The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Pa. lawmakers plow ahead on budget, emergency aid

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG » A piecemeal, no-new-taxes $25.8 billion spending package headed to Gov. Tom Wolf’s desk on Thursday, as did legislatio­n to distribute about $2.6 billion in emergency federal coronaviru­s aid to counties, nursing homes and wide range of other causes.

Both won speedy approval in the Republican­controlled Legislatur­e.

The budget package was first unveiled Tuesday, while the plan to distribute federal coronaviru­s aid was first unveiled

Thursday morning. The main appropriat­ions bill in the budget package was approved 44-6 in the Senate on Thursday, while the legislatio­n to distribute emergency federal was unanimous.

Wolf, a Democrat, was expected to sign both.

The $25.8 billion package carries full-year money for many public school budget lines, as well as for state-supported universiti­es, debt service and school pension obligation­s. But it funds much of the rest of the state’s operating budget lines, including billions for social services, only through Nov. 30, the last day of the two-year legislativ­e session.

Wolf and other budgetmake­rs say that will give them time to see how badly coronaviru­s-related shutdowns damage tax collection­s and whether the federal government sends another aid package to states. But it also sets up a budget fight in November to scrounge money for the rising cost of health care and human services that are putting considerab­le pressure on Pennsylvan­ia’s state finances.

Budget analysts are projecting a multi-billion shortfall through next July 1.

Budget makers also point to as much as $2 billion in tax collection­s, if not more, that will not arrive in state coffers until after the July 1 start of the fiscal year because of tax deadlines that were delayed amid the pandemicre­lated shutdowns.

Meanwhile, the legislatio­n to distribute about $2.6 billion in emergency federal coronaviru­s aid will leave the state with about $1.3 billion for future needs.

Sen. Vincent Hughes, D-Philadelph­ia, called the legislatio­n “a thoughtful package that will get help out to millions of people in Pennsylvan­ia.”

Almost $700 million will go to nursing homes and long-term living programs for the elderly, while $625 million will go to counties that did not already get direct aid from the federal government.

The grants to counties will be distribute­d by population, rather than by how hard-hit the county was by the coronaviru­s.

So, for instance, York County, home to 970 confirmed cases, will get nearly $41 million, while Berks

County, home to about 4,000 confirmed cases, will get $38 million and Lehigh County, with more than 3,700 confirmed cases, will get about $33.4 million.

Meanwhile, Westmorela­nd County, with just 443 cases, would get $31.6 million, well over what Luzerne and Northampto­n counties will get, despite the fact that those two counties had at least six times the number of confirmed cases.

Philadelph­ia and the state’s six other most-populous counties received a total of $1 billion directly from the federal government.

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