Keep New York’s Commitment to Cut Child Poverty (Organizational Sign-on)

Gov. Kathy Hochul

*This petition is for organizations. To sign on as an individual click here.*

New York State continues to have the worst income inequality and some of the highest child poverty rates in the nation, yet we also have the resources to solve these problems. In 2021, New York State committed to cutting child poverty in half by 2032. This year, Gov. Hochul and the legislature can make good on that promise by passing a transformative package of policies that would slash child poverty and pay for it by fairly taxing the richest corporations and individuals.

It’s up to all of us to make sure New York follows through and implements these policies to lift more than a quarter million kids and their families out of poverty. Add your name to call on Gov. Hochul to include this anti-poverty agenda in her Executive Budget proposal.

To: Gov. Kathy Hochul
From: [Your Name]

We write to you as concerned organizations, congregations and individuals from across New York State to urge you to include measures in your Executive Budget to cut child poverty in half, and to pay for these policies through progressive taxes targeting our state’s wealthiest individuals and corporations. Especially as the incoming Trump administration signals its intention to cut funding for safety net programs and cut taxes for the rich, New York must take bold, proactive steps to protect the most vulnerable New Yorkers and rein in the flow of wealth from the bottom to the top.

As your administration has recognized, child poverty in New York is at unacceptable levels. Our child poverty rate is higher than 40 other states, with 1 in 5 kids living in poverty. In the Bronx, more than a third of children are in poverty, and in Rochester, Buffalo and Syracuse the rate is more than 40 percent. As common sense and countless studies show, poverty has devastating consequences on children’s well-being and their future development. New York has a moral obligation to confront this crisis.

We applaud the commitment New York made in 2021 through the Child Poverty Reduction Act to cut child poverty in half over the following decade. While we believe New York can and must aim to abolish child poverty altogether, this is an important first target. Thanks to the work of the Child Poverty Reduction Advisory Council, we now have a package of policies that would achieve this goal. They include:

- Increasing the Empire Child Credit from $330 per child to $1,500 per child annually, expanding eligibility to include the lowest income families, and indexing the credit amount to inflation.

- Creating a state rental assistance program to serve income-eligible renting households. The program would cover the difference between the rent and 30% of household income, would be available to households regardless of immigration status, and would be an entitlement so that all income-eligible renting households would be able to access support.

- Doubling the Cash Assistance program benefit amount and indexing it to inflation.

- Creating a state Food Assistance Program that would cover the nearly 65,000 households with children that are currently excluded from participating in SNAP due to their family’s immigration status.

We call on you to include this full policy package in your 2026 Executive Budget. The Urban Institute estimates these policies would reduce child poverty by 50% if they are fully implemented and reach every eligible household. Although full implementation will take time, child poverty is continuing to rise, and federal policies on the horizon may move us in the wrong direction. Now is the time for decisive action for New Yorkers in need. Including the full package of policies in your budget would demonstrate that New York is serious about meeting the 50% child poverty reduction goal by 2032.

New York has the resources to make this transformative investment in our children and families. Our state is home to 139 billionaires, as well as some of the wealthiest, most profitable corporations in the world. In the first half of 2024, for example, Wall Street posted profits of $23.2 billion, nearly 80% higher than the previous year.

We call on you to fund these child poverty reduction policies through progressive taxes that target the ultra-wealthy. The Urban Institute estimates the cost of this policy package to be just under $9 billion.There are proposals currently in the NYS legislature that would raise more than five times that amount by modestly increasing taxes on the wealthiest individuals and corporations. These include implementing a capital gains tax, raising corporate taxes on the most profitable companies, making our income taxes more progressive, taxing billionaire wealth, and creating an heirs’ tax.

As the Trump administration prepares to cut taxes on the wealthy and cut safety net programs, New York can take the opposite path to invest in our families and communities. We are facing hard times ahead, especially for already vulnerable communities, including immigrants, LGBTQ people, and poor and low-income people. It is all the more urgent for New York to marshal the abundant resources of our state to help struggling families weather the challenges to come. We look forward to working with you to accomplish this through the 2026 New York State Budget.

Kairos Center for Religions, Rights and Social Justice
NYS Labor-Religion Coalition
NYS Poor People's Campaign
Advent Lutheran Church
All Souls Bethlehem Church Council
Broadway Community Inc.
Broadway United Church of Christ
Community Lunch Program for Kids (Norfolk, NY)
Dominican Sisters of Sparkill
Fairport United Methodist Church
First Presbyterian Church of Beacon
First Presbyterian Church of Brooklyn
First Presbyterian Church of Forest Hills
Housing Works
Inwood Indivisible
Irvington Presbyterian Church
Judson Memorial Church
Messiah Lutheran Church, Rotterdam
Middle Church, New York City
Mujeres Divinas
North Country Peace Group
NYS Council of Churches
Rotterdam Community Center
Showing up for Racial Justice (SURJ) Westchester
The Riverside Church in the City of New York
Trinity Lutheran Church of Manhattan
United Church of Fayetteville
United Muslim Alliance of Albany
United Tenants of Albany
Westchester Meditation Center
Westchester Women's Agenda
YMCA of Greater NY
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