Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Wolf to pursue Farm Show borrowing plan to plug deficit

- By Marc Levy The Associated Press

HARRISBURG, PA. » Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf’s administra­tion said Monday that it will look to borrow against the Pennsylvan­ia Farm Show Complex and Expo Center to help plug a projected $2.2 billion deficit and make payments to schools and human services providers.

It is the second unilateral move in a week announced by Wolf’s office to borrow money since efforts stalled last week in the state House of Representa­tives to pass a tax package the governor had insisted on to help whittle down an entrenched postrecess­ion deficit.

A Farm Show “lease-leaseback” is expected to yield $200 million up front, to be paid back with interest over 29 years, the Wolf administra­tion said.

The administra­tion could not immediatel­y say how much money such a transactio­n would cost. In an email, Agricultur­e Secretary Russell Redding told Farm Show commission­ers that the state will begin accepting proposals from interested investors.

It would, Redding said, retain full ownership and control of a nearly 1 millionsqu­are-foot complex that hosts regional draws, including the Farm Show and expos featuring guns, horses, outdoor recreation, recreation­al vehicles and home improvemen­ts.

The state already issued a request for informatio­n on the project in the spring.

The move comes on the heels of Wolf’s announceme­nt last week that his administra­tion will look to borrow $1.2 billion against revenue from the state-controlled wine and liquor store system. The scale of longterm borrowing being considered to prop up the state’s general operations is unpreceden­ted in Pennsylvan­ia, say current and former state budget officials.

Public finance analysts generally regard borrowing to pay operating costs as bad fiscal practice and a last resort, and the practice of plugging deficits with onetime cash infusions over the last five years has played a prominent role in Pennsylvan­ia’s credit rating plunging to the bottom rungs of state ratings.

The department­s of the auditor general and the treasury and leaders of the Republican-controlled Senate have not challenged Wolf’s borrowing plans, although a top lawyer for the Senate Republican­s, Drew Crompton, said he did not have enough details from the administra­tion to determine whether its moves are legal.

State government is three months into its fiscal year without an approved revenue package to fully fund a nearly $32 billion budget bill that lawmakers passed June 30.

Meanwhile, $650 million in aid to five schools — Penn State, Temple and Lincoln universiti­es; the University of Pittsburgh; and the University of Pennsylvan­ia’s veterinary school — is stuck in limbo, and Wolf and House Republican­s have blamed the failure of a revenue package on each other.

A spokesman for the House Republican majority insisted Wolf’s administra­tion cannot unilateral­ly execute the leaseback arrangemen­t and at a minimum needs approval from the Farm Show Commission.

Wolf’s office disputed that, and a member of the Farm Show Commission, David Black, said that as far as he knew the commission does not have to vote on it.

However, Black, as president of the Harrisburg Regional Chamber, said he was concerned that the deal would bite into funding to maintain the huge complex.

“When things need to be cut, government in general will cut back in maintenanc­e on facilities,” Black said. “And as we all know, if you don’t do the maintenanc­e on your house over time you’re going to have some big bills, and these are some big buildings.”

 ??  ?? Gov. Tom Wolf
Gov. Tom Wolf

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