Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Budget scenario calls for deep cuts

Governor shuffles funds to help pay state’s bills

- By Liz Navratil

HARRISBURG — Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf on Tuesday urged House Republican­s to take swift action to balance the budget or risk putting Pennsylvan­ia in a “much more dire financial situation” that could include painful spending cuts.

With a budget impasse about to drag into a third month, the governor has remained mum about what specifical­ly he would cut, should the Legislatur­e not send him a plan to fund the $32 billion budget it passed two months ago.

But his budget office has been quietly churning out plans to deal with the financial difficulti­es. An internal administra­tion document contains one possible plan that would cut 12 percent from nearly every department’s budget — including more than $700 million from public schools and nearly $282 million combined from the Department­s of Health and Human Services for homeless assistance, mental health and other programs.

That particular plan also would eliminate state funding for the state-related universiti­es: Temple, Penn State, Lincoln and Pittsburgh.

“No decisions have been made at this time,” said Mr. Wolf’s spokesman, J.J. Abbott.

Mr. Wolf’s comments came as he announced Tuesday that he had shuffled money between bank accounts to allow the state to

continue to pay its bills for three weeks. But that money likely will run out by Sept. 15, when hefty Medicaid payments are due.

The governor told House Republican­s in a letter dated Tuesday that without a swiftly balanced budget, “the consequenc­es that will be forced upon the Commonweal­th will be unfortunat­e and could include impacts to programs on which our constituen­ts rely.”

He added later, “Time is not on our side, and now is the time to put statesmans­hip before anything else. Thereis too much at stake.”

To cover finances for the next few weeks, Mr. Wolf transferre­d roughly $700 million from the motor license fund — typically reservedfo­r maintenanc­e and safety on public highways and bridges — to the state’s primary bank account. Most of that is an earliertha­n-usual payment to help defray Pennsylvan­ia State Police costs, but roughly $241 million is a loan that must be paid back with interestby March.

The transfer allows the state to make a large payment to school districts and cover other obligation­s until mid-September.

This is not the first loan to the state’s general fund this month. Democratic state Treasurer Joe Torsella recently approved a $750 million line of credit. He has said he would be hesitant to approve further loans without what he called a responsibl­e revenue package.

Mr. Wolf’s latest transfer “does not represent a solution to the challenges straining the Commonweal­th’s finances,” Mr. Torsella said in a statement. “It simply buys time for the Legislatur­e to finish work that was due months ago.”

The House is scheduled to return to session Sept. 11.

Legislator­s passed a nearly $32 billion spending plan hours before the July 1 start of the new fiscal year without a correspond­ing way to pay for it. Negotiator­s have struggled in recent months with how to plug a $1.5 billion shortfall in the last fiscal year and a $700 million deficit in the one that began July 1.

The credit rating agency Standard & Poor’s has warned Pennsylvan­ia that it could be facing a credit downgrade, which would make it more costly to borrow money in the future.

The Republican-controlled Senate passed a series of bills late last month that would balance the budget with a mix of borrowing and new or increased taxes. But taxaverse Republican­s who hold a commanding majority in the House have expressed concerns.

Though there have been some meetings and talks over the past few weeks, a resolution does not appear to be close.

Steve Miskin, a spokesman for House Republican­s, said some members were meeting in the Capitol on Tuesday to work on budget ideas. Exactly what their budget proposal would entail remains to be seen, but it could include plans to expand liquor privatizat­ion or legalize slotsstyle machines called video-gaming terminals in bars and restaurant­s.

“The fact is, VGTs are better than raising taxes, privatizin­g the liquor system is better than raising taxes, because it’s not raising taxes on hardworkin­g Pennsylvan­ians,” Mr. Miskin said.

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