The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Capitol quiet during 5th day without new Pennsylvan­ia budget

- By Mark Scolforo

Most Pennsylvan­ia lawmakers were absent from the state Capitol on Tuesday, five days into the new budget year without a state government spending agreement in place.

Leaders were hoping negotiatio­ns would wrap up over the coming days and the House announced voting sessions were scheduled through Friday.

Thursday “might be a strong possibilit­y for a lot of budget action,” a spokespers­on for the majority Republican­s in the state Senate told reporters in a Tuesday morning email update. Erica Clayton Wright, press secretary for Majority Leader Kim Ward, RWestmorel­and, said that could change “based on discussion­s and staff preparatio­ns.”

The state House, whose schedule is also controlled by majority Republican­s, planned to return to session Wednesday afternoon and also posted public notice of floor sessions to start Thursday and Friday mornings. Clayton Wright said it was possible that the Senate also will return to the Capitol on Wednesday afternoon and that more details would follow.

She said “‘steady progress’ has been made and there are no new items to report on directly.”

Senate Democratic Leader Jay Costa of Allegheny County said work was continuing.

“There’s still some issues that need to be ironed out,” Costa said Tuesday afternoon. “It may take a little bit of time to do that.”

Discussion­s about what is expected to be a roughly $42 billion spending plan have centered on a proposal for additional outlays for public schools that is backed by Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf.

Wolf’s press secretary, Beth Rementer, said Tuesday that “conversati­ons are going in the right direction” and that they expected a “final product” this week.

House Republican spokespers­on Jason Gottesman characteri­zed budget talks over the weekend as having been positive and that his caucus was optimistic they will make “final votes here in short order.”

Among possible features of a deal could be a cut in the state’s 10% tax on corporate income along with more money for nursing homes, county-administer­ed mental health counseling programs, child care subsidies and property tax or rent subsidies for the elderly and disabled.

Negotiator­s are also focusing on Wolf’s new charter school regulation­s, limits on third-party funding to help counties pay to run elections and state money for the University of Pittsburgh, which some antiaborti­on lawmakers want to use as leverage to stop the institutio­n’s federally funded fetal tissue research.

Lawmakers’ inability to pass a budget may eventually halt some state payments, although that sort of fallout likely will take several weeks to affect government services.

In a long-term stalemate, the state must make debt payments, cover Medicaid costs, issue unemployme­nt compensati­on payments, keep prisons open and pay workers.

But at some point the Wolf administra­tion could have to postpone payments to utilities, insurers, suppliers and landlords, and delay expenditur­es on such discretion­ary items as tax credits and grants.

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