The Southern Berks News

Wolf climate change plan will kill Pennsylvan­ia jobs

- By Elizabeth Stelle Columnist Elizabeth Stelle is the director of policy analysis at the Commonweal­th Foundation.

After Pennsylvan­ians endured a year of Gov. Tom Wolf’s domineerin­g COVID-19 response, they ratified landmark constituti­onal amendments that limit his emergency powers. But despite this resounding rebuke, the governor is just as much a “lone wolf” as ever.

In 2019, Wolf ordered the Department of Environmen­tal Protection to push the commonweal­th into the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, or RGGI. Now, despite a lack of public support, significan­t pushback from the General Assembly, and with a little more than a year until the next gubernator­ial election, Wolf is determined to finalize the process of entering the economy-harming accord.

Polling shows that voters do not support Wolf’s plan. That’s because RGGI imposes taxes on energy generation, increasing home electricit­y bills.

Wolf’s controvers­ial order also flagrantly bypassed the Legislatur­e, which has authority over taxation. To stop this, the Legislatur­e has introduced bills to reassert their power over any tax scheme, including RGGI membership. Wolf vetoed one of those bills and may veto another in the coming months. If the governor succeeds, there is no doubt the courts will need to weigh in on the legitimacy of imposing taxes via regulation.

The 11 other states that have joined RGGI did so through legislatio­n. Only Wolf insists on doing everything himself.

Wolf’s go-it-alone style doesn’t stop at RGGI or asserting emergency powers. Pennsylvan­ia governors have a legal obligation to certify that state budget appropriat­ions do not exceed revenues. Yet Wolf allowed unbalanced budgets to become law in 2016 and 2017, resulting in drawn-out budget battles and lawsuits.

Wolf has routinely allowed the agencies under his purview to spend more than the taxpayer dollars the General Assembly approves in the budget. He’s done this to the tune of $400 million in 2017, $613 million in 2019, $1 billion in 2020, and $849 million in 2021. This forces the General Assembly to find more revenue after the fact, turning taxpayers into little more than the Wolf administra­tion’s credit card.

And just weeks ahead of the November 2020 election, the Wolf administra­tion changed guidelines for ballot signatures, deadlines for counting mailin ballots, and rules for “drop boxes” without legislativ­e approval. These actions cast doubt on the efficacy of the election and fed into unsubstant­iated claims of mass fraud.

These are just a few examples of the many ways over the last seven years that Wolf has acted either beyond his authority or violated the authority of other branches of government. Despite the people amending our state constituti­on to put a stop to the governor’s overreach, Wolf persists. And he’s doing so to the detriment of Pennsylvan­ians.

Joining RGGI will hurt our economy. States that participat­e in the RGGI have seen major decreases in goods manufactur­ing (down 8.6% from 2007 to 2019) thanks to rising energy costs. That could translate into a $3.8 billion-per-year decline in manufactur­ed goods and the eliminatio­n of 17,460 manufactur­ing jobs in Pennsylvan­ia.

That doesn’t include the estimated 1,400 jobs lost in power plants, and another 3,500 from lost fuel production.

The governor should give up his lone wolf approach. Wolf needs to finally start listening to Pennsylvan­ians and working with the General Assembly. The May 18 referendum was a rejection of his use of crises to remake the state. That same sentiment applies to RGGI.

 ??  ?? elizabeth Stelle
elizabeth Stelle

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States