Pennsylvania
Fetterman Sworn Into U.S. Senate, State Senate President Pro Tempore Ascends To PA Lt. Gov. Post – LevittownNow.com
For the primary time in many years, Pennsylvania has two Democratic U.S. senators in Washington D.C.
Sen. John Fetterman took the oath Tuesday afternoon after resigning from his job as lieutenant governor of Pennsylvania. He serves alongside fellow Democratic Sen. Bob Casey.
“It has been my honor to function your Lieutenant Governor these previous 4 years, and I’m pleased with all we’ve been in a position to accomplish collectively. At this time as I’m sworn in as U.S. senator, I promise to maintain preventing for every one among you, in each group throughout Pennsylvania,” Fetterman mentioned within the closing assertion issued via his state workplace.
Whereas Fetterman, a Democrat from the western portion of the state, is serving within the U.S. Senate, State Sen. Kim Ward, the brand new president professional tempore of the state senate, took the oath because the appearing lieutenant governor for the remaining days of Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf’s time in workplace.
Ward, who hails from the western portion of the state, was second in line for the governorship below the Pennsylvania Structure in her position because the rating state senator. Nevertheless, Fetterman’s resignation places her first in line after Wolf.
Lt. Gov.-Elect Austin Davis and Gov.-Elect Josh Shapiro, each Democrats, might be sworn in on January 17.
The lieutenant governor has the official duties of serving as president of the state senate and being the chairperson of the Pennsylvania Board of Pardons and the Pennsylvania Emergency Administration Council.
Ward is the primary girl to be appointed by the state senate majority to function president professional tempore of the senate within the state’s historical past. Nevertheless, she won’t be the primary girl to function lieutenant governor.
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Pennsylvania
Delaware police at standoff occuring in Chester, Pennsylvania; part of I-95 NB closed
How to report a crime to Delaware Crime Stoppers
This video details what Delaware Crime Stoppers is and how to report a crime. 8/25/23
A portion of northbound I-95 is closed in Pennsylvania following a police chase that started in Delaware, according to news reports.
Delaware State Police and Wilmington Police did not immediately respond to emails sent Tuesday afternoon seeking comment about the incident, but in video streaming on 6ABC’s website, vehicles from those two Delaware police agencies are seen at a standoff in Chester, Pennsylvania.
6ABC is reporting that police were in pursuit of a shooting suspect in Delaware before this standoff occurred near 12th and Kerlin streets in Chester.
6ABC video shows a maroon vehicle with what appears to be bullet holes. There’s also an overturned SUV and a large police presence, some with their guns drawn.
This is a developing story. Check back with delawareonline.com for more information.
Send tips or story ideas to Esteban Parra at (302) 324-2299 or eparra@delawareonline.com.
Pennsylvania
Pa. House Democrats propose $5.1 billion in new funding for the state's poorest schools • Pennsylvania Capital-Star
Democratic lawmakers in Harrisburg took the first steps last week to provide $5.1 billion in new funding for Pennsylvania public schools to close a gap between the wealthiest and poorest districts that a court last year declared unconstitutional.
The legislation in the state House, proposed by Rep. Mike Sturla (D-Lancaster), follows the recommendation of a bipartisan commission on education funding to comply with a Commonwealth Court judge’s order to fix the education funding system.
The General Assembly has a constitutional imperative to end the funding disparity starting with the 2024-25 budget, Democratic lawmakers say.
“The judiciary has spoken and we have a responsibility to address the unconstitutional nature of our education system,” House Appropriations Committee Chairperson Jordan Harris (D-Philadelphia) told the Capital-Star on Monday. “For me, I don’t know how we can deal with anything else without dealing with that.”
But Harris’ Republican counterpart on the Appropriations Committee, Rep. Seth Grove (R-York), criticized the proposed legislation for not including revenue to pay for the plan. Grove said he also believes resetting the system through zero-based budgeting is the answer.
“Nothing in the Commonwealth Court ruling says we need more money,” Grove said.
House Democrats have a narrow one-vote majority and are likely to pass a budget that reflects their legislative priorities. But Republicans who control the state Senate fired an opening shot in budget negotiations last week clearly signaling their intention to slash Gov. Josh Shapiro’s $48.8 billion spending plan.
On May 7, the upper chamber passed a bipartisan reduction in the personal income tax and eliminated the tax on electricity that would add up to an estimated $3 billion reduction in revenue.
The Senate also took steps to revive a school voucher program to provide tax dollars of up to $10,000 for private school tuition. An impasse over the Pennsylvania Award for Student Success (PASS) program stalled budget negotiations for nearly six months last year.
A spokesperson for Senate Majority Leader Joe Pittman (R-Indiana) did not respond to a request for comment on Monday.
The fair funding proposal in Sturla’s forthcoming legislation is the product of more than a decade of litigation and days of hearings by the Basic Education Funding Commission, which include lawmakers from both parties in the House and Senate and members of Shapiro’s cabinet.
“Nothing in this piece of legislation should come as a surprise to anybody,” House Education Committee Chairperson Peter Schweyer (D-Lehigh) said. “It is the work that the legislature has been doing ever since the fair funding decision came down.”
Commonwealth Court President Judge Renee Cohn Jubelirer said in a Feb. 7, 2023, decision that the General Assembly has not fulfilled its legal mandate and has deprived students in school districts with low property values and incomes of the same resources and opportunities as children in wealthier ones.
The funding commission found that 371 of Pennsylvania’s 500 school districts have an adequacy gap, meaning they spend less than $13,704 per pupil. That’s the median per pupil spending by the districts that meet the state’s academic performance standards.
The decision, which lawmakers chose not to appeal, followed a four-month trial in a lawsuit filed in 2014 by a group of parents and school districts who claimed the state had failed the state Constitution’s mandate to provide a thorough and efficient system of public education.
Cohn Jubelirer, a conservative judge, did not instruct the General Assembly on how to fix the system, leaving the solution for the Legislature and executive branch to determine.
Last year, the Basic Education Funding Commission held dozens of hearings across the state where students, parents, educators, and administrators spoke about the challenges and deprivation they faced in the state’s neediest districts, both urban and rural.
In January, the commission voted 8-7, largely along party lines, to adopt a report that determined there is a $5.4 billion gap between what schools receive now and adequate funding as determined by the spending of the state’s most academically successful schools.
The $5.4 billion figure includes $291 million that is the responsibility of school districts that have lower taxes despite less-than-adequate funding. The remaining $5.1 billion is the state’s responsibility.
Sturla’s bill would also include $1 billion in tax relief over the next seven years for districts that have hiked taxes in an effort to generate adequate funding, money to reset the baseline funding that all school districts receive, and it would reform how cyber charter schools are funded to provide several hundred million in savings for school districts.
“This is a very comprehensive piece of legislation,” Schweyer said.
Republican budget maven Grove said the proposal doesn’t include the property tax increase and fails to provide a revenue source other than the state’s reserves. Shapiro’s office has projected that the state’s surplus and rainy day fund will total $14 billion at the end of this fiscal year on June 30.
“I’d actually like to thank them for being honest … on how much they want to spend over the next seven years,” Grove said of the Democratic plan. “If they want to spend the money over the next seven years it needs to come with a tax increase.”
Dan Urevick-Ackelsberg, senior attorney at the Education Law Center, said Grove’s assertion that the Commonwealth Court order doesn’t require the state to spend more is incorrect.
“What they’re hanging that on is this line [from the decision] that the remedy doesn’t need to be entirely financial,” Urevick-Ackelsberg said, adding that the ruling identified deficiencies in funding that affected the ability of districts to provide sufficient staff, instruments of learning and safe and modern schools.
Harris, the House Democrats’ chief budget negotiator, said he is open to proposals from House and Senate Republicans.
“If there is another proposal that they have to address the Commonwealth Court ruling, we would love to see it. We can talk about that,” he said.
But faced with an obligation to Pennsylvania’s students and the possibility of additional litigation if the Legislature fails to act, Harris said doing nothing is not an option.
“This is not a nice-to-have. This is a must-do,” Harris said.
Pennsylvania
Trump and Biden's performance in Pa., rising sea levels at the shore, Battleship New Jersey
A recent Philadelphia Inquirer/New York Times/Sienna poll reveals a neck-and-neck race between Biden and Trump in Pennsylvania. The Inquirer’s national politics reporter Julia Terruso joins us to discuss the findings.
Beach enthusiasts are making their way to the shore as the temperatures are climbing. Alarming sea level rise projections, though, threaten to submerge significant portions of New Jersey’s coastline in the years ahead. The pressing question arises: How will the region address the challenges posed by the rising seas? We talk with Rutgers University climate and sea level scientist Robert Kopp.
Stay tuned for the latest developments on the ongoing restoration efforts of the Battleship New Jersey. We hear from WHYY’s reporter and host Matt Guilhem about a potential return to the Delaware River.
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