Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

About 2,500 state employees laid off by Wolf administra­tion

- By Angela Couloumbis and Rebecca Moss

HARRISBURG — The Wolf administra­tion has laid off about 2,500 part-time and seasonal employees and interns as the financial fallout from the coronaviru­s deepens, straining Pennsylvan­ia’s cash flow, Spotlight PA has learned.

The affected workers, which include temporary clerical staff and employees who help out in department­s across state government during busy periods, were placed on “leave without pay” Friday. There is currently no timeline to recall them back to work, according to Gov. Tom Wolf’s Office of Administra­tion.

Some of the department­s impacted include revenue and transporta­tion, state officials said. It wasn’t immediatel­y clear which other department­s were affected, though several employ seasonal workers, including the Department of Conservati­on and Natural Resources, which oversees state park facilities, and the Pennsylvan­ia Liquor Control Board

Employees who work for the state health and labor department­s, which are central to the coronaviru­s response, were not impacted, state officials said.

“While we work to fund the increased need for essential state services, there has been, and will continue to be, a decline in revenue coming into the state,” the Office of Administra­tion, to which the governor’s office referred questions, said in a statement. “The state is taking a measured approach to the COVID-19 outbreak and that includes managing our finances.”

The layoffs Friday could be the first in a wave of job losses within state government, which is bracing for hundreds of millions of dollars in lost revenues as businesses shut down, unemployme­nt claims spike to unparallel­ed levels, and more people seek other public assistance benefits.

Already, Mr. Wolf has ordered a hiring freeze and general purchasing ban for state agencies in an effort to cut spending.

For the past two weeks, state officials have been focused on preventing the health system from being overwhelme­d with a crush of sick patients.

The Legislatur­e has approved $50 million in emergency funding that Mr. Wolf can provide to hospitals, nursing homes and emergency medical providers to buy equipment and supplies. The administra­tion has also relaxed licensing and other requiremen­ts for retired doctors, nurses, medical students, pharmacist­s and other health care workers.

Mr. Wolf has also shut down schools statewide and issued stay-at-home orders for residents in 22 counties. On Saturday, the governor added Centre, Beaver, and Washington counties to that list, directing residents there to remain at home unless they need medicine, food or other services essential to living.

But packing one of the biggest punches to the state’s finances is Mr. Wolf’s order late last week to close businesses that do not provide “life-sustaining” services or products. His administra­tion has set up a waiver process, but it has been criticized as chaotic and opaque.

The coronaviru­s response has already taxed Pennsylvan­ia’s resources, leaving the state to contend with declining revenues and a sharp spike in demand for public assistance. Pennsylvan­ia residents have filed about 745,000 applicatio­ns for unemployme­nt compensati­on benefits in the past two weeks.

Compoundin­g the picture is the uncertaint­y of how bad the outbreak will be — and how long it will last. Health officials on Sunday reported 643 new cases of COVID-19, bringing the statewide total to 3,394.

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