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Legislative District 14

Posted on: April 20, 2026

NUÑEZ DEMANDS EMERGENCY VOTE ON NASSAU GAS TAX HOLIDAY

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(L-R Leg. Delia DeRiggi-Whitton, Leg. Debra Mule, Leg. Cynthia Nunez, Leg. Olena Nicks)

Mineola, NY (Monday, April 20, 2026) — With gas prices climbing and household budgets already stretched thin, Nassau County Legislator Cynthia Nuñez has introduced legislation to deliver immediate relief at the pump and is urging her colleagues to bring it up for an emergency vote at next week’s scheduled legislative session. The bill would temporarily cap the taxable price of gasoline and diesel for Nassau County’s local 4.25% sales-tax calculation at $3.00 per gallon from June 1, 2026 through December 1, 2026.

At current prices, the measure could save Nassau motorists millions of dollars collectively over the life of the bill by preventing the county from collecting extra tax revenue on soaring pump prices. The proposal is aimed at giving drivers real, targeted relief as rising fuel costs tied to the conflict involving Iran ripple through family budgets.

“Families in Nassau County should not be forced to pay more and more every time an international crisis sends gas prices through the roof,” said Legislator Cynthia Nuñez. “This bill is a simple, targeted way to give residents relief where they need it most — at the pump. Other counties have already acted. Nassau should not be standing on the sidelines while working people get squeezed.”

Nuñez said the Legislature should move immediately rather than wait while residents continue paying inflated costs to commute to work, get their kids to school, and manage day-to-day life.

Other counties across New York, led by both Republicans and Democrats, have already moved forward with similar gas-tax relief measures. Rockland County approved a $3-per-gallon cap on the county sales-tax base for gasoline, Onondaga County passed a cap taxing only the first $4 per gallon, Putnam County approved a $3-per-gallon cap on county sales tax for gasoline and diesel, and Dutchess County approved a similar $3-per-gallon cap pending state approval.

The Nassau proposal echoes the county’s bipartisan action in 2022, when all nineteen legislators unanimously approved temporary gas-tax relief in response to soaring fuel prices after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. This bill follows that same playbook: provide temporary relief when costs spike and residents need help

Nuñez’s colleagues in the Democratic Minority Conference also called for swift action:

Minority Leader Delia DeRiggi-Whitton said:
 “People in Nassau County are already paying too much for too many basic necessities and rising gas prices only add more strain. This is a practical, temporary step that can give residents some breathing room, and we should move it without delay.”

Legislator Arnold W. Drucker said:
 “When families are forced to spend more just to fill up their tanks, that means less money for groceries, rent, prescriptions, and everything else. This proposal is about recognizing that reality and taking responsible action to ease the burden.”

Legislator Debra Mulé said:
“Working families, seniors, and commuters should not have to absorb the full shock of another international crisis at the gas pump. This legislation offers targeted relief and reflects the kind of common-sense response residents deserve from their government.”

Legislator Carrie Solages said:
“For many hardworking families, there is no way around the cost of driving. They cannot simply opt out of getting to work, school, or medical appointments. This measure would provide real relief at a moment when people need it most.”

Legislator Scott M. Davis said:
“Nassau residents rely on their cars every single day to get to work, get their kids to school, and take care of their families. If we have the ability to provide meaningful relief during a spike in gas prices, then we should act and we should act now.”

Legislator Olena Nicks said:
“This is exactly the kind of targeted relief government should be focused on — timely, practical, and aimed directly at helping residents manage rising everyday costs. Nassau County should not lag behind when other counties are already stepping up.”

Legislator Viviana Russell said:
“Residents expect us to respond when rising costs put more pressure on their household budgets. This bill would send a clear message that Nassau County is prepared to act in the public’s interest and provide relief when it is needed.”

Nuñez urged legislative leadership to bring the bill to the floor next week so Nassau residents can begin seeing relief as soon as state law allows.

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