Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Donations for Wolf inaugurati­on reach $1.7M and counting

- By Angela Couloumbis

HARRISBURG — Labor unions, law firms, lobbyists and big energy companies are among dozens of donors who have kicked in more than $1.7 million to help pay for Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf’s inaugural events Tuesday, according to informatio­n disclosed by the governor’s inaugural committee.

And that number is only expected to grow, organizers said, as donations continue to pour in. For Mr. Wolf’s first inaugurati­on, sponsors paid $2.7 million.

The majority of the money will be used to underwrite the evening bash Mr. Wolf will host at the Pennsylvan­ia Farm Show complex, a celebratio­n that will feature Pennsylvan­ia themes, food and artists, said Karissa Hand, spokeswoma­n for the inaugural committee, which is organizing the event.

Ms. Hand said some of the donations will also be used to reimburse the state’s Department of General Services for helping to stage the daytime swearingin ceremony for Mr. Wolf, scheduled for noon Tuesday outside the east wing rotunda of the Capitol.

As of Monday, there still was not a final price tag on the event.

“It is still ongoing,” Ms. Hand said, “and we are still determinin­g our costs.”

She added: “It is a goal of the committee that taxpayer money is not used on inaugural festivitie­s.”

Governors have been leaning on private donations to bankroll inaugural festivitie­s for years, hoping to stave off inevitable criticism that taxpayer dollars shouldn’t be used to fund the quadrennia­l event, which often includes private receptions along with the public oath-taking.

Left unsaid, however, is that many donors often want something from state government, whether contracts or public policies that are favorable to them. Mr. Wolf’s inaugural team, much like the ones that served previous governors, rejected any notion that such donations sway decisionma­king.

Mr. Wolf has posted his donors, and the amounts they have given, online — a major departure from past governors, who often held that list secret until after the events were over.

Ex-Gov. Tom Corbett’s inaugural committee in 2011 declined requests for a list of corporate sponsors in the weeks leading up to the inaugurati­on. It became public after donors were listed on the program handed out at his inaugural ball.

And in 2007, former Gov. Ed Rendell’s committee told reporters that sponsors were being listed on the inaugural program, but that the amounts they donated would not be publicly available until several weeks after the event, according to published reports at the time.

Mr. Wolf’s 2019 committee capped single donations at $50,000, with eight of the 129 (and growing) donors hitting that threshold. They include special interests as disparate as the union representi­ng Pennsylvan­ia’s teachers to natural gas exploratio­n and pipeline transport company EQT Corp.

Unions collective­ly were some of the more generous donors, giving at least $365,000. But law firms, energy companies and health care businesses also cut big checks: Law firms kicked in at least $140,000; energy companies at least $205,000; and the health care sector at least $90,000.

Some of Mr. Wolf’s biggest individual contributo­rs included real estate developers Jack Piatt and Israel Roizman. Each gave $25,000.

Tuesday’s inaugural festivitie­s are a big event in Harrisburg; streets are cordoned off and the Capitol virtually shuts down for the swearing-in ceremonies for Mr. Wolf and his second-incommand, Lt. Gov.-elect John Fetterman, the former Braddock mayor.

Mr. Fetterman is expected to take the oath of office in the late morning in the state Senate. After that, legislativ­e leaders, former governors and other elected officials will file outside to the back of the Capitol, where Mr. Wolf will take the stage and be sworn in for his second and last fouryear term.

Later in the day, there will be an open house at the governor’s residence about a mile from the Capitol. Mr. Wolf and first lady Frances Wolf do not live there; they opted to stay in their home in Mt. Wolf, about a 30minute drive south in York County , when Mr. Wolf was first elected in 2014.

The inaugural bash at the Farm Show is in the evening. It will feature everything from Pennsylvan­ia wines and beers to Pennsylvan­ia sports mascots, to The Roots, the hip-hop band from Philadelph­ia that is the official house band on “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.”

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