Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania’s budget is late. Here’s what you need to know about the impasse. | WITF
Lawmakers missed the Pa. budget deadline. What does a late budget mean, and how long might the impasse go?
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Kate Huangpu/Spotlight PA
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Pennsylvania’s state budget is late, and so far there’s no deal in sight.
Talks between Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro, the Republican-controlled state Senate, and the narrowly Democratic-controlled state House fell apart last week thanks to a deadlock over whether to include private school vouchers in the spending plan.
Three days after the June 30 deadline, most lawmakers are back in their districts and the House and Senate have yet to schedule a return to Harrisburg.
The state budget is necessary to set spending and collections across Pennsylvania’s government, from levying income taxes, to distributing money to public schools, to handing out tax credits to businesses.
The commonwealth will still be able to operate normally for some time without a plan. But if the impasse stretches out long enough, schools and nonprofits such as libraries could face serious budget issues.
The standoff is also a crucial moment for the commonwealth’s first-year governor. While Shapiro has long cultivated a reputation as a dealmaker, budget negotiations have daunted new governors in the past. Shapiro’s predecessor, Democrat Tom Wolf, oversaw a record nine-month impasse during his first year in office that damaged his approval ratings.
What’s the holdup?
Sometimes, many factors contribute to a budget stalemate. This year, there’s a single big one: whether to use taxpayer dollars to directly fund student scholarships for private schools.
Last week, Senate Republicans announced they had struck a deal with Shapiro on a $45.5 billion budget plan that would include $100 million in funding for a private school voucher program.
That program, dubbed the Pennsylvania Award for Student Success (or PASS), would give students in “low-achieving” school districts between $2,500 and $15,000 in scholarships on a first-come, first-served basis. It would have an income cap, and students could only use their voucher money for tuition or related expenses at a nonpublic school.
That was a deal breaker for the state House, according to the chamber’s Democratic Leader Matt Bradford (D., Montgomery), who told Spotlight PA Friday that it would be “unwise” of the Senate to “send over a budget that assumes any type of voucher program.”
Democrats have also indicated that there were other issues with the state Senate’s plan, namely that it would spend several million dollars less than the proposal Shapiro pitched in March and well over a billion dollars less than the bill state House Democrats passed earlier in June.
While state House Democrats have taken a hard line on vouchers, Senate Republican leaders have also stuck to their guns. Leaders say they will continue to support their compromise budget plan — which would include a substantial increase in education funding over last year’s budget — so long as Shapiro continues supporting vouchers.
“Those two parties need to reconcile those differences,” Majority Leader Joe Pittman (R., Indiana) said, referring to House Democrats and Shapiro. “We need to have a clear message from both of those parties whether or not lifeline scholarships is or is not on the table.”
State Senate President Pro Tempore Kim Ward (R., Westmoreland) was even more explicit, saying that the House needs to pass the scholarship program or senators will offer a different budget with a lower spend for state programs.
“If it’s not going to be part of the final product, there will be a different number in that budget,” she said. “Because all the things that we gave on, we will want to take back.”
Meanwhile, Bradford said Friday that House Democrats need “at least several days” to go through the budget passed by the state Senate.
What has happened in the past?
Lawmakers have often failed to meet the June 30 deadline. Last year, the budget was signed into law on July 8.
But the disagreement over vouchers has created a notable rift between state House Democrats and Senate Republicans.
Such impasses were common during the early years of former Wolf’s administration. Wolf’s eight years in office all featured strong GOP majorities in both the state House and Senate, and he clashed with them consistently over raising sales and income taxes and increasing funding for education.
Ultimately, Wolf signed a budget into law before the deadline only half of the time during his tenure.
The worst budget impasse of his tenure occurred his first year. In an unusual move, Wolf vetoed the budget proposal that the Republican-controlled legislature sent him in 2015, arguing that it would cause a $3 billion deficit and underfunded schools.
It was only in March of the following year, nearly 10 months after the deadline, that Wolf allowed a budget passed by the legislature to lapse into law without his signature. That final plan included additional funding for education but still caused a structural deficit.
What does an impasse mean for Pennsylvanians?
If the budget stalemate lasts only a few days, state-funded programs likely won’t feel any significant effects.
But the longer the impasse drags on, the more funds will run out, forcing publicly funded entities such as schools, libraries, and domestic violence services centers to make hard decisions about where and when to spend their dwindling funds.
Schools could feel the effects as soon as next month when teachers and students begin to return to the classroom. Administrators would have to decide which bills they must pay first, including utilities such as lights and heating.
In the past, some services have taken out lines of credit to supplement their funding until a new budget was enacted. According to the state auditor general at the time, Eugene DePasquale, Pennsylvania school districts borrowed nearly a billion dollars during the 2015 impasse.
Other services resorted to slashing costs or shuttering completely that year.
A survey by the United Way of Pennsylvania, a nonprofit dedicated to boosting education and health funding, found that hundreds of employees had been furloughed, lost benefits, or taken a salary reduction due to the 2015 budget impasse.
What happens now?
Rank and file members in both the state House and Senate told Spotlight PA on Monday that they still hadn’t heard from chamber leaders about when they would be called back to Harrisburg, or whether talks were still actively ongoing among leaders.
Spokespeople for state House Democrats and Shapiro either did not return requests for comment, or declined to comment on the status of negotiations. Kate Flessner, a spokesperson for Senate Republicans, said in an email that,“Until the governor and House Democrats reconcile their differences on the PASS initiative, the Senate has completed its work.”
Neither chamber has session days planned in the near future.
The state Senate’s next scheduled session day is September 18, and state House members are on a six-hour call with no precise return date scheduled.
Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania Game Commission asking public to report any turkey flocks they see across state
The Pennsylvania Game Commission is asking for the public to report any turkey flocks they see across the state.
The information is being collected through March 15 to help the Game Commission trap them for ongoing projects.
You are asked to provide the date of the sighting, the location and the type of land (public, private or unknown) where the birds were seen. The Game Commission will then assess these sites to potentially trap the bird. Leg bands will be put on the male turkeys and then released back. In four Wildlife Management Units – WMUs 2D, 3D, 4D and 5C – female turkeys, hens, also will be leg banded and about 130 hens also will be outfitted with GPS transmitters, then be released back on site, to be monitored over time.
Trapping turkeys during winter is part of the Game Commission’s ongoing population monitoring, and provides information for large-scale turkey studies, as well.
Hunters who harvest these marked turkeys, or people who find one dead, are asked to report the band number and/or transmitter, either by calling toll-free or reporting it online.
“The data give us information on annual survival rates and annual spring harvest rates for our population model, and provides the person reporting the information on when and approximately where the turkey was banded,” said Mary Jo Casalena, the Game Commission’s turkey biologist. “In the four WMUs where hens are getting the GPS transmitters, we’re studying turkey population and movement dynamics, disease prevalence, and other aspects that may limit populations.”
The studies are being done in partnership with Penn State University and the University of Pennsylvania’s Wildlife Futures Program.
“The public was so helpful the last few years and some even helped with monitoring sites and trapping,” Casalena said. “We look forward to continuing this winter.”
This field study will conclude at the end of December 2025.
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Pennsylvania
DEP urges all Pennsylvanians to test their homes for radon this January
PITTSBURGH (KDKA) – There’s a new alert to all Pennsylvanians about radon testing still being crucial in homes, schools, and businesses to protect your health.
A state radon expert is shining a light on why people should take “National Radon Action Month” seriously, no matter where they live in the state.
We’re deep in the coldest days of the year; Homes are closed up and the heat is cranked up. It’s the best time to check your home for radon.
“Pennsylvania is probably the most radon-prone state in the country…We have results at least 25 times the EPA guideline of every county and some much more than others,” said Bob Lewis, the radon program manager for the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection’s Bureau of Radiation Protection.
According to the American Lung Association, about 40 percent of Pennsylvania homes are believed to have radon levels, specifically above the EPA action level of 4 picocuries per liter (PCI/L).
Lewis said the naturally occurring radioactive gas can get into your home from the ground.
“It’s easily able to move from the soil and the rocks below the foundation, into the foundation,” he said.
You can’t smell, taste, see, or feel radon.
“Out of sight, out of mind, we can’t see it,” said Lewis.
He said breathing high levels of radon into your lungs can lead to serious health problems.
“So, we’re breathing this radioactive gas into our lungs and that’s where it’s deposited and that’s where it can do potential damage. These radioactive particles basically get lodged on the epithelial lining of your lung, the surface of the lung, mostly in the upper tracheobronchial areas. And over long-term exposure, they can increase one’s risk of getting lung cancer,” Lewis said.
According to the EPA, radon is responsible for an estimated 21,000 lung cancer deaths every year in the U.S., and radon is the second leading cause of lung cancer behind smoking.
Lewis said the first step to protect yourself and your family from the dangers is to buy an easy-to-use test kit at a hardware store or online. Then test your home and send the sample to a PA-certified lab. You can also hire a state-certified testing company.
“Get your test in the basement, and turn it back to the lab. You’ll get some test results after a week and a half or so,” he said.
If your test results are high, take action to reduce the levels in your home. You’ll need a certified radon mitigation contractor to install a radon reduction system.
“It’s an active system that uses some PVC pipe in the basement and it draws the air from underneath the basement floor to the outside and then dumps at the roof line. So basically, you have a vacuum cleaner underneath your house. Those systems work very well. They’re relatively low maintenance, about $1,000, generally speaking, for a system to be installed,” Lewis said.
The last step is to remember to monitor your mitigation system. According to the DEP, you should periodically check if the fan is running by looking at the U-tube manometer on the PVC piping of your system. The fluid levels on each side of the glass tube should be uneven.
Lewis said you should also do a radon test in the winter once every two years to make sure the mitigation system is still working properly.
While you have to pay for the system out of your own pocket, Lewis said taking radon dangers seriously is worth it in the end.
“It’s obviously a health benefit for you and your family. And it’s also a benefit when once you go then you go to sell the house too, at least if you’ve taken care of it,” he said.
You might not think about the dangers if you don’t own a house, but it’s recommended radon testing be done in rental homes, schools, and businesses too.
“We encourage, besides home, private homes, schools, and businesses to test as well. We’ve Been working with the Department of Education for quite a few years trying to get all the school districts to test,” Lewis said.
Call the DEP the Radon Hotline at 800-237-2366 for help with understanding test results and what action to take after getting back high results.
A list of state-certified radon contractors, labs, and testers is also available on DEP’s website.
The Allegheny County Health Department is providing more than 900 free radon test kits for residents. Pick up a test M-F between 8 AM and 4 PM at the Housing and Community Environment office (3190 Sassafras Way, Pittsburgh, PA 15201). One kit per household while supplies last so call ahead at 412-350-4046.
The American Lung Association is also offering free radon test kits. You can order them online.
Pennsylvania
Suspect in killing of woman in Pa. motel in custody in N.J., cops say
A suspect in the homicide of a woman in Bensalem, Pennsylvania is in custody at the Trenton Police Department, police said Wednesday afternoon.
The suspect and victim’s identities have not been made public.
The Bensalem, Pennsylvania police and the Buck County District Attorney’s Office said in a statement that officers found a woman dead at the Sleep Inn & Suites, on Street Road, early Wednesday. They did not detail the circumstances of her death.
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