The Morning Call

Budget boost to payments for state-owned land will benefit rural Pa. counties

- By Marley Parish Pennsylvan­ia Capital-Star

BELLEFONTE — Pennsylvan­ia will send hundreds of thousands of dollars more to rural counties as part of an increase to what the government pays for stateowned land, a bump local officials say is necessary to keep areas with shrinking population­s afloat.

The more than 3 million acres of state-owned park, forest, and game lands are tax-exempt and off-limits for developmen­t. Instead, the state government annually pays a certain amount per acre to counties, municipali­ties and school districts with state-owned land in their boundaries, totaling more than $8 million statewide.

Lawmakers approved the first rate increase in years while finalizing the remaining pieces of the $45.4 billion state budget on Wednesday. This increase, included in a code bill that directs state spending, raises the payments to $2.40 per acre for the land owned by the state Department of Conservati­on and Natural Resources, the Game Commission, and the Fish and Boat Commission.

Counties, schools, and townships should expect payments with the rate increase next year.

Local officials say years without an increase have left government­s and school districts — especially in rural areas with lots of stateowned land — to consider raising property taxes to generate revenue.

The County Commission­ers Associatio­n of Pennsylvan­ia is one of several statewide organizati­ons that supports an increase. Lisa Schaefer, the associatio­n’s executive director, told Spotlight PA that property tax is counties’ only source of locally generated revenue, so tax-exempt properties can significan­tly affect local finances.

“The payment in lieu of taxes paid by the state helps to offset the burden shifted to other county property taxpayers,” she said.

The Legislatur­e last increased the payment rates in 2016, but the change applied only to DCNR, which paid $2 per acre to the county, township, and school districts where stateowned parks and forests are located. The Game Commission and Fish and Boat Commission have paid $1.20 per acre for counties, municipali­ties, and schools since 2006.

State Rep. Martin Causer, R-McKean, who advocated for past increases, told Spotlight PA that a raise offers tax fairness, especially to rural counties, because local officials can’t build on stateowned lands, and there’s a lot of it in rural counties, which also have a shrinking tax base, he said.

Causer noted the increase doesn’t face widespread opposition; rather, the money for the state to make the payments has to come from somewhere. Gaming revenue goes toward these payments.

In Cameron County, about 60% of the land is state-owned, Commission­er Lori Reed, who retires from public office this month, told Spotlight PA.

The county has about 138,000 acres of state forests and parks and tens of thousands of game lands, so options for expanding housing or industrial developmen­t are limited, and the “burden of taxes falls on the 40% paying their fair share,” she added. A payment-inlieu-of-tax increase would bring additional revenue of tens of thousands of dollars, so local governing bodies don’t have to rely solely on raising property taxes.

Josh Zucal, Cameron County’s marketing director and incoming commission­er, said that having an abundance of state-owned parks, forests and game lands creates opportunit­ies for tourism and outdoor recreation. However, the county is limited in ways to foster developmen­t and recruit new businesses to the area, which has seen major employers leave over the years.

In October, the Western Pennsylvan­ia Conservanc­y announced the protection of 414 acres of forest land in Cameron County, which became part of Elk State Forest.

“That’s 400 acres less that we can try to develop or do something with,” Zucal told Spotlight PA.

Officials in Potter County — which has more than 270,000 acres of stateowned land — also support increasing payments in lieu of taxes as a boost for government­s and school districts.

Potter County Commission­er Paul Heimel estimated the increase to $2.40 per acre will generate an additional $250,000 for the county each year, according to November board meeting minutes.

This story was produced by the State College regional bureau of Spotlight PA, an independen­t, nonpartisa­n newsroom dedicated to investigat­ive and publicserv­ice journalism for Pennsylvan­ia. Sign up for our regional newsletter, Talk of the Town.

SUPPORT THIS JOURNALISM and help us reinvigora­te local news in north-central Pennsylvan­ia at spotlightp­a.org/donate/ statecolle­ge. Spotlight PA is funded by foundation­s and readers like you who are committed to accountabi­lity and publicserv­ice journalism that gets results.

 ?? FOR SPOTLIGHT PA GEORGIANNA SUTHERLAND/ ?? Rothrock State Forest in rural Huntingdon County, Pennsylvan­ia.
FOR SPOTLIGHT PA GEORGIANNA SUTHERLAND/ Rothrock State Forest in rural Huntingdon County, Pennsylvan­ia.
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