Sham plan fails schools, job creation, and human services

Harrisburg – June 30, 2014 – State Senate Democratic Leader Jay Costa, (D-Allegheny) slammed Gov. Tom Corbett’s budget for Fiscal Year 2014-15 as “remarkably shallow and incredibly insincere because it manages to underfund schools, job creation and human services while being balanced by unsustainable budget gimmicks, rosy revenue projections, accounting tricks and fund transfers.

“It is hard to put together a budget where everyone loses, but the governor has managed to do it this again this year,” Costa said. “This $29.1 billion spending plan is not a blueprint for the future, it is an election year parlor trick.

“The plan is misguided and inappropriate and policymakers need to quickly change course and go in a new direction.”

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The Democratic leader said that Pennsylvania school students, teachers and taxpayers are still reeling from the $1 billion in education cuts that Corbett authored in previous budgets. The result is that there has been a cumulative loss of nearly $3 billion in state resources. The slight adjustment in education funding in this year’s budget does little to make up lost ground, he noted.

Costa said this year’s budget didn’t have to be so harsh. He said that if the governor would have supported a severance tax, there would have been revenue available to meet needs this year and provide sustainable funding for years to come.

The Allegheny County lawmaker said the governor insisted there would be no shale extraction tax vote to fund education and other needs if his pension and liquor priorities weren’t addressed.

“Governor Corbett had an opportunity to lead by accepting a shale extraction tax that would have funded schools, job programs and human services,” Costa said. “Instead, he played political games with the energy tax and tried to push priorities that are ideologically based and politically motivated.

“The cut budget contains little hope and lots of pain for the citizens of Pennsylvania.”

Costa said that “there is no question that Pennsylvania needs to go a different way using a different approach and with different leadership.”

Senate Democrats attempted to amend the plan to add $275 million in education funding, $40 million for job creation programs and $28 million to restore human services that had been cut by Corbett in previous budgets. Those efforts were turned aside by the Republican majority.

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