Winners & Losers

This week’s biggest Winners & Losers

Who’s up and who’s down this week?

City & State

Which will end first: this winter, or this year’s budget debate? Although Harrisburg lawmakers have until June 30 to approve a state budget based on Gov. Josh Shapiro’s $53.3 billion proposal, last year’s four-month delay suggests expectations of an early thaw in negotiations should be temperatured, er, tempered by the cold reality of past precedent. 

Keep reading for more winners and losers!

WINNERS:

Public education -

Schools are big winners in Shapiro’s budget. His proposal includes an additional $50 million each for Basic Education Funding and for special education. He also wants $565 million more for adequacy and tax equity supplements for the commonwealth’s public schools, which long suffered from inequitable and inadequate state funding.

First responders -

Given the state’s needs, the budget process can often feel like trying to put out a fire with a squirt gun. Shapiro, who gave a shoutout to first responders during the budget address, put some funding behind his words. The governor proposed investing $16.2 million in four additional Pennsylvania State Police Cadet classes and creating a $30 million grant program for fire companies to seek extra repair funding.

Housing reform -

The governor’s speech also hit home. Housing was a major focus for Shapiro, who called on the legislature to pass a raft of reforms to the state’s housing laws to assist tenants and invest in housing development. Among the bills Shapiro gave time to were ones that would set a statewide cap on rental application fees, allow tenants to terminate a lease due to domestic violence, and seal eviction records for people who haven’t actually been evicted, among other changes.

LOSERS:

Rainy Day Fund -

Dark skies may be ahead for Pennsylvania’s Rainy Day Fund. The fund, also known as the Budget Stabilization Reserve Fund, currently holds about $7.4 billion in reserves. However, Shapiro’s budget proposal calls for a $4.5 billion transfer this year to help balance the budget as the state grapples with a structural deficit. State Senate Majority Leader Joe Pittman said this week that “it’s going to be a difficult task to not have any conversation about the Rainy Day Fund.”

Skill Games & Rick Goodling -

State Attorney General Dave Sunday announced this week that Rick Goodling, a retired Pennsylvania State Police corporal and former national compliance director for Pace-O-Matic, a leading skill game developer, pleaded guilty to money laundering. The guilty plea comes after an investigation found that Goodling accepted hundreds of thousands of dollars in payments from non-compliant distributors and operators; he also pleaded guilty to tax evasion. Goodling’s plea comes at a time when state lawmakers are considering taxing skill games to generate more state revenue.

Cyber charters -

For the third straight year, Pennsylvania’s cyber charter schools are losers in the state budget – at least if the governor has his way. The sizable budgets of publicly funded cyber charters have long been criticized by Democratic lawmakers, and Shapiro’s proposal would redirect $250 million in funding from cyber charters to public schools – $75 million more than last year, when $175 million was transferred from online institutions.

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