The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Governor Wolf’s budget pushes for school aid, college debt

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG » Gov. Tom Wolf wants to create a major new program for college scholarshi­ps, require public schools to provide full-day kindergart­en and pump $1 billion into cleaning up lead and asbestos in aging school buildings in his budget proposal rolled out Tuesday. However, the Democrat’s plans likely face a skeptical Republican-controlled Legislatur­e.

To do it, Wolf’s administra­tion is projecting rosy growth in tax collection­s, diverting casino gambling tax revenue that subsidizes the state’s horse-racing industry, raising borrowing limits and overhaulin­g how charter schools are funded.

In his speech to a joint session of the House and Senate, Wolf called his plan a “blueprint for unleashing a new wave of prosperity for our commonweal­th” and said it will make a difference in the lives of millions of people.

“It does not ask any of you to join me on any wild-eyed ideologica­l crusade,” Wolf told lawmakers. “It merely asks that you join me in imagining what this Commonweal­th can offer to each of its people.”

In his budget speech, Wolf also urged action to curb student debt and gun violence, making child care more affordable and raising the minimum wage.

The budget, Wolf’s sixth, would increase spending through the state’s main bank account to $36 billion for the 2020-21 fiscal year starting July 1. Including nearly $600 million in supplement­al cash for the current fiscal year, Wolf is seeking authorizat­ion for another $2.6 billion in new spending, or 7.5 % more.

Most of the increase would go to rising costs for health care for the poor and long-term care for the elderly and disabled. Public schools and pre-kindergart­en programs would get about another $170 million, or 2% more, plus $280 million in savings from changing how charter schools are funded. Meanwhile, the administra­tion wants to require that public schools start providing free, full-time kindergart­en.

Wolf makes budget speech appeal for action on gun violence. See Page 3. Hightlight­s of Pennsylvan­ia governor’s state budget proposal. See Page 3.

The plan would hold the line on sales and income taxes, the state’s two biggest sources of revenue. However, the administra­tion is projecting an aggressive 4.5% growth in tax

collection­s, including $240 million bump fromrestru­cturing the corporate net income tax. The administra­tion also is seeking new fees on municipali­ties to pay for state police services and on waste hauling to underwrite a hazardous cleanups program.

Many of the governor’s items face long odds, since

Republican lawmakers have reliably rejected Wolf’s most expansive proposals since he took office in 2015. The plan is already facing objections from the horse-racing industry and charter school proponents.

The $200 million collegesch­olarship program is part of Wolf’s initiative to attack student debt and would focus

on lower- and middleclas­s students graduating from one of Pennsylvan­ia’s 14 state-owned universiti­es.

Administra­tion officials estimate that at least 25,000 state-system university students would benefit from it, getting the assistance as long as they stay in Pennsylvan­ia after they graduate. To fund it, the

administra­tion wants to divert $200 million from slot-machine tax revenue that, since 2006, has subsidized the state’s horse racing industry.

“Let’s bet on our kids instead of bankrollin­g race horse owners and ensure the viability of the Pennsylvan­ia State System of Higher Education,” Wolf told lawmakers.

Another new element Wolf is proposing is expanding a bond-funded redevelopm­ent grant program by $1 billion and making the money available for lead and asbestos cleanups in schools. It is fueled by growing concerns over asbestos and lead poisoning in Scranton and Philadelph­ia.

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