Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Wolf, GOP on verge of beating deadline for budget

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leading to chronicall­y late budgets. Publicly, many in the Capitol attribute the swift pace this year to a rosier revenue picture. Privately, others note that it is an election year, and elected officials are motivated to wrap up their work so they can campaign.

This year, Mr. Wolf, the entire House of Representa­tives and half of the members of the Senate face elections.

Retiring state Rep. Joe Markosek, D-Monroevill­e, gave a nod to that sentiment, saying Tuesday: “We all know this is an interestin­g year. It’s an election year and we need to make sure we do the best for all the citizens of Pennsylvan­ia.”

For the past three years, Mr. Wolf and a number of moderate Republican­s have stressed the need to raise new revenue to keep up with mounting costs, warning of financial doom if the state did not do so. But the politicall­y charged debate over whether to raise taxes, and which ones, has stymied the budget process and has led to last year’s large-scale borrowing just to balance the books.

This year, all have been largely silent on taxes. In his budget address in February, Mr. Wolf called for raising the minimum wage and imposing a new severance tax on natural gas drilling.

He got neither one in this agreement — although he did land additional funding for public education, a priority for his administra­tion.

In a statement Tuesday, Mr. Wolf praised the budget deal moving through the Legislatur­e as “responsibl­e and bipartisan.”

“We have worked cooperativ­ely over the past few months to find common ground and room for compromise,” he said. “This budget makes smart investment­s in education, safety and human services and continues the progress we’ve made to restore fiscal stability to the commonweal­th’s finances.”

Legislativ­e leaders on Tuesday boasted that the proposed $32.7 billion spending plan represents only a 1.7 percent increase over this year’s budget.

The reality is more complex. That total does not include about $800 million in expected Medicaid expenses that were moved off the main budget books. The deal between Mr. Wolf and the Legislatur­e would fund that by tapping a variety of other accounts, one of which has been the subject of a lawsuit by a group that argues it cannot be used by elected officials to balance the budget.

The proposal also calls for moving roughly $158 million in expenses in the upcoming fiscal year onto the current fiscal year’s budget, making the percentage increase look smaller than it would be.

The House could take a final vote on much of the proposed deal as early as Wednesday, with the Senate following later in the week.

Other bills that supplement the budget were still being finalized Tuesday. That includes the so-called education code, which is expected to provide an additional $60 million for school districts to cover safety efforts, such as hiring a police officer or installing metal detectors. The push for extra schoolsafe­ty money came after the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla.

Senate Majority Leader Jake Corman, R-Centre, described that funding as “phase one” in efforts to improve safety in Pennsylvan­ia schools.

“Thisobviou­sly is a beginning,” Mr. Corman said. “Sixty million is not a drop in the bucket, but at the same time, it’s just a beginning.”

 ?? Hilary Swift/The New York Times ?? The Pennsylvan­ia Capitol building in Harrisburg.
Hilary Swift/The New York Times The Pennsylvan­ia Capitol building in Harrisburg.

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