Kane Republican

With accounts flush, budget talks come down to schools aid

- By Marc Levy Associated Press

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — With a week to go until the state's budget deadline, Gov. Tom Wolf and leaders of the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e are working through their remaining difference­s as they try to produce an agreement on a roughly $42 billion budget plan that they say will marshal substantia­l new aid for Pennsylvan­ia's public schools and environmen­tal cleanups while cutting corporate taxes.

Greasing the skids this year is a massive influx of tax receipts leaving the state's bank accounts flush with — by some estimates — $12 billion in reserves and surpluses, boosted by inflation and an economy juiced with federal pandemic subsidies.

There will be no broad tax cut, but there will be substantia­l new aid for public schools, as well as for services for the disabled, children and elderly that employ low-paid workers in high-turnover profession­s that suffered during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Lawmakers are also expected to approve significan­t sums of new money for mental health services and school security, including counseling.

Lawmakers are expected back in the Capitol on Monday, and votes could start soon after.

Perhaps the biggest sticking point is the amount of aid that Wolf, a Democrat, wants to send to public schools.

Talks are going on behind closed doors, as lobbyists circulate the Capitol's corridors and rank-and-file lawmakers await briefings from leadership.

Budget agreements typically get little public scrutiny before landing on a governor's desk. In most years, hundreds of pages of budget-related legislatio­n emerge from the closed-door talks before several dozen bills are rushed through floor votes — all within two or three days.

EDUCATION

Wolf is seeking what he calls “generation­al investment­s” in Pennsylvan­ia's public schools and public universiti­es.

For public schools, Wolf asked for almost $1.8 billion more for instructio­n, operations and special education, or about 21% more. Of that, $300 million was set aside for the 100 poorest public school districts and $200 million for special education.

Republican leaders are willing to send more money to public schools, but more like one-third to one-half of the amount Wolf requested. The state must be wary of overspendi­ng with an economic slowdown possibly on the way, they say.

On public universiti­es, Wolf had sought $225 million for State System of Higher Education universiti­es, including $150 million in one-time cash from the leftover federal aid, and $200 million annually to fund scholarshi­ps for students there.

Republican lawmakers have been friendly to Wolf's funding request for the public universiti­es, now that the shrinking system carried out a cost-cutting consolidat­ion.

But Wolf's administra­tion is still trying to talk lawmakers into the scholarshi­p program. In recent weeks, Wolf's office shifted strategy, and pitched a different funding source: an existing 2% tax on gambling at casino table games.

TAXES

Even with so much money sloshing around, don't expect a broad-based tax cut on income or sales.

Instead, lawmakers are targeting a corporate tax cut, even though corporate tax collection­s in Pennsylvan­ia have shrunk from about 20% of all collection­s to about 15% the past couple decades, largely because the Legislatur­e ended a separate tax on business assets.

Republican lawmakers contend that cutting the state's 9.99% corporate net income tax rate — one of the nation's highest — will lure more business activity, jobs and tax-paying residents to boost the state's economy and sluggish population growth.

Democrats say it is more effective to put more money into infrastruc­ture, schools and quality-of-life issues.

Wolf is an ally in the fight to cut corporate taxes, but has insisted that any tax cut come with structural changes to crack down on tax-avoidance strategies used by multistate corporatio­ns.

Wolf also contends that boosting school funding has the effect of a broad property-tax cut because it means the state picks up a bigger share of public education funding. Pennsylvan­ia puts a higher proportion of school funding on local property taxes than most other states.

SOCIAL SERVICES

The bulk of the new spending will go to keep pace with the rising cost of medical care for the poor and longterm care for the elderly and disabled.

In addition, budget negotiator­s say they are looking to boost subsidies for nursing homes, child care centers and programs for the disabled, all services that report they are struggling to find workers and, in some cases, beset by closures.

Nursing home trade associatio­ns have asked for a Medicaid reimbursem­ent rate increase of $295 million annually, or about 20%, saying they are losing money on each Medicaid enrollee.

MENTAL HEALTH

Securing tens of millions of dollars in additional aid for mental health programs is a top priority for counties and hospitals.

A lack of services and beds means people showing up to emergency rooms in crisis often stay there for extended periods because of a lack of providers, according to the Hospital and Healthsyst­em Associatio­n of Pennsylvan­ia. Counties and hospitals are also seeking more money for early interventi­on programs, to ensure more counseling services are available to help prevent a crisis.

Meanwhile, schools are pushing for more money for safety, in light of the Uvalde school shooting in Texas that killed 19 students and two teachers.

That money — possibly $100 million more — could fund physical security features such as metal detectors or security officers, but also school counselors or psychiatri­sts — a growing need that school officials say has been accelerate­d by the COVID-19 pandemic and mass shootings. FEDERAL AID Wolf and top lawmakers say they are working toward parceling out $2.2 billion in leftover federal coronaviru­s relief aid approved by Congress last year.

A Wolf proposal to send some of it out as $2,000 checks to households earning under $80,000 a year gained no Republican support.

Still, Republican­s are entertaini­ng a Wolf proposal using $204 million of the federal aid to boost property tax and rent rebate checks by $475 for all of the 466,000 people in the program.

Some of the money could go toward a new $250 million “clean streams” program to help improve water quality in the state's water ways.

At least some of that money would be targeted toward helping the state fulfill commitment­s to improving water quality in the Chesapeake Bay. More than 90% of the state's remaining pollution reductions must come from preventing farm runoff, according to the Chesapeake Bay Foundation.

Wolf also is pushing to use some of money for anti-gun violence programs and housing subsidies.

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