She’s not moo-ving on this.
Gov. Kathy Hochul promised that the price of a glass of milk at the annual New York State Fair won’t budge as long as she’s in the governor’s mansion — outside cost pressures and inflation be darned.
“It will never go up as long as I’m governor,” Hochul told The Post Wednesday as she deftly poured a few glasses of moo juice at the Syracuse fair’s famous Rainbow Dairy Bar.
The Empire State has subsidized the dairy bar for nearly a decade ever since the nonprofit that hands out frosty 7-ounce cups of white and chocolate milk said they’d have to double the price to $0.50.
But this increased price of lactose was simply intolerable for then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who in 2015 said the state would kick in $90,000 to keep the price where it’s been since 1983, when his father, Mario, was governor.
Attendees chug between 350,000-400,000 cups each year, New York State Dairy Exhibits, Inc., which operates the dairy bar, told Syracuse.com.
A spokesperson for the division of budget wasn’t immediately able to say just how much the state is spending subsidizing the milk bar this year.
Hochul’s price-freezing pledge came as she paraded through the fair surrounded by reporters, staffers and members of her cabinet, occasionally stopping to chat with other fairgoers.
“Take advantage of every program you can,” Hochul told a young girl participating in 4-H while holding a freshly poured cup of ice-cold chocolate milk. “I would join everything you can, because you never know where you’re going to end up starting in 4H.”
The governor also spoke at a women’s breakfast before stopping by the horticulture building where she signed a sweet piece of legislation allowing prospective sugar bush operators to lease state lands for maple syrup production for up to 10 years instead of the current five.
After mingling with a group of mounted state troopers and meeting one of their horses, James Bond, Hochul bumped into GOP Reps. Brandon Williams and Nicole Malliotakis — who yelled out “Staten Island is in the house!” to the Democrat.
She later split a Basilio’s sausage with Syracuse Mayor Ben Walsh, an independent, in keeping with a fair tradition.