Kane Republican

Budget would leave billions unspent, boost education funding

- By Mark Scolforo

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — The Pennsylvan­ia House, nearly a week into the state's new fiscal year, began passing budget legislatio­n Thursday to add billions into surplus accounts, significan­tly boost education spending and fund new environmen­tal programs.

The House passed the main budget bill with little debate on a 180-20 vote hours after representa­tives were briefed on the details. All of the no votes were Republican­s.

Leaders of the majority GOP caucus touted the $42.8 billion spending plan for how it would affect transporta­tion, police and election operations.

“One, it responsibl­y saves money, two, it responsibl­y invests money and three, while making sure that we're taking care of today we're also planning for tomorrow,” House Speaker Bryan Cutler, R-lancaster, told reporters.

Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf's spokespers­on called it a bipartisan deal that increases spending on education and other of his priorities.

“The governor urges the Legislatur­e to continue to move to get a budget to his desk,” Wolf press secretary Beth Rementer said after the House vote.

In the Senate, things were less clear, and Republican caucus spokespers­on Erica Clayton Wright said the framework was under discussion as the House voted.

“There's no deal yet," Clayton Wright said.

House Republican­s said the plan would repay some $2 billion in borrowed money and increase the rainy day fund from $2.9 billion to $5 billion. It also would leave about $3.6 billion unspent for future needs.

Rep. Stan Saylor, Ryork, the Appropriat­ions chair, called the deal “exactly the medicine this commonweal­th needs to right ourselves and be the most competitiv­e state in this nation and return ourselves to the Keystone State we should be.”

K-12 education spending would go up by more than a half-billion dollars, and the state's 100 poorest districts would split an additional $225 million. The plan would also increase subsidies for early childhood education, special education and the Pennsylvan­ia State System of Higher Education.

A program that gives tax credits in return for private school tuition would see an increase of 45%, to more than $400 million.

Wolf has agreed to pull charter school regulation­s that had been approved in March.

On the environmen­t, the framework would spend some $220 million in federal funds to help clean streams, about $150 million to fix up parks and forest land, and more for sewer and water infrastruc­ture, flood control and storm water projects.

A $45 million expenditur­e for elections through a state agency would help counties with the costs of voter registrati­on, preparing and administer­ing elections and auditing the results. Private donationst­o pay for elections would be prohibited.

A child care tax credit would be created, along with more money for a property tax and rent rebate program for seniors and to help lower-income people afford the cost of heating their homes.

The corporate net income tax rate, currently 10%, would drop by 1 percentage point this year and then be on track for half-point cuts in future years until it would hit 5%.

“This is what bipartisan compromise looks like on an issue that has confounded this chamber for literally decades,” said the ranking Democrat on the Appropriat­ions Committee, Rep. Matt Bradford, of Montgomery County.

The budget would pay for 200 new state troopers and shuffle funding for state police out of a fund that can therefore afford more transporta­tion projects.

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