Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pa. Legislatur­e ended 2023 sitting on a nearly $300 million surplus

- By Jan Murphy pennlive.com

HARRISBURG — Pennsylvan­ia’s legislativ­e branch has a record balance of nearly $300 million, ostensibly to ensure independen­ce in the event of a drawn-out budgetary showdown with the governor.

According to an audit released this week by a HouseSenat­e panel, the legislativ­e accounts grew by more than $37 million last year over the prior year’s balance of nearly $261.5 million.

That means the legislativ­e reserves are large enough to cover operations for about eight months based on their current combined annual appropriat­ion of $441.4 million.

This latest audit issued by the Legislativ­e Audit Advisory Commission with its $298.5 million balance has been building since 2017 when it was only a third of that amount.

Efforts to get comment from Commission Chairman Pat Harkins, D-Erie County, were unsuccessf­ul on Thursday.

Citizen watchdog Eric Epstein of RocktheCap­ital called it “unjustifie­d and totally out of control.”

The combined reserves of the House and Senate and a dozen legislativ­e service agencies has nearly doubled over the past decade.

Mr. Epstein pointed out the reserves, when added to this year’s $441.4 million appropriat­ion, total nearly $750 million, potentiall­y putting the legislativ­e branch on track to reach the $1 billion mark by 2030, if not before.

“You can’t justify this,” he said.

Over the years, lawmakers have insisted they need a healthy reserve to preserve their government­al branch’s autonomy in the event of a protracted budget stalemate such as the nine- month impasse of 2015-16, but even that year, they ended up with $118.4 million in reserve.

On occasion, the legislativ­e caucuses have agreed to dip into their surplus accounts to fund items in the budget, with the 2019 school safety grants being a recent example.

The breakdown on the amounts held in reserve as of June 30, 2023, has the Senate caucuses sitting on $47.5 million and the House caucuses holding $181.9 million. The legislativ­e service agencies such as the Legislativ­e Reference Bureau, Independen­t Fiscal Office and Capitol Preservati­on Committee, have $69 million in reserve.

How much is too much when it comes to these reserves? That’s a question lawmakers have been asked and pondered many times over.

Gov. Josh Shapiro, when he was a state legislator who chaired the advisory audit commission, called for a policy that limited the legislativ­e reserves to no more than two to three months of the Legislatur­e’s operating costs.

“The attitude needs to change as to who that money belongs to,” said then-Rep. Shapiro in 2009 when the surplus reached $201.5 million. “I think we should be reinvestin­g close to $150 million, dollars that are sitting in the legislativ­e leadership accounts, into meeting the needs of Pennsylvan­ians.”

An attempt to get a comment from the governor for this story was not successful.

Mr. Shapiro’s Revenue Secretary Pat Browne, who also chaired the commission when he was senator, said in 2010 that he thought three months would be sufficient, which at that time would have been $80 million to $90 million.

Former Gov. Tom Corbett also favored capping the excess money the legislativ­e branch held in reserve.

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