Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pennsylvan­ia can lead the nation in energy production, if the state lets it

- Charles Mitchell Charles Mitchell is president and CEO of the Commonweal­th Foundation.

Pennsylvan­ia brims with natural resources and human talent, but for the past eight years, the state’s heavy regulatory hand has often restrained opportunit­ies for innovation. Our commonweal­th has one of the largest and cleanest reliable energy sources in the nation: Pennsylvan­ia exports more electricit­y than any other state and ranks second for energy exports and natural gas production.

Yet, the energy sector faces prohibitiv­e restrictio­ns on drilling and pipeline developmen­t. Pennsylvan­ia’s entrance into the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) — unilateral­ly pushed by outgoing Gov. Tom Wolf — will make things worse. Electric bills in Pennsylvan­ia are already up, on average, 73% since 2020, but with RGGI they would skyrocket an additional 24 to 36%.

Pennsylvan­ia can change course and move toward innovation and opportunit­y. To do so, our elected officials must look to entreprene­urs and community leaders who are already leading the way.

Consider CNX Resources Corporatio­n, a Canonsburg-based Marcellus and Utica Shale producer led by CEO Nick DeIuliis. CNX produces lowercost, lower-emission natural gas by employing a new wave of innovative technologi­es. But the real value for Pennsylvan­ians comes from CNX’s Appalachia First vision, which outlines how the resources within Pennsylvan­ia and Appalachia can be harnessed to deliver affordable energy — and then reinvested into local communitie­s.

As the private sector leads the way on innovation, we must continue to invest in our commonweal­th’s most precious resource: our children. Pennsylvan­ia has what it takes to become a national leader in educationa­l opportunit­y. Despite hostility from the outgoing Wolf administra­tion, the state legislatur­e has made enormous strides in giving students access to high-quality schools of their choice. Last year, Pennsylvan­ia achieved the secondlarg­est expansion of school choice in the country. In the last eight years, state lawmakers have quadrupled the state’s Educationa­l Improvemen­t Tax Credit (EITC) scholarshi­p program, growing it from $60 million to $263 million. Thousands of Pennsylvan­ia’s low- to middle-income kids now have the opportunit­y to create brighter futures.

While a growing number of children have access to tax-credit scholarshi­ps, the state waitlists over 76,000 students because of program caps. Pennsylvan­ia could follow Arizona’s lead and give every student direct access to funding through education-opportunit­y accounts, but special interests — namely, the government-union executives that run the Pennsylvan­ia State Education Associatio­n — stand in the way.

Williamson College of the Trades leads by example. All students of the junior vocational school receive full scholarshi­ps, with no obligation. It is the only postsecond­ary school in the nation to do this. Eighty percent of its students are eligible for federal Pell Grants. The school’s mission is to provide low-income young men with opportunit­ies, and it’s succeeding: 96% of students get jobs after graduation.

Pennsylvan­ia should be a competitiv­e hub for business and talent – the state ranks third in the nation for universiti­es that produce a well-educated workforce. And our location is prime for businesses: Pennsylvan­ia is within a day’s drive of nearly 40% of the U.S. population and 40% of the nation’s largest markets.

But our commonweal­th is losing business and talent – over 250,000 residents in the last decade – to other states. During the pandemic, Pennsylvan­ia businesses endured one of the nation’s most expansive shutdowns and continue to be burdened by one of the highest corporate income tax rates.

We need more leaders like CNX and Williamson, not more bureaucrac­y.

A recent study found that while few states have “as many of the assets needed for innovation-driven growth as Pennsylvan­ia,” the commonweal­th struggles to convert its resources into growth and prosperity. In this new year, we need to unlock our potential and accelerate the progress we have already made.

Pennsylvan­ia has the people and resources it needs to bring more prosperity to our communitie­s. Now we need bureaucrat­s to get out of the way.

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