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Hochul spells out 50 actions to slash red tape, fees across New York and save 1M hours of time

Add The New York Post on Google Gov. Kathy Hochul outlined 50 actions her administration is taking on to slash red tape and unnecessary fees that will help untangle residents from state government’s bureaucracy.

The governor announced Monday she’ll simplify the license renewal applications for barbers, cosmetologists, real estate professionals, notaries, security guards and others who get permits from the Department of State.

The move will affect 800,000 New Yorkers, the governor said.

“The purpose of government should be to work for the people, not against them and every New Yorker can agree that bureaucratic obstacles stand in the way, wasting time and money,” Hochul said.

“After hearing directly from New Yorkers, we’re cutting red tape, making it easier to build housing and infrastructure, access healthcare, and cut down on burdensome fees and paperwork — delivering a more efficient government for every New Yorker.”

Some rules were obsolete and were taken off the books.

For example, the Office of Mental Health reform will repeal regulations regarding COVID-19 vaccination requirements for staff in OMH facilities. The pandemic subsided years ago and the rules are no longer appropriate for the current public health landscape.

Hochul claimed more than 1.5 million New Yorkers across the state including families, small businesses, and workers will benefit by reducing rules and regulations.

She estimated the changes will save residents 1 million hours in time by cutting unnecessary reporting requirements, digitizing paperwork and streamlining training.

“Tens of millions of dollars” for New Yorkers will be slashed in unnecessary fees and compliance costs, according to the EXPRESS NY (Expediting Processes and Regulations to Enable Streamlined Services) initiative first announced in her 2026 State of the State address in January.

The Democratic governor is seeking re-election this fall to a second full, four-year term. She faces off against Republican gubernatorial nominee Bruce Blakeman, the Nassau County executive.

Read original at New York Post

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