The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

State is running out of cash to pay bills

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG » Top state officials are warning that Pennsylvan­ia’s deficit-strapped government is rapidly approachin­g a more severe stage in its seven-week-old budget stalemate, one in which Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf may have to start deciding which bills to pay and which to postpone.

Taxes are still being collected and checks are being cut by the Pennsylvan­ia Treasury under a nearly $32 billion budget bill that lawmakers approved June 30, the day before the current fiscal year began.

But that spending plan is badly out of balance and, without a loan or an emergency revenue package, the state will face hard decisions within days.

“Somebody’s not getting paid if this doesn’t get fixed,” Auditor General Eugene DePasquale, a Democrat, said Friday. “Who it is — the vendors, I don’t know — that’s a decision for others to make. It’s simply a math equation: there’s not enough money to pay everybody.”

This scenario is new to a state government that has weathered months-long budget stalemates and an entrenched post-recession deficit that has left budget-makers plugging bigger holes every year and nursing one of the nation’s worst credit ratings.

“We are entering an era of a new frontier, and by that I mean things we have never seen be--

fore,” said Drew Crompton, the top aide to Senate President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati, R-Jefferson.

Wolf’s office wouldn’t answer questions about the governor’s contingenc­y plans, saying only that it was monitoring cash flow as it waits for the House of Representa­tives to return to Harrisburg to complete a revenue package.

Since the recession, the state Treasury Department has reliably bailed out the state during low-flow periods of tax collection­s.

However, Treasurer Joe Torsella, a Democrat first elected last November, said Wednesday that he may not continue loaning money, questionin­g whether patching the state’s growing gap was a fiscally responsibl­e use of the department’s short-term investment cash.

Approval from Torsella and DePasquale is legally necessary for the Wolf administra­tion to borrow from a bank. But, without a credible revenue package in place, neither says he is willing to authorize a shortterm bank loan to the state, assuming a bank would actually lend to the state.

Meanwhile, the Wolf administra­tion is seeking to

borrow money from offbudget state programs without approval from lawmakers or the Treasury Department, state officials said. Time is ticking. Torsella’s office projects that the state’s main bank account will fall below $0 by Aug. 29 and go $1.6 billion in the red by mid-September. Without a revenue package or a loan, it will remain in negative territory for until next spring, when the heavy tax collection season begins, his office said.

House Republican leaders have no plans to return to Harrisburg before Sept. 11, and rank-and-file

House Republican­s said Friday that the caucus had not embraced the Senate’s $2.2 billion revenue package, passed last month, or found consensus around an alternativ­e.

The Senate’s plan, supported by Wolf, is built on borrowing $1.3 billion against Pennsylvan­ia’s future proceeds from the 1998 multistate settlement with tobacco companies, raising $400 million worth of taxes on consumers’ utility bills and mounting another huge expansion of casino-style gambling.

Regardless of financial difficulti­es, the state is legally bound to make debt

payments, cover Medicaid costs, keep prisons open and meet biweekly payrolls of around $150 million, state officials said. But Wolf’s administra­tion could postpone payments to vendors, such as utilities, insurers, suppliers and landlords, and put off paying discretion­ary items, such as tax credits, grants and public school aid.

Ultimately, if the House does nothing, it could be up to Wolf to withhold $1.6 billion in program money, a prospect that could have broad consequenc­es, while nearly $600 million in aid to five universiti­es — Penn State, Temple, Lincoln, Pitt and Penn’s veterinary

school — is held up in the stalemate. Another $52 million for Penn State’s College of Agricultur­al Sciences also is in limbo.

The House’s Republican majority has kept its budget discussion in its own caucus, with little, if any, communicat­ion with Wolf, Democratic lawmakers or the Senate’s Republican majority.

“This is not sloth that’s keeping us from getting this budget done,” said Rep. Kate Harper, R-Montgomery. “There are very difficult value choices that have to be made and I don’t see unanimity in the Republican caucus on how to get there.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? The Pennsylvan­ia Capitol building in Harrisburg.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO The Pennsylvan­ia Capitol building in Harrisburg.

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