threrf23 wrote:This applies to volunteers who are not getting paid a cent by anybody affiliated with New York.  Out of state employers, who are volunteering their employees, are required to register with NY and do withholding there.  That's just part of the paperwork involved.  And I don't know specifics, but I would wager some of these volunteers will end up double taxed on their very modest income.  
Law was already on the books, but Cuomo claims he fully intends to pursue.  I know NY has a tough road ahead and can't afford to be idealist, but there has gotta be a better way.
I don't think these are literally unpaid volunteers, but people who volunteered to come to New York to do 
paid work, with the pay sometimes coming from their out-of-state employers who were paying them to work in New York instead of in their home state. In general it makes sense that New York (like most states, including MA) makes you pay some income taxes if you do paid work in the state, because it prevents loopholes of setting up residence in a low tax state to avoid taxes from your job in a high paying state. But what makes this different is these aren't people choosing to work in New York to earn more money, but people who chose to risk their lives to come to New York from out of state to help out in a time of need, and therefore it makes moral sense not to burden those people by taxing them on the basis that they worked here during an emergency. New York waived state income taxes for out of state workers helping with 9/11, and they should do it now too - pretty **** not to.
The complication here is that after months of reduced revenue from sales and income taxes, higher payments to social safety net programs, and throwing money at an unprecedented medical crisis, New York's state and local governments are all straight up broke, and that's going to be a huge problem for New Yorkers, especially because the federal government is dragging its feet on providing assistance as typically happens during natural disasters like hurricanes, so New York is going to make some difficult and frankly immoral decisions about how to allocate limited resources no matter what. And I think on top of that, Cuomo is the kind of **** who likes to play political hardball (for example, it's an open secret that he deliberately **** over NYC transit to try to make DeBlasio more unpopular), so while I hope this isn't part of the calculation, he might be trying to pressure Congress on providing budget assistance to New York by inconveniencing out-of-state workers and implying that he could solve this problem with federal assistance. I hope this gets resolved and that the state taxes get waived for those out of state workers who came to help us out soon - those people are heroes and deserve the royal treatment from New York. Makes me sad that this is happening.