Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Wolf seeks more funds for schools

Budget also helps pay for voting machines

- By Liz Navratil and Angela Couloumbis

HARRISBURG — Gov. Tom Wolf on Tuesday unveiled a $34.1 billion budget that would boost funding for public schools, raise the minimum wage and help counties update their voting machines, while steering clear of the broadbased tax increases that sank some of his earlier initiative­s.

The Democratic governor’s budget — his first since re-election — was both a return to some of his more progressiv­e wishes and a nod to the realities of negotiatin­g with the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e, which has refused to consider increases in the state sales and personal income taxes.

Still, Mr. Wolf is seeking other changes that have been rejected in the past, among them, a severance tax on natural gas — albeit, this time one that would be dedicated to refurbishi­ng aging infrastruc­ture instead of propping up the state’s general fund. That tax proposal is not in the budget, which must be approved by June 30, but is widely expected to be part of the overall debate.

“In the coming weeks, we’ll have the chance to discuss, debate and negotiate the details,” Mr. Wolf told a joint session of the Legislatur­e on Tuesday in his 27minute speech.

He later added: “While the rest of this country — and indeed the rest of the world — descends into divisive, nasty and unproducti­ve bouts of shouting, we are showing everyone else, right here in the heart of democracy, how democracy is supposed to work.”

After the speech, Republican­s struck an optimistic tone, saying they thought there were many areas where the two sides could agree.

Senate President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati, R-Jefferson, said he was “pleased” with Mr. Wolf’s overall message but warned there are other policy changes the governor did not address but which he believes are necessary. That includes a reduction in the state’s 9.99 percent corporate net income tax and an emphasis on cutting expenditur­es.

“This budget is not just going to be a slam dunk,” Mr. Scarnati said.

In all, the governor’s proposed plan would increase spending by $1.4 billion — or 4.2 percent — over this year’s approved $32.7 billion budget. That, however, does not include an additional $500 million needed to fill a projected gap in the current year’s budget.

To help pay for his budget, the governor is relying on a projection that revenue from taxes and fees will grow 2.6 percent — or nearly $900 million — in the next fiscal year. The plan also counts on people making a higher minimum wage paying more in sales and income taxes and on raising new dollars from a new fee on state police coverage in municipali­ties with no police of their own. Both are proposals the Legislatur­e has opposed before.

On the spending side, Mr. Wolf’s plan calls for an additional $200 million in funding for K-12 instructio­n in public schools, an extra $50 million for special education and another $7 million for Pennsylvan­ia’s 14 state universiti­es.

It also calls for some educationa­l policy changes, such as raising the school dropout age from 17 to 18, while lowering the age at which children must begin attending school from 8 to 6. The governor also wants to set a $45,000 minimum salary for public school teachers, up from $18,500. That would affect roughly 3,200 teachers, many in rural districts, administra­tion officials said.

The four state-related universiti­es — the University of Pittsburgh, Penn State, Temple and Lincoln — would receive no boost over this fiscal year’s spending. Mr. Wolf, however, is proposing $8 million for grants to community college students who remain in the state for work.

Outside of education, the governor’s budget also proposes a $15 million increase to serve more people with intellectu­al disabiliti­es who are currently on a waiting list for services.

The governor’s plan also includes $15 million to help counties cover the cost of updating their voting machines. Mr. Wolf’s administra­tion last year directed counties to begin using machines that create a paper record of votes that can be used to verify the accuracy of results. The goal is to have the new machines operating by the 2020 primary.

Counties have estimated the total cost at $125 million and have balked at the expense. The administra­tion has said it will propose similar annual infusions to help offset those costs, for a total of $75 million, over five years.

Mr. Wolf will ask state lawmakers to raise the minimum wage from $7.25 per hour to $12 per hour starting in July, with additional increases coming each year until 2025, when it would reach $15 an hour.

His administra­tion expects the measure would save the state $36 million in the 2019-20 fiscal year, an amount it attributes in part to lower costs for social services.

Republican leaders have repeatedly resisted attempts to increase the minimum wage, arguing that such changes should be driven by the marketplac­e rather than the government. The last change to the state’s minimum wage came a decade ago, when federal officials raised the rate.

Mr. Wolf is also seeking to raise $103 million by imposing a sliding-scale fee on municipali­ties that rely on the state police for patrol coverage. The fee would range from $8 to $166 per person, depending on a community’s population. Mr. Wolf in the past has proposed a flat fee, which has been blocked by the Legislatur­e.

A debate is also expected over Mr. Wolf’s effort to impose a severance tax on natural gas extracted through Marcellus Shale drilling.

“You can’t escape it,” said Sen. Vincent Hughes of Philadelph­ia, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee who supports a new drilling tax.

The governor has proposed borrowing $4.5 billion over four years and dedicating the money to help fund disaster recovery and infrastruc­ture improvemen­t, the latter a longtime goal for legislativ­e Republican­s. The loan, the governor said, would be paid off using money from a severance tax.

Republican leaders have resisted past severance tax proposals, citing potential harm to the natural gas industry. The Wolf administra­tion has said the governor will take out the loan only if legislator­s approve the levy.

Other areas of Mr. Wolf’s budget are likely to be easier sells.

Both Republican­s and Democrats on Tuesday praised the governor’s emphasis on enhancing work developmen­t and job training programs. Mr. Wolf, for example, called for creating a workforce “command center” to coordinate and streamline programs aimed at connecting employers with a trained workforce.

“We have not had that kind of recognitio­n that our government can be better organized to respond to workforce demands,” said Sen. Arthur Haywood, a Democrat whose district includes portions of Philadelph­ia and Montgomery counties.

The governor has also proposed dedicating additional money for agricultur­al projects, including $2.6 million to increase organic farming in the state and $2 million aimed at creating a center to help farmers create business plans.

The governor’s budget also asks for a $1.5 million increase in funding to provide people with the opioid overdose-reversal drug Naloxone. Both parties support efforts to combat the state’s opioid epidemic.

 ?? Matt Rourke/Associated Press ?? Lt. Gov. John Fetterman, left, shakes hands with Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf on Tuesday before Mr. Wolf delivers his budget address for the 2019-20 fiscal year to a joint session of the Pennsylvan­ia House and Senate in Harrisburg.
Matt Rourke/Associated Press Lt. Gov. John Fetterman, left, shakes hands with Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf on Tuesday before Mr. Wolf delivers his budget address for the 2019-20 fiscal year to a joint session of the Pennsylvan­ia House and Senate in Harrisburg.

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