The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)
Fetterman isn’t moving into lieutenant governor’s residence
HARRISBURG >> Pennsylvania’s newly elected lieutenant governor said Wednesday he does not plan to move into the lavish stateowned official residence and hopes to make it available for some type of public use.
Democrat John Fetterman said he may rent a place in Harrisburg, but he’s definitely not moving his family to Harrisburg or to the residence at Fort Indiantown Gap.
“We’re not going to reside in the mansion,” Fetterman said during a postelection visit to the Capitol newsroom. “My wife and I envision, and the governor supports, some kind of public usage of it. Particularly swimming for children.”
He said his family will remain in Braddock, a western Pennsylvania steel town where he is mayor.
“Not that Harrisburg’s not a wonderful town,” Fetterman said, noting he grew up outside York, about 25 miles from the capital. But he added his family has “a real strong allegiance both practically but also symbolically to the community that I’ve been lucky enough to lead for the past four terms.”
Fetterman beat incumbent Lt. Gov. Mike Stack, a former state senator, and three others in the Democratic primary this year to become Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf’s running mate.
Wolf and Stack were never particularly close, but that was exacerbated last year when the governor stripped Stack of Pennsylvania State Police protection and limited cleaning, grounds keeping and maintenance at the State House, as it is called, after an investigation that wasn’t made public into how state employees were treated there and the use of the state police troopers.
Stack’s office later disclosed his wife had entered treatment for an undisclosed mental health issue.
Stack spokesman J.P. Kurish said the residence’s location may present a problem for plans to convert it to a more public purpose.
“It would be difficult, because it sits on a military base,” Kurish said. “So it’s really not public land.”