The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

‘DIVIDED’ BUDGET

Governor signs $34 billion spending plan

- By Marc Levy and Mark Scolforo

Gov. Tom Wolf signed a $34 billion compromise budget Friday after lawmakers wrapped up the week with a flurry of votes on hundreds of pages of legislatio­n that in some cases drew angry protests from his fellow Democrats.

Fueled by strong tax collection­s, the budget boosts aid to public schools and universiti­es, holds the line on taxes, and stuffs a substantia­l sum into reserves.

Both Wolf and top Republican­s in the GOP-controlled Legislatur­e said they were proud of the budget.

However, Wolf saw some of his top priorities blocked by Republican­s, and he gave into a Republican demand to end a decades-old cash assistance program for the destitute deemed temporaril­y unable to work.

Not a single Democratic lawmaker voted for the bill, which ends the program called “general assistance,” and debate over it in the Senate turned ugly Wednesday. Meanwhile, 62 of the 70 votes against the main spending bill were from Wolf’s fellow Democrats, some of whom criticized the budget as lacking courage.

“In divided government, you have to advocate aggressive­ly, you have to negotiate hard, and you also have to do what’s best for all of the people you serve,”

Wolf said in a statement Friday announcing he would sign the budget bills. “You have to do everything you can to promote the most forward-looking agenda you can conceive, and to prevent regressive policies from becoming law.”

In interviews Friday, Wolf said he understood Democrats’ frustratio­n that the budget didn’t go far enough, but he defended it as “making lives better” and said the state is far ahead of where it was when he took office in 2015.

“We’re a much more progressiv­e state than we were five years ago, and I’m very proud of that,” Wolf said. “At the same time, there’s still a lot of work to be done.”

Both chambers gaveled out until September after approving the final budgetrela­ted bills.

Lawmakers passed a separate

measure to help counties afford new voting machines that have an auditable paper trail ahead of the 2020 presidenti­al election, although Democratic lawmakers protested some of the bill’s provisions changing election laws.

All told, the 2019-20 spending plan, for the budget year that starts Monday, authorizes new spending of nearly $2 billion, or about 6% more than the current fiscal year’s approved spending.

Much of the extra spending covers new discretion­ary aid for public schools, plus extra amounts to meet rising costs for prisons, debt, pension obligation­s and health care for

the poor.

It sends $210 million more to public school operations and instructio­n, as well as tens of millions more to pre-kindergart­en programs and higher education institutio­ns. It is also expected to leave nearly $300 million for the state’s “rainy day” budgetary reserve.

Much of it was similar to the $34.1 billion proposal Wolf issued in February. Healthy revenues eased pressure on lawmakers and the governor, helping them deliver an on-time budget after protracted battles during Wolf’s first three years in office.

Still, Republican­s rejected a push by Wolf and

his Democratic allies to raise Pennsylvan­ia’s minimum wage, as well as a new fee proposed by the governor on municipali­ties that rely solely on state troopers for local police services.

For the fifth straight year under Wolf, Republican­s again blocked a tax on Marcellus Shale natural gas drilling he had sought this year to underwrite infrastruc­ture and developmen­t projects.

The Legislatur­e authorized borrowing $90 million to pay for voting machines, to help counties with a tab expected to exceed $100 million. The borrowing provision emerged at the 11th hour, after weeks of Republican­s saying they did not support Wolf’s demand that counties buy new machines.

On Wednesday night, Republican­s abruptly bundled the borrowing provision into a measure carrying changes to voting laws that Democrats opposed.

Wolf on Friday would not say whether he would sign or veto it but said there are elements of it that he doesn’t like and suggested that it didn’t go nearly far enough in improving access to voting.

Determined to end the general assistance program, Republican­s packaged it into legislatio­n reauthoriz­ing state subsidies for Philadelph­ia hospitals.

 ?? MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A pedestrian walks by the state Capitol in Harrisburg, Pa., Friday. The Pennsylvan­ia House is working to wrap up final budget-season votes two days until the fiscal-year deadline, the morning after grinding to a halt over a critical education bill.
MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A pedestrian walks by the state Capitol in Harrisburg, Pa., Friday. The Pennsylvan­ia House is working to wrap up final budget-season votes two days until the fiscal-year deadline, the morning after grinding to a halt over a critical education bill.
 ?? MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? House Speaker Mike Turzai, R-Allegheny, walks down a corridor at the state Capitol in Harrisburg, Pa., Friday. The final pieces in the legislativ­e puzzle that makes up a $34 billion compromise state budget package were on their way Friday to Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf after the Pennsylvan­ia House wrapped up work with a flurry of votes.
MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS House Speaker Mike Turzai, R-Allegheny, walks down a corridor at the state Capitol in Harrisburg, Pa., Friday. The final pieces in the legislativ­e puzzle that makes up a $34 billion compromise state budget package were on their way Friday to Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf after the Pennsylvan­ia House wrapped up work with a flurry of votes.

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