Skip to content

New York’s Small Businesses Stop Albany-Run Healthcare from Advancing This Session

New York’s Small Businesses Stop Albany-Run Healthcare from Advancing This Session

June 14, 2022 Last Edit: June 5, 2025

NFIB’s successful campaign prevented $250,000,000,000 in new taxes

New York’s Small Businesses Stop Albany-Run Healthcare from Advancing This Session

 

Legislation proposing to takeover New York’s healthcare system and levy $250 billion in new taxes was foiled by NFIB’s successful grassroots advocacy campaign and the engagement of hundreds of small business owners.

In response to the political pressure to pass government-run, single payer healthcare (the so-called “New York Health Act”), NFIB launched a statewide radio and online ad campaign educating the public, elected officials, and small businesses about the pitfalls of the bill and the costs to taxpayers. Millions of New Yorkers heard and saw NFIB’s ads, and hundreds of small business owners contacted their elected leaders to let them know how bad the New York Health Act is for small businesses.

“Lawmakers from across New York State heard the message loud and clear: $250 billion in new taxes and a healthcare system run by Albany bureaucrats is not the answer,” said NFIB New York State Director Ashley Ranslow. “Small businesses have endured unprecedented economic challenges over the last couple of years: from COVID-related, state-mandated business closures and restrictions to rampant inflation, record high gas prices, and widespread labor shortages, Main Street is at its breaking point. Small business owners want good, affordable healthcare, but the New York Health Act would create a devastating and expensive system with the costs borne by hardworking small business owners. Many lawmakers heard the small business voice and wisely backed away from this legislation.”

Small business owner and NFIB member Chuck Handley, president of Burke’s Home Center in Oswego and Fulton, New York, shared his story in NFIB’s In Their Own Words (ITOW) video series about how government-run, single payer healthcare would impact his business and healthcare for his 25 employees. (Watch the NFIB ITOW video featuring Chuck Handley here: https://vimeo.com/705773982/62859c1d0b). He, like many other small business owners, expressed his concerns about how small businesses could possibly survive hundreds of billions of dollars in new taxes.

NFIB’s integrated media, grassroots, member recruitment, and lobbying campaign helped stop the New York Health Act from passage. The bill did advance through the New York State Assembly Health and Codes Committees, but NFIB’s and small business owners’ hard work successfully kept the bill from receiving a floor vote in either the State Assembly or the State Senate. While the bill failed to pass this year, this issue remains a clear and present threat when lawmakers return to Albany. NFIB will continue to be the voice of small business in the State Capitol by opposing this $250 billion, government-run healthcare boondoggle.

 

Get to know NFIB

NFIB is a member-driven organization advocating on behalf of small and independent businesses nationwide.

Receive our newsletter and email notification
Knowledge is power. Let us help you stay informed with breaking legislative news, regulatory updates, business tips, and more.

Related Articles

East Front of United States Capitol
Related
April 23, 2026
NFIB Supports Legislation to Increase the Small Business Deduction to 23%
The Small Business Tax Cut Act would build on the success of Congress making the Small Business Deduction permanent
Read More
Illinois state capitol IL springfield photo by Todd Pack
Related
April 23, 2026
New Tax Proposal Stalls in Illinois House
NFIB testified against the so-called millionaire’s tax in Illinois that would have disproportionately impacted small businesses
Read More
Related
April 22, 2026
READ: Arizona Small Businesses (Nervously) Await State Tax Conformity Deal Before Session Ends
“The Legislature has done its part. Governor Hobbs should finish the job, now, before one more small business owner has to guess about their future.”
Read More
Related
April 20, 2026
New NFIB Op-Ed in Washington Examiner: Small Businesses Need Relief from Rising Gas Prices
WASHINGTON, D.C. (April 20, 2026) In a new op-ed published in the Washington Examiner, Louis Bertolotti, NFIB Principal of Federal Government Relations, urges …
Read More

© 2001 - 2026 National Federation of Independent Business. All Rights Reserved. Terms and Conditions | Privacy Policy | Accessibility