Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

What to watch for in Pa. governor’s budget proposal

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG » Gov. Tom Wolf has weathered knockdown, drag-out budget fights with lawmakers, massive and unforeseen cash deficits and, now in his next-to-last year, perhaps the heaviest dose of financial stress and unpredicta­bility he’s seen.

On Tuesday, the Democrat will deliver his seventh budget proposal to Pennsylvan­ia’s Republican-controlled Legislatur­e, facing a pandemic that has helped spawn a projected multibilli­on-dollar state operating deficit and other liabilitie­s, including fast-expanding Medicaid rolls, new debts and a cash crunch that let other problems fester.

Still, nobody in Harrisburg is talking about tax increases or spending cuts to balance the budget.

Rather, Wolf is hoping that more federal pandemic aid will rescue the state’s finances until the economy recovers.

“I think we should have a strong bounce-back, and that would make moving forward really good, but we have some one-time challenges in this budget and a lot of it is riding on what the federal government does,” Wolf told a Greater Philadelph­ia Chamber of Commerce

audience this month.

Underscori­ng the unpredicta­bility of the situation, Wolf told reporters Thursday, “We’re all flying in an area of unknowns.”

The budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1 is being launched into the state Capitol’s highly political blame game over the government’s coronaviru­s response.

House Majority Leader Kerry Benninghof­f, R-Centre, suggested that Republican­s will look to avoid funding

cuts — “We keep our commitment­s to those that we fund,” he said — but also downplayed expectatio­ns for a federal rescue.

“It would be irresponsi­ble for us to think we should just sit back and expect more money coming from Washington,” he said.

Philadelph­ia Sen. Vince Hughes, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee, is optimistic.

“I’m seeing extremely positive signs from the federal government to do what it is that we need Joe Biden and Kamala Harris to do,” Hughes said.

Five things to watch in the governor’s plan:

Spending

The current year’s budget plan was approved at $33.1 billion, but that’s not the whole story. Federal coronaviru­s recovery aid is lowering the reliance on state tax dollars by about $3.4 billion.

The Independen­t Fiscal Office, a nonpartisa­n legislativ­e agency, is projecting that the state will need to spend slightly above $37.7 billion to maintain its current programs, with spending particular­ly driven by the rising cost of health care for poor people and long-term care for older adults.

That amounts to a $2.5 billion projected deficit, up from the Independen­t Fiscal Office’s deficit projection of $1 billion before the pandemic.

“The COVID pandemic really downshifte­d the economy, so we lost a full year of economic growth,” said Matthew Knittel, the office’s director.

Of course, budget-makers routinely use hundreds of millions of dollars in transfers from off-budget accounts, payment delays and other one-time maneuvers to balance the books. This year likely will be no different.

Taxes

The state’s tax collection­s were ahead of schedule through the first six months of the fiscal year. As of Jan. 1, the state had reported collecting $18.5 billion, almost a half-billion dollars, or nearly 3%, above estimates, toward its initial full-year estimate of $36.3 billion.

Persistent cost increases for health care, prisons and pensions can be expected to absorb much of the state’s natural growth in tax revenues.

Transporta­tion

Highway and mass transit funding remains a problem, even after a 2013 law raised more than $2 billion

a year by making Pennsylvan­ia’s fuel taxes among the nation’s highest.

Motorist fees and fuel taxes that fund highway constructi­on also still pay for more than half of the state police’s nearly $1.4 billion budget, a sore spot among highway builders, and Wolf is warning that fuel-efficient cars are eating into those fuel taxes.

Meanwhile, a public transit funding arrangemen­t funded by turnpike tolls is scheduled to shrink from

$450 million to $50 million next year, pushing the tab to the deficit-strapped treasury.

Education

Amid the pandemic, public schools did not get a funding increase from the state this year. The state’s school constructi­on subsidy program is dormant, as are efforts to fix a charter school-funding scheme that public schools view as vastly unfair and debilitati­ng to their finances.

At the same time, Pennsylvan­ia is barely using a funding formula it designed to iron out inequities in how it funds the poorest

public schools.

School districts have, however, received billions in federal pandemic aid, but school boards will want to see Wolf propose a funding increase for them.

“I’m really hoping that the governor has a robust proposal for public education next Tuesday, because the school children deserve it and we have to figure out how to get them the help they deserve,” Hughes said.

Liabilitie­s

Pennsylvan­ia is laboring under an estimated $67 billion debt in its two large public-sector pension systems to repay the next 30 years, a cost that absorbs about 10% of the state’s general tax collection­s.

The state has borrowed $800 million thus far this fiscal year in short-term financing to pay its bills and also must repay more than $1 billion in unemployme­nt compensati­on debt from the pandemic to the federal government.

Meanwhile, Pennsylvan­ia is wrestling with daunting long-term demographi­cs: an increasing number of residents older than 65, which is rapidly inflating costs for medical and longterm care, and a shrinking working-age population that can support it.

 ?? AP PHOTO/JULIO CORTEZ, FILE ?? In this Nov. 4, 2020, file photo, Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Tom Wolf speaks during a news conference in Harrisburg, regarding the counting of ballots in the 2020 general election. Facing a deep, pandemic-inflicted budget deficit, Gov. Wolf will ask lawmakers for billions of dollars funded by higher taxes on Pennsylvan­ia’s huge natural gas industry for workforce developmen­t and employment assistance to help the state recover.
AP PHOTO/JULIO CORTEZ, FILE In this Nov. 4, 2020, file photo, Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Tom Wolf speaks during a news conference in Harrisburg, regarding the counting of ballots in the 2020 general election. Facing a deep, pandemic-inflicted budget deficit, Gov. Wolf will ask lawmakers for billions of dollars funded by higher taxes on Pennsylvan­ia’s huge natural gas industry for workforce developmen­t and employment assistance to help the state recover.

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