The Morning Call

Power struggle goes before voters in May

- By Mark Scolforo

HARRISBURG — A pandemic power struggle that has raged for a year between Pennsylvan­ia’s Democratic governor and its Republican-led Legislatur­e will land on voters’ laps next month in the form of two proposed constituti­onal amendments that could limit the length of disaster emergencie­s.

There are four statewide ballot questions being decided during the May 18 primary. The others would put anti-discrimina­tion language into the state constituti­on and give paid fire and rescue department­s the same borrowing power that volunteer department­s have had for decades.

Republican­s wasted little time getting the disaster emergency questions onto the ballot after losing a court ruling in July over a similar resolution that would have ended Gov. Tom Wolf ’s disaster declaratio­n. Constituti­onal amendments must pass both chambers in two consecutiv­e, two-year sessions but do not require the governor’s backing.

GOP leaders have denounced the wording for the referendum­s, developed by the Wolf administra­tion, as loaded language.

“They clearly wrote it in a way for it to fail,” Senate President Pro Tempore Jake Corman, R-Centre, said in February, arguing the state’s disaster emergency has gone on too long. “Look, even a benevolent dictator is still a dictator. And when you have unilateral control, one individual, that’s what you

have.”

It’s unclear how much of Wolf’s authority would be curtailed by passage of the amendments. Wolf ’s aides argue that much of the administra­tion’s authority to impose social distancing restrictio­ns and shut down buildings or business activity comes from the Disease Prevention and Control Act, not the disaster declaratio­ns.

But Republican leaders say that without a disaster declaratio­n, Wolf may not be able to enforce Disease Prevention and Control Act measures, and that regulation­s that have been waived under Wolf ’s direction would return.

“An emergency declaratio­n is meant to give the executive branch the power to triage a crisis, not a vehicle for the governor to enact, amend and suspend laws and regulation­s for an excessive period of time,” said Senate GOP caucus spokespers­on Erica Clayton Wright.

Voters will decide whether disaster emergency declaratio­ns should expire after three weeks, rather than three months under existing law. A disaster declaratio­n could only be extended, even in part, with approval by both legislativ­e chambers. Lawmakers could end a disaster emergency with majority votes in each legislativ­e chamber, instead of needing the two-thirds margin required to override a veto.

The proposed constituti­onal amendments are among efforts in statehouse­s across the country to rein in gubernator­ial powers related to disaster response.

Wolf ’s aides warn that putting disaster declaratio­ns into the hands of the partisan Legislatur­e could risk federal funding and complicate the state’s ability to respond quickly. Many of Pennsylvan­ia’s emergencie­s relate to weather and flooding, and they sometimes last more than three weeks.

Administra­tion officials also wonder what might happen if an emergency centered on Harrisburg were to delay the ability of lawmakers to convene, or if an issue arises in the month between legislativ­e sessions.

“Any impediment to our agility is going to impact the folks that are most severely affected,” said Randy Padfield, director of the Pennsylvan­ia Emergency Management Agency. Among the examples he cited — authorizat­ion to pay the National Guard and flexibilit­y regarding procuremen­t of supplies and services.

To help fight the opioid and heroin addiction crisis, Wolf has renewed a 2018 disaster declaratio­n 13 times. Secretary Jennifer Smith, who heads Wolf ’s Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs, said the declaratio­n’s effect of cutting regulation­s and easing purchasing procedures was important in fighting the crisis, but she worries that renewing it may fall by the wayside in the Legislatur­e.

“Although there seems to be general support for this issue, my fear is there are competing priorities with the General Assembly,” Smith said.

An extra “emergency allotment” in federal funding of the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program has been critical to keeping people fed during the pandemic, but it requires a disaster declaratio­n be in place, said Teresa Miller, Wolf ’s human services secretary.

“If we’re no longer able to provide these additional benefits to families to help make sure that they can put food on the table, I worry that we’re just going to see more families hungry,” Miller said.

The third proposed constituti­onal amendment, bundled together with the disaster emergency changes as they passed the Legislatur­e, would add a section that says equality of rights under the law can’t be violated based on race or ethnicity, parallelin­g existing federal protection­s.

As for the ballot question regarding fire and rescue company loans, Republican state Rep. Frank Farry, a longtime Bucks County fire chief, said the fund that provides 2% interest loans to volunteer companies can likely handle additional demand by extending eligibilit­y to paid department­s.

Because the original referendum in the 1970s mentioned volunteer companies specifical­ly, Farry said, going back before voters rather than simply passing legislatio­n may help insulate the proposed change against a potential legal challenge.

The money is used to purchase equipment and other capital improvemen­ts, and the fund has had a low rate of default on its loans, Farry said.

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