Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Pa. again reverts to gimmicks to deal with budget blues

- By Lowman Henry Times Guest Columnist Lowman S. Henry is chairman & CEO of the Lincoln Institute and host of the weekly Lincoln Radio Journal. His e-mail address is lhenry@ lincolnins­titute.org. Drew McGinty is running for the Democratic nomination in Pen

It was perhaps the strangest budget season in Penn’s Woods since King Charles II granted William Penn a charter to establish a colony in the New World. The end came relatively quietly with the General Assembly passing a variety of gimmicks aimed at plugging a $2.2 billion budget hole of their own making.

The only good thing that can be said about the 20172018 budget process is that it didn’t take until April of next year to resolve. Recall that in Gov. Tom Wolf’s first year in office it took that long for the budget – due by July 1st of the previous year – to be enacted.

The same dynamics that resulted in that historical­ly long budget battle were at play this year: a governor who never met a tax he didn’t want to hike and a Republican-controlled state House that fought to the end to block tax increases. Add in a Republican state Senate majority that acts more like taxand-spend Democrats than Republican­s, and the formula for gridlock is complete.

Candidates for public office often pledge to “run government like a business” or at least abide by sound business principles. That certainly did not happen this year. Such is the collective opinion of the business owners and chief executive officers who participat­ed in the Fall 2017 Keystone Business Climate Survey conducted by the Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research. A lopsided 91 percent of the owners/CEOs surveyed said they are unsatisfie­d with state government’s budget process.

Fueling that negative perception, perhaps even more than the inability of the governor and Legislatur­e to get the budget done on time, is the manner in which this year’s budget process played out. It had one unique feature: the spending plan was adopted with no revenue component in place. That cast in stone the spend number and forced the conversati­on away from cutting spending, thus placing the entire focus on how to come up with enough revenue to fund the budget. Respondent­s to the Lincoln Institute survey were generally supportive of missing the budget deadline to hold the line on taxes, but 94 percent disapprove­d of adopting a spending package without simultaneo­usly passing a revenue package.

And so it was that from the beginning of July until the end of October lawmakers and the governor battled over how to fund the revenue gap. Predictabl­y, Gov. Wolf pushed for tax hikes including his never-ending quest to add a fourth layer of taxation on the state’s Marcellus shale gas industry.

House Republican­s dug in their heels and produced the only truly innovative approach to raising revenue. They actually spent the summer digging through the state’s finances coming up with hundreds of millions squirrelle­d away and left unused by various agencies. The final revenue plan included using some $300 million in such revenue.

But, the quest for revenue resulted in a move even more harmful to the state’s fiscal condition than tax increases. Senate Republican­s originated a plan to borrow money from future tobacco fund settlement payments to help plug the deficit. Not only will taxpayers pay interest on that loan, but it deprives future state budgets of such revenue. Asked about that, the owners/CEOs participat­ing in the Lincoln Institute poll voiced strong disapprova­l: 83 percent thought such borrowing was a bad idea.

One reason for this year’s large budget deficit was dependence the past two years on revenue from sources not currently in existence. That revenue, especially from gaming expansion, never materializ­ed. No lesson was learned from that experience. Lawmakers voted to expand gambling by legalizing slots in a variety of public venues and authorizin­g the establishm­ent of mini-casinos. None of those currently exist, but revenue from such sources is booked to help fund this year’s budget.

The legacy of this messy budget season will not only be making Pennsylvan­ia’s finances even more precarious, but it sets up what could be a politicall­y volatile budget fight next spring. The governor, half of the state Senate and all of the state House are up for election in 2018. Nothing was done this year to address Pennsylvan­ia’s spending problem, and the funding component is just smoke and mirrors. When the smoke clears, the budget problems will remain – and voters will be watching.

The skilled trades, especially those in clean energy, offer well-paying careers that don’t require a bachelor’s degree, and across the nation many of these positions are left unfilled and employers are clamoring for workers. These types of jobs can lead to rewarding careers right out of high school and more needs to be done by our representa­tives in Washington to encourage young people to work in these fields.

An affordable college and a workforce of skilled trade workers are both vital in creating a strong economy, and when I’m elected I plan on being on the forefront of this issues because they are too important to ignore. For the sake of our children and our grandchild­ren, we need to create better a better future for everyone and it starts today. Leave your comments online Use hashtag at

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Pennsylvan­ia House of Representa­tives at the State Capitol in Harrisburg. The budget funding plan that finally passed after a four-month impasse will not cure what ails the state’s economy, according to Lowman Henry.
ASSOCIATED PRESS The Pennsylvan­ia House of Representa­tives at the State Capitol in Harrisburg. The budget funding plan that finally passed after a four-month impasse will not cure what ails the state’s economy, according to Lowman Henry.

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