Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Wolf, Wagner make questionab­le claims about school funding

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG » Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Tom Wolf, a Democrat, and his opponent in the November election, Republican Scott Wagner, each accuse the other of wanting to cut school funding. Neither candidate has quite been able to prove his point.

A look at Wolf’s comments Tuesday on KDKAAM radio in Pittsburgh, in which he sought to counter attacks over school funding that Wagner began earlier this month:

WOLF: “My opponent Scott Wagner has been lying about my record on education.”

ANALYSIS: Wagner has claimed — including in a July 12 news conference in Pittsburgh — that Wolf proposed a redistribu­tion of state aid that would result in deep funding cuts to certain school districts.

Wagner is unable to point to an instance in which Wolf said he supported switching the existing scheme of distributi­ng state aid to public schools even if it means cutting aid to certain school districts.

Wagner instead points to a June 29 online report by WHYY-FM in Philadelph­ia citing Wolf as saying the state needs “a fair funding formula for all dollars going into public education.” The report is headlined, “Gov. Wolf calls for drastic school funding shakeup in surprise announceme­nt,” but goes on to say, “Wolf did not elaborate Friday whether he’d support a sudden shift in how the formula is applied or if he’d prefer a staggered approach.”

Asked about it, Wolf told The Associated Press that he does not support changing the distributi­on in a way that would cut funding to any school district. Rather, Wolf’s aides say he backs a shift when there’s a big enough increase in state aid to put all school aid through the state’s threeyear-old funding formula without cutting aid to any single district.

The funding formula was approved by lawmakers — including Wagner, who was a state senator in 2015 — as a fairer way of distributi­ng state aid for public school instructio­n and operations. It currently applies to less than 10 percent of that aid, and lawmakers typically must approve any shift in distributi­on.

WOLF: “Only one person supported and continues to advocate for cuts to our schools and that’s Scott Wagner.”

ANALYSIS: Wolf’s campaign is unable to point to an instance where Wagner continues to advocate for cutting school funding.

Wolf’s campaign points to two particular statements.

In 2011, before he was in public office, Wagner was asked on a public affairs show whether then-Gov. Tom Corbett, a Republican, should go through with a plan to cut education funding. Wagner replied, “Yes, I believe Gov. Corbett needs to stick to his plan.” The Legislatur­e ultimately approved a $1.1 billion budget-balancing cut to public schools and universiti­es, signed by Corbett.

Then in a primary debate four months ago, Wagner answered a question about whether public school funding levels are “fair and adequate,” saying he believes the state spends “enough money” in public schools per student, while stressing the need for frugality, fewer regulation­s and more accountabi­lity.

Wagner has said he can reduce state spending by up to $4 billion, but he hasn’t said where he’d find the savings. In any case, in his July 12 press conference, Wagner said, “I will never propose a plan or sign a budget that cuts funding for education.”

WOLF: “He also wants to lay off 10 percent of teachers.”

ANALYSIS: The reference comes from a 2015 interview with WHTM-TV in Harrisburg. Wagner is quoted as saying, “We have 180,000 teachers in the state of Pennsylvan­ia. If we laid off 10 percent of the teachers in the state of Pennsylvan­ia, we’d never miss them.”

However, Wolf’s campaign can’t point to where Wagner said he supports laying off 10 percent of teachers as governor, and Wagner’s campaign said he has never proposed it and will not propose it.

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