485APOS 1 lp1-021.htm POST-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO. 34 lp1-021.htm - Generated by SEC Publisher for SEC Filing
File Nos. 33-7497
811-4765

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549

FORM N-1A

 

REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933 [X]
Pre-Effective Amendment No. [ ]
Post-Effective Amendment No. 34 [X]
and/or  
REGISTRATION STATEMENT UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940 [X]
Amendment No. 34 [X]

 


(Check appropriate box or boxes.)

DREYFUS NEW YORK AMT-FREE MUNICIPAL BOND FUND
(Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Charter)

c/o The Dreyfus Corporation    
200 Park Avenue, New York, New York 10166  
(Address of Principal Executive Offices)   (Zip Code)

Registrant's Telephone Number, including Area Code: (212) 922-6000

Michael A. Rosenberg, Esq.
200 Park Avenue
New York, New York 10166
(Name and Address of Agent for Service)

It is proposed that this filing will become effective (check appropriate box)

            immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b)
----    
  on (date) pursuant to paragraph (b)
----
   
           60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(i)
----    
X On April 1, 2010 pursuant to paragraph (a)(i)
----    
           75 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(ii)
----    
  on (date) pursuant to paragraph (a)(ii) of Rule 485
----    

If appropriate, check the following box:

  this post-effective amendment designates a new effective date for a
  previously filed post-effective amendment.
----  



Dreyfus New York
AMT-Free Municipal Bond Fund

Class/Ticker A PSNYX B PRNBX C PNYCX I DNYIX

PROSPECTUS April __, 2010




Contents

Fund Summary  
Fund Summary 1
 
 
Fund Details  
Goal and Approach 6
Investment Risks 8
Management 10
 
 
Shareholder Guide  
Choosing a Share Class 12
Buying and Selling Shares 16
General Policies 19
Distributions and Taxes 21
Services for Fund Investors 22
Financial Highlights 23

For More Information
See back cover.



Fund Summary

 

INVESTMENT OBJECTIVE

The fund seeks to maximize current income exempt from federal, New York state and New York city income taxes to the extent consistent with the preservation of capital.

FEES AND EXPENSES

This table describes the fees and expenses that you may pay if you buy and hold shares of the fund. You may qualify for sales charge discounts if you and your family invest, or agree to invest in the future, at least $50,000 in certain funds in the Dreyfus Family of Funds. More information about these and other discounts is available from your financial professional and in the Shareholder Guide section on page [Shareholder Guide page number - to be inserted] of the prospectus and in the How to Buy Shares section on page [SAI page number - to be inserted] of the fund’s Statement of Additional Information (SAI). Class A shares bought without an initial sales charge as part of an investment of $1 million or more may be charged a deferred sales charge of 1.00% if redeemed within one year.

Shareholder fees (fees paid directly from your        
investment)        
  Class A Class B Class C Class I
Maximum sales charge (load) imposed on purchases        
(as a percentage of offering price) 4.50 none none none
Maximum deferred sales charge (load)        
(as a percentage of lower of purchase or sale price) none 4.00 1.00 none
Annual fund operating expenses (expenses that you pay        
each year as a percentage of the value of your        
investment)        
 
Management fees .55 .55 .55 .55
Distribution (12b-1) fees none .50 .75 none
Other expenses (including shareholder services fees) XXX XXX XXX XXX
Total annual fund operating expenses XXX XXX XXX XXX

EXPENSE EXAMPLE

The Example below is intended to help you compare the cost of investing in the fund with the cost of investing in other mutual funds. The Example assumes that you invest $10,000 in the fund for the time periods indicated and then redeem all of your shares at the end of those periods. The Example also assumes that your investment has a 5% return each year and that the fund’s operating expenses remain the same. Although your actual costs may be higher or lower, based on these assumptions your costs would be:

 

  1 Year 3 Years 5 Years 10 Years
Class A $XXX $XXX $XXX $XXX
Class B $XXX $XXX $XXX $XXX
Class C $XXX $XXX $XXX $XXX
Class I $XXX $XXX $XXX $XXX
 
You would pay the following expenses if you did not redeem your shares:    
  1 Year 3 Years 5 Years 10 Years
Class A $XXX $XXX $XXX $XXX
Class B $XXX $XXX $XXX $XXX

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Class C $XXX $XXX $XXX $XXX
Class I $XXX $XXX $XXX $XXX

PORTFOLIO TURNOVER

The fund pays transaction costs, such as commissions, when it buys and sells securities (or “turns over” its portfolio). A higher portfolio turnover may indicate higher transaction costs and may result in higher taxes when fund shares are held in a taxable account. These costs, which are not reflected in annual fund operating expenses or in the example, affect the fund’s performance. During the most recent fiscal year, the fund’s portfolio turnover rate was ___% of the average value of its portfolio.

PRINCIPAL INVESTMENT STRATEGY

To pursue its goal, the fund normally invests substantially all of its assets in municipal bonds that provide income exempt from federal, New York city and New York state personal income taxes. The fund also seeks to provide income exempt from the federal alternative minimum tax.  The fund invests primarily in municipal bonds rated investment grade. The fund seeks bonds with the potential to offer attractive current income, typically looking for bonds that can provide consistently attractive current yields or that are trading at competitive market prices.

 

PRINCIPAL RISKS

An investment in the fund is not a bank deposit. It is not insured or guaranteed by the FDIC or any other government agency. It is not a complete investment program. The fund’s share price fluctuates, which means you could lose money.

  • Municipal bond market risk. The amount of public information available about municipal bonds is generally less than that for corporate equities or bonds. Special factors, such as legislative changes, a state’s economy and local and business developments, may adversely affect the yield and/or value of the fund’s investments in municipal bonds. Other factors include the general conditions of the municipal bond market, the size of the particular offering, the maturity of the obligation and the rating of the issue.

  • Interest rate risk. Prices of municipal bonds tend to move inversely with changes in interest rates. The longer the effective maturity and duration of the fund's portfolio, the more the fund's share price is likely to react to interest rates.

  • Credit risk. Failure of an issuer to make timely interest or principal payments, or a decline or perception of a decline in the credit quality of a municipal bond, can cause the bond's price to fall, potentially lowering the fund's share price. To the extent the fund invests in high yield (“junk”) bonds, its portfolio is subject to heightened credit risk.

  • Liquidity risk. The secondary market for certain municipal bonds tends to be less well developed or liquid than many other securities markets, which may adversely affect the fund's ability to sell such municipal bonds at attractive prices.

  • State-specific risk. The fund is subject to the risk that New York's economy, and the revenues underlying its municipal bonds, may decline.  Investing primarily in a single state makes the fund more sensitive to risks specific to the state and may magnify other risks.

  • Non-diversification risk. The fund is non-diversified, meaning that a relatively high percentage of the fund’s assets may be invested in a limited number of issuers.  Therefore, the fund's performance may be more vulnerable to changes in the market value of a single issuer or group of issuers and more susceptible to risks associated with a single economic, political or regulatory occurrence than a diversified fund.

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PERFORMANCE

 

The following bar chart and table provide some indication of the risks of investing in the fund. The bar chart shows changes in the performance of the fund’s Class A shares from year to year. The table compares the average annual total returns of the fund’s shares to those of a broad measure of market performance. The fund’s past performance (before and after taxes) is no guarantee of future results. Sales charges, if any, are not reflected in the bar chart, and if those charges were included, returns would have been less than those shown.  More recent performance information may be available at www.Dreyfus.com.

Year-by-year total returns as of 12/31 each year (%)

Class A

[____________]

Best Quarter (XX, XXXX) ____%. Worst Quarter (XX, XXXX) ___ %

 

After-tax performance is shown only for Class A shares. After-tax performance of the fund's other share classes will vary. After-tax returns are calculated using the historical highest individual federal marginal tax rates, and do not reflect the impact of state and local taxes. Actual after-tax returns depend on the investor’s tax situation and may differ from those shown, and the after tax returns shown are not relevant to investors who hold their shares through tax-deferred arrangements such as 401(k) plans or individual retirement accounts.

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The performance information for the fund’s Class I shares for periods prior to 12/15/08 reflects the performance of the fund’s Class A shares. Such performance figures have not been adjusted to reflect applicable class fees and expenses.

Average annual total returns as of 12/31/09        
       
Share Class 1 Year 5 Years 10 Years
Class A returns before taxes XXX% XXX% XXX%
Class A returns after taxes on distributions XXX% XXX% XXX%
Class A returns after taxes on distributions and sale of fund      
shares XXX% XXX% XXX%
Class B returns before taxes XXX% XXX% XXX%
Class C returns before taxes XXX% XXX% XXX%
Class I returns before taxes XXX% XXX% XXX%
Barclays Capital Municipal Bond Index reflects no      
deduction for fees, expenses or taxes XXX% XXX% XXX%

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PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT

 

The fund’s investment adviser is The Dreyfus Corporation. Thomas Casey and David Belton have served as the fund's co-primary portfolio managers since December 2009.

PURCHASE AND SALE OF FUND SHARES

In general, the fund’s minimum initial investment is $1,000 and the minimum subsequent investment is $100. Certain types of accounts are eligible for lower minimum investments. You may sell your shares by mail, telephone or online at www.Dreyfus.com. Your shares will be sold at the next net asset value calculated after your order is received in proper form.

TAX INFORMATION

The fund anticipates that virtually all dividends paid will be exempt from federal, New York city and New York state income taxes. However, for federal tax purposes, certain distributions, such as distributions of short-term capital gains, are taxable as ordinary income, while long-term capital gains are taxable as capital gains.

PAYMENTS TO BROKER DEALERS AND OTHER FINANCIAL INTERMEDIARIES

 

If you purchase shares through a broker-dealer or other financial intermediary (such as a bank), the fund and its related companies may pay the intermediary for the sale of fund shares and related services. These payments may create a conflict of interest by influencing the broker-dealer or other intermediary and your salesperson to recommend the fund over another investment. Ask your salesperson or visit your financial intermediary’s website for more information.

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Fund Details

GOAL AND APPROACH

The fund seeks to maximize current income exempt from federal, New York state and New York city income taxes to the extent consistent with the preservation of capital. To pursue this goal, the fund normally invests substantially all of its assets in municipal bonds that provide income exempt from federal, New York state and New York city personal income taxes. The fund also seeks to provide income exempt from the federal alternative minimum tax. Municipal bonds are debt securities that provide income free from federal income tax, and state income tax if you live in the issuing state. Municipal bonds are typically of two types:

  • general obligation bonds, which are secured by the full faith and credit of the issuer and its taxing power

  • revenue bonds, which are payable from the revenue source, such as charges for water and sewer service or highway tolls

The fund invests at least 70% of its assets in municipal bonds rated investment grade or the unrated equivalent as determined by Dreyfus. For additional yield, the fund may invest up to 30% of its assets in municipal bonds rated below investment grade (“high yield” or “junk” bonds) or the unrated equivalent as determined by Dreyfus. Credit ratings are assigned by independent rating organizations based on their assessment of a bond issuer’s, and/or any credit enhancer’s, credit profile and ability to repay debts. These rating organizations assign letter grades that reflect the issuer’s, and/or any credit enhancer’s, creditworthiness. AAA or Aaa represents the highest credit rating, AA/Aa the second highest, and so on down to D, for defaulted debt. Bonds rated BBB or Baa and above are considered investment grade.

The dollar-weighted average maturity of the fund’s portfolio normally exceeds ten years, but the fund may invest without regard to maturity. Dollar-weighted average maturity is an average of the stated maturities of the securities held by the fund, based on their dollar-weighted proportions in the fund.

The portfolio manager may buy and sell bonds based on credit quality, market outlook and yield potential. In selecting municipal bonds for investment, the portfolio manager may assess the current interest rate environment and the municipal bond’s potential volatility in different rate environments. The portfolio manager focuses on bonds with the potential to offer attractive current income, typically looking for bonds that can provide consistently attractive current yields or that are trading at competitive market prices. A portion of the fund’s assets may be allocated to “discount” bonds, which are bonds that sell at a price below their face value, or to “premium” bonds, which are bonds that sell at a price above their face value. The fund’s allocation to either discount bonds or to premium bonds will change along with the portfolio manager’s changing views of the current interest rate and market environment. The portfolio manager may also look to select bonds that are most likely to obtain attractive prices when sold.

Although the fund seeks to provide income exempt from federal, New York state and New York city personal income taxes, the fund may invest temporarily in taxable bonds and/or municipal bonds that pay income exempt only from federal personal income tax, including when the portfolio manager believes acceptable New York municipal bonds are not available for investment.

The fund may, but is not required to, use derivatives, such as options, futures and options on futures (including those relating to securities, indexes and interest rates), as a substitute for investing directly in an underlying asset, to increase returns, to manage credit or interest rate risk, or as part of a hedging strategy. The fund may buy securities that pay interest at rates that float inversely with changes in prevailing interest rates (“inverse floaters”) and may make forward commitments in which the fund agrees to buy or sell a security in the future at a price agreed upon today. Inverse floaters are created by

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depositing municipal bonds in a trust which divides the bond’s income stream into two parts: a short-term variable rate demand note and a residual interest bond (the inverse floater) which receives interest based on the remaining cash flow of the trust after payment of interest on the note and various trust expenses. Interest on the inverse floater usually moves in the opposite direction as the interest on the variable rate demand note.

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INVESTMENT RISKS

The fund’s principal risks are discussed below. An investment in the fund is not a bank deposit. It is not insured or guaranteed by the FDIC or any other government agency. It is not a complete investment program. The value of your investment in the fund will fluctuate, sometimes dramatically, which means you could lose money.

  • Municipal bond market risk. The amount of public information available about municipal bonds is generally less than that for corporate equities or bonds. Special factors, such as legislative changes and local and business developments, may adversely affect the yield and/or value of the fund’s investments in municipal bonds. Other factors include the general conditions of the municipal bond market, the size of the particular offering, the maturity of the obligation and the rating of the issue.

  • Interest rate risk. Prices of bonds tend to move inversely with changes in interest rates. Typically, a rise in rates will adversely affect bond prices and, accordingly, the fund’s share price. The longer the effective maturity and duration of the fund’s portfolio, the more the fund’s share price is likely to react to interest rates.

  • Credit risk. Failure of an issuer to make timely interest or principal payments, or a decline or perception of a decline in the credit quality of a bond, can cause a bond’s price to fall, potentially lowering the fund’s share price. Although the fund invests primarily in bonds rated investment grade, it may invest to a limited extent in high yield bonds. High yield (“junk”) bonds involve greater credit risk, including the risk of default, than investment grade bonds, and are considered predominantly speculative with respect to the issuer’s ability to make principal and interest payments. The prices of high yield bonds can fall dramatically in response to bad news about the issuer or its industry, or the economy in general.

  • Call risk. Some bonds give the issuer the option to call, or redeem, the bonds before their maturity date. If an issuer “calls” its bond during a time of declining interest rates, the fund might have to reinvest the proceeds in an investment offering a lower yield, and therefore might not benefit from any increase in value as a result of declining interest rates. During periods of market illiquidity or rising interest rates, prices of “callable” issues are subject to increased price fluctuation.

  • Liquidity risk. When there is little or no active trading market for specific types of securities, it can become more difficult to sell the securities at or near their perceived value. In such a market, the value of such securities and the fund’s share price may fall dramatically, even during periods of declining interest rates.

  • State-specific risk. The fund is subject to the risk that New York’s economy, and the revenues underlying its municipal bonds, may decline. Investing primarily in a single state makes the fund more sensitive to risks specific to the state and may magnify other risks.

  • Market sector risk. The fund’s overall risk level will depend on the market sectors in which the fund is invested and the current interest rate, liquidity and credit quality of such sectors. The fund may significantly overweight or underweight certain industries or market sectors, which may cause the fund’s performance to be more or less sensitive to developments affecting those industries or sectors.

  • Tax risk. To be tax-exempt, municipal bonds generally must meet certain regulatory requirements. If any such municipal bond fails to meet these regulatory requirements, the interest received by the fund from its investment in such bonds and distributed to fund shareholders will be taxable.

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  • Derivatives risk. A small investment in derivatives could have a potentially large impact on the fund’s performance. The use of derivatives involves risks different from, or possibly greater than, the risks associated with investing directly in the underlying assets. Derivatives can be highly volatile, illiquid and difficult to value, and there is the risk that changes in the value of a derivative held by the fund will not correlate with the underlying instruments or the fund’s other investments. Derivative instruments also involve the risk that a loss may be sustained as a result of the failure of the counterparty to the derivative instruments to make required payments or otherwise comply with the derivative instruments’ terms. Certain types of derivatives involve greater risks than the underlying obligations because, in addition to general market risks, they are subject to illiquidity risk, counterparty risk and credit risk. Additionally, some derivatives involve economic leverage, which could increase the volatility of these investments as they may fluctuate in value more than the underlying instrument. Certain derivatives may cause taxable income.

  • Leveraging risk. The use of leverage, such as lending portfolio securities, entering into futures contracts, investing in inverse floaters, and engaging in forward commitment transactions, may cause taxable income and may magnify the fund’s gains or losses.

  • Non-diversification risk. The fund is non-diversified, which means that a relatively high percentage of the fund’s assets may be invested in a limited number of issuers. Therefore, the fund’s performance may be more vulnerable to changes in the market value of a single issuer or group of issuers and more susceptible to risks associated with a single economic, political or regulatory occurrence than a diversified fund.

  • Other potential risks. The fund may lend its portfolio securities to brokers, dealers and other financial institutions. In connection with such loans, the fund will receive collateral from the borrower equal to at least 100% of the value of loaned securities. If the borrower of the securities fails financially, there could be delays in recovering the loaned securities or exercising rights to the collateral.
    Under adverse market conditions, the fund could invest some or all of its assets in U.S. Treasury securities or money market securities. Although the fund would do this for temporary defensive purposes, it could reduce the benefit from any upswing in the market. During such periods, the fund may not achieve its investment objective.

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MANAGEMENT

The investment adviser for the fund is The Dreyfus Corporation (Dreyfus), 200 Park Avenue, New York, New York 10166. Founded in 1947, Dreyfus manages approximately $313 billion in 194 mutual fund portfolios. For the past fiscal year, the fund paid Dreyfus a management fee at the annual rate of ___% of the fund’s average daily net assets. A discussion regarding the basis for the board’s approving the fund’s management agreement with Dreyfus is available in the fund’s annual report for the fiscal year ended November 30, 2009. Dreyfus is the primary mutual fund business of The Bank of New York Mellon Corporation (BNY Mellon), a global financial services company focused on helping clients move and manage their financial assets, operating in 34 countries and serving more than 100 markets. BNY Mellon is a leading provider of financial services for institutions, corporations and high-net-worth individuals, providing asset and wealth management, asset servicing, issuer services, and treasury services through a worldwide client-focused team. BNY Mellon has more than $22.1 trillion in assets under custody and administration and $966 billion in assets under management, and it services more than $11.9 trillion in outstanding debt. Additional information is available at www.bnymellon.com.

The Dreyfus asset management philosophy is based on the belief that discipline and consistency are important to investment success. For each fund, Dreyfus seeks to establish clear guidelines for portfolio management and to be systematic in making decisions. This approach is designed to provide each fund with a distinct, stable identity.

Thomas Casey and David Belton have been co-primary portfolio managers of the fund since December 2009. Mr. Casey and Mr. Belton manage a number of other state-specific municipal bond funds for Dreyfus, where Mr. Casey has been employed since April 2009 and Mr. Belton has been employed since December 2009. Thomas Casey also is a senior portfolio manager for tax sensitive strategies at Standish Mellon Asset Management LLC (Standish), and affiliate of Dreyfus, where he also has been employed since July 1993. David Belton is the Head of Municipal Bond Research at Standish, where he also has been employed since November 1997.

The fund’s Statement of Additional Information (SAI) provides additional portfolio manager information, including compensation, other accounts managed and ownership of fund shares.

MBSC Securities Corporation (MBSC), a wholly owned subsidiary of Dreyfus, serves as distributor of the fund and for the other funds in the Dreyfus Family of Funds. Rule 12b-1 fees and shareholder services fees, as applicable, are paid to MBSC for financing the sale and distribution of fund shares and for providing shareholder account service and maintenance, respectively. Dreyfus or MBSC may provide cash payments out of its own resources to financial intermediaries that sell shares of funds in the Dreyfus Family of Funds or provide other services. Such payments are separate from any sales charges, 12b-1 fees and/or shareholder services fees or other expenses that may be paid by a fund to those intermediaries. Because those payments are not made by fund shareholders or the fund, the fund’s total expense ratio will not be affected by any such payments. These payments may be made to intermediaries, including affiliates, that provide shareholder servicing, sub-administration, recordkeeping and/or sub-transfer agency services, marketing support and/or access to sales meetings, sales representatives and management representatives of the financial intermediary. Cash compensation also may be paid from Dreyfus’ or MBSC’s own resources to intermediaries for inclusion of a fund on a sales list, including a preferred or select sales list or in other sales programs. These payments sometimes are referred to as “revenue sharing.” From time to time, Dreyfus or MBSC also may provide cash or non-cash compensation to financial intermediaries or their representatives in the form of occasional gifts; occasional meals, tickets or other entertainment; support for due diligence trips; educational conference sponsorships; support for recognition programs; and other forms of cash or non-cash compensation permissible under broker-dealer regulations. In some cases, these payments or compensation may create an incentive for a financial intermediary or its employees to recommend or sell shares of the fund to you. Please contact your

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financial representative for details about any payments they or their firm may receive in connection with the sale of fund shares or the provision of services to the fund.

The fund, Dreyfus and MBSC have each adopted a code of ethics that permits its personnel, subject to such code, to invest in securities, including securities that may be purchased or held by the fund. Each code of ethics restricts the personal securities transactions of employees, and requires portfolio managers and other investment personnel to comply with the code’s preclearance and disclosure procedures. The primary purpose of the respective codes is to ensure that personal trading by employees does not disadvantage any fund managed by Dreyfus or its affiliates.

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Shareholder Guide

Choosing a Share Class

The fund is designed primarily for people who are investing through a third party, such as a bank, broker-dealer or financial adviser, or in a 401(k) or other retirement plan. Third parties with whom you open a fund account may impose policies, limitations and fees that are different from those described in this prospectus. Consult a representative of your plan or financial institution for further information.

This prospectus offers Class A, B, C and I shares of the fund.

Your financial representative may receive different compensation for selling one class of shares than for selling another class. It is important to remember that any contingent deferred sales charge (CDSC) or Rule 12b-1 fees have the same purpose as the front-end sales charge: to compensate the distributor for concessions and expenses it pays to dealers and financial institutions in connection with the sale of fund shares. A CDSC is not charged on fund shares acquired through the reinvestment of fund dividends. Because the Rule 12b-1 fee is paid out of the fund’s assets on an ongoing basis, over time it will increase the cost of your investment and may cost you more than paying other types of sales charges.

The different classes of fund shares represent investments in the same portfolio of securities, but the classes are subject to different expenses and will likely have different share prices. When choosing a class, you should consider your investment amount, anticipated holding period, the potential costs over your holding period and whether you qualify for any reduction or waiver of the sales charge.

A complete description of these classes follows. You should review these arrangements with your financial representative before determining which class to invest in.

Class A shares

When you invest in Class A shares, you pay the public offering price, which is the share price, or net asset value (NAV), plus the initial sales charge that may apply to your purchase. The amount of the initial sales charge is based on the size of your investment, as the following table shows. We also describe below how you may reduce or eliminate the initial sales charge (see “Sales charge reductions and waivers”). Class A shares are subject to an ongoing shareholder services fee of .25% paid to the fund's distributor for shareholder account service and maintenance.

Since some of your investment goes to pay an upfront sales charge when you purchase Class A shares, you purchase fewer shares than you would with the same investment in Class C shares. Nevertheless, you are usually better off purchasing Class A shares, rather than Class C shares, and paying an up-front sales charge if you:

  • plan to own the shares for an extended period of time, since the ongoing Rule 12b-1 fees on Class C shares may eventually exceed the cost of the up-front sales charge; and

  • qualify for a reduced or waived sales charge

If you invest $1 million or more (and are not eligible to purchase Class I shares), Class A shares will always be the most advantageous choice.

  Total Sales Load* -- Class A Shares  
  As a % of offering As a % of net asset Dealers' reallowance as
Amount of Transaction price per share value per share a % of offering price
 
Less than $50,000 4.50 4.70 4.25

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    Total Sales Load* -- Class A Shares    
    As a % of offering   As a % of net asset   Dealers' reallowance as
Amount of Transaction   price per share   value per share   a % of offering price
 
$50,000 to less than $100,000   4.00   4.20   3.75
$100,000 to less than $250,000   3.00   3.10   2.75
$250,000 to less than $500,000   2.50   2.60   2.25
$500,000 to less than $1,000,000   2.00   2.00   1.75
$1,000,000 or more* -0- -0- -0-

*Investments of $1 million or more may be subject to a 1% contingent deferred sales charge if sold within one year of purchase.

Sales charge reductions and waivers

To receive a reduction or waiver of your initial sales charge, you must let your financial intermediary or the fund know at the time you purchase shares that you qualify for such a reduction or waiver. If you do not let your financial intermediary or the fund know that you are eligible for a reduction or waiver, you may not receive the reduction or waiver to which you are otherwise entitled. In order to receive a reduction or waiver, you may be required to provide your financial intermediary or the fund with evidence of your qualification for the reduction or waiver, such as records regarding shares of certain Dreyfus Funds held in accounts with that financial intermediary and other financial intermediaries. Additional information regarding reductions and waivers of sales loads is available, free of charge, at www.dreyfus.com and in the SAI.

You can reduce your initial sales charge in the following ways:

  • Rights of accumulation. You can count toward the amount of your investment your total account value in all share classes of the fund and certain other Dreyfus Funds that are subject to a sales charge. For example, if you have $1 million invested in shares of certain other Dreyfus Funds that are subject to a sales charge, you can invest in Class A shares of any fund without an initial sales charge.
    We may terminate or change this privilege at any time on written notice.

  • Letter of intent. You can sign a letter of intent, in which you agree to invest a certain amount (your goal) in the fund and certain other Dreyfus Funds over a 13-month period, and your initial sales charge will be based on your goal. A 90-day back-dated period can also be used to count previous purchases toward your goal. Your goal must be at least $50,000, and your initial investment must be at least $5,000. The sales charge will be adjusted if you do not meet your goal.

  • Combine with family members. You can also count toward the amount of your investment all investments in certain other Dreyfus Funds, in any class of shares that is subject to a sales charge, by your spouse and your children under age 21 (family members), including their rights of accumulation and goals under a letter of intent. Certain other groups may also be permitted to combine purchases for purposes of reducing or eliminating sales charges. (See “How to Buy Shares” in the SAI.)

Class A shares may be purchased at NAV without payment of a sales charge by the following individuals and entities:

  • full-time or part-time employees, and their family members, of Dreyfus or any of its affiliates

  • board members of Dreyfus and board members of the Dreyfus Family of Funds

  • full-time employees, and their family members, of financial institutions that have entered into selling agreements with the fund’s distributor

  • “wrap” accounts for the benefit of clients of financial institutions, provided they have entered into an agreement with the fund’s distributor specifying operating policies and standards

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  • qualified separate accounts maintained by an insurance company; any state, county or city or instrumentality thereof; charitable organizations investing $50,000 or more in fund shares; and charitable remainder trusts

  • qualified investors who (i) purchase Class A shares directly through the fund’s distributor, and (ii) have, or whose spouse or minor children have, beneficially owned shares and continuously maintained an open account directly through the distributor in a Dreyfus Fund since on or before February 28, 2006

  • investors with cash proceeds from the investor’s exercise of employment-related stock options, whether invested in the fund directly or indirectly through an exchange from a Dreyfus-managed money market fund, provided that the proceeds are processed through an entity that has entered into an agreement with the fund’s distributor specifically relating to processing stock options. Upon establishing the account in the fund or the Dreyfus-managed money market fund, the investor and the investor’s spouse or minor children become eligible to purchase Class A shares of the fund at NAV, whether or not using the proceeds of the employment-related stock options

  • members of qualified affinity groups who purchase Class A shares directly through the fund’s distributor, provided that the qualified affinity group has entered into an affinity agreement with the distributor

Class C shares

Since you pay no initial sales charge, an investment of less than $1 million in Class C shares buys more shares than the same investment would in Class A shares. However, Class C shares are subject to an annual Rule 12b-1 fee of .75%. Class C shares are also subject to an ongoing shareholder services fee of .25% paid to the fund's distributor for shareholder account service and maintenance. Over time, the Rule 12b-1 fees may cost you more than paying an initial sales charge on Class A shares. Class C shares redeemed within one year of purchase are subject to a 1% CDSC.

Because Class A shares will always be a more favorable investment than Class C shares for investments of $1 million or more, the fund will generally not accept a purchase order for Class C shares in the amount of $1 million or more. While the fund will take reasonable steps to prevent investments of $1 million or more in Class C shares, it may not be able to identify such investments made through certain financial intermediaries or omnibus accounts.

Class B shares

Class B shares are offered only in connection with dividend reinvestment and exchanges of Class B shares of certain other Dreyfus Funds or certain eligible shares of Dreyfus Worldwide Dollar Money Market Fund, Inc.

Class B shares are subject to an annual Rule 12b-1 fee of .50%, and to an ongoing shareholder services fee of .25% paid to the fund's distributor for shareholder account service and maintenance. Class B shares convert to Class A shares (which are not subject to a Rule 12b-1 fee) approximately six years after the date they were purchased. Class B shares sold within six years of purchase are subject to the following CDSCs:

  CDSC as a % of Amount
  Invested or Redemption Proceeds
Year Since Purchase Payment Was Made (whichever is less)
 
First 4.00
Second 4.00
Third 3.00
Fourth 3.00
Fifth 2.00
Sixth 1.00

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Class I share considerations

Since you pay no initial sales charge, an investment of less than $1 million in Class I shares buys more shares than the same investment would in a class that charges an initial sales charge. There is also no CDSC imposed on redemptions of Class I shares, and you do not pay any ongoing service or distribution fees.

Class I shares may be purchased by:

  • bank trust departments, trust companies and insurance companies that have entered into agreements with the fund’s distributor to offer Class I shares to their clients

  • law firms or attorneys acting as trustees or executors/administrators

  • foundations and endowments that make an initial investment in the fund of at least $1 million

  • advisory fee-based accounts offered through financial intermediaries who, depending on the structure of the selected advisory platform, make Class I shares available

CDSC waivers

The fund’s CDSC on Class A, B and C shares may be waived in the following cases:

  • permitted exchanges of shares, except if shares acquired by exchange are then redeemed within the period during which a CDSC would apply to the initial shares purchased

  • redemptions made within one year of death or disability of the shareholder

  • redemptions due to receiving required minimum distributions from retirement accounts upon reaching age 70½

  • redemptions made through the fund’s Automatic Withdrawal Plan, if such redemptions do not exceed 12% of the value of the account annually.

15



BUYING AND SELLING SHARES

Dreyfus generally calculates fund NAVs as of the close of trading on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) (usually 4:00 p.m. Eastern time) on days the NYSE is open for regular business. Your order will be priced at the next NAV calculated after your order is received in proper form by the fund’s transfer agent or other authorized entity. When calculating NAVs, Dreyfus values equity investments on the basis of market quotations or official closing prices. Dreyfus generally values fixed income investments based on values supplied by an independent pricing service approved by the fund’s board. The pricing service’s procedures are reviewed under the general supervision of the board. If market quotations or prices from a pricing service are not readily available, or are determined not to reflect accurately fair value, the fund may value those investments at fair value as determined in accordance with procedures approved by the fund’s board. Fair value of investments may be determined by the fund’s board, its pricing committee or its valuation committee in good faith using such information as it deems appropriate under the circumstances. Under certain circumstances, the fair value of foreign equity securities will be provided by an independent pricing service. Using fair value to price investments may result in a value that is different from a security’s most recent closing price and from the prices used by other mutual funds to calculate their net asset values. Funds that seek tax-exempt income are not recommended for purchase in IRAs or other qualified retirement plans. Foreign securities held by a fund may trade on days when the fund does not calculate its NAV and thus may affect the fund’s NAV on days when investors have no access to the fund.

Investments in certain types of thinly traded securities may provide short-term traders arbitrage opportunities with respect to the fund’s shares. For example, arbitrage opportunities may exist when trading in a portfolio security or securities is halted and does not resume, or the market on which such securities are traded closes before the fund calculates its NAV. If short-term investors of the fund were able to take advantage of these arbitrage opportunities, they could dilute the NAV of fund shares held by long-term investors. Portfolio valuation policies can serve to reduce arbitrage opportunities available to short-term traders, but there is no assurance that such valuation policies will prevent dilution of the fund’s NAV by short-term traders. While the fund has a policy regarding frequent trading, it too may not be completely effective to prevent short-term NAV arbitrage trading, particularly in regard to omnibus accounts. Please see “Shareholder Guide — General Policies” for further information about the fund’s frequent trading policy.

Orders to buy and sell shares received by dealers by the close of trading on the NYSE and transmitted to the distributor or its designee by the close of its business day (usually 5:15 p.m. Eastern time) will be based on the NAV determined as of the close of trading on the NYSE that day.

How to Buy Shares

By Mail – Regular Accounts. To open a regular account, complete an application and mail it, together with a check payable to The Dreyfus Family of Funds, to:

The Dreyfus Family of Funds
P.O. Box 55268
Boston, MA 02205-8502
Attn: Institutional Processing

To purchase additional shares in a regular account, mail a check payable to The Dreyfus Family of Funds (with your account number on your check), together with an investment slip, to the above address.

By Mail – IRA Accounts. To open an IRA account or make additional investments in an IRA account, be sure to specify the fund name and the year for which the contribution is being made. When opening a

16



new account include a completed IRA application, and when making additional investments include an investment slip. Make checks payable to The Dreyfus Family of Funds, and mail to:

The Bank of New York Mellon, Custodian
P.O. Box 55552
Boston, MA 02205-8568
Attn: Institutional Processing

Electronic Check or Wire. To purchase shares in a regular or IRA account by wire or electronic check, please call 1-800-554-4611 (inside the U.S. only) for more information.

Dreyfus TeleTransfer. To purchase additional shares in a regular or IRA account by Dreyfus TeleTransfer, which will transfer money from a pre-designated bank account, request the account service on your application. Call 1-800-554-4611 (inside the U.S. only) or visit www.dreyfus.com to request your transaction.

Automatically. You may purchase additional shares in a regular or IRA account by selecting one of Dreyfus’ automatic investment services made available to the fund on your account application or service application. See “Services for Fund Investors.”

In Person. Visit a Dreyfus Financial Center. Please call us for locations.

The minimum initial and subsequent investment for regular accounts is $1,000 and $100, respectively. Investments made through Dreyfus TeleTransfer are subject to a $150,000 maximum per day. All investments must be in U.S. dollars. Third-party checks, cash, travelers checks or money orders will not be accepted. You may be charged a fee for any check that does not clear.

How to Sell Shares

You may sell (redeem) shares at any time. Your shares will be sold at the next NAV calculated after your order is received in proper form by the fund’s transfer agent or other authorized entity. Any certificates representing fund shares being sold must be returned with your redemption request.Your order will be processed promptly and you will generally receive the proceeds within a week.

To keep your CDSC as low as possible, each time you request to sell shares we will first sell shares that are not subject to a CDSC, and then those subject to the lowest charge. The CDSC is based on the lesser of the original purchase cost or the current market value of the shares being sold, and is not charged on fund shares you acquired by reinvesting your fund dividends. As described above in this prospectus, there are certain instances when you may qualify to have the CDSC waived. Consult your financial representative or refer to the SAI for additional details.

Before selling or writing a check against shares recently purchased by check, Dreyfus TeleTransfer or Automatic Asset Builder, please note that:

  • if you send a written request to sell such shares, the fund may delay sending the proceeds for up to eight business days following the purchase of those shares

  • the fund will not honor redemption checks, or process wire, telephone, online or Dreyfus TeleTransfer redemption requests for up to eight business days following the purchase of those shares

By Mail – Regular Accounts. To redeem shares of a regular account by mail, send a letter of instruction that includes your name, your account number, the name of the fund, the share class, the dollar amount to be redeemed and how and where to send the proceeds. Mail your request to:

The Dreyfus Family of Funds

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P.O. Box 55268
Boston, MA 02205-8502

By Mail – IRA Accounts. To redeem shares of an IRA account by mail, send a letter of instruction that includes all of the same information for regular accounts and indicate whether the distribution is qualified or premature and whether the 10% TEFRA should be withheld. Mail your request to:

The Bank of New York Mellon, Custodian
P.O. Box 55552
Boston, MA 02205-8568

A signature guarantee is required for some written sell orders. These include:

  • amounts of $10,000 or more on accounts whose address has been changed within the last 30 days

  • requests to send the proceeds to a different payee or address

  • amounts of $100,000 or more

A signature guarantee helps protect against fraud. You can obtain one from most banks or securities dealers, but not from a notary public. For joint accounts, each signature must be guaranteed. Please call to ensure that your signature guarantee will be processed correctly.

Telephone or Online. To sell shares in a regular account, call Dreyfus at 1-800-554-4611 (inside the U.S. only) or visit www.dreyfus.com to request your transaction.

A check will be mailed to your address of record or you may request a wire or electronic check (Dreyfus TeleTransfer). For wires or Dreyfus TeleTransfer, be sure that the fund has your bank account information on file. Proceeds will be wired or sent by electronic check to your bank account.

You may request that redemption proceeds be paid by check and mailed to your address (maximum $250,000 per day). You may request that redemption proceeds be sent to your bank by wire (minimum $1,000/maximum $20,000) or by Dreyfus TeleTransfer (minimum $500/maximum $20,000). Holders of jointly registered fund or bank accounts may redeem by wire or through Dreyfus TeleTransfer for up to $500,000 within any 30-day period.

Automatically. You may sell shares in a regular account by calling 1-800-554-4611 (inside the U.S. only) for instructions on how to establish the Dreyfus Automatic Withdrawal Plan. You may sell shares in an IRA account by calling the above number for instructions on the Automatic Withdrawal Plan.

In Person. Visit a Dreyfus Financial Center. Please call us for locations.

18



GENERAL POLICIES

Unless you decline teleservice privileges on your application, the fund’s transfer agent is authorized to act on telephone or online instructions from any person representing himself or herself to be you and reasonably believed by the transfer agent to be genuine. You may be responsible for any fraudulent telephone or online order as long as the fund’s transfer agent takes reasonable measures to confirm that instructions are genuine.

The fund is designed for long-term investors. Frequent purchases, redemptions and exchanges may disrupt portfolio management strategies and harm fund performance by diluting the value of fund shares and increasing brokerage and administrative costs. As a result, Dreyfus and the fund’s board have adopted a policy of discouraging excessive trading, short-term market timing and other abusive trading practices (frequent trading) that could adversely affect the fund or its operations. Dreyfus and the fund will not enter into arrangements with any person or group to permit frequent trading.

The fund also reserves the right to:

  • change or discontinue its exchange privilege, or temporarily suspend the privilege during unusual market conditions

  • change its minimum or maximum investment amounts

  • delay sending out redemption proceeds for up to seven days (generally applies only during unusual market conditions or in cases of very large redemptions or excessive trading)

  • “redeem in kind,” or make payments in securities rather than cash, if the amount redeemed is large enough to affect fund operations (for example, if it exceeds 1% of the fund’s assets)

  • refuse any purchase or exchange request, including those from any individual or group who, in Dreyfus’ view, is likely to engage in frequent trading

More than four roundtrips within a rolling 12-month period generally is considered to be frequent trading. A roundtrip consists of an investment that is substantially liquidated within 60 days. Based on the facts and circumstances of the trades, the fund may also view as frequent trading a pattern of investments that are partially liquidated within 60 days.

Transactions made through Automatic Investment Plans, Automatic Withdrawal Plans, Dreyfus Auto-Exchange Privileges, automatic non-discretionary rebalancing programs, and minimum required retirement distributions generally are not considered to be frequent trading. For employer-sponsored benefit plans, generally only participant-initiated exchange transactions are subject to the roundtrip limit.

Dreyfus monitors selected transactions to identify frequent trading. When its surveillance systems identify multiple roundtrips, Dreyfus evaluates trading activity in the account for evidence of frequent trading. Dreyfus considers the investor’s trading history in other accounts under common ownership or control, in other Dreyfus Funds and BNY Mellon Funds, and if known, in non-affiliated mutual funds and accounts under common control. These evaluations involve judgments that are inherently subjective, and while Dreyfus seeks to apply the policy and procedures uniformly, it is possible that similar transactions may be treated differently. In all instances, Dreyfus seeks to make these judgments to the best of its abilities in a manner that it believes is consistent with shareholder interests. If Dreyfus concludes the account is likely to engage in frequent trading, Dreyfus may cancel or revoke the purchase or exchange on the following business day. Dreyfus may also temporarily or permanently bar such investor’s future purchases into the fund in lieu of, or in addition to, canceling or revoking the trade. At its discretion, Dreyfus may apply these restrictions across all accounts under common ownership, control or perceived affiliation.

Fund shares often are held through omnibus accounts maintained by financial intermediaries, such as brokers and retirement plan administrators, where the holdings of multiple shareholders, such as all the

19



clients of a particular broker, are aggregated. Dreyfus’ ability to monitor the trading activity of investors whose shares are held in omnibus accounts is limited. However, the agreements between the distributor and financial intermediaries include obligations to comply with the terms of this prospectus and to provide Dreyfus, upon request, with information concerning the trading activity of investors whose shares are held in omnibus accounts. If Dreyfus determines that any such investor has engaged in frequent trading of fund shares, Dreyfus may require the intermediary to restrict or prohibit future purchases or exchanges of fund shares by that investor.

Certain retirement plans and intermediaries that maintain omnibus accounts with the fund may have developed policies designed to control frequent trading that may differ from the fund’s policy. At its sole discretion, the fund may permit such intermediaries to apply their own frequent trading policy. If you are investing in fund shares through an intermediary (or in the case of a retirement plan, your plan sponsor), please contact the intermediary for information on the frequent trading policies applicable to your account.

To the extent the fund significantly invests in foreign securities traded on markets that close before the fund calculates its NAV, events that influence the value of these foreign securities may occur after the close of these foreign markets and before the fund calculates its NAV. As a result, certain investors may seek to trade fund shares in an effort to benefit from their understanding of the value of these foreign securities at the time the fund calculates its NAV (referred to as price arbitrage). This type of frequent trading may dilute the value of fund shares held by other shareholders. Dreyfus has adopted procedures designed to adjust closing market prices of foreign equity securities under certain circumstances to reflect what it believes to be their fair value.

To the extent the fund significantly invests in thinly traded securities, certain investors may seek to trade fund shares in an effort to benefit from their understanding of the value of these securities (referred to as price arbitrage). Any such frequent trading strategies may interfere with efficient management of the fund’s portfolio to a greater degree than funds that invest in highly liquid securities, in part because the fund may have difficulty selling these portfolio securities at advantageous times or prices to satisfy large and/or frequent redemption requests. Any successful price arbitrage may also cause dilution in the value of fund shares held by other shareholders.

Although the fund’s frequent trading and fair valuation policies and procedures are designed to discourage market timing and excessive trading, none of these tools alone, nor all of them together, completely eliminates the potential for frequent trading.

Small Account Policy

To offset the relatively higher costs of servicing smaller accounts, the fund charges regular accounts with balances below $2,000 an annual fee of $12. The fee will be imposed during the fourth quarter of each calendar year.

The fee will be waived for: any investor whose aggregate Dreyfus mutual fund investments total at least $25,000; IRA accounts; Education Savings Accounts; accounts participating in automatic investment programs; and accounts opened through a financial institution.

If your account falls below $500, the fund may ask you to increase your balance. If it is still below $500 after 30 days, the fund may close your account and send you the proceeds.

20



DISTRIBUTIONS AND TAXES

The fund earns dividends, interest and other income from its investments, and distributes this income (less expenses) to shareholders as dividends. The fund also realizes capital gains from its investments, and distributes these gains (less any losses) to shareholders as capital gain distributions. The fund normally pays dividends once a month and capital gain distributions annually. Fund dividends and distributions will be reinvested in the fund unless you instruct the fund otherwise. There are no fees or sales charges on reinvestments.

The fund anticipates that virtually all dividends paid to you will be exempt from federal and New York state and New York city personal income taxes. However, for federal tax purposes, certain distributions, such as distributions of short-term capital gains, are taxable to you as ordinary income, while long-term capital gains are taxable to you as capital gains.

For New York state and New York city personal income tax purposes, distributions derived from interest on municipal securities of New York issuers and from interest on qualifying securities issued by U.S. territories and possessions are generally exempt from tax. Distributions that are federally taxable as ordinary income or capital gains are generally subject to New York state and New York city personal income taxes.

High portfolio turnover and more volatile markets can result in significant taxable distributions to shareholders, regardless of whether their shares have increased in value.

The tax status of any distribution generally is the same regardless of how long you have been in the fund and whether you reinvest your distributions or take them in cash.

If you buy shares of a fund when the fund has realized but not yet distributed income or capital gains, you will be “buying a dividend” by paying the full price for the shares and then receiving a portion back in the form of a taxable distribution.

Your sale of shares, including exchanges into other funds, may result in a capital gain or loss for tax purposes. A capital gain or loss on your investment in the fund generally is the difference between the cost of your shares and the amount you receive when you sell them.

The tax status of your distributions will be detailed in your annual tax statement from the fund. Because everyone’s tax situation is unique, please consult your tax advisor before investing.

21



SERVICES FOR FUND INVESTORS

Automatic services

Buying or selling shares automatically is easy with the services described below. With each service, you select a schedule and amount, subject to certain restrictions. If you purchase shares through a third party, the third party may impose different restrictions on these services and privileges, or may not make them available at all. For information, call your financial representative or 1-800-554-4611.

Dreyfus Automatic Asset Builder® permits you to purchase fund shares (minimum of $100 and maximum of $150,000 per transaction) at regular intervals selected by you. Fund shares are purchased by transferring funds from the bank account designated by you.

 

Dreyfus Payroll Savings Plan permits you to purchase fund shares (minimum of $100 per transaction) automatically through a payroll deduction.

Dreyfus Government Direct Deposit permits you to purchase fund shares (minimum of $100 and maximum of $50,000 per transaction) automatically from your federal employment, Social Security or other regular federal government check.

Dreyfus Dividend Sweep permits you to automatically reinvest dividends and distributions from the fund into another Dreyfus Fund (not available for IRAs).

Dreyfus Auto-Exchange Privilege permits you to exchange at regular intervals your fund shares for shares of other Dreyfus Funds.

 

Dreyfus Automatic Withdrawal Plan permits you to make withdrawals (minimum of $50) on a monthly or quarterly basis, provided your account balance is at least $5,000. Any CDSC will be waived, as long as the amount of any withdrawal does not exceed on an annual basis 12% of the greater of the account value at the time of the first withdrawal under the plan, or at the time of the subsequent withdrawal.

Exchange privilege

Generally, you can exchange shares worth $500 or more (no minimum for retirement accounts) into other Dreyfus Funds. You can request your exchange by contacting your financial representative. Be sure to read the current prospectus for any fund into which you are exchanging before investing. Any new account established through an exchange generally will have the same privileges as your original account (as long as they are available). There is currently no fee for exchanges, although you may be charged a sales load when exchanging into any fund that has one. See the SAI for more information regarding exchanges.

Dreyfus TeleTransfer privilege

To move money between your bank account and your Dreyfus Fund account with a phone call or online, use the Dreyfus TeleTransfer privilege. You can set up Dreyfus TeleTransfer on your account by providing bank account information and following the instructions on your application, or contacting your financial representative. Shares held in an IRA or Education Savings Account may not be redeemed through the Dreyfus TeleTransfer privilege.

Account Statements

Every Dreyfus Fund investor automatically receives regular account statements. You will also be sent a yearly statement detailing the tax characteristics of any dividends and distributions you have received.

Reinvestment Privilege

Upon written request, you can reinvest up to the number of Class A shares you redeemed within 45 days of selling them at the current share price without any sales charge. If you paid a CDSC, it will be credited back to your account. This privilege may be used only once.

22



FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS

These financial highlights describe the performance of the fund’s shares for the fiscal periods indicated. “Total return” shows how much your investment in the fund would have increased (or decreased) during each period, assuming you had reinvested all dividends and distributions. These financial highlights have been audited by _________, an independent registered public accounting firm, whose report, along with the fund’s financial statements, is included in the annual report, which is available upon request.

    Year Ended November 30,      
Class A Shares 2009 2008   2007   2006   2005  
Per Share Data ($):                  
Net asset value, beginning of period XXX 14.43   14.88   14.80   15.00  
Investment Operations:                  
Investment income--neta XXX .56   .57   .57   .56  
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments XXX (1.44 ) (.42 ) .33   (.17 )
Total from Investment Operations XXX (.88 ) .15   .90   .39  
Distributions:                  
Dividends from investment income--net XXX (.56 ) (.57 ) (.58 ) (.56 )
Dividends from net realized gain on investments XXX (.06 ) (.03 ) (.24 ) (.03 )
Total Distributions XXX (.62 ) (.60 ) (.82 ) (.59 )
Net asset value, end of period XXX 12.93   14.43   14.88   14.80  
 
Total Return (%)b XXX (6.36 ) 1.06   6.25   2.58  
 
Ratios/Supplemental Data (%):                  
Ratio of total expenses to average net assets XXX .98   1.00   .98   .98  
Ratio of net expenses to average net assets XXX .86   .89   .88   .96  
Ratio of net investment income to average net assets XXX 3.97   3.93   3.94   3.70  
Portfolio Turnover Rate XXX 32.04   17.81   30.45   52.26  
 
Net Assets, end of period ($ x 1,000) XXX 128,135   134,892   142,631   144,978  
 
a Based on average shares outstanding at each month end.                  
b Exclusive of sales charge.                  

23



    Year Ended November 30,      
Class B Shares 2009 2008   2007   2006   2005  
Per Share Data ($):                  
Net asset value, beginning of period XXX 14.43   14.88   14.79   15.00  
Investment Operations:                  
Investment income--neta XXX .49   .49   .50   .48  
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments XXX (1.44 ) (.41 ) .33   (.18 )
Total from Investment Operations XXX (.95 ) .08   .83   .30  
Distributions:                  
Dividends from investment income--net XXX (.49 ) (.50 ) (.50 ) (.48 )
Dividends from net realized gain on investments XXX (.06 ) (.03 ) (.24 ) (.03 )
Total Distributions XXX (.55 ) (.53 ) (.74 ) (.51 )
Net asset value, end of period XXX 12.93   14.43   14.88   14.79  
 
Total Return (%)b XXX (6.79 ) .53   5.71   2.06  
 
Ratios/Supplemental Data (%):                  
Ratio of total expenses to average net assets XXX 1.52   1.53   1.50   1.50  
Ratio of net expenses to average net assets XXX 1.36   1.39   1.38   1.48  
Ratio of net investment income to average net assets XXX 3.49   3.41   3.43   3.19  
Portfolio Turnover Rate XXX 32.04   17.81   30.45   52.26  
 
Net Assets, end of period ($ x 1,000) XXX 5,997   11,147   19,390   24,710  
 
a Based on average shares outstanding at each month end.                  
b Exclusive of sales charge.                  
 
 
    Year Ended November 30,      
Class C Shares 2009 2008   2007   2006   2005  
Per Share Data ($):                  
Net asset value, beginning of period XXX 14.43   14.88   14.80   15.00  
Investment Operations:                  
Investment income--neta XXX .45   .46   .47   .44  
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments XXX (1.44 ) (.42 ) .32   (.17 )
Total from Investment Operations XXX (.99 ) .04   .79   .27  
Distributions:                  
Dividends from investment income--net XXX (.45 ) (.46 ) (.47 ) (.44 )
Dividends from net realized gain on investments XXX (.06 ) (.03 ) (.24 ) (.03 )
Total Distributions XXX (.51 ) (.49 ) (.71 ) (.47 )
Net asset value, end of period XXX 12.93   14.43   14.88   14.80  
 
Total Return (%)b XXX (7.07 ) .30   5.46   1.81  
 
Ratios/Supplemental Data (%):                  
Ratio of total expenses to average net assets XXX 1.73   1.75   1.74   1.73  
Ratio of net expenses to average net assets XXX 1.61   1.64   1.63   1.71  
Ratio of net investment income to average net assets XXX 3.22   3.16   3.19   2.95  
Portfolio Turnover Rate XXX 32.04   17.81   30.45   52.26  
 
Net Assets, end of period ($ x 1,000) XXX 9,885   8,036   6,553   7,552  
a Based on average shares outstanding at each month end.                  
b Exclusive of sales charge.                  

24



  Period Ended November 30,  
Class I Shares 2009 a
Per Share Data ($):    
Net asset value, beginning of period XXX  
Investment Operations:    
Investment income—netb XXX  
Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments XXX  
Total from Investment Operations XXX  
Distributions:    
Dividends from investment income--net XXX  
Net asset value, end of period XXX  
 
Total Return (%) c XXX  
 
Ratios/Supplemental Data (%):    
Ratio of total expenses to average net assetsd XXX  
Ratio of net expenses to average net assetsd XXX  
Ratio of net investment income to average net assetsd XXX  
Portfolio Turnover Rate XXX  
 
Net Assets, end of period ($ x 1,000) XXX  
a From December 15, 2008 (commencement of initial offering) to November 30, 2009.  
b Based on average shares outstanding at each month end.    
c Not annualized.    
d Annualized.    

25



NOTES

26



NOTES

27



NOTES

28



For More Information

Dreyfus New York AMT-Free Municipal Bond Fund
SEC file number: 811-4765

More information on this fund is available free upon request, including the following:

Annual/Semiannual Report

Describes the fund’s performance, lists portfolio holdings and contains a letter from the fund’s manager discussing recent market conditions, economic trends and fund strategies that significantly affected the fund’s performance during the last fiscal year.The fund’s most recent annual and semiannual reports are available at www.dreyfus.com.

Statement of Additional Information (SAI)

Provides more details about the fund and its policies. A current SAI is available at www.dreyfus.com and is on file with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The SAI is incorporated by reference (is legally considered part of this prospectus).

Portfolio Holdings

Dreyfus funds generally disclose their complete schedule of portfolio holdings monthly with a 30-day lag at www.dreyfus.com under Mutual Fund Center – Dreyfus Mutual Funds – Mutual Fund Total Holdings. Complete holdings as of the end of the calendar quarter are disclosed 15 days after the end of such quarter. Dreyfus money market funds generally disclose their complete schedule of holdings daily. The schedule of holdings for a fund will remain on the website until the fund files its Form N-Q or Form N-CSR for the period that includes the dates of the posted holdings.

A complete description of the fund’s policies and procedures with respect to the disclosure of the fund’s portfolio securities is available in the fund’s SAI.

To obtain information:

By telephone Call 1-800-554-4611

By mail Write to:
The Dreyfus Family of Funds
144 Glenn Curtiss Boulevard
Uniondale, NY 11556-0144

By E-mail Send your request to info@dreyfus.com
On the Internet Certain fund documents can be viewed online or downloaded from:
SEC http://www.sec.gov
Dreyfus http://www.dreyfus.com

You can also obtain copies, after paying a duplicating fee, by visiting the SEC’s Public Reference Room in Washington, DC (for information, call 1-202-551-8090) or by E-mail request to publicinfo@sec.gov, or by writing to the SEC’s Public Reference Section, Washington, DC 20549-0102.

© 2010 MBSC Securities Corporation

0021P0410



DREYFUS NEW YORK AMT-FREE MUNICIPAL BOND FUND
(Class A, Class B, Class C and Class I Shares)

STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
APRIL __, 2010

     This Statement of Additional Information, which is not a prospectus, supplements and should be read in conjunction with the current Prospectus of Dreyfus New York AMT-Free Municipal Bond Fund (the "Fund"), dated April __, 2010, as the Prospectus may be revised from time to time. To obtain a copy of the Fund's Prospectus, please call your financial adviser, or write to the Fund at 144 Glenn Curtiss Boulevard, Uniondale, New York 11556-0144, visit www.dreyfus.com, or call 1-800-554-4611.

     The Fund's most recent Annual Report and Semi-Annual Report to Shareholders are separate documents supplied with this Statement of Additional Information, and the financial statements, accompanying notes and report of the independent registered public accounting firm appearing in the Annual Report are incorporated by reference into this Statement of Additional Information.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
  Page 
 
Description of the Fund  B-2 
Management of the Fund  B-18 
Management Arrangements  B-24 
How to Buy Shares  B-30 
Distribution Plan and Shareholder Services Plan  B-37 
How to Redeem Shares  B-38 
Shareholder Services  B-44 
Determination of Net Asset Value  B-48 
Dividends, Distributions and Taxes  B-49 
Portfolio Transactions  B-52 
Information About the Fund  B-55 
Counsel and Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm  B-54 
Appendix A  B-59 
Appendix B  B-76 



DESCRIPTION OF THE FUND

     The Fund is a Massachusetts business trust that commenced operations on December 31, 1986. The Fund is an open-end management investment company, known as a mutual fund. As a municipal bond fund, the Fund invests in debt obligations issued by states, territories, and possessions of the United States and the District of Columbia and their political subdivisions, agencies and instrumentalities, or multi-state agencies or authorities, and certain other specified securities, the interest from which is, in the opinion of bond counsel to the issuer, exempt from Federal income tax ("Municipal Bonds").

     The Dreyfus Corporation (the "Manager" or "Dreyfus") serves as the Fund's investment adviser.

MBSC Securities Corporation (the "Distributor") is the distributor of the Fund's shares.

Certain Portfolio Securities

     The following information supplements and should be read in conjunction with the Fund's Prospectus.

     New York Municipal Bonds. As a fundamental policy, the Fund normally invests at least 80% of the value of its net assets (plus any borrowings for investment purposes) in Municipal Bonds of the State of New York, its political subdivisions, authorities and corporations, and certain other specified securities, that provide income exempt from Federal, New York State and New York City personal income taxes (collectively, "New York Municipal Bonds"). To the extent acceptable New York Municipal Bonds are at any time unavailable for investment by the Fund, the Fund will invest temporarily in other Municipal Bonds. Municipal Bonds generally include debt obligations issued to obtain funds for various public purposes as well as certain industrial development bonds issued by or on behalf of public authorities. Municipal Bonds are classified as general obligation bonds, revenue bonds and notes. General obligation bonds are secured by the issuer's pledge of its full faith, credit and taxing power for the payment of principal and interest. Revenue bonds are payable from the revenue derived from a particular facility or class of facilities or, in some cases, from the proceeds of a special excise or other specific revenue source, but not from the general taxing power. Tax exempt industrial development bonds, in most cases, are revenue bonds that do not carry the pledge of the credit of the issuing municipality, but generally are guaranteed by the corporate entity on whose behalf they are issued. Notes are short-term instruments which are obligations of the issuing municipalities or agencies and are sold in anticipation of a bond sale, collection of taxes or receipt of other revenues. Municipal Bonds include municipal lease/purchase agreements which are similar to installment purchase contracts for property or equipment issued by municipalities. Municipal Bonds bear fixed, floating or variable rates of interest, which are determined in some instances by formulas under which the Municipal Bond's interest rate will change directly or inversely to changes in interest rates or an index, or multiples thereof, in many cases subject to a maximum and minimum. Certain Municipal Bonds are subject to redemption at a date earlier than their stated maturity pursuant to call options, which may be separated from the related Municipal Bonds and purchased and sold separately.



     The yields on Municipal Bonds are dependent on a variety of factors, including general economic and monetary conditions, money market factors, conditions in the Municipal Bond market, size of a particular offering, maturity of the obligation and rating of the issue.

     Municipal Bonds include certain private activity bonds (a type of revenue bond), the income from which is subject to the Federal alternative minimum tax ("AMT"). The Fund currently will not purchase Municipal Bonds, including certain industrial development bonds and bonds issued after August 7, 1986 to finance "private activities," the income from which may constitute a "tax preference item" for purposes of the AMT even though the interest will continue to be fully tax-exempt for Federal income tax purposes.

Certain Tax Exempt Obligations. The Fund may purchase floating and variable rate demand notes and bonds, which are tax exempt obligations ordinarily having stated maturities in excess of one year, but which permit the holder to demand payment of principal at any time, or at specified intervals. Variable rate demand notes include master demand notes which are obligations that permit the Fund to invest fluctuating amounts, at varying rates of interest, pursuant to direct arrangements between the Fund, as lender, and the borrower. These obligations permit daily changes in the amount borrowed. Because these obligations are direct lending arrangements between the lender and borrower, it is not contemplated that such instruments generally will be traded, and there generally is no established secondary market for these obligations, although they are redeemable at face value, plus accrued interest. Accordingly, where these obligations are not secured by letters of credit or other credit support arrangements, the Fund's right to redeem is dependent on the ability of the borrower to pay principal and interest on demand. Each obligation purchased by the Fund will meet the quality criteria established for the purchase of Municipal Bonds.

Tax Exempt Participation Interests. The Fund may purchase from financial institutions participation interests in Municipal Bonds (such as industrial development bonds and municipal lease/purchase agreements). A participation interest gives the Fund an undivided interest in the Municipal Bond in the proportion that the Fund's participation interest bears to the total principal amount of the Municipal Bond. These instruments may have fixed, floating or variable rates of interest. If the participation interest is unrated, it will be backed by an irrevocable letter of credit or guarantee of a bank that the Fund's Board has determined meets prescribed quality standards for banks, or the payment obligation otherwise will be collateralized by U.S. Government securities. For certain participation interests, the Fund will have the right to demand payment, on not more than seven days' notice, for all or any part of the Fund's participation interest in the Municipal Bond, plus accrued interest. As to these instruments, the Fund intends to exercise its right to demand payment only upon a default under the terms of the Municipal Bond, as needed to provide liquidity to meet redemptions, or to maintain or improve the quality of its investment portfolio.

     Municipal lease obligations or installment purchase contract obligations (collectively, "lease obligations") have special risks not ordinarily associated with Municipal Bonds. Although lease obligations do not constitute general obligations of the municipality for which the municipality's taxing power is pledged, a lease obligation ordinarily is backed by the municipality's covenant to budget for, appropriate and make the payments due under the lease obligation. However, certain lease obligations in which the Fund may invest may contain "non-



appropriation" clauses which provide that the municipality has no obligation to make lease or installment purchase payments in future years unless money is appropriated for such purpose on a yearly basis. Although, "non-appropriation" lease obligations are secured by the leased property, disposition of the property in the event of foreclosure might prove difficult. Certain lease obligations may be considered illiquid. Determination as to the liquidity of such securities is made in accordance with guidelines established by the Fund's Board. Pursuant to such guidelines, the Board has directed the Manager to monitor carefully the Fund's investment in such securities with particular regard to: (1) the frequency of trades and quotes for the lease obligation; (2) the number of dealers willing to purchase or sell the lease obligation and the number of other potential buyers; (3) the willingness of dealers to undertake to make a market in the lease obligation; (4) the nature of marketplace trades, including the time needed to dispose of the lease obligation, the method of soliciting offers and the mechanics of transfer; and (5) such other factors concerning the trading market for the lease obligation as the Manager may deem relevant. In addition, in evaluating the liquidity and credit quality of a lease obligation that is unrated, the Fund's Board has directed the Manager to consider: (a) whether the lease can be cancelled; (b) what assurance there is that the assets represented by the lease can be sold; (c) the strength of the lessee's general credit (e.g., its debt, administrative, economic, and financial characteristics); (d) the likelihood that the municipality will discontinue appropriating funding for the leased property because the property is no longer deemed essential to the operations of the municipality (e.g., the potential for an "event of nonappropriation"); (e) the legal recourse in the event of failure to appropriate; and (f) such other factors concerning credit quality as the Manager may deem relevant.

Tender Option Bonds. The Fund may purchase tender option bonds. A tender option bond is a Municipal Bond (generally held pursuant to a custodial arrangement) having a relatively long maturity and bearing interest at a fixed rate substantially higher than prevailing short-term tax exempt rates, that has been coupled with the agreement of a third party, such as a bank, broker-dealer or other financial institution, pursuant to which such institution grants the security holders the option, at periodic intervals, to tender their securities to the institution and receive the face value thereof. As consideration for providing the option, the financial institution receives periodic fees equal to the difference between the Municipal Bond's fixed coupon rate and the rate, as determined by a remarketing or similar agent at or near the commencement of such period, that would cause the securities, coupled with the tender option, to trade at par on the date of such determination. Thus, after payment of this fee, the security holder effectively holds a demand obligation that bears interest at the prevailing short-term tax exempt rate. The Manager, on behalf of the Fund, will consider on an ongoing basis the creditworthiness of the issuer of the underlying Municipal Bond, of any custodian and of the third party provider of the tender option. In certain instances and for certain tender option bonds, the option may be terminable in the event of a default in payment of principal or interest on the underlying Municipal Bond and for other reasons.

     The Fund will purchase tender option bonds only when the Manager is satisfied that the custodial and tender option arrangements, including the fee payment arrangements, will not adversely affect the tax exempt status of the underlying Municipal Bonds and that payment of any tender fees will not have the effect of creating taxable income for the Fund. Based on the tender option bond agreement, the Fund expects to be able to value the tender option bond at par; however, the value of the instrument will be monitored to assure that it is valued at fair value.



Custodial Receipts. The Fund may purchase custodial receipts representing the right to receive certain future principal and interest payments on Municipal Bonds which underlie the custodial receipts. A number of different arrangements are possible. In a typical custodial receipt arrangement, an issuer or a third party owner of Municipal Bonds deposits such obligations with a custodian in exchange for two classes of custodial receipts. The two classes have different characteristics, but, in each case, payments on the two classes are based on payments received on the underlying Municipal Bonds. One class has the characteristics of a typical auction rate security, where at specified intervals its interest rate is adjusted, and ownership changes, based on an auction mechanism. The interest rate on this class generally is expected to be below the coupon rate of the underlying Municipal Bonds and generally is at a level comparable to that of a Municipal Bond of similar quality and having a maturity equal to the period between interest rate adjustments. The second class bears interest at a rate that exceeds the interest rate typically borne by a security of comparable quality and maturity; this rate also is adjusted, but in this case inversely to changes in the rate of interest of the first class. The aggregate interest paid with respect to the two classes will not exceed the interest paid by the underlying Municipal Bonds. The value of the second class and similar securities should be expected to fluctuate more than the value of a Municipal Bond of comparable quality and maturity, which would increase the volatility of the Fund's net asset value. These custodial receipts are sold in private placements. The Fund also may purchase directly from issuers, and not in a private placement, Municipal Bonds having characteristics similar to custodial receipts. These securities may be issued as part of a multi-class offering and the interest rate on certain classes may be subject to a cap or floor.

Inverse Floaters. The Fund may invest in residual interest Municipal Bonds whose interest rates bear an inverse relationship to the interest rate on another security or the value of an index ("inverse floaters"). An investment in inverse floaters may involve greater risk than an investment in a fixed-rate Municipal Bond. Because changes in the interest rate on the other security or index inversely affect the residual interest paid on the inverse floater, the value of an inverse floater is generally more volatile than that of a fixed-rate Municipal Bond. Inverse floaters have interest rate adjustment formulas which generally reduce or, in the extreme, eliminate the interest paid to the Fund when short-term interest rates rise, and increase the interest paid to the Fund when short-term interest rates fall. Investing in inverse floaters involves leveraging which may magnify the Fund's gains or losses. Although volatile, inverse floaters typically offer the potential for yields exceeding the yields available on fixed-rate Municipal Bonds with comparable credit quality, coupon, call provisions and maturity. These securities usually permit the investor to convert the floating rate to a fixed rate (normally adjusted downward), and this optional conversion feature may provide a partial hedge against rising rates if exercised at an opportune time.

     Inverse floaters typically are derivative instruments created by depositing Municipal Bonds in a trust which divides the bond's income stream into two parts: a short-term variable rate demand note and a residual interest bond (the inverse floater) which receives interest based on the remaining cash flow of the trust after payment of interest on the note and various trust expenses. Interest on the inverse floater usually moves in the opposite direction as the interest on the variable rate demand note. The Fund may either participate in structuring an inverse floater or purchase an inverse floater in the secondary market. When structuring an inverse floater, the Fund will transfer to a trust fixed rate Municipal Bonds held in the Fund's portfolio. The trust then typically issues the inverse floaters and the variable rate demand notes that are



collateralized by the cash flows of the fixed rate Municipal Bonds. In return for the transfer of the Municipal Bonds to the trust, the Fund receives the inverse floaters and cash associated with the sale of the notes from the trust. Historically, for accounting purposes the Fund has treated these transfers as sales of the Municipal Bonds (which yielded a gain or loss) and a purchase of the inverse floaters. However, as a result of recent changes in the Fund's accounting treatment of these transactions, the Fund now treats these transfers as part of a secured borrowing or financing transaction (not a sale), and the interest payments and related expenses due on the notes issued by the trusts and sold to third parties as liabilities of the Fund. The financial statements of the Fund have been restated for certain periods to reflect these changes. These changes did not impact the net asset value, total return or net investment income of the Fund. Inverse floaters purchased in the secondary market are treated as the purchase of a security and not as a secured borrowing or financing transaction.

Zero Coupon, Pay-In-Kind and Step-Up Municipal Bonds. The Fund may invest in zero coupon securities, which are Municipal Bonds issued or sold at a discount from their face value that do not entitle the holder to any periodic payment of interest prior to maturity or a specified redemption date or cash payment date; pay-in-kind bonds, which are Municipal Bonds that generally pay interest through the issuance of additional bonds; and step-up bonds, which are Municipal Bonds that typically do not pay interest for a specified period of time and then pay interest at a series of different rates. For zero coupon securities, the amount of any discount varies depending on the time remaining until maturity or cash payment date, prevailing interest rates, liquidity of the security and perceived credit quality of the issuer. Zero coupon securities also may take the form of Municipal Bonds that have been stripped of their unmatured interest coupons, the coupons themselves and receipts or certificates representing interest in such stripped debt obligations and coupons. The market prices of these securities generally are more volatile and are likely to respond to a greater degree to changes in interest rates than the market prices of Municipal Bonds that pay cash interest periodically having similar maturities and credit qualities. In addition, unlike Municipal Bonds which pay cash interest throughout the period to maturity, the Fund will realize no cash until the cash payment or maturity date unless a portion of such securities is sold and, if the issuer defaults, the Fund may obtain no return at all on its investment.

Ratings of Municipal Bonds. The Fund will invest at least 70% of the value of its net assets in securities which, in the case of Municipal Bonds, are rated no lower than Baa by Moody's Investors Service, Inc. ("Moody's") or BBB by Standard & Poor's Ratings Services ("S&P") or Fitch Ratings ("Fitch" and, together with Moody's and S&P, the "Rating Agencies"). The Fund may invest up to 30% of the value of its net assets in securities which, in the case of Municipal Bonds, are rated lower than Baa by Moody's and BBB by S&P and Fitch and as low as the lowest rating assigned by the Rating Agencies. The Fund also may invest in securities which, while not rated, are determined by the Manager to be of comparable quality to the rated securities in which the Fund may invest; for purposes of the 70% requirement described in this paragraph, such unrated securities will be considered to have the rating so determined.

     The average distribution of Fund investments (at value) in Municipal Bonds (including notes) by ratings for the fiscal year ended November 30, 2008, computed on a monthly basis, was as follows:



          Percentage of 
Fitch  or  Moody's  or  S&P  Value 
 
AAA    Aaa    AAA  __% 
AA    Aa    AA  __ 
A    A    A  __ 
BBB    Baa    BBB  __ 
Ba    BB    BB  __ 
Not Rated    Not Rated    Not Rated  __* 
          __% 

* Included in the Not Rated category are securities comprising __% of the Fund's market value which, while not
rated, have been determined by the Manager to be of comparable quality to securities in the following rating
categories: Aaa/AAA (__%), Baa/BBB (__%), Ba/BB (__%) and B/B (__%).

     Subsequent to its purchase by the Fund, an issue of rated Municipal Bonds may cease to be rated or its rating may be reduced below the minimum required for purchase by the Fund. Neither event will require the sale of such Municipal Bonds by the Fund, but the Manager will consider such event in determining whether the Fund should continue to hold the Municipal Bonds. To the extent that the ratings given by a Rating Agency for Municipal Bonds may change as a result of changes in such organization or its rating system, the Fund will attempt to use comparable ratings as standards for its investments in accordance with the investment policies described in the Fund's Prospectus and this Statement of Additional Information. The ratings of the Rating Agencies represent their opinions as to the quality of the Municipal Bonds which they undertake to rate. It should be emphasized, however, that ratings are relative and subjective and are not absolute standards of quality. Although these ratings may be an initial criterion for selection of portfolio investments, the Manager also will evaluate these securities and the creditworthiness of the issuers of such securities.

     Investment Companies. The Fund may invest in securities issued by other investment companies. Under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "1940 Act"), the Fund's investment in such securities, subject to certain exceptions, currently is limited to (i) 3% of the total voting stock of any one investment company, (ii) 5% of the Fund's total assets with respect to any one investment company and (iii) 10% of the Fund's total assets in the aggregate. As a shareholder of another investment company, the Fund would bear, along with other shareholders, its pro rata portion of the other investment company's expenses, including advisory fees. These expenses would be in addition to the advisory fees and other expenses that the Fund bears directly in connection with its own operations. The Fund also may invest its uninvested cash reserves or cash it receives as collateral from borrowers of its portfolio securities in connection with the Fund's securities lending program, in shares of one or more money market funds advised by the Manager. Such investments will not be subject to the limitations described above. See also "Investment Techniques - Lending Portfolio Securities" below.

     Illiquid Securities. The Fund may invest up to 15% of the value of its net assets in securities as to which a liquid trading market does not exist, provided such investments are consistent with the Fund's investment objective. Such securities may include securities that are not readily marketable, such as securities that are subject to legal or contractual restrictions on resale, and repurchase agreements providing for settlement in more than seven days after notice.



As to these securities, the Fund is subject to a risk that should the Fund desire to sell them when a ready buyer is not available at a price the Fund deems representative of their value, the value of the Fund's net assets could be adversely affected.

     Taxable Investments. From time to time, on a temporary basis other than for temporary defensive purposes (but not to exceed 20% of the value of the Fund's net assets) or for temporary defensive purposes, the Fund may invest in taxable short-term investments ("Taxable Investments") consisting of: notes of issuers having, at the time of purchase, a quality rating within the two highest grades of a Rating Agency; obligations of the U.S. Government, its agencies or instrumentalities; commercial paper rated not lower than P-1 by Moody's, A-1 by S&P or F-1 by Fitch; certificates of deposit of U.S. domestic banks, including foreign branches of domestic banks, with assets of $1 billion or more; time deposits; bankers' acceptances and other short-term bank obligations; and repurchase agreements in respect of any of the foregoing. Dividends paid by the Fund that are attributable to income earned by the Fund from Taxable Investments will be taxable to investors. See "Dividends, Distributions and Taxes." Except for temporary defensive purposes, at no time will more than 20% of the value of the Fund's net assets be invested in Taxable Investments. When the Fund has adopted a temporary defensive position, including when acceptable New York Municipal Bonds are unavailable for investment by the Fund, more than 20% of the Fund's net assets may be invested in securities that are not exempt from New York State and New York City personal income taxes. Under normal market conditions, the Fund anticipates that not more than 5% of the value of its total assets will be invested in any one category of Taxable Investments.

Investment Techniques

     The following information supplements and should be read in conjunction with the Fund's Prospectus. The Fund's use of certain of the investment techniques described below may give rise to taxable income.

     Borrowing Money. The Fund may borrow money from banks, but only for temporary or emergency (not leveraging) purposes, in an amount up to 15% of the value of its total assets (including the amount borrowed) valued at the lesser of cost or market, less liabilities (not including the amount borrowed) at the time the borrowing is made. While such borrowings exceed 5% of the value of the Fund's total assets, the Fund will not make any additional investments.

     Lending Portfolio Securities. The Fund may lend securities from its portfolio to brokers, dealers and other financial institutions needing to borrow securities to complete certain transactions. In connection with such loans, the Fund remains the owner of the loaned securities and continues to be entitled to payments in amounts equal to the interest or other distributions payable on the loaned securities. The Fund also has the right to terminate a loan at any time. The Fund may call the loan to vote proxies if a material issue affecting the Fund's investment is to be voted upon. Loans of portfolio securities may not exceed 33-1/3% of the value of the Fund's total assets (including the value of all assets received as collateral for the loan). The Fund will receive collateral consisting of cash, U.S. Government securities or irrevocable letters of credit which will be maintained at all times in an amount equal to at least 100% of the current market value of the loaned securities. If the collateral consists of a letter of credit or securities,



the borrower will pay the Fund a loan premium fee. If the collateral consists of cash, the Fund will reinvest the cash and pay the borrower a pre-negotiated fee or "rebate" from any return earned on the investment. The Fund may participate in a securities lending program operated by The Bank of New York Mellon, as lending agent (the "Lending Agent"). The Lending Agent will receive a percentage of the total earnings of the Fund derived from lending its portfolio securities. Should the borrower of the securities fail financially, the Fund may experience delays in recovering the loaned securities or exercising its rights in the collateral. Loans are made only to borrowers that are deemed by the Manager to be of good financial standing. In a loan transaction, the Fund will also bear the risk of any decline in value of securities acquired with cash collateral. The Fund will minimize this risk by limiting the investment of cash collateral to money market funds advised by the Manager, repurchase agreements or other high quality instruments with short maturities.

     Derivatives. The Fund may invest in, or enter into, derivatives for a variety of reasons, including to hedge certain market or interest rate risks, to provide a substitute for purchasing or selling particular securities or to increase potential returns. Generally, a derivative is a financial contract whose value depends upon, or is derived from, the value of an underlying asset, reference rate or index, and may relate to stocks, bonds, interest rates, currencies or currency exchange rates, commodities, and related indexes. Derivatives may provide a cheaper, quicker or more specifically focused way for the Fund to invest than "traditional" securities would. Examples of derivative instruments the Fund may use (in addition to inverse floaters) include options contracts, futures contracts and options on futures contracts. The Fund's portfolio manager may decide not to employ any of these strategies and there is no assurance that any derivatives strategy used by the Fund will succeed.

     Derivatives can be volatile and involve various types and degrees of risk, depending upon the characteristics of the particular derivative and the portfolio as a whole. Derivatives permit the Fund to increase or decrease the level of risk, or change the character of the risk, to which its portfolio is exposed in much the same way as the Fund can increase or decrease the level of risk, or change the character of the risk, of its portfolio by making investments in specific securities. However, derivatives may entail investment exposures that are greater than their cost would suggest, meaning that a small investment in derivatives could have a large potential impact on the Fund's performance.

     If the Fund invests in derivatives at inopportune times or judges market conditions incorrectly, such investments may lower the Fund's return or result in a loss. The Fund also could experience losses if its derivatives were poorly correlated with the underlying instrument on the Fund’s other investments, or if the Fund were unable to liquidate its position because of an illiquid secondary market. The market for many derivatives is, or suddenly can become, illiquid. Changes in liquidity may result in significant, rapid and unpredictable changes in the prices for derivatives.

     Derivatives may be purchased on established exchanges or through privately negotiated transactions referred to as over-the-counter derivatives. Exchange-traded derivatives generally are guaranteed by the clearing agency which is the issuer or counterparty to such derivatives. This guarantee usually is supported by a variation margin payment system operated by the clearing agency in order to reduce overall credit risk. As a result, unless the clearing agency



defaults, there is relatively little counterparty credit risk associated with derivatives purchased on an exchange. By contrast, no clearing agency guarantees over-the-counter derivatives. Therefore, each party to an over-the-counter derivative bears the risk that the counterparty will default. Accordingly, the Manager will consider the creditworthiness of counterparties to over-the-counter derivatives in the same manner as it would review the credit quality of a security to be purchased by the Fund. Over-the-counter derivatives are less liquid than exchange-traded derivatives since the other party to the transaction may be the only investor with sufficient understanding of the derivative to be interested in bidding for it.

     Some derivatives the Fund may use may involve leverage (e.g., an instrument linked to the value of a securities index may return income calculated as a multiple of the price movement of the underlying index). This economic leverage could increase the volatility of these instruments as they may increase or decrease in value more quickly than the underlying security, index, futures contract, or other economic variable. Pursuant to regulations and/or published positions of the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC"), the Fund may be required to segregate permissible liquid assets, or engage in other measures approved by the SEC or its staff, to "cover" the Fund's obligations relating to its transactions in derivatives. For example, in the case of futures contracts that are not contractually required to cash settle, the Fund must set aside liquid assets equal to such contracts' full notional value (generally, the total numerical value of the asset underlying a futures contract at the time of valuation) while the positions are open. With respect to futures contracts that are contractually required to cash settle, however, the Fund is permitted to set aside liquid assets in an amount equal to the Fund's daily marked-to-market net obligation (i.e., the Fund's daily net liability) under the contracts, if any, rather than such contracts' full notional value. By setting aside assets equal to only its net obligations under cash-settled futures contracts, the Fund may employ leverage to a greater extent than if the Fund were required to segregate assets equal to the full notional value of such contracts.

     The Fund will not be a commodity pool. The Fund has filed notice with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and National Futures Association of its eligibility, as a registered investment company, for an exclusion from the definition of commodity pool operator and that the Fund is not subject to registration or regulation as a commodity pool operator under the Commodity Exchange Act.

Futures Transactions—In General. A futures contract is an agreement between two parties to buy and sell a security for a set price on a future date. These contracts are traded on exchanges, so that, in most cases, either party can close out its position on the exchange for cash, without delivering the security. An option on a futures contract gives the holder of the option the right to buy from or sell to the writer of the option a position in a futures contract at a specified price on or before a specified expiration date. The Fund may invest in futures contracts and options on futures contracts, including those with respect to interest rates, securities, and security indexes.

     Although some futures contracts call for making or taking delivery of the underlying securities, generally these obligations are closed out before delivery by offsetting purchases or sales of matching futures contracts (same exchange, underlying security or index, and delivery month). Closing out a futures contract sale is effected by purchasing a futures contract for the same aggregate amount of the specific type of financial instrument with the same delivery date. If an offsetting purchase price is less than the original sale price, the Fund realizes a capital gain,



or if it is more, the Fund realizes a capital loss. Conversely, if an offsetting sale price is more than the original purchase price, the Fund realizes a capital gain, or if it is less, the Fund realizes a capital loss. Transaction costs also are included in these calculations.

     The Fund may enter into futures contracts in U.S. domestic markets. Engaging in these transactions involves risk of loss to the Fund which could adversely affect the value of the Fund's net assets. Although the Fund intends to purchase or sell futures contracts only if there is an active market for such contracts, no assurance can be given that a liquid market will exist for any particular contract at any particular time. Many futures exchanges and boards of trade limit the amount of fluctuation permitted in futures contract prices during a single trading day. Once the daily limit has been reached in a particular contract, no trades may be made that day at a price beyond that limit or trading may be suspended for specified periods during the trading day. Futures contract prices could move to the limit for several consecutive trading days with little or no trading, thereby preventing prompt liquidation of futures positions and potentially subjecting the Fund to substantial losses.

     Successful use of futures and options with respect thereto by the Fund also is subject to the Manager's ability to predict correctly movements in the direction of the relevant market and, to the extent the transaction is entered into for hedging purposes, to ascertain the appropriate correlation between the securities being hedged and the price movements of the futures contract. For example, if the Fund uses futures to hedge against the possibility of a decline in the market value of securities held in its portfolio and the prices of such securities instead increase, the Fund will lose part or all of the benefit of the increased value of securities which it has hedged because it will have offsetting losses in its futures positions. Furthermore, if in such circumstances the Fund has insufficient cash, it may have to sell securities to meet daily variation margin requirements. The Fund may have to sell such securities at a time when it may be disadvantageous to do so.

Specific Futures Transactions. The Fund may purchase and sell interest rate futures contracts. An interest rate future obligates the Fund to purchase or sell an amount of a specific debt security at a future date at a specific price.

     The Fund may purchase and sell Municipal Bond index futures contracts. Municipal Bond index futures contracts are based on an index of Municipal Bonds. The index assigns relative values to the Municipal Bonds included in the index and fluctuates with changes in the market value of such Municipal Bonds. The contract is an agreement pursuant to which two parties agree to take or make delivery of an amount of cash based upon the difference between the value of the index at the close of the last trading day of the contract and the price at which the index contract was originally written.

Options—In General. The Fund may invest up to 5% of its assets, represented by the premium paid, in the purchase of call and put options. The Fund may write (i.e., sell) covered call and put option contracts to the extent of 20% of the value of its net assets at the time such option contracts are written. A call option gives the purchaser of the option the right to buy, and obligates the writer to sell, the underlying security or securities at the exercise price at any time during the option period, or at a specific date. Conversely, a put option gives the purchaser of



the option the right to sell, and obligates the writer to buy, the underlying security or securities at the exercise price at any time during the option period, or at a specific date.

     A covered call option written by the Fund is a call option with respect to which the Fund owns the underlying security or otherwise covers the transaction such as by segregating permissible liquid assets. A put option written by the Fund is covered when, among other things, the Fund segregates permissible liquid assets having a value equal to or greater than the exercise price of the option to fulfill the obligation undertaken or otherwise covers the transaction. The principal reason for writing covered call and put options is to realize, through the receipt of premiums, a greater return than would be realized on the underlying securities alone. The Fund receives a premium from writing covered call or put options which it retains whether or not the option is exercised.

     There is no assurance that sufficient trading interest to create a liquid secondary market on a securities exchange will exist for any particular option or at any particular time, and for some options no such secondary market may exist. A liquid secondary market in an option may cease to exist for a variety of reasons. In the past, for example, higher than anticipated trading activity or order flow, or other unforeseen events, at times have rendered certain of the clearing facilities inadequate and resulted in the institution of special procedures, such as trading rotations, restrictions on certain types of orders or trading halts or suspensions in one or more options. There can be no assurance that similar events, or events that may otherwise interfere with the timely execution of customers' orders, will not recur. In such event, it might not be possible to effect closing transactions in particular options. If, as a covered call option writer, the Fund is unable to effect a closing purchase transaction in a secondary market, it will not be able to sell the underlying security until the option expires or it delivers the underlying security upon exercise or it otherwise covers its position.

Specific Options Transactions. The Fund may purchase and sell call and put options in respect of specific securities (or groups or "baskets" of specific securities) or indices listed on national securities exchanges or traded in the over-the-counter market. An option on an index is similar to an option in respect of specific securities, except that settlement does not occur by delivery of the securities comprising the index. Instead, the option holder receives an amount of cash if the closing level of the index upon which the option is based is greater than in the case of a call, or less than in the case of a put, the exercise price of the option. Thus, the effectiveness of purchasing or writing index options will depend upon price movements in the level of the index rather than the price of a particular security.

     Successful use by the Fund of options and options on futures will be subject to the Manager's ability to predict correctly movements in interest rates. To the extent the Manager's predictions are incorrect, the Fund may incur losses.

     Future Developments. The Fund may take advantage of opportunities in options and futures contracts and options on futures contracts and any other derivatives which are not presently contemplated for use by the Fund or which are not currently available but which may be developed, to the extent such opportunities are both consistent with the Fund's investment objective and legally permissible for the Fund. Before the Fund enters into such transactions or



makes any such investment, the Fund will provide appropriate disclosure in its Prospectus or this Statement of Additional Information.

     Short-Selling. In these transactions, the Fund sells a security it does not own in anticipation of a decline in the market value of the security. The Fund may make short-sales to hedge positions, for duration and risk management, to maintain portfolio flexibility or to enhance returns. To complete a short-sale transaction, the Fund must borrow the security to make delivery to the buyer. The Fund is obligated to replace the security borrowed by purchasing it subsequently at the market price at the time of replacement. The price at such time may be more or less than the price at which the security was sold by the Fund, which would result in a loss or gain, respectively.

     The Fund will not sell securities short if, after effect is given to any such short sale, the total market value of all securities sold short would exceed 25% of the value of the Fund's net assets. The Fund may not make a short sale which results in the Fund having sold short in the aggregate more than 5% of the outstanding securities of any class of an issuer.

     The Fund also may make short sales "against the box," in which the Fund enters into a short sale of a security it owns or has the immediate and unconditional right to acquire at no additional cost at the time of the sale. At no time will the Fund have more than 15% of the value of its net assets in deposits on short sales against the box.

     Until the Fund closes its short position or replaces the borrowed security, it will: (a) segregate permissible liquid assets in an amount that, together with the amount deposited as collateral, always equals the current value of the security sold short; or (b) otherwise cover its short position.

     Stand-By Commitments. The Fund may acquire "stand-by commitments" with respect to Municipal Bonds held in its portfolio. Under a stand-by commitment, the Fund obligates a broker, dealer or bank to repurchase, at the Fund's option, specified securities at a specified price and, in this respect, stand-by commitments are comparable to put options. The exercise of a stand-by commitment, therefore, is subject to the ability of the seller to make payment on demand. The Fund will acquire stand-by commitments solely to facilitate its portfolio liquidity and does not intend to exercise its rights thereunder for trading purposes. The Fund may pay for stand-by commitments if such action is deemed necessary, thus increasing to a degree the cost of the underlying Municipal Bond and similarly decreasing such security's yield to investors. Gains realized in connection with stand-by commitments will be taxable. The Fund also may acquire call options on specific Municipal Bonds. The Fund generally would purchase these call options to protect the Fund from the issuer of the related Municipal Bond redeeming, or other holder of the call option from calling away, the Municipal Bond before maturity. The sale by the Fund of a call option that it owns on a specific Municipal Bond could result in the receipt of taxable income by the Fund.

     Forward Commitments. The Fund may purchase or sell Municipal Bonds and other securities on a forward commitment, when-issued or delayed-delivery basis, which means that delivery and payment take place in the future, after the date of the commitment to purchase. The payment obligation and the interest rate receivable on a forward commitment, when-issued or



delayed-delivery security are fixed when the Fund enters into the commitment, but the Fund does not make payment until it receives delivery from the counterparty. The Fund will commit to purchase such securities only with the intention of actually acquiring the securities, but the Fund may sell these securities before the settlement date if it is deemed advisable. The Fund will segregate permissible liquid assets at least equal at all times to the amount of the Fund's purchase commitments.

     Municipal Bonds and other securities purchased on a forward commitment, when-issued or delayed-delivery basis are subject to changes in value (generally changing in the same way, i.e. appreciating when interest rates decline and depreciating when interest rates rise) based upon the public's perception of the creditworthiness of the issuer and changes, real or anticipated, in the level of interest rates. Securities purchased on a forward commitment, when-issued or delayed-delivery basis may expose the Fund to risks because they may experience such fluctuations prior to their actual delivery. Purchasing securities on a forward commitment, when-issued or delayed-delivery basis can involve the additional risk that the yield available in the market when the delivery takes place actually may be higher than that obtained in the transaction itself. Purchasing securities on a forward commitment, when-issued or delayed-delivery basis when the Fund is fully or almost fully invested may result in greater potential fluctuation in the value of the Fund's net assets and its net asset value per share.

Certain Investment Considerations and Risks

     Investing in Municipal Bonds. The Fund may invest more than 25% of the value of its total assets in Municipal Bonds which are related in such a way that an economic, business or political development or change affecting one such security also would affect the other securities; for example, securities the interest upon which is paid from revenues of similar types of projects. As a result, the Fund may be subject to greater risk as compared to a municipal bond fund that does not follow this practice.

     Certain provisions in the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code"), relating to the issuance of Municipal Bonds may reduce the volume of Municipal Bonds qualifying for Federal tax exemption. One effect of these provisions could be to increase the cost of the Municipal Bonds available for purchase by the Fund and thus reduce available yield. Shareholders should consult their tax advisers concerning the effect of these provisions on an investment in the Fund. Proposals that may restrict or eliminate the income tax exemption for interest on Municipal Bonds may be introduced in the future. If any such proposal were enacted that would reduce the availability of Municipal Bonds for investment by the Fund so as to adversely affect Fund shareholders, the Fund would reevaluate its investment objective and policies and submit possible changes in the Fund's structure to shareholders for their consideration. If legislation were enacted that would treat a type of Municipal Bond as taxable, the Fund would treat such security as a permissible Taxable Investment within the applicable limits set forth herein.

     Investing in New York Municipal Bonds. Because the Fund is concentrated in securities issued by New York or entities within New York, an investment in the Fund may involve greater risk than investments in certain other types of municipal bond funds. You should consider carefully the special risks inherent in the Fund's investment in New York Municipal Bonds. You



should review the information in "Appendix A," which provides a brief summary of special investment considerations and risk factors relating to investing in New York Municipal Bonds.

     Lower Rated Bonds. The Fund may invest up to 30% of the value of its net assets in higher yielding (and, therefore, higher risk) debt securities such as those rated below investment grade by the Rating Agencies (commonly known as "high yield" or "junk" bonds). They may be subject to greater risks with respect to the issuing entity and to greater market fluctuations than certain lower yielding, higher rated fixed-income securities. See "Appendix B" for a general description of the Rating Agencies' ratings of municipal securities. Although ratings may be useful in evaluating the safety of interest and principal payments, they do not evaluate the market value risk of these bonds. The Fund will rely on the Manager's judgment, analysis and experience in evaluating the creditworthiness of an issuer.

     The market values of many of these bonds tend to be more sensitive to economic conditions than are higher rated securities. These bonds generally are considered by the Rating Agencies to be, on balance, predominantly speculative with respect to capacity to pay interest and repay principal in accordance with the terms of the obligation and generally will involve more credit risk than securities in the higher rating categories.

     Because there is no established retail secondary market for many of these securities, the Fund anticipates that such securities could be sold only to a limited number of dealers or institutional investors. To the extent a secondary trading market for these bonds does exist, it generally is not as liquid as the secondary market for higher rated securities. The lack of a liquid secondary market may have an adverse impact on market price and yield and the Fund's ability to dispose of particular issues when necessary to meet the Fund's liquidity needs or in response to a specific economic event such as a deterioration in the creditworthiness of the issuer. The lack of a liquid secondary market for certain securities also may make it more difficult for the Fund to obtain accurate market quotations for purposes of valuing the Fund's portfolio and calculating its net asset value. Adverse publicity and investor perceptions, whether or not based on fundamental analysis, may decrease the values and liquidity of these securities. In such cases, the Manager's judgment may play a greater role in valuation because less reliable objective data may be available.

     These bonds may be particularly susceptible to economic downturns. An economic recession could adversely affect the ability of the issuers of lower rated bonds to repay principal which would pay interest thereon and increase the incidence of default for such securities. It is likely that any economic recession also could disrupt severely the market for such securities and have an adverse impact on their value.

     The Fund may acquire these bonds during an initial offering. Such securities may involve special risks because they are new issues. The Fund has no arrangement with any person concerning the acquisition of such securities, and the Manager will review carefully the credit and other characteristics pertinent to such new issues.

     The credit risk factors pertaining to lower rated securities also apply to lower rated zero coupon, pay-in-kind and step-up securities, in which the Fund may invest up to 5% of its total



assets. In addition to the risks associated with the credit rating of the issuers, the market price of these securities may be very volatile during the period no interest is paid.

     Non-Diversified Status. The Fund's classification as a "non-diversified" investment company means that the proportion of the Fund's assets that may be invested in the securities of a single issuer is not limited by the 1940 Act. The 1940 Act generally requires a "diversified" investment company, with respect to 75% of its total assets, to invest not more than 5% of such assets in securities of a single issuer. Since a relatively high percentage of the Fund's assets may be invested in the securities of a limited number of issuers or industries, the Fund may be more sensitive to changes in the market value of a single issuer or industry. However, to meet Federal tax requirements, at the close of each quarter the Fund may not have more than 25% of its total assets invested in any one issuer and, with respect to 50% of its total assets, not more than 5% of its total assets invested in any one issuer. These limitations do not apply to U.S. Government securities.

Investment Restrictions

     The Fund's investment objective and its policy to normally invest at least 80% of its net assets (plus any borrowings for investment purposes) in New York Municipal Bonds (or other instruments with similar economic characteristics) are fundamental policies, which cannot be changed without approval by the holders of a majority (as defined in the 1940 Act) of the Fund's outstanding voting shares. In addition, the Fund has adopted investment restrictions numbered 1 through 9 as fundamental policies. Investment restrictions numbered 10 and 11 are not fundamental policies and may be changed by vote of a majority of the Fund's Board members at any time. The Fund may not:

     1. Purchase securities other than Municipal Bonds and Taxable Investments as those terms are defined above and in the Prospectus and those arising out of transactions in futures and options.

     2. Borrow money, except from banks for temporary or emergency (not leveraging) purposes in an amount up to 15% of the value of the Fund's total assets (including the amount borrowed) based on the lesser of cost or market, less liabilities (not including the amount borrowed) at the time the borrowing is made. While borrowings exceed 5% of the value of the Fund's total assets, the Fund will not make any additional investments. Transactions in futures and options and the entry into short sales transactions do not involve any borrowing for purposes of this restriction.

     3. Pledge, hypothecate, mortgage or otherwise encumber its assets, except to secure borrowings for temporary or emergency purposes. The deposit of assets in escrow in connection with the writing of covered put and call options and the purchase of securities on a when-issued or delayed-delivery basis and collateral arrangements with respect to initial or variation margin for futures contracts and options on futures contracts or indices will not be deemed to be pledges of the Fund's assets.



     4. Purchase securities on margin, but the Fund may make margin deposits in connection with transactions in futures, including those related to indices, and options on futures or indices.

     5. Underwrite the securities of other issuers, except that the Fund may bid separately or as part of a group for the purchase of Municipal Bonds directly from an issuer for its own portfolio to take advantage of the lower purchase price available, and except to the extent the Fund may be deemed an underwriter under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, by virtue of disposing of portfolio securities.

     6. Purchase or sell real estate, real estate investment trust securities, commodities or commodity contracts, or oil and gas interests, but this shall not prevent the Fund from investing in Municipal Bonds secured by real estate or interests therein, or prevent the Fund from purchasing and selling futures contracts, including those relating to indices, and options on futures contracts or indices.

     7. Make loans to others, except through the purchase of qualified debt obligations and the entry into repurchase agreements referred to above and in the Fund's Prospectus; however, the Fund may lend its portfolio securities in an amount not to exceed 33-1/3% of the value of its total assets. Any loans of portfolio securities will be made according to guidelines established by the SEC and the Fund's Trustees.

     8. Invest more than 25% of its total assets in the securities of issuers in any single industry; provided that there shall be no such limitation on the purchase of Municipal Bonds and, for temporary defensive purposes, obligations issued or guaranteed by the U.S. Government, its agencies or instrumentalities.

9. Invest in companies for the purpose of exercising control.

     10. Purchase securities of other investment companies, except to the extent permitted under the 1940 Act.

     11. Enter into repurchase agreements providing for settlement in more than seven days after notice or purchase securities which are illiquid (which securities could include participation interests that are not subject to the demand feature described in the Fund's Prospectus or Statement of Additional Information and floating and variable rate demand obligations as to which no secondary market exists and the Fund cannot exercise the demand feature described in the Fund's Prospectus or Statement of Additional Information on less than seven days' notice), if, in the aggregate, more than 15% of the value of its net assets would be so invested.

     For purposes of Investment Restriction No. 8, industrial development bonds, where the payment of principal and interest is the ultimate responsibility of companies within the same industry, are grouped together as an "industry."

     If a percentage restriction is adhered to at the time of investment, a later change in percentage resulting from a change in values or assets will not constitute a violation of such restriction.



MANAGEMENT OF THE FUND

     The Fund's Board is responsible for the management and supervision of the Fund, and approves all significant agreements with those companies that furnish services to the Fund. These companies are as follows:

The Dreyfus Corporation  Investment Adviser 
MBSC Securities Corporation  Distributor 
Dreyfus Transfer, Inc  Transfer Agent 
The Bank of New York Mellon  Custodian 
 
Board Members of the Fund1   

Board members of the Fund, together with information as to their positions with the

Fund, principal occupations and other board memberships and affiliations are shown below.

Name (Age)  Principal Occupation   
Position with the Fund (Since)  During Past 5 Years  Other Board Memberships and Affiliations 
Joseph S. DiMartino (66)  Corporate Director and Trustee  The Muscular Dystrophy Association, Director 
Chairman of the Board    CBIC (formerly, Century Business Services, Inc.), 
(1995)    a provider of outsourcing functions for small and 
    medium size companies, Director 
    The Newark Group, a provider of a national 
    market of paper recovery facilities, paperboard 
    mills and paperboard converting plants, Director 
 
Clifford L. Alexander, Jr. (76)  President of Alexander & Associates,  Mutual of America Life Insurance Company, 
Board Member  Inc., a management consulting firm  Director 
(1986)  (January 1981 – present)   
 
David W. Burke (73)  Corporate Director and Trustee  John F. Kennedy Library Foundation, Director 
Board Member     
(2007)     
 
 
Peggy C. Davis (66)  Shad Professor of Law,  None 
Board Member  New York University School of   
(1990)  Law (1983 – present)   
  Writer and teacher in the fields of   
  evidence, constitutional theory,   
  family law, social sciences and the   
  law, legal process and professional   
  methodology and training   
 
 
Diane Dunst (70)  President, Huntting House Antiques  None 
Board Member     
(2007)     
 
Ernest Kafka (77)  Physician engaged in private practice  None 

1 None of the Board members are "interested persons" of the Fund, as defined in the 1940 Act.



Name (Age)  Principal Occupation   
Position with the Fund (Since)  During Past 5 Years  Other Board Memberships and Affiliations 
Board Member  specializing in the psychoanalysis   
(1986)  of adults and adolescents (1962 –   
  present)   
  Instructor, The New York   
  Psychoanalytic Institute   
  (1981 – present)   
 
Nathan Leventhal (66)  Commissioner, NYC Planning  Movado Group, Inc., Director 
Board Member  Commission  Mayor's Committee on Appointments, Chairman 
(1989)  (March 2007 – present)   
  Chairman of the Avery-Fisher Artist   
  Program   
  (November 1997 – present)   
 
Warren B. Rudman (79)  Stonebridge International LLC, Co-  Boston Scientific, Director 
Board Member  Chairman  D.B. Zwirn & Co., Vice Chairman of the 
(2007)  Of Counsel to (from January 1993 to  International Advisory Board 
  December 31, 2003, Partner in) the   
  law firm Paul, Weiss, Rifkind,   
  Wharton & Garrison, LLP   

     Board members are elected to serve for an indefinite term. The Fund has standing audit, nominating and compensation committees, each comprised of its Board members who are not "interested persons" of the Fund, as defined in the 1940 Act. The function of the audit committee is (i) to oversee the Fund's financial and reporting processes and the audits of the Fund's financial statements and (ii) to assist in the Board's oversight of the integrity of the Fund's financial statements, the Fund's compliance with legal and regulatory requirements and the independent registered public accounting firm's qualifications, independence and performance. The Fund's nominating committee, is responsible for selecting and nominating persons as members of the Board for election or appointment by the Board and for election by shareholders. In evaluating potential nominees, including any nominees recommended by shareholders, the committee takes into consideration various factors listed in the nominating committee charter, including character and integrity, business and professional experience, and whether the committee believes the person has the ability to apply sound and independent business judgment and would act in the interest of the Fund and its shareholders. The nominating committee will consider recommendations for nominees from shareholders submitted to the Secretary of the Fund, c/o The Dreyfus Corporation Legal Department, 200 Park Avenue, 8th Floor East, New York, New York 10166, which includes information regarding the recommended nominee as specified in the nominating committee charter. The function of the compensation committee is to establish the appropriate compensation for serving on the Board. The Fund also has a standing pricing committee comprised of any one Board member. The function of the pricing committee is to assist in valuing the Fund's investments. The audit committee met four times during the fiscal year ended November 30, 2009. The nominating, compensation and pricing committees had no meetings during the last fiscal year.



     The table below indicates the dollar range of each Board member's ownership of Fund shares and shares of other funds in the Dreyfus Family of Funds for which he or she is a Board member, in each case as of December 31, 2009.

    Aggregate Holding of 
    Funds in the Dreyfus 
    Family of Funds for which 
    Responsible as a Board 
Name of Board Member  Fund  Member 
Joseph S. DiMartino  XXX  XXX 
Clifford L. Alexander, Jr.  XXX  XXX 
David W. Burke  XXX  XXX 
Peggy C. Davis  XXX  XXX 
Diane Dunst  XXX  XXX 
Ernest Kafka  XXX  XXX 
Nathan Leventhal  XXX  XXX 
Warren B. Rudman  XXX  XXX 

     As of December 31, 2009, none of the Board members or their immediate family members owned securities of the Manager, the Distributor or any person (other than a registered investment company) directly or indirectly controlling, controlled by or under common control with the Manager or the Distributor.

     The Fund currently pays its Board members its allocated portion of an annual retainer of $90,000 and a fee of $12,000 per in person meeting and $2,000 per telephone meeting attended for the Fund and 11 other funds (comprised of 17 portfolios) in the Dreyfus Family of Funds (the attendance fee for in person meetings for less than all portfolios is $6,000), and reimburses them for their expenses. The Chairman of the Board receives an additional 25% of such compensation. Each Emeritus Board member is entitled to receive an annual retainer of one-half the amount paid as a retainer at the time the Board member became Emeritus and a per meeting attended fee of one-half the amount paid to Board members. The aggregate amount of compensation paid to each Board member by the Fund for the fiscal year ended November 30, 2009, and by all funds in the Dreyfus Family of Funds for which such person was a Board member (the number of portfolios of such funds is set forth in parenthesis next to each Board member's total compensation) during the year ended December 31, 2009, were as follows:

    Total Compensation 
  Aggregate  From the Fund and Fund 
Name of Board  Compensation From  Complex Paid to 
Member  the Fund*  Board Member(** ) 



Joseph S. DiMartino  $XXX  $XXX 
Clifford L. Alexander, Jr.  $XXX  $XXX 
David W. Burke  $XXX  $XXX 
Peggy C. Davis  $XXX  $XXX 
Diane Dunst  $XXX  $XXX 
Ernest Kafka  $XXX  $XXX 
Nathan Leventhal  $XXX  $XXX 
Jay I. Meltzer***  $XXX  $XXX 
Daniel Rose  $XXX  $XXX 
Warren B. Rudman  $XXX  $XXX 
Sander Vanocur††  $XXX  $XXX 

*     

Amount does not include the cost of office space, secretarial services and health benefits for the Chairman and expenses reimbursed to Board members for attending Board meetings, which in the aggregate amounted to $______.

**     

Represents the number of separate portfolios comprising the investment companies in the Fund Complex, including the Fund, for which the Board member serves.

***     

Emeritus Board member as of July 20, 2008.

     

Emeritus Board member as of October 31, 2009.

††     

Emeritus Board member as of January 8, 2008.

Officers of the Fund

BRADLEY J. SKAPYAK, President since January 2010. Chief Operating Officer and a director of the Manager since June 2009. From April 2003 to June 2009, Mr. Skapyak was the head of the Investment Accounting and Support Department of the Manager. He is an officer of 76 investment companies (comprised of 171 portfolios) managed by the Manager. He is 51 years old and has been an employee of the Manager since February 1988.

PHILLIP N. MAISANO, Executive Vice President since July 2007. Chief Investment Officer, Vice Chair and a director of the Manager, and an officer of 76 investment companies (comprised of 171 portfolios) managed by the Manager. Mr. Maisano also is an officer and/or board member of certain other investment management subsidiaries of The Bank of New York Mellon Corporation ("BNY Mellon"), each of which is an affiliate of the Manager. He is 62 years old and has been an employee of the Manager since November 2006. Prior to joining the Manager, Mr. Maisano served as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of EACM Advisors, an affiliate of the Manager, since August 2004.

JAMES WINDELS, Treasurer since November 2002. Director – Mutual Fund Accounting of the Manager, and an officer of 77 investment companies (comprised of 194 portfolios) managed by the Manager. He is 51 years old and has been an employee of the Manager since April 1985.

J. DAVID OFFICER, Vice President since January 2010. Director of Mellon United National Bank, an affiliate of the Manager, and an officer of 77 investment companies (comprised



of 194 portfolios) managed by the Manager. Prior to June 2009, Mr. Officer was Chief Operating Officer, Vice Chairman and a director of the Manager, where he had been employed since April 1998. He is 61 years old.

MICHAEL A. ROSENBERG, Vice President and Secretary since August 2005. Assistant General Counsel of BNY Mellon, and an officer of 77 investment companies (comprised of 194 portfolios) managed by the Manager. He is 49 years old and has been an employee of the Manager since October 1991.

JANETTE E. FARRAGHER, Vice President and Assistant Secretary since August 2005. Assistant General Counsel of BNY Mellon, and an officer of 77 investment companies (comprised of 194 portfolios) managed by the Manager. She is 47 years old and has been an employee of the Manager since February 1984.

KIESHA ASTWOOD, Vice President and Assistant Secretary since December 2009. Counsel of BNY Mellon, and an officer of 77 investment companies (comprised of 194 portfolios) managed by the Manager. She is 36 years old and has been an employee of the Manager since July 1995.

JAMES BITETTO, Vice President and Assistant Secretary since August 2005. Senior Counsel of BNY Mellon and Secretary of the Manager, and an officer of 77 investment companies (comprised of 194 portfolios) managed by the Manager. He is 43 years old and has been an employee of the Manager since December 1996.

JONI LACKS CHARATAN, Vice President and Assistant Secretary since August 2005. Senior Counsel of BNY Mellon, and an officer of 77 investment companies (comprised of 194 portfolios) managed by the Manager. She is 54 years old and has been an employee of the Manager since October 1988.

JOSEPH M. CHIOFFI, Vice President and Assistant Secretary since August 2005. Senior Counsel of BNY Mellon, and an officer of 77 investment companies (comprised of 194 portfolios) managed by the Manager. He is 48 years old and has been an employee of the Manager since June 2000.

KATHLEEN DENICHOLAS, Vice President and Assistant Secretary since December 2009. Senior Counsel of BNY Mellon, and an officer of 77 investment companies (comprised of 194 portfolios) managed by the Manager. She is 35 years old and has been an employee of the Manager since February 2001.

JOHN B. HAMMALIAN, Vice President and Assistant Secretary since August 2005. Managing Counsel of BNY Mellon, and an officer of 77 investment companies (comprised of 194 portfolios) managed by the Manager. He is 46 years old and has been an employee of the Manager since February 1991.

M. CRISTINA MEISER, Vice President and Assistant Secretary since December 2009. Senior Counsel of BNY Mellon, and an officer of 77 investment companies (comprised of 194



portfolios) managed by the Manager. She is 39 years old and has been an employee of the Manager since August 2001.

ROBERT R. MULLERY, Vice President and Assistant Secretary since August 2005. Managing Counsel of BNY Mellon, and an officer of 77 investment companies (comprised of 194 portfolios) managed by the Manager. He is 57 years old and has been an employee of the Manager since May 1986.

JEFF PRUSNOFSKY, Vice President and Assistant Secretary since August 2005. Managing Counsel of BNY Mellon, and an officer of 77 investment companies (comprised of 194 portfolios) managed by the Manager. He is 44 years old and has been an employee of the Manager since October 1990.

RICHARD S. CASSARO, Assistant Treasurer since January 2008. Senior Accounting Manager – Money Market and Municipal Bond Funds of the Manager, and an officer of 77 investment companies (comprised of 194 portfolios) managed by the Manager. He is 50 years old and has been an employee of the Manager since October 1982.

GAVIN C. REILLY, Assistant Treasurer since December 2005. Tax Manager of the Investment Accounting and Support Department of the Manager, and an officer of 77 investment companies (comprised of 194 portfolios) managed by the Manager. He is 41 years old and has been an employee of the Manager since April 1991.

ROBERT S. ROBOL, Assistant Treasurer since August 2005. Senior Accounting Manager –Fixed Income Funds of the Manager, and an officer of 77 investment companies (comprised of 194 portfolios) managed by the Manager. He is 45 years old and has been an employee of the Manager since October 1988.

ROBERT SALVIOLO, Assistant Treasurer since July 2007. Senior Accounting Manager –Equity Funds of the Manager, and an officer of 77 investment companies (comprised of 194 portfolios) managed by the Manager. He is 42 years old and has been an employee of the Manager since June 1989.

ROBERT SVAGNA, Assistant Treasurer since December 2002. Senior Accounting Manager –Equity Funds of the Manager, and an officer of 77 investment companies (comprised of 194 portfolios) managed by the Manager. He is 42 years old and has been an employee of the Manager since November 1990.

WILLIAM GERMENIS, Anti-Money Laundering Compliance Officer since September 2002. Vice President and Anti-Money Laundering Compliance Officer of the Distributor, and the Anti-Money Laundering Compliance Officer of 73 investment companies (comprised of 190 portfolios) managed by the Manager. He is 39 years old and has been an employee of the Distributor since October 1998.

JOSEPH W. CONNOLLY, Chief Compliance Officer since October 2004. Chief Compliance Officer of the Manager and The Dreyfus Family of Funds (77 investment companies, comprised of 194 portfolios). From November 2001 through March 2004, Mr. Connolly was first Vice-President, Mutual Fund Servicing for Mellon Global Securities Services.



In that capacity, Mr. Connolly was responsible for managing Mellon's Custody, Fund Accounting and Fund Administration services to third-party mutual fund clients. He is 52 years old and has served in various capacities with the Manager since 1980, including manager of the firm's Fund Accounting Department from 1997 through October 2001.

     The address of each Board member and officer of the Fund is 200 Park Avenue, New York, New York 10166.

     Board members and officers, as a group, owned less than 1% of the Fund's shares outstanding on March __, 2010. See "Information About the Fund" for a list of shareholders known by the Fund to own of record 5% or more of the Fund's outstanding voting securities as of March __, 2010.

MANAGEMENT ARRANGEMENTS

     Investment Adviser. The Manager is a wholly-owned subsidiary of BNY Mellon, a global financial services company focused on helping clients move and manage their financial assets, operating in 37 countries and serving more than 100 markets. BNY Mellon is a leading provider of financial services for institutions, corporations and high-net-worth individuals, providing asset and wealth management, asset servicing, issuer services, and treasury services through a worldwide client-focused team.

     The Manager provides management services pursuant to a Management Agreement (the "Agreement") between the Fund and the Manager. The Agreement is subject to annual approval by (i) the Fund's Board or (ii) vote of a majority (as defined in the 1940 Act) of the Fund's outstanding voting securities, provided that in either event the continuance also is approved by a majority of the Fund's Board members who are not "interested persons" (as defined in the 1940 Act) of the Fund or the Manager, by vote cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of voting on such approval. The Agreement is terminable without penalty, on 60 days' notice, by the Fund's Board or by vote of the holders of a majority of the Fund's outstanding voting securities, or, on not less than 90 days' notice, by the Manager. The Agreement will terminate automatically in the event of its assignment (as defined in the 1940 Act).

     The following persons are officers and/or directors of the Manager: [Jonathan Baum, Chair of the Board and Chief Executive Officer; J. Charles Cardona, President and a director; Diane P. Durnin, Vice Chair and a director; Phillip N. Maisano, Chief Investment Officer, Vice Chair and a director; J. David Officer, Chief Operating Officer, Vice Chair and a director; Dwight Jacobsen, Executive Vice President and a director; Patrice M. Kozlowski, Senior Vice President-Corporate Communications; Gary E. Abbs, Vice President – Tax; Joanne S. Huber, Vice President – Tax; Jill Gill, Vice President-Human Resources; Anthony Mayo, Vice-President-Information Systems; John E. Lane, Vice President; Jeanne M. Login, Vice President; Gary Pierce, Controller; Joseph W. Connolly, Chief Compliance Officer; James Bitetto, Secretary; and Mitchell E. Harris, Ronald P. O'Hanley III; Cyrus Taraporevala and Scott E. Wennerholm, directors].

     BNY Mellon and its affiliates may have deposit, loan and commercial banking or other relationships with the issuers of securities purchased by the Fund. The Manager has informed



management of the Fund that in making its investment decisions it does not obtain or use material inside information that BNY Mellon or its affiliates may possess with respect to such issuers.

     The Fund, the Manager and the Distributor each have adopted a Code of Ethics that permits its personnel, subject to such Code of Ethics, to invest in securities, including securities that may be purchased or held by the Fund. The Code of Ethics subjects the personal securities transactions of the Manager's employees to various restrictions to ensure that such trading does not disadvantage any fund advised by the Manager. In that regard, portfolio managers and other investment personnel of the Manager must preclear and report their personal securities transactions and holdings, which are reviewed for compliance with the Code of Ethics and are also subject to the oversight of BNY Mellon's Investment Ethics Committee (the "Committee"). Portfolio managers and other investment personnel of the Manager who comply with the preclearance and disclosure procedures of the Code of Ethics and the requirements of the Committee may be permitted to purchase, sell or hold securities which also may be or are held in fund(s) they manage or for which they otherwise provide investment advice.

     The Manager maintains office facilities on behalf of the Fund, and furnishes statistical and research data, clerical help, accounting, data processing, bookkeeping and internal auditing and certain other required services to the Fund. The Manager may pay the Distributor for shareholder services from the Manager's own assets, including past profits but not including the management fee paid by the Fund. The Distributor may use part or all of such payments to pay certain financial institutions (which may include banks), securities dealers ("Selected Dealers") and other industry professionals (collectively, "Service Agents") in respect of these services. The Manager also may make such advertising and promotional expenditures, using its own resources, as it from time to time deems appropriate.

Portfolio Managers. The Manager provides day-to-day management of the Fund's portfolio of investments in accordance with the stated policies of the Fund, subject to the approval of the Fund's Board. The Manager is responsible for investment decisions, and provides the Fund with portfolio managers who are authorized by the Fund's Board to execute purchases and sales of securities. The Fund's portfolio managers are: David Belton, Thomas Casey,Steven Harvey and James Welch. The Manager also maintains a research department with a professional staff of portfolio managers and securities analysts who provide research services for the Fund and for other funds advised by the Manager.

     Portfolio Manager Compensation. Portfolio manager compensation is comprised of a market-based salary, an annual incentive plan and a long-term incentive plan. The portfolio managers are compensated by Standish and not by the Fund. Portfolio managers are eligible to join the BNY Mellon deferred compensation program, and the BNY Mellon defined contribution pension plan, pursuant to which employer contributions are invested in BNY Mellon common stock.

Under the annual incentive plan, portfolio managers may receive a bonus of up to two times their annual salary, at the discretion of management. In determining the amount of the bonus, significant consideration is given to the portfolio manager's one-year (weighted 50%) and three-year (weighted 50%) pre-tax performance compared to that of appropriate peer groups.



Other factors considered are individual qualitative performance, asset size and revenue growth of the product managed by the portfolio manager.

Under the long-term incentive plan, restricted BNY Mellon stock and phantom Standish stock is awarded based on the discretion of management based on individual performance and contributions to the BNY Mellon organization.

Additional Information About Portfolio Managers. The following table lists the number and types of other accounts advised by the Fund's primary portfolio manager and assets under management in those accounts as of the end of the Fund's fiscal year:

  Registered           
  Investment           
  Company    Pooled  Assets  Other  Assets 
Portfolio Manager  Accounts  Assets Managed  Accounts  Managed  Accounts  Managed 
David Belton  XX  XXX  XX  XX  XX  XX 
Thomas Casey  XX  $XXX  XX  XX  XX  XX 

None of the funds or accounts are subject to a performance-based advisory fee.

     The dollar range of Fund shares beneficially owned by the primary portfolio manager are as follows as of the end of the Fund's fiscal year:

    Dollar Range of Fund Shares 
Portfolio Manager  Fund Name  Beneficially Owned 
David Belton  Dreyfus New York AMT-Free  XXX 
  Municipal Bond Fund   
Thomas Casey  Dreyfus New York AMT-Free  XXX 
  Municipal Bond Fund   

     Portfolio managers may manage multiple accounts for a diverse client base, including mutual funds, separate accounts (assets managed on behalf of institutions such as pension funds, insurance companies and foundations), bank common trust accounts and wrap fee programs ("Other Accounts").

     Potential conflicts of interest may arise because of Dreyfus' management of the Fund and Other Accounts. For example, conflicts of interest may arise with both the aggregation and allocation of securities transactions and allocation of limited investment opportunities, as Dreyfus may be perceived as causing accounts it manages to participate in an offering to increase Dreyfus' overall allocation of securities in that offering, or to increase Dreyfus' ability to participate in future offerings by the same underwriter or issuer. Allocations of bunched trades, particularly trade orders that were only partially filled due to limited availability, and allocation of investment opportunities generally, could raise a potential conflict of interest, as Dreyfus may have an incentive to allocate securities that are expected to increase in value to preferred accounts. Initial public offerings, in particular, are frequently of very limited availability. Additionally, portfolio managers may be perceived to have a conflict of interest if there are a large number of Other Accounts, in addition to a Fund, that they are managing on behalf of Dreyfus. Dreyfus periodically reviews each portfolio manager's overall responsibilities to ensure



that he or she is able to allocate the necessary time and resources to effectively manage the Fund. In addition, Dreyfus could be viewed as having a conflict of interest to the extent that Dreyfus or its affiliates and/or portfolio managers have a materially larger investment in Other Accounts than their investment in the Fund.

     Other Accounts may have investment objectives, strategies and risks that differ from those of the Funds. For these or other reasons, the portfolio manager may purchase different securities for a Fund and the Other Accounts, and the performance of securities purchased for the Fund may vary from the performance of securities purchased for Other Accounts. The portfolio manager may place transactions on behalf of Other Accounts that are directly or indirectly contrary to investment decisions made for the Fund, which could have the potential to adversely impact the Fund, depending on market conditions.

     A potential conflict of interest may be perceived to arise if transactions in one account closely follow related transactions in another account, such as when a purchase increases the value of securities previously purchased by the other account, or when a sale in one account lowers the sale price received in a sale by a second account.

     Conflicts of interest similar to those described above arise when portfolio managers are employed by a sub-investment adviser or are dual employees of the Manager and an affiliated entity and such portfolio managers also manage other accounts.

     Dreyfus' goal is to provide high quality investment services to all of its clients, while meeting Dreyfus' fiduciary obligation to treat all clients fairly. Dreyfus has adopted and implemented policies and procedures, including brokerage and trade allocation policies and procedures, that it believes address the conflicts associated with managing multiple accounts for multiple clients. In addition, Dreyfus monitors a variety of areas, including compliance with Fund guidelines, the allocation of initial public offerings, and compliance with Dreyfus' Code of Ethics. Furthermore, senior investment and business personnel at Dreyfus periodically review the performance of the portfolio managers for Dreyfus-managed funds.

     Expenses. All expenses incurred in the operation of the Fund are borne by the Fund, except to the extent specifically assumed by the Manager. The expenses borne by the Fund include, without limitation, the following: taxes, interest, loan commitment fees, interest and distributions paid on securities sold short, brokerage fees and commissions, if any, fees of Board members who are not officers, directors, employees or holders of 5% or more of the outstanding voting securities of the Manager or its affiliates, SEC fees, state Blue Sky qualification fees, advisory fees, charges of custodians, transfer and dividend disbursing agents' fees, certain insurance premiums, industry association fees, outside auditing and legal expenses, costs of independent pricing services, costs of maintaining corporate good standing under state law, costs attributable to investor services (including, without limitation, telephone and personnel expenses), costs of preparing and printing prospectuses and statements of additional information for regulatory purposes and for distribution to existing shareholders, costs of shareholders' reports and meetings, and any extraordinary expenses. In addition, each class of shares bears any class specific expenses allocated to such class, such as expenses related to the distribution and/or shareholder servicing of such class. Class A, Class B and Class C shares are subject to an annual



shareholder services fee, and Class B and Class C shares are subject to an annual distribution fee. See "Distribution Plan and Shareholder Services Plan." All fees and expenses are accrued daily and deducted before the declaration of dividends to shareholders.

     As compensation for the Manager's services to the Fund, the Fund has agreed to pay the Manager a monthly management fee at the annual rate of 0.55% of the value of the Fund's average daily net assets. For the fiscal years ended November 30, 2007, 2008 and 2009, the management fees payable, reduction in fees and net fees paid by the Fund were as follows:

Management Fee Payable  Reduction in Fee  Net Fee Paid by Fund   
2007  2008  2009  2007  2008  2009  2007  2008  2009 
$882,608  $832,632  $______  $183,540  $183,102  $______  $699,068  $649,530  $______ 

     The Manager has agreed that if in any fiscal year the aggregate expenses of the Fund, exclusive of taxes, brokerage fees, interest on borrowings and (with the prior written consent of the necessary state securities commissions) extraordinary expenses, but including the management fee, exceed the expense limitation of any state having jurisdiction over the Fund, the Fund may deduct from the payment to be made to the Manager under the Agreement, or the Manager will bear, such excess expense to the extent required by state law. Such deduction or payment, if any, will be estimated daily, and reconciled and effected or paid, as the case may be, on a monthly basis.

     The aggregate of the fees payable to the Manager is not subject to reduction as the value of the Fund's net assets increases.

     Distributor. The Distributor, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Manager, located at 200 Park Avenue, New York, New York 10166, serves as the Fund's distributor on a best efforts basis pursuant to an agreement with the Fund which is renewable annually. The Distributor also serves as distributor for the other funds in the Dreyfus Family of Funds and BNY Mellon Funds Trust. Before June 30, 2007, the Distributor was known as "Dreyfus Service Corporation."

     The Distributor compensates Service Agents for selling Class A shares subject to a contingent deferred sales charge ("CDSC") and Class C shares at the time of purchase from its own assets. The Distributor also compensated certain Service Agents for selling Class B shares at the time of purchase from its own assets when the Fund offered Class B shares; the Fund no longer offers Class B shares except in connection with dividend reinvestment and permitted exchanges. The proceeds of the CDSC and fees pursuant to the Fund's Distribution Plan (described below), in part, are used to defray the expenses incurred by the Distributor in connection with the sale of the applicable Class of Fund shares. The Distributor also may act as a Service Agent and retain sales loads and CDSCs and Distribution Plan fees. For purchases of Class A shares subject to a CDSC and Class C shares, the Distributor generally will pay Service Agents on new investments made through such Service Agents a commission of up to 1% of the amount invested. The Distributor generally paid Service Agents on new investments of Class B shares made through such Service Agents 4% of the net asset value of such shares purchased by



their clients. With respect to Class B shares issued to shareholders in exchange for shares originally issued by a series of The Bear Stearns Funds (the "Acquired Fund"), the proceeds of any CDSC and fees pursuant to the Distribution Plan are payable to the Acquired Fund's former distributor to defray the expenses it incurred in connection with the sale of such shares when originally issued by the Acquired Fund.

     The amounts retained on the sale of Fund shares by the Distributor from sales loads and CDSCs for the fiscal years ended November 30, 2007, 2008 and 2009, with respect to the Fund's Class A, Class B and Class C shares, are set forth below.

  Fiscal Year  Fiscal Year  Fiscal Year 
  Ended 2007  Ended 2008  Ended 2009 
Class A  $22,203  $21,387  $_____ 
Class B  $28,261  $18,764  $_____ 
Class C  $1,657  $2,346  $_____ 

     The Manager or the Distributor may provide cash payments out of its own resources to financial intermediaries that sell shares of the Fund or provide other services. Such payments are separate from any sales charges, 12b-1 fees and/or shareholder services fees or other expenses paid by the Fund to those intermediaries. Because those payments are not made by you or the Fund, the Fund's total expense ratio will not be affected by any such payments. These additional payments may be made to Service Agents, including affiliates, that provide shareholder servicing, sub-administration, recordkeeping and/or sub-transfer agency services, marketing support and/or access to sales meetings, sales representatives and management representatives of the Service Agent. Cash compensation also may be paid from the Manager's or the Distributor's own resources to Service Agents for inclusion of the Fund on a sales list, including a preferred or select sales list or in other sales programs. These payments sometimes are referred to as "revenue sharing." From time to time, the Manager or the Distributor also may provide cash or non-cash compensation to Service Agents in the form of: occasional gifts; occasional meals, tickets or other entertainment; support for due diligence trips; educational conference sponsorships; support for recognition programs; and other forms of cash or non-cash compensation permissible under broker-dealer regulations. In some cases, these payments or compensation may create an incentive for a Service Agent to recommend or sell shares of the Fund to you. Please contact your Service Agent for details about any payments it may receive in connection with the sale of Fund shares or the provision of services to the Fund.

     Transfer and Dividend Disbursing Agent and Custodian. Dreyfus Transfer, Inc. (the "Transfer Agent"), a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Manager, located at 200 Park Avenue, New York, New York 10166, is the Fund's transfer and dividend disbursing agent. Under a transfer agency agreement with the Fund, the Transfer Agent arranges for the maintenance of shareholder account records for the Fund, the handling of certain communications between shareholders and the Fund and the payment of dividends and distributions payable by the Fund. For these services, the Transfer Agent receives a monthly fee computed on the basis of the number of shareholder accounts it maintains for the Fund during the month, and is reimbursed for certain out-of-pocket expenses. The Fund also makes payments to certain financial intermediaries, including affiliates, who provide sub-administration, recordkeeping and/or sub-transfer agency services to beneficial owners of Fund shares.



     The Bank of New York Mellon (the "Custodian"), an affiliate of the Manager, located at One Wall Street, New York, New York 10286, acts as custodian for the Fund’s investments. The Custodian has no part in determining the investment policies of the Fund or which securities are to be purchased or sold by the Fund. Under a custody agreement with the Fund, the Custodian holds the Fund's securities and keeps all necessary accounts and records. For its custody services, the Custodian receives a monthly fee based on the market value of the Fund's assets held in custody and receives certain securities transactions charges.

HOW TO BUY SHARES

     General. The Fund offers Class A, Class C and Class I shares. Class A and Class C shares of the Fund may be purchased only by clients of Service Agents, including the Distributor. Subsequent purchases may be sent directly to the Transfer Agent or your Service Agent. You will be charged a fee if an investment check is returned unpayable.

     Class I shares are offered only to (i) bank trust departments, trust companies and insurance companies that have entered into agreements with the Distributor to offer Class I shares to their clients, (ii) law firms or attorneys acting as trustees or executors/administrators, (iii) foundations and endowments that make an initial investment in the Fund of at least $1 million, and (iv) advisory fee-based accounts offered through financial intermediaries who, depending on the structure of the selected advisory platform, make Class I shares available. Institutions effecting transactions in Class I shares for the accounts of their clients may charge their clients direct fees in connection with such transactions.

     As of June 1, 2006 (the "Effective Date"), Class B shares of the Fund are offered only in connection with dividend reinvestment and exchanges of Class B shares of certain other Dreyfus funds, or shares of Dreyfus Worldwide Dollar Money Market Fund, Inc. ("Worldwide Dollar Fund") held in an Exchange Account (as defined under "Shareholder Services—Fund Exchanges") as a result of a previous exchange of Class B shares. No new or subsequent investments, including through automatic investment plans, are allowed in Class B shares of the Fund, except through dividend reinvestment or permitted exchanges. If you hold Class B shares and make a subsequent investment in Fund shares, unless you specify the Class of shares you wish to purchase, such subsequent investment will be made in Class A shares and will be subject to any applicable sales load. For Class B shares outstanding on the Effective Date and Class B shares acquired upon reinvestment of dividends, all Class B share attributes, including associated CDSC schedules, conversion to Class A features and Distribution Plan and Shareholder Services Plan fees, will continue in effect.

     Share certificates are issued only upon your written request. No certificates are issued for fractional shares. It is not recommended that the Fund be used as a vehicle for Keogh, IRA or other qualified retirement plans.

     The Fund reserves the right to reject any purchase order. The Fund will not establish an account for a "foreign financial institution," as that term is defined in Department of the Treasury rules implementing section 312 of the USA PATRIOT Act of 2001. Foreign financial



institutions include: foreign banks (including foreign branches of U.S. depository institutions); foreign offices of U.S. securities broker-dealers, futures commission merchants, and mutual funds; non-U.S. entities that, if they were located in the United States, would be securities broker-dealers, futures commission merchants or mutual funds; and non-U.S. entities engaged in the business of currency dealer or exchanger or money transmitter. The Fund will not accept cash, travelers' checks, or money orders as payment for shares.

     When purchasing Fund shares, you must specify which Class is being purchased. Your Service Agent can help you choose the share class that is appropriate for your investment. The decision as to which Class of shares is most beneficial to you depends on a number of factors, including the amount and the intended length of your investment in the Fund. Please refer to the Fund's Prospectus for a further discussion of those factors.

     In many cases, neither the Distributor nor the Transfer Agent will have the information necessary to determine whether a quantity discount or reduced sales charge is applicable to a purchase. Your or your Service Agent must notify the Distributor whenever a quantity discount or reduced sales charge is applicable to a purchase and must provide the Distributor with sufficient information at the time of purchase to verify that each purchase qualifies for the privilege or discount.

     Service Agents may receive different levels of compensation for selling different Classes of shares. Management understands that some Service Agents may impose certain conditions on their clients which are different from those described in the Fund's Prospectus and this Statement of Additional Information, and, to the extent permitted by applicable regulatory authority, may charge their clients direct fees. You should consult your Service Agent in this regard. As discussed under "Management Arrangements – Distributor," Service Agents may receive revenue sharing payments from the Manager or the Distributor. The receipt of such payments could create an incentive for a Service Agent to recommend or sell shares of the Fund instead of other mutual funds where such payments are not received. Please contact your Service Agent for details about any payments it may receive in connection with the sale of Fund shares or the provision of services to the Fund.

     For Class A, Class C and Class I shares of the Fund, the minimum initial investment is $1,000. Subsequent investments must be at least $100. The initial investment must be accompanied by the Account Application. For full-time or part-time employees of the Manager or any of its affiliates or subsidiaries who elect to have a portion of their pay directly deposited into their Fund accounts, the minimum initial investment is $50. Fund shares are offered without regard to the minimum initial investment requirements to Board members of a fund advised by the Manager, including members of the Fund's Board, who elect to have all or a portion of their compensation for serving in that capacity automatically invested in the Fund. Fund shares are offered without regard to the minimum initial or subsequent investment amount requirements to investors purchasing Fund shares through wrap fee accounts or other fee-based programs. The Fund reserves the right to vary further the initial and subsequent investment minimum requirements at any time.

     The minimum initial investment through an exchange for Class B shares of the Fund is $1,000. Subsequent exchanges for Class B shares of the Fund must be at least $500.



     Class A, Class C and Class I shares of the Fund also may be purchased through Dreyfus-Automatic Asset Builder®, Dreyfus Government Direct Deposit Privilege or Dreyfus Payroll Savings Plan, described under "Shareholder Services." These services enable you to make regularly scheduled investments and may provide you with a convenient way to invest for long-term financial goals. You should be aware, however, that periodic investment plans do not guarantee a profit and will not protect an investor against loss in a declining market.

     Fund shares are sold on a continuous basis. Net asset value per share of each Class is determined as of the close of trading on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (usually 4:00 p.m., Eastern time), on each day the New York Stock Exchange is open for regular business. For purposes of determining net asset value, certain options and futures contracts may be valued 15 minutes after the close of trading on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Net asset value per share of each Class is computed by dividing the value of the Fund's net assets represented by such Class (i.e., the value of its assets less liabilities) by the total number of shares of such Class outstanding. For information regarding the methods employed in valuing the Fund's investments, see "Determination of Net Asset Value."

     If an order is received in proper form by the Transfer Agent or other entity authorized to receive orders on behalf of the Fund by the close of trading on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (usually 4:00 p.m., Eastern time) on a regular business day, Fund shares will be purchased at the public offering price determined as of the close of trading on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on that day. Otherwise, Fund shares will be purchased at the public offering price determined as of the close of trading on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on the next regular business day, except where shares are purchased through a dealer as provided below.

     Orders for the purchase of Fund shares received by dealers by the close of trading on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on a regular business day and transmitted to the Distributor or its designee by the close of its business day (usually 5:15 p.m., Eastern time) will be based on the public offering price per share determined as of the close of trading on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on that day. Otherwise, the orders will be based on the next determined public offering price. It is the dealer's responsibility to transmit orders so that they will be received by the Distributor or its designee before the close of its business day. For certain institutions that have entered into agreements with the Distributor, payment for the purchase of Fund shares may be transmitted, and must be received by the Transfer Agent, within three business days after the order is placed. If such payment is not received within three business days after the order is placed, the order may be canceled and the institution could be held liable for resulting fees and/or losses.

     Class A Shares. The public offering price for Class A shares is the net asset value per share of that Class plus a sales load as shown below:

  Total Sales Load*   
  As a % of  As a % of net  Dealers' reallowance as 
  offering price per  asset value per  a % of offering price 
Amount of Transaction  share  share   
Less than $50,000  4.50  4.70  4.25 



  Total Sales Load*   
  As a % of  As a % of net  Dealers' reallowance as 
  offering price per  asset value per  a % of offering price 
Amount of Transaction  share  share   
$50,000 to less than $100,000  4.00  4.20  3.75 
$100,000 to less than $250,000  3.00  3.10  2.75 
$250,000 to less than $500,000  2.50  2.60  2.25 
$500,000 to less than $1,000,000  2.00  2.00  1.75 
 
$1,000,000 or more  -0-  -0-  -0- 
* Due to rounding, the actual sales load you pay may be more or less than that calculated using these percentages.   

     Class A shares purchased without an initial sales charge as part of an investment of $1,000,000 or more will be assessed at the time of redemption a 1% CDSC if redeemed within one year of purchase. The Distributor may pay Service Agents an up-front commission of up to 1% of the net asset value of Class A shares purchased by their clients as part of a $1,000,000 or more investment in Class A shares that are subject to a CDSC. See "Management Arrangements—Distributor."

     The scale of sales loads applies to purchases of Class A shares made by any "purchaser," which term includes an individual and/or spouse purchasing securities for his, her or their own account or for the account of any minor children, or a trustee or other fiduciary purchasing securities for a single trust estate or a single fiduciary account (including a pension, profit-sharing or other employee benefit trust created pursuant to a plan qualified under Section 401 of the Code) although more than one beneficiary is involved; or a group of accounts established by or on behalf of the employees of an employer or affiliated employers pursuant to an employee benefit plan or other program (including accounts established pursuant to Sections 403(b), 408(k), and 457 of the Code); or an organized group which has been in existence for more than six months, provided that it is not organized for the purpose of buying redeemable securities of a registered investment company and provided that the purchases are made through a central administration or a single dealer, or by other means which result in economy of sales effort or expense.

     Set forth below is an example of the method of computing the offering price of the Fund's Class A shares. The example assumes a purchase of Class A shares aggregating less than $50,000 subject to the schedule of sales charges set forth above at a price based upon the net asset value of the Fund's Class A shares on November 30, 2009:

Net Asset Value, per share  $XXX 
Per Share Sales Charge – 4.50%   
of offering price (4.70% of net   
asset value per share)  XXX 
Per Share Offering Price to the   
Public  $XXX 



     Dealers' Reallowance--Class A Shares. The dealer reallowance provided with respect to Class A shares may be changed from time to time but will remain the same for all dealers. The Distributor, at its own expense, may provide additional promotional incentives to dealers that sell shares of funds advised by the Manager, which are sold with a sales load, such as Class A shares. In some instances, these incentives may be offered only to certain dealers who have sold or may sell significant amounts of such shares. See "Management Arrangements—Distributor."

     Class A Shares Offered at Net Asset Value. Full-time employees of Financial Industry Regulatory Authority ("FINRA") member firms and full-time employees of other financial institutions which have entered into an agreement with the Distributor pertaining to the sale of Fund shares (or which otherwise have a brokerage related or clearing arrangement with a FINRA member firm or financial institution with respect to the sale of such shares) may purchase Class A shares for themselves directly or pursuant to an employee benefit plan or other program, or for their spouses or minor children, at net asset value without a sales load, provided they have furnished the Distributor with such information as it may request from time to time in order to verify eligibility for this privilege. This privilege also applies to full-time employees of financial institutions affiliated with FINRA member firms whose full-time employees are eligible to purchase Class A shares at net asset value. In addition, Class A shares are offered at net asset value without a sales load to full-time or part-time employees of the Manager or any of its affiliates or subsidiaries, directors of the Manager, Board members of a fund advised by the Manager, including members of the Fund's Board, or the spouse or minor child of any of the foregoing.

     Class A shares may be purchased at net asset value without a sales load through certain broker-dealers and other financial institutions which have entered into an agreement with the Distributor, which includes a requirement that such shares be sold for the benefit of clients participating in a "wrap account" or a similar program under which such clients pay a fee to such broker-dealer or other financial institution.

     Class A shares also may be purchased at net asset value without a sales load, subject to appropriate documentation, by (i) qualified separate accounts maintained by an insurance company pursuant to the laws of any State or territory of the United States, (ii) a State, county or city or instrumentality thereof, (iii) a charitable organization (as defined in Section 501(c)(3) of the Code) investing $50,000 or more in Fund shares, and (iv) a charitable remainder trust (as defined in Section 501(c)(3) of the Code).

     Class A shares may be purchased at net asset value without a sales load by qualified investors who (i) purchase Class A shares directly through the Distributor, and (ii) have, or whose spouse or minor children have, beneficially owned shares and continuously maintained an open account directly through the Distributor in a Dreyfus-managed fund since on or before February 28, 2006.

     Class A shares may be purchased at net asset value without a sales load with the cash proceeds from an investor's exercise of employment-related stock options, whether invested in the Fund directly or indirectly through an exchange from a Dreyfus-managed money market fund, provided that the proceeds are processed through an entity that has entered into an agreement with the Distributor specifically relating to processing stock options. Upon



establishing the account in the Fund or Dreyfus-managed money market fund, the investor and the investor's spouse or minor children become eligible to purchase Class A shares of the Fund at net asset value, whether or not using the proceeds of the employment-related stock options.

     Class A shares may be purchased at net asset value without a sales load by members of qualified affinity groups who purchase Class A shares directly through the Distributor, provided that the qualified affinity group has entered into an affinity agreement with the Distributor.

     Class B Shares. Class B shares of the Fund are offered only in connection with dividend reinvestment and permitted exchanges of Class B shares of certain other funds. The public offering price for such Class B shares is the net asset value per share of that Class. No initial sales charge is imposed at the time of dividend reinvestment or exchange. A CDSC is imposed on certain redemptions of Class B shares as described in the Fund's Prospectus and in this Statement of Additional Information under "How to Redeem Shares—Contingent Deferred Sales Charge—Class B Shares."

     Approximately six years after the date of purchase, Class B shares automatically will convert to Class A shares, based on the relative net asset values for shares of each such Class. Class B shares of the Fund that have been acquired through the reinvestment of the Fund's dividends and distributions will be converted on a pro rata basis together with other Class B shares, in the proportion that a shareholder's Class B shares converting to Class A shares bears to the shareholder's total Class B shares not acquired through the reinvestment of the Fund's dividends and distributions.

     Class B shares of the Fund acquired by shareholders in exchange for Class B shares originally issued by the Acquired Fund before December 1, 2003 are subject to different CDSC and conversion to Class A schedules. See "How to Redeem Shares—Contingent Deferred Sales Charge—Class B Shares."

     Class C Shares. The public offering price for Class C shares is the net asset value per share of that Class. No initial sales charge is imposed at the time of purchase. A CDSC is imposed, however, on redemptions of Class C shares made within the first year of purchase. See "How to Redeem Shares—Contingent Deferred Sales Charge—Class C Shares."

     Class I Shares. The public offering price for Class I shares is the net asset value per share of that Class.

     Right of Accumulation — Class A Shares. Reduced sales loads apply to any purchase of Class A shares, by you and any related "purchaser" as defined above, where the aggregate investment, including such purchase, is $50,000 or more. If, for example, you previously purchased and still hold shares of the Fund or shares of certain other funds advised by Dreyfus that are subject to a front-end sales load or CDSC, or shares acquired by a previous exchange of such shares (hereinafter referred to as "Eligible Funds"), "or combination thereof, with an aggregate current market value of $40,000 and subsequently purchase Class A shares of the Fund having a current value of $20,000, the sales load applicable to the subsequent purchase would be reduced to 4.0% of the offering price. All present holdings of Eligible Funds may be combined



to determine the current offering price of the aggregate investment in ascertaining the sales load applicable to each subsequent purchase.

     To qualify for reduced sales loads, at the time of purchase you or your Service Agent must notify the Distributor if orders are made by wire, or the Transfer Agent if orders are made by mail. The reduced sales load is subject to confirmation of your holdings through a check of appropriate records.

     Using Federal Funds. The Transfer Agent or the Fund may attempt to notify you upon receipt of checks drawn on banks that are not members of the Federal Reserve System as to the possible delay in conversion into immediately available funds ("Federal Funds") and may attempt to arrange for a better means of transmitting the money. If you are a customer of a Selected Dealer and your order to purchase Fund shares is paid for other than in Federal Funds, the Selected Dealer, acting on your behalf, will complete the conversion into, or itself advance, Federal Funds generally on the business day following receipt of your order. The order is effective only when so converted and received by the Transfer Agent. An order for the purchase of Fund shares placed by you with sufficient Federal Funds or a cash balance in your brokerage account with a Selected Dealer will become effective on the day that the order, including Federal Funds, is received by the Transfer Agent.

     Dreyfus TeleTransfer Privilege. You may purchase Class A, Class C or Class I shares by telephone or online if you have checked the appropriate box and supplied the necessary information on the Account Application or have filed a Shareholder Services Form with the Transfer Agent. The proceeds will be transferred between the bank account designated in one of these documents and your Fund account. Only a bank account maintained in a domestic financial institution which is an Automated Clearing House ("ACH") member may be so designated.

     Dreyfus TeleTransfer purchase orders may be made at any time. If purchase orders are received by 4:00 p.m., Eastern time, on any day the Transfer Agent and the New York Stock Exchange are open for regular business, Fund shares will be purchased at the public offering price determined on that day. If purchase orders are made after 4:00 p.m., Eastern time, on any day the Transfer Agent and the New York Stock Exchange are open for regular business, or made on Saturday, Sunday or any Fund holiday (e.g., when the New York Stock Exchange is not open for business), Fund shares will be purchased at the public offering price determined on the next bank business day following such purchase order. To qualify to use the Dreyfus TeleTransfer Privilege, the initial payment for purchase of Fund shares must be drawn on, and redemption proceeds paid to, the same bank and account as are designated on the Account Application or Shareholder Services Form on file. If the proceeds of a particular redemption are to be sent to an account at any other bank, the request must be in writing and signature-guaranteed. See "How to Redeem Shares—Dreyfus TeleTransfer Privilege."

     Reopening an Account. You may reopen an account with a minimum investment of $100 without filing a new Account Application during the calendar year the account is closed or during the following calendar year, provided the information on the old Account Application is still applicable.



     Converting Shares. Under certain circumstances, Fund shares may be converted from one Class of shares to another Class of shares of the Fund. The aggregate dollar value of the shares of the Class received upon any such conversion will equal the aggregate dollar value of the converted shares on the date of the conversion. An investor whose Fund shares are converted from one Class to another Class of the Fund will not realize taxable gain or loss as a result of the conversion.

DISTRIBUTION PLAN AND SHAREHOLDER SERVICES PLAN

     Class B and Class C shares are subject to a Distribution Plan and Class A, Class B and Class C shares are subject to a Shareholder Services Plan.

     Distribution Plan. Rule 12b-1 (the "Rule") adopted by the SEC under the 1940 Act provides, among other things, that an investment company may bear expenses of distributing its shares only pursuant to a plan adopted in accordance with the Rule. The Fund's Board has adopted such a plan (the "Distribution Plan") with respect to the Fund's Class B and Class C shares, pursuant to which the Fund pays the Distributor for distributing each such Class of shares a fee at the annual rate of 0.50% of the value of the average daily net assets of Class B shares and 0.75% of the value of the average daily net assets of Class C shares. The Distributor may pay one or more Service Agents in respect of advertising, marketing and other distribution services, and determines the amounts, if any, to be paid to Service Agents and the basis on which such payments are made. The Fund's Board believes that there is a reasonable likelihood that the Distribution Plan will benefit the Fund and holders of its Class B and Class C shares.

     A quarterly report of the amounts expended under the Distribution Plan, and the purposes for which such expenditures were incurred, must be made to the Board for its review. In addition, the Distribution Plan provides that it may not be amended to increase materially the costs which holders of Class B or Class C shares may bear for distribution pursuant to the Distribution Plan without the approval of such shareholders and that other material amendments of the Distribution Plan must be approved by the Fund's Board, and by the Board members who are not "interested persons" (as defined in the 1940 Act) of the Fund and have no direct or indirect financial interest in the operation of the Distribution Plan or in any agreements entered into in connection with the Distribution Plan, by vote cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of considering such amendments. The Distribution Plan is subject to annual approval by such vote of the Board cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of voting on the Distribution Plan. As to each of Class B and Class C, the Distribution Plan may be terminated at any time by vote of a majority of the Board members who are not "interested persons" and have no direct or indirect financial interest in the operation of the Distribution Plan or in any agreements entered into in connection with the Distribution Plan or by vote of the holders of a majority of such Class of shares.

     For the fiscal year ended November 30, 2009, the Fund paid the Distributor, with respect to Class B and Class C shares, $_____ and $_____, respectively, pursuant to the Distribution Plan.



     Shareholder Services Plan. The Fund has adopted a Shareholder Services Plan pursuant to which the Fund pays the Distributor for the provision of certain services to the holders of the Fund's Class A, Class B and Class C shares a fee at the annual rate of 0.25% of the value of the average daily net assets of each such Class. The services provided may include personal services relating to shareholder accounts, such as answering shareholder inquiries regarding the Fund and providing reports and other information, and services related to the maintenance of such shareholder accounts. Under the Shareholder Services Plan, the Distributor may make payments to Service Agents in respect of these services.

     A quarterly report of the amounts expended under the Shareholder Services Plan, and the purposes for which such expenditures were incurred, must be made to the Board for its review. In addition, the Shareholder Services Plan provides that material amendments must be approved by the Fund's Board, and by the Board members who are not "interested persons" (as defined in the 1940 Act) of the Fund and have no direct or indirect financial interest in the operation of the Shareholder Services Plan or in any agreements entered into in connection with the Shareholder Services Plan, by vote cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of considering such amendments. The Shareholder Services Plan is subject to annual approval by such vote of the Board cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of voting on the Shareholder Services Plan. As to each Class of shares, the Shareholder Services Plan is terminable at any time by vote of a majority of the Board members who are not "interested persons" and have no direct or indirect financial interest in the operation of the Shareholder Services Plan or in any agreements entered into in connection with the Shareholder Services Plan.

     For the fiscal year ended November 30, 2009, the Fund paid the Distributor, with respect to Class A, Class B and Class C shares, $______, $______ and $______, respectively, pursuant to the Shareholder Services Plan.

HOW TO REDEEM SHARES

     General. If you hold shares of more than one Class of Fund shares, any request for redemption must specify the Class of shares being redeemed. If you fail to specify the Class of shares to be redeemed or if you own fewer shares of the Class than specified to be redeemed, the redemption request may be delayed until the Transfer Agent receives further instructions from you or your Service Agent.

     The Fund ordinarily will make payment for all shares redeemed within seven days after receipt by the Transfer Agent of a redemption request in proper form, except as provided by the rules of the SEC. However, if you have purchased Fund shares by check, by Dreyfus TeleTransfer Privilege or through Dreyfus-Automatic Asset Builder® and subsequently submit a written redemption request to the Transfer Agent, the Fund may delay sending the redemption proceeds for up to eight business days after the purchase of such shares. In addition, the Fund will not honor redemption checks under the Checkwriting Privilege, and will reject requests to redeem shares by wire or telephone, online or pursuant to the Dreyfus TeleTransfer Privilege, for a period of up to eight business days after receipt by the Transfer Agent of the purchase check, the Dreyfus TeleTransfer purchase or the Dreyfus-Automatic Asset Builder® order against which such redemption is requested. These procedures will not apply if your shares were purchased by



wire payment, or if you otherwise have a sufficient collected balance in your account to cover the redemption request. Fund shares may not be redeemed until the Transfer Agent has received your Account Application.

     Contingent Deferred Sales Charge—Class B Shares. A CDSC payable to the Distributor is imposed on any redemption of Class B shares which reduces the current net asset value of your Class B shares to an amount which is lower than the dollar amount of all payments by you for the purchase of Class B shares of the Fund held by you at the time of redemption. No CDSC will be imposed to the extent that the net asset value of the Class B shares of the Fund redeemed does not exceed (i) the current net asset value of Class B shares of the Fund acquired through reinvestment of Fund dividends or capital gain distributions, plus (ii) increases in the net asset value of your Class B shares above the dollar amount of all your payments for the purchase of Class B shares of the Fund held by you at the time of redemption.

     If the aggregate value of Class B shares redeemed has declined below their original cost as a result of the Fund's performance, a CDSC may be applied to the then-current net asset value rather than the purchase price.

     In circumstances where the CDSC is imposed, the amount of the charge will depend on the number of years from the time you purchased the Class B shares until the time of redemption of such shares. Solely for purposes of determining the number of years from the time of any payment for the purchase of Class B shares, all payments during a month will be aggregated and deemed to have been made on the first day of the month.

     The following table sets forth the rates of the CDSC and the conversion to Class A schedule for Class B shares of the Fund, except for Class B shares purchased by shareholders who beneficially owned Class B shares on November 30, 1996, and except for certain Class B shares issued in exchange for shares originally issued by the Acquired Fund described below:

  CDSC as a % of 
Year Since  Amount Invested or 
Purchase Payment  Redemption Proceeds 
Was Made  (whichever is less) 
 
First  4.00 
Second  4.00 
Third  3.00 
Fourth  3.00 
Fifth  2.00 
Sixth  1.00* 

* These Class B shares will automatically convert into Class A shares approximately six years after the date of purchase.

     The following table sets forth the rates of the CDSC and the conversion to Class A schedule for Class B shares of the Fund purchased by shareholders who beneficially owned Class B shares on November 30, 1996:



  CDSC as a % of 
Year Since  Amount Invested or 
Purchase Payment  Redemption Proceeds 
Was Made  (whichever is less) 
 
First  3.00 
Second  3.00 
Third  2.00 
Fourth  2.00 
Fifth  1.00 
Sixth  0.00** 

** These Class B shares will automatically convert into Class A shares approximately six years after the date of purchase.

     The following table sets forth the rates of the CDSC payable to the Acquired Fund's former distributor and the conversion to Class A schedule for Class B shares of the Fund issued in exchange for Class B shares originally issued by the Acquired Fund before December 1, 2003:

  CDSC as a % of 
Year Since  Amount Invested or 
Purchase Payment  Redemption Proceeds 
Was Made  (whichever is less) 
First  5.00 
Second  4.00 
Third  3.00 
Fourth  3.00 
Fifth  2.00 
Sixth  1.00 
Seventh  0.00 
Eighth  0.00*** 

***     

These Class B shares will automatically convert into Class A shares at the end of the calendar quarter that is eight years after the initial purchase of the Class B shares of the Acquired Fund (applies to such Class B shares originally issued by the Acquired Fund before December 1, 2003).

     In determining whether a CDSC is applicable to a redemption, the calculation will be made in a manner that results in the lowest possible rate. It will be assumed that the redemption is made first of amounts representing Class B shares of the Fund acquired pursuant to the reinvestment of Fund dividends and distributions; then of amounts representing the increase in net asset value of Class B shares above the total amount of payments for the purchase of Class B shares made during the preceding six years (five years for shareholders beneficially owning Class B shares on November 30, 1996, or eight years for certain shares issued in exchange for shares originally issued by the Acquired Fund); and finally, of amounts representing the cost of shares held for the longest period.

     For example, assume an investor purchased 100 shares of the Fund at $10 per share for a cost of $1,000. Subsequently, the shareholder acquired five additional Fund shares through the



reinvestment of Fund dividends. During the second year after the purchase the investor decided to redeem $500 of the investment. Assuming at the time of the redemption the net asset value had appreciated to $12 per share, the value of the investor's shares would be $1,260 (105 shares at $12 per share). The CDSC would not be applied to the value of the reinvested dividend shares and the amount which represents appreciation ($260). Therefore, $240 of the $500 redemption proceeds ($500 minus $260) would be charged at a rate of 4% (the applicable rate in the second year after purchase) for a total CDSC of $9.60.

     Contingent Deferred Sales Charge—Class C Shares. A CDSC of 1% payable to the Distributor is imposed on any redemption of Class C shares within one year of the date of purchase. The basis for calculating the payment of any such CDSC will be the method used in calculating the CDSC for Class B shares. See "Contingent Deferred Sales Charge — Class B Shares" above.

     Waiver of CDSC. The CDSC may be waived in connection with (a) redemptions made within one year after the death or disability, as defined in Section 72(m)(7) of the Code, of the shareholder, (b) redemptions by employees participating in qualified or non-qualified employee benefit plans or other programs, (c) redemptions as a result of a combination of any investment company with the Fund by merger, acquisition of assets or otherwise, (d) a distribution following retirement under a tax-deferred retirement plan or upon attaining age 70½ in the case of an IRA or Keogh plan or custodial account pursuant to Section 403(b) of the Code, and (e) redemptions pursuant to the Automatic Withdrawal Plan, as described below. If the Fund's Board determines to discontinue the waiver of the CDSC, the disclosure herein will be revised appropriately. Any Fund shares subject to a CDSC which were purchased prior to the termination of such waiver will have the CDSC waived as provided in the Fund's Prospectus or this Statement of Additional Information at the time of the purchase of such shares.

     To qualify for a waiver of the CDSC, at the time of redemption you or your Service Agent must notify the Distributor. Any such qualification is subject to confirmation of your entitlement.

     Checkwriting Privilege – Class A Only. The Fund provides redemption checks ("Checks") to investors in Class A shares automatically upon opening an account, unless you specifically refuse the Checkwriting Privilege by checking the applicable "No" box on the Account Application. Checks will be sent only to the registered owner(s) of the account and only to the address of record. The Checkwriting Privilege may be established for an existing account by a separate signed Shareholder Services Form. The Account Application or Shareholder Services Form must be manually signed by the registered owner(s). Checks are drawn on your Fund account and may be made payable to the order of any person in an amount of $500 or more. When a Check is presented to the Transfer Agent for payment, the Transfer Agent, as your agent, will cause the Fund to redeem a sufficient number of full and fractional Class A shares in your account to cover the amount of the Check. Dividends are earned until the Check clears. After clearance, a copy of the Check will be returned to you. You generally will be subject to the same rules and regulations that apply to checking accounts, although election of this Privilege creates only a shareholder-transfer agent relationship with the Transfer Agent.



     You should date your Checks with the current date when you write them. Please do not postdate your Checks. If you do, the Transfer Agent will honor, upon presentment, even if presented before the date of the Check, all postdated Checks which are dated within six months of presentment for payment, if they are otherwise in good order.

     Checks are free, but the Transfer Agent will impose a fee for stopping payment of a Check upon your request or if the Transfer Agent cannot honor a Check due to insufficient funds or other valid reason. If the amount of the Check is greater than the value of the Class A shares in your account, the Check will be returned marked insufficient funds. Checks should not be used to close an account.

     The Checkwriting Privilege will be terminated immediately, without notice, with respect to any account which is, or becomes, subject to backup withholding on redemptions. Any Check written on an account which has become subject to backup withholding on redemptions will not be honored by the Transfer Agent.

     Redemption Through a Selected Dealer. If you are a customer of a Selected Dealer, you may make redemption requests to your Selected Dealer. If the Selected Dealer transmits the redemption request so that it is received by the Transfer Agent prior to the close of trading on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (usually 4:00 p.m., Eastern time), the redemption request will be effective on that day. If a redemption request is received by the Transfer Agent after the close of trading on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, the redemption request will be effective on the next business day. It is the responsibility of the Selected Dealer to transmit a request so that it is received in a timely manner. The proceeds of the redemption are credited to your account with the Selected Dealer. See "How to Buy Shares" for a discussion of additional conditions or fees that may be imposed upon redemption.

     In addition, the Distributor or its designee will accept orders from Selected Dealers with which the Distributor has sales agreements for the repurchase of shares held by shareholders. Repurchase orders received by dealers by the close of trading on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on any business day and transmitted to the Distributor or its designee prior to the close of its business day (usually 5:15 p.m., Eastern time) are effected at the price determined as of the close of trading on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on that day. Otherwise, the shares will be redeemed at the next determined net asset value. It is the responsibility of the Selected Dealer to transmit orders on a timely basis. The Selected Dealer may charge the shareholder a fee for executing the order. This repurchase arrangement is discretionary and may be withdrawn at any time.

     Reinvestment Privilege. Upon written request, you may reinvest up to the number of Class A shares you have redeemed, within 45 days of redemption, at the then-prevailing net asset value without a sales load, or reinstate your account for the purpose of exercising Fund Exchanges. Upon reinstatement, if such shares were subject to a CDSC, your account will be credited with an amount equal to the CDSC previously paid upon redemption of the Class A shares reinvested. The Reinvestment Privilege may be exercised only once.

     Wire Redemption Privilege. By using this Privilege, you authorize the Transfer Agent to act on telephone, letter or online redemption instructions from any person representing himself or



herself to be you or a representative of your Service Agent and reasonably believed by the Transfer Agent to be genuine. Ordinarily, the Fund will initiate payment for shares redeemed pursuant to this Privilege on the next business day after receipt by the Transfer Agent of a redemption request in proper form. Redemption proceeds ($1,000 minimum) will be transferred by Federal Reserve wire only to the commercial bank account specified by you on the Account Application or Shareholder Services Form, or to a correspondent bank if your bank is not a member of the Federal Reserve System. Fees ordinarily are imposed by such bank and borne by the investor. Immediate notification by the correspondent bank to your bank is necessary to avoid a delay in crediting the funds to your bank account.

     To change the commercial bank or account designated to receive redemption proceeds, a written request must be sent to the Transfer Agent. This request must be signed by each shareholder, with each signature guaranteed as described below under "Share Certificates; Signatures."

     Dreyfus TeleTransfer Privilege. You may request by telephone or online that redemption proceeds be transferred between your Fund account and your bank account. Only a bank account maintained in a domestic financial institution which is an ACH member may be designated. Redemption proceeds will be on deposit in your account at an ACH member bank ordinarily two business days after receipt of the redemption request. You should be aware that if you have selected the Dreyfus TeleTransfer Privilege, any request for a Dreyfus TeleTransfer transaction will be effected through the ACH system unless more prompt transmittal specifically is requested. See "How to Buy Shares—Dreyfus TeleTransfer Privilege."

     Share Certificates; Signatures. Any certificates representing Fund shares to be redeemed must be submitted with the redemption request. A fee may be imposed to replace lost or stolen certificates, or certificates that were never received. Written redemption requests must be signed by each shareholder, including each holder of a joint account, and each signature must be guaranteed. Signatures on endorsed certificates submitted for redemption also must be guaranteed. The Transfer Agent has adopted standards and procedures pursuant to which signature-guarantees in proper form generally will be accepted from domestic banks, brokers, dealers, credit unions, national securities exchanges, registered securities associations, clearing agencies, and savings associations, as well as from participants in the New York Stock Exchange Medallion Signature Program, the Securities Transfer Agents Medallion Program ("STAMP") and the Stock Exchanges Medallion Program. Guarantees must be signed by an authorized signatory of the guarantor and "Signature-Guaranteed" must appear with the signature. The Transfer Agent may request additional documentation from corporations, executors, administrators, trustees or guardians, and may accept other suitable verification arrangements from foreign investors, such as consular verification.

     Redemption Commitment. The Fund has committed itself to pay in cash all redemption requests by any shareholder of record of the Fund, limited in amount during any 90-day period to the lesser of $250,000 or 1% of the value of the Fund's net assets at the beginning of such period. Such commitment is irrevocable without the prior approval of the SEC. In the case of requests for redemption from the Fund in excess of such amount, the Fund's Board reserves the right to make payments in whole or in part in securities or other assets of the Fund in case of an emergency or any time a cash distribution would impair the liquidity of the Fund to the detriment



of the existing shareholders. In such event, the securities would be valued in the same manner as the Fund's portfolio is valued. If the recipient sells such securities, brokerage charges might be incurred.

     Suspension of Redemptions. The right of redemption may be suspended or the date of payment postponed (a) during any period when the New York Stock Exchange is closed (other than customary weekend and holiday closings), (b) when trading in the markets the Fund ordinarily utilizes is restricted, or when an emergency exists as determined by the SEC so that disposal of the Fund's investments or determination of its net asset value is not reasonably practicable, or (c) for such other periods as the SEC by order may permit to protect the Fund's shareholders.

SHAREHOLDER SERVICES

     Fund Exchanges. Clients of certain Service Agents may purchase, in exchange for shares of the Fund, shares of the same Class of another fund in the Dreyfus Family of Funds, or shares of certain other funds in the Dreyfus Family of Funds, to the extent such shares are offered for sale in such client's state of residence. Shares of such funds purchased by exchange will be purchased on the basis of relative net asset value per share as follows:

A.     

Exchanges for shares of funds offered without a sales load will be made without a sales load.

B.     

Shares of funds purchased without a sales load may be exchanged for shares of other funds sold with a sales load, and the applicable sales load will be deducted.

C.     

Shares of funds purchased with a sales load may be exchanged without a sales load for shares of other funds sold without a sales load.

D.     

Shares of funds purchased with a sales load, shares of funds acquired by a previous exchange from shares purchased with a sales load and additional shares acquired through reinvestment of dividends or distributions of any such funds (collectively referred to herein as "Purchased Shares") may be exchanged for shares of other funds sold with a sales load (referred to herein as "Offered Shares"), but if the sales load applicable to the Offered Shares exceeds the maximum sales load that could have been imposed in connection with the Purchased Shares (at the time the Purchased Shares were acquired), without giving effect to any reduced loads, the difference may be deducted.

E.     

Shares of funds subject to a CDSC that are exchanged for shares of another fund will be subject to the higher applicable CDSC of the two funds, and for purposes of calculating CDSC rates and conversion periods, if any, will be deemed to have been held since the date the shares being exchanged were initially purchased.



     To accomplish an exchange under item D above, you or your Service Agent acting on your behalf must notify the Transfer Agent of your prior ownership of Fund shares and your account number.

     As of the Effective Date, you also may exchange your Class B shares for Class B shares of General Money Market Fund, Inc. (the "General Fund"), a money market fund advised by the Manager. The shares so purchased will be held in a special account created solely for this purpose ("Exchange Account"). Exchanges of shares from an Exchange Account only can be made into Class B shares of funds in the Dreyfus Family of Funds. No CDSC is charged when an investor exchanges into an Exchange Account; however, the applicable CDSC will be imposed when shares are redeemed from an Exchange Account or other applicable fund account. Upon redemption, the applicable CDSC will be calculated taking into account the time such shares were held in the General Fund's Exchange Account. In addition, the time Class B shares are held in the General Fund's Exchange Account will be taken into account for purposes of calculating when such shares convert to Class A shares. If your Class B shares are held in the General Fund's Exchange Account at the time such shares are scheduled to convert to Class A shares, you will receive Class A shares of the General Fund. Prior to the Effective Date, shareholders were permitted to exchange their Class B shares for shares of Worldwide Dollar Fund, and such shares were held in an Exchange Account. Shareholders who held shares of Worldwide Dollar Fund in an Exchange Account on the Effective Date may continue to hold those shares and upon redemption from the Exchange Account or other applicable fund account, the applicable CDSC and conversion to Class A schedule will be calculated, except for Fund shares issued in exchange for shares originally issued by the Acquired Fund, without regard to the time such shares were held in Worldwide Dollar Fund's Exchange Account; for Fund shares issued in exchange for shares originally issued by the Acquired Fund, the applicable CDSC and conversion to Class A schedule will be calculated taking into account the time such shares were held in the Worldwide Dollar Fund's Exchange Account. Exchanges of shares from an Exchange Account in Worldwide Dollar Fund only can be made into Class B shares of funds in the Dreyfus Family of Funds or the General Fund. See "How to Redeem Shares." Redemption proceeds for Exchange Account shares are paid by Federal wire or check only. Exchange Account shares also are eligible for the Dreyfus Auto-Exchange Privilege and the Automatic Withdrawal Plan, as described below.

     To request an exchange, you or your Service Agent acting on your behalf must give exchange instructions to the Transfer Agent in writing, by telephone or online. The ability to issue exchange instructions by telephone or online is given to all Fund shareholders automatically, unless you check the applicable "No" box on the Account Application, indicating that you specifically refuse this privilege. By using this privilege, you authorize the Transfer Agent to act on telephonic and online instructions (including over the Dreyfus Express® voice response telephone system) from any person representing himself or herself to be you, or a representative of your Service Agent, and reasonably believed by the Transfer Agent to be genuine. Exchanges may be subject to limitations as to the amount involved or the number of exchanges permitted. Shares issued in certificate form are not eligible for telephone or online exchange. No fees currently are charged shareholders directly in connection with exchanges, although the Fund reserves the right, upon not less than 60 days' written notice, to charge shareholders a nominal administrative fee in accordance with rules promulgated by the SEC.



     To establish a personal retirement plan by exchange, shares of the fund being exchanged must have a value of at least the minimum initial investment required for the fund into which the exchange is being made.

     During times of drastic economic or market conditions, the Fund may suspend Fund Exchanges temporarily without notice and treat exchange requests based on their separate components -- redemption orders with a simultaneous request to purchase the other fund's shares. In such a case, the redemption request would be processed at the Fund's next determined net asset value but the purchase order would be effective only at the net asset value next determined after the fund being purchased receives the proceeds of the redemption, which may result in the purchase being delayed.

     Dreyfus Auto-Exchange Privilege. Dreyfus Auto-Exchange Privilege permits you to purchase (on a semi-monthly, monthly, quarterly or annual basis), in exchange for shares of the Fund, shares of the same Class of another fund in the Dreyfus Family of Funds, or shares of certain other funds in the Dreyfus Family of Funds, of which you are a shareholder (including, for Class B shares of the Fund, Class B shares of the General Fund held in an Exchange Account). This Privilege is available only for existing accounts. Shares will be exchanged on the basis of relative net asset value as described above under "Fund Exchanges." Enrollment in or modification or cancellation of this Privilege is effective three business days following notification by you. You will be notified if your account falls below the amount designated to be exchanged under this Privilege. In this case, your account will fall to zero unless additional investments are made in excess of the designated amount prior to the next Auto-Exchange transaction.

     Shareholder Services Forms and prospectuses of the other funds may be obtained by calling 1-800-554-4611, or visiting www.dreyfus.com. The Fund reserves the right to reject any exchange request in whole or in part. Shares may be exchanged only between accounts having certain identical identifying designations. The Fund Exchanges service or the Dreyfus Auto-Exchange Privilege may be modified or terminated at any time upon notice to shareholders.

     Dreyfus-Automatic Asset Builder®. Dreyfus-Automatic Asset Builder permits you to purchase Class A, Class C or Class I shares (minimum of $100 and maximum of $150,000 per transaction) at regular intervals selected by you. Fund shares are purchased by transferring funds from the bank account designated by you.

     Dreyfus Government Direct Deposit Privilege. Dreyfus Government Direct Deposit Privilege enables you to purchase Class A, Class C or Class I shares (minimum of $100 and maximum of $50,000 per transaction) by having Federal salary, Social Security, or certain veterans', military or other payments from the U.S. Government automatically deposited into your Fund account.

     Dreyfus Payroll Savings Plan. Dreyfus Payroll Savings Plan permits you to purchase Class A, Class C or Class I shares (minimum of $100 per transaction) automatically on a regular basis. Depending upon your employer's direct deposit program, you may have part or all of your paycheck transferred to your existing Dreyfus account electronically through the ACH system at each pay period. To establish a Dreyfus Payroll Savings Plan account, you must file an



authorization form with your employer's payroll department. It is the sole responsibility of your employer to arrange for transactions under the Dreyfus Payroll Savings Plan.

     Dreyfus Dividend Options. Dreyfus Dividend Sweep allows you to invest automatically your dividends or dividends and capital gain distributions, if any, from Class A, Class C or Class I shares in shares of the same Class of another fund in the Dreyfus Family of Funds, or shares of certain other funds in the Dreyfus Family of Funds, of which you are a shareholder. Shares of other funds purchased pursuant to this privilege will be purchased on the basis of relative net asset value per share as follows:

A. Dividends and distributions paid by a fund may be invested without a sales load in shares of other funds offered without a sales load.

B. Dividends and distributions paid by a fund that does not charge a sales load may be invested in shares of other funds sold with a sales load, and the applicable sales load will be deducted.

C. Dividends and distributions paid by a fund that charges a sales load may be invested in shares of other funds sold with a sales load (referred to herein as "Offered Shares"), but if the sales load applicable to the Offered Shares exceeds the maximum sales load charged by the fund from which dividends or distributions are being swept (without giving effect to any reduced loads), the difference may be deducted.

D. Dividends and distributions paid by a fund may be invested in the shares of other funds that impose a CDSC and the applicable CDSC, if any, will be imposed upon redemption of such shares.

     Dreyfus Dividend ACH permits you to transfer electronically dividends or dividends and capital gain distributions, if any, from the Fund to a designated bank account. Only an account maintained at a domestic financial institution which is an ACH member may be so designated. Banks may charge a fee for this service.

     Automatic Withdrawal Plan. The Automatic Withdrawal Plan permits you to request withdrawal of a specified dollar amount (minimum of $50) on either a monthly or quarterly basis if you have a $5,000 minimum account. Withdrawal payments are the proceeds from sales of Fund shares, not the yield on the shares. If withdrawal payments exceed reinvested dividends and distributions, your shares will be reduced and eventually may be depleted. The Automatic Withdrawal Plan may be established by filing an Automatic Withdrawal Plan application with the Transfer Agent or by oral request from any of the authorized signatories on the account by calling 1-800-554-4611. The Automatic Withdrawal Plan may be terminated at any time by you, the Fund or the Transfer Agent. Shares for which certificates have been issued may not be redeemed through the Automatic Withdrawal Plan.

     No CDSC with respect to Class B shares (including Class B shares held in an Exchange Account) or Class C shares will be imposed on withdrawals made under the Automatic Withdrawal Plan, provided that any amount withdrawn under the plan does not exceed on an annual basis 12% of the greater of (1) the account value at the time of the first withdrawal under



the Automatic Withdrawal Plan, or (2) the account value at the time of the subsequent withdrawal. Withdrawals with respect to Class B or Class C shares under the Automatic Withdrawal Plan that exceed such amounts will be subject to a CDSC. Withdrawals of Class A shares subject to a CDSC under the Automatic Withdrawal Plan will be subject to any applicable CDSC. Purchases of additional Class A shares where the sales load is imposed concurrently with withdrawals of Class A shares generally are undesirable.

     Letter of Intent--Class A Shares. By signing a Letter of Intent form, you become eligible for the reduced sales load on purchases of Class A shares based on the total number of shares of Eligible Funds purchased by you and any related "purchaser" (as defined above) in a 13-month period pursuant to the terms and conditions set forth in the Letter of Intent. Shares of any Eligible Fund purchased within 90 days prior to the submission of the Letter of Intent may be used to equal or exceed the amount specified in the Letter of Intent. A minimum initial purchase of $5,000 is required. You can obtain a Letter of Intent form by calling 1-800-554-4611.

     Each purchase you make during the 13-month period (which begins on the date you submit the Letter of Intent) will be at the public offering price applicable to a single transaction of the aggregate dollar amount you select in the Letter of Intent. The Transfer Agent will hold in escrow 5% of the amount indicated in the Letter of Intent, which may be used for payment of a higher sales load if you do not purchase the full amount indicated in the Letter of Intent. When you fulfill the terms of the Letter of Intent by purchasing the specified amount, the escrowed amount will be released and additional shares representing such amount credited to your account. If your purchases meet the total minimum investment amount specified in the Letter of Intent within the 13-month period, an adjustment will be made at the conclusion of the 13-month period to reflect any reduced sales load applicable to shares purchased during the 90-day period prior to submission of the Letter of Intent. If your purchases qualify for a further sales load reduction, the sales load will be adjusted to reflect your total purchase at the end of 13 months. If total purchases are less than the amount specified, the offering price of the shares you purchased (including shares representing the escrowed amount) during the 13-month period will be adjusted to reflect the sales load applicable to the aggregate purchases you actually made (which will reduce the number of shares in your account), unless you have redeemed the shares in your account, in which case the Transfer Agent, as attorney-in-fact pursuant to the terms of the Letter of Intent, will redeem an appropriate number of Class A shares of the Fund held in escrow to realize the difference between the sales load actually paid and the sales load applicable to the aggregate purchases actually made and any remaining shares will be credited to your account. Signing a Letter of Intent does not bind you to purchase, or the Fund to sell, the full amount indicated at the sales load in effect at the time of signing, but you must complete the intended purchase to obtain the reduced sales load. At the time you purchase Class A shares, you must indicate your intention to do so under a Letter of Intent. Purchases pursuant to a Letter of Intent will be made at the then-current net asset value plus the applicable sales load in effect at the time such Letter of Intent was submitted.

DETERMINATION OF NET ASSET VALUE

     Valuation of Portfolio Securities. The Fund's investments are valued each business day by an independent pricing service (the "Service") approved by the Fund's Board. When, in the



judgment of the Service, quoted bid prices for investments are readily available and are representative of the bid side of the market, these investments are valued at the mean between the quoted bid prices (as obtained by the Service from dealers in such securities) and asked prices (as calculated by the Service based upon its evaluation of the market for such securities). The value of other investments is determined by the Service based on methods which include consideration of: yields or prices of municipal bonds of comparable quality, coupon, maturity and type; indications as to values from dealers; and general market conditions. The Service may employ electronic data processing techniques and/or a matrix system to determine valuations. The Service's procedures are reviewed under the general supervision of the Fund's Board. If valuations for investments (received from the Service or otherwise) are not readily available, or are determined not to reflect accurately fair value, the Fund may value those investments at fair value as determined in accordance with the procedures approved by the Fund's Board. Fair value of investments may be done by the Fund's Board, its pricing committee or its valuation committee in good faith using such information deemed appropriate under the circumstances. The factors that may be considered in fair valuing a security include fundamental analytical data, the nature and duration of restrictions on disposition, an evaluation of the forces that influence the market in which the securities are purchased or sold, and public trading of similar securities of the issuer or comparable issuers. Using fair value to price investments may result in a value that is different from a security's most recent price and from prices used by other mutual funds to calculate their net asset values. Expenses and fees, including the management fee (reduced by the expense limitation, if any) and fees pursuant to the Shareholder Services Plan, with respect to Class A, Class B and Class C only, and the Distribution Plan, with respect to the Class B and Class C only, are accrued daily and are taken into account for the purpose of determining the net asset value of the relevant Class of shares. Because of the differences in operating expenses incurred by each Class, the per share net asset value of each Class will differ.

     New York Stock Exchange Closings. The holidays (as observed) on which the New York Stock Exchange is closed currently are: New Year's Day, Martin Luther King Jr. Day, Presidents' Day, Good Friday, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving and Christmas.

DIVIDENDS, DISTRIBUTIONS AND TAXES

     Management believes that the Fund has qualified for treatment as a "regulated investment company" under the Code for the fiscal year ended November 30, 2008. The Fund intends to continue to so qualify if such qualification is in the best interests of its shareholders. As a regulated investment company, the Fund will pay no Federal income tax on net investment income and net realized capital gains to the extent that such income and gains are distributed to shareholders in accordance with applicable provisions of the Code. To qualify as a regulated investment company, the Fund must distribute to its shareholders at least 90% of its net income (consisting of net investment income from tax exempt obligations and taxable obligations, if any, and net short-term capital gains), and must meet certain asset diversification and other requirements. If the Fund does not qualify as a regulated investment company, it will be treated for tax purposes as an ordinary corporation subject to Federal income tax. The term "regulated investment company" does not imply the supervision of management or investment practices or policies by any government agency.



     The Fund ordinarily declares dividends from its net investment income on each day the New York Stock Exchange is open for regular business. Fund shares begin earning income dividends on the day immediately available funds ("Federal Funds") are received by the Transfer Agent. If a purchase order is not accompanied by remittance in Federal Funds, there may be a delay between the time the purchase order becomes effective and the time the shares purchased start earning dividends. If your payment is not made in Federal Funds, it must be converted into Federal Funds. This usually occurs within one business day of receipt of a bank wire and within two business days of receipt of a check drawn on a member bank of the Federal Reserve System. Checks drawn on banks which are not members of the Federal Reserve System may take considerably longer to convert into Federal Funds. Dividends usually are paid on the last calendar day of each month and are automatically reinvested in additional Fund shares at net asset value without a sales load or, at your option, paid in cash. The Fund's earnings for Saturdays, Sundays and holidays are declared as dividends on the preceding business day. If you redeem all shares in your account at any time during the month, all dividends to which you are entitled will be paid to you along with the proceeds of the redemption. If you are an omnibus accountholder and indicate in a partial redemption request that a portion of any accrued dividends to which such account is entitled belongs to an underlying accountholder who has redeemed all shares in his or her account, such portion of the accrued dividends will be paid to you along with the proceeds of the redemption. Distributions from net realized securities gains, if any, generally are declared and paid once a year, but the Fund may make distributions on a more frequent basis to comply with the distribution requirements of the Code, in all events in a manner consistent with the provisions of the 1940 Act.

     If you elect to receive dividends and distributions in cash, and your dividend or distribution check is returned to the Fund as undeliverable or remains uncashed for six months, the Fund reserves the right to reinvest such dividends or distributions and all future dividends and distributions payable to you in additional Fund shares at net asset value. No interest will accrue on amounts represented by uncashed distribution or redemption checks.

     Any dividend or distribution paid shortly after an investor's purchase of Fund shares may have the effect of reducing the aggregate net asset value of such shares below the cost of the investment. Such a distribution would be a return of capital in an economic sense, although taxable as stated in the Fund's Prospectus. In addition, the Code provides that if a shareholder holds Fund shares for six months or less and has received an exempt-interest dividend with respect to such shares, any loss incurred on the sale of such shares will be disallowed to the extent of the exempt-interest dividend received.

     If, at the close of each quarter of its taxable year, at least 50% of the value of the Fund's total assets consists of Federal tax exempt obligations, the Fund may designate and pay Federal exempt-interest dividends from interest earned on all such tax exempt obligations. Such exempt-interest dividends may be excluded by shareholders of the Fund from their gross income for Federal income tax purposes. Dividends derived from Taxable Investments, together with distributions from any net realized short-term securities gains, generally are taxable as ordinary income for Federal income tax purposes whether or not reinvested. Distributions from net realized long-term securities gains generally are taxable as long-term capital gains to a



shareholder who is a citizen or resident of the United States, whether or not reinvested and regardless of the length of time the shareholder has held his or her shares.

     Ordinarily, gains and losses realized from portfolio transactions will be treated as capital gain or loss. However, all or a portion of the gain realized from the disposition of certain market discount bonds will be treated as ordinary income. In addition, all or a portion of the gain realized from engaging in "conversion transactions" (generally including certain transactions designed to convert ordinary income into capital gain) may be treated as ordinary income.

     Gain or loss, if any, realized by the Fund from certain financial futures and options transactions ("Section 1256 contracts") will be treated as 60% long-term capital gain or loss and 40% short-term capital gain or loss. Gain or loss will arise upon exercise or lapse of Section 1256 contracts as well as from closing transactions. In addition, any Section 1256 contracts remaining unexercised at the end of the Fund's taxable year will be treated as sold for their then fair market value, resulting in additional gain or loss to the Fund characterized as described above.

     Offsetting positions held by the Fund involving certain futures and options transactions may constitute "straddles." To the extent the straddle rules apply to positions established by the Fund, losses realized by the Fund may be deferred to the extent of unrealized gain in the offsetting position. In addition, short-term capital loss on straddle positions may be recharacterized as long-term capital loss, and long-term capital gains on straddle positions may be treated as short-term capital gains or ordinary income. Certain of the straddle positions held by the Fund may constitute "mixed straddles." The Fund may make one or more elections with respect to the treatment of "mixed straddles," resulting in different tax consequences. In certain circumstances, the provisions governing the tax treatment of straddles override or modify certain of the provisions discussed above.

     If the Fund either (1) holds an appreciated financial position with respect to stock, certain debt obligations, or partnership interests ("appreciated financial positions") and then enters into a short sale, futures, forward, or offsetting notional principal contract (collectively, a "Contract") with respect to the same or substantially identical property or (2) holds an appreciated financial position that is a Contract and then acquires property that is the same as, or substantially identical to, the underlying property, the Fund generally will be taxed as if the appreciated financial position were sold at its fair market value on the date the Fund enters into the financial position or acquires the property, respectively.

     Investment by the Fund in securities issued or acquired at a discount, or providing for deferred interest or for payment of interest in the form of additional obligations, such as zero coupon, pay-in-kind or step-up securities, could, under special tax rules, affect the amount, timing and character of distributions to shareholders by causing the Fund to recognize income prior to the receipt of cash payment. For example, the Fund could be required to take into account annually a portion of the discount (or deemed discount) at which such securities were issued and to distribute such portion in order to maintain its qualification as a regulated investment company. In such case, the Fund may have to dispose of securities which it might otherwise have continued to hold in order to generate cash to satisfy these distribution requirements.



     Federal regulations require that you provide a certified taxpayer identification number ("TIN") upon opening or reopening an account. See the Account Application for further information concerning this requirement. Failure to furnish a certified TIN to the Fund could subject you to a $50 penalty imposed by the Internal Revenue Service.

PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS

     General. The Manager assumes general supervision over the placement of securities purchase and sale orders on behalf of the funds it manages. In cases where the Manager or fund employs a sub-adviser, the sub-adviser, under the supervision of the Manager, places orders on behalf of the applicable fund(s) for the purchase and sale of portfolio securities.

     Certain funds are managed by dual employees of the Manager and an affiliated entity in the BNY Mellon organization. Funds managed by dual employees use the research and trading facilities, and are subject to the internal policies and procedures, of the affiliated entity. In this regard, the Manager places orders on behalf of those funds for the purchase and sale of securities through the trading desk of the affiliated entity, applying the written trade allocation procedures of such affiliate.

     The Manager (and where applicable, a sub-adviser or Dreyfus affiliate) generally has the authority to select brokers (for equity securities) or dealers (for fixed income securities) and the commission rates or spreads to be paid. Allocation of brokerage transactions, including their frequency, is made in the best judgment of the Manager (and where applicable, a sub-adviser or Dreyfus affiliate) and in a manner deemed fair and reasonable to shareholders. The primary consideration in placing portfolio transactions is prompt execution of orders at the most favorable net price. In choosing brokers or dealers, the Manager (and where applicable, a sub-adviser or Dreyfus affiliate) evaluates the ability of the broker or dealer to execute the particular transaction (taking into account the market for the security and the size of the order) at the best combination of price and quality of execution.

     In general, brokers or dealers involved in the execution of portfolio transactions on behalf of a fund are selected on the basis of their professional capability and the value and quality of their services. The Manager (and where applicable, a sub-adviser or Dreyfus affiliate) attempts to obtain best execution for the funds by choosing brokers or dealers to execute transactions based on a variety of factors, which may include, but are not limited to, the following: (i) price; (ii) liquidity; (iii) the nature and character of the relevant market for the security to be purchased or sold; (iv) the measured quality and efficiency of the broker's or dealer's execution; (v) the broker's or dealer's willingness to commit capital; (vi) the reliability of the broker or dealer in trade settlement and clearance; (vii) the level of counter-party risk (i.e., the broker's or dealer's financial condition); (viii) the commission rate or the spread; (ix) the value of research provided; (x) the availability of electronic trade entry and reporting links; and (xi) the size and type of order (e.g., foreign or domestic security, large block, illiquid security). In selecting brokers or dealers no factor is necessarily determinative; however, at various times and for various reasons, certain factors will be more important than others in determining which broker or dealer to use. Seeking to obtain best execution for all trades takes precedence over all other considerations.



     With respect to the receipt of research, the brokers or dealers selected may include those that supplement the Manager's (and where applicable, a sub-adviser's or Dreyfus affiliate's) research facilities with statistical data, investment information, economic facts and opinions. Such information may be useful to the Manager (and where applicable, a sub-adviser or Dreyfus affiliate) in serving funds or accounts that it advises and, conversely, supplemental information obtained by the placement of business of other clients may be useful to the Manager (and where applicable, a sub-adviser or Dreyfus affiliate) in carrying out its obligations to the funds. Information so received is in addition to, and not in lieu of, services required to be performed by the Manager (and where applicable, a sub-adviser or Dreyfus affiliate), and the Manager's (and where applicable, a sub-adviser's or Dreyfus affiliate's) fees are not reduced as a consequence of the receipt of such supplemental information. Although the receipt of such research services does not reduce the Manager's (and where applicable, a sub-adviser's or Dreyfus affiliate's) normal independent research activities, it enables it to avoid the additional expenses that might otherwise be incurred if it were to attempt to develop comparable information through its own staff.

     Under the Manager's (and where applicable, a sub-adviser's or Dreyfus affiliate's) procedures, portfolio managers and their corresponding trading desks may seek to aggregate (or "bunch") orders that are placed or received concurrently for more than one fund or account. In some cases, this policy may adversely affect the price paid or received by a fund or an account, or the size of the position obtained or liquidated. As noted above, certain brokers or dealers may be selected because of their ability to handle special executions such as those involving large block trades or broad distributions, provided that the primary consideration of best execution is met. Generally, when trades are aggregated, each fund or account within the block will receive the same price and commission. However, random allocations of aggregate transactions may be made to minimize custodial transaction costs. In addition, at the close of the trading day, when reasonable and practicable, the completed securities of partially filled orders will generally be allocated to each participating fund and account in the proportion that each order bears to the total of all orders (subject to rounding to "round lot" amounts).

     Portfolio turnover may vary from year to year as well as within a year. In periods in which extraordinary market conditions prevail, the Manager (and where applicable, a sub-adviser or Dreyfus affiliate) will not be deterred from changing a fund's investment strategy as rapidly as needed, in which case higher turnover rates can be anticipated which would result in greater brokerage expenses. The overall reasonableness of brokerage commissions paid is evaluated by the Manager (and where applicable, a sub-adviser or Dreyfus affiliate) based upon its knowledge of available information as to the general level of commissions paid by other institutional investors for comparable services. Higher portfolio turnover rates usually generate additional brokerage commissions and transaction costs and any short-term gains realized from these transactions are taxable to shareholders as ordinary income.

     To the extent that a fund invests in foreign securities, certain of a fund’s transactions in those securities may not benefit from the negotiated commission rates available to a fund for transactions in securities of domestic issuers. For funds that permit foreign exchange transactions, such transactions are made with banks or institutions in the interbank market at prices reflecting a mark-up or mark-down and/or commission.



     The Manager (and where applicable, a sub-adviser or Dreyfus affiliate) may deem it appropriate for one of its accounts to sell a security while another of its accounts is purchasing the same security. Under such circumstances, the Manager (and where applicable, a sub-adviser or Dreyfus affiliate) may arrange to have the purchase and sale transactions effected directly between its accounts ("cross transactions"). Cross transactions will be effected in accordance with procedures adopted pursuant to Rule 17a-7 under the 1940 Act.

     Portfolio securities ordinarily are purchased from and sold to parties acting either as principal or agent. Newly-issued securities ordinarily are purchased directly from the issuer or from an underwriter; other purchases and sales usually are placed with those dealers from which it appears that the best price or execution will be obtained. Usually no brokerage commissions, as such, are paid by the fund for such purchases and sales, although the price paid usually includes an undisclosed compensation to the dealer acting as agent. The prices paid to underwriters of newly-issued securities usually include a concession paid by the issuer to the underwriter, and purchases of after-market securities from dealers ordinarily are executed at a price between the bid and asked price.

     When transactions are executed in the over-the-counter market (i.e., with dealers), the Manager (and where applicable, a sub-adviser or Dreyfus affiliate) will typically deal with the primary market makers unless a more favorable price or execution otherwise is obtainable. No brokerage commissions have been paid by the Fund to date.

     The Fund contemplates that, consistent with the policy of seeking best price and execution, brokerage transactions may be conducted through affiliates of the Manager. The Board has adopted procedures in conformity with Rule 17e-1 under the 1940 Act to ensure that all brokerage commissions paid to affiliates of the Manager are reasonable and fair.

     No brokerage commissions were paid by the Fund for the fiscal years ended November 30, 2007, 2008 and 2009.

     Disclosure of Portfolio Holdings. It is the policy of Dreyfus to protect the confidentiality of fund portfolio holdings and prevent the selective disclosure of non-public information about such holdings. Each fund, or its duly authorized service providers, publicly discloses its portfolio holdings in accordance with regulatory requirements, such as periodic portfolio disclosure in filings with the SEC. Each non-money market fund, or its duly authorized service providers, may publicly disclose its complete schedule of portfolio holdings at month-end, with a one-month lag, on the Dreyfus website at www.dreyfus.com. In addition, fifteen days following the end of each calendar quarter, each non-money market fund, or its duly authorized service providers, may publicly disclose on the website its complete schedule of portfolio holdings as of the end of such quarter. Each money market fund will disclose daily, on www.dreyfus.com, the fund's complete schedule of holdings as of the end of the previous business day. The schedule of holdings will remain on the website until the fund files its Form N-Q or Form N-CSR for the period that includes the date of the posted holdings.

     If a fund's portfolio holdings are released pursuant to an ongoing arrangement with any party, such fund must have a legitimate business purpose for doing so, and neither the fund, nor Dreyfus or its affiliates, may receive any compensation in connection with an arrangement to



make available information about the fund's portfolio holdings. Funds may distribute portfolio holdings to mutual fund evaluation services such as Standard & Poor's, Morningstar or Lipper Analytical Services; due diligence departments of broker-dealers and wirehouses that regularly analyze the portfolio holdings of mutual funds before their public disclosure; and broker-dealers that may be used by the fund, for the purpose of efficient trading and receipt of relevant research, provided that: (a) the recipient does not distribute the portfolio holdings to persons who are likely to use the information for purposes of purchasing or selling fund shares or fund portfolio holdings before the portfolio holdings become public information; and (b) the recipient signs a written confidentiality agreement.

     Funds may also disclose any and all portfolio holdings information to their service providers and others who generally need access to such information in the performance of their contractual duties and responsibilities and are subject to duties of confidentiality, including a duty not to trade on non-public information, imposed by law and/or contract. These service providers include the fund's custodian, independent registered public accounting firm, investment adviser, administrator, and each of their respective affiliates and advisers.

     Disclosure of portfolio holdings may be authorized only by the fund's Chief Compliance Officer, and any exceptions to this policy are reported quarterly to the fund's Board.

INFORMATION ABOUT THE FUND

     Each Fund share has one vote and, when issued and paid for in accordance with the terms of the offering, is fully paid and non-assessable. Shares have no preemptive or subscription rights and are freely transferable.

     Unless otherwise required by the 1940 Act, ordinarily it will not be necessary for the Fund to hold annual meetings of shareholders. As a result, Fund shareholders may not consider each year the election of Board members or the appointment of auditors. However, the holders of at least 10% of the shares outstanding and entitled to vote may require the Fund to hold a special meeting of shareholders for purposes of removing a Board member from office. Fund shareholders may remove a Board member by the affirmative vote of two-thirds of the Fund's outstanding voting shares. In addition, the Board will call a meeting of shareholders for the purpose of electing Board members if, at any time, less than a majority of the Board members then holding office have been elected by shareholders.

     The Fund is organized as an unincorporated business trust under the laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Under Massachusetts law, shareholders could, under certain circumstances, be held personally liable for the obligations of the Fund. However, the Fund's Agreement and Declaration of Trust (the "Trust Agreement") disclaims shareholder liability for acts or obligations of the Fund and requires that notice of such disclaimer be given in each agreement, obligation or instrument entered into or executed by the Fund or a Trustee. The Trust Agreement provides for indemnification from the Fund's property for all losses and expenses of any shareholder held personally liable for the obligations of the Fund. Thus, the risk of a shareholder incurring financial loss on account of shareholder liability is limited to circumstances in which the Fund itself would be unable to meet its obligations, a possibility



which management believes is remote. Upon payment of any liability incurred by the Fund, the shareholder paying such liability will be entitled to reimbursement from the general assets of the Fund. The Fund intends to conduct its operations in such a way so as to avoid, as far as possible, ultimate liability of the shareholders for liabilities of the Fund.

     The Fund is intended to be a long-term investment vehicle and is not designed to provide investors with a means of speculating on short-term market movements. A pattern of frequent purchases and exchanges can be disruptive to efficient portfolio management and, consequently, can be detrimental to the Fund's performance and its shareholders. If Fund management determines that an investor is following an abusive investment strategy, it may reject any purchase request, or terminate the investor's exchange privilege, with or without prior notice. Such investors also may be barred from purchasing shares of other funds in the Dreyfus Family of Funds. Accounts under common ownership or control may be considered as one account for purposes of determining a pattern of excessive or abusive trading. In addition, the Fund may refuse or restrict purchase or exchange requests for Fund shares by any person or group if, in the judgment of the Fund's management, the Fund would be unable to invest the money effectively in accordance with its investment objective and policies or could otherwise be adversely affected or if the Fund receives or anticipates receiving simultaneous orders that may significantly affect the Fund. If an exchange request is refused, the Fund will take no other action with respect to the Fund shares until it receives further instructions from the investor. While the Fund will take reasonable steps to prevent excessive short term trading deemed to be harmful to the Fund, it may not be able to identify excessive trading conducted through certain financial intermediaries or omnibus accounts.

     Effective December 1, 2008, the Fund changed its name from Dreyfus Premier New York AMT-Free Municipal Bond Fund to its current name. On December 15, 2008, the Fund commenced offering Class I shares.

The Fund sends annual and semi-annual financial statements to all its shareholders.

     The following shareholders are known by the Fund to own of record 5% or more of the indicated Class of the Fund's outstanding voting securities as of March __, 2010:

[______]  Class A – ___% 
  Class B – ___% 
  Class C – ___% 
 
[______]  Class A – ___% 
  Class B – ___% 
  Class C – ___% 
 
[______]  Class A – ___% 
  Class B – ___% 
  Class C – ___% 
 
[______]  Class B – ___% 



  Class C – ___% 
[______]  Class B – ___% 
  Class C – ___% 
[______]  Class C – ___% 
[______]  Class I – ___% 

     A shareholder who beneficially owns, directly or indirectly, more than 25% of the Fund's voting securities may be deemed a "control person" (as defined in the 1940 Act) of the Fund.

COUNSEL AND INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

     ______________, as counsel for the Fund, has rendered its opinion as to certain legal matters regarding the due authorization and valid issuance of the shares being sold pursuant to the Fund's Prospectus.

     ______________, an independent registered public accounting firm, has been selected to serve as the independent registered public accounting firm for the Fund.



APPENDIX A

RISK FACTORS—INVESTING IN NEW YORK MUNICIPAL BONDS

     The following information constitutes only a brief summary, does not purport to be a complete description, and is based primarily on information drawn from the Annual Information Statement of the State of New York (the "State") and any updates available as of the date of this Statement of Additional Information. While the Fund has not independently verified this information, it has no reason to believe that such information is not correct in all material respects.

[Economic Trends

     U.S. Economy. Since the end of October 2008, evidence has mounted that the U.S. recession that began in December 2007 has deepened and the advance toward global recession has accelerated. The deleveraging process in the housing and credit markets has destroyed trillions of dollars of wealth, resulting in what may become the most severe economic contraction since the early 1980s and possibly the Great Depression. In spite of a massive government effort to restore the domestic banking system, and similar efforts around the world, the global economy's downward momentum continues unabated. Real gross domestic product ("GDP") is now projected to decline for four consecutive quarters, starting in the third quarter of 2008, not seen since the recession of the mid-1970s. The U.S. economy, as measured by growth in real GDP, is now projected to contract by 1.4% in 2009, following growth of 1.2% in 2008.

     The housing market has still failed to find a bottom, with housing starts falling to unprecedented postwar lows and home prices continuing to fall. Declining employment and wealth, combined with unfavorable credit market conditions, continue to put downward pressure on household spending. On the positive side, the recent decline in energy prices has increased the purchasing power of household incomes, while at the same time reducing inflation expectations and increasing the Federal Reserve's policy options. But this favorable trend is expected only to cushion the impact of a falling labor market and a slow-recovering financial system. Consequently, real consumption is projected to decline.

     Labor market conditions also have deteriorated, with the unemployment rate exceeding 6% in August and September 2008. Job losses are expected to become more severe going forward, further weakening income growth and putting more downward pressure on consumer spending. With the accelerated loss of jobs projected for 2009, wage growth is also expected to fall. The New York Division of the Budget ("DOB") projects that wages will actually fall in both the fourth quarter of 2008 and the first quarter of 2009, owing in part to weak bonus performance anticipated nationwide for these quarters. The substantial decline in wage growth is expected to reduce personal income growth from 3.8% in 2008 to 1.8% in 2009.

     Though there have been signs that global efforts to restore confidence in the banking system may be working, their impact on the real economy may not become visible for some time. Changes in monetary conditions are generally believed to affect the economy with a lag of 9 to 18 months. As a result, DOB projects relatively weak growth in both real household consumption and private sector investment through the end of 2009. DOB has revised projected



inflation, as measured by growth in the Consumer Price Index, to 0.1% for 2009, following 3.9% for 2008. Business investment is now expected to contract for four consecutive quarters starting in the fourth quarter of 2008. Greater cutbacks by private sector businesses also imply a weaker labor market than previously anticipated. Acceleration in the pace of job losses is expected to result in a peak-to-trough loss of 1.7 million jobs nationally. The U.S. unemployment rate is expected to average 6.7% in 2009, following 5.7% in 2008.

     There is considerable risk to the DOB outlook for the national economy. Household spending is under pressure from several sources. Consequently, should either the labor market, equity market, or housing market prove to be weaker than projected, greater declines in real consumer spending could ensue, implying a longer and deeper recession than currently forecasted. In addition, if the recent downward trend in energy prices should reverse course, real spending growth could fall further below expectations. A weaker global economy could also depress economic growth more than projected, while the failure of yet another major financial institution could unwind the progress that has been made in the defrosting of credit markets, deepening the current downturn. Alternatively, if a future government stimulus package should successfully induce consumers to spend more, economic growth could be stronger than expected. In addition, if credit markets should thaw more quickly than anticipated, or housing and equity markets recover more quickly than projected, economic activity may also exceed expectations. Finally, if energy prices should fall even more than expected, effectively increasing real household income, consumer spending could spur a quicker economic recovery than projected.

     State Economy. The financial market terrain now looks very different than it looked in the Summer of 2008.. With the financial markets at the center of the economic downturn, the New York State economy stands to be hit hard by the current recession. Financial industry consolidation is likely to have grave implications for financial sector employment, particularly in New York City. Layoffs from the State's financial services sector are now expected to total approximately 60,000 as strained financial institutions seek to cut costs and newly merged banks seek to reduce duplication of services. These projected losses are approximately double those that occurred in the wake of September 11th.

     But the current downturn in the State economy will hardly be restricted to Wall Street. The State's downturn is now expected to be much more broad-based, with private sector job losses surpassing 180,000 and declines anticipated for all major industrial sectors except for health and education. The loss of manufacturing jobs is expected to accelerate going forward, particularly in light of weakening auto sales. The State's real estate market will continue to weaken in 2009, with office vacancy rates expected to rise due to falling employment, tight credit market conditions, and new construction coming online. In addition, a weak global economy is expected to negatively impact the State's tourism industry, with the leisure and hospitality industry in New York City already beginning to see evidence of a slowdown. State employment is now expected to fall 1.9% for 2009, with private sector jobs projected to fall 2.2%, following growth of 0.3% for both total and private for 2008. DOB projects a decline in total State wages of 4.1%, largely driven by a decline of 48% in bonus payments of the finance and insurance industry, following an estimated increase of 1.1% for 2008. Declining employment and bonuses have negative implications for overall income growth as well. Growth



in total New York personal income for 2009 has been revised down to a decline of 1.6%, following growth of 2.3% for 2008.

     All of the risks to the forecast for the national economy apply to the State forecast as well, although equity market volatility and the current level of uncertainty surrounding global credit markets pose a particularly large degree of uncertainty for New York. If the current financial market crisis is sufficiently prolonged, the impact on State income and employment could be even more severe. Similarly, a prolonged global slowdown could result in larger declines in tourism and put additional pressure on the real estate market, particularly in New York City. In contrast, a quicker recovery of the national and global economies would imply a shorter downturn for New York.

     The City of New York. The fiscal demands on the State may be affected by the fiscal health of New York City, which relies in part on State aid to balance its budget and meet its cash requirements. The State's finances also may be affected by the ability of the City, and certain entities issuing debt for the benefit of the City, to market their securities successfully in the public credit markets. For its normal operations, the City depends on aid from the State both to enable the City to balance its budget and to meet its cash requirements. There can be no assurance that there will not be reductions in State aid to the City from amounts currently projected.

     Other Localities. Certain localities outside the City have experienced financial problems and have requested and received additional State assistance during the last several State fiscal years. Between 2004 and 2008, the State Legislature authorized 17 bond issuances to finance local government operating deficits. The potential impact on the State of any future requests by localities for additional oversight or financial assistance was not included in the projections of the State's receipts and disbursements for Fiscal Year 2008-09 or thereafter.

     Like the State, local governments must respond to changing political, economic and financial influences over which they have little or no control. Such changes may adversely affect the financial condition of certain local governments. It is also possible that the City, other localities or any of their respective public authorities may suffer serious financial difficulties that could jeopardize local access to the public credit markets, which may adverse affect the marketability of notes and bonds issued by localities within the State. Localities may also face unanticipated problems resulting from pending litigation, judicial decisions and long-range economic trends. Other large-scale potential problems, such as declining urban populations, increasing expenditures, and the loss of skilled manufacturing jobs, may also adversely affect localities and necessitate State assistance.

     Special Considerations. Many complex political, social, and economic forces influence the State's economy and finances, which may in turn affect the State's annual financial plan. These forces may affect the State unpredictably from fiscal year to fiscal year and are influenced by governments, institutions, and events that are not subject to the State's control and there can be no assurance that actual results will not differ materially and adversely from the current forecast. The most significant short-term risks include: (i) further underperformance of the national and State economies; (ii) potential costs of collective bargaining agreements with certain



unions; (iii) potential Federal disallowances related to certain Medicaid claims; (iv) potential Federal rule changes concerning Medicaid payments; and (v) litigation against the State, including certain challenges to the State's tax authority under the State constitution.

     Labor Settlements. The State has reached new labor contracts with several labor unions and has extended comparable changes in pay and benefits to "management/confidential" employees. Under the terms of these four-year contracts, employees will receive pay increases of 3% annually in Fiscal Years 2008-09, 2009-10 and 2010-11 and 4% in Fiscal Year 2011-12. The Governor's 2009-10 Executive Budget savings proposals include eliminating the Fiscal Year 2009-10 general salary increase.

     The 2009-10 Executive Budget recommendations would, if enacted in their entirety, provide for savings sufficient to finance pattern settlements. DOB estimates that if all remaining unsettled unions were to agree to the same terms that have been ratified by settled unions, it would result in added costs of approximately $340 million in Fiscal Year 2009-10, and $220 million in both Fiscal Years 2010-11 and 2011-12.

     Status of Auction Markets for Municipal Bonds; Variable Rate Debt. Since February 2008, a significant number of auction rate municipal bonds have failed to attract buyers, including certain bonds backed by the State, resulting in "failed auctions" and a resetting of the periodic rates to rates in excess of that which would otherwise prevail in the short-term market. The auction failures have affected municipal issuers throughout the nation. Failed auctions generally do not reflect the credit strength of individual issuers, but reflect concerns relating to bond insurers that have insured these auction rate bonds as well as changes in the operation of the auction rate market itself. As an outcome of these failed auctions, governmental issuers are experiencing significantly higher service costs on auction rate bonds and bondholders are experience significantly less liquidity than has been anticipated.

     The State continues to adjust its variable-rate debt portfolio in response to widespread disruption in the municipal bond market. Since February 2008, the State has repositioned nearly $4 billion of variable-rate bonds, including $2.8 billion in auction rate securities and $1.2 billion of variable rate demand bonds to mitigate risk and reduce debt-service costs. The adjustments were accomplished using a combination of fixed rate bonds and better-performing variable rate bonds. The State has also terminated approximately $1.7 billion in interest-rate exchange agreements at cost of about $76 million. The State has received $125 million in revenues from settlements negotiated by the State Attorney General in relation to auction rate securities.

State Finances

     The State accounts for all budgeted receipts and disbursements that support programs and other administrative costs of running State government within the All Governmental Funds type. The All Governmental Funds, comprised of funding supported by State Funds and Federal Funds, provides the most comprehensive view of the financial operations of the State. State Funds includes the General Fund and other State-supported funds including State Special Reserve Funds, Capital Projects Funds and Debt Service Funds. The General Fund is the principal operating fund of the State and is used to account for all financial transactions except



those required to be accounted for in another fund. It is the State's largest fund and receives almost all State taxes and other resources not dedicated to particular purposes.

     Recent Trends. The outlook for State finances has continued to weaken since the Fiscal Year 2008-09 Budget was enacted in April 2008. Since that time, DOB has significantly lowered its projections for tax receipts to reflect the worsening outlook for the national and State economies, and the anticipated impact on tax collections. A potential gap was identified for Fiscal Year 2008-09, which DOB expected to eliminate through a 7% reduction in State agency operations. In light of market uncertainties, DOB has also lowered the amount of resources from health insurance conversions that it expects to be available to finance State health care spending, thereby creating a potential funding gap in the Health Care Reform Act ("HCRA") fund starting in Fiscal Year 2009-10.

     In September and October 2008, a series of unprecedented financial sector shocks transformed the economic downturn that began in late 2007 into a global financial crisis. In New York, the crisis was expected to have grave consequences for the State's financial services sector, one of the principal sources of State tax receipts. Since that time, DOB reduced the General Fund receipts forecast by nearly $1.7 billion for Fiscal Year 2008-09 and by over $5.8 billion for Fiscal Year 2009-10. In addition, market conditions were expected to disrupt plans to convert GHI/HIP to a for-profit company and to sell certain surplus properties, reducing expected resources by an additional $384 million in the current year. As a result of these and other revisions, a combined General Fund and HCRA budget gap of $1.5 billion was projected for Fiscal Year 2008-09, growing to $12.5 billion in Fiscal Year 2009-10.

     At the Governor's request, the Legislature convened a special session on November 18, 2008 to consider options to close the current-year gap, but ultimately took no action. DOB now projects a potential General Fund gap of approximately $1.6 billion in Fiscal Year 2008-09 and $13.8 billion in Fiscal Year 2009-10.

Prior Fiscal Year Results

     Fiscal Year 2005-06 Results. DOB reported a Fiscal Year 2005-06 General Fund surplus of $2 billion. Total receipts, including transfers from other funds, were $47.2 billion, an increase of $3.3 billion over the prior fiscal year. Disbursements, including transfers to other funds, totaled $46.5 billion, an increase of $2.9 billion from Fiscal Year 2004-05. The General Fund ended Fiscal Year 2005-06 with a balance of $3.3 billion, which included dedicated balances of $944 million in the State's "rainy day" fund, $21 million in the Contingency Reserve Fund and $251 million in the Community Projects Fund. The closing balance also included $2 billion in a spending stabilization reserve. Tax receipts increased by $3.8 billion and transfers increased by $743 million, while miscellaneous receipts decreased by $197 million, due primarily to the loss of various one-time receipts. The main sources of annual spending increases were Medicaid, school aid and fringe benefits.

     The State ended Fiscal Year 2005-06 with a State Funds cash balance of $6.8 billion. In addition to the $3.3 billion General Fund balance, the State's special revenue funds had a closing balance of $3.7 billion and the debt service funds had a closing balance of $221 million. State



Funds receipts totaled $71.7 billion for Fiscal Year 2005-06, an increase of $7.4 billion from the prior fiscal year. The annual growth in General Fund receipts combined with growth in other State taxes and miscellaneous receipts accounted for the change. State Funds disbursements totaled $69.7 billion in Fiscal Year 2005-06, an increase of $5.8 billion from Fiscal Year 2004-05.

     The State ended Fiscal Year 2005-06 with an All Funds cash balance of $7.1 billion. In addition to the $6.8 billion State Funds balance described above, the Federal Funds had a closing balance of $249 million. All Funds receipts totaled $107 billion, an increase of $6.3 million over Fiscal Year 2004-05. Strong growth in tax collections and moderate growth in miscellaneous receipts were partially offset by a decline in Federal grants. All Funds disbursements for Fiscal Year 2005-06 totaled $104.3 billion, an increase of $3.7 billion over the prior fiscal year.

     Fiscal Year 2006-07 Results. DOB reported a General Fund surplus of $1.5 billion for Fiscal Year 2006-07. Results for Fiscal Year 2006-07 were $1.5 billion higher than the 2006-07 Budget as a result of revenue revisions over initial projections ($1.4 billion) and changes to reserve fund balances ($767 million), partly offset by higher than initially projected spending ($607 million). Total receipts, including transfers from other funds, were $51.4 billion, and disbursements, including transfers to other funds, totaled $51.6 billion. The General Fund ended Fiscal Year 2006-07 with a balance of $3 billion, including $1.7 billion in general revenues. General Fund receipts, including transfers from other funds and the impact of the tax refund reserve transaction, totaled $51.4 billion in Fiscal Year 2006-07, an increase of $4.2 billion from Fiscal Year 2005-06. Tax receipts increased by $3.4 billion, transfers increased by $419 million, and miscellaneous receipts increased by $239 million. General Fund spending, including transfers to other funds, totaled $51.6 billion in Fiscal Year 2006-07, an increase of $5.1 billion from Fiscal Year 2005-06.

     The State ended Fiscal Year 2006-07 with a State Funds cash balance of $6.9 billion. In addition to the $3 billion General Fund balance, the State's special revenue funds had a closing balance of $3.7 billion and the debt service funds had a closing balance of $233 million. State Funds receipts totaled $72.6 billion in Fiscal Year 2006-07, an increase of $4.5 billion from Fiscal Year 2005-06. Actual State Funds disbursements totaled $73.5 billion in Fiscal Year 2006-07, an increase of $7.2 billion from Fiscal Year 2005-06.

     The State ended Fiscal Year 2006-07 with an All Funds cash balance of $6.8 billion. In addition to the $6.9 billion State Funds balance, the Federal Funds had a closing balance of $336 million, offset by a negative balance in the Federal capital projects funds of $432 million. All Funds receipts for Fiscal Year 2006-07 totaled $112.4 billion, an increase of $5.4 billion over Fiscal Year 2005-06. All Funds disbursements for 2006-07 totaled $112.8 billion, an increase of $8.4 billion over Fiscal Year 2005-06.

     Fiscal Year 2007-08 Results (Unaudited). The State ended Fiscal Year 2007-08 in balance. State revenues were $585 million lower than initial projections, while spending for the year finished at $306 million lower than expectations. The result was a $279 million decrease in cash reserves. The General Fund ended Fiscal Year 2007-08 with a balance of $2.8 billion, which included dedicated balances of $1.2 billion in the Rainy Day Reserve. General Fund



receipts, including transfers from other funds and the impact of the tax refund reserve transaction, totaled $53.1 billion in Fiscal Year 2007-08, an increase of $1.7 billion from Fiscal Year 2006-07 results. While tax receipts decreased by $273 million, transfers increased by $1.9 billion and miscellaneous receipts increased by $191 million. General Fund spending totaled $53.4 billion in Fiscal Year 2007-08, an increase of $1.8 billion from Fiscal Year 2006-07.

     State Operating Funds receipts totaled $75.6 billion in Fiscal Year 2006-07, an increase of $3 billion from Fiscal Year 2006-07 results. Actual State Operating Funds disbursements totaled $77 billion in Fiscal Year 2007-08, an increase of $3.5 billion from Fiscal Year 2006-07. The State ended Fiscal Year 2007-08 with a State Operating Funds cash balance of $6.6 billion. In addition to the $2.8 billion General Fund balance, the State's special revenue funds have a closing balance of $3.5 billion and the debt service funds had a closing balance of $285 million.

     The State ended Fiscal Year 2007-08 with an All Funds cash balance of $6.5 billion. Along with the $6.6 billion State Operating Funds balance, Federal operating funds had a closing balance of $359 million, offset by a negative capital project funds closing balance of $434 million. All Funds receipts for Fiscal Year 2007-08 totaled $115.4 billion, an increase of $3 billion over Fiscal Year 2006-07 results. All Funds disbursements for Fiscal Year 2007-08 totaled $116.1 billion, an increase of $3.3 billion over Fiscal Year 2006-07 results.

Fiscal Year 2008-09 Enacted Budget Financial Plan

     The Legislature completed action on the Fiscal Year 2008-09 Budget on April 9, 2008, nine days after the start of the State's fiscal year (interim appropriations were enacted to meet contractual and other obligations until final enactment of the 2008-09 Budget). Governor Paterson did not veto any legislative additions. Consistent with past practice, the Legislature enacted all debt service appropriations without amendment before the start of the fiscal year.

     DOB initially projected that the 2008-09 Budget was balanced in the General Fund on a cash basis, as required by law. The 2008-09 Budget was projected to close a current-services gap estimated at $5.2 billion, and fund $873 million in new initiatives. General Fund receipts, including transfers from other funds, were projected to total $55.6 billion. General Fund disbursements, including transfers to other funds, were estimated at $56.4 billion. The State expected to use $723 million in designated reserves in Fiscal Year 2008-09, most of which will be used to finance the cost of labor settlements with State employee unions that have ratified their contracts.

     The 2008-09 Budget, at the time of enactment, projected State Operating Funds spending of $80.9 billion, an increase of 5% over Fiscal Year 2007-08 results. This growth was for local aid to public schools, Medicaid costs, support for transportation, local government programs and debt service. At Governor Patterson's direction, DOB identified $778 million in across-the-board reductions in State Operating Funds. The General Fund savings from the reductions were initially estimated to total $485 million, which consisted of $322 million in State Operations and $163 million in local assistance payments. All Funds spending, which comprises the General Fund, Special Revenue Funds, Capital Project Funds and Debt Service Funds, was estimated at $121.6 billion in Fiscal Year 2008-09, an increase of $5.6 billion from Fiscal Year 2007-08.



     The 2008-09 Budget raised the tax on cigarettes by $1.25 per pack, effective June 3, 2008, bringing the total State tax to $2.75 per pack. The additional revenues generated by the tax increase, estimated at $265 million in Fiscal Year 2008-09, are to be deposited into the HCRA Fund and help finance health care costs, including Medicaid.

     The 2008-09 Budget also provided for a slower phase-in of the basic middle-class School Tax Relief ("STAR") rebate and related New York City income tax payments; a reduction in the STAR credit for New York City resident personal income taxpayers with incomes above $250,000; a change in the adjustment that limits annual reductions in the STAR exemption amount due to increased property values, from 5% to 10% in Fiscal Year 2008-09 and 11% in Fiscal Year 2009-10 and thereafter; and authorization for the State to offset middle-class STAR rebates owed to individuals who are delinquent on their taxes, child support, or other legal debt obligations. After these actions, the State will finance $4.7 billion in total property tax relief in Fiscal Year 2008-09 (nearly $5 billion on a commitment basis), growing to $6.2 billion over the next few years.

     The 2008-09 Budget included $1.3 billion in General Fund revenue actions, including: (i) restructuring and streamlining the fees on limited liability companies and the minimum taxes on corporations so that they are based on New York income; (ii) subjecting credit card companies with a qualifying number of customers or receipts in New York State to the bank tax; (iii) amending the 2007 legislation that was intended to fully close the Real Estate Investment Trust/Regulated Investment Company (REIT/RIC) loophole; (iv) temporarily raising the tax limitation amount in the capital base tax for non-manufacturing companies from $1 million to $10 million for three years beginning in the 2008 tax year and reducing the tax rate from 0.178% to 0.15% starting with the 2008 tax year; and (v) decoupling the State from the Federal Qualified Production Activity Income deduction (currently a 6% deduction of qualifying income).

     Revisions to the Fiscal Year 2008-09 Budget. In DOB's view, the updated economic information, the continuing instability in the financial markets, and the uneven response to Federal government efforts to restore confidence combine to provide compelling evidence for further reducing the General Fund receipts forecast over Fiscal Year 2008-09. The impact of the recession on tax collections is expected to begin to register in the high-tax collection months that remain in Fiscal Year 2008-09. DOB has lowered the estimate of General Fund tax receipts (excluding deposits to the STAR fund) by $492 million in the current year and $1.8 billion in Fiscal Year 2009-10. The reductions are in addition to the substantial downward revisions by the DOB in late 2008.

     The DOB has reduced expected General Fund personal income tax receipts (excluding STAR), by an additional $253 million in Fiscal Year 2008-09 and $1.27 billion in 2009-10. In Fiscal Year 2008-09, the revisions reflect an expected decrease in estimated tax payments and withholding, offset in part by an expected increase in final returns. In Fiscal Year 2009-10, the revisions reflect falling wage growth and lower withholding and estimated tax payments, consistent with the updated economic forecast. General Fund user taxes and fees have been lowered by another $143 million in Fiscal Year 2008-09, reflecting slower than expected growth in the sales tax base. Business tax estimates have been reduced by $87 million in Fiscal Year 2009-10, which is consistent with the economic outlook. Real estate transfer tax receipts have



been lowered by $50 million in and $210 in Fiscal Year 2008-09 and 2009-10, respectively, consistent with the expected weakness in the real estate and credit markets. The estate tax estimate has been lowered by $56 million and $127 million in Fiscal Years 2008-09 and 2009-10, respectively.

     In Fiscal Year 2008-09, the net impact of the revisions leaves a budget gap of $1.6 billion, an increase of $117 million from the last update. In Fiscal Year 2009-10, the result is a budget gap of $13.8 billion, an increase of $1.3 billion from the last update. The combined four-year gap (excluding Fiscal Year 2012-13, which is included for the first time in the 2009-10 Executive Budget) totals $51 billion before recommendations, up by more than $4 billion compared to prior estimates. The gap for Fiscal Year 2009-10 is the largest ever faced by the State as measured in absolute dollars, and is roughly equivalent to the magnitude of the gap that needed to be closed in Fiscal Year 2003-04 as a percentage of the total General Fund.

     Since the 2009-10 Executive Budget was presented, DOB has revised the estimate for General Fund receipts upward by $115 million, mainly reflecting the impact of certain litigation settlements reached by the State Attorney General. In Fiscal Year 2009-10 and beyond, DOB has reduced projected General Fund tax receipts by $200 million, based in large part on updated economic information for December 2008. The decline in tax receipts is partially offset by other forecast revisions, leaving a potential imbalance of $128 million compared to the 2009-10 Executive Budget.

     DOB estimates the State will end Fiscal Year 2008-09 with a General Fund balance of $1.5 billion, consisting of $1.2 billion in undesignated reserves and $287 million in designated reserves. The closing balance estimates assume the successful implementation of the DRP and the enactment of the 2009-10 Executive Budget in its entirety, as discussed below.

2009-10 Executive Budget

     The Governor presented the 2009-10 Executive Budget on December 16, 2008, which contained proposals that would make significant progress in bringing State finances into structural balance. If enacted by the Legislature, the recommendations would fully balance the General Fund and HCRA in Fiscal Years 2008-09 and 2009-10, and leave a General Fund deficit of $2 billion in Fiscal Year 2010-11. The combined four-year gap would be reduced from a projected $51 billion to $6.2 billion (88%).

     The 2009-10 Executive Budget holds Fiscal Year 2009-10 spending flat in the General Fund and below inflation for nearly all budget measures. The State's rainy day reserves would remain intact at $1.2 billion, equal to approximately 2.2% of expected spending. Non-recurring resources would total just over $1.1 billion in Fiscal Year 2009-10, or approximately 8% of the total gap-closing plan. The number of State employees is expected to decline by approximately 3,100 in Fiscal Year 2009-10, the first annual reduction in headcount since 2004. The gap-closing plan is balanced with actions that are under the State's control to enact and implement. It does not rely on the prospect of extraordinary Federal aid, which at this point remains speculative.



     The 2009-10 Executive Budget is presented as two separate plans: a deficit reduction plan ("DRP") to eliminate the budget gap for Fiscal Year 2008-09, and a complete plan of savings proposals and new resources to balance the Fiscal Year 2009-10 budget. It is structured so that the Legislature can enact the DRP in advance of the Fiscal Year 2009-10 budget. The Legislature convened for its new session on January 7, 2009, and the 2009-10 Executive Budget assumed that they would take action on the DRP proposals and on the remaining proposal by February 1, 2009 and March 1, 2009 respectively. The DRP was approved by the Legislature on February 6, 2009. To eliminate the entire current-year gap, the DRP must achieve $1.6 billion in savings by March 31, 2009. The types of DRP actions that can be implemented in the final quarter of the fiscal year are limited by the time period and, therefore, were developed under separate guidelines from the 2009-10 Executive Budget.

     Executive Budget Actions. The Fiscal Year 2009-10 gap-closing actions can be grouped into three general categories: (1) actions that reduce current services spending in the General Fund on a recurring basis; (2) actions that increase revenues on a recurring basis; and (3) transactions that increase revenues or lower spending in Fiscal Year 2009-10, but that are not expected to recur. The State has experienced growth in spending that exceeds inflation and personal income growth in nearly all major aid programs since 2004, leading to a long-term structural deficit that has only been compounded by the recent economic crisis. Therefore, the 2009-10 Executive Budget's gap-closing measures focus on actions that substantially reduce the growth in State spending on a reoccurring basis. The largest spending cuts that have been proposed include reducing Medicaid/HCRA funding by $2.6 billion, cutting school aid by $1.9 billion (including maintaining selected aids at 2008-09 school year levels and extending the phase-in of the universal pre-kindergarten program), and savings of $1.7 billion by eliminating the STAR program, reducing the personal income tax credit for New York City taxpayers, and adjusting the "hold-harmless" floor. Other cuts in spending are proposed for local government aid ($432 million), mental hygiene ($423 million), human services ($385 million), higher education ($338 million), other education aid ($246 million), public safety ($191 million), transportation ($177 million), economic development, regulatory activities and gaming ($112 million), health and aging ($106 million) and the elimination of all member item funding ($196 million). State government workforce costs are also reduced through wage, health benefit and pension changes, including freezing salaries at 2008-09 levels and a statewide hiring freeze.

     The 2009-10 Executive Budget proposes financing a larger share of economic development projects with ongoing resources rather than with long-term debt, starting in Fiscal Year 2010-11. By converting from debt financing, the State will increase capacity under its statutory debt cap and realize debt service savings in future years. The determination to allocate the "pay-as-you-go resources" to economic development takes into account that projects in this area typically have above-average financing costs.

     In order to balance the budget exclusively through spending reductions, a significant retrenchment in State services would have been necessary. Absent any actions to raise revenues, General Fund spending would have to be reduced by over $13 billion from the level required to meet existing commitments to achieve a balanced budget in Fiscal Year 2009-10. Spending reductions of this magnitude in a recession could threaten to slow a future recovery, as well as raise potential health and public safety concerns. Accordingly, the 2009-10 Executive Budget



contains a package of revenue raising actions, including increasing the gross receipts assessment on utilities from 1% to 2%, eliminating the sales tax exemption on clothing priced under $110 and expanding the State's tax base to cover certain services such as cable/satellite television. All together, the revenue enhancements and tax increases proposed total over $3 billion in Fiscal Year 2009-10.

     The 2009-10 Executive Budget also relies on $1.1 billion in non-recurring resources in Fiscal Year 2009-10. Some of the most significant actions are delaying, by two years, and extra Medicaid cycle that would otherwise occur at the end of Fiscal Year 2009-10, increasing the business tax pre-payment to 40%, and bond-financing certain capital costs. The Legislature continues to deliberate on the 2009-10 Executive Budget proposal submitted by the Governor.

     Deficit Reduction Plan. The DRP, approved by the Governor and Legislature on February 6, 2009, is designed to achieve $1.6 billion in savings by March 31, 2009, which when combined with additional revenue from Attorney General litigation settlements of $125 million, will eliminate the current-year deficit of $1.7 billion. The DRP consists of actions that require legislative approval and actions that DOB expects to take administratively. Actions requiring legislative approval total $1.2 billion (77% of the $1.6 billion total). A large portion of the DRP is realized through health-care savings, in addition to State University of New York (SUNY) tuition increases and other legislative actions totaling $1.2 billion, and $400 million in administrative actions by DOB.

General Fund Out-Year Projections.

     DOB estimates current service gaps of $17.1 billion in Fiscal Year 2010-11, $18.6 billion in Fiscal Year 2011-12 and $19.6 billion in Fiscal Year 2012-13. Assuming the Legislature enacts the 2009-10 Executive Budget recommendations in their entirety, DOB projects a balanced General Fund in Fiscal Year 2009-10 and leaves projected outyear budget gaps of $2 billion in Fiscal Year 2010-11, $4.2 billion in Fiscal Year 2011-12 and $5.7 billion in Fiscal Year 2012-13.

     In the 2009-10 Executive Budget, tax receipts growth in Fiscal Years 2011-2013 is expected to remain in the range of 4.8 to 6.3%, which is consistent with a projected return to trend economic growth in the U.S. and New York economies in the second half of 2009. Total General Fund receipts are projected to reach $57 billion in Fiscal Year 2010-11, nearly $60 billion in Fiscal Year 2011-12 and almost $63 billion in Fiscal Year 2012-13. Total State Funds receipts are projected to be approximately $88 billion in Fiscal Year 2010-11, almost $91 billion in Fiscal Year 2011-12 and nearly $94 billion in Fiscal Year 2012-13. Total All Funds receipts in 2010-11 are projected to reach over $125 billion, an increase of $5.2 billion, or 4.3 percent over 2009-10 estimates.

     DOB forecasts General Fund spending of $59.2 billion in Fiscal Year 2010-11, an increase of $3.8 billion (6.9%) over recommended Fiscal Year 2009-10 levels. Growth in Fiscal Year 2011-12 is projected at $4.8 billion (8%) and in Fiscal Year 2012-13 at $4.3 billion (6.7%). The growth levels are based on current services projections, as modified by the recommendations contained in the 2009-10 Executive Budget.



     As of mid-February, the Governor and the Legislature have amended their predictions for General Fund tax receipts downward by about $1 billion from the levels forecast in the 2009-10 Executive Budget.

American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 ("ARRA"). President Obama signed into law the ARRA on February 17, 2009. Based on DOB's preliminary analysis, the State and various localities in New York will receive approximately $24.6 billion during the current fiscal year, and over the following two fiscal years under the stimulus package. The State itself will receive approximately $6.5 billion in direct Federal aid, of which approximately $5.3 billion is unrestricted and approximately $1.2 billion (on a school year basis) is restricted to financing education and higher education programs that would have otherwise been reduced based upon recommendations in the Executive Budget.

State Indebtedness

     General. Financing activities of the State include general obligation debt and State-guaranteed debt, to which the full faith and credit of the State has been pledged, as well as lease-purchase and contractual-obligation financing, moral obligation and other financing through public authorities and municipalities, where the State's legal obligation to make payments to those public authorities and municipalities for their debt service is subject to annual appropriation by the Legislature. The State has never defaulted on any of its general obligation indebtedness or its obligations under lease-purchase or contractual-obligation financing arrangements and has never been called upon to make any direct payments pursuant to its guarantees.

     The recent credit crisis has meant that government issuers have either been unable to issue bonds, or, if market access exists, at much higher interest rates than prior to September 2008. Being unable to sell bonds at the rate or on the timetable anticipated by the State's capital plan can lead to significant costs to the General Fund and a difficult cash flow position, as capital spending is often financed through loans from the General Fund which are repaid through the bond sale. For planning purposes, DOB is assuming the State will have limited access to the bond market for the remainder of the fiscal year, but is also imposing stringent capital controls to marginally reduce the need to issue bonds in the coming months.

Limitations on State-Supported Debt.

     Debt Reform Act of 2000. The Debt Reform Act of 2000 (the "Act") is intended to improve the State's borrowing practices, and it applies to all new State-supported debt issued on and after April 1, 2000. It also imposes phased-in caps on new debt outstanding and new debt service costs. The Act also limited the use of debt to capital projects and established a maximum term of 30 years on such debt. The cap on new State-supported debt outstanding began at 0.75% of personal income in Fiscal Year 2000-01, and will gradually increase until it is fully phased-in at 4.0% in Fiscal Year 2010-11. Similarly, the cap on covered debt service costs began at 0.75% of total State funds receipts in Fiscal Year 2000-01, and will gradually increase to 5.0% in Fiscal Year 2013-14.



     For Fiscal Year 2007-08, the cumulative debt outstanding and debt service caps were 3.32% each, and actual levels remained below the statutory caps. Between April 1, 2000 and March 31, 2008 the State issued new debt resulting in $21 billion of debt outstanding applicable to the debt reform cap, about $8.8 billion below the limitation. Debt service costs on this new debt totaled $1.7 billion in Fiscal Year 2007-08 or roughly $2.1 billion below the debt service limitation.

     Variable Rate Obligations and Related Agreements. State statutory law authorizes issuers of State-supported debt to issue a limited amount of variable rate obligations and, subject to various statutory restrictions, enter into a limited amount of interest rate exchange agreements. State law limits the use of debt instruments which result in a variable rate exposure to no more than 20% of total outstanding State-supported debt, and limits the use of interest rate exchange agreements to a total notional amount of no more than 20% of total State-supported outstanding debt. As of March 31, 2008, State-supported debt in the amount of $44.5 billion was outstanding, resulting in a variable rate exposure cap and interest rate exchange agreement cap of approximately $8.9 billion each. As of March 31, 2008, both amounts are less than the statutorily cap of 20%, and are projected to be below the caps for the entire forecast period through Fiscal Year 2011-12.

     As of March 31, 2008, the State had five agencies or instrumentalities that had entered into a notional amount of $5.86 billion of interest rate exchange agreements that are subject to the interest rate exchange agreement cap, or 13.2% of total debt outstanding. The agreements outstanding as of that date involved nine different counterparties. Each agreement were part of refunding transactions that resulted in fixed rated that ranged between 2.86% and 3.66%, which were significantly lower than the fixed bond rates at the time the refunding bonds were issued. As of March 31, 2008, the net mark-to-market value of all the outstanding obligations (the aggregate termination amount) was approximately $312 million. The State plans to continue to monitor and manage counterparty risk on a monthly basis.

     As of March 31, 2008, the State had about $1.8 billion of outstanding variable rate debt instruments, or 4.1% of total debt outstanding, that are subject to the net variable rate exposure cap. That amount includes $1.6 billion of unhedged variable rate obligations and $168 million of synthetic variable rate obligations. In addition to these variable rate obligations, as of March 31, 2008, the State had outstanding $3.1 billion of fixed-rate obligations that may convert to variable rate obligations in the future. This amount included $2.4 billion in State-supported convertible rate bonds.

     State-Supported Debt. The State's debt affordability measures compare favorably to the forecasts contained in the State's Capital Program and Financing Plan. Issuances of State-supported debt obligations have been generally consistent with the expected sale schedule for the current year, with marginal revisions reflecting certain economic development bonding that occurred earlier in the year than originally anticipated.

     General Obligation Bond Programs. General obligation debt is currently authorized by the State for transportation, environment and housing purposes. The amount of general obligation bonds issued in Fiscal Year 2007-08 (excluding refunding bonds) was $268 million,



and as of March 31, 2008, the total amount of general obligation debt outstanding was $3.2 billion. The Enacted Capital Plan projects that approximately $457 million in general obligation bonds will be issued in Fiscal Year 2008-09. Transportation-related bonds are issued for State highway and bridge improvements, aviation, highway and mass transportation projects and purposes, and rapid transport, rail, canal, port and waterway programs and projects. Environmental bonds are issued to fund environmentally sensitive land acquisitions, air and water quality improvements, municipal non-hazardous waste landfill closures and hazardous waste site cleanup projects.

     Lease-Purchase and Contractual-Obligation Financing Programs. Lease-purchase and contractual-obligation financing arrangements with public authorities and municipalities has been used primarily by the State to finance the State's bridge and highway programs, SUNY and CUNY buildings, health and mental hygiene facilities, prison construction and rehabilitation and various other State capital projects. As of March 31, 2008, approximately $10.8 billion of State Personal Income Tax Revenue Bonds were outstanding.

     Debt Servicing. The Debt Reduction Reserve Fund (the "DRRF") was created in 1998 to set aside resources that could be used to reduce State-supported indebtedness either through the use of the DRRF as a pay-as-you-go financing source, reduce debt service costs or defease outstanding debt. Since Fiscal Year 1998-99, over $1.3 billion has been deposited in the DRRF. The State spent $127 million of DRRF in Fiscal Year 2007-08 to defease high-cost debt. In Fiscal Year 2008-09, the State plans to spend the balance of the $250 million approved last year to address the disruption in the variable rate market or defease high cost debt. Debt service is paid on revenue credits supported by dedicated taxes and fees and patient income, including Personal Income Tax Revenue bonds, Dedicated Highway and Bridge Trust Fund bonds and Mental Health facilities bonds, as well as service contract bonds that are secured mainly by the General Fund.

     2008-09 State Supported Borrowing Plan. The State's Fiscal Year 2008-09 borrowing plan projects new issuance of $457 billion in general obligation bonds; $601 million in Dedicated Highway and Bridge Trust Fund Bonds issued to finance capital projects for transportation; $814 million in Mental Health Facilities Improvement Revenue Bonds issued to finance capital projects at mental health facilities; $119 million in SUNY Dormitory Facilities Revenue Bonds to finance capital projects related to student dormitories; and $4 billion in State Personal Income Tax Revenue Bonds to finance various capital programs.

Litigation

     General. The legal proceedings listed below involve State finances and programs and miscellaneous civil rights, real property, contract and other tort claims in which the State is a defendant and the potential monetary claims against the State are deemed to be material, generally in excess of $100 million. These proceedings could adversely affect the State's finances in the current fiscal year or thereafter. Adverse developments in the proceedings could affect the ability of the State to maintain a balanced budget. The State believes that any budget will include sufficient reserves to offset the costs associated with the payment of judgments that may be required during the current fiscal year. There can be no assurance, however, that adverse



decisions in legal proceedings against the State would not exceed the amount of all potential budget resources available for the payment of judgments.

     Real Property Claims. In Oneida Indian Nation of New York, et al. v. State of New York, the alleged successors-in-interest to the historic Oneida Indian Nation seek a declaration that they hold a current possessory interest in approximately 250,000 acres of land that the tribe sold to the State in a series of transactions between 1795 and 1846, and ejectment of the State and surrounding counties from all publicly-held lands in the claim area. This case was dormant while the plaintiffs pursuant an earlier action which ended in an unsuccessful effort at a settlement. In 1998, the U.S. intervened in the case, and in December 1998 both the U.S. and the tribal plaintiffs moved for leave to amend their complaints to assert claims for 250,000 acres, including both monetary damages and ejectment, to add the State as a defendant and to seek class certification for all individuals who currently purport to hold title within the disputed land area. On September 25, 2000, the court granted the motions to amend the complaints to add the State as a defendant and to assert monetary damages, but denied the motions to seek class certification and the remedy of ejectment. On March 29, 2002, the court granted, in part, plaintiffs' motion to strike the State's defenses and counterclaims as to liability, but such defenses may still be asserted with respect to monetary damages. The court also denied the State's motion to dismiss for failure to join indispensable parties.

     Further efforts at settlement of this action failed to reach a successful outcome. While such discussions were underway, two significant decisions were rendered by the Supreme Court and the Second Circuit Court of Appeals which changed the legal landscape pertaining to ancient land claims: City of Sherrill v. Oneida Indian Nation of New York and Cayuga Indian Nation of New York v. Pataki. Taken together, these cases have made clear that the equitable doctrines of laches, acquiescence, and impossibility can bar ancient land claims. These decisions prompted the court to reassess its 2002 decision, which in part had struck such defenses, and to permit the filing of a motion for summary judgment predicated on the Sherrill and Cayuga holdings. On August 11, 2006, the defendants moved for summary judgment dismissing the action, based on the defenses of laches, acquiescence, and impossibility. By order dated May 21, 2007, the court dismissed plaintiffs' claims to the extent that they asserted a possessory interest, but permitted plaintiffs to pursue a claim seeking the difference between the amount paid and the fair market value of the lands at the time of the transaction. The court certified the May 21, 2007 order for interlocutory appeal and, on July 13, 2007, the Second Circuit granted motions by both sides seeking leave to pursue interlocutory appeals of that order. The appeals have been fully briefed before the Second Circuit, and oral argument was conducted in June of 2008. The case now awaits the court's decision.

     Other Indian land claims include Canadian St. Regis Band of Mohawk Indians, et al., v. State of New York, et al., and The Onondaga Nation v. The State of New York, et al. both in United States District Court.

     In the Canadian St. Regis Band of Mohawk Indians case, plaintiffs seek ejectment and monetary damages with respect to their claim that approximately 15,000 acres in Franklin and St. Lawrence counties were illegally transferred from their predecessors-in-interest. On July 28, 2003, the court granted, in most respects, the plaintiffs' motion to strike defenses and dismiss



counterclaims. On October 20, 2003, the court denied the State's motion for a reconsideration of the July 28th decision regarding the State's counterclaims for contribution. On November 29, 2004, the plaintiff tribes, with one exception, approved a settlement with the State. On February 10, 2006, the district court stayed all proceedings and legislation until 45 days after the U.S. Supreme Court issued a final decision in the Cayuga Indian Nation of New York case. On November 6, 2006, after certiorari was denied in Cayuga, the defendants moved for judgment on the pleadings. Although the motion is fully briefed and awaiting decision, on April 16, 2008, the District Court issued an order staying the case until a decision is rendered with respect to the pending appeal in the Oneida case.

     In The Onondaga Nation v. The State of New York, et al., plaintiff seeks a judgment declaring that certain lands within the State are the property of the Onondaga Nation and the Haudenosaunee, and that conveyances of that land pursuant to treaties during the period from 1788-1822 are null and void. On August 15, 2006, based on Sherrill and Cayuga, the defendants moved for an order dismissing this action, based on the issue of laches. The motion is now fully briefed and awaiting decision.

     Cayuga Indian Nation of New York, et al. v. Pataki, et al., involved approximately 64,000 acres in Seneca and Cayuga Counties that the historic Cayuga Nation sold to the State in 1795 and 1807 in alleged violation of the Nonintercourse Act ("NIA") (first enacted in 1790) because the transactions were not held under Federal supervision, and were not formally ratified by the U.S. Senate and proclaimed by the President. In 2001, the court denied ejectment as a remedy and rendered a judgment against the State for in the net amount of $250 million. The State appealed the judgment. The tribal plaintiffs (but not the U.S. Government) cross-appealed, seeking ejectment of all of the present day occupants of the claimed land and approximately $1.5 billion in additional prejudgment interest.

     On June 28, 2005, the Second Circuit reversed and entered judgment dismissing the action, based upon the intervening Sherrill decision. The Second Circuit concluded that the same equitable considerations that the Supreme Court relied on in Sherrill applied to the Cayugas' possessory claim and required dismissal of the entire lawsuit, including plaintiffs' claims for money damages and ejectment. The Court also held that the United States' complaint-in-intervention was barred by laches. The Supreme Court denied certiorari in Cayuga on May 15, 2006.

     This case was closed but recently became active when the Cayuga plaintiffs filed a motion to have the judgment vacated and the case stayed until after the Second Circuit decides the appeal in Oneida. The motion is premised on the ruling in Oneida that, in spite of the decision in Cayuga, the tribal plaintiffs may proceed to prove a non-possessory claim for unjust compensation against the State. Further briefing on the plaintiffs' motion from relief from judgment has been suspended, pending the outcome of the Oneida appeal.

     Medicaid. Numerous cases challenge provisions of State law which alter the nursing home Medicaid reimbursement methodology. Included are New York State Health Facilities Association, et al., v. DeBuono, et al., St. Luke's Nursing Center, et al. v. DeBuono, et al., New York Association of Homes and Services for the Aging v. DeBuono, et al. (six cases), and Matter



of Nazareth Home of the Franciscan Sisters, et al. v. Novello. Plaintiffs allege that the changes in methodologies have been adopted in violation of procedural and substantive requirements of State and Federal law.

     In New York Association of Homes and Services for the Aging v. DeBuono, et al., the U.S. District Court dismissed plaintiff's complaint on May 19, 2004. On April 6, 2006, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the order of the District Court. This case is now concluded. Several related cases at the State level involving the same parties and issues had been held in abeyance pending the result of the litigation in Federal court.

     Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement. In Freedom Holdings Inc. et al. v. Spitzer et ano., two cigarette importers brought an action in 2002 challenging portions of laws enacted by the State under the 1998 Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement ("MSA") that New York and many other states entered into with major tobacco manufacturers. The initial complaint alleged: (1) violations of the Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constitution; (2) the establishment of an "output cartel" in conflict with the Sherman Act; and (3) selective nonenforcement of laws on Native American reservations in violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. Constitution. The District Court granted defendants' motion to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a cause of action. Plaintiffs appealed from this dismissal. In an opinion dated January 6, 2004, the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit (1) affirmed the dismissal of the Commerce Clause claim; (2) reversed the dismissal of the Sherman Act claim; and (3) remanded the selective enforcement claim to the District Court for further proceedings. Plaintiffs have filed an amended complaint that also challenges the MSA itself (as well as other related State statutes) primarily on preemption grounds. On September 14, 2004, the District Court denied all aspects of plaintiffs' motion for a preliminary injunction, except that portion of the motion relating to the ability of tobacco manufacturers to obtain the release of certain funds from escrow. Plaintiffs appealed the denial of the remainder of the motion. In May 2005, the Second Circuit affirmed the denial of the preliminary injunction. In December 2006, the summary judgment motions and cross-motions were fully submitted to the District Court. By order dated July 7, 2008, the District Court requested updated statistical information and other information needed to resolve certain material questions. Following an evidentiary hearing, by order dated December 15, 2008 summarizing a preliminary decision, the District Court dismissed all of plaintiff's claims.

     West Valley Litigation. In State of New York et al v. The United States of America et al., the State and the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority have filed suit seeking declarations that defendants are (i) liable under CERCLA for the State's response costs and for damages to the State's natural resources resulting from pollution releases from the West Valley site and a judgment reimbursing the State for these costs and damages, (ii) responsible to decontaminate and decommission the site and for future site monitoring and maintenance, and (iii) responsible for paying the fees for disposal of solidified high level radioactive waste at the site. The parties have agreed to stay the litigation and submit the issues to non-binding arbitration and early neutral evaluation. The parties are currently engaged in mediation.

     Representative Payees. In Weaver v. State of New York, the claimant alleges that executive directors of Office of Mental Health facilities, acting as representative payees under



the Federal Social Security Act, have improperly received benefits due to patients and former patients and improperly applied those benefits to defray the cost of patient care and maintenance. The named claimant seeks benefits on her own behalf as well as certification of a class of claimants.

     On September 26, 2008, the State moved to dismiss the claim on the grounds that the claimant failed to file a motion to certify the class in a timely manner and that the claimant failed to identify the time and place in which each claim arose. Claimant has opposed the motion and cross-moved, seeking certification of the class, pre-certification discovery, and partial summary judgment. The State's reply papers were due on February 9, 2009.]



APPENDIX B

Rating Categories

     Description of certain ratings assigned by Standard & Poor's Ratings Services ("S&P"), Moody's Investors Service ("Moody's"), and Fitch Ratings ("Fitch"):

S&P

Long-term

AAA

An obligation rated 'AAA' has the highest rating assigned by S&P. The obligor's capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation is extremely strong.

AA

An obligation rated 'AA' differs from the highest rated obligations only in small degree. The obligor's capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation is very strong.

A

An obligation rated 'A' is somewhat more susceptible to the adverse effects of changes in circumstances and economic conditions than obligations in higher rated categories. However, the obligor's capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation is still strong.

BBB

An obligation rated 'BBB' exhibits adequate protection parameters. However, adverse economic conditions or changing circumstances are more likely to lead to a weakened capacity of the obligor to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.

BB, B, CCC, CC, and C

Obligations rated 'BB', 'B', 'CCC', 'CC', and 'C' are regarded as having significant speculative characteristics. 'BB' indicates the least degree of speculation and 'C' the highest. While such obligations will likely have some quality and protective characteristics, these may be outweighed by large uncertainties or major exposures to adverse conditions.

BB

An obligation rated 'BB' is less vulnerable to nonpayment than other speculative issues. However, it faces major ongoing uncertainties or exposure to adverse business, financial, or economic conditions which could lead to the obligor's inadequate capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.

B

An obligation rated 'B' is more vulnerable to nonpayment than obligations rated 'BB', but the obligor currently has the capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation. Adverse business, financial, or economic conditions will likely impair the obligor's capacity or willingness to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.



CCC

An obligation rated 'CCC' is currently vulnerable to nonpayment, and is dependent upon favorable business, financial, and economic conditions for the obligor to meet its financial commitment on the obligation. In the event of adverse business, financial, or economic conditions, the obligor is not likely to have the capacity to meet its financial commitment on the obligation.

CC

An obligation rated 'CC' is currently highly vulnerable to nonpayment.

C

A subordinated debt or preferred stock obligation rated 'C' is currently highly vulnerable to nonpayment. The 'C' rating may be used to cover a situation where a bankruptcy petition has been filed or similar action taken, but payments on this obligation are being continued. A 'C' also will be assigned to a preferred stock issue in arrears on dividends or sinking fund payments, but that is currently paying.

D

An obligation rated 'D' is in payment default. The 'D' rating category is used when payments on an obligation are not made on the date due even if the applicable grace period has not expired, unless S&P believes that such payments will be made during such grace period. The 'D' rating also will be used upon the filing of a bankruptcy petition or the taking of a similar action if payments on an obligation are jeopardized.

r

The symbol 'r' is attached to the ratings of instruments with significant noncredit risks. It highlights risks to principal or volatility of expected returns which are not addressed in the credit rating. Examples include: obligations linked or indexed to equities, currencies, or commodities; obligations exposed to severe prepayment risk—such as interest-only or principal-only mortgage securities; and obligations with unusually risky interest terms, such as inverse floaters.

N.R.

The designation 'N.R.' indicates that no rating has been requested, that there is insufficient information on which to base a rating, or that S&P does not rate a particular obligation as a matter of policy.

Note: The ratings from 'AA' to 'CCC' may be modified by the addition of a plus (+) or minus (-) sign designation to show relative standing within the major rating categories.

Short-term

SP-1

Strong capacity to pay principal and interest. An issue determined to possess a very strong capacity to pay debt service is given a plus sign (+) designation.



SP-2

Satisfactory capacity to pay principal and interest, with some vulnerability to adverse financial and economic changes over the term of the notes.

SP-3

Speculative capacity to pay principal and interest.

Commercial paper

A-1

This designation indicates that the degree of safety regarding timely payment is strong. Those issues determined to possess extremely strong safety characteristics are denoted with a plus sign (+) designation.

A-2

Capacity for timely payment on issues with this designation is satisfactory. However, the relative degree of safety is not as high as for issues designated 'A-1'.

A-3

Issues carrying this designation have an adequate capacity for timely payment. The are, however, more vulnerable to the adverse effects of changes in circumstances than obligations carrying the higher designations.

B

Issues rated B are regarded as having only speculative capacity for timely payment.

C

This rating is assigned to short-term debt obligations with a doubtful capacity for payment.

D

Debt rated 'D' is payment default. The 'D' rating category is used when interest payments or principal payments are not made on the due date, even if the applicable grace period has not expired, unless S&P believes such payments will be made during such grace period.

Moody's

Long-term

Aaa

Bonds rated 'Aaa' are judged to be of the best quality. They carry the smallest degree of investment risk and are generally referred to as "gilt edged." Interest payments are protected by a large or by an exceptionally stable margin and principal is secure. While the various protective elements are likely to change, such changes as can be visualized are most unlikely to impair the fundamentally strong position of such issues.

Aa

Bonds rated 'Aa' are judged to be of high quality by all standards. Together with the 'Aaa' group they comprise what are generally known as high-grade bonds. They are rated lower than the best



bonds because margins of protection may not be as large as in 'Aaa' securities or fluctuation of protective elements may be of greater amplitude or there may be other elements present which make the long-term risk appear somewhat larger than the 'Aaa' securities.

A

Bonds rated 'A' possess many favorable investment attributes and are to be considered as upper-medium-grade obligations. Factors giving security to principal and interest are considered adequate, but elements may be present which suggest a susceptibility to impairment some time in the future.

Baa

Bonds rated 'Baa' are considered as medium-grade obligations (i.e., they are neither highly protected nor poorly secured). Interest payments and principal security appear adequate for the present but certain protective elements may be lacking or may be characteristically unreliable over any great length of time. Such bonds lack outstanding investment characteristics and in fact have speculative characteristics as well.

Ba

Bonds rated 'Ba' are judged to have speculative elements; their future cannot be considered as well-assured. Often the protection of interest and principal payments may be very moderate, and thereby not well safeguarded during both good and bad times over the future. Uncertainty of position characterizes bonds in this class.

B

Bonds rated 'B' generally lack characteristics of the desirable investment. Assurance of interest and principal payments or of maintenance of other terms of the contract over any long period of time may be small.

Caa

Bonds rated 'Caa' are of poor standing. Such issues may be in default or there may be present elements of danger with respect to principal or interest.

Ca

Bonds rated 'Ca' represent obligations which are speculative in a high degree. Such issues are often in default or have other marked shortcomings.

C

Bonds rated 'C' are the lowest rated class of bonds, and issues so rated can be regarded as having extremely poor prospects of ever attaining any real investment standing.

Note: Moody's applies numerical modifiers 1, 2, and 3 in each generic rating classification from 'Aa' through 'Caa'. The modifier 1 indicates that the obligation ranks in the higher end of its generic rating category; the modifier 2 indicates a mid-range ranking; and the modifier 3 indicates a ranking in the lower end of that generic rating category.



Prime rating system (short-term)

Issuers rated Prime-1 (or supporting institutions) have a superior ability for repayment of senior short-term debt obligations. Prime-1 repayment ability will often be evidenced by many of the following characteristics:

Leading market positions in well-established industries.

High rates of return on funds employed.

Conservative capitalization structure with moderate reliance on debt and ample asset protection.

Broad margins in earnings coverage of fixed financial charges and high internal cash generation.

Well-established access to a range of financial markets and assured sources of alternate liquidity.

Issuers rated Prime-2 (or supporting institutions) have a strong ability for repayment of senior short-term debt obligations. This will normally be evidenced by many of the characteristics cited above but to a lesser degree. Earnings trends and coverage ratios, while sound, may be more subject to variation. Capitalization characteristics, while still appropriate, may be more affected by external conditions. Ample alternate liquidity is maintained.

Issuers rated Prime-3 (or supporting institutions) have an acceptable ability for repayment of senior short-term obligations. The effect of industry characteristics and market compositions may be more pronounced. Variability in earnings and profitability may result in changes in the level of debt protection measurements and may require relatively high financial leverage. Adequate alternate liquidity is maintained.

Issuers rated Not Prime do not fall within any of the Prime rating categories.

MIG/VMIG--U.S. short-term

Municipal debt issuance ratings are designated as Moody's Investment Grade (MIG) and are divided into three levels -- MIG 1 through MIG 3.

The short-term rating assigned to the demand feature of variable rate demand obligations (VRDOs) is designated as VMIG. When either the long- or short-term aspect of a VRDO is not rated, that piece is designated NR, e.g., Aaa/NR or NR/VMIG 1.

MIG 1/VMIG1

This designation denotes superior credit quality. Excellent protection is afforded by established cash flows, highly reliable liquidity support, or demonstrated broad-based access to the market for refinancing.



MIG 2/VMIG 2

This designation denotes strong credit quality. Margins of protection are ample, although not as large as in the preceding group.

MIG 3/VMIG 3

This designation denotes acceptable credit quality. Liquidity and cash-flow protection may be narrow, and market access for refinancing is likely to be less well-established.

SG

This designation denotes speculative-grade credit quality. Debt instruments in this category may lack sufficient margins of protection.

Fitch

Long-term investment grade

AAA

Highest credit quality. 'AAA' ratings denote the lowest expectation of credit risk. They are assigned only in case of exceptionally strong capacity for timely payment of financial commitments. This capacity is highly unlikely to be adversely affected by foreseeable events.

AA

Very high credit quality. 'AA' ratings denote a very low expectation of credit risk. They indicate very strong capacity for timely payment of financial commitments. This capacity is not significantly vulnerable to foreseeable events.

A

High credit quality. 'A' ratings denote a low expectation of credit risk. The capacity for timely payment of financial commitments is considered strong. This capacity may, nevertheless, be more vulnerable to changes in circumstances or in economic conditions than is the case for higher ratings.

BBB

Good credit quality. 'BBB' ratings indicate that there is currently a low expectation of credit risk. The capacity for timely payment of financial commitments is considered adequate, but adverse changes in circumstances and in economic conditions are more likely to impair this capacity. This is the lowest investment-grade category.

Long-term speculative grade

BB

Speculative. 'BB' ratings indicate that there is a possibility of credit risk developing, particularly as the result of adverse economic change over time; however, business or financial alternatives may be available to allow financial commitments to be met. Securities rated in this category are not investment grade.



B

Highly speculative. 'B' ratings indicate that significant credit risk is present, but a limited margin of safety remains. Financial commitments are currently being met; however, capacity for continued payment is contingent upon a sustained, favorable business and economic environment.

CCC, CC, C

High default risk. Default is a real possibility. Capacity for meeting financial commitments is solely reliant upon sustained, favorable business or economic developments. 'CC' ratings indicate that default of some kind appears probable. 'C' ratings signal imminent default.

DDD, DD, D

Default. The ratings of obligations in this category are based on their prospects for achieving partial or full recovery in a reorganization or liquidation of the obligor. While expected recovery values are highly speculative and cannot be estimated with any precision, the following serve as general guidelines. 'DDD' obligations have the highest potential for recovery, around 90% -100% of outstanding amounts and accrued interest. 'DD' ratings indicate potential recoveries in the range of 50% - 90% and 'D' the lowest recovery potential, i.e., below 50%.

Entities rated in this category have defaulted on some or all of their obligations. Entities rated 'DDD' have the highest prospect for resumption of performance or continued operation with or without a formal reorganization process. Entities rated 'DD' and 'D' are generally undergoing a formal reorganization or liquidation process; those rated 'DD' are likely to satisfy a higher portion of their outstanding obligations, while entities rated 'D' have a poor prospect of repaying all obligations.

Short-term

A short-term rating has a time horizon of less than 12 months for most obligations, or up to three years for U.S. public finance securities, and thus places greater emphasis on the liquidity necessary to meet financial commitments in a timely manner.

F1

Highest credit quality. Indicates the strongest capacity for timely payment of financial commitments; may have an added "+" to denote any exceptionally strong credit feature.

F2

Good credit quality. A satisfactory capacity for timely payment of financial commitments, but the margin of safety is not as great as in the case of the higher ratings.

F3

Fair credit quality. The capacity for timely payment of financial commitment is adequate; however, near-term adverse changes could result in a reduction non-investment grade.

B

Speculative. Minimal capacity for timely payment of financial commitments plus vulnerability to near-term adverse changes in financial and economic conditions.



C

High default risk. Default is a real possibility. Capacity for meeting financial commitments is solely reliant upon a sustained, favorable business and economic environment.

D

Default. Denotes actual or imminent payment default.

'NR' indicates that Fitch does not rate the issuer or issue in question.

Notes to long-term and short-term ratings: A plus (+) or minus (-) sign designation may be appended to a rating to denote relative status within major rating categories. Such suffixes are not added to the 'AAA' long-term rating category, to categories below 'CCC', or to short-term ratings other than 'F1.'



DREYFUS NEW YORK AMT-FREE MUNICIPAL BOND FUND

PART C. OTHER INFORMATION
_________________________

Item 23. Exhibits

(a)(1) Registrant's Amended and Restated Agreement and Declaration of Trust is incorporated by reference to
  Exhibit (1) of Post-Effective Amendment No. 14 to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A, filed on
  September 8, 1995 (“Post-Effective Amendment No. 14”), and Exhibit (1)(b) of Post-Effective Amendment
  No. 17 to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A, filed on March 27, 1997 (“Post-Effective Amendment
  No. 17”).
 
(a)(2) Articles of Amendment are incorporated by reference to Exhibit (a)(ii) of Post-Effective Amendment No.
  32 to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A, filed on December 12, 2008 (“Post-Effective Amendment
  No. 32”).
 
(b) Registrant's By-Laws, as amended, are incorporated by reference to Exhibit (b) of Post-Effective
  Amendment No. 27 to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A, filed on March 29, 2006 (“Post-Effective
  Amendment No. 27”).
 
(d) Management Agreement is incorporated by reference to Exhibit (5) of Post-Effective Amendment No. 12
  to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A, filed on January 27, 1995.
 
(e)(1) Distribution Agreement is incorporated by reference to Exhibit (e)(1) of Post-Effective Amendment No. 25
  to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A, filed on March 29, 2004 (“Post-Effective Amendment No.
  25”).
 
(e)(2) Forms of Service Agreements are incorporated by reference to Exhibit (e) of Post-Effective Amendment
  No. 21 to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A, filed on March 29, 2000.
 
(e)(3) Contract between a principal underwriter and dealer is incorporated by reference to Exhibit (e)(3)
  of Post-Effective Amendment No. 29 to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A, filed on March
  28, 2007 (“Post-Effective Amendment No. 29”).
 
(g)(1) Custody Agreement is incorporated by reference to Exhibit (g)(1) of Post-Effective Amendment No. 30 to
  the Registration Statement on Form N-1A, filed on January 29, 2008.
 
(g)(2) Amendments to Custody Agreement and Foreign Custody Manager Agreement are incorporated by
reference to Exhibits (g)(2) and (g)(3), respectively, of Post-Effective Amendment No. 23 to the
  Registration Statement on Form N-1A, filed on March 18, 2002.
 
(h) Shareholder Services Plan is incorporated by reference to Exhibit (9) of Post-Effective Amendment No. 14.
 
(i) Opinion and consent of Registrant's counsel is incorporated by reference to Exhibit (10) of Post-Effective
  Amendment No. 14.

(j) Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm is incorporated by reference to Exhibit (j) of
  Post-Effective Amendment No. 33 to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A, filed on March 27, 2009.



Item 23. Exhibits. - List (continued)

(m) Rule 12b-1 Plan is incorporated by reference to Exhibit (m) of Post-Effective Amendment No. 25.
(n) Rule 18f-3 Plan is incorporated by reference to Exhibit (n) of Post-Effective Amendment No. 32.
(p) Code of Ethics adopted by Registrant, Registrant’s Adviser and Registrant’s Distributor is incorporated by
  reference to Exhibit (p) of Post-Effective Amendment No. 29.

Other Exhibits

(a)(1) Power of Attorney of the Board Members. *
(a)(2) Power of Attorney of Officers. *
(b) Certificate of Assistant Secretary. *

* Filed herewith.

Item 24. Persons Controlled by or under Common Control with Registrant.

Not Applicable

Item 25. Indemnification

The Registrant's charter documents set forth the circumstances under which indemnification shall be provided to any past or present Board member or officer of the Registrant. The Registrant also has entered into a separate agreement with each of its Board members that describes the conditions and manner in which the Registrant indemnifies each of its Board members against all liabilities incurred by them (including attorneys' fees and other litigation expenses, settlements, fines and penalties), or which may be threatened against them, as a result of being or having been a Board member of the Registrant. These indemnification provisions are subject to applicable state law and to the limitation under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, that no board member or officer of a fund may be protected against liability for willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard for the duties of his or her office. Reference is hereby made to the following:

Article VIII of the Registrant's Amended and Restated Declaration of Trust, incorporated by reference to Exhibit (1) of Post-Effective Amendment No. 14 and Exhibit (1)(b) of Post-Effective Amendment No. 17; Article 10 of the Registrant's By-Laws, as amended, incorporated by reference to Exhibit (b) of Post-Effective Amendment No. 27; and Section 1.11 of the Distribution Agreement, incorporated by reference to Exhibit (e) (1) of Post-Effective Amendment No. 25.



Item 26. Business and Other Connections of Investment Adviser.

The Dreyfus Corporation ("Dreyfus") and subsidiary companies comprise a financial service organization whose business consists primarily of providing investment management services as the investment adviser and manager for sponsored investment companies registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 and as an investment adviser to institutional and individual accounts. Dreyfus also serves as sub-investment adviser to and/or administrator of other investment companies. MBSC Securities Corporation, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Dreyfus, serves primarily as a registered broker-dealer and distributor of other investment companies advised and administered by Dreyfus. Dreyfus Investment Advisors, Inc., another wholly-owned subsidiary, provides investment management services to various pension plans, institutions and individuals.



ITEM 26.  Business and Other Connections of Investment Adviser (continued) 
  Officers and Directors of Investment Adviser 

 
Name and Position       
With Dreyfus  Other Businesses  Position Held  Dates 
 
 
Jonathan Baum  MBSC Securities Corporation++  Chief Executive Officer  3/08 - Present 
Chief Executive Officer    Chairman of the Board  3/08 - Present 
and Chair of the Board    Director  6/07 - 3/08 
    Executive Vice President  6/07 - 3/08 
 
  Dreyfus Service Corporation++  Director  8/06 - 6/07 
    Executive Vice President  8/06 - 6/07 
 
J. Charles Cardona  MBSC Securities Corporation++  Director  6/07 - Present 
President and Director    Executive Vice President  6/07 - Present 
 
  Universal Liquidity Funds plc+  Director  4/06 - Present 
 
  Dreyfus Service Corporation++  Executive Vice President  2/97 - 6/07 
    Director  8/00 - 6/07 
 
Diane P. Durnin  None     
Vice Chair and Director       
 
Phillip N. Maisano  The Bank of New York Mellon *****  Senior Vice President  7/08 - Present 
Director, Vice Chair and       
Chief Investment Officer       
 
  BNY Mellon, National Association +  Senior Vice President  7/08 - Present 
 
  Mellon Bank, N.A.+  Senior Vice President  4/06 - 6/08 
 
  BNY Alcentra Group Holdings, Inc.++  Director  10/07 - Present 
 
  BNY Mellon Investment Office GP LLC*  Manager  4/07 - Present 
 
  Mellon Global Alternative Investments Limited  Director  8/06 - Present 
  London, England     
 
  Pareto Investment Management Limited  Director  4/08 - Present 
  London, England     
 
  The Boston Company Asset Management NY,  Manager  10/07 - Present 
  LLC*     
 
  The Boston Company Asset Management, LLC*  Manager  12/06 - Present 
 
  Urdang Capital Management, Inc.  Director  10/07 - Present 
  630 West Germantown Pike, Suite 300     
  Plymouth Meeting, PA 19462     
 
  Urdang Securities Management, Inc.  Director  10/07 - Present 
  630 West Germantown Pike, Suite 300     
  Plymouth Meeting, PA 19462     
 
  EACM Advisors LLC  Chairman of Board  8/04 - Present 
  200 Connecticut Avenue     
  Norwalk, CT 06854-1940     
 
  Founders Asset Management LLC****  Member, Board of  11/06 - 12/09 
    Managers   

C-3



 
Name and Position       
With Dreyfus  Other Businesses  Position Held  Dates 
 
 
  Standish Mellon Asset Management Company,  Board Member  12/06 - Present 
  LLC     
  Mellon Financial Center     
  201 Washington Street     
  Boston, MA 02108-4408     
 
  Mellon Capital Management Corporation***  Director  12/06 - Present 
 
  Mellon Equity Associates, LLP+  Board Member  12/06 - 12/07 
 
  Newton Management Limited  Board Member  12/06 - Present 
  London, England     
 
  Franklin Portfolio Associates, LLC*  Board Member  12/06 - Present 
 
Mitchell E. Harris  Standish Mellon Asset Management Company  Chairman  2/05 - Present 
Director  LLC  Chief Executive Officer  8/04 - Present 
  Mellon Financial Center  Member, Board of  10/04 - Present 
  201 Washington Street  Managers   
  Boston, MA 02108-4408     
 
  Alcentra NY, LLC++  Manager  1/08 - Present 
 
  Alcentra US, Inc. ++  Director  1/08 - Present 
 
  Alcentra, Inc. ++  Director  1/08 - Present 
 
  BNY Alcentra Group Holdings, Inc. ++  Director  10/07 - Present 
 
  Pareto New York LLC++  Manager  11/07 - Present 
 
  Standish Ventures LLC  President  12/05 - Present 
  Mellon Financial Center     
  201 Washington Street     
  Boston, MA 02108-4408     
    Manager  12/05 - Present 
 
  Palomar Management  Director  12/97 - Present 
  London, England     
 
  Palomar Management Holdings Limited  Director  12/97 - Present 
  London, England     
 
  Pareto Investment Management Limited  Director  9/04 - Present 
  London, England     
 
  MAM (DE) Trust+++++  President  10/05 - 1/07 
    Member of Board of  10/05 - 1/07 
    Trustees   
 
  MAM (MA) Holding Trust+++++  President  10/05 - 1/07 
    Member of Board of  10/05 - 1/07 
    Trustees   

C-4



 
Name and Position       
With Dreyfus  Other Businesses  Position Held  Dates 
Ronald P. O Hanley  The Bank of New York Mellon Corporation *****  Vice Chairman  7/07 - Present 
Director       
  Mellon Financial Corporation+  Vice Chairman  6/01 - 6/07 
  Mellon Trust of New England, N.A. *  Vice Chairman  4/05 - 6/08 
  The Bank of New York Mellon *****  Vice Chairman  7/08 - Present 
  BNY Mellon, National Association +  Vice Chairman  7/08 - Present 
  BNY Alcentra Group Holdings, Inc. ++  Director  10/07 - Present 
  BNY Mellon Investment Office GP LLC+  Manager  4/07 - Present 
  EACM Advisors LLC  Manager  6/04 - Present 
  200 Connecticut Avenue     
  Norwalk, CT 06854-1940     
  Ivy Asset Management Corp.  Director  12/07 - Present 
  One Jericho Plaza     
  Jericho, NY 11753     
  Neptune LLC+++++  Chairman  7/98 - Present 
    President  7/98 - Present 
    Member, Management  6/98 - Present 
    Committee   
  Pareto Investment Management Limited  Director  9/04 - Present 
  London, England     
  The Boston Company Asset Management NY,  Manager  10/07 - Present 
  LLC*     
  The Boston Company Asset Management, LLC*  Manager  12/97 - Present 
  The Boston Company Holding, LLC*  Vice Chairman  2/07 - Present 
  Walter Scott & Partners Limited  Director  10/06 - Present 
  Edinburgh, Scotland     
  WestLB Mellon Asset Management Holdings  Director  4/06 - Present 
  Limited     
  Dusseldorf, Germany     
  Mellon Bank, N.A. +  Vice Chairman  6/01 - 6/08 
  Standish Mellon Asset Management Company,  Board Member  7/01 Present 
  LLC     
  Mellon Financial Center     
  201 Washington Street     
  Boston, MA 02108-4408     
  Franklin Portfolio Holdings, LLC*  Director  12/00 - Present 
  Franklin Portfolio Associates, LLC*  Director  4/97 Present 
  Pareto Partners (NY) ++  Partner Representative  2/00 - Present 
 
  Buck Consultants, Inc.++  Director  7/97 - Present 

C-5



 
Name and Position       
With Dreyfus  Other Businesses  Position Held  Dates 
 
 
  Newton Management Limited  Executive Committee  10/98 - Present 
  London, England  Member   
    Director  10/98 - Present 
 
  BNY Mellon Asset Management Japan Limited  Director  6/06 - Present 
  Tokyo, Japan     
 
  TBCAM Holdings, LLC*  Director  1/98 Present 
 
  MAM (MA) Holding Trust+++++  Trustee  6/03 Present 
 
  MAM (DE) Trust+++++  Trustee  6/03 Present 
 
  Pareto Partners  Partner Representative  5/97 Present 
  The Bank of New York Mellon Centre     
  160 Queen Victoria Street     
  London England     
 
  Mellon Capital Management Corporation***  Director  2/97 Present 
 
  Mellon Equity Associates, LLP+  Executive Committee  1/98 12/07 
    Member   
    Chairman  1/98 12/07 
 
  Mellon Global Investing Corp.*  Director  5/97 Present 
    Chairman  5/97 - Present 
    Chief Executive Officer  5/97 Present 
 
Cyrus Taraporevala  Urdang Capital Management, Inc.  Director  10/07 - Present 
Director  630 West Germantown Pike, Suite 300     
  Plymouth Meeting, PA 19462     
 
  Urdang Securities Management, Inc.  Director  10/07 - Present 
  630 West Germantown Pike, Suite 300     
  Plymouth Meeting, PA 19462     
 
  The Boston Company Asset Management NY,  Manager  08/06 Present 
  LLC*     
 
  The Boston Company Asset Management LLC*  Manager  01/08 Present 
 
  BNY Mellon, National Association+  Senior Vice President  07/06 - Present 
 
  The Bank of New York Mellon*****  Senior Vice President  07/06 - Present 
 
Scott E. Wennerholm  Mellon Capital Management Corporation***  Director  10/05 - Present 
Director       
 
  Newton Management Limited  Director  1/06 - Present 
  London, England     
 
  Gannett Welsh & Kotler LLC  Manager  11/07 - Present 
  222 Berkley Street  Administrator  11/07 - Present 
  Boston, MA 02116     
 
  BNY Alcentra Group Holdings, Inc. ++  Director  10/07 - Present 
 
  Ivy Asset Management Corp.  Director  12/07 - Present 
  One Jericho Plaza     
  Jericho, NY 11753     

C-6



 
Name and Position       
With Dreyfus  Other Businesses  Position Held  Dates 
 
 
  Urdang Capital Management, Inc.  Director  10/07 - Present 
  630 West Germantown Pike, Suite 300     
  Plymouth Meeting, PA 19462     
 
  Urdang Securities Management, Inc.  Director  10/07 - Present 
  630 West Germantown Pike, Suite 300     
  Plymouth Meeting, PA 19462     
 
  EACM Advisors LLC  Manager  6/04 - Present 
  200 Connecticut Avenue     
  Norwalk, CT 06854-1940     
 
  Franklin Portfolio Associates LLC*  Manager  1/06 - Present 
 
  The Boston Company Asset Management NY,  Manager  10/07 - Present 
  LLC*     
 
  The Boston Company Asset Management LLC*  Manager  10/05 - Present 
 
  Pareto Investment Management Limited  Director  3/06 - Present 
  London, England     
 
  Mellon Equity Associates, LLP+  Executive Committee  10/05 - 12/07 
    Member   
 
  Standish Mellon Asset Management Company,  Member, Board of  10/05 - Present 
  LLC  Managers   
  Mellon Financial Center     
  201 Washington Street     
  Boston, MA 02108-4408     
 
  The Boston Company Holding, LLC*  Member, Board of  4/06 - Present 
    Managers   
 
  The Bank of New York Mellon *****  Senior Vice President  7/08 - Present 
 
 
  BNY Mellon, National Association +  Senior Vice President  7/08 - Present 
 
  Mellon Bank, N.A. +  Senior Vice President  10/05 - 6/08 
 
  Mellon Trust of New England, N. A.*  Director  4/06 - 6/08 
    Senior Vice President  10/05 - 6/08 
 
  MAM (DE) Trust+++++  Member of Board of  1/07 - Present 
    Trustees   
 
  MAM (MA) Holding Trust+++++  Member of Board of  1/07 - Present 
    Trustees   

C-7



 
Name and Position       
With Dreyfus  Other Businesses  Position Held  Dates 
 
Bradley J. Skapyak  MBSC Securities Corporation++  Executive Vice President  6/07 - Present 
Chief Operating Officer       
and Director       
  Dreyfus Service Corporation++  Executive Vice President  2/07 - 6/07 
    Senior Vice President  10/97 - 2/07 
 
  The Bank of New York Mellon****  Senior Vice President  4/07 - Present 
 
Dwight Jacobsen  Pioneer Investments  Senior Vice President  4/06 12/07 
Executive Vice President  60 State Street     
and Director  Boston, Massachusetts     
 
Patrice M. Kozlowski  None     
Senior Vice President        
Corporate       
Communications       
 
Gary Pierce  The Bank of New York Mellon *****  Vice President  7/08 - Present 
Controller       
 
 
  BNY Mellon, National Association +  Vice President  7/08 - Present 
 
  The Dreyfus Trust Company+++  Chief Financial Officer  7/05 - 6/08 
    Treasurer  7/05 - 6/08 
 
  Laurel Capital Advisors, LLP+  Chief Financial Officer  5/07 - Present 
 
  MBSC, LLC++  Chief Financial Officer  7/05 - 6/07 
    Manager, Board of  7/05 - 6/07 
    Managers   
 
  MBSC Securities Corporation++  Director  6/07 - Present 
    Chief Financial Officer  6/07 - Present 
 
  Dreyfus Service Corporation++  Director  7/05 - 6/07 
    Chief Financial Officer  7/05 - 6/07 
 
  Founders Asset Management, LLC****  Assistant Treasurer  7/06 - 12/09 
 
  Dreyfus Consumer Credit  Treasurer  7/05 - Present 
  Corporation ++     
 
  Dreyfus Transfer, Inc. ++  Chief Financial Officer  7/05 - Present 
 
  Dreyfus Service  Treasurer  7/05 - Present 
  Organization, Inc.++     
  Seven Six Seven Agency, Inc. ++  Treasurer  4/99 - Present 

C-8



 
Name and Position       
With Dreyfus  Other Businesses  Position Held  Dates 
 
Joseph W. Connolly  The Dreyfus Family of Funds++  Chief Compliance  10/04 - Present 
Chief Compliance Officer    Officer   
  Laurel Capital Advisors, LLP+  Chief Compliance  4/05 - Present 
    Officer   
  The Mellon Funds Trust++  Chief Compliance  10/04 - Present 
    Officer   
  MBSC, LLC++  Chief Compliance  10/04 6/07 
    Officer   
  MBSC Securities Corporation++  Chief Compliance  6/07 Present 
    Officer   
  Dreyfus Service Corporation++  Chief Compliance  10/04 6/07 
    Officer   
 
Gary E. Abbs  The Bank of New York Mellon+  First Vice President and  12/96 Present 
Vice President Tax    Manager of Tax   
    Compliance   
 
  Dreyfus Service Organization++  Vice President Tax  01/09 Present 
 
  Dreyfus Consumer Credit Corporation++  Chairman  01/09 Present 
    President  01/09 Present 
 
  MBSC Securities Corporation++  Vice President Tax  01/09 Present 
 
Jill Gill  Mellon Financial Corporation +  Vice President  10/01 6/07 
Vice President        
Human Resources  MBSC Securities Corporation++  Vice President  6/07 Present 
 
  The Bank of New York Mellon *****  Vice President  7/08 Present 
 
  BNY Mellon, National Association +  Vice President  7/08 - Present 
 
  Mellon Bank N.A. +  Vice President  10/06 6/08 
 
  Dreyfus Service Corporation++  Vice President  10/06 6/07 
 
Joanne S. Huber  The Bank of New York Mellon+  State & Local  07/1/07  
Vice President Tax    Compliance Manager  Present 
 
  Dreyfus Service Organization++  Vice President Tax  01/09 Present 
 
  Dreyfus Consumer Credit Corporation++  Vice President Tax  01/09 Present 
 
  MBSC Securities Corporation++  Vice President Tax  01/09 Present 
 
Anthony Mayo  None     
Vice President        
Information Systems       
 
John E. Lane  A P Colorado, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
Vice President    Estate and Leases   
  A P East, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  A P Management, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  A P Properties, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  A P Rural Land, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - 9/07 
    Estate and Leases   
  Allomon Corporation+  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   

C-9



 
Name and Position       
With Dreyfus  Other Businesses  Position Held  Dates 
 
  AP Residential Realty, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  AP Wheels, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  BNY Mellon, National Association +  Vice President Real  7/08 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Citmelex Corporation+  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Eagle Investment Systems LLC  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
  65 LaSalle Road  Estate and Leases   
  West Hartford, CT 06107     
  East Properties Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  FSFC, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Holiday Properties, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  MBC Investments Corporation+  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  MBSC Securities Corporation++  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  MELDEL Leasing Corporation Number 2, Inc. +  Vice President Real  7/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Mellon Bank Community Development  Vice President Real  11/07 - Present 
  Corporation+  Estate and Leases   
 
  Mellon Capital Management Corporation+  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Mellon Financial Services Corporation #1+  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Mellon Financial Services Corporation #4+  Vice President Real  7/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Mellon Funding Corporation+  Vice President Real  12/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Mellon Holdings, LLC+  Vice President Real  12/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Mellon International Leasing Company+  Vice President Real  7/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Mellon Leasing Corporation+  Vice President Real  7/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Mellon Private Trust Company, National  Vice President Real  8/07 - 1/08 
  Association+  Estate and Leases   
 
  Mellon Securities Trust Company+  Vice President Real  8/07 - 7/08 
    Estate and Leases   
  Mellon Trust Company of Illinois+  Vice President Real  8/07 - 07/08 
    Estate and Leases   
  Mellon Trust Company of New England, N.A.+  Vice President Real  8/07 - 6/08 
    Estate and Leases   
  Mellon Trust Company of New York LLC++  Vice President Real  8/07 - 6/08 
    Estate and Leases   
  Mellon Ventures, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Melnamor Corporation+  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  MFS Leasing Corp. +  Vice President Real  7/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  MMIP, LLC+  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Pareto New York LLC++  Vice President Real  10/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   

C-10



 
Name and Position       
With Dreyfus  Other Businesses  Position Held  Dates 
 
  Pontus, Inc. +  Vice President Real  7/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Promenade, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  RECR, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  SKAP #7+  Vice President Real  8/07 - 11/07 
    Estate and Leases   
  Technology Services Group, Inc.*****  Senior Vice President  6/06 - Present 
 
  Tennesee Processing Center LLC*****  Managing Director  5/08 - Present 
    Senior Vice President  4/04 - 5/08 
 
  Texas AP, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  The Bank of New York Mellon*****  Vice President Real  7/08 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  The Bank of New York Mellon Corporation*****  Executive Vice President  8/07 - Present 
 
  Trilem, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
Jeanne M. Login  A P Colorado, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
Vice President    Estate and Leases   
  A P East, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  A P Management, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  A P Properties, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  A P Rural Land, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - 9/07 
    Estate and Leases   
  Allomon Corporation+  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  AP Residential Realty, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  AP Wheels, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  APT Holdings Corporation+  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  BNY Investment Management Services LLC++++  Vice President Real  1/01 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  BNY Mellon, National Association +  Vice President Real  7/08 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Citmelex Corporation+  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Eagle Investment Systems LLC+  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  East Properties Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  FSFC, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Holiday Properties, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  MBC Investments Corporation+  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  MBSC Securities Corporation++  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  MELDEL Leasing Corporation Number 2, Inc. +  Vice President Real  7/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   

C-11



 
Name and Position       
With Dreyfus  Other Businesses  Position Held  Dates 
 
  Mellon Bank Community Development  Vice President Real  11/07 - Present 
  Corporation+  Estate and Leases   
 
  Mellon Capital Management Corporation+  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Mellon Financial Services Corporation #1+  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Mellon Financial Services Corporation #4+  Vice President Real  7/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Mellon Funding Corporation+  Vice President Real  12/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Mellon Holdings LLC+  Vice President Real  12/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Mellon International Leasing Company+  Vice President Real  7/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Mellon Leasing Corporation+  Vice President Real  7/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Mellon Private Trust Company, National  Vice President Real  8/07 - 1/08 
  Association+  Estate and Leases   
 
  Mellon Securities Trust Company+  Vice President Real  8/07 - 7/08 
    Estate and Leases   
  Mellon Trust of New England, N.A. *  Vice President Real  8/07 - 6/08 
    Estate and Leases   
  Mellon Trust Company of Illinois+  Vice President Real  8/07 - 7/08 
    Estate and Leases   
  MFS Leasing Corp. +  Vice President Real  7/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  MMIP, LLC+  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Pontus, Inc. +  Vice President Real  7/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Promenade, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  RECR, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  SKAP #7+  Vice President Real  8/07 - 11/07 
    Estate and Leases   
  Tennesee Processing Center LLC*****  Managing Director  5/08 - Present 
    Senior Vice President  4/04 - 5/08 
 
  Texas AP, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  The Bank of New York Mellon*****  Vice President Real  7/08 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
  Trilem, Inc. +  Vice President Real  8/07 - Present 
    Estate and Leases   
 
James Bitetto  MBSC Securities Corporation++  Assistant Secretary  6/07 - Present 
Secretary       
  Dreyfus Service Corporation++  Assistant Secretary  8/98 - 6/07 
 
  Dreyfus Service Organization, Inc.++  Secretary  8/05 - Present 
 
  The Dreyfus Consumer Credit Corporation++  Vice President  2/02 - Present 
    Director  2/02 - 7/06 
 
  Founders Asset Management LLC****  Assistant Secretary  3/09 - 12/09 

C-12



*  The address of the business so indicated is One Boston Place, Boston, Massachusetts, 02108. 
**  The address of the business so indicated is One Bush Street, Suite 450, San Francisco, California 94104. 
***  The address of the business so indicated is 595 Market Street, Suite 3000, San Francisco, California 94105. 
****  The address of the business so indicated is 210 University Blvd., Suite 800, Denver, Colorado 80206. 
*****  The address of the business so indicated is One Wall Street, New York, New York 10286. 
+  The address of the business so indicated is One Mellon Bank Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15258. 
++  The address of the business so indicated is 200 Park Avenue, New York, New York 10166. 
+++  The address of the business so indicated is 144 Glenn Curtiss Boulevard, Uniondale, New York 11556-0144. 
++++  The address of the business so indicated is White Clay Center, Route 273, Newark, Delaware 19711. 
+++++  The address of the business so indicated is 4005 Kennett Pike, Greenville, DE 19804. 

C-13


Item 27. Principal Underwriters

     (a) Other investment companies for which Registrant's principal underwriter (exclusive distributor) acts as principal underwriter or exclusive distributor:

1.      Advantage Funds, Inc.
 
2.      BNY Mellon Funds Trust
 
3.      CitizensSelect Funds
 
4.      Dreyfus Appreciation Fund, Inc.
 
5.      Dreyfus BASIC Money Market Fund, Inc.
 
6.      Dreyfus BASIC U.S. Government Money Market Fund
 
7.      Dreyfus BASIC U.S. Mortgage Securities Fund
 
8.      Dreyfus Bond Funds, Inc.
 
9.      Dreyfus Cash Management
 
10.      Dreyfus Cash Management Plus, Inc.
 
11.      Dreyfus Connecticut Municipal Money Market Fund, Inc.
 
12.      Dreyfus Funds, Inc.
 
13.      The Dreyfus Fund Incorporated
 
14.      Dreyfus Government Cash Management Funds
 
15.      Dreyfus Growth and Income Fund, Inc.
 
16.      Dreyfus Index Funds, Inc.
 
17.      Dreyfus Institutional Cash Advantage Funds
 
18.      Dreyfus Institutional Money Market Fund
 
19.      Dreyfus Institutional Preferred Money Market Funds
 
20.      Dreyfus Institutional Reserves Funds
 
21.      Dreyfus Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund, Inc.
 
22.      Dreyfus International Funds, Inc.
 
23.      Dreyfus Investment Funds
 
24.      Dreyfus Investment Grade Funds, Inc.
 
25.      Dreyfus Investment Portfolios
 
26.      The Dreyfus/Laurel Funds, Inc.
 
27.      The Dreyfus/Laurel Funds Trust
 
28.      The Dreyfus/Laurel Tax-Free Municipal Funds
 
29.      Dreyfus LifeTime Portfolios, Inc.
 
30.      Dreyfus Liquid Assets, Inc.
 
31.      Dreyfus Manager Funds I
 
32.      Dreyfus Manager Funds II
 
33.      Dreyfus Massachusetts Municipal Money Market Fund
 
34.      Dreyfus Midcap Index Fund, Inc.
 
35.      Dreyfus Money Market Instruments, Inc.
 
36.      Dreyfus Municipal Bond Opportunity Fund
 
37.      Dreyfus Municipal Cash Management Plus
 
38.      Dreyfus Municipal Funds, Inc.
 
39.      Dreyfus Municipal Money Market Fund, Inc.
 
40.      Dreyfus New Jersey Municipal Bond Fund, Inc.
 
41.      Dreyfus New Jersey Municipal Money Market Fund, Inc.
 
42.      Dreyfus New York AMT-Free Municipal Bond Fund
 
43.      Dreyfus New York AMT-Free Municipal Money Market Fund
 
44.      Dreyfus New York Municipal Cash Management
 
45.      Dreyfus New York Tax Exempt Bond Fund, Inc.
 
46.      Dreyfus Opportunity Funds
 

C-14


 
47.      Dreyfus Pennsylvania Municipal Money Market Fund
 
48.      Dreyfus Premier California AMT-Free Municipal Bond Fund, Inc.
 
49.      Dreyfus Premier Equity Funds, Inc.
 
50.      Dreyfus Premier GNMA Fund, Inc.
 
51.      Dreyfus Premier Investment Funds, Inc.
 
52.      Dreyfus Premier Short-Intermediate Municipal Bond Fund
 
53.      Dreyfus Premier Worldwide Growth Fund, Inc.
 
54.      Dreyfus Research Growth Fund, Inc.
 
55.      Dreyfus State Municipal Bond Funds
 
56.      Dreyfus Stock Funds
 
57.      Dreyfus Short-Intermediate Government Fund
 
58.      The Dreyfus Socially Responsible Growth Fund, Inc.
 
59.      Dreyfus Stock Index Fund, Inc.
 
60.      Dreyfus Tax Exempt Cash Management Funds
 
61.      The Dreyfus Third Century Fund, Inc.
 
62.      Dreyfus Treasury & Agency Cash Management
 
63.      Dreyfus Treasury Prime Cash Management
 
64.      Dreyfus U.S. Treasury Intermediate Term Fund
 
65.      Dreyfus U.S. Treasury Long Term Fund
 
66.      Dreyfus 100% U.S. Treasury Money Market Fund
 
67.      Dreyfus Variable Investment Fund
 
68.      Dreyfus Worldwide Dollar Money Market Fund, Inc.
 
69.      General California Municipal Money Market Fund
 
70.      General Government Securities Money Market Funds, Inc.
 
71.      General Money Market Fund, Inc.
 
72.      General Municipal Money Market Funds, Inc.
 
73.      General New York Municipal Bond Fund, Inc.
 
74.      General New York Municipal Money Market Fund
 
75.      Strategic Funds, Inc.
 

C-15



 
(b)     
Name and principal    Positions and Offices 
Business address  Positions and offices with the Distributor  with Registrant 
 
Jon R. Baum*  Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board  None 
Ken Bradle**  President and Director  None 
Robert G. Capone*****  Executive Vice President and Director  None 
J. Charles Cardona*  Executive Vice President and Director  None 
Sue Ann Cormack**  Executive Vice President  None 
Dwight D. Jacobsen*  Executive Vice President and Director  None 
Mark A. Keleher******  Executive Vice President  None 
James D. Kohley****  Executive Vice President  None 
William H. Maresca*  Executive Vice President and Director  None 
Timothy M. McCormick*  Executive Vice President  None 
David K. Mossman****  Executive Vice President  None 
James Neiland*  Executive Vice President  None 
Sean O’Neil*****  Executive Vice President and Director  None 
Irene Papadoulis**  Executive Vice President  None 
Matthew Perrone**  Executive Vice President  None 
Noreen Ross*  Executive Vice President  None 
Bradley J. Skapyak*  Executive Vice President  None 
Gary Pierce*  Chief Financial Officer and Director  None 
Tracy Hopkins*  Senior Vice President  None 
Marc S. Isaacson**  Senior Vice President  None 
Denise B. Kneeland*****  Senior Vice President  None 
Mary T. Lomasney*****  Senior Vice President  None 
Barbara A. McCann*****  Senior Vice President  None 
Christine Carr Smith******  Senior Vice President  None 
Ronald Jamison*  Chief Legal Officer and Secretary  None 
Joseph W. Connolly*  Chief Compliance Officer (Investment Advisory Business)  Chief Compliance Officer 
Stephen Storen*  Chief Compliance Officer  None 
Maria Georgopoulos*  Vice President – Facilities Management  None 
William Germenis*  Vice President – Compliance and Anti-Money Laundering  Anti-Money Laundering 
  Officer  Compliance Officer 
Karin L. Waldmann*  Privacy Officer  None 
Gary E. Abbs****  Vice President - Tax  None 
Timothy I. Barrett**  Vice President  None 
Gina DiChiara*  Vice President  None 
Jill Gill*  Vice President  None 
Joanne S. Huber****  Vice President - Tax  None 
John E. Lane*******  Vice President – Real Estate and Leases  None 
Jeanne M. Login*******  Vice President – Real Estate and Leases  None 
Edward A. Markward*  Vice President – Compliance  None 
Paul Molloy*  Vice President  None 
Anthony Nunez*  Vice President – Finance  None 
William Schalda*  Vice President  None 
John Shea*  Vice President – Finance  None 
Christopher A. Stallone**  Vice President  None 
Susan Verbil*  Vice President – Finance  None 
William Verity*  Vice President – Finance  None 
James Windels*  Vice President  Treasurer 

C-16



 
(b)     
Name and principal    Positions and Offices 
Business address  Positions and offices with the Distributor  with Registrant 
 
James Bitetto*  Assistant Secretary  Vice President and 
    Assistant Secretary 
James D. Muir*  Assistant Secretary  None 
Ken Christoffersen***  Assistant Secretary  None 
 
*      Principal business address is 200 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10166.
**      Principal business address is 144 Glenn Curtiss Blvd., Uniondale, NY 11556-0144.
***      Principal business address is 210 University Blvd., Suite 800, Denver, CO 80206.
****      Principal business address is One Mellon Bank Center, Pittsburgh, PA 15258.
*****      Principal business address is One Boston Place, Boston, MA 02108.
******      Principal business address is 595 Market Street, San Francisco, CA 94105.
*******      Principal business address is 101 Barclay Street, New York 10286.

C-17


Item 28.    Location of Accounts and Records 

1.    The Bank of New York Mellon 
    One Wall Street 
    New York, New York 10286 
 
2.    DST Systems, Inc. 
    1055 Broadway 
Kansas City, MO 64105
 
3.    The Dreyfus Corporation 
    200 Park Avenue 
    New York, New York 10166 

Item 29.    Management Services 

Not Applicable

Item 30.    Undertakings 

None

C-18



SIGNATURES
__________

     Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933 and to the Investment Company Act of 1940, the Registrant has duly caused this Amendment to the Registration Statement to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, in the City of New York, and State of New York on the 28th day of January, 2010.

  DREYFUS NEW YORK AMT-FREE MUNICIPAL BOND FUND
 
BY: /s/Bradley J. Skapyak*
  Bradley J. Skapyak, PRESIDENT

     Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this Amendment to the Registration Statement has been signed below by the following persons in the capacities and on the date indicated.

Signatures Title Date
 
 
/s/ Bradley J. Skapyak* President 1/28/10
  (Principal Executive Officer)  
Bradley J. Skapyak    
 
 
/s/James Windels* Treasurer  
  (Principal Financial and Accounting 1/28/10
James Windels Officer)  
 
 
 
/s/Joseph S. DiMartino* Chairman of the Board 1/28/10
Joseph S. DiMartino    
 
 
 
/s/Clifford L. Alexander, Jr.* Board Member 1/28/10
Clifford L. Alexander, Jr.    
 
 
 
/s/ David W. Burke* Board Member 1/28/10
David W. Burke    



/s/ Peggy C. Davis* Board Member 1/28/10
Peggy C. Davis    
 
/s/Diane Dunst* Board Member 1/28/10
Diane Dunst    
 
/s/Ernest Kafka* Board Member 1/28/10
Ernest Kafka    
 
/s/Nathan Leventhal* Board Member 1/28/10
Nathan Leventhal    
 
/s/Warren B. Rudman* Board Member 1/28/10
Warren B. Rudman    

*BY: /s/ Janette E. Farragher
  Janette E. Farragher,
  Attorney-in-Fact



DREYFUS NEW YORK AMT-FREE MUNICIPAL BOND FUND

INDEX OF EXHIBITS

ITEM 23

Other Exhibits

(a)(1) Power of Attorney of the Directors.
(a)(2) Power of Attorney of Officers.
(b) Certificate of Assistant Secretary.