Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Talks yield no deal, with 3 days left

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG » Pennsylvan­ia’s state House of Representa­tives and Senate returned to the Capitol on Tuesday, as leaders of the Republican-controlled chambers work to get an agreement on a roughly $42 billion budget plan with Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf before the state loses some of its spending authority in three days.

No budget plan has been unveiled, and hundreds of pages of budget-related legislatio­n remained under wraps. Closed-door talks were still going on as Senate

Republican­s warned in a Monday afternoon statement that they were still “far apart” with Wolf’s office.

Without new budget legislatio­n signed into law by Friday, the state will lose the authority to make many discretion­ary payments, although it could be weeks before any effect is felt.

Wolf’s budget secretary, Greg Thall, said Tuesday that a budget deal is within reach and that there is no reason to miss the end-of-fiscal-year deadline Friday.

Still, the ongoing stalemate has begun to revive memories of protracted, months-long budget fights between Wolf and the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e in 2015 and 2017 that inflicted lasting stress on counties, schools and social services agencies, and precipitat­ed another credit downgrade.

Senate Republican lawmakers have been particular­ly tight-lipped, and Wolf has generally stayed out of sight in the Capitol.

The talks revolve around the amount of money Wolf is seeking for public schools, after he asked for almost $1.8 billion more for instructio­n, operations and special education, or about 21% more. Of that, $300 million was set aside for the 100 poorest public school districts and $200 million for special education.

Thall would not discuss what sort of concession­s Republican lawmakers were seeking from Wolf. However, he said the state is awash in billions of dollars in surplus revenue and that lawmakers should act to help “people who are struggling in the economy.”

GOP leaders are willing to send more money to public schools, but perhaps one-third to one-half of the amount Wolf requested. The state must be wary of overspendi­ng with an economic slowdown possibly on the way, they say.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States