The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Time for PA lawmakers to get back to work

- — The Philadelph­ia Inquirer, The Associated Press

September is back to business for school children and workers. Why isn’t this the case for state lawmakers?

Pennsylvan­ia has the nation’s largest full-time legislatur­e, and its average base pay of $87,000 a year is second only to California’s. That’s not counting the free cars, including gas and maintenanc­e, as well as excellent health and retirement benefits.

September is back to business for school children and workers who have burned off their vacation time. Why isn’t it the case for state lawmakers?

The House had originally been scheduled to return to Harrisburg for two voting sessions last week, but Speaker Mike Turzai (R., Allegheny) canceled them — with no public explanatio­n given — effectivel­y extending their summer recess by another two weeks, for a grand total of 86 days off.

The Senate didn’t even bother to schedule voting sessions last week.

Pennsylvan­ia has the nation’s largest full-time legislatur­e, and its average base pay of $87,000 a year is second only to California’s.

That’s not even counting the free cars, including gas and maintenanc­e, as well as excellent health and retirement benefits that lawmakers give themselves.

As legislator­s continue to cash their paychecks, they are ignoring important state business.

Here are some key issues that demand action.

School funding is always going to be a pressing issue, but this year, it has taken on more urgency for a number of reasons.

First, a Commonweal­th Court upheld a lawsuit challengin­g the state’s funding formula and its failure to correct inequities in funding between high income and poorer communitie­s — a gap that’s worse in Pennsylvan­ia than in any other state.

Figuring out how to balance these inequities will require time and thoughtful debate. Ignoring it won’t make it go away.

In addition, the dismissal of Philadelph­ia schools during extreme heat earlier this month was yet another reminder that the aging infrastruc­ture of schools throughout the state must be addressed as a key safety issue.

On guns, the Senate in March passed a bill to tighten the 60-day window for violent domestic abusers and those who pose a threat to self and others to give up their guns to 24 hours.

The House just couldn’t muster the courage to concur, despite the fact that last year, the number of victims of domestic violence killed with a gun in Pennsylvan­ia increased.

Of the 117 domestic violence deaths, 78 were caused by a gun. How many of those 78 deaths might have been prevented if lawmakers were paying attention?

This summer’s explosive grand jury report that 301 priests abused more than 1,000 victims was a fivealarm reminder of the need to adjust the criminal and civil statutes of limitation­s so that victims of abuse could pursue justice.

Right now, criminal charges can’t be brought if the victim is over 50 and civil cases can’t be filed if the victim is over 30.

The legislatur­e has failed to address the need to restructur­e state taxes - especially giving communitie­s much-needed property tax relief.

And an unpreceden­ted grassroots movement calling for an end to gerrymande­ring, the process through which legislator­s stack the deck in their favor with voters of their own party, also fell on deaf ears.

The legislatur­e’s failure to attack our problems is putting the progress and health of the state at risk.

Those legislator­s who are hiding from voters should use the upcoming Nov. 6 election as a time for thoughtful reflection on whether they even belong in government.

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