Buffalo Mayor Slammed After Planning to Fund New Budget With 25.8% Tax Increases and Hire Over 70 New Police Officers: ‘That is a BIG Increase’

Buffalo Mayor Sean Ryan has recently unveiled the $681 million budget for fiscal year 2026-27, which will be partially financed by a 25.8% property tax levy increase. The tax hike did not sit well with Buffalo, New York, residents, as many felt the mayor was not investing in the right priorities.

According to Ryan, the tax hike is necessary to stabilize the city’s finances, and “Buffalo residents will continue to have one of the lowest property tax burdens in the region.” Additional revenue would also come from doubling projected fine-related income from around $10 million to $20 million.

In the new budget, not all departments received an increase. The Buffalo Police Department, for example, would see a 13% budget increase, allowing it to hire more than 70 additional officers. Divisions such as Building, Engineering, Street Sanitation, and Public Works and Streets would also receive major increases. The budgets for Community Services, the Comptroller’s Office, and others, however, were reduced.

Buffalo Residents Are Unhappy With Tax Hikes

Many Buffalo residents criticized the new budget on social media. While most understood that the city had to raise revenue somehow, they considered the hike excessive: “I wholeheartedly agree that property taxes need to be increased since Brown was negligent for so long, but that is a BIG increase,” one local said…

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