Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Governor’s plan to boost transit aid passes Pa. House, now faces Senate

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG — Pennsylvan­ia’s House of Representa­tives on Wednesday approved Gov. Josh Shapiro’s planto boost funding for public transporta­tion systems still trying to recover prepandemi­c ridership numbers and facing a drop-off in funding when federal COVID-19 aid runs out.

The Democratic- controlled chamber voted, 10695, with all but one Democrat in favor, and all but five Republican­s opposing it.

The bill would deliver an increase of about 20% in state aid to public transporta­tion systems, proposed by the Democratic governor in his budget plan earlier this year. However, the bill faces long odds in the Republican- controlled Senate, with Republican­s protesting the amount of the funding increase and objecting to procedures that House Democrats used to pass the bill.

Under the bill, the state would increase the share of state sales tax collection­s devoted to public transit agencies from 4.4% of receipts to 6.15%. That would translate to an estimated increase of $283 million in the 2024-25 fiscal year on top of the $1.3 billion going to transit agencies this year.

About two-thirds of the state aid goes to the Philadelph­ia-area Southeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia Transporta­tion Authority, or SEPTA, and another 20% goes to Pittsburgh Regional Transit. The rest goes to 29 public transporta­tion systems around Pennsylvan­ia.

The bill also excuses transit agencies from a 15% fund- matching requiremen­t for five years.

Democrats defended the increase as necessary to keep transit systems from cutting services or increasing fares.

“This is going to benefit all of us, and it’s going to keep Pennsylvan­ia moving,” said Rep. Jennifer O’Mara, D-Delaware.

House Minority Leader Bryan Cutler, R-Lancaster, called the bill a “mass transit bailout.” The size of the subsidy increase is “eyepopping,” Mr. Cutler said, and he suggested that more funding won’t fix the things that are ailing public transit systems, including lagging ridership, rising fuel costs and high-profile incidents of crime.

“There are structural problems in mass transit systems that funding alone will not solve,” Mr. Cutler said.

Mr. Cutler’s criticisms echoed those in the past by Senate Republican­s. In a statement Wednesday, Senate Majority Leader Joe Pittman, R-Indiana, said simply that Senate Republican­s haven’t agreed to pass the bill.

Republican­s also protested that the bill could be found unconstitu­tional by a court after the public transit provisions were inserted into a bill created for an entirely different purpose. Senate Republican­s wrote the original bill to give landowners an income tax deduction for the use of natural gas, coal, oil or other natural deposits on their land.

Public transporta­tion authoritie­s across the U.S. have yet to fully recover their ridership after it dropped off during the pandemic and mass transit advocates say systems lack the revenue to avoid service cuts when federal COVID-19 relief aid runs out.

In addition, they say, operating costs have grown, with inflation that hit a fourdecade high in 2022 and rising wages and fuel prices.

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