,050,000)
38 For payment of federal aid to localities pursuant to the provisions of
39 title V of the juvenile justice and delinquency prevention act of
40 1974, as amended for local delinquency prevention programs, includ-
41 ing sub-allocation to state operations for the administration of
42 this grant in accordance with a distribution plan determined by the
43 juvenile justice advisory group and affirmed by the commissioner of
44 the division of criminal justice services.
45 For services and expenses associated with the juvenile justice and
46 delinquency prevention formula account. A portion of these funds may
47 be transferred to state operations and may be suballocated to other
48 state agencies (20215) ... 100,000 .................. (re. $100,000)
155 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
2 For payment of federal aid to localities pursuant to the provisions of
3 the federal juvenile justice and delinquency prevention act in
4 accordance with a distribution plan determined by the juvenile
5 justice advisory group and affirmed by the commissioner of the divi-
6 sion of criminal justice services. A portion of these funds may be
7 transferred to state operations and may be suballocated to other
8 state agencies (20213) ... 2,050,000 .............. (re. $2,050,000)
9 For payment of federal aid to localities pursuant to the provisions of
10 title V of the juvenile justice and delinquency prevention act of
11 1974, as amended for local delinquency prevention programs, includ-
12 ing sub-allocation to state operations for the administration of
13 this grant in accordance with a distribution plan determined by the
14 juvenile justice advisory group and affirmed by the commissioner of
15 the division of criminal justice services.
16 For services and expenses associated with the juvenile justice and
17 delinquency prevention formula account. A portion of these funds may
18 be transferred to state operations and may be suballocated to other
19 state agencies (20215) ... 100,000 .................. (re. $100,000)
20 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
21 For payment of federal aid to localities pursuant to the provisions of
22 the federal juvenile justice and delinquency prevention act in
23 accordance with a distribution plan determined by the juvenile
24 justice advisory group and affirmed by the commissioner of the divi-
25 sion of criminal justice services. A portion of these funds may be
26 transferred to state operations and may be suballocated to other
27 state agencies (20213) ... 2,050,000 .............. (re. $2,050,000)
28 For payment of federal aid to localities pursuant to the provisions of
29 title V of the juvenile justice and delinquency prevention act of
30 1974, as amended for local delinquency prevention programs, includ-
31 ing sub-allocation to state operations for the administration of
32 this grant in accordance with a distribution plan determined by the
33 juvenile justice advisory group and affirmed by the commissioner of
34 the division of criminal justice services.
35 For services and expenses associated with the juvenile justice and
36 delinquency prevention formula account. A portion of these funds may
37 be transferred to state operations and may be suballocated to other
38 state agencies (20215) ... 100,000 .................. (re. $100,000)
39 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018:
40 For payment of federal aid to localities pursuant to the provisions of
41 the federal juvenile justice and delinquency prevention act in
42 accordance with a distribution plan determined by the juvenile
43 justice advisory group and affirmed by the commissioner of the divi-
44 sion of criminal justice services. A portion of these funds may be
45 transferred to state operations and may be suballocated to other
46 state agencies (20213) ... 2,050,000 .............. (re. $1,750,000)
47 For payment of federal aid to localities pursuant to the provisions of
48 title V of the juvenile justice and delinquency prevention act of
49 1974, as amended for local delinquency prevention programs, includ-
50 ing sub-allocation to state operations for the administration of
156 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 this grant in accordance with a distribution plan determined by the
2 juvenile justice advisory group and affirmed by the commissioner of
3 the division of criminal justice services.
4 For services and expenses associated with the juvenile justice and
5 delinquency prevention formula account. A portion of these funds may
6 be transferred to state operations and may be suballocated to other
7 state agencies (20215) ... 100,000 .................. (re. $100,000)
8 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2017:
9 For payment of federal aid to localities pursuant to the provisions of
10 the federal juvenile justice and delinquency prevention act in
11 accordance with a distribution plan determined by the juvenile
12 justice advisory group and affirmed by the commissioner of the divi-
13 sion of criminal justice services. A portion of these funds may be
14 transferred to state operations and may be suballocated to other
15 state agencies (20213) ... 2,050,000 .............. (re. $1,608,000)
16 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2016:
17 For payment of federal aid to localities pursuant to the provisions of
18 the federal juvenile justice and delinquency prevention act in
19 accordance with a distribution plan determined by the juvenile
20 justice advisory group and affirmed by the commissioner of the divi-
21 sion of criminal justice services. A portion of these funds may be
22 transferred to state operations and may be suballocated to other
23 state agencies (20213) ... 2,050,000 ................ (re. $853,000)
24 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2015:
25 For payment of federal aid to localities pursuant to the provisions of
26 the federal juvenile justice and delinquency prevention act in
27 accordance with a distribution plan determined by the juvenile
28 justice advisory group and affirmed by the commissioner of the divi-
29 sion of criminal justice services. A portion of these funds may be
30 transferred to state operations and may be suballocated to other
31 state agencies (20213) ... 2,050,000 ................ (re. $821,000)
32 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
33 Federal Miscellaneous Operating Grants Fund
34 Violence Against Women Account - 25477
35 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
36 For payment of federal aid to localities pursuant to an expenditure
37 plan developed by the commissioner of the division of criminal
38 justice services, provided however that up to 10 percent of the
39 amount herein appropriated may be used for program administration. A
40 portion of these funds may be transferred to state operations and
41 may be suballocated to other state agencies (20216) ................
42 6,500,000 ......................................... (re. $6,500,000)
43 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
44 For payment of federal aid to localities pursuant to an expenditure
45 plan developed by the commissioner of the division of criminal
46 justice services, provided however that up to 10 percent of the
157 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 amount herein appropriated may be used for program administration. A
2 portion of these funds may be transferred to state operations and
3 may be suballocated to other state agencies (20216) ................
4 6,500,000 ......................................... (re. $5,962,000)
5 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
6 For payment of federal aid to localities pursuant to an expenditure
7 plan developed by the commissioner of the division of criminal
8 justice services, provided however that up to 10 percent of the
9 amount herein appropriated may be used for program administration. A
10 portion of these funds may be transferred to state operations and
11 may be suballocated to other state agencies (20216) ................
12 6,500,000 ......................................... (re. $1,122,000)
13 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018:
14 For payment of federal aid to localities pursuant to an expenditure
15 plan developed by the commissioner of the division of criminal
16 justice services, provided however that up to 10 percent of the
17 amount herein appropriated may be used for program administration. A
18 portion of these funds may be transferred to state operations and
19 may be suballocated to other state agencies (20216) ................
20 6,500,000 ........................................... (re. $674,000)
21 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2017:
22 For payment of federal aid to localities pursuant to an expenditure
23 plan developed by the commissioner of the division of criminal
24 justice services, provided however that up to 10 percent of the
25 amount herein appropriated may be used for program administration.
26 A portion of these funds may be transferred to state operations and
27 may be suballocated to other state agencies (20216) ................
28 6,500,000 ........................................... (re. $318,000)
29 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2016:
30 For payment of federal aid to localities pursuant to an expenditure
31 plan developed by the commissioner of the division of criminal
32 justice services, provided however that up to 10 percent of the
33 amount herein appropriated may be used for program administration.
34 A portion of these funds may be transferred to state operations and
35 may be suballocated to other state agencies (20216) ................
36 6,500,000 ........................................... (re. $218,000)
37 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2015:
38 For payment of federal aid to localities pursuant to an expenditure
39 plan developed by the commissioner of the division of criminal
40 justice services, provided however that up to 10 percent of the
41 amount herein appropriated may be used for program administration.
42 A portion of these funds may be transferred to state operations and
43 may be suballocated to other state agencies (20216) ................
44 6,500,000 ........................................... (re. $817,000)
45 Special Revenue Funds - Other
46 Indigent Legal Services Fund
158 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 Indigent Legal Services Account - 23551
2 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
3 For payment to New York state defenders association for services and
4 expenses related to the provision of training and other assistance.
5 The funds hereby appropriated are to be available for payment of
6 liabilities heretofore accrued or hereafter accrued (20247) ........
7 1,030,000 ......................................... (re. $1,030,000)
8 For defense services to be distributed in the same manner as the prior
9 year or through a competitive process. The funds hereby appropriated
10 are to be available for payment of liabilities heretofore accrued or
11 hereafter accrued (20246) ... 7,658,000 ........... (re. $7,658,000)
12 For payment to prisoner's legal services for services and expenses
13 related to legal representation and assistance to indigent inmates.
14 The funds hereby appropriated are to be available for payment of
15 liabilities heretofore accrued or hereafter accrued (20979) ........
16 2,200,000 ......................................... (re. $1,415,000)
17 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
18 For payment to New York state defenders association for services and
19 expenses related to the provision of training and other assistance.
20 The funds hereby appropriated are to be available for payment of
21 liabilities heretofore accrued or hereafter accrued (20247) ........
22 1,030,000 ........................................... (re. $540,000)
23 For defense services to be distributed in the same manner as the prior
24 year or through a competitive process. The funds hereby appropriated
25 are to be available for payment of liabilities heretofore accrued or
26 hereafter accrued (20246) ... 7,658,000 ............. (re. $719,000)
27 For payment to prisoner's legal services for services and expenses
28 related to legal representation and assistance to indigent inmates.
29 The funds hereby appropriated are to be available for payment of
30 liabilities heretofore accrued or hereafter accrued (20979) ........
31 2,200,000 ........................................... (re. $830,000)
32 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
33 For defense services to be distributed in the same manner as the prior
34 year or through a competitive process. The funds hereby appropriated
35 are to be available for payment of liabilities heretofore accrued or
36 hereafter accrued (20246) ... 5,066,000 ............. (re. $614,000)
37 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018:
38 For defense services to be distributed in the same manner as the prior
39 year or through a competitive process. The funds hereby appropriated
40 are to be available for payment of liabilities heretofore accrued or
41 hereafter accrued (20246) ... 5,066,000 ............. (re. $254,000)
42 Special Revenue Funds - Other
43 Miscellaneous Special Revenue Fund
44 Criminal Justice Improvement Account - 22248
45 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
159 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For grants to rape crisis centers for services to rape victims and
2 programs to prevent rape. A portion of these funds may be trans-
3 ferred or suballocated to other state agencies, and distributed
4 pursuant to a plan prepared by the commissioner or director of the
5 recipient agency and approved by the director of the budget (39718)
6 ... 2,788,000 ..................................... (re. $2,788,000)
7 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
8 For grants to rape crisis centers for services to rape victims and
9 programs to prevent rape. A portion of these funds may be trans-
10 ferred or suballocated to other state agencies, and distributed
11 pursuant to a plan prepared by the commissioner or director of the
12 recipient agency and approved by the director of the budget (39718)
13 ... 2,788,000 ..................................... (re. $1,766,000)
14 Special Revenue Funds - Other
15 Miscellaneous Special Revenue Fund
16 Criminal Justice Discovery Compensation Account - 22248
17 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
18 For services and expenses related to discovery implementation, includ-
19 ing but not limited to digital evidence transmission technology,
20 administrative support, computers, hardware and operating software,
21 data connectivity, development of training materials, staff train-
22 ing, overtime costs, litigation readiness, and pretrial services.
23 Eligible entities shall include, but not be limited to counties,
24 cities with populations less than one million, and law enforcement
25 and prosecutorial entities within towns and villages. These funds
26 shall be distributed pursuant to a plan submitted by the commission-
27 er of the division of criminal justice services and approved by the
28 director of the budget.
29 Notwithstanding any provision of law, rule or regulation to the
30 contrary, of the amounts appropriated herein, $10,000,000 may be
31 made available for services and expenses related to state and local
32 crime reduction, youth justice and gang prevention programs, includ-
33 ing but not limited to street outreach, crime analysis, research,
34 and shooting/violence reduction programs (39799) ...................
35 40,000,000 ....................................... (re. $40,000,000)
36 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
37 For services and expenses related to discovery implementation, includ-
38 ing but not limited to digital evidence transmission technology,
39 administrative support, computers, hardware and operating software,
40 data connectivity, development of training materials, staff train-
41 ing, overtime costs, litigation readiness, and pretrial services.
42 Eligible entities shall include, but not be limited to counties,
43 cities with populations less than one million, and law enforcement
44 and prosecutorial entities within towns and villages. These funds
45 shall be distributed pursuant to a plan submitted by the commission-
46 er of the division of criminal justice services and approved by the
47 director of the budget (39799) .....................................
48 40,000,000 ........................................ (re. $7,958,000)
160 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 Special Revenue Funds - Other
2 Miscellaneous Special Revenue Fund
3 Legal Services Assistance Account - 22096
4 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
5 For prosecutorial services of counties, to be distributed pursuant to
6 a plan prepared by the commissioner of the division of criminal
7 justice services and approved by the director of the budget. The
8 funds hereby appropriated are to be available for payment of liabil-
9 ities heretofore accrued or hereafter accrued (20241) ..............
10 12,549,000 ....................................... (re. $12,527,000)
11 For services and expenses of the district attorney and indigent legal
12 services attorney loan forgiveness program pursuant to section 679-e
13 of the education law. These funds may be suballocated to the higher
14 education services corporation (20220) .............................
15 2,430,000 ......................................... (re. $2,430,000)
16 For services and expenses of the Legal Action Center (20376) .........
17 180,000 ............................................. (re. $180,000)
18 For services, expenses or reimbursement of expenses incurred by local
19 government agencies and/or not-for-profit providers or their employ-
20 ees providing civil or criminal legal services in accordance with
21 the following schedule:
22 Brooklyn Bar Association (20294) ... 49,574 ............ (re. $49,574)
23 Caribbean Women's Health Association (20296) .........................
24 22,574 ............................................... (re. $22,574)
25 Center for Family Representation (20297) ... 112,872 .. (re. $112,872)
26 Day One New York (20300) ... 34,313 .................... (re. $34,313)
27 Empire Justice Center (20301) ... 174,725 ............. (re. $174,725)
28 Family and Children's Association (20302) ... 39,496 ... (re. $39,496)
29 Frank H. Hiscock Legal Aid Society (20303) ... 21,942 .. (re. $21,942)
30 Goddard Riverside Community Center (20373) ... 53,605 .. (re. $53,605)
31 Greenhope Services for Women (20304) ... 33,352 ........ (re. $33,352)
32 Harlem Legal Services (20305) ... 99,992 ............... (re. $99,992)
33 Her Justice (39769) ... 75,000 ......................... (re. $75,000)
34 Legal Aid Bureau of Buffalo (20306) ... 54,548 ......... (re. $54,548)
35 Legal Aid Society of Mid New York (20307) ... 65,827 ... (re. $65,827)
36 Legal Aid Society of Northeastern New York (20308) ...................
37 48,272 ............................................... (re. $48,272)
38 Legal Aid Society of Rochester (20335) ... 89,425 ...... (re. $89,425)
39 Legal Aid Society of Rockland County (20309) .........................
40 21,942 ............................................... (re. $21,942)
41 Legal Information for Families Today (LIFT) (20310) ..................
42 39,496 ............................................... (re. $39,496)
43 Legal Project of the Cap. Dist. Women's Bar (20311) ..................
44 85,782 ............................................... (re. $85,782)
45 Legal Services for New York City (LSNY) (20312) ......................
46 118,488 ............................................. (re. $118,488)
47 Legal Services of Central New York (20313) ... 13,364 .. (re. $13,364)
48 Legal Services of the Hudson Valley (20314) ..........................
49 151,667 ............................................. (re. $151,667)
50 MFY Legal Services (20317) ... 43,885 .................. (re. $43,885)
161 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 Monroe County Legal Assistance Center (20318) ........................
2 35,108 ............................................... (re. $35,108)
3 Nassau/Suffolk Law Services Committee, Inc. (20319) ..................
4 48,272 ............................................... (re. $48,272)
5 Neighborhood Legal Services (20393) ... 80,000 ......... (re. $80,000)
6 New York Legal Assistance Group (NYLAG) (60030) ......................
7 25,000 ............................................... (re. $25,000)
8 New York Legal Assistance Group (NYLAG) - Tenants' Right Unit (60031)
9 ... 120,000 ......................................... (re. $120,000)
10 New York City Legal Aid (20321) ... 25,000 ............. (re. $25,000)
11 New York City Legal Aid (20322) ... 263,307 ........... (re. $263,307)
12 Northern Manhattan Improvement Corp (20324) ..........................
13 89,425 ............................................... (re. $89,425)
14 Osborne Association El Rio Program (20325) ... 35,985 .. (re. $35,985)
15 Rural Law Center of New York (20326) ... 21,942 ........ (re. $21,942)
16 Sanctuary for Families (20327) ... 163,994 ............ (re. $163,994)
17 Southern Tier Legal Services (20328) ... 61,438 ........ (re. $61,438)
18 Transgender Legal Defense and Education Fund (39766) .................
19 75,000 ............................................... (re. $75,000)
20 Vera Institute of Justice (20329) ... 138,208 ......... (re. $138,208)
21 Volunteers of Legal Service (VOLS) (20330) ... 39,496 .. (re. $39,496)
22 Volunteer Legal Services Project of Monroe County (21098) ............
23 21,942 ............................................... (re. $21,942)
24 Western New York Law Center (20331) ... 60,634 ......... (re. $60,634)
25 Worker's Justice Law Center of New York, Inc. (20332) ................
26 35,108 ............................................... (re. $35,108)
27 Chemung County Neighborhood Legal Services (20298) ...................
28 40,000 ............................................... (re. $40,000)
29 For payment to counties other than the city of New York for costs
30 associated with the provision of legal assistance and representation
31 to indigent parolees, thirty-one percent of this amount may be used
32 for costs associated with the provision of legal assistance and
33 representation to indigent parolees in Wyoming county, not less than
34 six percent of the remaining amount may be used for legal assistance
35 and representation to indigent parolees related to the willard drug
36 and alcohol treatment program (21014) ... 600,000 ... (re. $600,000)
37 For services and expenses or reimbursement of expenses incurred by
38 local government agencies and/or not-for-profit service providers or
39 their employees providing civil or criminal legal services, which
40 include but are not limited to, legal services for survivors of
41 domestic violence. Notwithstanding section 24 of the state finance
42 law or any provision of law to the contrary, funds from this appro-
43 priation shall be allocated only pursuant to a plan (i) approved by
44 the temporary president of the Senate and the director of the budget
45 which sets forth either an itemized list of grantees with the amount
46 to be received by each or the methodology for allocating such appro-
47 priation (20982) ... 770,000 ........................ (re. $770,000)
48 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
49 For prosecutorial services of counties, to be distributed pursuant to
50 a plan prepared by the commissioner of the division of criminal
51 justice services and approved by the director of the budget. The
162 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 funds hereby appropriated are to be available for payment of liabil-
2 ities heretofore accrued or hereafter accrued (20241) ..............
3 12,549,000 ........................................ (re. $1,349,000)
4 For services and expenses of the district attorney and indigent legal
5 services attorney loan forgiveness program pursuant to section 679-e
6 of the education law. These funds may be suballocated to the higher
7 education services corporation (20220) .............................
8 2,430,000 ......................................... (re. $2,430,000)
9 For services and expenses of the Legal Action Center (20376) .........
10 180,000 .............................................. (re. $40,000)
11 For services, expenses or reimbursement of expenses incurred by local
12 government agencies and/or not-for-profit providers or their employ-
13 ees providing civil or criminal legal services in accordance with
14 the following schedule:
15 Brooklyn Bar Association (20294) ... 49,574 ............ (re. $25,000)
16 Caribbean Women's Health Association (20296) .........................
17 22,574 ............................................... (re. $22,574)
18 Center for Family Representation (20297) ... 112,872 ... (re. $38,000)
19 Day One New York (20300) ... 34,313 .................... (re. $34,313)
20 Empire Justice Center (20301) ... 174,725 ............. (re. $174,725)
21 Family and Children's Association (20302) ... 39,496 ... (re. $39,496)
22 Frank H. Hiscock Legal Aid Society (20303) ... 21,942 .. (re. $21,942)
23 Goddard Riverside Community Center (20373) ... 53,605 .. (re. $53,605)
24 Greenhope Services for Women (20304) ... 33,352 ........ (re. $33,352)
25 Harlem Legal Services (20305) ... 99,992 ............... (re. $99,992)
26 Her Justice (39769) ... 75,000 ......................... (re. $75,000)
27 Legal Aid Bureau of Buffalo (20306) ... 54,548 ......... (re. $54,548)
28 Legal Aid Society of Mid New York (20307) ... 65,827 ... (re. $65,827)
29 Legal Aid Society of Northeastern New York (20308) ...................
30 48,272 ............................................... (re. $48,272)
31 Legal Aid Society of Rochester (20335) ... 89,425 ...... (re. $89,425)
32 Legal Aid Society of Rockland County (20309) .........................
33 21,942 ............................................... (re. $21,942)
34 Legal Information for Families Today (LIFT) (20310) ..................
35 39,496 ................................................ (re. $1,000)
36 Legal Project of the Cap. Dist. Women's Bar (20311) ..................
37 85,782 ............................................... (re. $85,782)
38 Legal Services for New York City (LSNY) (20312) ......................
39 118,488 ............................................. (re. $118,488)
40 Legal Services of Central New York (20313) ... 13,364 .. (re. $13,364)
41 Legal Services of the Hudson Valley (20314) ..........................
42 151,667 ............................................. (re. $151,667)
43 MFY Legal Services (20317) ... 43,885 .................. (re. $43,885)
44 Monroe County Legal Assistance Center (20318) ........................
45 35,108 ............................................... (re. $35,108)
46 Nassau/Suffolk Law Services Committee, Inc. (20319) ..................
47 48,272 ............................................... (re. $48,272)
48 Neighborhood Legal Services (20393) ... 80,000 ......... (re. $80,000)
49 New York Legal Assistance Group (NYLAG) (60030) ......................
50 25,000 ............................................... (re. $25,000)
51 New York Legal Assistance Group (NYLAG) - Tenants' Right Unit (60031)
52 ... 120,000 ......................................... (re. $120,000)
163 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 New York City Legal Aid (20321) ... 25,000 ............. (re. $25,000)
2 New York City Legal Aid (20322) ... 263,307 ........... (re. $263,307)
3 Northern Manhattan Improvement Corp (20324) ..........................
4 89,425 ............................................... (re. $89,425)
5 Osborne Association El Rio Program (20325) ... 35,985 .. (re. $23,000)
6 Sanctuary for Families (20327) ... 163,994 ............ (re. $163,994)
7 Southern Tier Legal Services (20328) ... 61,438 ........ (re. $61,438)
8 Transgender Legal Defense and Education Fund (39766) .................
9 75,000 ................................................ (re. $1,000)
10 Vera Institute of Justice (20329) ... 138,208 ......... (re. $138,208)
11 Volunteers of Legal Service (VOLS) (20330) ... 39,496 .. (re. $39,496)
12 Volunteer Legal Services Project of Monroe County (21098) ............
13 21,942 ............................................... (re. $21,942)
14 Western New York Law Center (20331) ... 60,634 ......... (re. $60,634)
15 Worker's Justice Law Center of New York, Inc. (20332) ................
16 35,108 ............................................... (re. $35,108)
17 Chemung County Neighborhood Legal Services (20298) ...................
18 40,000 ............................................... (re. $40,000)
19 For payment to counties other than the city of New York for costs
20 associated with the provision of legal assistance and representation
21 to indigent parolees, thirty-one percent of this amount may be used
22 for costs associated with the provision of legal assistance and
23 representation to indigent parolees in Wyoming county, not less than
24 six percent of the remaining amount may be used for legal assistance
25 and representation to indigent parolees related to the Willard drug
26 and alcohol treatment program (21014) ... 600,000 ... (re. $600,000)
27 For services, expenses or reimbursement of expenses incurred by local
28 government agencies and/or not-for-profit providers or their employ-
29 ees providing civil or criminal legal services, including but not
30 limited to legal services for victims of domestic violence, or
31 veterans. Notwithstanding section 24 of the state finance law or any
32 provision of law to the contrary, funds from this appropriation
33 shall be allocated only pursuant to a plan approved by the temporary
34 president of the Senate and the director of the budget which sets
35 forth either an itemized list of grantees with the amount to be
36 received by each or the methodology for allocating such appropri-
37 ation (20982) ... 770,000 ........................... (re. $770,000)
38 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
39 For prosecutorial services of counties, to be distributed in the same
40 manner as the prior year or through a competitive process. The funds
41 hereby appropriated are to be available for payment of liabilities
42 heretofore accrued or hereafter accrued (20241) ....................
43 3,592,000 ............................................. (re. $1,000)
44 For defense services to be distributed in the same manner as the prior
45 year or through a competitive process. The funds hereby appropriated
46 are to be available for payment of liabilities heretofore accrued or
47 hereafter accrued (20246) ... 2,592,000 ............... (re. $2,000)
48 For services and expenses of the district attorney and indigent legal
49 services attorney loan forgiveness program pursuant to section 679-e
50 of the education law. These funds may be suballocated to the higher
164 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 education services corporation (20220) .............................
2 2,430,000 ......................................... (re. $2,430,000)
3 For services, expenses or reimbursement of expenses incurred by local
4 government agencies and/or not-for-profit providers or their employ-
5 ees providing civil or criminal legal services in accordance with
6 the following schedule:
7 Day One New York (20300) ... 34,313 ..................... (re. $2,000)
8 Empire Justice Center (20301) ... 174,725 ............... (re. $1,000)
9 Family and Children's Association (20302) ... 39,496 .... (re. $1,000)
10 Frank H. Hiscock Legal Aid Society (20303) ... 21,942 .. (re. $21,942)
11 Goddard Riverside Community Center (20373) ... 53,605 .. (re. $53,605)
12 Greenhope Services for Women (20304) ... 33,352 ......... (re. $9,000)
13 Her Justice (39769) ... 75,000 .......................... (re. $1,000)
14 Legal Aid Bureau of Buffalo (20306) ... 54,548 ......... (re. $54,548)
15 Legal Aid Society of Mid New York (20307) ... 65,827 ... (re. $65,827)
16 Legal Aid Society of Northeastern New York (20308) ...................
17 48,272 ............................................... (re. $20,000)
18 Legal Project of the Cap. Dist. Women's Bar (20311) ..................
19 85,782 ................................................ (re. $2,000)
20 Legal Services of the Hudson Valley (20314) ..........................
21 151,667 ............................................... (re. $1,000)
22 Nassau/Suffolk Law Services Committee, Inc. (20319) ..................
23 48,272 ................................................ (re. $9,000)
24 New York City Legal Aid (20321) ... 25,000 ............. (re. $25,000)
25 New York City Legal Aid (20322) ... 263,307 ........... (re. $263,307)
26 Osborne Association El Rio Program (20325) ... 35,985 ... (re. $3,000)
27 Transgender Legal Defense and Education Fund (39766) .................
28 75,000 ................................................ (re. $2,000)
29 Western New York Law Center (20331) ... 60,634 ......... (re. $28,000)
30 Chemung County Neighborhood Legal Services (20298) ...................
31 40,000 ............................................... (re. $40,000)
32 For payment to counties other than the city of New York for costs
33 associated with the provision of legal assistance and representation
34 to indigent parolees, thirty-one percent of this amount may be used
35 for costs associated with the provision of legal assistance and
36 representation to indigent parolees in Wyoming county, not less than
37 six percent of the remaining amount may be used for legal assistance
38 and representation to indigent parolees related to the Willard drug
39 and alcohol treatment program (21014) ... 600,000 ... (re. $420,000)
40 For services and expenses of civil or criminal domestic violence legal
41 services or veterans civil or criminal legal services. Notwith-
42 standing section 24 of the state finance law or any provision of law
43 to the contrary, funds from this appropriation shall be allocated
44 only pursuant to a plan (i) approved by the temporary president of
45 the Senate and the director of the budget which sets forth either an
46 itemized list of grantees with the amount to be received by each, or
47 the methodology for allocating such appropriate, and (ii) which is
48 thereafter included in a senate resolution calling for the expendi-
49 ture of such funds, which resolution must be approved by a majority
50 vote of all members elected to the senate upon a roll call vote
51 (20982) ... 950,000 ................................. (re. $573,000)
165 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018:
2 For defense services to be distributed in the same manner as the prior
3 year or through a competitive process. The funds hereby appropriated
4 are to be available for payment of liabilities heretofore accrued or
5 hereafter accrued (20246) ... 2,592,000 ............... (re. $1,000)
6 For services, expenses or reimbursement of expenses incurred by local
7 government agencies and/or not-for-profit providers or their employ-
8 ees providing civil or criminal legal services in accordance with
9 the following schedule:
10 Caribbean Women's Health Association (20296) .........................
11 22,574 ................................................ (re. $2,000)
12 Empire Justice Center (20301) ... 174,725 ............... (re. $2,000)
13 Family and Children's Association (20302) ... 40,634 .... (re. $3,000)
14 Goddard Riverside Community Center (20373) ... 55,149 .. (re. $55,149)
15 Greenhope Services for Women (20304) ... 34,313 ......... (re. $1,000)
16 Legal Aid Bureau of Buffalo (20306) ... 56,119 ......... (re. $37,000)
17 Transgender Legal Defense and Education Fund (39766) .................
18 75,000 ............................................... (re. $32,000)
19 For payment to counties other than the city of New York for costs
20 associated with the provision of legal assistance and representation
21 to indigent parolees, thirty-one percent of this amount may be used
22 for costs associated with the provision of legal assistance and
23 representation to indigent parolees in Wyoming county, not less than
24 six percent of the remaining amount may be used for legal assistance
25 and representation to indigent parolees related to the Willard drug
26 and alcohol treatment program (21014) ... 600,000 ..... (re. $1,000)
27 For services and expenses of civil or criminal domestic violence legal
28 services or veterans civil or criminal legal services. Notwith-
29 standing section 24 of the state finance law or any provision of law
30 to the contrary, funds from this appropriation shall be allocated
31 only pursuant to a plan (i) approved by the temporary president of
32 the Senate and the director of the budget which sets forth either an
33 itemized list of grantees with the amount to be received by each, or
34 the methodology for allocating such appropriation, and (ii) which is
35 thereafter included in a senate resolution calling for the expendi-
36 ture of such funds, which resolution must be approved by a majority
37 vote of all members elected to the senate upon a roll call vote
38 (20982) ... 950,000 ................................. (re. $145,000)
39 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2017:
40 For defense services to be distributed in the same manner as the prior
41 year or through a competitive process (20246) ......................
42 2,592,000 ............................................ (re. $80,000)
43 For services and expenses of civil or criminal domestic violence legal
44 services or veterans civil or criminal legal services. Notwith-
45 standing section twenty-four of the state finance law or any
46 provision of law to the contrary, funds from this appropriation
47 shall be allocated only pursuant to a plan (i) approved by the
48 temporary president of the Senate and the director of the budget
49 which sets forth either an itemized list of grantees with the amount
50 to be received by each, or the methodology for allocating such
51 appropriation, and (ii) which is thereafter included in a senate
166 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 resolution calling for the expenditure of such funds, which resol-
2 ution must be approved by a majority vote of all members elected to
3 the senate upon a roll call vote (20982) ...........................
4 950,000 ............................................. (re. $134,000)
5 For services, expenses or reimbursement of expenses incurred by local
6 government agencies and/or not-for-profit providers or their employ-
7 ees providing civil or criminal legal services in accordance with
8 the following schedule:
9 Family and Children's Association (20302) ... 40,634 .... (re. $7,000)
10 Neighborhood Legal Services (20393) ... 75,000 .......... (re. $1,000)
11 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2016:
12 For services and expenses of civil or criminal domestic violence legal
13 services or veterans civil or criminal legal services. Notwith-
14 standing section twenty-four of the state finance law or any
15 provision of law to the contrary, funds from this appropriation
16 shall be allocated only pursuant to a plan (i) approved by the
17 temporary president of the Senate and the director of the budget
18 which sets forth either an itemized list of grantees with the amount
19 to be received by each, or the methodology for allocating such
20 appropriation, and (ii) which is thereafter included in a senate
21 resolution calling for the expenditure of such funds, which resol-
22 ution must be approved by a majority vote of all members elected to
23 the senate upon a roll call vote (20982) ...........................
24 950,000 ............................................. (re. $150,000)
25 For services, expenses or reimbursement of expenses incurred by local
26 government agencies and/or not-for-profit providers or their employ-
27 ees providing civil or criminal legal services in accordance with
28 the following schedule:
29 Family and Children's Association (20302) ... 40,634 ... (re. $23,000)
30 Goddard Riverside Community Center (20373) ...........................
31 125,000 .............................................. (re. $21,000)
32 Transgender Legal Defense and Education Fund (39766) .................
33 75,000 ................................................ (re. $6,000)
34 Special Revenue Funds - Other
35 State Police Motor Vehicle Law Enforcement and Motor Vehicle Theft and
36 Insurance Fraud Prevention Fund
37 Motor Vehicle Theft and Insurance Fraud Account - 22801
38 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
39 For services and expenses associated with local anti-auto theft
40 programs, in accordance with section 89-d of the state finance law,
41 distributed through a competitive process (20235) ..................
42 3,749,000 ......................................... (re. $3,749,000)
43 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
44 For services and expenses associated with local anti-auto theft
45 programs, in accordance with section 89-d of the state finance law,
46 distributed through a competitive process (20235) ..................
47 3,749,000 ......................................... (re. $2,341,000)
167 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
2 For services and expenses associated with local anti-auto theft
3 programs, in accordance with section 89-d of the state finance law,
4 distributed through a competitive process (20235) ..................
5 3,749,000 ........................................... (re. $402,000)
6 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018:
7 For services and expenses associated with local anti-auto theft
8 programs, in accordance with section 89-d of the state finance law,
9 distributed through a competitive process (20235) ..................
10 3,749,000 ........................................... (re. $170,000)
11 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2017:
12 For services and expenses associated with local anti-auto theft
13 programs, in accordance with section 89-d of the state finance law,
14 distributed through a competitive process (20235) ..................
15 3,749,000 ........................................... (re. $219,000)
16 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2016:
17 For services and expenses associated with local anti-auto theft
18 programs, in accordance with section 89-d of the state finance law,
19 distributed through a competitive process (20235) ..................
20 3,749,000 ............................................ (re. $84,000)
21 By chapter 50, section 1, of the laws of 2009:
22 Maintenance Undistributed
23 For services and expenses or for contracts with municipalities and/or
24 private not-for-profit agencies for the amounts herein provided:
25 General Fund
26 Community Projects Fund - 007
27 Account EE
28 CHEMUNG COUNTY SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT ... 5,000 ........... (re. $5,000)
29 EAST FISHKILL POLICE DEPARTMENT ... 8,000 ............... (re. $8,000)
30 TOWN OF AMHERST JUSTICE CENTER ... 35,000 .............. (re. $35,000)
31 By chapter 50, section 1, of the laws of 2008, as amended by chapter 53,
32 section 1, of the laws of 2012:
33 Maintenance Undistributed
34 For services and expenses or for contracts with municipalities and/or
35 private not-for-profit agencies for the amounts herein provided:
36 General Fund
37 Community Projects Fund - 007
38 Account AA
168 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 61st Precinct Community Council ... 2,000 ............... (re. $2,000)
2 62nd Precinct - Auxiliary Unit ... 2,000 ................ (re. $2,000)
3 62nd Precinct Community Council ... 2,000 ............... (re. $2,000)
4 68th Precinct Auxiliary ... 2,000 ....................... (re. $2,000)
5 68th Precinct Explorers ... 2,500 ....................... (re. $2,500)
6 Family Services ... 44,550 .............................. (re. $1,300)
7 Lions Club of Johnson City, Inc ... 15,000 .............. (re. $2,050)
8 Montgomery County Probation Department ... 25,000 ....... (re. $6,650)
9 Orange County Sheriff's Department ... 20,000 ........... (re. $3,200)
10 Rockland County Office of the District Attorney ......................
11 100,000 ............................................... (re. $3,500)
12 Rotterdam Police Department ... 7,500 ................... (re. $7,500)
13 Safari Club International Western and Central New York Chapter, Inc.
14 ... 35,000 ............................................ (re. $7,000)
15 Suffolk County District Attorney's ... 55,000 ........... (re. $1,900)
16 Troy Police Benevolent and Protective Association, Inc ...............
17 40,000 ............................................... (re. $40,000)
18 Valley Stream Auxiliary Police ... 3,000 ................ (re. $3,000)
19 Wallkill, Town of ... 70,000 ............................ (re. $3,250)
20 General Fund
21 Community Projects Fund - 007
22 Account BB
23 City of Syracuse Police Department ... 15,000 .......... (re. $15,000)
24 Van Nest Community Association ... 2,500 ................ (re. $2,500)
25 Waterbury-Lasalle Community Association ... 2,500 ....... (re. $2,500)
26 General Fund
27 Community Projects Fund - 007
28 Account EE
29 DUTCHESS COUNTY SHERIFF ... 4,000 ....................... (re. $4,000)
30 ORLEANS COUNTY SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT ... 1,500 ........... (re. $1,500)
31 SCHENECTADY POLICE DEPARTMENT ... 5,000 ................. (re. $5,000)
32 SCHUYLER COUNTY SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT ... 11,500 ........ (re. $11,500)
33 VILLAGE OF HAMBURG POLICE DEPARTMENT ... 5,000 .......... (re. $5,000)
34 By chapter 50, section 1, of the laws of 2007, as amended by chapter 53,
35 section 1, of the laws of 2012:
36 Maintenance Undistributed
37 For services and expenses or for contracts with municipalities and/or
38 private not-for-profit agencies for the amounts herein provided:
39 General Fund
40 Community Projects Fund - 007
41 Account AA
42 68th Precinct Auxiliary ... 2,000 ....................... (re. $2,000)
43 Chester, Town of Police Department ... 25,000 ........... (re. $1,350)
169 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 Columbia County Sheriff ... 33,735 ..................... (re. $17,450)
2 Genesee County Sheriff's Department ... 50,000 .......... (re. $3,200)
3 Onondaga County Bar Association ... 58,500 .............. (re. $3,650)
4 Orange County ... 25,000 ................................ (re. $7,000)
5 Safari Club International ... 50,000 ................... (re. $30,000)
6 Schenectady County District Attorney's Office ........................
7 25,000 ................................................ (re. $4,150)
8 General Fund
9 Community Projects Fund - 007
10 Account BB
11 A.L.E.R.T. ... 30,000 ................................... (re. $1,400)
12 Van Nest Community Association ... 2,500 ................ (re. $2,500)
13 Williamsburg Safety Patrol ... 20,500 .................. (re. $20,500)
14 General Fund
15 Community Projects Fund - 007
16 Account EE
17 DUTCHESS COUNTY SHERIFF ... 6,000 ....................... (re. $6,000)
18 MILLBROOK POLICE DEPARTMENT ... 3,148 ................... (re. $3,148)
19 ORLEANS COUNTY SHERIFF ... 5,000 ........................ (re. $5,000)
20 SCHUYLER COUNTY SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT ... 10,000 ........ (re. $10,000)
21 VICTIMS INFORMATION BUREAU OF SERVICES ... 2,500 ........ (re. $2,500)
22 VILLAGE OF FISHKILL POLICE DEPARTMENT ... 5,000 ......... (re. $5,000)
23 VILLAGE OF FLORIDA POLICE DEPARTMENT ... 4,524 .......... (re. $4,524)
24 WALLKILL POLICE DEPARTMENT ... 4,524 .................... (re. $4,524)
25 YONKERS POLICE CAPTAINS, LIEUTENANT & SERGEANTS ASSOCIATION ..........
26 2,500 ................................................. (re. $2,500)
27 By chapter 50, section 1, of the laws of 2002, as amended by chapter 50,
28 section 1, of the laws of 2007:
29 Maintenance Undistributed
30 For services and expenses or for contracts with municipalities and/or
31 private not-for-profit agencies for the amounts herein provided:
32 General Fund
33 Community Projects Fund - 007
34 Account EE
35 17th Precinct ... 5,000 ................................. (re. $5,000)
36 19th Precinct ... 5,000 ................................. (re. $5,000)
37 By chapter 54, section 1, of the laws of 2000, as amended by chapter 50,
38 section 1, of the laws of 2007:
39 Maintenance Undistributed
40 General Fund
170 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 Community Projects Fund - 007
2 Account AA
3 For services and expenses, grants in aid, or for contracts with muni-
4 cipalities and/or private not-for-profit agencies. The funds appro-
5 priated hereby may be suballocated to any department, agency or
6 public authority ... 2,000,000 .................... (re. $2,000,000)
7 By chapter 54, section 1, of the laws of 2000, as amended by chapter 50,
8 section 1, of the laws of 2007:
9 Maintenance Undistributed
10 For services and expenses or for contracts with municipalities and/or
11 private not-for-profit agencies for the amounts herein provided:
12 General Fund
13 Community Projects Fund - 007
14 Account EE
15 Niskayuna Youth Court ... 3,500 ......................... (re. $3,500)
16 By chapter 54, section 1, of the laws of 2000, as amended by chapter 53,
17 section 1, of the laws of 2018:
18 Maintenance Undistributed
19 General Fund
20 Community Projects Fund - 007
21 Account CC
22 For services and expenses, grants in aid, or for contracts with
23 certain municipalities and/or not-for-profit agencies pursuant to
24 section 99-d of the state finance law. The funds appropriated hereby
25 may be suballocated to any department, agency or public authority.
26 Notwithstanding subdivision 5 of section 24 of the state finance law,
27 the $2,000,000 appropriation specified herein shall be available
28 pursuant to one or several plans, which shall include but not be
29 limited to an itemized list of grantees with the amount to be
30 received by each, submitted by the secretary of the assembly ways
31 and means committee, and subject to the approval of the director of
32 the budget ... 2,000,000 ............................ (re. $792,184)
33 By chapter 54, section 1, of the laws of 1999, as amended by chapter 50,
34 section 1, of the laws of 2007:
35 Maintenance Undistributed
36 For services and expenses or for contracts with municipalities and/or
37 private not-for-profit agencies for the amounts herein provided:
38 General Fund
171 12653-09-2
DIVISION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVICES
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 Community Projects Fund - 007
2 Account EE
3 Amherst Domestic Violence Task Force ... 10,000 ........ (re. $10,000)
4 Island Park Fire Department ... 5,000 ................... (re. $5,000)
5 Rockland County Police Academy ... 5,000 ................ (re. $5,000)
6 By chapter 54, section 1, of the laws of 1998, as amended by chapter 50,
7 section 1, of the laws of 2002:
8 Maintenance Undistributed
9 For services and expenses or for contracts with municipalities and/or
10 private not-for-profit agencies for the amounts herein provided:
11 General Fund
12 Community Projects Fund - 007
13 Account EE
14 Orange County Sheriff's Department ... 10,000 .......... (re. $10,000)
15 Amherst First Offender Reversion Program ... 20,000 .... (re. $20,000)
16 Town of Plattekill Police Department ... 5,000 .......... (re. $5,000)
172 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For payment according to the following schedule:
2 APPROPRIATIONS REAPPROPRIATIONS
3 General Fund ....................... 49,572,000 206,506,561
4 Special Revenue funds - Federal .... 14,000,000 623,276,000
5 Special Revenue funds - Other ...... 0 1,381,000
6 ---------------- ----------------
7 All Funds ........................ 63,572,000 831,163,561
8 ================ ================
9 SCHEDULE
10 HIGH TECHNOLOGY PROGRAM ..................................... 44,309,000
11 --------------
12 General Fund
13 Local Assistance Account - 10000
14 For services and expenses related to the
15 operation of the centers of excellence
16 pursuant to a plan approved by the direc-
17 tor of the budget. All or portions of the
18 funds appropriated hereby may be suballo-
19 cated or transferred to any department,
20 agency, or public authority (21427) ......... 12,025,005
21 Project Schedule
22 PROJECT AMOUNT
23 --------------------------------------------
24 For services and expenses
25 related to the operation of
26 the Buffalo center of excel-
27 lence in bioinformatics and
28 life sciences .................... 895,455
29 For services and expenses
30 related to the operation of
31 the Syracuse center of
32 excellence in environmental
33 and energy systems ............... 895,455
34 For services and expenses
35 related to the operation of
36 the Albany center of excel-
37 lence in nanoelectronics ......... 895,455
38 For services and expenses
39 related to the operation of
40 the Stony Brook center of
41 excellence in wireless and
42 information technology ........... 895,455
43 For services and expenses
44 related to the operation of
45 the Binghamton center of
173 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 excellence in small scale
2 systems integration and
3 packaging ........................ 895,455
4 For services and expenses
5 related to the operation of
6 the Stony Brook center of
7 excellence in advanced ener-
8 gy research ...................... 895,455
9 For services and expenses
10 related to the operation of
11 the Buffalo center of excel-
12 lence in materials informat-
13 ics .............................. 895,455
14 For services and expenses
15 related to the operation of
16 the Rochester center of
17 excellence in sustainable
18 manufacturing .................... 895,455
19 For services and expenses
20 related to the operation of
21 the Rochester center of
22 excellence in data science ....... 895,455
23 For services and expenses
24 related to the operation of
25 the Rensselaer Polytechnic
26 Institute, Rochester Insti-
27 tute of Technology, and New
28 York University centers of
29 excellence in Digital Game
30 Development ...................... 895,455
31 For services and expenses
32 related to the operation of
33 the Cornell University's
34 center of excellence in Food
35 and Agriculture Innovation
36 in Geneva, New York .............. 895,455
37 For services and expenses
38 related to the operation of
39 Albany center of excellence
40 in data science in atmo-
41 spheric and environmental
42 prediction and innovation ........ 800,000
43 For services and expenses
44 related to New York Medical
45 College to create and oper-
46 ate a Center of Excellence
47 in precision Responses to
48 Bioterrorism and Disaster ...... 1,000,000
49 For services and expenses
50 related to the operation of
51 the Clarkson - SUNY ESF
174 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 center of excellence in
2 Healthy Water Solutions .......... 375,000
3 --------------
4 Total ......................... 12,025,005
5 ==============
6 For additional services and expenses related
7 to the operation of the centers of excel-
8 lence pursuant to a plan approved by the
9 director of the budget ....................... 1,974,995
10 Project Schedule
11 PROJECT AMOUNT
12 --------------------------------------------
13 For services and expenses
14 related to the operations of
15 the Buffalo center of excel-
16 lence in bioinformatics and
17 life sciences .................... 104,545
18 For services and expenses
19 related to the operation of
20 the Syracuse center of
21 excellence in environmental
22 and energy systems ............... 104,545
23 For services and expenses
24 related to the operation of
25 the Albany center of excel-
26 lence in nanoelectronics ......... 104,545
27 For services and expenses
28 related to the operation of
29 the Stony Brook center of
30 excellence in wireless and
31 information technology ........... 104,545
32 For services and expenses
33 related to the operation of
34 the Binghamton center of
35 excellence in small scale
36 systems integration and
37 packaging ........................ 104,545
38 For services and expenses
39 related to the operation of
40 the Stony Brook center of
41 excellence in advanced ener-
42 gy research ...................... 104,545
43 For services and expenses
44 related to the operation of
45 the Buffalo center of excel-
46 lence in materials informat-
47 ics .............................. 104,545
48 For services and expenses
49 related to the operation of
50 the Rochester center of
175 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 excellence in sustainable
2 manufacturing .................... 104,545
3 For services and expenses
4 related to the operation of
5 the Rochester center of
6 excellence in data science ....... 104,545
7 For services and expenses
8 related to the operation of
9 the Rensselaer Polytechnic
10 Institute, Rochester Insti-
11 tute of Technology, and New
12 York University centers of
13 excellence in Digital Game
14 Development ...................... 104,545
15 For services and expenses
16 related to the operation of
17 the Cornell University's
18 center of excellence in Food
19 and Agriculture Innovation
20 in Geneva, New York .............. 104,545
21 For services and expenses
22 related to the operation of
23 Albany center of excellence
24 in data science in atmo-
25 spheric and environmental
26 prediction and innovation ........ 200,000
27 For services and expenses
28 related to the operation of
29 the Clarkson - SUNY ESF
30 center of excellence in
31 Healthy Water Solutions .......... 625,000
32 --------------
33 Total .......................... 1,974,995
34 ==============
35 For services and expenses related to the
36 following: centers for advanced technolo-
37 gy, for matching grants to designated
38 centers for advanced technology, pursuant
39 to subdivision 3 of section 3102-b of the
40 public authorities law. Notwithstanding
41 any provision of law to the contrary,
42 funds may also be used for initiatives
43 related to the operation and development
44 of the centers of excellence or other high
45 technology centers. No funds shall be
46 expended from this appropriation until the
47 director of the budget has approved a
48 spending plan (21426) ....................... 13,559,320
49 For additional services and expenses related
50 to the following: centers for advanced
51 technology, for matching grants to desig-
176 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 nated centers for advanced technology,
2 pursuant to subdivision 3 of section
3 3102-b of the public authorities law.
4 Notwithstanding any provision of law to
5 the contrary, funds may also be used for
6 initiatives related to the operation and
7 development of the centers of excellence
8 or other high technology centers. No funds
9 shall be expended from this appropriation
10 until the director of the budget has
11 approved a spending plan (21426) ............. 1,440,680
12 Technology development organization matching
13 grants, to be awarded on a competitive
14 basis in accordance with the provisions of
15 section 3102-d of the public authorities
16 law. Notwithstanding any inconsistent
17 provision of law, the director of the
18 budget may suballocate up to the full
19 amount of this appropriation to any
20 department, agency or authority. No funds
21 shall be expended from this appropriation
22 until the director of the budget has
23 approved a spending plan (21441) ............. 1,382,000
24 Industrial technology extension service.
25 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision
26 of law, the director of the budget may
27 suballocate up to the full amount of this
28 appropriation to any department, agency or
29 authority. No funds shall be expended from
30 this appropriation until the director of
31 the budget has approved a spending plan
32 (21435) ........................................ 921,000
33 For services and expenses related to the
34 operation of the SUNY Polytechnic Insti-
35 tute Colleges of Nanoscale Science and
36 Engineering focus center and Rensselaer
37 Polytechnic Institute focus center. No
38 funds shall be expended from this appro-
39 priation until the director of the budget
40 has approved a spending plan (21434) ......... 3,006,000
41 High technology matching grants program,
42 including the security through advanced
43 research and technology (START) initiative
44 to leverage resources from federal or
45 private sources including but not limited
46 to the national science foundation, busi-
47 nesses, industry consortiums, foundations,
48 and other organizations for efforts asso-
49 ciated with high technology economic
50 development, including the payment of
51 liabilities incurred prior to April 1,
52 2022. All or portions of the funds appro-
177 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 priated hereby may be suballocated or
2 transferred to any department, agency, or
3 public authority. No funds shall be
4 expended from this appropriation until the
5 director of the budget has approved a
6 spending plan (21438) ........................ 5,000,000
7 For services and expenses, loans, and
8 grants, related to the operation of New
9 York state innovation hot spots and New
10 York state incubators. All or portions of
11 the funds appropriated hereby may be
12 suballocated or transferred to any depart-
13 ment, agency, or public authority (21685) .... 5,000,000
14 --------------
15 MARKETING AND ADVERTISING PROGRAM ............................ 3,450,000
16 --------------
17 General Fund
18 Local Assistance Account - 10000
19 For a local tourism promotion matching
20 grants program pursuant to article 5-A of
21 the economic development law (21417) ......... 2,450,000
22 For additional grants of a local tourism
23 promotion matching grants program pursuant
24 to article 5-A of the economic development
25 law .......................................... 1,000,000
26 --------------
27 RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM ................................... 343,000
28 --------------
29 General Fund
30 Local Assistance Account - 10000
31 For the science and technology law center
32 program (81027) ................................ 343,000
33 --------------
34 TRAINING AND BUSINESS ASSISTANCE PROGRAM .................... 15,470,000
35 --------------
36 General Fund
37 Local Assistance Account - 10000
38 For services and expenses of state matching
39 funds for the federal manufacturing exten-
40 sion partnership program.
41 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision
42 of law, the director of the budget may
43 suballocate up to the full amount of this
178 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 appropriation to any department, agency or
2 authority. No funds shall be expended from
3 this appropriation until the director of
4 the budget has approved a spending plan
5 (81053) ...................................... 1,470,000
6 --------------
7 Program account subtotal ................... 1,470,000
8 --------------
9 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
10 Federal Miscellaneous Operating Grants Fund
11 Manufacturing Extension Partnership Program Account -
12 25517
13 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision
14 of law, the director of the budget may
15 suballocate up to the full amount of this
16 appropriation to any department, agency or
17 authority (81052) ........................... 14,000,000
18 --------------
19 Program account subtotal .................. 14,000,000
20 --------------
179 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 HIGH TECHNOLOGY PROGRAM
2 General Fund
3 Local Assistance Account - 10000
4 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
5 For services and expenses related to the operation of the centers of
6 excellence pursuant to a plan approved by the director of the budg-
7 et. All or portions of the funds appropriated hereby may be suballo-
8 cated or transferred to any department, agency, or public authority
9 (21427) ... 8,629,621 ............................. (re. $8,629,621)
10 Project Schedule
11 PROJECT AMOUNT
12 --------------------------------------------
13 For services and expenses
14 related to the operation of
15 the Buffalo center of excel-
16 lence in bioinformatics and
17 life sciences .................... 784,511
18 For services and expenses
19 related to the operation of
20 the Syracuse center of
21 excellence in environmental
22 and energy systems ............... 784,511
23 For services and expenses
24 related to the operation of
25 the Albany center of excel-
26 lence in nanoelectronics ......... 784,511
27 For services and expenses
28 related to the operation of
29 the Stony Brook center of
30 excellence in wireless and
31 information technology ........... 784,511
32 For services and expenses
33 related to the operation of
34 the Binghamton center of
35 excellence in small scale
36 systems integration and
37 packaging ........................ 784,511
38 For services and expenses
39 related to the operation of
40 the Stony Brook center of
41 excellence in advanced ener-
42 gy research ...................... 784,511
43 For services and expenses
44 related to the operation of
45 the Buffalo center of excel-
46 lence in materials informat-
47 ics ............................. 784,511
48 For services and expenses
49 related to the operation of
180 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 the Rochester center of
2 excellence in sustainable
3 manufacturing .................... 784,511
4 For services and expenses
5 related to the operation of
6 the Rochester center of
7 excellence in data science ....... 784,511
8 For services and expenses
9 related to the operation of
10 the Rensselaer Polytechnic
11 Institute, Rochester Insti-
12 tute of Technology, and New
13 York University centers of
14 excellence in Digital Game
15 Development ...................... 784,511
16 For services and expenses
17 related to the operation of
18 the Cornell University's
19 center of excellence in Food
20 and Agriculture Innovation
21 in Geneva, New York .............. 784,511
22 --------------
23 Total .......................... 8,629,621
24 ==============
25 For additional services and expenses related to the operation of the
26 centers of excellence pursuant to a plan approved by the director of
27 the budget (21677) ... 3,395,384 .................. (re. $3,216,000)
28 Project Schedule
29 PROJECT AMOUNT
30 --------------------------------------------
31 For services and expenses
32 related to the operation of
33 the Buffalo center of excel-
34 lence in bioinformatics and
35 life sciences .................... 110,944
36 For services and expenses
37 related to the operation of
38 the Syracuse center of
39 excellence in environmental
40 and energy systems ............... 110,944
41 For services and expenses
42 related to the operation of
43 the Albany center of excel-
44 lence in nanoelectronics ......... 110,944
45 For services and expenses
46 related to the operation of
47 the Stony Brook center of
48 excellence in wireless and
49 information technology ........... 110,944
181 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses
2 related to the operation of
3 the Binghamton center of
4 excellence in small scale
5 systems integration and
6 packaging ........................ 110,944
7 For services and expenses
8 related to the operation of
9 the Stony Brook center of
10 excellence in advanced ener-
11 gy research ...................... 110,944
12 For services and expenses
13 related to the operation of
14 the Buffalo center of excel-
15 lence in materials informat-
16 ics .............................. 110,944
17 For services and expenses
18 related to the operation of
19 the Rochester center of
20 excellence in sustainable
21 manufacturing .................... 110,944
22 For services and expenses
23 related to the operation of
24 the Rochester center of
25 excellence in data science ....... 110,944
26 For services and expenses
27 related to the operation of
28 the Rensselaer Polytechnic
29 Institute, Rochester Insti-
30 tute of Technology, and New
31 York University centers of
32 excellence in Digital Game
33 Development ...................... 110,944
34 For services and expenses
35 related to the operation of
36 the Cornell University's
37 center of excellence in Food
38 and Agriculture Innovation
39 in Geneva, New York .............. 110,944
40 For services and expenses
41 related to the operation of
42 Albany center of excellence
43 in data science in atmo-
44 spheric and environmental
45 prediction and innovation ........ 800,000
46 For services and expenses
47 related to New York Medical
48 College to create and oper-
49 ate a Center of Excellence
50 in precision Responses to
51 Bioterrorism and Disaster ...... 1,000,000
182 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses
2 related to the operation of
3 the Clarkson - SUNY ESF
4 center of excellence in
5 Healthy Water Solutions .......... 375,000
6 --------------
7 Total .......................... 3,395,384
8 ==============
9 For services and expenses related to the following: centers for
10 advanced technology, for matching grants to designated centers for
11 advanced technology, pursuant to subdivision 3 of section 3102-b of
12 the public authorities law. Notwithstanding any provision of law to
13 the contrary, funds may also be used for initiatives related to the
14 operation and development of the centers of excellence or other high
15 technology centers. No funds shall be expended from this appropri-
16 ation until the director of the budget has approved a spending plan
17 (21426) ... 12,370,380 ........................... (re. $12,370,000)
18 For additional services and expenses related to the following: centers
19 for advanced technology, for matching grants to designated centers
20 for advanced technology, pursuant to subdivision 3 of section 3102-b
21 of the public authorities law. Notwithstanding any provision of law
22 to the contrary, funds may also be used for initiatives related to
23 the operation and development of the centers of excellence or other
24 high technology centers (21678) ... 1,188,940 ..... (re. $1,188,940)
25 Technology development organization matching grants, to be awarded on
26 a competitive basis in accordance with the provisions of section
27 3102-d of the public authorities law. Notwithstanding any inconsist-
28 ent provision of law, the director of the budget may suballocate up
29 to the full amount of this appropriation to any department, agency
30 or authority. No funds shall be expended from this appropriation
31 until the director of the budget has approved a spending plan
32 (21441) ... 1,382,000 ............................. (re. $1,382,000)
33 Industrial technology extension service. Notwithstanding any incon-
34 sistent provision of law, the director of the budget may suballocate
35 up to the full amount of this appropriation to any department, agen-
36 cy or authority. No funds shall be expended from this appropriation
37 until the director of the budget has approved a spending plan
38 (21435) ... 921,000 ................................. (re. $436,000)
39 For services and expenses related to the operation of the SUNY Poly-
40 technic Institute Colleges of Nanoscale Science and Engineering
41 focus center and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute focus center. No
42 funds shall be expended from this appropriation until the director
43 of the budget has approved a spending plan (21434) .................
44 3,006,000 ......................................... (re. $3,006,000)
45 High technology matching grants program, including the security
46 through advanced research and technology (START) initiative to
47 leverage resources from federal or private sources including but not
48 limited to the national science foundation, businesses, industry
49 consortiums, foundations, and other organizations for efforts asso-
50 ciated with high technology economic development, including the
51 payment of liabilities incurred prior to April 1, 2021. All or
183 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 portions of the funds appropriated hereby may be suballocated or
2 transferred to any department, agency, or public authority. No funds
3 shall be expended from this appropriation until the director of the
4 budget has approved a spending plan (21438) ........................
5 5,000,000 ......................................... (re. $5,000,000)
6 For services and expenses, loans, and grants, related to the operation
7 of New York state innovation hot spots and New York state incuba-
8 tors. All or portions of the funds appropriated hereby may be subal-
9 located or transferred to any department, agency, or public authori-
10 ty (21685) ... 5,000,000 .......................... (re. $5,000,000)
11 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
12 For services and expenses related to the operation of the centers of
13 excellence pursuant to a plan approved by the director of the budg-
14 et. All or portions of the funds appropriated hereby may be suballo-
15 cated or transferred to any department, agency, or public authority
16 (21427) ... 8,629,621 ............................. (re. $8,586,000)
17 Project Schedule
18 PROJECT AMOUNT
19 --------------------------------------------
20 For services and expenses
21 related to the operation of
22 the Buffalo center of excel-
23 lence in bioinformatics and
24 life sciences .................... 784,511
25 For services and expenses
26 related to the operation of
27 the Syracuse center of
28 excellence in environmental
29 and energy systems ............... 784,511
30 For services and expenses
31 related to the operation of
32 the Albany center of excel-
33 lence in nanoelectronics ......... 784,511
34 For services and expenses
35 related to the operation of
36 the Stony Brook center of
37 excellence in wireless and
38 information technology ........... 784,511
39 For services and expenses
40 related to the operation of
41 the Binghamton center of
42 excellence in small scale
43 systems integration and
44 packaging ........................ 784,511
45 For services and expenses
46 related to the operation of
47 the Stony Brook center of
48 excellence in advanced ener-
49 gy research ...................... 784,511
184 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses
2 related to the operation of
3 the Buffalo center of excel-
4 lence in materials informat-
5 ics .............................. 784,511
6 For services and expenses
7 related to the operation of
8 the Rochester center of
9 excellence in sustainable
10 manufacturing .................... 784,511
11 For services and expenses
12 related to the operation of
13 the Rochester center of
14 excellence in data science ....... 784,511
15 For services and expenses
16 related to the operation of
17 the Rensselaer Polytechnic
18 Institute, Rochester Insti-
19 tute of Technology, and New
20 York University centers of
21 excellence in Digital Game
22 Development ...................... 784,511
23 For services and expenses
24 related to the operation of
25 the Cornell University's
26 center of excellence in Food
27 and Agriculture Innovation
28 in Geneva, New York .............. 784,511
29 --------------
30 Total .......................... 8,629,621
31 ==============
32 For additional services and expenses related to the operation of the
33 centers of excellence pursuant to a plan approved by the director of
34 the budget (21677) ... 2,002,164 .................. (re. $2,002,000)
35 Project Schedule
36 PROJECT AMOUNT
37 --------------------------------------------
38 For services and expenses
39 related to the operation of
40 the Buffalo center of excel-
41 lence in bioinformatics and
42 life sciences ..................... 82,101
43 For services and expenses
44 related to the operation of
45 the Syracuse center of
46 excellence in environmental
47 and energy systems ................ 82,101
48 For services and expenses
49 related to the operation of
185 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 the Albany center of excel-
2 lence in nanoelectronics .......... 82,101
3 For services and expenses
4 related to the operation of
5 the Stony Brook center of
6 excellence in wireless and
7 information technology ............ 82,101
8 For services and expenses
9 related to the operation of
10 the Binghamton center of
11 excellence in small scale
12 systems integration and
13 packaging ......................... 82,101
14 For services and expenses
15 related to the operation of
16 the Stony Brook center of
17 excellence in advanced ener-
18 gy research ....................... 82,101
19 For services and expenses
20 related to the operation of
21 the Buffalo center of excel-
22 lence in materials informat-
23 ics ............................... 82,101
24 For services and expenses
25 related to the operation of
26 the Rochester center of
27 excellence in sustainable
28 manufacturing ..................... 82,101
29 For services and expenses
30 related to the operation of
31 the Rochester center of
32 excellence in data science ........ 82,101
33 For services and expenses
34 related to the operation of
35 the Rensselaer Polytechnic
36 Institute, Rochester Insti-
37 tute of Technology, and New
38 York University centers of
39 excellence in Digital Game
40 Development ....................... 82,101
41 For services and expenses
42 related to the operation of
43 the Cornell University's
44 center of excellence in Food
45 and Agriculture Innovation
46 in Geneva, New York ............... 82,101
47 For services and expenses
48 related to the operation of
49 Albany center of excellence
50 in data science in atmo-
51 spheric and environmental
52 prediction and innovation ........ 250,000
186 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses
2 related to New York Medical
3 College to create and oper-
4 ate a Center of Excellence
5 in precision Responses to
6 Bioterrorism and Disaster ........ 747,975
7 For services and expenses
8 related to the operation of
9 the Clarkson - SUNY ESF
10 center of excellence in
11 Healthy Water Solutions .......... 101,078
12 --------------
13 Total .......................... 2,002,164
14 ==============
15 For services and expenses related to the following: centers for
16 advanced technology, for matching grants to designated centers for
17 advanced technology, pursuant to subdivision 3 of section 3102-b of
18 the public authorities law. Notwithstanding any provision of law to
19 the contrary, funds may also be used for initiatives related to the
20 operation and development of the centers of excellence or other high
21 technology centers. No funds shall be expended from this appropri-
22 ation until the director of the budget has approved a spending plan
23 (21426) ... 12,370,380 ........................... (re. $12,370,000)
24 For additional services and expenses related to the following: centers
25 for advanced technology, for matching grants to designated centers
26 for advanced technology, pursuant to subdivision 3 of section 3102-b
27 of the public authorities law. Notwithstanding any provision of law
28 to the contrary, funds may also be used for initiatives related to
29 the operation and development of the centers of excellence or other
30 high technology centers (21678) ... 591,000 ......... (re. $591,000)
31 Technology development organization matching grants, to be awarded on
32 a competitive basis in accordance with the provisions of section
33 3102-d of the public authorities law. Notwithstanding any inconsist-
34 ent provision of law, the director of the budget may suballocate up
35 to the full amount of this appropriation to any department, agency
36 or authority. No funds shall be expended from this appropriation
37 until the director of the budget has approved a spending plan
38 (21441) ... 1,382,000 ............................. (re. $1,032,000)
39 Industrial technology extension service. Notwithstanding any incon-
40 sistent provision of law, the director of the budget may suballocate
41 up to the full amount of this appropriation to any department, agen-
42 cy or authority. No funds shall be expended from this appropriation
43 until the director of the budget has approved a spending plan
44 (21435) ... 921,000 ................................. (re. $461,000)
45 For services and expenses related to the operation of the SUNY Poly-
46 technic Institute Colleges of Nanoscale Science and Engineering
47 focus center and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute focus center. No
48 funds shall be expended from this appropriation until the director
49 of the budget has approved a spending plan (21434) .................
50 3,006,000 ......................................... (re. $1,503,000)
187 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 High technology matching grants program, including the security
2 through advanced research and technology (START) initiative to
3 leverage resources from federal or private sources including but not
4 limited to the national science foundation, businesses, industry
5 consortiums, foundations, and other organizations for efforts asso-
6 ciated with high technology economic development, including the
7 payment of liabilities incurred prior to April 1, 2020. All or
8 portions of the funds appropriated hereby may be suballocated or
9 transferred to any department, agency, or public authority. No funds
10 shall be expended from this appropriation until the director of the
11 budget has approved a spending plan (21438) ........................
12 6,000,000 ......................................... (re. $6,000,000)
13 For services and expenses, loans, and grants, related to the operation
14 of New York state innovation hot spots and New York state incuba-
15 tors. All or portions of the funds appropriated hereby may be subal-
16 located or transferred to any department, agency, or public authori-
17 ty (21685) ... 5,000,000 .......................... (re. $5,000,000)
18 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
19 For services and expenses related to the operation of the centers of
20 excellence pursuant to a plan approved by the director of the budg-
21 et. All or portions of the funds appropriated hereby may be suballo-
22 cated or transferred to any department, agency, or public authority
23 (21427) ... 9,595,663 ............................. (re. $7,217,000)
24 Project Schedule
25 PROJECT AMOUNT
26 --------------------------------------------
27 For services and expenses
28 related to the operation of
29 the Buffalo center of excel-
30 lence in bioinformatics and
31 life sciences .................... 872,333
32 For services and expenses
33 related to the operation of
34 the Syracuse center of
35 excellence in environmental
36 and energy systems ............... 872,333
37 For services and expenses
38 related to the operation of
39 the Albany center of excel-
40 lence in nanoelectronics ......... 872,333
41 For services and expenses
42 related to the operation of
43 the Stony Brook center of
44 excellence in wireless and
45 information technology ........... 872,333
46 For services and expenses
47 related to the operation of
48 the Binghamton center of
49 excellence in small scale
188 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 systems integration and
2 packaging ........................ 872,333
3 For services and expenses
4 related to the operation of
5 the Stony Brook center of
6 excellence in advanced ener-
7 gy research ...................... 872,333
8 For services and expenses
9 related to the operation of
10 the Buffalo center of excel-
11 lence in materials informat-
12 ics .............................. 872,333
13 For services and expenses
14 related to the operation of
15 the Rochester center of
16 excellence in sustainable
17 manufacturing .................... 872,333
18 For services and expenses
19 related to the operation of
20 the Rochester center of
21 excellence in data science ....... 872,333
22 For services and expenses
23 related to the operation of
24 the Rensselaer Polytechnic
25 Institute, Rochester Insti-
26 tute of Technology, and New
27 York University centers of
28 excellence in Digital Game
29 Development ...................... 872,333
30 For services and expenses
31 related to the operation
32 of the Cornell University's
33 center of excellence in Food
34 and Agriculture Innovation
35 in Geneva, New York .............. 872,333
36 --------------
37 Total .......................... 9,595,663
38 ==============
39 For additional services and expenses related to the operation of the
40 centers of excellence pursuant to a plan approved by the director of
41 the budget (21677) ... 2,704,337 .................. (re. $1,808,000)
42 Project Schedule
43 PROJECT AMOUNT
44 --------------------------------------------
45 For services and expenses
46 related to the operation of
47 the Buffalo center of excel-
48 lence in bioinformatics and
49 life sciences .................... 127,667
189 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses
2 related to the operation of
3 the Syracuse center of
4 excellence in environmental
5 and energy systems ............... 127,667
6 For services and expenses
7 related to the operation of
8 the Albany center of excel-
9 lence in nanoelectronics ......... 127,667
10 For services and expenses
11 related to the operation of
12 the Stony Brook center of
13 excellence in wireless and
14 information technology ........... 127,667
15 For services and expenses
16 related to the operation of
17 the Binghamton center of
18 excellence in small scale
19 systems integration and
20 packaging ........................ 127,667
21 For services and expenses
22 related to the operation of
23 the Stony Brook center of
24 excellence in advanced ener-
25 gy research ...................... 127,667
26 For services and expenses
27 related to the operation of
28 the Buffalo center of excel-
29 lence in materials informat-
30 ics .............................. 127,667
31 For services and expenses
32 related to the operation of
33 the Rochester center of
34 excellence in sustainable
35 manufacturing .................... 127,667
36 For services and expenses
37 related to the operation of
38 the Rochester center of
39 excellence in data science ....... 127,667
40 For services and expenses
41 related to the operation of
42 the Rensselaer Polytechnic
43 Institute, Rochester Insti-
44 tute of Technology, and New
45 York University centers of
46 excellence in Digital Game
47 Development ...................... 127,667
48 For services and expenses
49 related to the operation of
50 the Cornell University's
51 center of excellence in Food
190 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 and Agriculture Innovation
2 in Geneva, New York .............. 127,667
3 For services and expenses
4 related to the operation of
5 Albany center of excellence
6 in data science in atmo-
7 spheric and environmental
8 prediction and innovation ........ 250,000
9 For services and expenses
10 related to New York Medical
11 College to create and oper-
12 ate a Center of Excellence
13 in precision Responses to
14 Bioterrorism and Disaster ........ 925,000
15 For services and expenses
16 related to the operation of
17 the Clarkson - SUNY ESF
18 center of excellence in
19 Healthy Water Solutions .......... 125,000
20 --------------
21 Total ........................ 2,704,337
22 ==============
23 For services and expenses related to the following: centers for
24 advanced technology, for matching grants to designated centers for
25 advanced technology, pursuant to subdivision 3 of section 3102-b of
26 the public authorities law. Notwithstanding any provision of law to
27 the contrary, funds may also be used for initiatives related to the
28 operation and development of the centers of excellence or other high
29 technology centers. No funds shall be expended from this appropri-
30 ation until the director of the budget has approved a spending plan
31 (21426) ... 13,818,000 ............................ (re. $9,044,000)
32 For additional services and expenses related to the following: centers
33 for advanced technology, for matching grants to designated centers
34 for advanced technology, pursuant to subdivision 3 of section 3102-b
35 of the public authorities law. Notwithstanding any provision of law
36 to the contrary, funds may also be used for initiatives related to
37 the operation and development of the centers of excellence or other
38 high technology centers (21678) ... 591,000 ......... (re. $485,000)
39 Technology development organization matching grants, to be awarded on
40 a competitive basis in accordance with the provisions of section
41 3102-d of the public authorities law. Notwithstanding any inconsist-
42 ent provision of law, the director of the budget may suballocate up
43 to the full amount of this appropriation to any department, agency
44 or authority. No funds shall be expended from this appropriation
45 until the director of the budget has approved a spending plan
46 (21441) ... 1,382,000 ............................... (re. $691,000)
47 For additional services and expenses of the technology development
48 organization matching grants, to be awarded on a competitive basis
49 in accordance with the provisions of section 3102-d of the public
50 authorities law. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law,
51 the director of the budget may suballocate up to the full amount of
191 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 this appropriation to any department, agency or authority (21670)
2 ... 609,000 ........................................... (re. $8,000)
3 For services and expenses related to the operation of the SUNY Poly-
4 technic Institute Colleges of Nanoscale Science and Engineering
5 focus center and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute focus center. No
6 funds shall be expended from this appropriation until the director
7 of the budget has approved a spending plan (21434) .................
8 3,006,000 ......................................... (re. $1,723,000)
9 High technology matching grants program, including the security
10 through advanced research and technology (START) initiative to
11 leverage resources from federal or private sources including but not
12 limited to the national science foundation, businesses, industry
13 consortiums, foundations, and other organizations for efforts asso-
14 ciated with high technology economic development, including the
15 payment of liabilities incurred prior to April 1, 2018. All or
16 portions of the funds appropriated hereby may be suballocated or
17 transferred to any department, agency, or public authority. No funds
18 shall be expended from this appropriation until the director of the
19 budget has approved a spending plan (21438) ........................
20 6,000,000 ......................................... (re. $5,985,000)
21 For services and expenses, loans, and grants, related to the operation
22 of New York state innovation hot spots and New York state incuba-
23 tors. All or portions of the funds appropriated hereby may be subal-
24 located or transferred to any department, agency, or public authori-
25 ty (21685) ... 5,000,000 .......................... (re. $4,213,000)
26 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018:
27 For additional services and expenses related to the operation of the
28 centers of excellence pursuant to a plan approved by the director of
29 the budget (21677) ... 2,276,670 .................... (re. $840,000)
30 Project Schedule
31 PROJECT AMOUNT
32 --------------------------------------------
33 For services and expenses
34 related to the operation of
35 the Buffalo center of excel-
36 lence in bioinformatics and
37 life sciences .................... 127,667
38 For services and expenses
39 related to the operation of
40 Cornell University's center
41 of excellence in Food and
42 Agriculture Innovation in
43 Geneva, New York ................. 127,667
44 For services and expenses
45 related to the operation of
46 the Syracuse center of
47 excellence in environmental
48 and energy systems ............... 127,667
49 For services and expenses
50 related to the operation of
192 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 the Albany center of excel-
2 lence in nanoelectronics ......... 127,667
3 For services and expenses
4 related to the operation of
5 the Stony Brook center of
6 excellence in wireless and
7 information technology ........... 127,667
8 For services and expenses
9 related to the operation of
10 the Binghamton center of
11 excellence in small scale
12 systems integration and
13 packaging ........................ 127,667
14 For services and expenses
15 related to the operation of
16 the Stony Brook center of
17 excellence in advanced ener-
18 gy research ...................... 127,667
19 For services and expenses
20 related to the operation of
21 the Buffalo center of excel-
22 lence in materials informat-
23 ics .............................. 127,667
24 For services and expenses
25 related to the operation of
26 the Rochester center of
27 excellence in sustainable
28 manufacturing .................... 127,667
29 For services and expenses
30 related to the operation of
31 the Rochester center of
32 excellence in data science ....... 127,667
33 For services and expenses
34 related to the operation of
35 the Albany center of excel-
36 lence in data science in
37 atmospheric and environ-
38 mental prediction and inno-
39 vation ........................... 250,000
40 For services and expenses
41 related to New York Medical
42 College to operate a Center
43 of Excellence in Precision
44 Responses to Bioterrorism
45 and Disaster ..................... 750,000
46 --------------
47 Total ........................ 2,276,670
48 ==============
49 Technology development organization matching grants, to be awarded on
50 a competitive basis in accordance with the provisions of section
51 3102-d of the public authorities law. Notwithstanding any inconsist-
193 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 ent provision of law, the director of the budget may suballocate up
2 to the full amount of this appropriation to any department, agency
3 or authority. No funds shall be expended from this appropriation
4 until the director of the budget has approved a spending plan
5 (21441) ... 1,382,000 ............................. (re. $1,382,000)
6 For additional services and expenses of the technology development
7 organization matching grants, to be awarded on a competitive basis
8 in accordance with the provisions of section 3102-d of the public
9 authorities law. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law,
10 the director of the budget may suballocate up to the full amount of
11 this appropriation to any department, agency or authority (21670)
12 ... 609,000 ........................................... (re. $7,000)
13 For services and expenses related to the operation of the SUNY Poly-
14 technic Institute Colleges of Nanoscale Science and Engineering
15 focus center and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute focus center. No
16 funds shall be expended from this appropriation until the director
17 of the budget has approved a spending plan (21434) .................
18 3,006,000 ......................................... (re. $2,491,000)
19 High technology matching grants program, including the security
20 through advanced research and technology (START) initiative to
21 leverage resources from federal or private sources including but not
22 limited to the national science foundation, businesses, industry
23 consortiums, foundations, and other organizations for efforts asso-
24 ciated with high technology economic development, including the
25 payment of liabilities incurred prior to April 1, 2018. All or
26 portions of the funds appropriated hereby may be suballocated or
27 transferred to any department, agency, or public authority. No funds
28 shall be expended from this appropriation until the director of the
29 budget has approved a spending plan (21438) ........................
30 6,000,000 ......................................... (re. $5,986,000)
31 For services and expenses, loans, and grants, related to the operation
32 of New York state innovation hot spots and New York state incuba-
33 tors. All or portions of the funds appropriated hereby may be subal-
34 located or transferred to any department, agency, or public authori-
35 ty (21685) ... 5,000,000 ............................ (re. $740,000)
36 For services and expenses of the Small Business Innovation Research
37 (SBIR)/Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) Technical Assist-
38 ance Program (21651) ... 500,000 .................... (re. $500,000)
39 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2017:
40 For services and expenses related to the following: centers for
41 advanced technology, for matching grants to designated centers for
42 advanced technology, pursuant to subdivision 3 of section 3102-b of
43 the public authorities law. Notwithstanding any provision of law to
44 the contrary, funds may also be used for initiatives related to the
45 operation and development of the centers of excellence or other high
46 technology centers. No funds shall be expended from this appropri-
47 ation until the director of the budget has approved a spending plan
48 (21426) ... 13,818,000 ............................... (re. $45,000)
49 Technology development organization matching grants, to be awarded on
50 a competitive basis in accordance with the provisions of section
51 3102-d of the public authorities law. Notwithstanding any inconsist-
194 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 ent provision of law, the director of the budget may suballocate up
2 to the full amount of this appropriation to any department, agency
3 or authority. No funds shall be expended from this appropriation
4 until the director of the budget has approved a spending plan
5 (21441) ... 1,382,000 ............................... (re. $722,000)
6 For additional services and expenses of the technology development
7 organization matching grants, to be awarded on a competitive basis
8 in accordance with the provisions of section 3102-d of the public
9 authorities law. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law,
10 the director of the budget may suballocate up to the full amount of
11 this appropriation to any department, agency or authority (21670)
12 ... 609,000 ........................................... (re. $3,000)
13 For services and expenses related to the operation of the SUNY Poly-
14 technic Institute Colleges of Nanoscale Science and Engineering
15 focus center and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute focus center. No
16 funds shall be expended from this appropriation until the director
17 of the budget has approved a spending plan (21434) .................
18 3,006,000 ........................................... (re. $778,000)
19 High technology matching grants program, including the security
20 through advanced research and technology (START) initiative to
21 leverage resources from federal or private sources including but not
22 limited to the national science foundation, businesses, industry
23 consortiums, foundations, and other organizations for efforts asso-
24 ciated with high technology economic development, including the
25 payment of liabilities incurred prior to April 1, 2017. All or
26 portions of the funds appropriated hereby may be suballocated or
27 transferred to any department, agency, or public authority. No funds
28 shall be expended from this appropriation until the director of the
29 budget has approved a spending plan (21438) ........................
30 6,000,000 ......................................... (re. $2,265,000)
31 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2016:
32 Technology development organization matching grants, to be awarded on
33 a competitive basis in accordance with the provisions of section
34 3102-d of the public authorities law. Notwithstanding any inconsist-
35 ent provision of law, the director of the budget may suballocate up
36 to the full amount of this appropriation to any department, agency
37 or authority. No funds shall be expended from this appropriation
38 until the director of the budget has approved a spending plan
39 (21441) ... 1,382,000 ............................... (re. $122,000)
40 For services and expenses related to the operation of the SUNY Poly-
41 technic Institute Colleges of Nanoscale Science and Engineering
42 focus center and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute focus center. No
43 funds shall be expended from this appropriation until the director
44 of the budget has approved a spending plan (21434) .................
45 3,006,000 ........................................... (re. $846,000)
46 For services and expenses of Rockland Independent Living Center
47 (21660) ... 30,000 ................................... (re. $30,000)
48 For services and expenses of the Merrick Chamber of Commerce (21662)
49 ... 40,000 ........................................... (re. $40,000)
50 For services and expenses of the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball
51 Tournament at Buffalo (21665) ... 75,000 ............. (re. $11,000)
195 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For additional local tourism promotion matching grants program pursu-
2 ant to article 5-A of the economic development law (21669) .........
3 500,000 ............................................. (re. $150,000)
4 For three digital gaming hubs to be designated pursuant to proposals
5 submitted to the department from higher education institutions
6 offering degree programs in game design or game programming (21400)
7 ... 1,000,000 ....................................... (re. $232,000)
8 For additional services and expenses of the technology development
9 organization matching grants, to be awarded on a competitive basis
10 in accordance with the provisions of section 3102-d of the public
11 authorities law. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law,
12 the director of the budget may suballocate up to the full amount of
13 this appropriation to any department, agency or authority. No funds
14 shall be expended from this appropriation until the director of the
15 budget has approved a spending plan (21670) ........................
16 609,000 .............................................. (re. $17,000)
17 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2015:
18 For additional services and expenses of the centers for advanced tech-
19 nology (21678) ... 500,000 .......................... (re. $269,000)
20 For additional services and expenses, loans and grants for New York
21 state incubators (21679) ... 1,000,000 .............. (re. $515,000)
22 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2014:
23 For services and expenses related to the operation of the centers of
24 excellence pursuant to a plan approved by the director of the budg-
25 et. All or portions of the funds appropriated hereby may be suballo-
26 cated or transferred to any department, agency, or public authority
27 (21427) ... 8,723,330 ................................ (re. $17,000)
28 Project Schedule
29 PROJECT AMOUNT
30 --------------------------------------------
31 For services and expenses
32 related to the operation of
33 the Buffalo center of excel-
34 lence in bioinformatics and
35 life sciences .................... 872,333
36 For services and expenses
37 related to the operation of
38 the Greater Rochester center
39 of excellence in photonics
40 and microsystems ................. 872,333
41 For services and expenses
42 related to the operation of
43 the Syracuse center of
44 excellence in environmental
45 and energy systems ............... 872,333
46 For services and expenses
47 related to the operation of
48 the Albany center of excel-
49 lence in nanoelectronics ......... 872,333
196 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses
2 related to the operation of
3 the Stony Brook center of
4 excellence in wireless and
5 information technology ........... 872,333
6 For services and expenses
7 related to the operation of
8 the Binghamton center of
9 excellence in small scale
10 systems integration and
11 packaging ........................ 872,333
12 For services and expenses
13 related to the operation of
14 the Stony Brook center of
15 excellence in advanced ener-
16 gy research ...................... 872,333
17 For services and expenses
18 related to the operation of
19 the Buffalo center of excel-
20 lence in materials informat-
21 ics .............................. 872,333
22 For services and expenses
23 related to the operation of
24 the Rochester center of
25 excellence in sustainable
26 manufacturing .................... 872,333
27 For services and expenses
28 related to the operation of
29 the Rochester center of
30 excellence in data science ....... 872,333
31 --------------
32 Total ........................ 8,723,330
33 ==============
34 High technology matching grants program, including the security
35 through advanced research and technology (START) initiative to
36 leverage resources from federal or private sources including but not
37 limited to the national science foundation, businesses, industry
38 consortiums, foundations, and other organizations for efforts asso-
39 ciated with high technology economic development, including the
40 payment of liabilities incurred prior to April 1, 2014. No funds
41 shall be expended from this appropriation until the director of the
42 budget has approved a spending plan (21438) ........................
43 4,606,000 ......................................... (re. $4,606,000)
44 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2014, as amended by chapter 53,
45 section 1, of the laws of 2015:
46 For services and expenses related to the institute for semiconductor
47 research corporation (SRC) center for advanced interconnect systems
48 technologies (CAIST), including the payment of liabilities incurred
49 prior to April 1, 2014, at The SUNY Polytechnic Institute Colleges
50 of Nanoscale Science and Engineering (CNSE), with its autonomous
197 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 operating status as recognized and approved by the SUNY Board of
2 Trustees in resolution number 2008-165 (21688) .....................
3 713,000 ............................................... (re. $7,000)
4 For services and expenses related to the Institute for Nanoelectronics
5 Discovery and Exploration (INDEX) at The SUNY Polytechnic Institute
6 Colleges of Nanoscale Science and Engineering (CNSE), with its
7 autonomous operating status as recognized and approved by the SUNY
8 Board of Trustees in resolution number 2008-165 (21690) ............
9 775,000 ............................................... (re. $2,000)
10 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2013:
11 For services and expenses related to the operation of the Stony Brook
12 center of excellence in advanced energy research (21687) ...........
13 500,000 ............................................. (re. $500,000)
14 For services and expenses related to the operation of the Buffalo
15 center of excellence in materials informatics (21691) ..............
16 500,000 ............................................. (re. $500,000)
17 High technology matching grants program, including the security
18 through advanced research and technology (START) initiative to
19 leverage resources from federal or private sources including but not
20 limited to the national science foundation, businesses, industry
21 consortiums, foundations, and other organizations for efforts asso-
22 ciated with high technology economic development, including the
23 payment of liabilities incurred prior to April 1, 2013. No funds
24 shall be expended from this appropriation until the director of the
25 budget has approved a spending plan (21438) ........................
26 4,606,000 ......................................... (re. $4,606,000)
27 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2012:
28 High technology matching grants program, including the security
29 through advanced research and technology (START) initiative to
30 leverage resources from federal or private sources including but not
31 limited to the national science foundation, businesses, industry
32 consortiums, foundations, and other organizations for efforts asso-
33 ciated with high technology economic development, including the
34 payment of liabilities incurred prior to April 1, 2012. No funds
35 shall be expended from this appropriation until the director of the
36 budget has approved a spending plan (21438) ........................
37 4,606,000 ......................................... (re. $4,606,000)
38 Columbia university/NSF materials research science and engineering
39 center. No funds shall be expended from this appropriation until the
40 director of the budget has approved a spending plan (21428) ........
41 245,000 ............................................. (re. $245,000)
42 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2011:
43 Cornell university/NSF nanoscale science and engineering center. No
44 funds shall be expended from this appropriation until the director
45 of the budget has approved a spending plan (21431) .................
46 490,000 .............................................. (re. $34,000)
47 SUNY Albany semiconductor research corporation (SRC)center for
48 advanced interconnect systems technologies (CAIST), including the
49 payment of liabilities incurred prior to April 1, 2011. No funds
198 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 shall be expended from this appropriation until the director of the
2 budget has approved a spending plan (21440) ........................
3 690,000 .............................................. (re. $10,000)
4 University at Albany Institute for Nanoelectronics Discovery and
5 Exploration (INDEX). No funds shall be expended from this appropri-
6 ation until the director of the budget has approved a spending plan
7 (21425) ... 750,000 ................................... (re. $2,000)
8 Stony Brook University Semiconductor High-Energy Radiation project. No
9 funds shall be expended from this appropriation until the director
10 of the budget has approved a spending plan (21439) .................
11 250,000 ............................................. (re. $250,000)
12 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2010, as transferred by chapter
13 53, section 1, of the laws of 2011:
14 Innovation economy matching grants program to be awarded on a compet-
15 itive basis to leverage resources from federal or private sources,
16 including but not limited to, the national science foundation, busi-
17 nesses, industry consortiums, foundations, and other organizations
18 for efforts associated with high technology research and economic
19 development, including the payment of liabilities incurred prior to
20 April 1, 2010. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law,
21 the director of the budget may suballocate up to the full amount of
22 this appropriation to any department, agency or authority. No funds
23 shall be expended from this appropriation until the director of the
24 budget has approved a spending plan submitted by the foundation for
25 science, technology and innovation in such detail as the director of
26 the budget may require. Copies of the plan shall be provided to the
27 Senate Finance and Assembly Ways and Means (42034) .................
28 29,500,000 ........................................ (re. $9,212,000)
29 SUNY Albany semiconductor research corporation (SRC)center for
30 advanced interconnect systems technologies (CAIST), including the
31 payment of liabilities incurred prior to April 1, 2010. No funds
32 shall be expended from this appropriation until the director of the
33 budget has approved a spending plan submitted by the foundation for
34 science, technology and innovation in such detail as the director of
35 the budget may require (21440) ... 690,000 .......... (re. $282,000)
36 University at Albany Institute for Nanoelectronics Discovery and
37 Exploration (INDEX). No funds shall be expended from this appropri-
38 ation until the director of the budget has approved a spending plan
39 submitted by the foundation for science, technology and innovation
40 in such detail as the director of the budget may require (21425) ...
41 750,000 ............................................. (re. $520,000)
42 Stony Brook University Semiconductor High-Energy Radiation project. No
43 funds shall be expended from this appropriation until the director
44 of the budget has approved a spending plan submitted by the founda-
45 tion for science, technology and innovation in such detail as the
46 director of the budget may require (21439) .........................
47 250,000 ............................................. (re. $250,000)
48 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2009, as transferred by chapter
49 53, section 1, of the laws of 2011:
199 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 Stony Brook University Semiconductor High-Energy Radiation project.
2 No funds shall be expended from this appropriation until the direc-
3 tor of the budget has approved a spending plan submitted by the
4 foundation for science, technology and innovation in such detail as
5 the director of the budget may require (21439) .....................
6 250,000 ............................................. (re. $250,000)
7 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2008, as transferred by chapter
8 53, section 1, of the laws of 2011:
9 Syracuse university sensing, analyzing, interpreting and deciding
10 center - SAID. No funds shall be expended from this appropriation
11 until the director of the budget has approved a spending plan
12 submitted by the foundation for science, technology and innovation
13 in such detail as the director of the budget may require (42024) ...
14 314,000 ............................................. (re. $314,000)
15 For services and expenses related to the following: college applied
16 research centers, for matching grants to designated college applied
17 research centers, pursuant to section 209-t of article 10-B of the
18 executive law. No funds shall be expended from this appropriation
19 until the director of the budget has approved a spending plan
20 submitted by the foundation for science, technology and innovation
21 in such detail as the director of the budget may require (42025) ...
22 932,000 ............................................. (re. $932,000)
23 For services and expenses of: Center for Remanufacturing (42028) .....
24 301,000 ............................................... (re. $2,000)
25 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2007, as transferred by chapter
26 53, section 1, of the laws of 2011:
27 For services and expenses of: New York State Center for Engineering,
28 Design and Industrial Innovation (42033) ... 250,000 .. (re. $2,000)
29 For services and expenses related to the following: college applied
30 research centers, for matching grants to designated college applied
31 research centers, pursuant to section 209-t of article 10-B of the
32 executive law. No funds shall be expended from this appropriation
33 until the director of the budget has approved a spending plan
34 submitted by the foundation for science, technology and innovation
35 in such detail as the director of the budget may require (42025) ...
36 960,000 ............................................. (re. $526,000)
37 MARKETING AND ADVERTISING PROGRAM
38 General Fund
39 Local Assistance Account - 10000
40 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
41 For a local tourism promotion matching grants program pursuant to
42 article 5-A of the economic development law (21417) ................
43 2,450,000 ......................................... (re. $2,450,000)
44 For additional grants of a local tourism promotion matching grants
45 program pursuant to article 5-A of the economic development law
46 (21282) ... 1,000,000 ............................... (re. $500,000)
200 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For marketing, advertising, and retail operations to promote local
2 agritourism and New York produced food and beverage goods and
3 products, including but not limited to up to $350,000 for Cornell
4 Cooperative Extension of Broome County, up to $350,000 for the Mont-
5 gomery County Chapter of NYARC, Inc., up to $475,000 for Cornell
6 Cooperative Extension of Erie County, up to $350,000 for the Lake
7 George Regional Chamber of Commerce, up to $450,000 for the Cornell
8 Cooperative Extension of Columbia and Greene Counties, up to
9 $850,000 for the Thousand Islands Bridge Authority, up to $450,000
10 for the Cornell Cooperative Extension of Sullivan County, up to
11 $485,000 for Cornell Cooperative Extension of Nassau County, and up
12 to $160,000 for Cornell Cooperative Extension of Tompkins County. At
13 the direction of the director of the budget, all or a portion of
14 this appropriation may be suballocated to any department, agency, or
15 public authority or transferred to state operations (21672) ........
16 3,971,000 ............................................ (re. $51,000)
17 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
18 For a local tourism promotion matching grants program pursuant to
19 article 5-A of the economic development law (21417) ................
20 3,815,000 ......................................... (re. $3,810,000)
21 For marketing, advertising, and retail operations to promote local
22 agritourism and New York produced food and beverage goods and
23 products, including but not limited to up to $375,000 for Cornell
24 Cooperative Extension of Broome County, up to $350,000 for the Mont-
25 gomery County Chapter of NYARC, Inc., up to $500,000 for Cornell
26 Cooperative Extension of Erie County, up to $350,000 for the Lake
27 George Regional Chamber of Commerce, up to $450,000 for the Cornell
28 Cooperative Extension of Columbia and Greene Counties, up to
29 $300,000 for the Thousand Islands Bridge Authority, up to $450,000
30 for the Cornell Cooperative Extension of Sullivan County, up to
31 $485,000 for Cornell Cooperative Extension of Nassau County, up to
32 $400,000 for the Thousand Islands Bridge Authority, and up to
33 $190,000 for Cornell Cooperative Extension of Tompkins County. At
34 the direction of the director of the budget, all or a portion of
35 this appropriation may be suballocated to any department, agency, or
36 public authority or transferred to state operations (21672) ........
37 3,971,000 ........................................... (re. $121,000)
38 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
39 For a local tourism promotion matching grants program pursuant to
40 article 5-A of the economic development law (21417) ................
41 3,815,000 ......................................... (re. $3,815,000)
42 For additional local tourism promotion matching grants program pursu-
43 ant to article 5-A of the economic development law (21282) .........
44 593,000 ............................................. (re. $593,000)
45 For operation of a gateway information center at Beekmantown, New York
46 (21421) ... 196,000 .................................. (re. $64,000)
47 For operation of a gateway information center at Binghamton, New York
48 (21422) ... 196,000 .................................. (re. $75,000)
49 For services and expenses of the Town of East Hampton for Tourism
50 Initiatives (21658) ... 100,000 ..................... (re. $100,000)
201 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018:
2 For a local tourism promotion matching grants program pursuant to
3 article 5-A of the economic development law (21417) ................
4 3,815,000 ......................................... (re. $2,361,000)
5 For additional local tourism promotion matching grants program pursu-
6 ant to article 5-A of the economic development law (21282) .........
7 593,000 ............................................. (re. $593,000)
8 For services and expenses of the Broome County Community Charities
9 related to the 2018 professional golf tournament in Broome County.
10 Funds from this appropriation shall be made available on an annual
11 basis pursuant to a multi-year plan subject to annual approval by
12 the director of the division of the budget (21652) .................
13 3,000,000 ......................................... (re. $2,500,000)
14 For services and expenses related to Lake Ontario and Thousand Island
15 tourism promotion efforts (21653) ... 100,000 ........ (re. $70,000)
16 For additional local tourism promotion matching grants program pursu-
17 ant to article 5-A of the economic development law (21654) .........
18 500,000 ............................................. (re. $500,000)
19 For services and expenses of the North Country Chamber of Commerce
20 related to the North American Center of Excellence for Transporta-
21 tion Equipment program (21673) ... 150,000 ........... (re. $82,000)
22 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2017:
23 For services and expenses of the Long Island Regional Planning Council
24 related to Fiber Optic Robotic Feasibility Study on Long Island
25 (21675) ... 125,000 ................................. (re. $125,000)
26 For services and expenses of Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce (21659) ...
27 50,000 ............................................... (re. $50,000)
28 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2016:
29 For services and expenses of the Long Island Farm Bureau for tourism
30 promotion (21684) ... 50,000 ......................... (re. $50,000)
31 For services and expenses of the Long Island Wine Council for tourism
32 promotion (21686) ... 50,000 .......................... (re. $2,000)
33 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2015:
34 For services and expenses of the Michigan Street African American
35 Heritage Corridor Commission (21683) ... 75,000 ...... (re. $38,000)
36 For services and expenses of the Long Island Farm Bureau for tourism
37 promotion (21684) ... 50,000 ......................... (re. $50,000)
38 RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM
39 General Fund
40 Local Assistance Account - 10000
41 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
42 For the science and technology law center program (81027) ............
43 343,000 ............................................. (re. $343,000)
44 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
202 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For the science and technology law center program (81027) ............
2 343,000 ............................................. (re. $343,000)
3 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
4 For the science and technology law center program (81027) ............
5 343,000 ............................................. (re. $343,000)
6 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018:
7 For the science and technology law center program (81027) ............
8 343,000 ............................................. (re. $343,000)
9 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2017:
10 For the science and technology law center program (81027) ............
11 343,000 .............................................. (re. $78,000)
12 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2016:
13 For the science and technology law center program (81027) ............
14 343,000 .............................................. (re. $38,000)
15 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2014:
16 For services and expenses of the faculty development program and the
17 incentive program (21407) ... 650,000 ............... (re. $603,000)
18 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2009, as transferred by chapter
19 53, section 1, of the laws of 2011:
20 Faculty development program (81046) ... 2,685,000 ... (re. $2,685,000)
21 For expenses related to the incentive program (81047) ................
22 2,920,000 ......................................... (re. $2,920,000)
23 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2008, as transferred by chapter
24 53, section 1, of the laws of 2011:
25 Incentive program in accordance with the following:
26 For expenses related to the incentive program (81047) ................
27 2,920,000 ......................................... (re. $2,920,000)
28 Faculty development program (81046) ... 2,685,000 ... (re. $2,450,000)
29 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2007, as transferred by chapter
30 53, section 1, of the laws of 2011:
31 Incentive program in accordance with the following:
32 Faculty development program, provided, however, that the amount of
33 this appropriation available for expenditure and disbursement on and
34 after September 1, 2008 shall be reduced by six percent of the
35 amount that was undisbursed as of August 15, 2008 (81046) ..........
36 4,000,000 ......................................... (re. $3,760,000)
37 For services and expenses of the James D. Watson investigator program,
38 provided, however, that the amount of this appropriation available
39 for expenditure and disbursement on and after September 1, 2008
40 shall be reduced by six percent of the amount that was undisbursed
41 as of August 15, 2008 (81048) ... 1,000,000 ......... (re. $429,000)
42 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2006, as transferred by chapter
43 53, section 1, of the laws of 2011:
203 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 Incentive program in accordance with the following:
2 For additional expenses related to the incentive program (81047) .....
3 4,000,000 ......................................... (re. $2,777,000)
4 Faculty development program, provided, however, that the amount of
5 this appropriation available for expenditure and disbursement on and
6 after September 1, 2008 shall be reduced by six percent of the
7 amount that was undisbursed as of August 15, 2008 (81046) ..........
8 4,000,000 ......................................... (re. $1,924,000)
9 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2005, as transferred by chapter
10 53, section 1, of the laws of 2011:
11 Incentive program in accordance with the following:
12 For additional expenses related to the incentive program (81047) .....
13 4,000,000 ........................................... (re. $629,000)
14 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2004, as transferred by chapter
15 53, section 1, of the laws of 2011:
16 Incentive program in accordance with the following:
17 For additional expenses related to the incentive program (81047) .....
18 4,650,000 ........................................... (re. $772,000)
19 Centers for advanced technology development fund (81049) .............
20 10,000,000 ........................................ (re. $7,433,000)
21 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2003, as transferred by chapter
22 53, section 1, of the laws of 2011:
23 Incentive program in accordance with the following: Centers for
24 advanced technology development fund (81049) .......................
25 10,000,000 .......................................... (re. $658,000)
26 SMALL BUSINESS CREDIT INITIATIVE PROGRAM
27 Special Revenue Funds - Other
28 Miscellaneous Special Revenue Fund
29 Small Business Credit Initiative Account - 22202
30 By chapter 103, section 3, of the laws of 2011:
31 For programs and activities authorized pursuant to section sixteen-f
32 of the new york state urban development corporation act, including
33 any services and costs associated with administration of such
34 programs and activities, subject to the limitations imposed by
35 federal funding requirements. Notwithstanding any provision of law
36 to the contrary, such moneys shall be paid by the department of
37 economic development to the new york state urban development corpo-
38 ration from federal operating grant moneys deposited in the state
39 treasury for the federal state small business credit initiative.
40 Provided further that, notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of
41 law, subject to the approval of the director of the budget, funds
42 appropriated herein may be interchanged with any other item of
43 appropriation to be funded from the small business credit initiative
44 account (21694) ... 10,405,173 ...................... (re. $214,000)
45 For programs and activities authorized pursuant to section sixteen-u
46 of the new york state urban development corporation act, including
204 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 any services and costs associated with administration of such
2 programs and activities, subject to the limitations imposed by
3 federal funding requirements. Notwithstanding any provision of law
4 to the contrary, such moneys shall be paid by the department of
5 economic development to the new york state urban development corpo-
6 ration from federal operating grant moneys deposited in the state
7 treasury for the federal state small business credit initiative.
8 Provided further that, notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of
9 law, subject to the approval of the director of the budget, funds
10 appropriated herein may be inter changed with any other item of
11 appropriation to be funded from the small business credit initiative
12 account (21692) ... 25,952,157 ...................... (re. $432,000)
13 By chapter 103, section 3, of the laws of 2011, as amended by chapter
14 53, section 1, of the laws of 2013:
15 For programs and activities (i) authorized pursuant to section
16 sixteen-k of the new york state urban development corporation act,
17 including any services and costs associated with administration of
18 such programs and activities, subject to the limitations imposed by
19 federal funding requirements, or (ii) that provide small businesses
20 loans, loan guarantees, grants, including interest subsidy grants,
21 and equity investments to small businesses. Notwithstanding any
22 provision of law to the contrary, such moneys shall be paid by the
23 department of economic development to the new york state urban
24 development corporation from federal operating grant moneys deposit-
25 ed in the state treasury for the federal state small business credit
26 initiative. Provided further that, notwithstanding any inconsistent
27 provision of law, subject to the approval of the director of the
28 budget, funds appropriated herein may be interchanged with any other
29 item of appropriation to be funded from the small business credit
30 initiative account (21693) ... 18,994,204 ........... (re. $735,000)
31 STATE SMALL BUSINESS CREDIT INITIATIVE PROGRAM
32 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
33 Federal Miscellaneous Operating Grant Fund
34 State Small Business Credit Initiative Account
35 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
36 For programs and activities authorized pursuant to the New York state
37 urban development corporation act, economic development law, or
38 public authorities law including any services and costs associated
39 with administration of such programs and activities, subject to the
40 limitations imposed by federal funding requirements for program
41 funding, contract expenditures, services, expenses, grants, sponsor-
42 ships, administrative costs, and investments to support the U.S.
43 Department of Treasury State Small Business Credit Initiative
44 (SSBCI). Program funding may include but shall not be limited to
45 loan loss reserves, collateral, loan guarantees, insurance, equity
46 investments & debt, and technical assistance. Notwithstanding any
47 provision of law to the contrary, such moneys shall be paid by the
48 department of economic development to the New York state urban
205 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 development corporation from federal operating grant moneys deposit-
2 ed in the state treasury for the federal state small business credit
3 initiative. Provided further that, notwithstanding any inconsistent
4 provision of law, subject to the approval of the director of the
5 budget, funds appropriated herein may be interchanged with any other
6 item of appropriation to be funded from the state small business
7 credit initiative account ..........................................
8 600,000,000 ..................................... (re. $600,000,000)
9 TRAINING AND BUSINESS ASSISTANCE PROGRAM
10 General Fund
11 Local Assistance Account - 10000
12 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
13 For services and expenses of state matching funds for the federal
14 manufacturing extension partnership program.
15 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, the director of the
16 budget may suballocate up to the full amount of this appropriation
17 to any department, agency or authority. No funds shall be expended
18 from this appropriation until the director of the budget has
19 approved a spending plan (81053) ... 1,470,000 .... (re. $1,470,000)
20 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
21 For services and expenses of state matching funds for the federal
22 manufacturing extension partnership program.
23 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, the director of the
24 budget may suballocate up to the full amount of this appropriation
25 to any department, agency or authority. No funds shall be expended
26 from this appropriation until the director of the budget has
27 approved a spending plan (81053) ... 1,470,000 ...... (re. $735,000)
28 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2007, as transferred by chapter
29 53, section 1, of the laws of 2011:
30 For services and expenses related to development of emerging technolo-
31 gy workforce training programs at community colleges (81050) .......
32 2,100,000 ........................................... (re. $240,000)
33 Project Schedule
34 PROJECT AMOUNT
35 ----------------------------------------------------------
36 (thousands)
37 For services and expenses related to emerg-
38 ing technology workforce training at Onon-
39 daga county community college .................. 700,000
40 For services and expenses related to emerg-
41 ing technology workforce training at
42 Monroe county community college ................ 700,000
43 For services and expenses related to emerg-
44 ing technology workforce training at
45 Hudson Valley community college ................ 700,000
46 --------------
206 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
2 Federal Miscellaneous Operating Grants Fund
3 Manufacturing Extension Partnership Program Account - 25517
4 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
5 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, the director of the
6 budget may suballocate up to the full amount of this appropriation
7 to any department, agency or authority (81052) .....................
8 12,000,000 ....................................... (re. $12,000,000)
9 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
10 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, the director of the
11 budget may suballocate up to the full amount of this appropriation
12 to any department, agency or authority (81052) .....................
13 12,000,000 ........................................ (re. $7,695,000)
14 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
15 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, the director of the
16 budget may suballocate up to the full amount of this appropriation
17 to any department, agency or authority (81052) .....................
18 12,000,000 ........................................ (re. $3,543,000)
19 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2013:
20 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, the director of the
21 budget may suballocate up to the full amount of this appropriation
22 to any department, agency or authority (81052) .....................
23 6,000,000 ............................................ (re. $38,000)
24 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2009, as amended by chapter 55,
25 section 1, of the laws of 2010:
26 Maintenance Undistributed
27 For services and expenses or for contracts with municipalities and/or
28 private not-for-profit agencies for the amounts herein provided:
29 General Fund
30 Community Projects Fund - 007
31 Account EE
32 DUTCHESS COMMUNITY COLLEGE ... 10,000 .................. (re. $10,000)
33 EAST MEADOW CHAMBER OF COMMERCE ... 3,500 ............... (re. $3,500)
34 FORT DRUM REGIONAL LIASON ORGANIZATION ... 25,000 ...... (re. $25,000)
35 FULTON COUNTY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY .......................
36 20,000 ............................................... (re. $20,000)
37 GREATER OSWEGO-FULTON CHAMBER OF COMMERCE ... 15,000 ... (re. $15,000)
38 MASSAPEQUA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE ... 1,500 ................ (re. $1,500)
39 WAYNE COUNTY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CORP ... 25,000 ...... (re. $25,000)
207 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2008, as amended by chapter 55,
2 section 1, of the laws of 2012:
3 Maintenance Undistributed
4 For services and expenses or for contracts with municipalities and/or
5 private not-for-profit agencies for the amounts herein provided:
6 General Fund
7 Community Projects Fund - 007
8 Account AA
9 Adirondack Theatre Festival ... 15,000 ................. (re. $15,000)
10 Baldwin Chamber of Commerce ... 30,000 ................. (re. $30,000)
11 Bellerose Business District Development Corp. ........................
12 12,000 ............................................... (re. $12,000)
13 Cayuga County Chamber of Commerce ... 15,000 ............ (re. $1,700)
14 Cayuga County Development Corporation ... 75,000 ....... (re. $75,000)
15 Chamber of Commerce of the Massapequas, Inc., The ....................
16 10,000 ............................................... (re. $10,000)
17 Chamber of Schenectady County ... 25,000 ............... (re. $25,000)
18 Cortland County IDA ... 40,000 .......................... (re. $4,950)
19 Digital Rochester, Inc. ... 10,000 ...................... (re. $2,150)
20 Downtown Middletown District Management Association, Inc. ............
21 10,000 ............................................... (re. $10,000)
22 Farmingdale Chamber of Commerce ... 2,750 ............... (re. $2,750)
23 Hoosick Falls, Village of ... 15,000 ................... (re. $15,000)
24 Job Path ... 5,000 ...................................... (re. $5,000)
25 Lancaster Area Chamber (The) ... 2,500 .................. (re. $2,500)
26 Niagara Tourism & Convention Corporation ... 3,000 ...... (re. $3,000)
27 Niagara USA Chamber ... 12,000 .......................... (re. $3,200)
28 Orange County Chamber of Commerce ... 35,000 ............ (re. $1,200)
29 Orleans County Chamber of Commerce ... 4,000 ............ (re. $4,000)
30 Red Hook Area Chamber of Commerce ... 4,160 ............. (re. $4,160)
31 Saratoga County ... 5,000 ............................... (re. $5,000)
32 Sullivan County Visitors Association, Inc. ... 5,000 .... (re. $5,000)
33 Third Rochester Enterprises Corporation ... 15,000 ...... (re. $3,300)
34 Ticonderoga, Town of ... 50,000 ......................... (re. $3,200)
35 Tupper Lake Arts Council ... 6,000 ...................... (re. $1,700)
36 General Fund
37 Community Projects Fund - 007
38 Account BB
39 Bay Improvement Group ... 5,000 ......................... (re. $5,000)
40 Center for Urban Rehabilitation & Empowerment ........................
41 10,000 ................................................ (re. $1,100)
42 City of Niagara Falls, Dept. of Economic Development .................
43 25,000 ............................................... (re. $25,000)
44 Greenwich Village-Chelsea Chamber of Commerce ... 1,000 . (re. $1,000)
45 Village Alliance District Management Association Inc. ................
46 1,000 ................................................. (re. $1,000)
208 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 General Fund
2 Community Projects Fund - 007
3 Account EE
4 EAST MEADOW CHAMBER OF COMMERCE ... 3,000 ............... (re. $3,000)
5 EAST MEADOW CHAMBER OF COMMERCE ... 5,000 ............... (re. $5,000)
6 GREATER SCHOHARIE BUSINESS ALLIANCE ... 1,500 ........... (re. $1,500)
7 YORKTOWN CHAMBER OF COMMERCE ... 7,000 .................. (re. $7,000)
8 MASSAPEQUA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE ... 2,000 ................ (re. $2,000)
9 ORLEANS COUNTY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE ... 3,400 ............ (re. $3,400)
10 SAG HARBOR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE ... 2,500 ................ (re. $2,500)
11 SARANAC LAKE AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE ... 5,000 ......... (re. $5,000)
12 SCHOHARIE COUNTY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE ... 1,500 .......... (re. $1,500)
13 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2007, as amended by chapter 53,
14 section 1, of the laws of 2012:
15 Maintenance Undistributed
16 For services and expenses or for contracts with municipalities and/or
17 private not-for-profit agencies for the amounts herein provided:
18 General Fund
19 Community Projects Fund - 007
20 Account AA
21 Bellerose Business District Development Corp. ........................
22 12,000 ............................................... (re. $12,000)
23 Brighton Chamber of Commerce ... 30,000 ................ (re. $22,500)
24 Chamber of Commerce of the Greater Ronkonkoma's Inc., The ............
25 22,500 ............................................... (re. $22,500)
26 Chamber of Southern Saratoga County, The ... 25,000 .... (re. $25,000)
27 Community Leadership Development Program of Niagara County, Inc. ...
28 5,000 ................................................. (re. $5,000)
29 Downtown Middletown District Management Association, Inc. ............
30 20,000 ............................................... (re. $20,000)
31 Executive Service Corps Otsego-Delaware, Inc. ........................
32 1,500 ................................................. (re. $1,500)
33 Glen Head Glenwood Business Association ... 15,000 ..... (re. $15,000)
34 Kings Park Chamber of Commerce ... 10,000 .............. (re. $10,000)
35 Long Island Greenbelt Trail Conference ... 15,000 ...... (re. $15,000)
36 Niagara Tourism & Convention Corporation .............................
37 135,000 ............................................. (re. $135,000)
38 Plainview Chamber of Commerce ... 2,500 ................. (re. $2,500)
39 Sugar Hill Development Corporation ... 20,000 ........... (re. $1,500)
40 Wayne County Industrial Development Agency ...........................
41 350,000 ............................................. (re. $350,000)
42 General Fund
43 Community Projects Fund - 007
44 Account BB
209 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 City of Niagara Falls, Dept. of Economic Development .................
2 25,000 ................................................ (re. $4,900)
3 Corona-Elmhurst Center for Economic Development ......................
4 10,000 ............................................... (re. $10,000)
5 General Fund
6 Community Projects Fund - 007
7 Account EE
8 BAINBRIDGE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE ... 1,600 ................ (re. $1,600)
9 HUDSON VALLEY AGRIBUSINESS DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION ...................
10 7,500 ................................................. (re. $7,500)
11 THE SCHENECTADY COUNTY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, INC. .....................
12 10,000 ............................................... (re. $10,000)
13 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2002, as amended by chapter 55,
14 section 1, of the laws of 2004:
15 Maintenance Undistributed
16 General Fund
17 Community Projects Fund - 007
18 Account AA
19 For services and expenses, grants in aid, or for contracts with muni-
20 cipalities and/or private not-for-profit agencies. The funds appro-
21 priated hereby may be suballocated to any department, agency or
22 public authority ... 2,000,000 .................... (re. $2,000,000)
23 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2002, as amended by chapter 55,
24 section 1, of the laws of 2004:
25 Maintenance Undistributed
26 For services and expenses or for contracts with municipalities and/or
27 private not-for-profit agencies for the amounts herein provided:
28 General Fund
29 Community Projects Fund - 007
30 Account EE
31 WSKG Public Broadcasting ... 5,000 ...................... (re. $5,000)
32 The Hicksville Chamber of Commerce ... 10,000 .......... (re. $10,000)
33 Merrick Chamber of Commerce ... 5,000 ................... (re. $5,000)
34 Wayne Economic Development Corporation ... 11,000 ...... (re. $11,000)
35 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2000, as amended by chapter 55,
36 section 1, of the laws of 2008:
37 Maintenance Undistributed
210 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses or for contracts with municipalities and/or
2 private not-for-profit agencies for the amounts herein provided:
3 General Fund
4 Community Projects Fund - 007
5 Account EE
6 Columbia Hudson Partnership ... 5,000 ................... (re. $5,000)
7 Village of Newport ... 4,500 ............................ (re. $4,500)
8 General Fund
9 Community Projects Fund - 007
10 Account II
11 Maintenance Undistributed
12 For services and expenses or for contracts with municipalities and/or
13 private not-for-profit agencies for the amounts herein provided:
14 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2000:
15 For services and expenses of the:
16 Cultural Tourism Grants ... 250,000 .................... (re. $11,707)
17 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 2000, as amended by chapter 53,
18 section 1, of the laws of 2018:
19 Maintenance Undistributed
20 General Fund
21 Community Projects Fund - 007
22 Account CC
23 For services and expenses or for contracts with universities,
24 colleges, municipalities, and/or not-for-profit agencies pursuant to
25 section 99-d of the state finance law. The funds appropriated herein
26 may be suballocated to any department, agency or public authority.
27 Notwithstanding subdivision 5 of section 24 of the state finance law,
28 the $4,000,000 appropriation specified herein shall be available
29 pursuant to one or several plans, which shall include but not be
30 limited to an itemized list of grantees with the amount to be
31 received by each, submitted by the secretary of the assembly ways
32 and means committee, and subject to the approval of the director of
33 the budget .........................................................
34 4,000,000 ......................................... (re. $2,962,000)
35 By chapter 55, section 1, of the laws of 1999, as amended by chapter 55,
36 section 1, of the laws of 2003:
37 Maintenance Undistributed
211 12653-09-2
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses or for contracts with municipalities and/or
2 private not-for-profit agencies for the amounts herein provided:
3 General Fund
4 Community Projects Fund - 007
5 Account EE
6 Bethpage Chamber of Commerce ... 5,000 .................. (re. $5,000)
7 Canton Downtown Improvement Grasse River Project .....................
8 5,000 ................................................. (re. $5,000)
9 Merrick Chamber of Commerce ... 5,000 ................... (re. $5,000)
10 Shiloh Baptist Church ... 7,000 ......................... (re. $7,000)
11 State Council on Waterways ... 10,000 .................. (re. $10,000)
12 Town of Putnam Valley ... 15,000 ....................... (re. $15,000)
212 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For payment according to the following schedule, net of
2 disallowances, refunds, reimbursements and credits:
3 APPROPRIATIONS REAPPROPRIATIONS
4 General Fund ....................... 28,557,387,350 2,023,185,389
5 Special Revenue Funds - Federal .... 5,107,988,000 23,359,424,000
6 Special Revenue Funds - Other ...... 6,518,225,000 82,427,000
7 ---------------- ----------------
8 All Funds ........................ 40,183,600,350 25,465,036,389
9 ================ ================
10 SCHEDULE
11 ADULT CAREER AND CONTINUING EDUCATION SERVICES PROGRAM ..... 228,641,000
12 --------------
13 General Fund
14 Local Assistance Account - 10000
15 For case services provided on or after Octo-
16 ber 1, 2020 to disabled individuals in
17 accordance with economic eligibility
18 criteria developed by the department
19 (21713) ..................................... 54,000,000
20 For services and expenses of independent
21 living centers (21856) ...................... 16,000,000
22 For college readers aid payments (21854) ....... 1,000,000
23 For services and expenses of supported
24 employment and integrated employment
25 opportunities provided on or after October
26 1, 2020:
27 For services and expenses of programs
28 providing or leading to the provision of
29 time-limited services or long-term support
30 services (21741) ............................ 15,160,000
31 For grants to schools for programs involving
32 literacy and basic education for public
33 assistance recipients for the 2022-23
34 school year for those programs adminis-
35 tered by the state education department
36 (23411) ...................................... 1,843,000
37 For competitive grants for adult
38 literacy/education aid to public and
39 private not-for-profit agencies, including
40 but not limited to, 2 and 4 year colleges,
41 community based organizations, libraries,
42 and volunteer literacy organizations and
43 institutions which meet quality standards
44 promulgated by the commissioner of educa-
45 tion to provide programs of basic litera-
46 cy, high school equivalency, and English
213 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 as a second language to persons 16 years
2 of age or older for the remaining payments
3 of the 2021-22 school year and for the
4 2022-23 school year, provided further that
5 no more than $300,000 shall be available
6 for remaining payments for the 2021-22
7 school year (23410) .......................... 7,793,000
8 For additional competitive grants for adult
9 literacy/education aid (23410) ............... 1,500,000
10 --------------
11 Program account subtotal .................. 97,296,000
12 --------------
13 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
14 Federal Education Fund
15 Federal Department of Education Account - 25210
16 For case services provided to individuals
17 with disabilities (21713) ................... 70,000,000
18 For the independent living program (21856) ..... 2,572,000
19 For the supported employment program (21741) ... 2,500,000
20 For grants to schools and other eligible
21 entities for adult basic education, liter-
22 acy, and civics education pursuant to the
23 workforce investment act (21734) ............ 48,704,000
24 --------------
25 Program account subtotal ................. 123,776,000
26 --------------
27 Special Revenue Funds - Other
28 Miscellaneous Special Revenue Fund
29 VESID Social Security Account - 22001
30 For the rehabilitation of social security
31 disability beneficiaries (21852) ............. 6,871,000
32 --------------
33 Program account subtotal ................... 6,871,000
34 --------------
35 Special Revenue Funds - Other
36 Vocational Rehabilitation Fund
37 Vocational Rehabilitation Account - 23051
38 For services and expenses of the special
39 workers' compensation program (21852) .......... 698,000
40 --------------
41 Program account subtotal ..................... 698,000
42 --------------
43 CULTURAL EDUCATION PROGRAM ................................. 136,298,500
44 --------------
214 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 General Fund
2 Local Assistance Account - 10000
3 Aid to public libraries including aid to New
4 York public library (NYPL) and NYPL's
5 science industry and business library.
6 Provided that, notwithstanding any
7 provision of law, rule or regulation to
8 the contrary, such aid, and the state's
9 liability therefor, shall represent
10 fulfillment of the state's obligation for
11 this program (21846) ........................ 96,127,000
12 For additional aid to public libraries ......... 3,500,000
13 For services and expenses of the Schomburg
14 Center for Research in Black Culture ........... 375,000
15 For services and expenses of the Langston
16 Hughes Community Library and Cultural
17 Center of Queens Library ....................... 112,500
18 Aid to educational television and radio.
19 Notwithstanding any provision of law, rule
20 or regulation to the contrary, the amount
21 appropriated herein shall represent
22 fulfillment of the state's obligation for
23 this program (21848) ........................ 14,027,000
24 For additional aid to educational television
25 and radio in accordance with the following
26 sub-schedule (23458) ......................... 7,800,000
27 sub-schedule
28 Instructional content for use
29 in the classroom and remote
30 learning ....................... 3,350,000
31 Digital teaching and learning
32 media tools focused on New
33 York state history, civics,
34 and geography and appropri-
35 ate for all grade levels and
36 subjects ....................... 2,000,000
37 Teacher professional develop-
38 ment toolkit on improving
39 student mental health
40 through trauma-informed
41 care, therapeutic crisis
42 interventions and suicide
43 prevention, in consultation
44 with the office of mental
45 health ........................... 300,000
46 Resources to address social
47 isolation among seniors, in
48 consultation with the office
49 for the aging .................... 750,000
215 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 Special programming and events
2 on the opioid crisis in New
3 York state, in consultation
4 with the office of addiction
5 services and supports .......... 1,400,000
6 --------------
7 Total of sub-schedule .......... 7,800,000
8 --------------
9 --------------
10 Program account subtotal ................. 121,941,500
11 --------------
12 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
13 Federal Miscellaneous Operating Grants Fund
14 Federal Operating Grants Account - 25456
15 For aid to public libraries pursuant to
16 various federal laws including the library
17 services technology act (21851) .............. 5,400,000
18 --------------
19 Program account subtotal ................... 5,400,000
20 --------------
21 Special Revenue Funds - Other
22 Miscellaneous Special Revenue Fund
23 Love Your Library Account - 22119
24 For services and expenses of the statewide
25 summer reading program pursuant to subdi-
26 vision 9 of section 273 of the education
27 law and section 99-l of the state finance
28 law, as added by chapter 303 of the laws
29 of 2004 ........................................ 150,000
30 --------------
31 Program account subtotal ..................... 150,000
32 --------------
33 Special Revenue Funds - Other
34 New York State Local Government Records Management
35 Improvement Fund
36 Local Government Records Management Account - 20501
37 Grants to individual local governments or
38 groups of cooperating local governments as
39 provided in section 57.35 of the arts and
40 cultural affairs law (21849) ................. 8,346,000
41 Aid for documentary heritage grants and aid
42 to eligible archives, libraries, histor-
43 ical societies, museums, and to certain
44 organizations including the state educa-
45 tion department that provide services to
46 such programs (21850) .......................... 461,000
216 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 --------------
2 Program account subtotal ................... 8,807,000
3 --------------
4 OFFICE OF HIGHER EDUCATION AND THE PROFESSIONS PROGRAM ..... 164,505,850
5 --------------
6 General Fund
7 Local Assistance Account - 10000
8 For liberty partnerships program awards as
9 prescribed by section 612 of the education
10 law as added by chapter 425 of the laws of
11 1988. Notwithstanding any other section of
12 law to the contrary, funding for such
13 programs in the 2022-23 fiscal year shall
14 be limited to the amount appropriated
15 herein (21830) .............................. 24,238,360
16 For additional liberty partnerships program
17 awards (21830) ................................. 738,000
18 Unrestricted aid to independent colleges and
19 universities, notwithstanding any other
20 provision of law to the contrary, aid
21 otherwise due and payable in the 2022-23
22 fiscal year shall be limited to the amount
23 appropriated herein; provided that no
24 college or university shall be eligible
25 for a payment in the 2022-23 academic year
26 from this appropriation if the college or
27 university has not submitted to the state
28 education department a plan to improve
29 faculty diversity, which shall include
30 measurable goals and a schedule of report-
31 ing on progress toward meeting such goals
32 (21831) ..................................... 35,129,000
33 For higher education opportunity program
34 awards. Funds appropriated herein shall be
35 used by independent colleges to expand
36 opportunities for the educationally and
37 economically disadvantaged at independent
38 institutions of higher learning, and may
39 be used to support currently enrolled HEOP
40 students in projects that phase out
41 (21832) ..................................... 46,896,420
42 For additional higher education opportunity
43 program awards (21832) ....................... 1,428,000
44 For science and technology entry program
45 (STEP) awards (21834) ....................... 20,871,680
46 For additional science and technology entry
47 program (STEP) awards (21834) .................. 636,000
48 For collegiate science and technology entry
49 program (CSTEP) awards (21835) .............. 15,816,390
217 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For additional collegiate science and tech-
2 nology entry program (CSTEP) awards;
3 notwithstanding any other law to the
4 contrary, such funds shall be used to
5 increase funding for existing CSTEP
6 programs (21835) ............................... 482,000
7 For teacher opportunity corps program awards
8 (21837) ........................................ 450,000
9 For services and expenses of a foster youth
10 initiative, to provide additional services
11 and expenses to expand opportunities
12 through existing postsecondary opportunity
13 programs at the State University of New
14 York, City University of New York, and
15 other degree-granting institutions for
16 foster youth; and to provide any necessary
17 supplemental financial aid for foster
18 youth, which may include the cost of
19 tuition and fees, books, transportation,
20 housing and other expenses as determined
21 by the commissioner to be necessary for
22 such foster youth to attend college;
23 financial aid outreach to foster youth;
24 summer college preparation programs to
25 help foster youth transition to college,
26 prepare them to navigate on-campus
27 systems, and provide preparation in read-
28 ing, writing, and mathematics for foster
29 youth who need it; advisement, counseling,
30 tutoring, and academic assistance for
31 foster youth; and supplemental housing and
32 meals for foster youth. A portion of these
33 funds may be suballocated to other state
34 departments, agencies, the State Universi-
35 ty of New York, and the City University of
36 New York. Notwithstanding any law, rule,
37 or regulation to the contrary, funds
38 provided to the State University of New
39 York may be utilized to support state-op-
40 erated campuses, statutory colleges, or
41 community colleges as appropriate (55913) .... 7,920,000
42 For additional services and expenses of a
43 foster youth initiative (55913) ................ 241,000
44 For state financial assistance to expand
45 high needs nursing programs at private
46 colleges and universities in accordance
47 with section 6401-a of the education law
48 (21838) ........................................ 941,000
49 For services and expenses of the national
50 board for professional teaching standards
51 certification grant program for the 2022-
52 23 school year (21785) ......................... 368,000
218 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For enhancing supports and services for
2 students with disabilities enrolled in New
3 York State degree granting colleges and
4 universities (23344) ......................... 2,000,000
5 For services and expenses of Latino U
6 College Access (LUCA) .......................... 350,000
7 For services and expenses of the Dental
8 Grants Program. Funds appropriated herein
9 shall be available for teaching students
10 to work with individuals with disabilities
11 ................................................ 750,000
12 Niagara University - First Responder Emer-
13 gency Management Disability Awareness
14 Training Program ................................ 50,000
15 For services and expenses of On Point for
16 College, Inc ................................... 200,000
17 --------------
18 Program account subtotal ................. 159,505,850
19 --------------
20 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
21 Federal Education Fund
22 Federal Department of Education Account - 25210
23 For grants to schools and other eligible
24 entities for programs pursuant to various
25 federal laws including, but not limited
26 to: title II supporting effective instruc-
27 tion.
28 Notwithstanding any provision of law to the
29 contrary, funds appropriated herein may be
30 suballocated, subject to the approval of
31 the director of the budget, to any state
32 agency or department, and interchanged to
33 other accounts, to accomplish the purpose
34 of this appropriation. A portion of this
35 appropriation may be interchanged to other
36 accounts, as needed to accomplish the
37 intent of this appropriation (23419) ......... 5,000,000
38 --------------
39 Program account subtotal ................... 5,000,000
40 --------------
41 OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT SERVICES PROGRAM ........................ 5,214,000
42 --------------
43 Special Revenue Funds - Other
44 Combined Expendable Trust Fund
45 Grants Account - 20191
46 For services and expenses related to the
47 administration of funds, including grants
219 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 to local recipients, paid to the education
2 department from private foundations,
3 corporations and individuals and from
4 public or private funds received as
5 payment in lieu of honorarium for services
6 rendered by employees which are related to
7 such employees' official duties or respon-
8 sibilities.
9 Provided further that, notwithstanding any
10 inconsistent provision of law, funds
11 appropriated herein may be transferred to
12 any other combined expendable trust fund,
13 subject to the approval of the director of
14 the budget, as needed to accomplish the
15 intent of this appropriation (21744) ......... 5,214,000
16 --------------
17 OFFICE OF PREKINDERGARTEN THROUGH GRADE TWELVE EDUCATION
18 PROGRAM ............................................... 37,817,956,000
19 --------------
20 General Fund
21 Local Assistance Account - 10000
22 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision
23 of law, for general support for public
24 schools for the 2022-23 state fiscal year,
25 including aid payable pursuant to section
26 3609-d of the education law, as provided
27 herein.
28 Notwithstanding any provision of law to the
29 contrary, for the 2022-23 school year,
30 foundation aid shall be equal to the sum
31 of the total foundation aid base computed
32 pursuant to paragraph j of subdivision 1
33 of section 3602 of education law plus the
34 greater of (a) the product of 50 percent
35 (0.5) multiplied by the positive differ-
36 ence, if any, of (1) total foundation aid
37 pursuant to paragraph a of subdivision 4
38 of section 3602 of education law less (2)
39 the total foundation aid base computed
40 pursuant to paragraph j of subdivision 1
41 of section 3602 of education law, or (b)
42 the product of 3 percent (0.03) multiplied
43 by the total foundation aid base computed
44 pursuant to paragraph j of subdivision 1
45 of section 3602 of education law.
46 Notwithstanding any provision of law to the
47 contrary, for the 2022-23 school year,
48 each school district shall be eligible to
49 receive a universal prekindergarten grant
220 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 equal to the amount set forth on the
2 school aid computer listing produced by
3 the commissioner of education in support
4 of the enacted budget for the 2022-2023
5 school year and equal to the sum of (a)
6 the amount set forth for such school
7 district as "UNIVERSAL PREKINDERGARTEN
8 ALLOCATION" based on an electronic data
9 file used to produce the school aid
10 computer listing produced by the commis-
11 sioner of education in support of the
12 enacted budget for the 2021-2022 school
13 year and entitled "SA212-2" excluding
14 amounts subject to section 3602-ee of
15 education law plus (b) funds allocated
16 pursuant to a universal prekindergarten
17 expansion prescribed in subdivision 20 of
18 section 3602-e of education law as of the
19 school aid computer listing produced by
20 the commissioner of education in support
21 of the enacted budget for the 2022-2023
22 school year, provided that the maximum
23 grant shall not exceed the total actual
24 grant expenditures incurred by the school
25 district in the school year in which funds
26 are granted as approved by the commission-
27 er.
28 For purposes of this appropriation:
29 (i) "Funds allocated pursuant to a universal
30 prekindergarten expansion prescribed in
31 subdivision 20 of section 3602-e of the
32 education law" shall be equal to the
33 amount set forth on the school aid comput-
34 er listing produced by the commissioner in
35 support of the enacted budget for the
36 2022-2023 school year, calculated as the
37 product of expansion slots multiplied by
38 double the selected aid per prekindergar-
39 ten pupil calculated pursuant to subpara-
40 graph (i) of paragraph b of subdivision 10
41 of section 3602 of the education law,
42 where such expansion slots shall serve
43 additional full-day four-year-old prekin-
44 dergarten pupils in universal prekinder-
45 garten programs.
46 (ii) "Expansion slots" shall be equal to the
47 amount set forth on the school aid comput-
48 er listing produced by the commissioner in
49 support of the enacted budget for the
50 2022-2023 school year, calculated as the
51 positive difference, if any, of the prod-
52 uct of 0.5919 multiplied by unserved four-
221 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 year-old prekindergarten pupils as defined
2 in subparagraph (iv) of paragraph b of
3 subdivision 10 of section 3602-e of the
4 education law, less the eligible four-
5 year-old students. If such expansion slots
6 are greater than or equal to 10 but less
7 than 20, the expansion slots shall be 20;
8 if such expansion slots are less than 10,
9 the expansion slots shall be 0; and for a
10 city school district in a city having a
11 population of one million or more, the
12 expansion slots shall be 0.
13 (iii) "Eligible four-year-old students"
14 shall be equal to the amount set forth on
15 the school aid computer listing produced
16 by the commissioner in support of the
17 enacted budget for the 2022-2023 school
18 year, calculated as the sum of (1) eligi-
19 ble full-day four-year-old prekindergarten
20 pupils as defined in subparagraph (ii) of
21 paragraph b of subdivision 10 of section
22 3602-e of the education law for the base
23 year plus (2) the product of 0.5 and the
24 eligible half-day four-year-old prekinder-
25 garten pupils as defined in subparagraph
26 (ii) of paragraph b of subdivision 10 of
27 section 3602-e of the education law for
28 the base year, plus (3) the maximum number
29 of eligible students who may be served by
30 uncertified classroom teachers in full-day
31 prekindergarten programs funded by grants
32 pursuant to section 3602-ee of the educa-
33 tion law in the base year, plus (4) expan-
34 sion slots for the base year pursuant to
35 subdivision 19 of section 3602-e of the
36 education law.
37 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision
38 of law, for the purposes of this appropri-
39 ation and of calculating the allocable
40 growth amount for the 2022-23 school year
41 pursuant to paragraph gg of subdivision 1
42 of section 3602 of the education law, the
43 allowable growth amount shall equal the
44 sum of (a) the product of the positive
45 difference of the personal income growth
46 index minus one, multiplied by the state-
47 wide total of the sum of (1) the appor-
48 tionments due and owing during the base
49 year to school districts and boards of
50 cooperative educational services from the
51 general support for public schools as
52 computed based on an electronic data file
222 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 used to produce the school aid computer
2 listing produced by the commissioner of
3 education in support of the enacted budget
4 for the base year plus (2) the competitive
5 awards amount for the base year plus (b)
6 $766,410,000. Provided that the personal
7 income growth index shall equal the aver-
8 age of the quotients for each year in the
9 period commencing with the state fiscal
10 year nine years prior to the state fiscal
11 year in which the base year began and
12 finishing with the state fiscal year prior
13 to the state fiscal year in which the base
14 year began of the total personal income of
15 the state for each such year divided by
16 the total personal income of the state for
17 the immediately preceding state fiscal
18 year, but not less than one.
19 Provided further that notwithstanding any
20 provision of law to the contrary, the
21 competitive awards amount for purposes of
22 calculating the allocable growth amount
23 shall be $2,000,000 for the 2022-23 school
24 year.
25 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision
26 of law, for all school districts, the
27 apportionment of general support for
28 public schools for the 2022-23 school year
29 in excess of the amount apportioned to
30 such school district in the 2021-22 school
31 year shall be withheld until (i) such
32 school district has submitted to the
33 commissioner of education and the director
34 of the budget a detailed statement of the
35 total funding allocation for each school
36 in the district for the 2022-23 school
37 year, in a statewide uniform form devel-
38 oped by the director of the budget, in
39 consultation with the commissioner of
40 education, and (ii) the commissioner of
41 education and the director of the budget
42 issue a determination of compliance in
43 writing of such school district's state-
44 ment of total funding allocation as
45 required by subdivision 1 of section 3614
46 of the education law, provided that such
47 school districts shall submit such state-
48 ment to the commissioner of education and
49 the director of the budget on or before
50 September 2, 2022.
51 Provided further that such school districts
52 shall adhere to and complete the
223 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 prescribed form accurately and fully, and
2 shall make such statement publicly avail-
3 able and on the district website.
4 Provided further that the director of the
5 budget shall request in such form only
6 information that is known to, or may be
7 ascertained or estimated by, the district.
8 Provided further that each such local educa-
9 tional agency shall include in such state-
10 ment the approach used to allocate funds
11 to each school and that such statement
12 shall include but not be limited to sepa-
13 rate entries for each individual school,
14 demographic data for the school, per pupil
15 funding level, source of funds, and
16 uniform decision rules regarding allo-
17 cation of centralized spending to individ-
18 ual schools from all funding sources.
19 Provided further that within 45 days of
20 submission of such statement by a school
21 district, the commissioner of education
22 and director of the budget shall review
23 such statement and determine whether the
24 statement is complete and is in the format
25 required. If such statement is determined
26 to be complete and in the format required,
27 a written acknowledgement of such shall be
28 sent to the school district. If no deter-
29 mination is made by the commissioner of
30 education and the director of the budget
31 within 45 days of submission of the state-
32 ment, such statement shall be deemed
33 approved.
34 Should the commissioner of education or the
35 director of the budget request additional
36 information from the school district to
37 determine completeness, the district shall
38 submit such requested information to the
39 commissioner of education and the director
40 of the budget within 30 days of such
41 request and the commissioner of education
42 and director of the budget's deadline for
43 review and determination shall be extended
44 by 45 days from the date of submission of
45 the additional requested information. If
46 the commissioner of education or director
47 of the budget determine a school
48 district's spending statement to be
49 noncompliant, such school district shall
50 be allowed to submit a revised spending
51 statement at any time.
224 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 Provided further that if a school district
2 fails to submit a statement that is
3 complete and in the format required on or
4 before September 2, 2022 or if the commis-
5 sioner of education or director of the
6 budget determine the school district's
7 spending statement to be noncompliant, a
8 written explanation shall be provided and
9 the school district will have 30 days to
10 cure.
11 If the school district does not cure within
12 30 days, at the joint direction of the
13 director of the budget and the commission-
14 er of education, the comptroller of the
15 city in which such school district is
16 situated, or if the city does not have an
17 elected comptroller the chief financial
18 officer of the city, or for school
19 districts not located in a city, the chief
20 financial officer of the town in which the
21 majority of the school district is situ-
22 ated shall be authorized, at his or her
23 discretion, to obtain appropriate informa-
24 tion from the school district, and shall
25 be authorized to complete such form and
26 submit such statement to the director of
27 the budget and the commissioner of educa-
28 tion for approval.
29 Provided further that where the comptroller
30 or chief financial officer exercises the
31 authority to submit such form, such
32 submission shall occur within 60 days
33 following notification of the school
34 district's failure to cure.
35 Provided further that nothing in the preced-
36 ing paragraph shall preclude a school
37 district from submitting a spending state-
38 ment for approval by the director of the
39 budget and the commissioner of education
40 at any time.
41 Provided further that any apportionment
42 withheld pursuant to this appropriation
43 shall not have any effect on the base year
44 calculation for use in the subsequent
45 school year.
46 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision
47 of law, for the 2022-23 school year, any
48 school district with an underfunded high-
49 need school shall prioritize all such
50 underfunded high-need schools among its
51 individual schools, and shall submit to
52 the commissioner on or before September 1,
225 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 2022 a report specifying how such district
2 effectuated appropriate funding for the
3 underfunded high-need schools. Provided
4 further, on or before May 1, 2022, the
5 director of the budget shall produce a
6 list of underfunded high need schools, as
7 defined herein. Provided, however, that
8 the director of the budget shall exclude
9 from this list schools within district 75
10 of the city school district of New York,
11 schools that are of the same school type
12 within a district but do not serve any
13 grade levels that overlap, schools serving
14 only students in prekindergarten, or any
15 other schools with irregular or outlying
16 properties.
17 Provided further, for purposes of this
18 appropriation:
19 (1) "school type" for any school shall mean
20 elementary, middle, high, pre-k only, or
21 K-12, as defined by the commissioner of
22 education, provided that for purposes of
23 this appropriation, a "middle" school
24 shall include any school with the grade
25 organization of either a middle school or
26 a junior high school, and a "high" school
27 shall include any school with the grade
28 organization of either a senior high
29 school or a junior-senior high school;
30 (2) "underfunded high-need school" shall
31 mean a school within a school district
32 that has been deemed both a significantly
33 high need school and a significantly low
34 funded school;
35 (3) "student need index" for any school
36 shall mean the quotient arrived at when
37 dividing the weighted student enrollment
38 as defined herein by the K-12 enrollment
39 for the 2021-22 school year as reported on
40 the statement required for such school
41 year pursuant to section 3614 of the
42 education law;
43 (4) "average student need index by school
44 type" shall mean the quotient arrived at
45 when dividing the sum of weighted student
46 enrollment as defined herein for all
47 schools within a school district of the
48 same school type by the K-12 enrollment
49 for the 2021-22 school year for all
50 schools in a school district of the same
51 school type as reported on the statement
226 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 required for such school year pursuant to
2 section 3614 of the education law;
3 (5) "weighted student enrollment" for any
4 school shall mean the sum of (i) K-12
5 enrollment plus (ii) the product of the
6 number of students eligible to receive
7 free and reduced price lunch multiplied by
8 0.65 plus (iii) the product of the number
9 of English language learners multiplied by
10 0.5, plus (iv) the product of the number
11 of students with disabilities multiplied
12 by 1.41, for the 2021-22 school year as
13 reported on the statement required for
14 such school year pursuant to section 3614
15 of the education law;
16 (6) "significantly high need school" shall
17 mean a school with a student need index
18 greater than the product of the average
19 student need index by school type within
20 the school district multiplied by 1.05;
21 (7) "per pupil expenditures" for any school
22 shall mean the quotient arrived at when
23 dividing the expenditure amount as
24 reported for the 2021-22 school year in
25 the statement required for such school
26 year pursuant to section 3614 of the
27 education law, excluding expenditures for
28 prekindergarten and preschool special
29 education programs and central district
30 costs by the weighted student enrollment
31 of the school;
32 (8) "average per pupil expenditures by
33 school type" shall mean the quotient
34 arrived at when dividing (i) the sum of
35 the expenditure amounts reported for the
36 2021-22 school year in the statement
37 required for such school year pursuant to
38 section 3614 of the education law, exclud-
39 ing expenditures for prekindergarten and
40 preschool special education programs and
41 central district costs, for all schools
42 within a school district of the same
43 school type by (ii) the weighted student
44 enrollment for the 2021-22 school year for
45 all schools in a school district of the
46 same school type as reported on the state-
47 ment required for such school year pursu-
48 ant to section 3614 of the education law;
49 (9) "significantly low funded school" shall
50 mean a school within a school district
51 that has per pupil expenditures less than
52 the product of the average per pupil
227 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 expenditures by school type within the
2 school district multiplied by 0.95.
3 Provided further that notwithstanding any
4 provision of law to the contrary, for the
5 2022-23 school year, the apportionments
6 computed pursuant to subdivisions 5-a, 12
7 and 16 of section 3602 of the education
8 law shall equal the amounts set forth,
9 respectively, for such school district as
10 "SUPPLEMENTAL PUB EXCESS COST", "ACADEMIC
11 ENHANCEMENT" and "HIGH TAX AID" under the
12 heading "2021-22 ESTIMATED AIDS" in the
13 school aid computer listing produced by
14 the commissioner of education in support
15 of the enacted budget for the 2021-22
16 school year and entitled "SA212-2".
17 Provided further that to the extent required
18 by federal law, each board of cooperative
19 educational services receiving a payment
20 pursuant to section 3609-d of the educa-
21 tion law in the 2022-23 school year shall
22 be required to set aside from such payment
23 an amount not less than the amount of
24 state aid received pursuant to subdivision
25 5 of section 1950 of the education law in
26 the base year that was attributable to
27 cooperative services agreements (CO-SERs)
28 for career education, as determined by the
29 commissioner of education, and shall be
30 required to use such amount to support
31 career education programs in the current
32 year.
33 Provided further that, notwithstanding any
34 inconsistent provision of law, subject to
35 the approval of the director of the budg-
36 et, funds appropriated herein may be
37 interchanged with any other item of appro-
38 priation for general support for public
39 schools within the general fund local
40 assistance account office of prekindergar-
41 ten through grade 12 education program.
42 Notwithstanding any other law, rule or regu-
43 lation to the contrary, funds appropriated
44 herein shall be available for payment of
45 financial assistance net of any disallow-
46 ances, refunds, reimbursement and credits,
47 and may be suballocated to other depart-
48 ments and agencies to accomplish the
49 intent of this appropriation subject to
50 the approval of the director of the budg-
51 et. Notwithstanding any provision of law
228 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 to the contrary, funds appropriated herein
2 shall be available for payment of liabil-
3 ities heretofore accrued or hereafter to
4 accrue (21701) .......................... 16,779,287,000
5 For remaining 2021-22 and prior school year
6 obligations, including aid for such school
7 years payable pursuant to section 3609-d
8 of the education law, provided that
9 notwithstanding any provision of law to
10 the contrary, subject to the approval of
11 the director of the budget, funds appro-
12 priated herein may be interchanged with
13 any other item of appropriation for gener-
14 al support for public schools within the
15 general fund local assistance account
16 office of prekindergarten through grade
17 twelve education program.
18 Notwithstanding any other law, rule or regu-
19 lation to the contrary, funds appropriated
20 herein shall be available for payment of
21 financial assistance net of any disallow-
22 ances, refunds, reimbursement and credits,
23 and may be suballocated to other depart-
24 ments and agencies to accomplish the
25 intent of this appropriation subject to
26 the approval of the director of the budg-
27 et. Notwithstanding any provision of law
28 to the contrary, funds appropriated herein
29 shall be available for payment of liabil-
30 ities heretofore accrued or hereafter to
31 accrue (21882) ........................... 8,195,943,000
32 Funds appropriated herein shall be available
33 for reimbursement for the education of
34 homeless children and youth for the 2022-
35 23 school year pursuant to section 3209 of
36 the education law, including reimbursement
37 for expenditures for the transportation of
38 homeless children pursuant to paragraph b
39 of subdivision 4 of section 3209 of the
40 education law, up to the amount of the
41 approved costs of the most cost-effective
42 mode of transportation, in accordance with
43 a plan prepared by the commissioner of
44 education and approved by the director of
45 the budget provided that in the 2022-23
46 state fiscal year the sum of $30,000 may
47 be transferred to the credit of the state
48 purposes account of the state education
49 department to carry out the purposes of
50 such section relating to reimbursement of
51 youth shelters transporting such pupils
52 and provided further that, notwithstanding
229 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 any inconsistent provision of law, subject
2 to the approval of the director of the
3 budget, funds appropriated herein may be
4 interchanged with any other item of appro-
5 priation for general support for public
6 schools within the general fund local
7 assistance account office of prekindergar-
8 ten through grade twelve education
9 program.
10 Notwithstanding any other law, rule or regu-
11 lation to the contrary, funds appropriated
12 herein shall be available for payment of
13 financial assistance net of any disallow-
14 ances, refunds, reimbursement and credits,
15 and may be suballocated to other depart-
16 ments and agencies to accomplish the
17 intent of this appropriation subject to
18 the approval of the director of the budg-
19 et. Notwithstanding any provision of law
20 to the contrary, funds appropriated herein
21 shall be available for payment of liabil-
22 ities heretofore accrued or hereafter to
23 accrue (21746) .............................. 22,558,000
24 Funds appropriated herein shall be available
25 during the 2022-23 school year for bilin-
26 gual education grants to school districts,
27 boards of cooperative educational
28 services, colleges and universities, and
29 an entity, chosen through a competitive
30 procurement process, to assist schools and
31 districts to conduct self assessments to
32 identify areas that need to be strength-
33 ened and to ensure compliance with the
34 various federal, state and local laws that
35 govern limited English proficiency and
36 English language learning education,
37 provided, however, that the sum of such
38 grants shall not exceed $18,500,000 for
39 the 2022-23 school year, and provided
40 further that, notwithstanding any incon-
41 sistent provision of law, subject to the
42 approval of the director of the budget,
43 funds appropriated herein may be inter-
44 changed with any other item of appropri-
45 ation for general support for public
46 schools within the general fund local
47 assistance account office of prekindergar-
48 ten through grade twelve education
49 program.
50 Notwithstanding any other law, rule or regu-
51 lation to the contrary, funds appropriated
52 herein shall be available for payment of
230 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 financial assistance net of any disallow-
2 ances, refunds, reimbursement and credits,
3 and may be suballocated to other depart-
4 ments and agencies to accomplish the
5 intent of this appropriation subject to
6 the approval of the director of the budg-
7 et. Notwithstanding any provision of law
8 to the contrary, funds appropriated herein
9 shall be available for payment of liabil-
10 ities heretofore accrued or hereafter to
11 accrue (21747) .............................. 12,950,000
12 Funds appropriated herein shall be available
13 in the 2022-23 school year for school
14 districts and boards of cooperative educa-
15 tional services applications for funding
16 of approved learning technology programs
17 approved by the commissioner of education,
18 including services benefiting nonpublic
19 school students, pursuant to regulations
20 promulgated by the commissioner of educa-
21 tion and approved by the director of the
22 budget. Provided, however, that the sum of
23 such grants shall not exceed $3,285,000
24 for the 2022-23 school year, and provided
25 further that, notwithstanding any incon-
26 sistent provision of law, subject to the
27 approval of the director of the budget,
28 funds appropriated herein may be inter-
29 changed with any other item of appropri-
30 ation for general support for public
31 schools within the general fund local
32 assistance account office of prekindergar-
33 ten through grade twelve education
34 program.
35 Notwithstanding any other law, rule or regu-
36 lation to the contrary, funds appropriated
37 herein shall be available for payment of
38 financial assistance net of any disallow-
39 ances, refunds, reimbursement and credits,
40 and may be suballocated to other depart-
41 ments and agencies to accomplish the
42 intent of this appropriation subject to
43 the approval of the director of the budg-
44 et. Notwithstanding any provision of law
45 to the contrary, funds appropriated herein
46 shall be available for payment of liabil-
47 ities heretofore accrued or hereafter to
48 accrue (21748) ............................... 2,300,000
49 Funds appropriated herein shall be available
50 for the voluntary interdistrict urban-su-
51 burban transfer program aid pursuant to
52 subdivision 15 of section 3602 of the
231 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 education law for the 2022-23 school year,
2 provided that notwithstanding any incon-
3 sistent provision of law, subject to the
4 approval of the director of the budget,
5 funds appropriated herein may be inter-
6 changed with any other item of appropri-
7 ation for general support for public
8 schools within the general fund local
9 assistance account office of prekindergar-
10 ten through grade twelve education
11 program.
12 Notwithstanding any other law, rule or regu-
13 lation to the contrary, funds appropriated
14 herein shall be available for payment of
15 financial assistance net of any disallow-
16 ances, refunds, reimbursement and credits,
17 and may be suballocated to other depart-
18 ments and agencies to accomplish the
19 intent of this appropriation subject to
20 the approval of the director of the budg-
21 et. Notwithstanding any provision of law
22 to the contrary, funds appropriated herein
23 shall be available for payment of liabil-
24 ities heretofore accrued or hereafter to
25 accrue (21749) ............................... 6,013,000
26 Funds appropriated herein shall be available
27 for additional apportionments of building
28 aid for school districts educating pupils
29 residing on Indian reservations calculated
30 pursuant to subdivision 6-a of section
31 3602 of the education law for the 2022-23
32 school year provided that, notwithstanding
33 any inconsistent provision of law, subject
34 to the approval of the director of the
35 budget, funds appropriated herein may be
36 interchanged with any other item of appro-
37 priation for general support for public
38 schools within the general fund local
39 assistance account office of prekindergar-
40 ten through grade twelve education
41 program.
42 Notwithstanding any other law, rule or regu-
43 lation to the contrary, funds appropriated
44 herein shall be available for payment of
45 financial assistance net of any disallow-
46 ances, refunds, reimbursement and credits,
47 and may be suballocated to other depart-
48 ments and agencies to accomplish the
49 intent of this appropriation subject to
50 the approval of the director of the budg-
51 et. Notwithstanding any provision of law
232 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 to the contrary, funds appropriated herein
2 shall be available for payment of liabil-
3 ities heretofore accrued or hereafter to
4 accrue (21750) ............................... 3,500,000
5 Funds appropriated herein shall be available
6 during the 2022-23 school year for the
7 education of youth incarcerated in county
8 correctional facilities pursuant to subdi-
9 vision 13 of section 3602 of the education
10 law, provided that notwithstanding any
11 inconsistent provision of law, subject to
12 the approval of the director of the budg-
13 et, funds appropriated herein may be
14 interchanged with any other item of appro-
15 priation for general support for public
16 schools within the general fund local
17 assistance account office of prekindergar-
18 ten through grade twelve education
19 program.
20 Notwithstanding any other law, rule or regu-
21 lation to the contrary, funds appropriated
22 herein shall be available for payment of
23 financial assistance net of any disallow-
24 ances, refunds, reimbursement and credits,
25 and may be suballocated to other depart-
26 ments and agencies to accomplish the
27 intent of this appropriation subject to
28 the approval of the director of the budg-
29 et. Notwithstanding any provision of law
30 to the contrary, funds appropriated herein
31 shall be available for payment of liabil-
32 ities heretofore accrued or hereafter to
33 accrue (21751) ............................... 4,200,000
34 Funds appropriated herein shall be available
35 for the 2022-23 school year for the educa-
36 tion of students who reside in a school
37 operated by the office of mental health or
38 the office for people with developmental
39 disabilities pursuant to subdivision 5 of
40 section 3202 of the education law,
41 provided that notwithstanding any incon-
42 sistent provision of law, subject to the
43 approval of the director of the budget,
44 funds appropriated herein may be inter-
45 changed with any other item of appropri-
46 ation for general support for public
47 schools within the general fund local
48 assistance account office of prekindergar-
49 ten through grade twelve education
50 program.
51 Notwithstanding any other law, rule or regu-
52 lation to the contrary, funds appropriated
233 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 herein shall be available for payment of
2 financial assistance net of any disallow-
3 ances, refunds, reimbursement and credits,
4 and may be suballocated to other depart-
5 ments and agencies to accomplish the
6 intent of this appropriation subject to
7 the approval of the director of the budg-
8 et. Notwithstanding any provision of law
9 to the contrary, funds appropriated herein
10 shall be available for payment of liabil-
11 ities heretofore accrued or hereafter to
12 accrue (21752) .............................. 33,600,000
13 Funds appropriated herein shall be available
14 for building aid payable in the 2022-23
15 school years to special act school
16 districts, provided that, subject to the
17 approval of the director of the budget,
18 such funds may be used for payments to the
19 dormitory authority on behalf of eligible
20 special act school districts pursuant to
21 chapter 737 of the laws of 1988 provided
22 that, notwithstanding any inconsistent
23 provision of law, subject to the approval
24 of the director of the budget, funds
25 appropriated herein may be interchanged
26 with any other item of appropriation for
27 general support for public schools within
28 the general fund local assistance account
29 office of prekindergarten through grade
30 twelve education program.
31 Notwithstanding any other law, rule or regu-
32 lation to the contrary, funds appropriated
33 herein shall be available for payment of
34 financial assistance net of any disallow-
35 ances, refunds, reimbursement and credits,
36 and may be suballocated to other depart-
37 ments and agencies to accomplish the
38 intent of this appropriation subject to
39 the approval of the director of the budg-
40 et. Notwithstanding any provision of law
41 to the contrary, funds appropriated herein
42 shall be available for payment of liabil-
43 ities heretofore accrued or hereafter to
44 accrue (21753) ............................... 1,890,000
45 Funds appropriated herein shall be available
46 for school bus driver training grants,
47 provided that for aid payable in the
48 2022-23 school year, the commissioner of
49 education shall allocate school bus driver
50 training grants, not to exceed $400,000 in
51 the 2022-23 school year, to school
52 districts and boards of cooperative educa-
234 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 tional services pursuant to sections
2 3650-a, 3650-b and 3650-c of the education
3 law, or for contracts directly with not-
4 for-profit educational organizations for
5 the purposes of this appropriation,
6 provided that notwithstanding any incon-
7 sistent provision of law, subject to the
8 approval of the director of the budget,
9 funds appropriated herein may be inter-
10 changed with any other item of appropri-
11 ation for general support for public
12 schools within the general fund local
13 assistance account office of prekindergar-
14 ten through grade twelve education
15 program.
16 Notwithstanding any other law, rule or regu-
17 lation to the contrary, funds appropriated
18 herein shall be available for payment of
19 financial assistance net of any disallow-
20 ances, refunds, reimbursement and credits,
21 and may be suballocated to other depart-
22 ments and agencies to accomplish the
23 intent of this appropriation subject to
24 the approval of the director of the budg-
25 et. Notwithstanding any provision of law
26 to the contrary, funds appropriated herein
27 shall be available for payment of liabil-
28 ities heretofore accrued or hereafter to
29 accrue (21754) ................................. 280,000
30 Funds appropriated herein shall be available
31 for services and expenses of a $2,000,000
32 teacher mentor intern program in the
33 2022-23 school year, provided that,
34 notwithstanding any inconsistent provision
35 of law, subject to the approval of the
36 director of the budget, funds appropriated
37 herein may be interchanged with any other
38 item of appropriation for general support
39 for public schools within the general fund
40 local assistance account office of prekin-
41 dergarten through grade twelve education
42 program.
43 Notwithstanding any other law, rule or regu-
44 lation to the contrary, funds appropriated
45 herein shall be available for payment of
46 financial assistance net of any disallow-
47 ances, refunds, reimbursement and credits,
48 and may be suballocated to other depart-
49 ments and agencies to accomplish the
50 intent of this appropriation subject to
51 the approval of the director of the budg-
52 et. Notwithstanding any provision of law
235 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 to the contrary, funds appropriated herein
2 shall be available for payment of liabil-
3 ities heretofore accrued or hereafter to
4 accrue (23485) ............................... 1,400,000
5 Funds appropriated herein shall be available
6 for services and expenses of a $12,000,000
7 special academic improvement grants
8 program in the 2022-23 school year payable
9 pursuant to subdivision 11 of section 3641
10 of the education law, provided that
11 notwithstanding any provisions of law to
12 the contrary, such funds shall be paid in
13 accordance with a schedule developed by
14 the commissioner of education and approved
15 by the director of the budget provided
16 that, notwithstanding any inconsistent
17 provision of law, subject to the approval
18 of the director of the budget, funds
19 appropriated herein may be interchanged
20 with any other item of appropriation for
21 general support for public schools within
22 the general fund local assistance account
23 office of prekindergarten through grade
24 twelve education program.
25 Notwithstanding any other law, rule or regu-
26 lation to the contrary, funds appropriated
27 herein shall be available for payment of
28 financial assistance net of any disallow-
29 ances, refunds, reimbursement and credits,
30 and may be suballocated to other depart-
31 ments and agencies to accomplish the
32 intent of this appropriation subject to
33 the approval of the director of the budg-
34 et. Notwithstanding any provision of law
35 to the contrary, funds appropriated herein
36 shall be available for payment of liabil-
37 ities heretofore accrued or hereafter to
38 accrue (21755) ............................... 8,400,000
39 For the education of Native Americans in the
40 2022-23 or prior school years. Funds
41 appropriated herein shall be considered
42 general support for public schools and
43 shall be paid in accordance with a sched-
44 ule developed by the commissioner of
45 education and approved by the director of
46 the budget. Notwithstanding any provision
47 of law to the contrary, subject to the
48 approval of the director of the budget,
49 funds appropriated herein may be inter-
50 changed with any other item of appropri-
51 ation for general support for public
52 schools within the general fund local
236 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 assistance account office of prekindergar-
2 ten through grade twelve education
3 program.
4 Notwithstanding any other law, rule or regu-
5 lation to the contrary, funds appropriated
6 herein shall be available for payment of
7 financial assistance net of any disallow-
8 ances, refunds, reimbursement and credits,
9 and may be suballocated to other depart-
10 ments and agencies to accomplish the
11 intent of this appropriation subject to
12 the approval of the director of the budg-
13 et. Notwithstanding any provision of law
14 to the contrary, funds appropriated herein
15 shall be available for payment of liabil-
16 ities heretofore accrued or hereafter to
17 accrue (21756) .............................. 45,500,000
18 For school health services grants to public
19 schools totaling $13,840,000 in the 2022-
20 23 school year; provided that, notwith-
21 standing any provisions of law to the
22 contrary, in addition to any other appor-
23 tionment, such grants shall only be paya-
24 ble to any city school district in a city
25 having a population in excess of 125,000,
26 and less than 1,000,000 inhabitants, and
27 such district shall be eligible to receive
28 the same amount it was eligible to receive
29 for the 2010-11 school year. Funds appro-
30 priated herein shall be considered general
31 support for public schools and shall be
32 paid in accordance with a schedule devel-
33 oped by the commissioner of education and
34 approved by the director of the budget.
35 Notwithstanding any provision of law to the
36 contrary, subject to the approval of the
37 director of the budget, funds appropriated
38 herein may be interchanged with any other
39 item of appropriation for general support
40 for public schools within the general fund
41 local assistance account office of prekin-
42 dergarten through grade twelve education
43 program.
44 Notwithstanding any other law, rule or regu-
45 lation to the contrary, funds appropriated
46 herein shall be available for payment of
47 financial assistance net of any disallow-
48 ances, refunds, reimbursement and credits,
49 and may be suballocated to other depart-
50 ments and agencies to accomplish the
51 intent of this appropriation subject to
52 the approval of the director of the budg-
237 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 et. Notwithstanding any provision of law
2 to the contrary, funds appropriated herein
3 shall be available for payment of liabil-
4 ities heretofore accrued or hereafter to
5 accrue (21757) ............................... 9,688,000
6 For additional school health services grants
7 to the Buffalo City School District for
8 the 2022-23 school year ...................... 1,200,000
9 For additional school health services grants
10 to the Rochester City School District for
11 the 2022-23 school year ...................... 1,200,000
12 For the teachers of tomorrow awards to
13 school districts for the 2022-23 school
14 year in the amount of $25,000,000,
15 provided that $5,000,000 of this total
16 amount in such school year shall be made
17 available for a program to be developed by
18 the commissioner of education to attract
19 qualified teachers that have received or
20 will receive a transitional certificate
21 and agree to teach mathematics, science,
22 or bilingual education in a low performing
23 school, further provided that of this
24 $5,000,000, a total of up to $500,000 in
25 each such school year shall be made and
26 available for demonstration programs in
27 the Yonkers and Syracuse city school
28 districts to increase the number of teach-
29 ers in such districts who teach math,
30 science and related areas and who have
31 such transitional certificate, and
32 provided further that notwithstanding any
33 inconsistent provision of law of this
34 $5,000,000, a total of $1,000,000 shall be
35 made available as a matching grant to
36 colleges and universities to support
37 programs designed to recruit and train
38 math and science teachers based on a prov-
39 en national model that results in improved
40 student achievement and enhanced teacher
41 retention in the classroom.
42 Funds appropriated herein shall be consid-
43 ered general support for public schools,
44 Notwithstanding any provision of law to
45 the contrary, funds appropriated herein
46 may be interchanged with any other item of
47 appropriation for general support for
48 public schools within the general fund
49 local assistance account office of prekin-
50 dergarten through grade twelve education
51 program.
238 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 Notwithstanding any other law, rule or regu-
2 lation to the contrary, funds appropriated
3 herein shall be available for payment of
4 financial assistance net of any disallow-
5 ances, refunds, reimbursement and credits,
6 and may be suballocated to other depart-
7 ments and agencies to accomplish the
8 intent of this appropriation subject to
9 the approval of the director of the budg-
10 et. Notwithstanding any provision of law
11 to the contrary, funds appropriated herein
12 shall be available for payment of liabil-
13 ities heretofore accrued or hereafter to
14 accrue (21759) .............................. 17,500,000
15 For payment of employment preparation educa-
16 tion aid for the 2022-23 school year
17 pursuant to paragraph e of subdivision 11
18 of section 3602 of the education law.
19 Notwithstanding any provision of law to the
20 contrary, funds appropriated herein may be
21 suballocated, subject to the approval of
22 the director of the budget, to other
23 departments and agencies to accomplish the
24 intent of this appropriation and subject
25 to the approval of the director of the
26 budget, such funds shall be available to
27 the department net of disallowances,
28 refunds, reimbursements and credits.
29 Funds appropriated herein shall be consid-
30 ered general support for public schools.
31 Notwithstanding any provision of law to
32 the contrary, funds appropriated herein
33 may be interchanged with any other item of
34 appropriation for general support for
35 public schools within the general fund
36 local assistance account office of prekin-
37 dergarten through grade twelve education
38 program. Notwithstanding any provision of
39 law to the contrary, funds appropriated
40 herein shall be available for payment of
41 liabilities heretofore accrued or hereaft-
42 er to accrue (21762) ........................ 96,000,000
43 For purposes of providing additional funding
44 for school districts which have experi-
45 enced a significant financial hardship
46 created by (1) an extraordinary change in
47 the taxable property valuation or (2) a
48 significant shift in tax liability due to
49 a tax certiorari settlement or judgement.
50 Notwithstanding section 24 of the state
51 finance law or any provision of law to the
52 contrary, funds from this appropriation
239 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 shall be allocated only pursuant to a plan
2 (i) approved by the temporary president of
3 the senate and the director of the budget
4 which sets forth either an itemized list
5 of grantees with the amount to be received
6 by each, or the methodology for allocating
7 such appropriation, and (ii) which is
8 thereafter included in a senate resolution
9 calling for the expenditure of such funds,
10 which resolution must be approved by a
11 majority vote of all members elected to
12 the senate upon a roll call vote ............. 4,000,000
13 For services and expenses of the Yonkers
14 City School District (56043) ................ 12,000,000
15 For services and expenses of the Garrison
16 Union Free School District ..................... 180,000
17 For services and expenses of the Hempstead
18 Union Free School District ..................... 175,000
19 For services and expenses of the Wyandanch
20 Union Free School District ..................... 175,000
21 For services and expenses of the Rochester
22 City School District ........................... 175,000
23 For services and expenses of the East Ramapo
24 Central School District ........................ 225,000
25 For continuation of a statewide universal
26 full-day prekindergarten program in
27 accordance with section 3602-ee of the
28 education law to reimburse school
29 districts and/or eligible entities for the
30 cost of awarded programs operating in the
31 2022-23 school year and prior school
32 years; provided that up to 25 percent of a
33 school district's and/or eligible entity's
34 awarded funds shall be made available in
35 the final quarter of the year in which
36 services are provided as an advance on
37 subsequent school year liabilities;
38 provided further that funds appropriated
39 herein shall only be awarded to school
40 districts and/or eligible entities which
41 meet requirements provided for in section
42 3602-ee of the education law.
43 Provided further that funds appropriated
44 herein shall only be used to supplement
45 and not supplant current local expendi-
46 tures of federal, state or local funds on
47 prekindergarten programs and the number of
48 placements in such programs from such
49 sources and that current local expendi-
50 tures shall include any local expenditures
51 of federal, state or local funds used to
52 supplement or extend services provided
240 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 directly or via contract to eligible chil-
2 dren enrolled in a universal prekindergar-
3 ten program in accordance with section
4 3602-e of the education law. Notwithstand-
5 ing any provision of law to the contrary,
6 the funds appropriated herein shall only
7 be available for a statewide universal
8 full-day prekindergarten program and, as
9 of July 1, 2023, may be suballocated or
10 transferred to any other appropriation for
11 the sole purpose of administering such
12 program. Notwithstanding any provision of
13 law to the contrary, programs that provide
14 services for fewer than 180 days will be
15 subject to the provisions of subdivision
16 16 of section 3602-e of the education law
17 (56138) .................................... 340,000,000
18 For universal prekindergarten expansion
19 grants for prekindergarten programs serv-
20 ing four-year-old students in new full-day
21 placements or for the conversion of half-
22 day placements to full-day placements for
23 programs operating in the 2022-23 school
24 year, based on a request for proposals, in
25 which all school districts would be eligi-
26 ble to apply, developed by the commission-
27 er of education and approved by the direc-
28 tor of the budget, provided further that
29 the commissioner of education shall evalu-
30 ate applications and make awards on a
31 competitive basis based on merit and
32 factors including, but not limited to, the
33 following: (i) the extent to which the
34 district's proposal would prioritize funds
35 to maximize the total number of eligible
36 children in the district served in prekin-
37 dergarten programs, (ii) proposal quality,
38 and (iii) the level of existing prekinder-
39 garten services in the district; provided
40 that preference for the 2022-23 awards
41 shall be given to programs serving high
42 levels of economically disadvantaged
43 students. Provided further that funds
44 appropriated herein shall only be awarded
45 to school districts which meet the
46 requirements of section 3602-ee of the
47 education law.
48 Provided that grants awarded pursuant to
49 this request for proposal process shall be
50 equal to $7,000 per pupil for students
51 served by teachers without a certificate
52 valid for service in early childhood
241 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 grades and $10,000 per pupil for students
2 served by teachers with valid certificates
3 for service in early childhood grades.
4 Programs shall (i) provide instruction for
5 at least five hours per school day for
6 full-day prekindergarten programs; (ii)
7 agree to offer instruction consistent with
8 applicable New York state prekindergarten
9 early learning standards; and (iii) other-
10 wise comply with all of the same rules and
11 requirements as the statewide universal
12 prekindergarten programs pursuant to
13 section 3602-ee of the education law
14 except as modified herein.
15 Provided further that funds appropriated
16 herein shall only be used to supplement
17 and not supplant current local expendi-
18 tures of federal, state or local funds on
19 prekindergarten programs and the number of
20 placements in such programs from such
21 sources and that current local expendi-
22 tures shall include any local expenditures
23 of federal, state or local funds used to
24 supplement or extend services provided
25 directly or via contract to eligible chil-
26 dren enrolled in a universal prekindergar-
27 ten program in accordance with section
28 3602-e of the education law.
29 Notwithstanding any provision of law to the
30 contrary, programs that provide services
31 for fewer than 180 days will be subject to
32 the provisions of subdivision 16 of
33 section 3602-e of the education law ......... 25,000,000
34 For continuation in the 2022-23 school year
35 of universal prekindergarten expansion
36 grants awarded based on responses to the
37 2021-22 universal prekindergarten expan-
38 sion grant for new full-day placements for
39 four-year-old students request for
40 proposals pursuant to chapter 53 of the
41 laws of 2021, subject to the approval of
42 the director of the budget, to the extent
43 that the commissioner of education deter-
44 mines that the amount of federal elementa-
45 ry and secondary school emergency relief
46 funds made available for such grants is
47 insufficient to continue the awards
48 through the 2022-23 school year .............. 1,500,000
49 For reimbursement of supplemental basic
50 tuition payments to charter schools made
51 by school districts in the 2021-22 school
52 year, as defined by paragraph (a) of
242 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 subdivision 1 of section 2856 of the
2 education law (55907) ...................... 185,000,000
3 For charter schools facilities aid for the
4 2021-22 school year and prior school years
5 pursuant to subdivision 6-g of section
6 3602 of the education law (55971) .......... 100,000,000
7 Funds appropriated herein shall be used to
8 provide awards to school districts, boards
9 of cooperative educational services, and
10 other eligible entities based on a plan
11 developed by the commissioner of education
12 and approved by the director of the budg-
13 et. Provided that at least the following
14 amounts of the funds appropriated herein
15 shall be made available as follows:
16 (i) $21,590,000 for the continuation of
17 school-wide extended learning grants to
18 school districts or school districts in
19 collaboration with not-for-profit communi-
20 ty-based organizations pursuant to the
21 guidelines set forth and the awards made
22 pursuant to chapter 53 of the laws of
23 2013.
24 (ii) $8,495,000 for grants awarded based on
25 responses to the 2013-20 NYS pathways in
26 technology early college high schools
27 request for proposals, pursuant to chapter
28 53 of the laws of 2013.
29 (iii) $3,545,000 for grants awarded based on
30 responses to the 2014-21 NYS pathways in
31 technology early college high schools
32 request for proposals, pursuant to chapter
33 53 of the laws of 2014.
34 (iv) $3,465,000 for grants awarded based on
35 responses to the 2015-2022 NYS pathways in
36 technology early college high schools
37 request for proposals, pursuant to chapter
38 53 of the laws of 2015.
39 (v) $3,750,000 for grants awarded based on
40 responses to the 2018-2024 NYS pathways in
41 technology early college high school
42 request for proposals, pursuant to chapter
43 53 of the laws of 2017.
44 (vi) $2,437,000 for grants awarded based on
45 responses to the 2019-2025 NYS pathways in
46 technology early college high school
47 request for proposals, pursuant to chapter
48 53 of the laws of 2018.
49 (vii) $4,058,000 for the continuation of
50 early college high school awards made
51 based on responses to the New York state
52 early college high school ECHS program
243 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 request for proposals pursuant to chapter
2 53 of the laws of 2017.
3 (viii) $9,000,000 for expansion of programs,
4 provided $4,500,000 shall be made avail-
5 able for new pathways in technology early
6 college high school grants and $4,500,000
7 shall be made available for new smart
8 scholars early college high school grants,
9 pursuant to a plan developed by the
10 commissioner of education and approved by
11 the director of the budget.
12 Provided that such requests for proposal
13 shall contain contingent requirements to
14 meet program goals and metrics. Provided
15 further that such grants shall be made
16 available after the issuance of a report
17 by the commissioner in a form prescribed
18 by the director of the budget including
19 analysis of college credits granted to
20 program graduates. Such report shall be
21 completed no later than June 30, 2022 and
22 such funds shall be released promptly
23 thereafter.
24 (ix) $1,364,000 for the continuation of
25 smart scholars early college high school
26 grants, provided that funds shall be used
27 pursuant to the guidelines set forth and
28 the awards made pursuant to chapter 53 of
29 the laws of 2013.
30 (x) $1,883,000 for the continuation of smart
31 scholars early college high school grants,
32 provided that funds shall be used pursuant
33 to the guidelines set forth and the awards
34 made pursuant to chapter 53 of the laws of
35 2018.
36 (xi) $1,798,000 for the continuation of
37 smart transfer early college high school
38 program grants awarded based on responses
39 to the New York state smart transfer ECHS
40 program request for proposals pursuant to
41 chapter 53 of the laws of 2016.
42 (xii) $20,500,000 for the continuation of
43 the master teacher program, pursuant to
44 chapter 53 of the laws of 2013, chapter 53
45 of the laws of 2015, chapter 53 of the
46 laws of 2017, chapter 53 of the laws of
47 2018, and chapter 53 of the laws of 2019;
48 notwithstanding any provision of law to
49 the contrary, upon approval of the direc-
50 tor of the budget, the funds hereby made
51 available for master teacher program fund-
52 ing may be suballocated, interchanged,
244 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 transferred or otherwise made available to
2 the state university of New York for the
3 services and expenses of administering
4 such program.
5 (xiii) $5,000,000 for the continuation of
6 QUALITYstarsNY, pursuant to chapter 53 of
7 the laws of 2015 and chapter 53 of the
8 laws of 2016; notwithstanding any
9 provision of law to the contrary, upon
10 approval of the director of the budget,
11 the funds hereby made available for QUALI-
12 TYstarsNY may be suballocated, inter-
13 changed, transferred or otherwise made
14 available to the office of children and
15 family services for the sole purpose of
16 administering such system.
17 (xiv) $3,000,000 for the continuation of New
18 York state masters-in-education teacher
19 incentive scholarship program, pursuant to
20 chapter 53 of the laws of 2015; notwith-
21 standing any provision of law to the
22 contrary, upon approval of the director of
23 the budget, the funds hereby made avail-
24 able for the masters-in-education teacher
25 incentive scholarship program may be
26 suballocated, interchanged, transferred or
27 otherwise made available to the higher
28 education services corporation for the
29 sole purpose of administering such
30 program.
31 (xv) $35,000,000 for the continuation of
32 awards made based on responses to the
33 empire state after-school program request
34 for proposals pursuant to chapter 53 of
35 the laws of 2017; notwithstanding any
36 provision of law to the contrary, upon
37 approval of the director of the budget,
38 the funds hereby made available may be
39 suballocated, interchanged, transferred or
40 otherwise made available to the office of
41 children and family services for the sole
42 purpose of administering such grants.
43 (xvi) $10,000,000 for the continuation of
44 awards made based on responses to the
45 empire state after-school program request
46 for proposals pursuant to chapter 53 of
47 the laws of 2018; notwithstanding any
48 provision of law to the contrary, upon
49 approval of the director of the budget,
50 the funds hereby made available may be
51 suballocated, interchanged, transferred or
52 otherwise made available to the office of
245 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 children and family services for the sole
2 purpose of administering such grants.
3 (xvii) $10,000,000 for the continuation of
4 awards made based on responses to the
5 empire state after-school program request
6 for proposals pursuant to chapter 53 of
7 the laws of 2019; notwithstanding any
8 provision of law to the contrary, upon
9 approval of the director of the budget,
10 the funds hereby made available may be
11 suballocated, interchanged, transferred or
12 otherwise made available to the office of
13 children and family services for the sole
14 purpose of administering such grants.
15 (xviii) $5,800,000 for services and expenses
16 to subsidize the remaining cost of
17 advanced placement and international
18 baccalaureate exam fees for low-income
19 students, as determined by free and
20 reduced price lunch eligibility, pursuant
21 to a plan developed by the commissioner of
22 education and approved by the director of
23 the budget.
24 (xix) $1,500,000 for grants for the advanced
25 courses access program pursuant to chapter
26 53 of the laws of 2018 and chapter 53 of
27 the laws of 2019, provided that such
28 grants shall be awarded to school
29 districts and/or boards of cooperative
30 educational services in order to increase
31 advanced course offerings for students,
32 particularly in districts with no or very
33 limited advanced course offerings.
34 (xx) $400,000 for empire state excellence in
35 teaching awards pursuant to chapter 53 of
36 the laws of 2017; notwithstanding any
37 provision of law to the contrary, upon
38 approval of the director of the budget,
39 the funds hereby made available may be
40 suballocated, interchanged, transferred or
41 otherwise made available to the state
42 university of New York for the services
43 and expenses of administering such awards.
44 (xxi) $6,000,000 for grants for the smart
45 start computer science program pursuant to
46 chapter 53 of the laws of 2018.
47 (xxii) $5,000,000 for additional funds to
48 reimburse sponsors of school breakfast
49 programs pursuant to chapter 53 of the
50 laws of 2018.
51 (xxiii) $250,000 for grants to school
52 districts to allow community schools to
246 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 expand mental health services and capacity
2 of community school programs pursuant to
3 chapter 53 of the laws of 2018.
4 (xxiv) $1,500,000 for the continuation of
5 the refugee and immigrant student welcome
6 grants program, pursuant to chapter 53 of
7 the laws of 2019; notwithstanding any
8 provision of law to the contrary, upon
9 approval of the director of the budget,
10 the funds hereby made available for the
11 refugee and immigrant student welcome
12 grants program may be suballocated, inter-
13 changed, transferred or otherwise made
14 available to the office of temporary and
15 disability assistance for the services and
16 expenses of administering such awards.
17 (xxv) $3,000,000 for grants to school
18 districts to allow districts to increase
19 the use of alternative approaches to
20 student discipline, pursuant to chapter 53
21 of the laws of 2019.
22 (xxvi) $1,500,000 for services and expenses
23 of school mental health programs pursuant
24 to a plan developed by the commissioner of
25 education and approved by the director of
26 the budget, pursuant to chapter 53 of the
27 laws of 2019. Provided further, that of
28 the amount appropriated herein, up to
29 $500,000 may be used to support the School
30 Mental Health Resource and Training
31 Center.
32 (xxvii) $3,000,000 for the continuation of
33 the we teach NY grant program, pursuant to
34 chapter 53 of the laws of 2019; notwith-
35 standing any provision of law to the
36 contrary, upon approval of the director of
37 the budget, the funds hereby made avail-
38 able for the we teach NY grant may be
39 suballocated, interchanged, transferred or
40 otherwise made available to the state
41 university of New York for the services
42 and expenses of administering such awards.
43 (xxviii) $1,500,000 for the continuation of
44 the expanded mathematics access program,
45 pursuant to chapter 53 of the laws of
46 2019; notwithstanding any provision of law
47 to the contrary, upon approval of the
48 director of the budget, the funds hereby
49 made available for the expanded mathemat-
50 ics access program may be suballocated,
51 interchanged, transferred or otherwise
52 made available to the state university of
247 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 New York for the services and expenses of
2 administering such awards.
3 (xxix) $200,000 for the continuation of the
4 New York state youth council, pursuant to
5 chapter 53 of the laws of 2019; notwith-
6 standing any provision of law to the
7 contrary, upon approval of the director of
8 the budget, the funds hereby made avail-
9 able for the New York state youth council
10 may be suballocated, interchanged, trans-
11 ferred or otherwise made available to the
12 office of children and family services for
13 the services and expenses of administering
14 such council.
15 (xxx) $10,000,000 for student mental health
16 support grants to school districts, pursu-
17 ant to chapter 53 of the laws of 2020;
18 Notwithstanding any provision of law to the
19 contrary, upon approval of the director of
20 the budget, the funds hereby made avail-
21 able may be suballocated, interchanged,
22 transferred or otherwise made available to
23 the office of mental health for the sole
24 purpose of administering such grants.
25 (xxxi) $2,000,000 for additional master
26 teacher and school counselor awards to
27 support individual high-performing teach-
28 ers and school counselors; provided that
29 awards shall prioritize support of teach-
30 ers of color, career and technical educa-
31 tion teachers, and guidance counselors.
32 Provided further that the funds hereby made
33 available shall support the award of
34 stipends of $15,000 per annum over four
35 years to such individual teachers or
36 school counselors, and of related costs,
37 administered by the state university of
38 New York pursuant to a plan developed in
39 consultation with the commissioner of
40 education, who shall consult with appro-
41 priate state organizations representing
42 K-12 public school teachers and school
43 counselors, and approved by the director
44 of the budget, to build a corps of
45 outstanding teachers and counselors in
46 order to improve the quality of instruc-
47 tion and counseling at public schools.
48 Such plan for use of funding hereby made
49 available shall: (i) establish an applica-
50 tion process; (ii) include guidelines by
51 which applications from eligible teachers
52 and school counselors shall be evaluated,
248 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 which shall include, but not be limited
2 to, evidence of professional achievement
3 and effectiveness; and (iii) provide peri-
4 odic opportunities for professional devel-
5 opment for successful applicants.
6 Notwithstanding any provision of law to the
7 contrary, upon approval of the director of
8 the budget, the funds hereby made avail-
9 able may be suballocated, interchanged,
10 transferred or otherwise made available to
11 the state university of New York for the
12 services and expenses of administering
13 such awards. Nothing herein shall be
14 construed to limit the rights of labor
15 organizations representing teachers and
16 school counselors to collectively bargain
17 terms and conditions pursuant to article
18 14 of the civil service law.
19 Notwithstanding any provision of law to the
20 contrary, the $2,000,000 made available in
21 item (xxxi) herein shall constitute the
22 competitive awards amount authorized for
23 the 2022-23 school year (23306) ............ 231,363,000
24 For New York state recover from COVID school
25 program grants for the 2022-23 and 2023-24
26 school years, pursuant to a plan developed
27 by the commissioner of education and
28 approved by the director of the budget, to
29 school districts and boards of cooperative
30 educational services to address student
31 well-being and learning loss in response
32 to the trauma brought about by the COVID-
33 19 pandemic through the following: (i) the
34 employment of mental health professionals,
35 the expansion of school-based mental
36 health services, or other evidence-based
37 mental health supports for students and
38 school staff or (ii) the creation or
39 expansion of summer learning, after-
40 school, or extended day and year programs
41 for students.
42 Provided further that such grants shall be
43 awarded based on factors including, but
44 not limited to, the following: (i) meas-
45 ures of the need of students to be served
46 by the school district or board of cooper-
47 ative educational services, (ii) the
48 school district's proposal to target the
49 highest-need schools and students, or
50 board of cooperative educational services'
51 proposal to target the highest-need
52 students, (iii) the extent to which the
249 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 district's or board of cooperative educa-
2 tional services' proposal would address
3 student learning loss or well-being in
4 response to the trauma brought about by
5 the COVID-19 pandemic, (iv) the extent to
6 which the proposal would provide for
7 delivery of services directly in school
8 buildings, (v) the extent to which the
9 proposal maximizes the number of students
10 served, and (vi) proposal quality.
11 Provided further that a school district or
12 board of cooperative educational services
13 shall be eligible for a grant in an amount
14 not to exceed the amount of local, state,
15 and federal funds that it commits to
16 expend on the same allowable purpose or
17 purposes for which it seeks a grant.
18 Provided further that of the amount appro-
19 priated herein, up to $50,000,000 shall be
20 available for awards for the 2022-23
21 school year, and up to $50,000,000 shall
22 be available for awards for the 2023-24
23 school year.
24 Provided further that no school district or
25 board of cooperative educational services
26 shall receive more than 40 percent of the
27 total New York state recover from COVID
28 school program grant allocation.
29 Notwithstanding section 40 of the state
30 finance law or any provision of law to the
31 contrary, this appropriation shall remain
32 in full force and effect to the maximum
33 extent allowed by law ...................... 100,000,000
34 For grants to school districts to support
35 programs designed to improve school
36 climate; provided that funds appropriated
37 herein shall be awarded to districts to
38 implement programs focused on meeting the
39 holistic needs of students using proven
40 models or innovative approaches, pursuant
41 to a plan developed by the commissioner of
42 education and approved by the director of
43 the budget; and provided further that such
44 plan shall prioritize schools with high
45 levels of suspensions ........................ 2,000,000
46 For services and expenses of community
47 school regional technical assistance
48 centers for the 2022-23 school year. Funds
49 appropriated herein shall be used to oper-
50 ate three regional centers that shall
51 provide technical assistance to school
52 districts establishing or operating commu-
250 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 nity school programs, pursuant to a plan
2 developed by the commissioner of education
3 and approved by the director of the budg-
4 et. Provided, further, that such plan
5 shall establish a process for selection of
6 nonprofit entities with expertise in
7 community school programs and technical
8 assistance to operate such centers (55962) ... 1,200,000
9 For services and expenses of the my broth-
10 er's keeper initiative. A portion of this
11 appropriation may be transferred to any
12 other program or fund within the state
13 education department for these purposes
14 (55928) ..................................... 18,000,000
15 For services and expenses of remaining obli-
16 gations for the 2021-22 school year for
17 support for the operation of targeted
18 pre-kindergarten for those providers not
19 eligible to receive funding pursuant to
20 section 3602-e of the education law and
21 for support for providers continuing to
22 operate such programs in the 2022-23
23 school year. Such funds shall be expended
24 pursuant to a plan developed by the
25 commissioner of education and approved by
26 the director of the budget (21763) ........... 1,303,000
27 For services and expenses of remaining obli-
28 gations of a $14,260,000 teacher resources
29 and computer training centers program for
30 the 2021-22 school year (55985) .............. 4,278,000
31 Funds appropriated herein shall be available
32 for services and expenses of a $21,392,000
33 teacher resources and computer training
34 center program for the 2022-23 school year
35 (23445) ..................................... 14,974,000
36 For education of children of migrant workers
37 for the 2022-23 school year (21764) ............. 89,000
38 For the school lunch and breakfast program.
39 Funds for the school lunch and breakfast
40 program shall be expended subject to the
41 limitation of funds available and may be
42 used to reimburse sponsors of non-profit
43 school lunch, breakfast, or other school
44 child feeding programs based upon the
45 number of federally reimbursable break-
46 fasts and lunches served to students under
47 such program agreements entered into by
48 the state education department and such
49 sponsors, in accordance with an act of
50 Congress entitled the "National School
51 Lunch Act," P.L. 79-396, as amended, or
52 the provisions of the "Child Nutrition Act
251 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 of 1966," P.L. 89-642, as amended, in the
2 case of school breakfast programs to reim-
3 burse sponsors in excess of the federal
4 rates of reimbursement. Notwithstanding
5 any provision of law to the contrary, the
6 moneys hereby appropriated, or so much
7 thereof as may be necessary, are to be
8 available for the purposes herein speci-
9 fied for obligations heretofore accrued or
10 hereafter to accrue for the school years
11 beginning July 1, 2020, July 1, 2021 and
12 July 1, 2022.
13 Notwithstanding any law, rule or regulation
14 to the contrary, the amount appropriated
15 herein represents the maximum amount paya-
16 ble during the 2022-23 state fiscal year
17 for state reimbursement for school lunch
18 and breakfast programs (21702) .............. 34,400,000
19 For additional funds to reimburse sponsors
20 of school lunch programs that have
21 purchased at least 30 percent of their
22 total food products for their school lunch
23 service program from New York State farm-
24 ers, growers, producers, or processors,
25 based upon the number of federally reim-
26 bursable lunches served to students under
27 such program agreements entered into by
28 the state education department and such
29 sponsors, in accordance with the
30 provisions of the "National School Lunch
31 Act," P.L. 79-396, as amended, to reim-
32 burse sponsors in excess of the federal
33 and State rates of reimbursement,
34 provided, that the total State subsidy
35 shall not exceed twenty-five cents per
36 school lunch meal, which shall include any
37 annual state subsidy received by such
38 sponsor under any other provision of State
39 law, provided further that funds appropri-
40 ated herein shall be made available on or
41 after April 1, 2023 (55986) ................. 10,000,000
42 For additional services of the school lunch
43 and breakfast program to pay the student
44 cost of reduced price meals effective July
45 1, 2022 (23316) .............................. 2,300,000
46 For nonpublic school aid payable in the
47 2022-23 school year to reimburse 2021-22
48 school year expenses. Provided that
49 nonpublic schools shall continue to
50 receive aid based on either a 5.0/5.5 hour
51 standard instructional day, or another
52 work day as certified by the nonpublic
252 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 school officials, in accordance with the
2 methodology for computing salary and bene-
3 fits applied by the department in paying
4 aid for the 2012-13 and prior school
5 years. Notwithstanding any provision of
6 law, rule or regulation to the contrary,
7 each nonpublic school which seeks aid
8 payable in the 2022-23 school year shall
9 submit a claim for such aid to the state
10 education department no later than April
11 1, 2023, and such claims shall be paid by
12 the Department no later than May 31, 2023.
13 Provided further that funds appropriated
14 herein shall be made available on or after
15 April 1, 2023 (21769) ...................... 115,652,000
16 For aid payable in the 2022-23 school year
17 for additional nonpublic school aid to
18 reimburse 2021-22 school year expenses.
19 Notwithstanding any provision of law, rule
20 or regulation to the contrary, each
21 nonpublic school which seeks aid payable
22 in the 2022-23 school year shall submit a
23 claim for such aid to the state education
24 department no later than April 1, 2023,
25 and such claims shall be paid by the
26 Department no later than May 31, 2023.
27 Provided further that funds appropriated
28 herein shall be made available on or after
29 April 1, 2023 (21770) ....................... 77,476,000
30 For additional aid payable in the 2022-23
31 school year for additional nonpublic
32 school aid to reimburse 2021-22 school
33 year expenses ................................ 1,900,000
34 For academic intervention for nonpublic
35 schools based on a plan to be developed by
36 the commissioner of education and approved
37 by the director of the budget (21771) .......... 922,000
38 For services and expenses related to nonpub-
39 lic school STEM programs (55964) ............ 55,000,000
40 For additional services and expenses related
41 to nonpublic school STEM programs (55964) .... 3,000,000
42 For additional mandated services and
43 expenses of the costs of complying with
44 the State School Immunization Program
45 (SSIP) for the 2021-22 school year;
46 provided further that the department of
47 health in consultation with the state
48 Education Department shall create a proc-
49 ess to certify compliance with SSIP and
50 such process shall be in place July 1,
51 2022. Schools shall certify compliance
253 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 with such process prior to receiving the
2 funds appropriated herein .................... 1,000,000
3 For costs associated with schools for the
4 blind and deaf and other students with
5 disabilities subject to article 85 of the
6 education law, including state aid for
7 blind and deaf pupils in certain insti-
8 tutions to be paid for the purposes
9 provided under section 4204-a of the
10 education law for the education of deaf
11 children under 3 years of age, including
12 transfers to the miscellaneous special
13 revenue fund Rome school for the deaf
14 account pursuant to a plan to be developed
15 by the commissioner and approved by the
16 director of the budget.
17 Of the amounts appropriated herein, up to
18 $84,700,000 shall be available for
19 reimbursement to school districts for the
20 tuition costs of students attending
21 schools for the blind and deaf during the
22 2020-21 school year pursuant to subdivi-
23 sion 2 of section 4204 of the education
24 law and subdivision 2 of section 4207 of
25 the education law, and up to $9,000,000
26 shall be available for remaining allowable
27 purposes.
28 Provided further that, notwithstanding any
29 inconsistent provision of law, upon
30 disbursement of funds appropriated for
31 allowances to schools for the blind and
32 deaf in the individuals with disabilities
33 program special revenue funds-federal/aid
34 to localities for purposes of this appro-
35 priation, funds appropriated herein shall
36 be reduced in an amount equivalent to such
37 disbursement and the portion of this
38 appropriation so affected shall have no
39 further force or effect.
40 Notwithstanding any provision of the law to
41 the contrary, funds appropriated herein
42 shall be available for payment of liabil-
43 ities heretofore accrued or hereafter to
44 accrue and, subject to the approval of the
45 director of the budget, such funds shall
46 be available to the department net of
47 disallowances, refunds, reimbursements and
48 credits (21705) ............................. 93,700,000
49 For costs associated with schools for the
50 blind and deaf and other students with
51 disabilities subject to article 85 of the
52 education law for the 2022-23 school year.
254 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 Funds appropriated herein shall be
2 distributed directly to the schools for
3 the blind and deaf and other students with
4 disabilities subject to article 85 of the
5 education law based on a three year aver-
6 age of the schools' FTE enrollment (55909) .. 12,200,000
7 For additional costs associated with schools
8 for the blind and deaf and other students
9 with disabilities subject to article 85 of
10 the education law for the 2022-23 school
11 year. Funds appropriated herein shall be
12 distributed directly to the schools for
13 the blind and deaf and other students with
14 disabilities subject to article 85 of the
15 education law based on a three year aver-
16 age of the schools' FTE enrollment (55909) ... 2,000,000
17 For services and expenses of the New York
18 School for the Deaf for the 2022-23 school
19 year ........................................... 903,000
20 For services and expenses of the Henry
21 Viscardi School for the 2022-23 school
22 year ........................................... 903,000
23 For services and expenses of the Mill Neck
24 Manor School for the Deaf for the 2022-23
25 school year .................................... 500,000
26 For services and expenses of the Cleary
27 School for the Deaf for the 2022-23 school
28 year ........................................... 500,000
29 For services and expenses of the St. Francis
30 de Sales School for the Deaf for the
31 2022-23 school year ............................ 150,000
32 For July and August programs for school-aged
33 children with handicapping conditions
34 pursuant to section 4408 of the education
35 law. Moneys appropriated herein shall be
36 used as follows: (i) for remaining base
37 year and prior school years obligations,
38 (ii) for the purposes of subdivision 4 of
39 section 3602 of the education law for
40 schools operated under articles 87 and 88
41 of the education law, and (iii) notwith-
42 standing any inconsistent provision of
43 law, for payments made pursuant to this
44 appropriation for current school year
45 obligations, provided, however, that such
46 payments shall not exceed 70 percent of
47 the state aid due for the sum of the
48 approved tuition and maintenance rates and
49 transportation expense provided for here-
50 in; provided, however, that eligible
51 claims shall be payable in the order that
52 such claims have been approved for payment
255 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 by the commissioner of education, but in
2 no case shall a single payee draw down
3 more than 45 percent of this appropri-
4 ation, and provided further that no claim
5 shall be set aside for insufficiency of
6 funds to make a complete payment, but
7 shall be eligible for a partial payment in
8 one year and shall retain its priority
9 date status for subsequent appropriations
10 designated for such purposes. Notwith-
11 standing any inconsistent provision of
12 law, funds appropriated herein shall only
13 be available for liabilities incurred
14 prior to July 1, 2023, shall be used to
15 pay 2021-22 school year claims in the
16 first instance, and represent the maximum
17 amount payable during the 2022-23 state
18 fiscal year.
19 Notwithstanding any provision of law to the
20 contrary, funds appropriated herein shall
21 be available for payment of liabilities
22 heretofore accrued or hereafter to accrue
23 and, subject to the approval of the direc-
24 tor of the budget, such funds shall be
25 available to the department net of disal-
26 lowances, refunds, reimbursements and
27 credits (21707) ............................ 364,500,000
28 For the state's share of the costs of the
29 education of preschool children with disa-
30 bilities pursuant to section 4410 of the
31 education law. Notwithstanding any incon-
32 sistent provision of law to the contrary,
33 the amount appropriated herein shall
34 support a state share of preschool hand-
35 icapped education costs for the 2021-22
36 school year limited to 59.5 percent of
37 such total approved expenditures, and
38 furthermore, notwithstanding any other
39 provision of law, local claims for
40 reimbursement of costs incurred prior to
41 the 2020-21 school year and during the
42 2020-21 school year that have been
43 approved for payment by the education
44 department as of March 31, 2022 shall be
45 the first claims paid from this appropri-
46 ation.
47 Notwithstanding any provision of law to the
48 contrary, funds appropriated herein shall
49 be available for payment of liabilities
50 heretofore accrued or hereafter to accrue
51 and, subject to the approval of the direc-
256 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 tor of the budget, such funds shall be
2 available to the department net of disal-
3 lowances, refunds, reimbursements and
4 credits (21706) .......................... 1,035,000,000
5 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision
6 of law, funding made available by this
7 appropriation shall support direct salary
8 costs and related fringe benefits associ-
9 ated with any minimum wage increase that
10 takes effect on or after December 31,
11 2016, pursuant to section 652 of the labor
12 law. Organizations eligible for funding
13 made available by this appropriation shall
14 be limited to special act school districts
15 and those that are required to file a
16 consolidated fiscal report with the state
17 education department and provide preschool
18 and school-age special education services
19 under articles 81, 85 and 89 of the educa-
20 tion law. Each eligible organization in
21 receipt of funding made available by this
22 appropriation shall submit written certif-
23 ication, in such form and at such time as
24 the commissioner shall prescribe, attest-
25 ing to how such funding will be or was
26 used for purposes eligible under this
27 appropriation. Notwithstanding any incon-
28 sistent provision of law, and subject to
29 the approval of the director of the budg-
30 et, the amounts appropriated herein may be
31 increased or decreased by interchange or
32 transfer to any local assistance appropri-
33 ation of the state education department
34 (55938) ..................................... 17,180,000
35 For services and expenses of the New York
36 state center for school safety for the
37 2022-23 school year. Funds appropriated
38 herein shall be used to operate a state-
39 wide center and shall be subject to an
40 expenditure plan approved by the director
41 of the budget (21774) .......................... 466,000
42 For services and expenses of the health
43 education program for the 2022-23 school
44 year. Funds appropriated herein shall be
45 available for health-related programs
46 including, but not limited to, those
47 providing instruction and supportive
48 services in comprehensive health education
49 and/or acquired immune deficiency syndrome
50 (AIDS) education. Of the amounts appropri-
51 ated herein, $86,000 shall be available
52 for the program previously operated as the
257 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 school health demonstration program.
2 Notwithstanding any other provision of law
3 to the contrary, funds appropriated herein
4 may be suballocated, subject to the
5 approval of the director of the budget, to
6 any state agency or department to accom-
7 plish the purpose of this appropriation
8 (21775) ........................................ 691,000
9 For competitive grants for the 2022-23
10 school year for extended day programs and
11 school violence prevention programs pursu-
12 ant to section 2814 of the education law
13 provided, however, notwithstanding any
14 inconsistent provisions of law, eligible
15 entities receiving funds for extended day
16 programs may include not-for-profit organ-
17 izations working in collaboration with a
18 public school or school district (21776) .... 24,344,000
19 For aid payable for the 2022-23 school year
20 for support of county vocational education
21 and extension boards pursuant to section
22 1104 of the education law, provided,
23 however, that notwithstanding any incon-
24 sistent provision of law, rule, or regu-
25 lation, any apportionment of aid shall be
26 based on a quota amounting to one-half of
27 the salary paid each teacher, director,
28 assistant, and supervisor, where such
29 salary is attributable to a course of
30 study first submitted to the commissioner
31 for approval pursuant to section 1103 of
32 the education law on or before July 1,
33 2010, but not to exceed the amount
34 computed by the commissioner based upon an
35 assumed annualized salary equal to ten
36 thousand five hundred dollars per school
37 year on account of the employment of such
38 teacher, director, assistant or supervisor
39 and provided further that payment from
40 this appropriation shall first be made for
41 approved claims for salary expenses for
42 the 2022-23 school year, and any amount
43 remaining after payment of such claims
44 shall be available for payment of unpaid
45 claims for prior school years (21781) .......... 932,000
46 For services and expenses of the primary
47 mental health project at the children's
48 institute for the 2022-23 school year
49 (21778) ........................................ 894,000
50 For services and expenses associated with
51 the math and science high schools for the
52 2022-23 school year in the amount of
258 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 $1,382,000, provided that such funds shall
2 be allocated equally among those entities
3 that received program funding for the
4 2007-08 school year (21779) .................. 1,382,000
5 For additional services and expenses associ-
6 ated with the Bard High School Early
7 College Queens for the 2022-23 school year
8 ................................................ 461,000
9 Funds appropriated herein shall be available
10 for educational services and expenses of
11 the Syracuse city school district for the
12 say yes to education program (21800) ........... 350,000
13 For services and expenses of the center for
14 autism and related disabilities at the
15 state university of New York at Albany
16 (21782) ...................................... 1,240,000
17 For postsecondary aid to Native Americans to
18 fund awards to eligible students. Notwith-
19 standing any other provision of law to the
20 contrary, the amount herein made available
21 shall constitute the state's entire obli-
22 gation for all costs incurred under
23 section 4118 of the education law in state
24 fiscal year 2022-23 (21833) .................... 800,000
25 For services and expenses of the summer food
26 program for the 2022-23 school year
27 (21784) ...................................... 3,049,000
28 Work Force Education. For partial reimburse-
29 ment of services and expenses per contract
30 hour of work force education conducted by
31 the consortium for worker education (CWE),
32 a private not-for-profit corporation
33 program approved by the commissioner of
34 education that enable adults who are 21
35 years of age or older to obtain or retain
36 employment or improve their work skills
37 capacity to enhance their opportunities
38 for increased earnings and advancement
39 (21801) ..................................... 13,000,000
40 For services and expenses of the Consortium
41 for Workers Education Credential Initi-
42 ative .......................................... 250,000
43 For services and expenses of the Executive
44 Leadership Institute ........................... 475,000
45 For services and expenses of the Magellan
46 Foundation, Inc. ............................... 475,000
47 For services and expenses related to the
48 development, implementation and operation
49 of charter schools for the 2022-23 school
50 year including an amount sufficient to
51 support administrative/technical support
52 services provided by the charter school
259 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 institute of the state university of New
2 York, pursuant to a plan submitted by the
3 charter school institute and approved by
4 the board of trustees of the state univer-
5 sity of New York. This appropriation shall
6 only be available for expenditure upon the
7 approval of an expenditure plan by the
8 director of the budget and funds appropri-
9 ated herein shall be transferred to the
10 miscellaneous special revenue fund - char-
11 ter schools stimulus account (21803) ......... 4,837,000
12 For the early college high schools program
13 for the 2022-23 school year, provided,
14 however, that expenditure of funds appro-
15 priated herein shall support the continua-
16 tion and expansion of the early college
17 high schools program pursuant to a plan
18 developed by the commissioner of education
19 and approved by the director of the budget
20 provided, further, that a portion of the
21 payment to the early college high schools
22 program awarded from this appropriation
23 shall be available on a sliding scale
24 based upon the number of college credits
25 earned annually by participating students
26 consistent with guidelines established by
27 the commissioner. Provided further that,
28 notwithstanding any provision of law to
29 the contrary, higher education partners
30 participating in an early college high
31 schools program, or the entity/entities
32 responsible for setting tuition at the
33 institution, shall be authorized to set a
34 reduced rate of tuition and/or fees, or to
35 waive tuition and/or fees entirely, for
36 students enrolled in such early college
37 high schools program with no reduction in
38 other state, local or other support for
39 such students earning college credit that
40 such higher education partner would other-
41 wise be eligible to receive (56139) .......... 1,465,000
42 For services and expenses of the clinically
43 rich intensive teacher institute bilingual
44 extension and English to speakers of other
45 languages program .............................. 385,000
46 For services and expenses of a teacher
47 diversity pipeline pilot operated by the
48 State University College at Buffalo for
49 the Buffalo City School District to assist
50 teacher aides and teaching assistants in
51 attaining the necessary educational and
260 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 professional credentials to obtain teacher
2 certification .................................. 500,000
3 For services and expenses of a $490,000
4 2022-23 school year program for mentoring
5 and tutoring operated by the Hillside
6 Children's Center, which is based on model
7 programs proven to be effective in produc-
8 ing outcomes that include, but are not
9 limited to, improved graduation rates,
10 provided that such services shall be
11 provided to students in one or more city
12 school districts located in a city having
13 a population in excess of 125,000 and less
14 than 1,000,000 inhabitants (21804) ............. 490,000
15 For payment of small government assistance
16 to school districts pursuant to subdivi-
17 sion 7 of section 3641 of the education
18 law on or before March 31, 2023 upon audit
19 and warrant of the comptroller in the
20 amount that small government assistance
21 was paid to school districts in state
22 fiscal year 2010-11 (23449) .................. 1,868,000
23 For purposes of the Just for Kids program at
24 the State University of New York at Albany
25 (56005) ........................................ 235,000
26 For educational services and expenses for
27 out of school immigrant youth and young
28 adults (56045) ............................... 1,000,000
29 For services and expenses of Many Threads,
30 One Fabric union led implicit bias train-
31 ing for public school educators .............. 1,250,000
32 For services and expenses of the Fund for
33 the City of New York - Promise Project ......... 300,000
34 For services and expenses of United Communi-
35 ty Schools, Incorporated ....................... 450,000
36 For services and expenses of the Long Island
37 Pre-K Initiative operated by Nassau BOCES ...... 500,000
38 For services and expenses of the Mind Build-
39 ers Creative Arts Center ....................... 365,000
40 For services and expenses of the Queens
41 College Townsend Harris High School ............ 250,000
42 For services and expenses of the BioBus .......... 400,000
43 For services and expenses of Educators for
44 Student Success ................................ 100,000
45 For services and expenses of the Long Island
46 Latino Teachers Association ..................... 40,000
47 For services and expenses related to school
48 resource officers for the Auburn Enlarged
49 City School District ........................... 275,000
50 For services and expenses of NYC Kids RISE,
51 Inc ............................................ 650,000
261 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of the Universal
2 Hip Hop Museum ................................. 150,000
3 For additional grants in aid to certain
4 school districts, public libraries, and
5 not-for-profit institutions. Notwithstand-
6 ing section 24 of the state finance law or
7 any provision of law to the contrary,
8 funds from this appropriation shall be
9 allocated only pursuant to a plan (i)
10 approved by the temporary president of the
11 senate and the director of the budget
12 which sets forth either an itemized list
13 of grantees with the amount to be received
14 by each, or the methodology for allocating
15 such appropriation, and (ii) which is
16 thereafter included in a senate resolution
17 calling for the expenditure of such funds,
18 which resolution must be approved by a
19 majority vote of all members elected to
20 the senate upon a roll call vote ............. 6,750,000
21 For additional grants in aid to certain
22 school districts, public libraries, and
23 not-for-profit institutions. Notwithstand-
24 ing section 24 of the state finance law or
25 any provision of law to the contrary,
26 funds from this appropriation shall be
27 allocated only pursuant to a plan (i)
28 approved by the speaker of the assembly
29 and the director of the budget which sets
30 forth either an itemized list of grantees
31 with the amount to be received by each, or
32 the methodology for allocating such appro-
33 priation, and (ii) which is thereafter
34 included in an assembly resolution calling
35 for the expenditure of such funds, which
36 resolution must be approved by a majority
37 vote of all members elected to the assem-
38 bly upon a roll call vote .................... 6,343,000
39 Less expenditure savings due to the with-
40 holding of a portion of employment prepa-
41 ration education aid due to the city of
42 New York equal to the reimbursement costs
43 of the work force education program from
44 aid payable to such city school district
45 payable on or after April 1, 2022; such
46 moneys shall be credited to the office of
47 pre-kindergarten through grade twelve
48 education general fund-local assistance
49 account and which shall not exceed the
50 amount appropriated herein (21701) ........ (13,000,000)
51 --------------
262 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 Program account subtotal .............. 28,178,644,000
2 --------------
3 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
4 Federal Education Fund
5 Education Stabilization Fund - 25210
6 For additional support of elementary and
7 secondary education from the elementary
8 and secondary school emergency relief
9 fund, as funded by the American rescue
10 plan act of 2021 (P.L. 117-2) providing
11 support for elementary and/or secondary
12 education in response to the COVID-19
13 public health emergency, pursuant to the
14 requirements set forth under chapter 53 of
15 the laws of 2021 ............................. 6,502,000
16 For additional services and assistance to
17 nonpublic schools through the emergency
18 assistance to nonpublic schools program,
19 funded through the American rescue plan
20 act of 2021, P. L. 117-2 ("ARPA"), pursu-
21 ant to the requirements set forth under
22 chapter 53 of the laws of 2021 ............... 2,345,000
23 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
24 Federal Education Fund
25 Federal Department of Education Account - 25210
26 For grants to schools for specific programs
27 including, but not limited to, grants for
28 purposes under title I of the elementary
29 and secondary education act. Provided
30 further that, notwithstanding any incon-
31 sistent provision of law, the commissioner
32 of education shall provide to the director
33 of the budget, the chairperson of the
34 senate finance committee and the chair-
35 person of the assembly ways and means
36 committee copies of any spending plans
37 and/or budgets submitted to the federal
38 government with respect to the use of any
39 funds appropriated by the federal govern-
40 ment including state grants administered
41 by the department. Notwithstanding any
42 inconsistent provision of law, a portion
43 of this appropriation may be suballocated
44 to other state departments and agencies,
45 subject to the approval of the director of
46 the budget, as needed to accomplish the
47 intent of this appropriation (21740) ..... 1,771,819,000
263 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 For grants to schools and other eligible
2 entities for specific programs including,
3 but not limited to, state grants for
4 supporting effective instruction pursuant
5 to title II of the elementary and second-
6 ary education act. Provided further that,
7 notwithstanding any inconsistent provision
8 of law, the commissioner of education
9 shall provide to the director of the budg-
10 et, the chairperson of the senate finance
11 committee and the chairperson of the
12 assembly ways and means committee copies
13 of any spending plans and/or budgets
14 submitted to the federal government with
15 respect to the use of any funds appropri-
16 ated by the federal government including
17 state grants administered by the Depart-
18 ment. Notwithstanding any inconsistent
19 provision of law, a portion of this appro-
20 priation may be suballocated to other
21 state departments and agencies, subject to
22 the approval of the director of the budg-
23 et, as needed to accomplish the intent of
24 this appropriation (23418) ................. 256,841,000
25 For grants to schools and other eligible
26 entities for specific programs including,
27 but not limited to, the English language
28 acquisition program pursuant to title III
29 of the elementary and secondary education
30 act. Provided further that, notwithstand-
31 ing any inconsistent provision of law, the
32 commissioner of education shall provide to
33 the director of the budget, the chair-
34 person of the senate finance committee and
35 the chairperson of the assembly ways and
36 means committee copies of any spending
37 plans and/or budgets submitted to the
38 federal government with respect to the use
39 of any funds appropriated by the federal
40 government including state grants adminis-
41 tered by the department. Notwithstanding
42 any inconsistent provision of law, a
43 portion of this appropriation may be
44 suballocated to other state departments
45 and agencies, subject to the approval of
46 the director of the budget, as needed to
47 accomplish the intent of this appropri-
48 ation (23417) ............................... 65,331,000
49 For grants to schools and other eligible
50 entities for specific programs including,
51 but not limited to, the 21st century
52 community learning centers, and student
264 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 support and academic enrichment pursuant
2 to title IV of the elementary and second-
3 ary education act. Provided further that,
4 notwithstanding any inconsistent provision
5 of law, the commissioner of education
6 shall provide to the director of the budg-
7 et, the chairperson of the senate finance
8 committee and the chairperson of the
9 assembly ways and means committee copies
10 of any spending plans and/or budgets
11 submitted to the federal government with
12 respect to the use of any funds appropri-
13 ated by the federal government including
14 state grants administered by the Depart-
15 ment. Notwithstanding any inconsistent
16 provision of law, a portion of this appro-
17 priation may be suballocated to other
18 state departments and agencies, subject to
19 the approval of the director of the budg-
20 et, as needed to accomplish the intent of
21 this appropriation (23416) ................. 178,326,000
22 For grants to schools and other eligible
23 entities for specific programs including,
24 but not limited to, the charter schools
25 program pursuant to title IV of the
26 elementary and secondary education act.
27 Provided further that, notwithstanding any
28 inconsistent provision of law, the commis-
29 sioner of education shall provide to the
30 director of the budget, the chairperson of
31 the senate finance committee and the
32 chairperson of the assembly ways and means
33 committee copies of any spending plans
34 and/or budgets submitted to the federal
35 government with respect to the use of any
36 funds appropriated by the federal govern-
37 ment including state grants administered
38 by the department. Notwithstanding any
39 inconsistent provision of law, a portion
40 of this appropriation may be suballocated
41 to other state departments and agencies,
42 subject to the approval of the director of
43 the budget, as needed to accomplish the
44 intent of this appropriation (23415) ........ 28,000,000
45 For grants to schools and other eligible
46 entities for specific programs including,
47 but not limited to, the rural education
48 initiative pursuant to title V of the
49 elementary and secondary education act.
50 Provided further that, notwithstanding any
51 inconsistent provision of law, the commis-
52 sioner of education shall provide to the
265 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 director of the budget, the chairperson of
2 the senate finance committee and the
3 chairperson of the assembly ways and means
4 committee copies of any spending plans
5 and/or budgets submitted to the federal
6 government with respect to the use of any
7 funds appropriated by the federal govern-
8 ment including state grants administered
9 by the department. Notwithstanding any
10 inconsistent provision of law, a portion
11 of this appropriation may be suballocated
12 to other state departments and agencies,
13 subject to the approval of the director of
14 the budget, as needed to accomplish the
15 intent of this appropriation (23414) ......... 5,000,000
16 For grants to schools and other eligible
17 entities for specific programs including,
18 but not limited to, the homeless education
19 program pursuant to title VII of the
20 McKinney Vento homeless assistance act.
21 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision
22 of law, a portion of this appropriation
23 may be suballocated to other state depart-
24 ments and agencies, subject to the
25 approval of the director of the budget, as
26 needed to accomplish the intent of this
27 appropriation (23413) ........................ 8,000,000
28 For grants to schools and other eligible
29 entities for specific programs including,
30 but not limited to, the Carl D. Perkins
31 vocational and applied technology educa-
32 tion act (VTEA).
33 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision
34 of law, a portion of this appropriation
35 may be suballocated to other state depart-
36 ments and agencies, subject to the
37 approval of the director of the budget, as
38 needed to accomplish the intent of this
39 appropriation (23477) ....................... 68,578,000
40 For various grants to schools and other
41 eligible entities. Notwithstanding any
42 inconsistent provision of law, a portion
43 of this appropriation may be suballocated
44 to other state departments and agencies,
45 subject to the approval of the director of
46 the budget, as needed to accomplish the
47 intent of this appropriation (23407) ........ 34,425,000
48 For the education of individuals with disa-
49 bilities including up to $3,000,000 for
50 services and expenses of early childhood
51 family and community engagement centers
52 and $500,000 for services and expenses of
266 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 the center for autism and related disabil-
2 ities at the state university of New York
3 at Albany. Notwithstanding any inconsist-
4 ent provision of law, a portion of the
5 funds appropriated herein shall be avail-
6 able, subject to a plan developed by the
7 commissioner of education and approved by
8 the director of the budget, for grants to
9 ensure appropriately certified teachers in
10 schools providing special services or
11 programs as defined in paragraphs e, g, i
12 and l of subdivision 2 of section 4401 of
13 the education law to children placed by
14 school districts and in approved preschool
15 programs that provide full and half-day
16 educational programs in accordance with
17 section 4410 of the education law for
18 children placed by school district.
19 Provided further that, in the allocation
20 of funds, priority shall be given to those
21 programs with a demonstrated need to
22 increase the number of certified teachers
23 to comply with state and federal require-
24 ments. Such funds shall be made available
25 for such activities as certification prep-
26 aration, training, assisting schools with
27 personnel shortages and supporting activ-
28 ities that improve the delivery of
29 services to improve results for children
30 with disabilities. Provided further that
31 notwithstanding any inconsistent provision
32 of law, of the funds appropriated herein:
33 up to $10,000,000 shall be available for
34 costs associated with schools operated
35 under article 85 of the education law
36 which otherwise would be payable through
37 the department's general fund aid to
38 localities appropriation, provided further
39 that notwithstanding any inconsistent
40 provision of law, any disbursements
41 against this $10,000,000 shall immediately
42 reduce the amounts appropriated in the
43 education department's general fund aid to
44 localities for costs associated with
45 schools operated under article 85 of the
46 education law by an equivalent amount, and
47 the portion of such general fund appropri-
48 ation so affected shall have no further
49 force or effect.
50 Notwithstanding any provision of the law to
51 the contrary, funds appropriated herein
52 shall be available for payment of liabil-
267 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 ities heretofore accrued or hereafter to
2 accrue and subject to the approval of the
3 director of budget, such funds shall be
4 available to the department net of disal-
5 lowances, refunds, reimbursements and
6 credits. Notwithstanding any inconsistent
7 provision of law, a portion of this appro-
8 priation may be suballocated to other
9 state departments and agencies, as needed,
10 to accomplish the intent of this appropri-
11 ation (21737) .............................. 987,970,000
12 --------------
13 Program account subtotal ............... 3,404,290,000
14 --------------
15 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
16 Federal Health and Human Services Fund
17 Federal Health and Human Services Account - 25122
18 For grants to schools for specific programs
19 (21742) ...................................... 5,000,000
20 --------------
21 Program account subtotal ................... 5,000,000
22 --------------
23 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
24 Federal Miscellaneous Operating Grants Fund
25 Federal Operating Grants Account - 25456
26 For grants to schools for specific programs
27 (21826) ...................................... 5,000,000
28 --------------
29 Program account subtotal ................... 5,000,000
30 --------------
31 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
32 Federal USDA-Food and Nutrition Services Fund
33 Federal USDA-Food and Nutrition Services Account - 25026
34 For grants to schools and other eligible
35 entities for programs funded through the
36 national school lunch act (21703) ........ 1,550,675,000
37 --------------
38 Program account subtotal ............... 1,550,675,000
39 --------------
40 Special Revenue Funds - Other
41 Charter School Stimulus Fund
42 Charter School Stimulus Account - 20601
43 For services and expenses related to devel-
44 opment, implementation and operation of
268 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 charter schools, including facility costs
2 and loans to authorized schools, and
3 including funds available for transfer for
4 the administrative/technical support
5 services provided by the charter school
6 institute of the state university of New
7 York. This appropriation shall only be
8 available for expenditure upon the
9 approval of an expenditure plan by the
10 director of the budget (21700) .............. 20,000,000
11 --------------
12 Program account subtotal .................. 20,000,000
13 --------------
14 Special Revenue Funds - Other
15 Combined Expendable Trust Fund
16 New York State Teen Health Education Account - 20200
17 For teen health education, pursuant to
18 section 99-u of the state finance law
19 (55926) ........................................ 120,000
20 --------------
21 Program account subtotal ..................... 120,000
22 --------------
23 Special Revenue Funds - Other
24 Mobile Sports Wagering Fund
25 Mobile Sports Wagering Account - 24955
26 For general support for public schools for
27 the 2022-23 school year, for grants
28 awarded pursuant to section 1367 of the
29 racing, pari-mutuel wagering and breeding
30 law and section 92-c of the state finance
31 law ........................................ 614,580,000
32 --------------
33 Program account subtotal ................. 614,580,000
34 --------------
35 Special Revenue Funds - Other
36 NYS Commercial Gaming Fund
37 Commercial Gaming Revenue Account - 23701
38 For general support for public schools for
39 the 2022-23 school year, for grants
40 awarded pursuant to paragraph b of subdi-
41 vision 5 of section 97-nnnn of the state
42 finance law (56140) ........................ 140,800,000
43 --------------
44 Program account subtotal ................. 140,800,000
45 --------------
269 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 Special Revenue Funds - Other
2 State Lottery Fund
3 State Lottery Account - 20901
4 For general support for public schools for
5 the 2022-23 school year, provided that,
6 notwithstanding any other provision of law
7 to the contrary, in computing the addi-
8 tional lottery grant pursuant to subpara-
9 graph (4) of paragraph b of subdivision 4
10 of section 92-c of the state finance law
11 for the 2022-23 school year, the base
12 grant shall not exceed $2,412,980,000
13 (21735) .................................. 2,412,980,000
14 For allowances to private schools for the
15 blind and deaf for the 2022-23 school year
16 (23460) ......................................... 20,000
17 For general support for public schools, for
18 the June 2021-22 school year payment
19 (23495) .................................... 240,000,000
20 --------------
21 Program account subtotal ............... 2,653,000,000
22 --------------
23 Special Revenue Funds - Other
24 State Lottery Fund
25 VLT Education Account - 20904
26 For general support for public schools for
27 the 2022-23 school year, for grants
28 awarded pursuant to subparagraph (2-a) of
29 paragraph b of subdivision 4 of section
30 92-c of the state finance law (23494) .... 1,237,000,000
31 --------------
32 Program account subtotal ............... 1,237,000,000
33 --------------
34 SCHOOL TAX RELIEF PROGRAM ................................ 1,830,985,000
35 --------------
36 Special Revenue Funds - Other
37 School Tax Relief Fund
38 School Tax Relief Account - 20551
39 For payments to local governments relating
40 to the school tax relief (STAR) program
41 including state aid pursuant to section
42 1306-a of the real property tax law.
43 Up to $5,000,000 of the funds appropriated
44 hereby may be suballocated or transferred
45 to the department of taxation and finance
46 for the purpose of making direct payments
270 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES 2022-23
1 to certain property owners from the
2 account established pursuant to subpara-
3 graph (iii) of paragraph (a) of subdivi-
4 sion 14 of section 425 of the real proper-
5 ty tax law (21709) ....................... 1,830,985,000
6 --------------
271 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 ADULT CAREER AND CONTINUING EDUCATION SERVICES PROGRAM
2 General Fund
3 Local Assistance Account - 10000
4 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
5 For case services provided on or after October 1, 2019 to disabled
6 individuals in accordance with economic eligibility criteria devel-
7 oped by the department (21713) .....................................
8 54,000,000 ....................................... (re. $41,202,000)
9 For services and expenses of independent living centers (21856) ......
10 13,361,000 ........................................ (re. $9,750,000)
11 For additional services and expenses of existing independent living
12 centers ... 1,000,000 ............................. (re. $1,000,000)
13 For college readers aid payments (21854) ... 294,000 .. (re. $186,000)
14 For services and expenses of supported employment and integrated
15 employment opportunities provided on or after October 1, 2019:
16 For services and expenses of programs providing or leading to the
17 provision of time-limited services or long-term support services
18 (21741) ... 15,160,000 ........................... (re. $14,774,000)
19 For grants to schools for programs involving literacy and basic educa-
20 tion for public assistance recipients for the 2021-22 school year
21 for those programs administered by the state education department
22 (23411) ... 1,843,000 ............................. (re. $1,843,000)
23 For competitive grants for adult literacy/education aid to public and
24 private not-for-profit agencies, including but not limited to, 2 and
25 4 year colleges, community based organizations, libraries, and
26 volunteer literacy organizations and institutions which meet quality
27 standards promulgated by the commissioner of education to provide
28 programs of basic literacy, high school equivalency, and English as
29 a second language to persons 16 years of age or older for the
30 remaining payments of the 2020-21 school year and for the 2021-22
31 school year, provided further that no more than $300,000 shall be
32 available for remaining payments for the 2020-21 school year (23410)
33 ... 6,293,000 ..................................... (re. $6,293,000)
34 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
35 For case services provided on or after October 1, 2018 to disabled
36 individuals in accordance with economic eligibility criteria devel-
37 oped by the department (21713) .....................................
38 54,000,000 ........................................ (re. $1,165,000)
39 For services and expenses of independent living centers (21856) ......
40 13,361,000 .......................................... (re. $785,000)
41 For services and expenses of supported employment and integrated
42 employment opportunities provided on or after October 1, 2018:
43 For services and expenses of programs providing or leading to the
44 provision of time-limited services or long-term support services
45 (21741) ... 15,160,000 ............................ (re. $9,333,000)
46 For grants to schools for programs involving literacy and basic educa-
47 tion for public assistance recipients for the 2020-21 school year
48 for those programs administered by the state education department
49 (23411) ... 1,843,000 ............................. (re. $1,177,000)
272 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For competitive grants for adult literacy/education aid to public and
2 private not-for-profit agencies, including but not limited to, 2 and
3 4 year colleges, community based organizations, libraries, and
4 volunteer literacy organizations and institutions which meet quality
5 standards promulgated by the commissioner of education to provide
6 programs of basic literacy, high school equivalency, and English as
7 a second language to persons 16 years of age or older for the
8 remaining payments of the 2019-20 school year and for the 2020-21
9 school year, provided further that no more than $300,000 shall be
10 available for remaining payments for the 2019-20 school year (23410)
11 ... 6,293,000 ..................................... (re. $2,539,000)
12 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
13 For case services provided on or after October 1, 2017 to disabled
14 individuals in accordance with economic eligibility criteria devel-
15 oped by the department (21713) ... 54,000,000 ........ (re. $63,000)
16 For services and expenses of supported employment and integrated
17 employment opportunities provided on or after October 1, 2017:
18 For services and expenses of programs providing or leading to the
19 provision of time-limited services or long-term support services
20 (21741) ... 15,160,000 ............................ (re. $1,900,000)
21 For grants to schools for programs involving literacy and basic educa-
22 tion for public assistance recipients for the 2019-20 school year
23 for those programs administered by the state education department
24 (23411) ... 1,843,000 ................................ (re. $10,000)
25 For competitive grants for adult literacy/education aid to public and
26 private not-for-profit agencies, including but not limited to, 2 and
27 4 year colleges, community based organizations, libraries, and
28 volunteer literacy organizations and institutions which meet quality
29 standards promulgated by the commissioner of education to provide
30 programs of basic literacy, high school equivalency, and English as
31 a second language to persons 16 years of age or older for the
32 remaining payments of the 2018-19 school year and for the 2019-20
33 school year, provided further that no more than $300,000 shall be
34 available for remaining payments for the 2018-19 school year (23410)
35 ... 6,293,000 ....................................... (re. $529,000)
36 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018, as added by chapter 54,
37 section 2, of the laws of 2018:
38 For grants to schools for programs involving literacy and basic educa-
39 tion for public assistance recipients for the 2018-19 school year
40 for those programs administered by the state education department
41 (23411) ... 1,843,000 ................................ (re. $24,000)
42 For competitive grants for adult literacy/education aid to public and
43 private not-for-profit agencies, including but not limited to, 2 and
44 4 year colleges, community based organizations, libraries, and
45 volunteer literacy organizations and institutions which meet quality
46 standards promulgated by the commissioner of education to provide
47 programs of basic literacy, high school equivalency, and English as
48 a second language to persons 16 years of age or older for the
49 remaining payments of the 2017-18 school year and for the 2018-19
50 school year, provided further that no more than $300,000 shall be
273 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 available for remaining payments for the 2017-18 school year (23410)
2 ... 6,293,000 ........................................ (re. $47,000)
3 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2017, as added by chapter 50,
4 section 2, of the laws of 2017:
5 For competitive grants for adult literacy/ education aid to public and
6 private not-for-profit agencies, including but not limited to, 2 and
7 4 year colleges, community based organizations, libraries, and
8 volunteer literacy organizations and institutions which meet quality
9 standards promulgated by the commissioner of education to provide
10 programs of basic literacy, high school equivalency, and English as
11 a second language to persons 16 years of age or older for the
12 remaining payments of the 2016-17 school year and for the 2017-18
13 school year, provided further that no more than $300,000 shall be
14 available for remaining payments for the 2016-17 school year (23410)
15 ... 6,293,000 ....................................... (re. $207,000)
16 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2016:
17 For grants to schools for programs involving literacy and basic educa-
18 tion for public assistance recipients for the 2016-17 school year
19 for those programs administered by the state education department
20 (23411) ... 1,843,000 ............................... (re. $322,000)
21 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
22 Federal Education Fund
23 Federal Department of Education Account - 25210
24 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
25 For case services provided to individuals with disabilities (21713)
26 ... 70,000,000 ................................... (re. $70,000,000)
27 For the independent living program (21856) ...........................
28 2,572,000 ......................................... (re. $2,572,000)
29 For the supported employment program (21741) .........................
30 2,500,000 ......................................... (re. $2,500,000)
31 For grants to schools and other eligible entities for adult basic
32 education, literacy, and civics education pursuant to the workforce
33 investment act (21734) ... 48,704,000 ............ (re. $48,704,000)
34 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
35 For case services provided to individuals with disabilities (21713)
36 ... 70,000,000 ................................... (re. $63,192,000)
37 For the independent living program (21856) ...........................
38 2,572,000 ......................................... (re. $2,482,000)
39 For the supported employment program (21741) .........................
40 2,500,000 ......................................... (re. $1,514,000)
41 For grants to schools and other eligible entities for adult basic
42 education, literacy, and civics education pursuant to the workforce
43 investment act (21734) ... 48,704,000 ............ (re. $35,607,000)
44 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
45 For case services provided to individuals with disabilities (21713)
46 ... 70,000,000 ................................... (re. $51,221,000)
274 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For the independent living program (21856) ...........................
2 2,572,000 ......................................... (re. $2,158,000)
3 For the supported employment program (21741) .........................
4 2,500,000 ......................................... (re. $1,506,000)
5 For grants to schools and other eligible entities for adult basic
6 education, literacy, and civics education pursuant to the workforce
7 investment act (21734) ... 48,704,000 ............. (re. $9,869,000)
8 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018, as added by chapter 54,
9 section 2, of the laws of 2018:
10 For case services provided to individuals with disabilities (21713)
11 ... 70,000,000 ................................... (re. $33,112,000)
12 For the independent living program (21856) ...........................
13 2,572,000 ......................................... (re. $2,072,000)
14 For the supported employment program (21741) .........................
15 2,500,000 ......................................... (re. $1,486,000)
16 For grants to schools and other eligible entities for adult basic
17 education, literacy, and civics education pursuant to the workforce
18 investment act (21734) ... 48,704,000 ............. (re. $8,990,000)
19 Special Revenue Funds - Other
20 Miscellaneous Special Revenue Fund
21 VESID Social Security Account - 22001
22 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
23 For the rehabilitation of social security disability beneficiaries
24 (21852) ... 11,760,000 ............................ (re. $9,585,000)
25 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
26 For the rehabilitation of social security disability beneficiaries
27 (21852) ... 11,760,000 ............................ (re. $5,376,000)
28 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
29 For the rehabilitation of social security disability beneficiaries
30 (21852) ... 11,760,000 ........................... (re. $11,760,000)
31 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018, as added by chapter 54,
32 section 2, of the laws of 2018:
33 For the rehabilitation of social security disability beneficiaries
34 (21852) ... 11,760,000 ............................ (re. $7,896,000)
35 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2017, as added by chapter 50,
36 section 2, of the laws of 2017:
37 For the rehabilitation of social security disability beneficiaries
38 (21852) ... 11,760,000 ........................... (re. $10,959,000)
39 Special Revenue Funds - Other
40 Vocational Rehabilitation Fund
41 Vocational Rehabilitation Account - 23051
42 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
275 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of the special workers' compensation program
2 (21852) ... 698,000 ................................. (re. $672,000)
3 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
4 For services and expenses of the special workers' compensation program
5 (21852) ... 698,000 ................................. (re. $694,000)
6 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
7 For services and expenses of the special workers' compensation program
8 (21852) ... 698,000 ................................. (re. $698,000)
9 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018, as added by chapter 54,
10 section 2, of the laws of 2018:
11 For services and expenses of the special workers' compensation program
12 (21852) ... 698,000 ................................. (re. $698,000)
13 CULTURAL EDUCATION PROGRAM
14 General Fund
15 Local Assistance Account - 10000
16 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
17 Aid to public libraries including aid to New York public library
18 (NYPL) and NYPL's science industry and business library. Provided
19 that, notwithstanding any provision of law, rule or regulation to
20 the contrary, such aid, and the state's liability therefor, shall
21 represent fulfillment of the state's obligation for this program
22 (21846) ... 91,627,000 ............................ (re. $7,205,000)
23 For services and expenses of the Schomburg Center for Research in
24 Black Culture ... 250,000 ........................... (re. $250,000)
25 For services and expenses of the Langston Hughes Community Library and
26 Cultural Center of Queens Library ... 75,000 ......... (re. $75,000)
27 Aid to educational television and radio. Notwithstanding any provision
28 of law, rule or regulation to the contrary, the amount appropriated
29 herein shall represent fulfillment of the state's obligation for
30 this program (21848) ... 14,002,000 ............... (re. $1,378,000)
31 For additional aid to educational television and radio ...............
32 25,000 ............................................... (re. $25,000)
33 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
34 Aid to public libraries including aid to New York public library
35 (NYPL) and NYPL's science industry and business library. Provided
36 that, notwithstanding any provision of law, rule or regulation to
37 the contrary, such aid, and the state's liability therefor, shall
38 represent fulfillment of the state's obligation for this program
39 (21846) ... 91,627,000 .............................. (re. $121,000)
40 For additional aid to public libraries ...............................
41 2,500,000 ......................................... (re. $2,000,000)
42 For services and expenses of the Schomburg Center for Research in
43 Black Culture ... 250,000 ........................... (re. $250,000)
44 For services and expenses of the Langston Hughes Community Library and
45 Cultural Center of Queens Library ... 75,000 ......... (re. $75,000)
276 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
2 Aid to public libraries including aid to New York public library
3 (NYPL) and NYPL's science industry and business library. Provided
4 that, notwithstanding any provision of law, rule or regulation to
5 the contrary, such aid, and the state's liability therefor, shall
6 represent fulfillment of the state's obligation for this program
7 (21846) ... 91,627,000 .............................. (re. $197,000)
8 For services and expenses of the Langston Hughes Community Library and
9 Cultural Center of Queens Library ... 75,000 ......... (re. $68,000)
10 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018, as added by chapter 54,
11 section 2, of the laws of 2018:
12 For services and expenses of the Langston Hughes Community Library and
13 Cultural Center of Queens Library ... 75,000 ......... (re. $57,000)
14 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2017, as added by chapter 50,
15 section 2, of the laws of 2017:
16 For services and expenses of the Langston Hughes Community Library and
17 Cultural Center of Queens Library ... 75,000 ......... (re. $75,000)
18 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
19 Federal Miscellaneous Operating Grants Fund
20 Federal Operating Grants Account - 25456
21 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
22 For aid to public libraries pursuant to various federal laws including
23 the library services technology act (21851) ........................
24 5,400,000 ......................................... (re. $5,400,000)
25 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
26 For aid to public libraries pursuant to various federal laws including
27 the library services technology act (21851) ........................
28 5,400,000 ......................................... (re. $1,780,000)
29 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
30 For aid to public libraries pursuant to various federal laws including
31 the library services technology act (21851) ........................
32 5,400,000 ......................................... (re. $2,767,000)
33 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018, as added by chapter 54,
34 section 2, of the laws of 2018:
35 For aid to public libraries pursuant to various federal laws including
36 the library services technology act (21851) ........................
37 5,400,000 ......................................... (re. $3,054,000)
38 Special Revenue Funds - Other
39 New York State Local Government Records Management Improvement Fund
40 Local Government Records Management Account - 20501
41 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
277 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 Grants to individual local governments or groups of cooperating local
2 governments as provided in section 57.35 of the arts and cultural
3 affairs law (21849) ... 8,346,000 ................. (re. $6,768,000)
4 Aid for documentary heritage grants and aid to eligible archives,
5 libraries, historical societies, museums, and to certain organiza-
6 tions including the state education department that provide services
7 to such programs (21850) ... 461,000 ................ (re. $416,000)
8 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
9 Grants to individual local governments or groups of cooperating local
10 governments as provided in section 57.35 of the arts and cultural
11 affairs law (21849) ... 8,346,000 ................. (re. $8,346,000)
12 Aid for documentary heritage grants and aid to eligible archives,
13 libraries, historical societies, museums, and to certain organiza-
14 tions including the state education department that provide services
15 to such programs (21850) ... 461,000 ................ (re. $461,000)
16 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
17 Grants to individual local governments or groups of cooperating local
18 governments as provided in section 57.35 of the arts and cultural
19 affairs law (21849) ... 8,346,000 ................. (re. $5,255,000)
20 Aid for documentary heritage grants and aid to eligible archives,
21 libraries, historical societies, museums, and to certain organiza-
22 tions including the state education department that provide services
23 to such programs (21850) ... 461,000 ................ (re. $410,000)
24 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018, as added by chapter 54,
25 section 2, of the laws of 2018:
26 Grants to individual local governments or groups of cooperating local
27 governments as provided in section 57.35 of the arts and cultural
28 affairs law (21849) ... 8,346,000 ................. (re. $2,651,000)
29 Aid for documentary heritage grants and aid to eligible archives,
30 libraries, historical societies, museums, and to certain organiza-
31 tions including the state education department that provide services
32 to such programs (21850) ... 461,000 ................ (re. $281,000)
33 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2017, as added by chapter 50,
34 section 2, of the laws of 2017:
35 Grants to individual local governments or groups of cooperating local
36 governments as provided in section 57.35 of the arts and cultural
37 affairs law (21849) ... 8,346,000 ................. (re. $4,124,000)
38 Aid for documentary heritage grants and aid to eligible archives,
39 libraries, historical societies, museums, and to certain organiza-
40 tions including the state education department that provide services
41 to such programs (21850) ... 461,000 ................. (re. $29,000)
42 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2016:
43 Grants to individual local governments or groups of cooperating local
44 governments as provided in section 57.35 of the arts and cultural
45 affairs law (21849) ... 8,346,000 ................. (re. $5,346,000)
46 Aid for documentary heritage grants and aid to eligible archives,
47 libraries, historical societies, museums, and to certain organiza-
278 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 tions including the state education department that provide services
2 to such programs (21850) ... 461,000 .................. (re. $2,000)
3 OFFICE OF HIGHER EDUCATION AND THE PROFESSIONS PROGRAM
4 General Fund
5 Local Assistance Account - 10000
6 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
7 For liberty partnerships program awards as prescribed by section 612
8 of the education law as added by chapter 425 of the laws of 1988.
9 Notwithstanding any other section of law to the contrary, funding
10 for such programs in the 2021-22 fiscal year shall be limited to the
11 amount appropriated herein (21830) .................................
12 18,361,860 ....................................... (re. $18,361,860)
13 Unrestricted aid to independent colleges and universities, notwith-
14 standing any other section of law to the contrary, aid otherwise due
15 and payable in the 2021-22 fiscal year shall be limited to the
16 amount appropriated herein (21831) ... 35,129,000 ... (re. $569,000)
17 For higher education opportunity program awards. Funds appropriated
18 herein shall be used by independent colleges to expand opportunities
19 for the educationally and economically disadvantaged at independent
20 institutions of higher learning, and may be used to support current-
21 ly enrolled HEOP students in projects that phase out (21832) .......
22 35,526,920 ....................................... (re. $35,526,920)
23 For science and technology entry program (STEP) awards (21834) .......
24 15,811,180 ....................................... (re. $14,929,719)
25 For collegiate science and technology entry program (CSTEP) awards
26 (21835) ... 11,981,890 ........................... (re. $11,981,890)
27 For teacher opportunity corps program awards (21837) .................
28 450,000 ............................................. (re. $450,000)
29 For services and expenses of a foster youth initiative, to provide
30 additional services and expenses to expand opportunities through
31 existing postsecondary opportunity programs at the State University
32 of New York, City University of New York, and other degree-granting
33 institutions for foster youth; and to provide any necessary supple-
34 mental financial aid for foster youth, which may include the cost of
35 tuition and fees, books, transportation, housing and other expenses
36 as determined by the commissioner to be necessary for such foster
37 youth to attend college; financial aid outreach to foster youth;
38 summer college preparation programs to help foster youth transition
39 to college, prepare them to navigate on-campus systems, and provide
40 preparation in reading, writing, and mathematics for foster youth
41 who need it; advisement, counseling, tutoring, and academic assist-
42 ance for foster youth; and supplemental housing and meals for foster
43 youth. A portion of these funds may be suballocated to other state
44 departments, agencies, the State University of New York, and the
45 City University of New York. Notwithstanding any law, rule, or regu-
46 lation to the contrary, funds provided to the State University of
47 New York may be utilized to support state-operated campuses, statu-
48 tory colleges, or community colleges as appropriate (55913) ...
49 6,000,000 ......................................... (re. $6,000,000)
279 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For state financial assistance to expand high needs nursing programs
2 at private colleges and universities in accordance with section
3 6401-a of the education law (21838) ... 941,000 ..... (re. $941,000)
4 For services and expenses of the national board for professional
5 teaching standards certification grant program for the 2021-22
6 school year (21785) ... 184,000 ..................... (re. $184,000)
7 For enhancing supports and services for students with disabilities
8 enrolled in New York State degree granting colleges and universities
9 ... 2,000,000 ..................................... (re. $2,000,000)
10 For services and expenses of Syracuse University's Inclusive Program
11 ... 100,000 ......................................... (re. $100,000)
12 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
13 For liberty partnerships program awards as prescribed by section 612
14 of the education law as added by chapter 425 of the laws of 1988.
15 Notwithstanding any other section of law to the contrary, funding
16 for such programs in the 2020-21 fiscal year shall be limited to the
17 amount appropriated herein (21830) .................................
18 18,361,860 ....................................... (re. $11,439,000)
19 Unrestricted aid to independent colleges and universities, notwith-
20 standing any other section of law to the contrary, aid otherwise due
21 and payable in the 2021-22 fiscal year shall be limited to the
22 amount appropriated herein (21831) .................................
23 35,129,000 ........................................ (re. $1,756,000)
24 For higher education opportunity program awards. Funds appropriated
25 herein shall be used by independent colleges to expand opportunities
26 for the educationally and economically disadvantaged at independent
27 institutions of higher learning, and may be used to support current-
28 ly enrolled HEOP students in projects that phase out (21832) ...
29 35,526,920 ........................................ (re. $9,695,000)
30 For science and technology entry program (STEP) awards (21834) .......
31 15,811,180 ........................................ (re. $6,134,000)
32 For collegiate science and technology entry program (CSTEP) awards
33 (21835) ... 11,981,890 ............................ (re. $3,988,000)
34 For teacher opportunity corps program awards (21837) .................
35 450,000 ............................................. (re. $450,000)
36 For services and expenses of a foster youth initiative, to provide
37 additional services and expenses to expand opportunities through
38 existing postsecondary opportunity programs at the State University
39 of New York, City University of New York, and other degree-granting
40 institutions for foster youth; and to provide any necessary supple-
41 mental financial aid for foster youth, which may include the cost of
42 tuition and fees, books, transportation, housing and other expenses
43 as determined by the commissioner to be necessary for such foster
44 youth to attend college; financial aid outreach to foster youth;
45 summer college preparation programs to help foster youth transition
46 to college, prepare them to navigate on-campus systems, and provide
47 preparation in reading, writing, and mathematics for foster youth
48 who need it; advisement, counseling, tutoring, and academic assist-
49 ance for foster youth; and supplemental housing and meals for foster
50 youth. A portion of these funds may be suballocated to other state
51 departments, agencies, the State University of New York, and the
280 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 City University of New York. Notwithstanding any law, rule, or regu-
2 lation to the contrary, funds provided to the State University of
3 New York may be utilized to support state-operated campuses, statu-
4 tory colleges, or community colleges as appropriate (55913) ...
5 6,000,000 ........................................... (re. $445,000)
6 For services and expenses of the national board for professional
7 teaching standards certification grant program for the 2020-21
8 school year (21785) ... 368,000 ..................... (re. $261,000)
9 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019:
10 For liberty partnerships program awards as prescribed by section 612
11 of the education law as added by chapter 425 of the laws of 1988.
12 Notwithstanding any other section of law to the contrary, funding for
13 such programs in the 2019-20 fiscal year shall be limited to the
14 amount appropriated herein (21830) .................................
15 15,301,860 ........................................ (re. $3,482,000)
16 For science and technology entry program (STEP) awards (21834) .......
17 13,176,180 ........................................ (re. $1,395,000)
18 For collegiate science and technology entry program (CSTEP) awards
19 (21835) ... 9,984,890 ............................. (re. $1,312,000)
20 For teacher opportunity corps program awards (21837) .................
21 450,000 ............................................. (re. $450,000)
22 For services and expenses of a foster youth initiative, to provide
23 additional services and expenses to expand opportunities through
24 existing postsecondary opportunity programs at the State University
25 of New York, City University of New York, and other degree-granting
26 institutions for foster youth; and to provide any necessary supple-
27 mental financial aid for foster youth, which may include the cost of
28 tuition and fees, books, transportation, housing and other expenses
29 as determined by the commissioner to be necessary for such foster
30 youth to attend college; financial aid outreach to foster youth;
31 summer college preparation programs to help foster youth transition
32 to college, prepare them to navigate on-campus systems, and provide
33 preparation in reading, writing, and mathematics for foster youth
34 who need it; advisement, counseling, tutoring, and academic assist-
35 ance for foster youth; and supplemental housing and meals for foster
36 youth. A portion of these funds may be suballocated to other state
37 departments, agencies, the State University of New York, and the
38 City University of New York. Notwithstanding any law, rule, or regu-
39 lation to the contrary, funds provided to the State University of
40 New York may be utilized to support state-operated campuses, statu-
41 tory colleges, or community colleges as appropriate (55913) ...
42 1,500,000 ............................................ (re. $61,000)
43 For services and expenses of the national board for professional
44 teaching standards certification grant program for the 2019-20
45 school year (21785) ... 368,000 ..................... (re. $192,000)
46 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2019, as amended by chapter 53,
47 section 1, of the laws of 2020:
48 For higher education opportunity program awards. Funds appropriated
49 herein shall be used by independent colleges to expand opportunities
50 for the educationally and economically disadvantaged at independent
281 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 institutions of higher learning, and may be used to support current-
2 ly enrolled HEOP students in projects that phase out (21832) .......
3 29,605,920 ........................................ (re. $2,441,000)
4 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2018, as added by chapter 54,
5 section 2, of the laws of 2018:
6 For liberty partnerships program awards as prescribed by section 612
7 of the education law as added by chapter 425 of the laws of 1988.
8 Notwithstanding any other section of law to the contrary, funding for
9 such programs in the 2018-19 fiscal year shall be limited to the
10 amount appropriated herein (21830) .................................
11 15,301,860 .......................................... (re. $473,000)
12 For higher education opportunity program awards. Funds appropriated
13 herein shall be used by independent colleges to expand opportunities
14 for the educationally and economically disadvantaged at independent
15 institutions of higher learning (21832) ............................
16 29,605,920 .......................................... (re. $512,000)
17 For science and technology entry program (STEP) awards (21834) .......
18 13,176,180 .......................................... (re. $622,000)
19 For collegiate science and technology entry program (CSTEP) awards
20 (21835) ... 9,984,890 ............................... (re. $266,000)
21 For services and expenses of a foster youth initiative to ensure
22 support is available through current post-secondary opportunity
23 programs at public and independent institutions for foster youth
24 including summer transition programs, and to provide foster youth
25 with financial aid outreach, counseling services, and direct finan-
26 cial support. Provided however, a portion of these funds may be used
27 to provide supplemental housing and meals for foster youth not
28 currently enrolled in a post-secondary opportunity program at SUNY.
29 A portion of these funds may be suballocated to other state depart-
30 ments, agencies, the State University of New York, and the City
31 University of New York. Notwithstanding any law, rule, or regulation
32 to the contrary, funds provided to the State University of New York
33 may be utilized to support state-operated campuses, statutory
34 colleges, or community colleges as appropriate (55913) .............
35 1,500,000 ............................................ (re. $20,000)
36 For services and expenses of the national board for professional
37 teaching standards certification grant program for the 2018-19
38 school year (21785) ... 368,000 ..................... (re. $115,000)
39 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2017, as added by chapter 50,
40 section 2, of the laws of 2017:
41 For liberty partnerships program awards as prescribed by section 612
42 of the education law as added by chapter 425 of the laws of 1988.
43 Notwithstanding any other section of law to the contrary, funding for
44 such programs in the 2017-18 fiscal year shall be limited to the
45 amount appropriated herein (21830) .................................
46 15,301,860 .......................................... (re. $676,000)
47 For higher education opportunity program awards. Funds appropriated
48 herein shall be used by independent colleges to expand opportunities
49 for the educationally and economically disadvantaged at independent
282 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 institutions of higher learning (21832) ............................
2 29,605,920 .......................................... (re. $818,000)
3 For science and technology entry program (STEP) awards (21834) .......
4 13,176,180 .......................................... (re. $224,000)
5 For collegiate science and technology entry program (CSTEP) awards
6 (21835) ... 9,984,890 ............................... (re. $302,000)
7 For teacher opportunity corps program awards (21837) .................
8 450,000 ............................................. (re. $402,000)
9 For services and expenses of a foster youth initiative to ensure
10 support is available through current post-secondary opportunity
11 programs at public and independent institutions for foster youth
12 including summer transition programs, and to provide foster youth
13 with financial aid outreach, counseling services, and direct finan-
14 cial support. A portion of these funds may be suballocated to other
15 state departments, agencies, the State University of New York, and
16 the City University of New York (55913) ............................
17 1,500,000 ........................................... (re. $102,000)
18 For services and expenses of the national board for professional
19 teaching standards certification grant program for the 2017-18
20 school year (21785) ... 368,000 ....................... (re. $3,000)
21 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2016:
22 For liberty partnerships program awards as prescribed by section 612
23 of the education law as added by chapter 425 of the laws of 1988.
24 Notwithstanding any other section of law to the contrary, funding for
25 such programs in the 2016-17 fiscal year shall be limited to the
26 amount appropriated herein (21830) .................................
27 15,301,860 .......................................... (re. $211,000)
28 For higher education opportunity program awards. Funds appropriated
29 herein shall be used by independent colleges to expand opportunities
30 for the educationally and economically disadvantaged at independent
31 institutions of higher learning (21832) ............................
32 29,605,920 .......................................... (re. $201,000)
33 For science and technology entry program (STEP) awards (21834) .......
34 13,176,180 ........................................... (re. $72,000)
35 For collegiate science and technology entry program (CSTEP) awards
36 (21835) ... 9,984,890 ............................... (re. $421,000)
37 For teacher opportunity corps program awards (21837) .................
38 450,000 .............................................. (re. $29,000)
39 For services and expenses of a foster youth initiative to ensure
40 support is available through current post-secondary opportunity
41 programs at public and independent institutions for foster youth
42 including summer transition programs, and to provide foster youth
43 with financial aid outreach, counseling services, and direct finan-
44 cial support. A portion of these funds may be suballocated to other
45 state departments, agencies, the State University of New York, and
46 the City University of New York (55913) ............................
47 1,500,000 ............................................ (re. $43,000)
48 For services and expenses of the national board for professional
49 teaching standards certification grant program for the 2016-17
50 school year (21785) ... 368,000 ..................... (re. $129,000)
283 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2015, as added by chapter 61,
2 section 1, of the laws of 2015:
3 For science and technology entry program (STEP)awards (21834)
4 11,845,180 .......................................... (re. $161,000)
5 For services and expenses of the national board for professional
6 teaching standards certification grant program for the 2015-16
7 school year (21785) ... 368,000 ..................... (re. $166,000)
8 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2014:
9 For liberty partnerships program awards as prescribed by section 612
10 of the education law as added by chapter 425 of the laws of 1988.
11 Notwithstanding any other section of law to the contrary, funding for
12 such programs in the 2014-15 fiscal year shall be limited to the
13 amount appropriated herein (21830) ... 12,918,260 .... (re. $31,000)
14 For services and expenses of the national board for professional
15 teaching standards certification grant program for the 2014-15
16 school year (21785) ... 368,000 ..................... (re. $111,000)
17 Special Revenue Funds - Federal
18 Federal Education Fund
19 Federal Department of Education Account - 25210
20 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021:
21 For grants to schools and other eligible entities for programs pursu-
22 ant to various federal laws including, but not limited to: title II
23 supporting effective instruction.
24 Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, funds appropri-
25 ated herein may be suballocated, subject to the approval of the
26 director of the budget, to any state agency or department, and
27 interchanged to other accounts, to accomplish the purpose of this
28 appropriation. A portion of this appropriation may be interchanged
29 to other accounts, as needed to accomplish the intent of this appro-
30 priation (23419) ... 5,000,000 .................... (re. $5,000,000)
31 By chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020:
32 For grants to schools and other eligible entities for programs pursu-
33 ant to various federal laws including, but not limited to: title II
34 supporting effective instruction.
35 Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, funds appropri-
36 ated herein may be suballocated, subject to the approval of the
37 director of the budget, to any state agency or department, and
38 interchanged to other accounts, to accomplish the purpose of this
39 appropriation. A portion of this appropriation may be interchanged
40 to other accounts, as needed to accomplish the intent of this appro-
41 priation (23419) ... 5,000,000 .................... (re. $5,000,000)
42 OFFICE OF PREKINDERGARTEN THROUGH GRADE TWELVE EDUCATION PROGRAM
43 General Fund
44 Local Assistance Account - 10000
284 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 The appropriation made by chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2021, is
2 hereby amended and reappropriated to read:
3 For purpose of providing additional funding for school districts which
4 have experienced a significant financial hardship created by (1) an
5 extraordinary change in the taxable property valuation or (2) a
6 significant shift in tax liability due to a tax certiorari settle-
7 ment or judgement. Notwithstanding section twenty-four of the state
8 finance law or any provision of law to the contrary, funds from this
9 appropriation shall be allocated only pursuant to a plan (i)
10 approved by the temporary president of the senate and the director
11 of the budget which sets forth either an itemized list of grantees
12 with the amount to be received by each, or the methodology for allo-
13 cating such appropriation, and (ii) which is thereafter included in
14 a senate resolution calling for the expenditure of such funds, which
15 resolution must be approved by a majority vote of all members
16 elected to the senate upon a roll call vote ........................
17 5,000,000 ......................................... (re. $1,000,000)
18 For services and expenses of the East Ramapo Central School District
19 (55949) ... 1,000,000 ............................. (re. $1,000,000)
20 For continuation of a statewide universal full-day pre-kindergarten
21 program in accordance with section 3602-ee of the education law to
22 reimburse school districts and/or eligible entities for the cost of
23 awarded programs operating in the 2021-22 school year and prior
24 school years; provided that up to 25 percent of a school district's
25 and/or eligible entity's awarded funds shall be made available in
26 the final quarter of the year in which services are provided as an
27 advance on subsequent school year liabilities; provided further that
28 funds appropriated herein shall only be awarded to school districts
29 and/or eligible entities which meet requirements provided for in
30 section 3602-ee of the education law.
31 Provided further that funds appropriated herein shall only be used to
32 supplement and not supplant current local expenditures of federal,
33 state or local funds on pre-kindergarten programs and the number of
34 placements in such programs from such sources and that current local
35 expenditures shall include any local expenditures of federal, state
36 or local funds used to supplement or extend services provided
37 directly or via contract to eligible children enrolled in a
38 universal pre-kindergarten program in accordance with section 3602-e
39 of the education law. Notwithstanding any provision of law to the
40 contrary, the funds appropriated herein shall only be available for
41 a statewide universal full-day pre-kindergarten program and, as of
42 July 1, [2022] 2023, may be suballocated or transferred to any other
43 appropriation for the sole purpose of administering such program.
44 Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, programs that
45 provide services for fewer than 180 days will be subject to the
46 provisions of subdivision 16 of section 3602-e of the education law
47 (56138) ... 340,000,000 ......................... (re. $340,000,000)
48 For reimbursement of supplemental basic tuition payments to charter
49 schools made by school districts in the 2020-21 school year, as
50 defined by paragraph (a) of subdivision 1 of section 2856 of the
51 education law. Provided that for expenses incurred in the 2020-21
52 school year, for the city school district in a city having a popu-
285 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 lation of one million or more, the annual apportionment shall be
2 reduced by $35,000,000 upon certification by the director of the
3 budget of the availability of a grant in the same amount from the
4 elementary and secondary school emergency relief funds provided
5 through the American rescue plan act of 2021 (55907) ...............
6 133,000,000 ...................................... (re. $51,000,000)
7 For charter schools facilities aid for the 2020-21 school year and
8 prior school years pursuant to subdivision 6-g of section 3602 of
9 the education law (55971) ... 51,500,000 ......... (re. $51,500,000)
10 Funds appropriated herein shall be used to provide awards to school
11 districts, boards of cooperative educational services, and other
12 eligible entities based on a plan developed by the commissioner of
13 education and approved by the director of the budget. Provided that
14 at least the following amounts of the funds appropriated herein
15 shall be made available as follows:
16 (i) $21,590,000 for the continuation of school-wide extended learning
17 grants to school districts or school districts in collaboration with
18 not-for-profit community-based organizations pursuant to the guide-
19 lines set forth and the awards made pursuant to chapter 53 of the
20 laws of 2013.
21 (ii) $8,495,000 for grants awarded based on responses to the 2013-20
22 NYS pathways in technology early college high schools request for
23 proposals, pursuant to chapter 53 of the laws of 2013.
24 (iii) $3,545,000 for grants awarded based on responses to the 2014-21
25 NYS pathways in technology early college high schools request for
26 proposals, pursuant to chapter 53 of the laws of 2014.
27 (iv) $3,465,000 for grants awarded based on responses to the 2015-2022
28 NYS pathways in technology early college high schools request for
29 proposals, pursuant to chapter 53 of the laws of 2015.
30 (v) $3,300,000 for grants awarded based on responses to the 2018-2024
31 NYS pathways in technology early college high school request for
32 proposals, pursuant to chapter 53 of the laws of 2017.
33 (vi) $1,651,000 for grants awarded based on responses to the 2019-2025
34 NYS pathways in technology early college high school request for
35 proposals, pursuant to chapter 53 of the laws of 2018.
36 (vii) $4,058,000 for the continuation of early college high school
37 awards made based on responses to the New York state early college
38 high school ECHS program request for proposals pursuant to chapter
39 53 of the laws of 2017.
40 (viii) $9,000,000 for early college high school grants awarded based
41 on responses to a request for proposals, pursuant to chapter 53 of
42 the laws of 2019.
43 (ix) $1,364,000 for the continuation of smart scholars early college
44 high school grants, provided that funds shall be used pursuant to
45 the guidelines set forth and the awards made pursuant to chapter 53
46 of the laws of 2013.
47 (x) $1,150,000 for the continuation of smart scholars early college
48 high school grants, provided that funds shall be used pursuant to
49 the guidelines set forth and the awards made pursuant to chapter 53
50 of the laws of 2018.
51 (xi) $1,798,000 for the continuation of smart transfer early college
52 high school program grants awarded based on responses to the New
286 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 York state smart transfer ECHS program request for proposals pursu-
2 ant to chapter 53 of the laws of 2016.
3 (xii) $20,500,000 for the continuation of the master teacher program,
4 pursuant to chapter 53 of the laws of 2013, chapter 53 of the laws
5 of 2015, chapter 53 of the laws of 2017, chapter 53 of the laws of
6 2018, and chapter 53 of the laws of 2019; notwithstanding any
7 provision of law to the contrary, upon approval of the director of
8 the budget, the funds hereby made available for master teacher
9 program funding may be suballocated, interchanged, transferred or
10 otherwise made available to the state university of New York for the
11 services and expenses of administering such program.
12 (xiii) $5,000,000 for the continuation of QUALITYstarsNY, pursuant to
13 chapter 53 of the laws of 2015 and chapter 53 of the laws of 2016;
14 notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, upon approval
15 of the director of the budget, the funds hereby made available for
16 QUALITYstarsNY may be suballocated, interchanged, transferred or
17 otherwise made available to the office of children and family
18 services for the sole purpose of administering such system.
19 (xiv) $3,000,000 for the continuation of New York state masters-in-e-
20 ducation teacher incentive scholarship program, pursuant to chapter
21 53 of the laws of 2015; notwithstanding any provision of law to the
22 contrary, upon approval of the director of the budget, the funds
23 hereby made available for the masters-in-education teacher incentive
24 scholarship program may be suballocated, interchanged, transferred
25 or otherwise made available to the higher education services corpo-
26 ration for the sole purpose of administering such program.
27 (xv) $35,000,000 for the continuation of awards made based on
28 responses to the empire state after-school program request for
29 proposals pursuant to chapter 53 of the laws of 2017; notwithstand-
30 ing any provision of law to the contrary, upon approval of the
31 director of the budget, the funds hereby made available may be
32 suballocated, interchanged, transferred or otherwise made available
33 to the office of children and family services for the sole purpose
34 of administering such grants.
35 (xvi) $10,000,000 for the continuation of awards made based on
36 responses to the empire state after-school program request for
37 proposals pursuant to chapter 53 of the laws of 2018; notwithstand-
38 ing any provision of law to the contrary, upon approval of the
39 director of the budget, the funds hereby made available may be
40 suballocated, interchanged, transferred or otherwise made available
41 to the office of children and family services for the sole purpose
42 of administering such grants.
43 (xvii) $10,000,000 for the continuation of awards made based on
44 responses to the empire state after-school program request for
45 proposals pursuant to chapter 53 of the laws of 2019; notwithstand-
46 ing any provision of law to the contrary, upon approval of the
47 director of the budget, the funds hereby made available may be
48 suballocated, interchanged, transferred or otherwise made available
49 to the office of children and family services for the sole purpose
50 of administering such grants.
51 (xviii) $5,800,000 for services and expenses to subsidize the remain-
52 ing cost of advanced placement and international baccalaureate exam
287 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 fees for low-income students, as determined by free and reduced
2 price lunch eligibility, pursuant to a plan developed by the commis-
3 sioner of education and approved by the director of the budget.
4 (xix) $1,500,000 for grants for the advanced courses access program
5 pursuant to chapter 53 of the laws of 2018 and chapter 53 of the
6 laws of 2019, provided that such grants shall be awarded to school
7 districts and/or boards of cooperative educational services in order
8 to increase advanced course offerings for students, particularly in
9 districts with no or very limited advanced course offerings.
10 (xx) $400,000 for empire state excellence in teaching awards pursuant
11 to chapter 53 of the laws of 2017; notwithstanding any provision of
12 law to the contrary, upon approval of the director of the budget,
13 the funds hereby made available may be suballocated, interchanged,
14 transferred or otherwise made available to the state university of
15 New York for the services and expenses of administering such awards.
16 (xxi) $6,000,000 for grants for the smart start computer science
17 program pursuant to chapter 53 of the laws of 2018.
18 (xxii) $5,000,000 for additional funds to reimburse sponsors of school
19 breakfast programs pursuant to chapter 53 of the laws of 2018.
20 (xxiii) $750,000 for additional services and expenses of a program to
21 develop farm to school initiatives, pursuant to chapter 53 of the
22 laws of 2018; notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary,
23 upon approval of the director of the budget, the funds hereby made
24 available may be suballocated, interchanged, transferred or other-
25 wise made available to the department of agriculture and markets for
26 the services and expenses of administering such awards.
27 (xxiv) $250,000 for grants to school districts to allow community
28 schools to expand mental health services and capacity of community
29 school programs pursuant to chapter 53 of the laws of 2018.
30 (xxv) $1,500,000 for the continuation of the refugee and immigrant
31 student welcome grants program, pursuant to chapter 53 of the laws
32 of 2019; notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, upon
33 approval of the director of the budget, the funds hereby made avail-
34 able for the refugee and immigrant student welcome grants program
35 may be suballocated, interchanged, transferred or otherwise made
36 available to the office of temporary and disability assistance for
37 the services and expenses of administering such awards.
38 (xxvi) $3,000,000 for grants to school districts to allow districts to
39 increase the use of alternative approaches to student discipline,
40 pursuant to chapter 53 of the laws of 2019.
41 (xxvii) $1,500,000 for services and expenses of school mental health
42 programs pursuant to a plan developed by the commissioner of educa-
43 tion and approved by the director of the budget, pursuant to chapter
44 53 of the laws of 2019. Provided further, that of the amount appro-
45 priated herein, up to $500,000 may be used to support the School
46 Mental Health Resource and Training Center.
47 (xxviii) $3,000,000 for the continuation of the we teach NY grant
48 program, pursuant to chapter 53 of the laws of 2019; notwithstanding
49 any provision of law to the contrary, upon approval of the director
50 of the budget, the funds hereby made available for the we teach NY
51 grant may be suballocated, interchanged, transferred or otherwise
288 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 made available to the state university of New York for the services
2 and expenses of administering such awards.
3 (xxix) $1,500,000 for the continuation of the expanded mathematics
4 access program, pursuant to chapter 53 of the laws of 2019; notwith-
5 standing any provision of law to the contrary, upon approval of the
6 director of the budget, the funds hereby made available for the
7 expanded mathematics access program may be suballocated, inter-
8 changed, transferred or otherwise made available to the state
9 university of New York for the services and expenses of administer-
10 ing such awards.
11 (xxx) $200,000 for the continuation of the New York state youth coun-
12 cil, pursuant to chapter 53 of the laws of 2019; notwithstanding any
13 provision of law to the contrary, upon approval of the director of
14 the budget, the funds hereby made available for the New York state
15 youth council may be suballocated, interchanged, transferred or
16 otherwise made available to the office of children and family
17 services for the services and expenses of administering such coun-
18 cil.
19 (xxxi) $10,000,000 for student mental health support grants to school
20 districts, pursuant to chapter 53 of the laws of 2020[;].
21 Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, upon approval of
22 the director of the budget, the funds hereby made available may be
23 suballocated, interchanged, transferred or otherwise made available
24 to the office of mental health for the sole purpose of administering
25 such grants[.
26 Notwithstanding section 40 of the state finance law or any provision
27 of law to the contrary, this appropriation shall lapse on March 31,
28 2023] (23306) ... 230,113,000 ................... (re. $229,278,000)
29 For services and expenses of community school regional technical
30 assistance centers for the 2021-22 school year. Funds appropriated
31 herein shall be used to operate three regional centers that shall
32 provide technical assistance to school districts establishing or
33 operating community school programs, pursuant to a plan developed by
34 the commissioner of education and approved by the director of the
35 budget. Provided, further, that such plan shall establish a process
36 for selection of nonprofit entities with expertise in community
37 school programs and technical assistance to operate such centers
38 (55962) ... 1,200,000 ............................. (re. $1,200,000)
39 For services and expenses of the my brother's keeper initiative. A
40 portion of this appropriation may be transferred to any other
41 program or fund within the state education department for these
42 purposes (55928) ... 18,000,000 .................. (re. $16,879,000)
43 For services and expenses of remaining obligations for the 2020-21
44 school year for support for the operation of targeted prekindergar-
45 ten for those providers not eligible to receive funding pursuant to
46 section 3602-e of the education law and for support for providers
47 continuing to operate such programs in the 2021-22 school year. Such
48 funds shall be expended pursuant to a plan developed by the commis-
49 sioner of education and approved by the director of the budget
50 (21763) ... 1,303,000 ............................. (re. $1,303,000)
289 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of remaining obligations of a $14,260,000
2 teacher resources and computer training centers program for the
3 2020-21 school year (55985) ... 4,278,000 ......... (re. $3,252,000)
4 Funds appropriated herein shall be available for services and expenses
5 of a $14,260,000 teacher resources and computer training center
6 program for the 2021-22 school year (23445) ........................
7 9,982,000 ......................................... (re. $9,391,000)
8 For education of children of migrant workers for the 2021-22 school
9 year (21764) ... 89,000 .............................. (re. $89,000)
10 For the school lunch and breakfast program. Funds for the school lunch
11 and breakfast program shall be expended subject to the limitation of
12 funds available and may be used to reimburse sponsors of non-profit
13 school lunch, breakfast, or other school child feeding programs
14 based upon the number of federally reimbursable breakfasts and
15 lunches served to students under such program agreements entered
16 into by the state education department and such sponsors, in accord-
17 ance with an act of Congress entitled the "National School Lunch
18 Act," P.L. 79-396, as amended, or the provisions of the "Child
19 Nutrition Act of 1966," P.L. 89-642, as amended, in the case of
20 school breakfast programs to reimburse sponsors in excess of the
21 federal rates of reimbursement. Notwithstanding any provision of
22 law to the contrary, the moneys hereby appropriated, or so much
23 thereof as may be necessary, are to be available for the purposes
24 herein specified for obligations heretofore accrued or hereafter to
25 accrue for the school years beginning July 1, 2019, July 1, 2020 and
26 July 1, 2021.
27 Notwithstanding any law, rule or regulation to the contrary, the
28 amount appropriated herein represents the maximum amount payable
29 during the 2021-22 state fiscal year for state reimbursement for
30 school lunch and breakfast programs (21702) ........................
31 34,400,000 ....................................... (re. $23,578,000)
32 For additional funds to reimburse sponsors of school lunch programs
33 that have purchased at least 30 percent of their total food products
34 for its school lunch service program from New York State farmers,
35 growers, producers, or processors, based upon the number of feder-
36 ally reimbursable lunches served to students under such program
37 agreements entered into by the state education department and such
38 sponsors, in accordance with the provisions of the "National School
39 Lunch Act," P.L. 79-396, as amended, to reimburse sponsors in excess
40 of the federal and State rates of reimbursement, provided, that the
41 total State subsidy shall not exceed twenty-five cents per school
42 lunch meal, which shall include any annual state subsidy received by
43 such sponsor under any other provision of State law, provided
44 further that funds appropriated herein shall be made available on or
45 after April 1, 2022 (55986) ........................................
46 10,000,000 ....................................... (re. $10,000,000)
47 For additional services of the school lunch and breakfast program to
48 pay the student cost of reduced price meals effective July 1, 2021
49 (23316) ... 2,300,000 ............................. (re. $2,300,000)
50 For nonpublic school aid payable in the 2021-22 school year to reim-
51 burse 2020-21 school year expenses. Provided that nonpublic schools
52 shall continue to receive aid based on either a 5.0/5.5 hour stand-
290 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 ard instructional day, or another work day as certified by the
2 nonpublic school officials, in accordance with the methodology for
3 computing salary and benefits applied by the department in paying
4 aid for the 2012-13 and prior school years. Notwithstanding any
5 provision of law, rule or regulation to the contrary, each nonpublic
6 school which seeks aid payable in the 2021-22 school year shall
7 submit a claim for such aid to the state education department no
8 later than April 1, 2022, and such claims shall be paid by the
9 Department no later than May 31, 2022. Provided further that funds
10 appropriated herein shall be made available on or after April 1,
11 2022 (21769) ... 115,652,000 .................... (re. $115,652,000)
12 For aid payable in the 2021-22 school year for additional nonpublic
13 school aid to reimburse 2020-21 school year expenses.
14 Notwithstanding any provision of law, rule or regulation to the
15 contrary, each nonpublic school which seeks aid payable in the
16 2021-22 school year shall submit a claim for such aid to the state
17 education department no later than April 1, 2022, and such claims
18 shall be paid by the Department no later than May 31, 2022. Provided
19 further that funds appropriated herein shall be made available on or
20 after April 1, 2022 (21770) ... 77,476,000 ....... (re. $77,476,000)
21 For academic intervention for nonpublic schools based on a plan to be
22 developed by the commissioner of education and approved by the
23 director of the budget (21771) ... 922,000 .......... (re. $922,000)
24 For services and expenses related to nonpublic school STEM programs
25 (55964) ... 40,000,000 ........................... (re. $40,000,000)
26 For additional mandated services and expenses of the costs of comply-
27 ing with the State School Immunization Program (SSIP) for the 2020-
28 21 school year; provided, further that the department of health, in
29 consultation with the state education department, shall create a
30 process to certify compliance with the SSIP and such process shall
31 be in place July 1, 2021. Schools shall certify compliance with such
32 process prior to receiving the funds appropriated herein ...
33 1,000,000 ......................................... (re. $1,000,000)
34 For costs associated with schools for the blind and deaf and other
35 students with disabilities subject to article 85 of the education
36 law, including state aid for blind and deaf pupils in certain insti-
37 tutions to be paid for the purposes provided under section 4204-a of
38 the education law for the education of deaf children under 3 years
39 of age, including transfers to the miscellaneous special revenue
40 fund Rome school for the deaf account pursuant to a plan to be
41 developed by the commissioner and approved by the director of the
42 budget.
43 Of the amounts appropriated herein, up to $84,700,000 shall be avail-
44 able for reimbursement to school districts for the tuition costs of
45 students attending schools for the blind and deaf during the 2020-21
46 school year pursuant to subdivision 2 of section 4204 of the educa-
47 tion law and subdivision 2 of section 4207 of the education law, and
48 up to $9,000,000 shall be available for remaining allowable
49 purposes.
50 Provided further that, notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of
51 law, upon disbursement of funds appropriated for allowances to
52 schools for the blind and deaf in the individuals with disabilities
291 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 program special revenue funds-federal/aid to localities for purposes
2 of this appropriation, funds appropriated herein shall be reduced in
3 an amount equivalent to such disbursement and the portion of this
4 appropriation so affected shall have no further force or effect.
5 Notwithstanding any provision of the law to the contrary, funds appro-
6 priated herein shall be available for payment of liabilities hereto-
7 fore accrued or hereafter to accrue and, subject to the approval of
8 the director of the budget, such funds shall be available to the
9 department net of disallowances, refunds, reimbursements and credits
10 (21705) ... 93,700,000 ........................... (re. $61,000,000)
11 For additional costs associated with schools for the blind and deaf
12 and other students with disabilities subject to article 85 of the
13 education law for the 2021-22 school year. Funds appropriated herein
14 shall be distributed directly to the schools for the blind and deaf
15 and other students with disabilities subject to article 85 of the
16 education law based on a three year average of the schools' FTE
17 enrollment (55909) ... 2,000,000 .................. (re. $2,000,000)
18 For July and August programs for school-aged children with handicap-
19 ping conditions pursuant to section 4408 of the education law.
20 Moneys appropriated herein shall be used as follows: (i) for remain-
21 ing base year and prior school years obligations, (ii) for the
22 purposes of subdivision 4 of section 3602 of the education law for
23 schools operated under articles 87 and 88 of the education law, and
24 (iii) notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, for
25 payments made pursuant to this appropriation for current school year
26 obligations, provided, however, that such payments shall not exceed
27 70 percent of the state aid due for the sum of the approved tuition
28 and maintenance rates and transportation expense provided for here-
29 in; provided, however, that eligible claims shall be payable in the
30 order that such claims have been approved for payment by the commis-
31 sioner of education, but in no case shall a single payee draw down
32 more than 45 percent of this appropriation, and provided further
33 that no claim shall be set aside for insufficiency of funds to make
34 a complete payment, but shall be eligible for a partial payment in
35 one year and shall retain its priority date status for subsequent
36 appropriations designated for such purposes. Notwithstanding any
37 inconsistent provision of law, funds appropriated herein shall only
38 be available for liabilities incurred prior to July 1, 2022, shall
39 be used to pay 2020-21 school year claims in the first instance, and
40 represent the maximum amount payable during the 2021-22 state fiscal
41 year.
42 Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, funds appropri-
43 ated herein shall be available for payment of liabilities heretofore
44 accrued or hereafter to accrue and, subject to the approval of the
45 director of the budget, such funds shall be available to the depart-
46 ment net of disallowances, refunds, reimbursements and credits
47 (21707) ... 364,500,000 ......................... (re. $255,000,000)
48 For the state's share of the costs of the education of preschool chil-
49 dren with disabilities pursuant to section 4410 of the education
50 law. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law to the
51 contrary, the amount appropriated herein shall support a state share
52 of preschool handicapped education costs for the 2020-21 school year
292 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 limited to 59.5 percent of such total approved expenditures, and
2 furthermore, notwithstanding any other provision of law, local
3 claims for reimbursement of costs incurred prior to the 2019-20
4 school year and during the 2019-20 school year that have been
5 approved for payment by the education department as of March 31,
6 2021 shall be the first claims paid from this appropriation.
7 Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, funds appropri-
8 ated herein shall be available for payment of liabilities heretofore
9 accrued or hereafter to accrue and, subject to the approval of the
10 director of the budget, such funds shall be available to the depart-
11 ment net of disallowances, refunds, reimbursements and credits
12 (21706) ... 1,035,000,000 ....................... (re. $300,000,000)
13 Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of law, funding made avail-
14 able by this appropriation shall support direct salary costs and
15 related fringe benefits associated with any minimum wage increase
16 that takes effect on or after December 31, 2016, pursuant to section
17 652 of the labor law. Organizations eligible for funding made avail-
18 able by this appropriation shall be limited to special act school
19 districts and those that are required to file a consolidated fiscal
20 report with the state education department and provide preschool and
21 school-age special education services under articles 81, 85 and 89
22 of the education law. Each eligible organization in receipt of fund-
23 ing made available by this appropriation shall submit written
24 certification, in such form and at such time as the commissioner
25 shall prescribe, attesting to how such funding will be or was used
26 for purposes eligible under this appropriation. Notwithstanding any
27 inconsistent provision of law, and subject to the approval of the
28 director of the budget, the amounts appropriated herein may be
29 increased or decreased by interchange or transfer to any local
30 assistance appropriation of the state education department (55938)
31 ... 17,180,000 ................................... (re. $17,180,000)
32 For services and expenses of the New York state center for school
33 safety for the 2021-22 school year. Funds appropriated herein shall
34 be used to operate a statewide center and shall be subject to an
35 expenditure plan approved by the director of the budget (21774) ....
36 466,000 ............................................. (re. $466,000)
37 For services and expenses of the health education program for the
38 2021-22 school year. Funds appropriated herein shall be available
39 for health-related programs including, but not limited to, those
40 providing instruction and supportive services in comprehensive
41 health education and/or acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS)
42 education. Of the amounts appropriated herein, $86,000 shall be
43 available for the program previously operated as the school health
44 demonstration program. Notwithstanding any other provision of law to
45 the contrary, funds appropriated herein may be suballocated, subject
46 to the approval of the director of the budget, to any state agency
47 or department to accomplish the purpose of this appropriation
48 (21775) ... 691,000 ................................. (re. $691,000)
49 For competitive grants for the 2021-22 school year for extended day
50 programs and school violence prevention programs pursuant to section
51 2814 of the education law provided, however, notwithstanding any
52 inconsistent provisions of law, eligible entities receiving funds
293 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 for extended day programs may include not-for-profit organizations
2 working in collaboration with a public school or school district
3 (21776) ... 24,344,000 ........................... (re. $24,344,000)
4 For aid payable for the 2021-22 school year for support of county
5 vocational education and extension boards pursuant to section 1104
6 of the education law, provided, however, that notwithstanding any
7 inconsistent provision of law, rule, or regulation, any apportion-
8 ment of aid shall be based on a quota amounting to one-half of the
9 salary paid each teacher, director, assistant, and supervisor, where
10 such salary is attributable to a course of study first submitted to
11 the commissioner for approval pursuant to section 1103 of the educa-
12 tion law on or before July 1, 2010, but not to exceed the amount
13 computed by the commissioner based upon an assumed annualized salary
14 equal to ten thousand five hundred dollars per school year on
15 account of the employment of such teacher, director, assistant or
16 supervisor and provided further that payment from this appropriation
17 shall first be made for approved claims for salary expenses for the
18 2021-22 school year, and any amount remaining after payment of such
19 claims shall be available for payment of unpaid claims for prior
20 school years (21781) ... 932,000 .................... (re. $684,000)
21 For services and expenses of the primary mental health project at the
22 children's institute for the 2021-22 school year (21778) ...........
23 894,000 ............................................. (re. $894,000)
24 For services and expenses associated with the math and science high
25 schools for the 2021-22 school year in the amount of $1,382,000,
26 provided that such funds shall be allocated equally among those
27 entities that received program funding for the 2007-08 school year
28 (21779) ... 1,382,000 ............................. (re. $1,382,000)
29 For additional services and expenses associated with the Bard High
30 School Early College Queens for the 2021-22 school year (55939) ....
31 461,000 ............................................. (re. $461,000)
32 Funds appropriated herein shall be available for educational services
33 and expenses of the Syracuse city school district for the say yes to
34 education program (21800) ... 350,000 ............... (re. $263,000)
35 For services and expenses of the center for autism and related disa-
36 bilities at the state university of New York at Albany (21782) .....
37 740,000 ............................................. (re. $740,000)
38 For additional services and expenses of the center for autism and
39 related disabilities at the state university of New York at Albany
40 ... 500,000 ......................................... (re. $500,000)
41 For postsecondary aid to Native Americans to fund awards to eligible
42 students. Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the contra-
43 ry, the amount herein made available shall constitute the state's
44 entire obligation for all costs incurred under section 4118 of the
45 education law in state fiscal year 2021-22 (21833) .................
46 800,000 ............................................. (re. $800,000)
47 For services and expenses of the summer food program for the 2021-22
48 school year (21784) ................................................
49 3,049,000 ........................................... (re. $131,000)
50 Work Force Education. For partial reimbursement of services and
51 expenses per contract hour of work force education conducted by the
52 consortium for worker education (CWE), a private not-for-profit
294 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 corporation program approved by the commissioner of education that
2 enable adults who are 21 years of age or older to obtain or retain
3 employment or improve their work skills capacity to enhance their
4 opportunities for increased earnings and advancement (21801) .......
5 11,500,000 ........................................ (re. $7,910,000)
6 For services and expenses of the Consortium for Workers Education
7 Credential Initiative (55967) ... 500,000 ........... (re. $500,000)
8 For services and expenses of the Executive Leadership Institute ......
9 475,000 ............................................. (re. $475,000)
10 For services and expenses of the Magellan Foundation, Inc. ...........
11 475,000 ............................................. (re. $475,000)
12 For services and expenses related to the development, implementation
13 and operation of charter schools for the 2021-22 school year includ-
14 ing an amount sufficient to support administrative/technical support
15 services provided by the charter school institute of the state
16 university of New York, pursuant to a plan submitted by the charter
17 school institute and approved by the board of trustees of the state
18 university of New York. This appropriation shall only be available
19 for expenditure upon the approval of an expenditure plan by the
20 director of the budget and funds appropriated herein shall be trans-
21 ferred to the miscellaneous special revenue fund - charter schools
22 stimulus account (21803) ... 4,837,000 ............ (re. $4,837,000)
23 For the early college high schools program for the 2021-22 school
24 year, provided, however, that expenditure of funds appropriated
25 herein shall support the continuation and expansion of the early
26 college high schools program pursuant to a plan developed by the
27 commissioner of education and approved by the director of the budget
28 provided, further, that a portion of the payment to the early
29 college high schools program awarded from this appropriation shall
30 be available on a sliding scale based upon the number of college
31 credits earned annually by participating students consistent with
32 guidelines established by the commissioner. Provided further that,
33 notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, higher educa-
34 tion partners participating in an early college high schools
35 program, or the entity/entities responsible for setting tuition at
36 the institution, shall be authorized to set a reduced rate of
37 tuition and/or fees, or to waive tuition and/or fees entirely, for
38 students enrolled in such early college high schools program with no
39 reduction in other state, local or other support for such students
40 earning college credit that such higher education partner would
41 otherwise be eligible to receive (56139) ...........................
42 1,465,000 ......................................... (re. $1,465,000)
43 For services and expenses of the clinically rich intensive teacher
44 institute bilingual extension and English to speakers of other
45 languages program (55998) ... 385,000 ............... (re. $385,000)
46 For services and expenses of a teacher diversity pipeline pilot oper-
47 ated by the State University College at Buffalo for the Buffalo City
48 School District to assist teacher aides and teaching assistants in
49 attaining the necessary educational and professional credentials to
50 obtain teacher certification (55997) ...............................
51 500,000 ............................................. (re. $500,000)
295 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of a $490,000 2021-22 school year program
2 for mentoring and tutoring operated by the Hillside [WorkScholarship
3 Connection program] Children's Center, which is based on model
4 programs proven to be effective in producing outcomes that include,
5 but are not limited to, improved graduation rates, provided that
6 such services shall be provided to students in one or more city
7 school districts located in a city having a population in excess of
8 125,000 and less than 1,000,000 inhabitants (21804) ................
9 490,000 ............................................. (re. $490,000)
10 For payment of small government assistance to school districts pursu-
11 ant to subdivision 7 of section 3641 of the education law on or
12 before March 31, 2022 upon audit and warrant of the comptroller in
13 the amount that small government assistance was paid to school
14 districts in state fiscal year 2010-11 (23449) .....................
15 1,868,000 ............................................. (re. $1,000)
16 For purposes of the Just for Kids program at the State University of
17 New York at Albany (56005) ... 235,000 .............. (re. $235,000)
18 For educational services and expenses for out of school immigrant
19 youth and young adults (56045) ... 1,000,000 ...... (re. $1,000,000)
20 For services and expenses of Many Threads, One Fabric union led
21 implicit bias training for public school educators (23347) .........
22 1,000,000 ......................................... (re. $1,000,000)
23 For services and expenses of [PromiseProject] Fund for the City of New
24 York - Promise Project (23348) ... 250,000 .......... (re. $250,000)
25 For services and expenses of United Community Schools, Incorporated
26 (56150) ... 450,000 ................................. (re. $450,000)
27 For services and expenses of the Long Island Pre-K Initiative operated
28 by Nassau BOCES ... 500,000 ......................... (re. $500,000)
29 For services and expenses of the Mind Builders Creative Arts Center ..
30 225,000 ............................................. (re. $225,000)
31 For services and expenses of the BioBus ... 400,000 ... (re. $400,000)
32 For services and expenses of Educators for Student Success ... 100,000
33 ..................................................... (re. $100,000)
34 For services and expenses of the Friends of the Central Library ...
35 100,000 ............................................. (re. $100,000)
36 For services and expenses of the Long Island Latino Teachers Associ-
37 ation ... 40,000 ..................................... (re. $40,000)
38 For services and expenses of the Literacy Volunteers of Sullivan Coun-
39 ty ... 25,000 ........................................ (re. $25,000)
40 For additional grants in aid to certain school districts, public
41 libraries, and not-for-profit institutions. Notwithstanding section
42 twenty-four of the state finance law or any provision of law to the
43 contrary, funds from this appropriation shall be allocated only
44 pursuant to a plan (i) approved by the temporary president of the
45 senate and the director of the budget which sets forth either an
46 itemized list of grantees with the amount to be received by each, or
47 the methodology for allocating such appropriation, and (ii) which is
48 thereafter included in a senate resolution calling for the expendi-
49 ture of such funds, which resolution must be approved by a majority
50 vote of all members elected to the senate upon a roll call vote ....
51 5,035,500 ......................................... (re. $4,000,000)
296 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For additional grants in aid to certain school districts, public
2 libraries, and not-for-profit institutions. Notwithstanding section
3 twenty-four of the state finance law or any provision of law to the
4 contrary, funds from this appropriation shall be allocated only
5 pursuant to a plan (i) approved by the speaker of the assembly and
6 the director of the budget which sets forth either an itemized list
7 of grantees with the amount to be received by each, or the methodol-
8 ogy for allocating such appropriation, and (ii) which is thereafter
9 included in an assembly resolution calling for the expenditure of
10 such funds, which resolution must be approved by a majority vote of
11 all members elected to the assembly upon a roll call vote ...
12 8,000,000 ......................................... (re. $8,000,000)
13 For services and expenses of NYC Kids RISE, Inc ......................
14 1,300,000 ......................................... (re. $1,300,000)
15 For additional grants in aid to certain school districts, public
16 libraries, and not-for-profit institutions. Notwithstanding any
17 provision of law to the contrary, funds from this appropriation
18 shall be allocated only pursuant to a plan developed by the director
19 of the budget which sets forth either an itemized list of grantees
20 with the amount to be received by each, or the methodology for allo-
21 cating such appropriation (23318) ..................................
22 10,000,000 ....................................... (re. $10,000,000)
23 The appropriation made by chapter 53, section 1, of the laws of 2020, is
24 hereby amended and reappropriated to read:
25 For services and expenses of community school regional technical
26 assistance centers for the 2020-21 school year. Funds appropriated
27 herein shall be used to operate three regional centers that shall
28 provide technical assistance to school districts establishing or
29 operating community school programs, pursuant to a plan developed by
30 the commissioner of education and approved by the director of the
31 budget. Provided, further, that such plan shall establish a process
32 for selection of nonprofit entities with expertise in community
33 school programs and technical assistance to operate such centers
34 (55962) ... 1,200,000 ............................. (re. $1,200,000)
35 For services and expenses of the my brother's keeper initiative. A
36 portion of this appropriation may be transferred to any other
37 program or fund within the state education department for these
38 purposes (55928) ... 18,000,000 .................. (re. $11,882,000)
39 For services and expenses of remaining obligations for the 2019-20
40 school year for support for the operation of targeted pre-kindergar-
41 ten for those providers not eligible to receive funding pursuant to
42 section 3602-e of the education law and for support for providers
43 continuing to operate such programs in the 2020-21 school year. Such
44 funds shall be expended pursuant to a plan developed by the commis-
45 sioner of education and approved by the director of the budget
46 (21763) ... 1,303,000 ................................ (re. $67,000)
47 For services and expenses of remaining obligations of a $14,260,000
48 teacher resources and computer training centers program for the
49 2019-20 school year (55985) ... 4,278,000 ......... (re. $2,696,000)
50 Funds appropriated herein shall be available for services and expenses
51 of a $14,260,000 teacher resources and computer training center
297 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 program for the 2020-21 school year (23445) ........................
2 9,982,000 ............................................. (re. $6,000)
3 For education of children of migrant workers for the 2020-21 school
4 year (21764) ... 89,000 .............................. (re. $89,000)
5 For the school lunch and breakfast program. Funds for the school lunch
6 and breakfast program shall be expended subject to the limitation of
7 funds available and may be used to reimburse sponsors of non-profit
8 school lunch, breakfast, or other school child feeding programs
9 based upon the number of federally reimbursable breakfasts and
10 lunches served to students under such program agreements entered
11 into by the state education department and such sponsors, in accord-
12 ance with an act of Congress entitled the "National School Lunch
13 Act," P.L. 79-396, as amended, or the provisions of the "Child
14 Nutrition Act of 1966," P.L. 89-642, as amended, in the case of
15 school breakfast programs to reimburse sponsors in excess of the
16 federal rates of reimbursement. Notwithstanding any provision of
17 law to the contrary, the moneys hereby appropriated, or so much
18 thereof as may be necessary, are to be available for the purposes
19 herein specified for obligations heretofore accrued or hereafter to
20 accrue for the school years beginning July 1, 2018, July 1, 2019 and
21 July 1, 2020.
22 Notwithstanding any law, rule or regulation to the contrary, the
23 amount appropriated herein represents the maximum amount payable
24 during the 2020-21 state fiscal year for state reimbursement for
25 school lunch and breakfast programs (21702) ........................
26 34,400,000 .......................................... (re. $688,000)
27 For additional funds to reimburse sponsors of school lunch programs
28 that have purchased at least 30 percent of their total food products
29 for its school lunch service program from New York State farmers,
30 growers, producers, or processors, based upon the number of feder-
31 ally reimbursable lunches served to students under such program
32 agreements entered into by the state education department and such
33 sponsors, in accordance with the provisions of the "National School
34 Lunch Act," P.L. 79-396, as amended, to reimburse sponsors in excess
35 of the federal and State rates of reimbursement, provided, that the
36 total State subsidy shall not exceed twenty-five cents per school
37 lunch meal, which shall include any annual state subsidy received by
38 such sponsor under any other provision of State law, provided
39 further that funds appropriated herein shall be made available on or
40 after April 1, 2021 (55986) ........................................
41 10,000,000 ....................................... (re. $10,000,000)
42 For academic intervention for nonpublic schools based on a plan to be
43 developed by the commissioner of education and approved by the
44 director of the budget (21771) ... 922,000 .......... (re. $922,000)
45 For additional services of the school lunch and breakfast program to
46 pay the student cost of reduced price meals effective July 1, 2020
47 (23316) ... 2,300,000 ............................. (re. $2,300,000)
48 For services and expenses of the New York state center for school
49 safety for the 2020-21 school year. Funds appropriated herein shall
50 be used to operate a statewide center and shall be subject to an
51 expenditure plan approved by the director of the budget (21774) ....
52 466,000 ............................................. (re. $376,000)
298 12653-09-2
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
AID TO LOCALITIES - REAPPROPRIATIONS 2022-23
1 For services and expenses of the health education program for the
2 2020-21 school year. Funds appropriated herein shall be available
3 for health-related programs including, but not limited to, those
4 providing instruction and supportive services in comprehensive
5 health education and/or acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS)
6 education. Of the amounts appropriated herein, $86,000 shall be
7 available for the program previously operated as the school health
8 demonstration program. Notwithstanding any other provision of law to
9 the contrary, funds appropriated herein may be suballocated, subject
10 to the approval of the director of the budget, to any state agency
11 or department to accomplish the purpose of this appropriation
12 (21775) ... 691,000 ................................. (re. $252,000)
13 For competitive grants for the 2020-21 school year for extended day
14 programs and school violence prevention programs pursuant to section
15 2814 of the education law provided, however, notwithstanding any
16 inconsistent provisions of law, eligible entities receiving funds
17 for extended day programs may include not-for-profit organizations
18 working in collaboration with a public school or school district
19 (21776) ... 24,344,000 ........................... (re. $20,924,000)
20 For aid payable for the 2020-21 school year for support of county
21 vocational education and extension boards pursuant to section 1104
22 of the education law, provided, however, that notwithstanding any
23 inconsistent provision of law, rule, or regulation, any apportion-
24 ment of aid shall be based on a quota amounting to one-half of the
25 salary paid each teacher, director, assistant, and supervisor, where
26 such salary is attributable to a course of study first submitted to
27 the commissioner for approval pursuant to section 1103 of the educa-
28 tion law on or before July 1, 2010, but not to exceed the amount
29 computed by the commissioner based upon an assumed annualized salary
30 equal to ten thousand five hundred dollars per school year on
31 account of the employment of such teacher, director, assistant or
32 supervisor and provided further that payment from this appropriation
33 shall first be made for approved claims for salary expenses for the
34 2020-21 school year, and any amount remaining after payment of such
35 claims shall be available f