NEW YORK - Mayor Bill de Blasio unveiled his new executive budget proposal Thursday, making the city’s spending plan reach around $89 billion.

The mayor says the five boroughs have been hit by unexpected costs from Albany which he says totals out to $530 million de Blasio planned on using for the city budget.

According to City Hall, that cash was supposed to go to funds for education and juvenile justice programs.

The budget also forces the city to fork over more cash for the MTA, making it tough for the mayor to come through on his plan to reduce transit fares for low income New Yorkers. 

"It is a fair proposal. We are going to talk to them between now and adoption and figure out what we will prioritize," De Blazio said.

"I am disappointed. I think these are things, fair fares, are really in line with everything he has talked about. Being the fairest big city in America," said City Council Speaker Corey Johnson.

The governor's office responded saying de Blasio used "political advocacy math" instead of numbers and that the city will be receiving $334 million more in education funding than it did last year. 

The city budget is due in June.