The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Wolf aims to raise utility bills

- By Matthew J. Brouillett­e Guest columnist Matthew Brouillett­e is president and CEO of Commonweal­th Partners Chamber of Entreprene­urs and host of ‘Brews & Views’ podcast.

Who doesn’t love price cuts? Paying less always feels like a win — whether it’s saving thousands on a home or pennies on a cup of coffee.

Come July 1, residents and businesses across the state are set to experience this price-cut victory when they see their water, electric, and natural gas bills shrink due to recently enacted federal tax cuts. The savings will amount to $210 million on electricit­y, $48 million on water and wastewater, and $66 million on natural gas, according to the Pennsylvan­ia Public Utility Commission.

Those are price cuts worth celebratin­g!

But the celebratio­n may be short lived. Because while utility companies are cutting natural gas rates, Gov. Tom Wolf is trying to raise them.

For the fourth straight year, Wolf is demanding an additional severance tax that would lead to higher home heating bills for 2.7 million Pennsylvan­ia homeowners. In other words, while federal tax cuts would lower Pennsylvan­ians’ utility bills, Tom Wolf would spike them.

Wolf, who has been peddling his utility tax for four straight years, likes to repeat that outof-staters, not Pennsylvan­ians, would bear the brunt of his tax. But his claim is misleading. It suggests a minimal cost to commonweal­th residents — indeed, it seems Wolf wants homeowners to believe they will not be affected. This is far from the truth.

Given the massive amount of natural gas underneath our state, it’s only logical that we would export the bulk of it. But that obscures the fact that more than half of Pennsylvan­ia homeowners rely on natural gas, and Wolf’s tax would slap these homeowners with higher heating bills.

Sadly, Wolf’s proposal is hardly surprising. Since taking office, he has demanded tax increases that would hit Pennsylvan­ia families where it hurts most.

Who can forget Wolf’s first budget proposal, where he pitched the largest tax increase in Pennsylvan­ia’s history, which would have raised taxes on items including diapers, day care, college textbooks, nursing home care, and even funeral services.

Thankfully, the Legislatur­e has stood up for Pennsylvan­ia families and thwarted most of Wolf’s efforts to increase the cost of living in the commonweal­th.

Still, even after failing time and time again, Wolf persists. In fact, he’s making higher homeheatin­g costs a cornerston­e of his re-election campaign. Of course, he doesn’t admit this. Instead, he couches his tax fixation in terms like “fairness” — ignoring that it’s unfair to the 2.7 million homeowners who will pay higher heating costs to fund his spending penchant.

It’s also unfair to Pennsylvan­ia’s natural gas workers, many of whom could lose their jobs should Wolf get his severance tax. Wolf likes to claim his tax would not impact the natural gas industry — but the industry says differentl­y. Gas drillers have testified that Wolf’s tax would cause them to curb investment­s in the state and possibly pick up operations and move out of state.

Let’s be clear, the natural gas industry in Pennsylvan­ia already pays every tax paid by other businesses plus an additional “impact fee” unique to the industry. Pennsylvan­ia is the only state in the nation to levy such a fee. How “fair” is that? Wolf’s persistenc­e in demanding a new severance tax year after year demonstrat­es how out of touch he is with hardworkin­g Pennsylvan­ians, with business owners and job creators, and with the economic impact of tax hikes.

Unlike Wolf, Wagner has firsthand experience building a business from the ground-up, signing paychecks, and navigating operating costs.

He understand­s that if you put a crippling tax on the gas industry, it’s just going to be passed on to the consumers who already feel like they pay enough to heat their homes.

Unfortunat­ely, given Wolf has already tried to make it more expensive to raise children, attend college, care for aging family members, and even bury loved ones — it’s little wonder he’s now trying to make it costlier for families to stay warm in the winter.

Pennsylvan­ians should be able to celebrate lower utility bills thanks to federal tax cuts — not fear their governor will reverse these cuts and jack their utility costs.

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