City officials are sounding the alarm on several of Gov. Kathy Hochul's state budget proposals, particularly transit funding.

First Deputy Mayor Sheena Wright joined Errol Louis on “Inside City Hall” Thursday and called Hochul’s plan for the city to pitch in $500 million more to the MTA “unfair.”

Hochul proposed a nearly $230 billion state budget, which includes money for New York City to help pay for an influx of asylum seekers and a new tax to help fund mass transit.

“We already give multiple billions of dollars to the MTA every single year, and I think the challenge is there wasn’t a lot of ridership, obviously during COVID,” she said.

Wright added that city officials are hopeful one of the House bills could provide an alternative method to close the gap.

“[Lawmakers are] fighting to ensure that New York City is not overburdened inappropriately to fix the MTA budget challenges,” she said.

According to the Adams administration, the city is only getting 29% of what the city is spending on sheltering asylum seekers, meeting a cap of a billion dollars over two years. Wright said it’s not enough.

“We are looking at $4.2 billion, $4.2 billion that we did not have, we didn’t budget for between last year and the upcoming year,” she said. “So that is a significant amount and $1 billion does not really help us — I mean it does, but it doesn’t really get us to where we need to be.”

“I think when we look at our budget, we have to appreciate that every dollar counts and this administration is really looking to be efficient and effective,” Wright said.