How are Trump cuts playing a role in New York’s budget negotiations?

Plus: meet with New York Focus reporters in Albany on Monday

Alex Arriaga   ·   April 5, 2025
graphic of Trump in black and white
The Trump Administration unexpectedly cut tens of millions in grants to addiction and mental health services in New York in late March. | Images: NY State Senate and Gage Skidmore / Flickr; Illustration by New York Focus

Sign up for Staying Focused, our newsletter keeping readers up to speed on New York politics.

As budget negotiations continue past the April 1 deadline, New York Focus reporters have been following the story. One big question this budget season is how the state will respond to the Trump administration’s funding cuts.

Social services reporter Jie Jenny Zou reported on the push from mental health providers and advocates to prevent mass layoffs and program reductions as a consequence of federal cuts.

New York State faces cuts of $40 million to addiction and substance abuse treatment, $27 million to mental health services, and $300 million to the Department of Health, impacting programs from virus surveillance to infection prevention in healthcare facilities, according to Gov. Kathy Hochul’s office.

What power does the state have to fill this gap? Hochul says the state lacks the resources, but mental health advocates who provide medication management and housing assistance see a sense of irony when her budget proposals include a push to expand on involuntary treatment for people with mental illness.

Another way the state has been responding to the threat of cuts from the Trump administration: New York Focus contributor Nathan Porceng reported on how Trump’s anti-trans order clashes with the state’s mandate to provide gender-affirming care.

Trump referred to the kind of care that helps a person align with their gender identity as “mutilation” and a “horrifying tragedy.” His executive order directed federal agencies to withhold funding from health care entities that provide gender-affirming medical care to people under 19.

Porceng reported that New York has some of the strongest protections for trans people in the nation due to its 1945 Human Rights Law prohibiting discrimination in “public accommodation,” including hospitals and clinics. But some providers have buckled to threats from the federal government — the NYU Langone health system stopped providing gender-affirming healthcare and has been met with protests and pressure from state lawmakers to resume.


Do you have more questions about how the Trump administration is impacting budget negotiations or other services in New York? Ask them here or email Alex Arriaga at alex@nysfocus.com.

More on state budget negotiations

Climate reporter Colin Kinniburgh has been reporting on the Hochul administration’s delays in implementing the governor’s promised cap and invest program. Cap and invest would bring in funding that could help the state meet its ambitious climate goals, and Hochul has been promising it since 2023. Now, environmental and climate justice groups are suing New York for “stonewalling necessary climate action in outright violation” of its legal obligations.

Education reporter Bianca Fortis wrote about a proposed bill that lawmakers are considering to weaken the state Education Department’s recent guidelines on yeshivas and other nonpublic schools. These schools face a June 30 deadline to prove they offer a “substantially equivalent” education as the state’s public schools, but the draft bill would loosen those rules and potentially delay the deadline.

Fortis wrote: “The education department has already pulled funding for six schools — all yeshivas based in Brooklyn — which it said had failed to cooperate with the New York City Department of Education, as well as the state Education Department, despite several deadline extensions and invitations to meet.”


Want to talk more about budget negotiations with Focus reporters? Meet us in Albany on Monday.

New York Focus + The CITY

New York Focus often publishes with local media partners across New York City and state. This week, we published a couple stories with our partner, The CITY.

First, Sam Mellins reported on the fund that pays for New York City employees’ health benefits. The fund has run dry, opening up a $600 million hole in the city budget and threatening potential cuts to public workers’ health benefits. Mellins reported that the city government and the Municipal Labor Committee are currently in negotiations to find ways to salvage the stabilization fund and cut overall health care expenses, which could result in cuts to city workers’ benefits or increased health care costs for employees.

Also in partnership with The CITY, contributor Surina Venkat published a story about how stop-and-frisks have soared since Eric Adams took office. NYPD officers recorded over 25,000 stops last year, a 50 percent increase over the previous year. Nine in 10 people stopped by the NYPD last year were Black or Latino. A notorious “anti-crime” plainclothes unit resurrected by Adams may have contributed to those increases.


Reach Out

We have a network of 50 local media partners and any media organization can sign up to our distribution list and pick up our stories following our republishing guidelines.

Also, if you have a tip to send — reach out using our tip line.


At New York Focus, our central mission is to help readers better understand how New York really works. If you think this article succeeded, please consider supporting our mission and making more stories like this one possible.

New York is an incongruous state. We’re home to fabulous wealth — if the state were a country, it would have the tenth largest economy in the world — but also the highest rate of wealth inequality. We’re among the most diverse – but also the most segregated. We passed the nation’s most ambitious climate law — but haven’t been meeting its deadlines and continue to subsidize industries hastening the climate crisis.

As New York’s only statewide nonprofit news publication, our journalism exists to help you make sense of these contradictions. Our work scrutinizes how power works in the state, unpacks who’s really calling the shots, and reveals how obscure decisions shape ordinary New Yorkers’ lives.

In the last two decades, the number of local news outlets in New York has been nearly slashed in half, allowing elected officials and powerful individuals to increasingly operate in the dark — with the average New Yorker none the wiser.

We’re on a mission to change that. Our work has already shown what can happen when those with power know that someone is watching, with stories that have prompted policy changes and spurred legislation. We have ambitious plans for the rest of the year and beyond, including tackling new beats and more hard-hitting stories — but we need your help to make them a reality.

If you’re able, please consider supporting our journalism with a one-time gift or a monthly gift. We can't do this work without you.

Thank you,

Akash Mehta
Editor-in-Chief
A photo of Akash Mehta.
A photo of Alex Arriaga.
Alex Arriaga is the audience engagement editor at New York Focus, where she leads the organization’s strategy to reach audiences throughout the state. She was previously an engagement reporter at The Marshall Project, where she reported on prisons and jails with a specialization… more
Also filed in Budget

State leaders are expected to pass a bill that avoids resolving how much Resorts World New York City needs to pay.

Resorts World is floating legislation to avert more than $500 million in payments to the horseracing industry.

Our searchable database breaks down the most consequential decisions Albany politicians made on climate, immigration, housing, schools, taxes, and more.