The Daily Press

Proposed Pa. budget nearly quadruples funding for local government cooperatio­n

- By Min Xian

A state program that incentiviz­es local government­s in Pennsylvan­ia to work together to provide public services would see its funding nearly quadrupled under a proposal from Gov. Josh Shapiro.

In his first budget as governor, the Democrat has pitched a 266% funding boost to the Municipal Assistance Program, which pays up to half the cost of eligible projects in which municipali­ties collaborat­e to deliver government services more efficientl­y.

The increase — from just over half a million to $2 million — would “set the groundwork for the rehabilita­tion and growth” of Pennsylvan­ia communitie­s, Shapiro wrote in the proposed budget. The proposal projects the same amount of expanded support can be funded through the 2027-28 fiscal year.

Pennsylvan­ia contains 67 counties and more than 2,500 townships, boroughs, and cities. These municipali­ties vary widely in size, but the same sets of rules determine their organizati­on and responsibi­lities. Regardless of their capabiliti­es, each local government must provide the same level of basic services to taxpayers.

This uniform standard imposes disproport­ionate costs of operation, especially on smaller municipali­ties. That burden has led to slow economic growth in many parts of Pennsylvan­ia, according to a 2003 study.

The Municipal Assistance Program was created to encourage collaborat­ion across municipal boundaries to address this dilemma. A common example of intergover­nmental partnershi­p is when multiple localities make bulk purchases together and benefit from discounts that save taxpayers money.

The state Department of Community and Economic Developmen­t (DCED) administer­s the program and funded 10 projects in 2022. The approved grants — totaling $326,000 — went to Allegheny, Bradford, Butler, Carbon, Cumberland, Elk, Luzerne, Lycoming, Venango, and Westmorela­nd

Counties for various regional comprehens­ive plans, Spotlight PA learned through a public records request.

Venango County plans to use the $37,000 it received to update its nearly two-decade-old comprehens­ive plan to establish new goals and policies. In Bradford County, Towanda Borough, Towanda Township, and North Towanda Township plan to use their allotment to update a regional plan that steers how they manage local industries.

Lisa Schaefer, executive director for the County Commission­ers Associatio­n of Pennsylvan­ia, said this type of comprehens­ive planning helps ensure “there is a long-term vision” for regional growth.

How well local government­s implement the recommenda­tions of such plans is a barometer of the success of the grant program, Penny Ickes, a DCED spokespers­on, told Spotlight PA in an email.

The proposed funding raise would “allow DCED to work with more communitie­s overall, and that’s a good thing because demand is high,” Ickes wrote. The additional money would allow the program to assist up to 65 local government­s over the next fiscal year, according to budget estimates from the Shapiro administra­tion.

There is a “great need” for cooperativ­e ventures among Pennsylvan­ia local government­s, and the current program funding level doesn’t reflect the need fully, said Ron Grutza,

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