The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Governor: Raise taxes to defuse ‘time bomb’

Wolf scolds Legislatur­e for not giving in to his budget demands

- By Marc Levy and Mark Scolforo

HARRISBURG >> Gov. Tom Wolf warned lawmakers on Tuesday that Pennsylvan­ia’s finances are a ticking time bomb amid a record-long budget gridlock, as he sent thema spending proposal for the coming fiscal year with no full plan in place for the year that began back in July.

The first-term Democrat delivered an approximat­ely $33.3 billion plan for 2016-17 to the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e as he tries again to break down resistance to a multibilli­on-dollar tax increase that has held up passage of a budget for the current year.

Wolf delivered his message in a blunt, 25-minute speech that prompted objections from most Republican­s, but allies said Wolf sent the message that people need to hear about the state government’s crisis.

Billions of dollars for prisons, hospitals and schools remain in limbo and, without a state tax increase to close a massive deficit, the governor warned that schools will lay off thousands of teachers, the state’s social services safety net will spring huge holes and local government­s will raise taxes.

“This deficit isn’t just a cloud hanging over Pennsylvan­ia’s long-term future. It’s a time bomb, and it’s ticking away, right now, even as I speak,” Wolf told a joint session of the House and Senate. “If it explodes — if the people in this chamber, if you allow it to explode — then Pennsylvan­ia will experience a fiscal catastroph­e the likes of which we have never seen.”

He urged lawmakers to “take on the crisis we are facing” or find another job.

Wolf’s spending proposal amounts to a two-year, 14 percent increase.

Wolf wants the projected $2.7 billion tax increase to close a long-term deficit that has damaged Pennsylvan­ia’s credit rating and to boost aid to public school systems that have a mong the nation’s biggest funding gaps between wealthy and poor districts. Big increases for pension obligation­s, human services and prisons are also helping drive the increase.

Wolf wants an 11 percent increase in the state income tax to 3.4 percent, plus new taxes on natural gas production, casino gambling and insurance premiums. sales tax to include movie tickets and basic cable television service, and increase taxes on cigarettes by $1 to $2.60 per pack.

“This fiscal crisis didn’t appear from out of nowhere,” Wolf told lawmakers. “This was no act of God. We are in a hole we dug ourselves, right here in Harrisburg.”

Top Republican­s said they are committed to dealing with the deficit, but they are aiming to do it without raising taxes, and they said Wolf’s new proposal includes billions in extra spending and taxes that are not necessary to close a deficit estimated at $1.8 billion next year by the Legislatur­e’s independen­t fiscal agency.

House Majority Leader Dave Reed, R-Indiana, said when Wolf returns from “Fantasylan­d or Neverland or wherever he is” that Republican­s will be ready toworkwith him.

House Speaker Mike Turzai, R-Allegheny, called the governor’s tone “unstatesma­nlike, unprofessi­onal, I hate to say it, but even petulant.” House Minority Leader Frank Dermody, D-Allegheny, responded that “the truth hurts.”

The only other state with such budget gridlock is Illinois, where first-term Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner is battling the Legislatur­e’s Democratic majorities.

Republican­s, who have amassed their largest legislativ­e majorities in decades, have agreed to boost spending on public schools, although not by the amount Wolf has sought. But with legislativ­e elections looming this fall, House Republican­s blocked a tax increase even after the governor made concession­s on GOP policy priorities.

Negotiatio­ns have been further complicate­d by the competing priorities of House and Senate Republican­s.

Part of Wolf’s objective has been to erase Republican­s’ deep, budget-balancing cuts in aid to schools in 2011-12, the brunt of which was borne by the state’s poorest school districts.

Fornow, talks are a tast and still, and the sides blame each other for the current year’s stalemate.

Abipartisa­n deal involving a $1 billion-plus tax increase collapsed before Christmas, and as an alternativ­e Republican­s sent Wolf themain appropriat­ions bill in a $30.3 billion budget package that he opposed.

Democratic lawmakers bottled up more than $500 million in university subsidies and Wolf vetoed another $6 billion, in part to keep heat on Republican lawmakers to pass a budget plan along the lines of the bipartisan agreement.

ItwasWolf’sthirdfull­orpartialv­etoofaRepu­blicanspen­ding plan within sixmonths. A responsibl­e governor would have signed them, Turzai said.

“He’s just committed to havoc and not committed to responsibl­e governing,” Turzai said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Gov. Tom Wolf delivers his budget address for the 2016-17 fiscal year to a joint session of the Pennsylvan­ia House and Senate at the State Capitol in Harrisburg Tuesday.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Gov. Tom Wolf delivers his budget address for the 2016-17 fiscal year to a joint session of the Pennsylvan­ia House and Senate at the State Capitol in Harrisburg Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States