The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Gov. Tom Wolf’s act is getting tiresome

- Renee Chesler is a former Township Supervisor in Limerick Township.

Pennsylvan­ia residents are growing tired of Gov. Tom Wolf’s charade of dragging the Covid Virus “stayat-home” orders on and on with no end in sight. Gov. Wolf continues to deny the efforts of our State House of Representa­tives to open for business. The residents of our Commonweal­th have become an audience in a poor performanc­e of a Harrisburg drama that is being played out at the Capitol, and directed by Gov. Wolf.

Our elected representa­tives are working to present legislatio­n to Gov. Wolf to open small businesses safely and have appeared for this dress rehearsal for the last two months.

Most recently, the state house voted to pass legislatio­n, HR 2388, which would have opened hair salons, dog groomers, local garden centers, and auto dealership­s using establishe­d CDC guidelines to protect both employees and customers. Passing this legislatio­n would help small businesses throughout the state begin to open in a measured way, similar to what is happening in neighborin­g states, including Ohio,

West Virginia and Maryland. In a dramatic fashion, villain Gov. Wolf vetoed this bill one business day after it landed on his desk.

The Democrat Caucus of state representa­tives could vote to overturn Gov. Wolf’s veto power, by moving, along with the Republican Caucus, to open small businesses across the state. Without bipartisan support, the Pennsylvan­ia House of Representa­tives does not have the super-majority needed to overturn a single one of Gov. Wolf’s vetoes. The waiting audience of small business owners are constituen­ts, who continue to suffer as their businesses remain closed. Our State House of Representa­tives seemingly enjoys the dress rehearsal of presenting legislatio­n, but lack the commitment to support the real performanc­e, which would be voting to overturn Governor Wolf’s veto.

It must be exhausting to keep sending common-sense bipartisan legislatio­n to Gov. Wolf, expecting more than another veto. Quite the continued charade, as the State House of Representa­tives has not yet managed to orchestrat­e an effort to overturn a single piece of legislatio­n that nearly every representa­tive votes the first time to support. The courageous vote will be the second vote, the vote to override Gov. Wolf’s veto power and pass legislatio­n to reopen our local businesses.

In November, all state representa­tives run for re-election and they will likely be planning to campaign on all of their accomplish­ments. Activity does not matter to small business owners, results matter. This Harrisburg drama is “much ado about nothing” as almost nothing has changed. We are now past 60 days of a lockout for small businesses. The audience of small business owners has grown tired of the dialogue.

It is not too late for a second act. Or a second vote. Perhaps there will be bipartisan­ship in this Harrisburg drama before the curtain closes on our local businesses and our economic recovery.

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