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Increase DEC Education Camp Fee. Increases tuition at the Department of Environmental Conservation’s four education camps from $250 to $325. This fee was last increased in 2005.
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Increase Physician Fees. Increases the bi-annual physician registration fee, last raised in 1996, from $600 to $1,000 to support the ongoing activities of the Office of Professional Medical Conduct.
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Establish Early Intervention Parent Fee. Establishes a new monthly parental fee, based upon income, for the Early Intervention Program, similar to other states.
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Establish Early Intervention Provider Fee. Imposes a new application fee on providers seeking to participate in the Early Intervention Program.
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Restructure Clinical Lab Fee. Converts the fee on clinical laboratories to a 1 percent assessment based on annual receipts.
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Increase Certificate of Need Fees. Increases 10 fees on health care providers that support the Department of Health’s administration of the certificate of need process. These fees were last raised in 2001.
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Increase Asbestos Fees. Increases nine fees for asbestos certification, licensing, and project notification. The fees range from $50 to $1,000 and will be doubled. These fees were last increased in 2004

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Increase Boiler Fees. Increases two fees for boiler inspection and insurance industry reports. The fees range from $25 to $200 and will be doubled. These fees were last increased in 2004.
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Establishes Explosives Fee and Penalty. Adds explosives handling and pyrotechnics to the explosives licensing requirements, and adds new civil penalties for violation of these requirements. This change would impose a civil penalty of up to $10,000 per day for each violation of licensing and other explosives requirements.
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Increase Real Property Transfer Fee. Raises the real property transfer fee that is paid whenever a deed is recorded. Last changed in 2004, the fee would increase from $75 to $125 for residential property, from $165 to $250 for commercial property, and from $50 to $100 for non-deeded transfers (housing cooperatives) in New York City.
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Increase Parks Administrative Fees. Raises administrative fees for various park activities, such as camping, cabin rentals, golf, and marina usage, as well as for Empire passports, passes and permits. These fees were last increased at various times between 2003 and 2006.
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Establish Horse Entrance Fee. Establishes a new entrance fee of $10 for every horse entered into pari-mutuel races conducted in New York State.
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Increase State Licensing Fees. Increases licensing examination fees for 16 disciplines licensed by the Department of State such as notary public, barber, cosmetology and real estate salesperson. These fees have been increased at various times between 1967 and 2005.
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Increase Surcharge on Auto Insurance. Increases the Motor Vehicle Law Enforcement Fee on auto insurance policies from $5 to $10 to support state police operations. This fee was last raised in 2003.
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Establish Processing Fee for Paper Tax Returns. Creates a new fee of $10 for filing a paper personal income tax return, which will encourage individuals to file via the internet.
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Establish Bad Check Fee. Creates a new fee of $50 for checks returned due to insufficient funds by the Department of Taxation and Finance.
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Establish Installment Payment Fee. Creates a new fee of $75 for taxpayers wishing to establish installment payment agreements to satisfy outstanding tax liabilities.
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Establish Tax Preparer Fee. Creates a new fee of $100 to be paid by all persons who are compensated for the preparation of 10 or more tax returns.
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Increase Highway Use Tax Renewal Fee. Increase the highway use fee for a replacement registration certificate to the cost of the initial permit. This fee for a replacement registration would increase from $4 to $15 for a motor vehicle, and from $2 to $15 for a trailer, semi-trailer, dolly or other drawn device. The fee was last amended in 1984.

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Increase Cigarette and Tobacco Retail Registration Fee. Increases the cigarette and tobacco retailer fee from $100 to $1,000 for retailers with gross sales of under $1 million, to $2,500 for retailers with gross sales of $1 million but less than $10 million, and to $5,000 for retailers with gross sales of $10 million or more. This fee was last changed in 1990.
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Establish Non-LLC Partnership Fee. Imposes a new fee on non-limited liability company (LLC) partnerships equal to fee amounts that currently apply to LLCs. Amounts would range from $25 to $500. Unlike the current LLC fee, partnerships with New York-source gross income under $1 million would be exempt.
III. Charges and Assessments for Specific Sectors
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Increase Utility Assessment. Increases the current regulatory fee on public utilities throughout the state, including electric, gas, water and telephone. This action will pay for state regulatory and management oversight by raising the fee from 1/3 of 1 percent to 1 percent of intrastate revenues, expanding the fee to include energy service companies, and establishing an additional 1 percent state energy and utility service conservation assessment, which will expire on March 31, 2012.
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Reinstitute Hospital Assessment. Reinstitutes the 0.7 percent assessment on hospital inpatient revenues.
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Reinstitute Home Care Assessment. Reinstitutes a 0.7 percent assessment on total home care provider revenues.
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Increase Hospital Surcharges. Proportionately increases the three health care surcharges paid by insurers on hospital patient services. These were last increased in 2006.
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Increase Covered Lives Assessment. Increases the covered lives assessment on insurers to $1.04 billion. This assessment was last raised in 2008.
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Extend the Covered Lives Assessment. Applies the covered lives assessment to insurers headquartered out-of-state.
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Establish Physician Procedure Surcharge. Creates a new 9.63 percent HCRA surcharge to surgical and radiological procedures performed by physicians in office-based and urgent care settings.
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Increase Insurance Assessment for Public Health Programs. Requires financing for certain public health programs through assessments on the insurance industry.
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Establish Timothy’s Law Insurance Assessment. Finances the costs of assistance to small business to implement Timothy’s Law from insurance assessments.
132 2009-10 New York State Executive Budget

• Increase Insurance Assessment for Tobacco Control and Early Intervention. Finances tobacco control ($70.9 million) and Early Intervention insurance ($44.3 million - 50 percent offsets state costs and 50 percent offsets local costs) costs with an insurance industry assessment.
• Extend Insurance Assessment. Applies the insurance assessment to insurers headquartered out-of-state.
• Create Third Party Administrator Fee. Establishes a $1 assessment per claim processed by entities that administer self-funded health insurance plans.
• Create Sales Tax on Soft Drinks. Imposes an additional 18 percent rate of sales and compensating use taxes on fruit drinks that contain less than seventy percent of natural fruit juice and non-dietetic soft drinks, sodas and beverages. By increasing the price, it will discourage individuals, especially children and teenagers, from excessive consumption of these beverages. Revenues will be directed for health care initiatives. IV. New or Increased Fines
• Allow Civil Penalties for Non-Housing Cases. Authorizes the assessment of civil penalties for violations of Human Rights Law. Currently, civil penalties are authorized only for housing discrimination violations of Human Rights Law. These penalties were established in 1997 and carry a maximum civil penalty of $50,000 unless the discrimination is shown to be malicious, in which case the maximum penalty is $100,000.
• Remove Cap on Traffic Violation Surcharges. Eliminates the $100 cap on surcharges for violators with two or more convictions arising out of the same traffic incident.
• Increase Vehicle Safety Fines. Increases the civil penalty for repair shops, inspection stations, and dealers who falsify safety and emission inspections or falsify vehicle repairs, from a maximum of $350 per violation to a minimum of $350 for the first violation, $500 for the second violation and $1,000 for the third violation. This bill will also increase the civil penalty for dealers from a maximum penalty of $1,000 to a maximum of $1,500.
• Establish Uncertified Crane Operation Penalty. Adds a new civil penalty of $1,000 to $3,000 for individuals that operate a crane without a certificate of competence issued by Department of Labor. In addition, employers that knowingly allow employees to operate a crane without certification will be assessed a penalty of $5,000 to $10,000.
• Increase License Suspension Fees. Increases fees for license suspension from $25 to $50 for non-alcohol related suspensions, and $100 to $200 for alcohol-related suspensions. This proposal would also increase the scofflaw termination fee from $35 to $70, and increase the license reinstatement fee from $50 to $100. These fees were last increased in 1992

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Increase Food Safety Violation Penalties. Increases the maximum penalty for the first critical health violation of Agriculture & Markets Law from $300 to $1,000, and from $600 to $2,000 for each subsequent finding. This penalty was last amended in 1990. Additionally, the maximum penalty for the first critical health deficiency finding related to a rule or order of the Department will increase from $200 to $1,000 and from $400 to $2,000 for each subsequent finding. This penalty was last amended in 1968. Both increased penalties are intended to improve compliance with statutes and regulations.
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Allow Automated Speed Enforcement Cameras. Authorizes the use of cameras to identify vehicles speeding in highway workzones and designated stretches of highway. Tickets of $50 for highway speeding and $100 for workzone speeding would be issued to the registered owners of vehicles captured by the cameras.
V. Other Revenue Actions
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Expand the Bottle Bill. Expands the nickel deposit to include additional beverage containers and provide for the return of unclaimed deposits to the state. Proceeds would be directed to the Environmental Protection Fund (EPF).
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Reform the Empire Zones Program. Requires all current and future participants in the program to be recertified before qualifying for tax year 2008 zone benefits, and to meet or exceed a new statutory, 20:1 benefit-cost standard. This proposal would also exclude businesses from certain industry sectors (utilities, retail, and real estate holding companies) from applying for future acceptance into the program.
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Allow the Sale of Wine in Grocery Stores. Allows New York to join 35 other states that permit wine to be sold in grocery stores.
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Expand Tax Compliance. Provides the Department of Taxation and Finance with a variety of tax enforcement tools to ensure that taxpayers are remitting the taxes they owe, including the ability to verify tax liability through the use of third party information, and increases in the interest rates tied to the underpayment of tax. This package will provide for a more comprehensive audit, compliance and tax enforcement program.
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Enact Reciprocal Vendor Offsets. Enacts a reciprocal program with the U.S. Treasury Department and other states to intercept vendor payments to satisfy legally enforceable and past due income tax debts.
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Increase Prepaid Sales Tax Rates on Cigarettes. Increase the prepaid sales tax rate on cigarettes from 7 percent to 8 percent, consistent with the sales tax rate in most New York State jurisdictions. This will not change the amount of tax liability, but simply the timing of payments.
134 2009-10 New York State Executive Budget

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Allow for Mailing of Decals To TMT Carriers. Provides the authority for the Tax Department to mail decals to Truck Mileage Tax (TMT) carriers. The state amended its Highway Use Tax law due to a federal law that stated that states were no longer allowed to use a permit/decal system. That law has since been repealed.
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Increase Tax Prepayment. Increases the mandatory first installment of tax due from certain taxpayers from 30 percent to 40 percent of the previous year’s tax liability. For most taxpayers, this installment is due in March with the filing of the previous year’s tax return. This will not change the amount of tax liability, but simply the timing of payments.
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Extend Pari-Mutuel Tax. Extends lower pari-mutuel tax rates for one year. This proposal would also extend by one year the rules governing the simulcasting of out-ofstate
races and the authorization for account wagering.
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Eliminate Quick Draw Restrictions. Removes certain restrictions on the locations where Quick Draw can be played and on the hours of operation.
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Extend VLT Hours of Operation. Eliminates the hour restrictions on the operation of VLTs. The elimination of these restrictions will allow the Division of the Lottery to set hours based on facility utilization.
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Allow for Additional Multi-Jurisdictional Lottery Games. Removes the restriction that currently allows the Division of the Lottery to join only one multi-jurisdictional game. This action would allow the Lottery to be part of new multi-jurisdictional gaming associations.
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Improve Lottery Prize Fund Investment. Authorizes a wider variety of investment options for moneys held by the Lottery Prize Fund. This will allow the Lottery to achieve a higher return on these investments through a prudent, diversified investment strategy.
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Authorize VLTs at Belmont Park. Authorizes the operation of VLTs at Belmont Park, which would generate a franchise payment of at least $370 million in 2010-11.
VI. New or Expanded Tax Credits

• Expand the Low Income Housing Tax Credit Program. Authorizes the Commissioner of the Division of Housing and Community Renewal to allocate an additional $4 million in aggregate credit awards to taxpayers that develop qualifying housing projects for low-income New Yorkers. Credits are given in equal installments for a 10 year period, so that the total amount of credits that will be awarded from this new authorization will be $40 million

I believe this is all of it. Here is the link to download the pdf...

http://imgsrv.wben.com/image/wben/Us...iefingBook.pdf