ALBANY — Anti-corruption legislation passed by the Senate and supported by members of the Assembly on both sides of the aisle is not likely to pass this session, Assembly Minority Leader Brian Kolb said Wednesday.

Kolb and other members of the Republican conference said time is running out for passing bills that would institute more transparency in state government.

With just five working days left in this year’s legislative session, several initiatives that would create more checks and balances on government spending are likely to stall.

“Inaction from the Assembly Majority is simply inexcusable,” Kolb said, referring to Democrats.

“With no explanation and no just cause, it continues to block much-needed reforms for no good reason. New York’s economic development programs are broken, ineffective and corrupt.”

Buffalo Assemblywoman Crystal Peoples-Stokes’ Procurement Integrity Act passed the Senate with support on both sides of the aisle but has not been put up for a vote by her Democratic colleagues in the Assembly.

The bill would restore Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli’s oversight of state contracts awarded through SUNY, CUNY and the Office of General Services. It would ban contracts through state affiliated not-for-profits, which don’t have to report spending the same way as state agencies.

Assemblyman Robin Schimminger’s bill to create a “Database of Deals” is also stuck in the lower house. The Buffalo-area Democrat’s legislation would allow the public to search a database of economic development benefits that have been awarded.

“Time is short for the Assembly to act,” said Brandon Muir, Executive Director of Reclaim New York​ Initiative. “If lawmakers truly want to crackdown on Albany corruption, they will pass the Procurement Integrity Act now. New Yorkers simply can’t afford another corruption-laden gut punch.”

Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie did not respond to a request for comment.