The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Budget speeds through House

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG » A $32.7 billion spending package for Pennsylvan­ia’s approachin­g fiscal year began speeding through the state Legislatur­e on Wednesday with little public debate, a stark change from the first three budgets hashed out by Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf and the House and Senate’s huge Republican majorities.

The centerpiec­e of the no-newtaxes plan unveiled just a day earlier won overwhelmi­ng House approval, 188-10. It was negotiated behind closed doors by Republican majority leaders with Wolf, and was slated for a Senate vote on Friday.

The new fiscal year begins July 1.

The lack of a public fight is a reversal from the first three budgets

under Wolf, when partisan disagreeme­nts over how to plug huge deficits dragged budget acrimony deep into the fiscal year or prompted Wolf to allow spending bills to become law without his signature.

With a November election looming, Wolf — who is running for a second term — had floated a relatively modest budget proposal and lawmakers were eager to get out of the Capitol.

Sen. Vincent Hughes, D-Philadelph­ia, said new school funding in the budget package helps reach one of Wolf’s firstterm goals, to resolve a deep budgetbala­ncing cut in state aid dealt to public schools and universiti­es in 2011 under then-Republican Gov. Tom Corbett.

“We’re finally closing the hole created by Gov. Corbett and his billiondol­lar cut,” said Hughes, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee.

Still, Hughes said the budget won’t fix long-standing inadequaci­es in public school funding.

“That’s still a major issue that’s got to get addressed,” Hughes said.

The plan holds the line on state taxes, and increases spending by about $700 million through the state’s main bank account, or slightly over 2 percent above the current year’s enacted budget of $32 billion.

The increase goes largely to public schools, social services, pensions and prisons. It also creates a $60 million offbudget grant program for school safety that lawmakers say is still being written into legislatio­n to set guidelines for how the money can be distribute­d and used.

Wolf appeared to get most of the spending he had sought in his February proposal, including more money to expand high-demand computer and industrial skills training in high schools and colleges.

Republican­s, meanwhile, rejected Wolf’s overtures for a fourth straight year for a severance tax on Marcellus Shale natural gas drilling and his request for municipali­ties without a full-time police force to start paying for a portion of the state police coverage they receive.

Some details of the budget package remained unclear Wednesday.

The governor’s office and Appropriat­ions Committee officials had not disclosed certain elements of the just-unveiled package, including precisely how the state’s massive Medicaid programs would be funded.

Critics say the use of off-budget dollars to foot Medicaid costs masks the true increase in state spending in the state’s operating account, called the general fund.

“A lot of the growth is off-budget, in what’s called the shadow budget, and it’s not accounted for in the general fund,” said Nathan Benefield of the Harrisburg-based Commonweal­th Foundation, a free-market think tank.

The budget package leaves questions for next year.

House officials say the package will tap one-time cash sources to underwrite about $800 million in Medicaid costs, potentiall­y creating a funding gap in a year.

Meanwhile, the state faces rising borrowing costs in the coming years after issuing bonds for school constructi­on projects and backfillin­g last year’s $2.2 billion deficit, largely by borrowing.

State officials, however, say rosier projection­s of tax collection­s in the coming year could pick up those burdens.

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