Senate Again Refuses to Fund State’s Most Dire School Districts

Senate Again Refuses to Fund Stateā€™s Most Dire School Districts – Marc Stier, Executive Director, Penn Policy Center “The Republican-controlled Pennsylvania Senate came back today for a rare August session. It took a step toward completing the budget by passing a code bill on several uncontroversial issues. However Republican senators have failed to pass a code bill with language that would allow the expenditure of $100 million for Level Up for the stateā€™s 100 least-well-funded schools. Senate Republicans keep talking about helping kids in so-called ā€œfailing schools.ā€ The only schools that donā€™t provide a good education are those that are underfunded and that, today, they failed again to fund.” Continue reading

Economic Opportunity, the Dignity of Work, and the Minimum Wage

Raising the minimum wage has always been about the dignity, as well as the wages, of working people. We who place so much value on our ability to provide for ourselves and our families should recognize the importance of ensuring a dignified living wage for all full-time workers.Ā  Yet during the debate on the minimum wage in the Pennsylvania House in May, Republicans in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives showed us what they think of low-wage workers. They proposed amendments to the minimum wage bill that are classic examples of blaming the victim. One would exclude workers without a high school degree, or the equivalent, from the protection of the minimum wage. Another would require workers to pass a literacy test to earn the minimum wage.Ā Ā  These representativesā€”many of whom come from districts in which ten percent or more of the population do not have a high school degree andā€¦ Continue reading

The (First Part) of the Budget Standoff Is Over

After Governor Shapiro signed the General Appropriation bill today, the Pennsylvania Policy Center released the following statement by our executive director, Marc Stier: “Today, Senate Republicans blinked in the budget standoff with Governor Shapiro and Democrats. Thanks to the increasing pressure from social service providers and school districts worried about the delay in receiving state funding and the public, which supports them, the Republican leadership agreed today to bring the Senate back to session to allow the General Fund appropriations bill to be sent to Governor Shapiro. The Governor just signed it after issuing his promised line-item veto of $100 million for the voucher program. Todayā€™s action does not mean that the 2023ā€“24 budget is complete, however. In Pennsylvania, what we call ā€œcode billsā€ are needed to authorize some of the spending in the appropriation bills, including the Level Up program, which provides additional funding for the least-well funded schoolsā€¦ Continue reading