General Assembly Democrats, Local Leaders Across PA Call for Immediate Action on Toxic and Unsafe School Infrastructure

Statewide, PA − June 11, 2021 — As the projected state budget surplus surged to $3 billion and more than $7 billion in federal aid remains idled by inaction, Senate & House Democrats gathered in front of local schools across Pennsylvania on Friday to call for immediate release of funds to end the scourge of toxic and dilapidated school buildings in Pennsylvania.

Elected officials and local leaders in four different regions of the commonwealth talked about how widespread health and safety concerns affect school districts large and small across the commonwealth, where school infrastructure has caused illness and even death to those who are forced to occupy them every day.

“We are here to put an end to the excuses,” state Sen. Vincent Hughes, D-Philadelphia, Montgomery said outside the century-old Overbrook High School where students go without water in science labs and duck pieces falling from the auditorium ceiling. “It’s budget season and the annual excuses that have kept our children trapped in toxic schools are as old and worn as the schools themselves.  Enough.  We have the resources to end this embarrassment right now.”

Democrats are seeking immediate investment in schools across the Pennsylvania, one of only 22 states that has failed to remove lead from school drinking water and where infrastructure has been rated C- by the American Society of Civil Engineers.

Senate Democratic Leader Jay Costa, who spoke from Kelly Primary School in Wilkinsburg, said indiscriminate boundaries should not play a role in school quality.

“Something as simple and arbitrary as a zip code determines the quality of buildings and facilities a student will have to learn in,” he said.  “This isn’t right and it’s not equitable, but this year we have the opportunity to level the playing field. With $7 billion in federal funding and a $3 billion surplus, we can address aging infrastructure in every district in this state that needs it.”

Senate Democrats and Gov. Tom Wolf have been urging the General Assembly for years to protect students, teachers and staff with investments in our schools that would also create thousands of jobs.  Still, news outlets continue to report lead in drinking water, asbestos pollution, and even carbon monoxide dangers in Pennsylvania schools.

Sen. Carolyn Comitta, a member of the Senate Education Committee who spoke said investment of surplus and American Rescue Plan funding would be benefit both students and local economies.

“Every child deserves the opportunity to attend school in a classroom that is a safe, healthy, and productive environment for learning,” she said. With significant ARP funding, we now have a golden opportunity to upgrade Pennsylvania’s school facilities and address problems like mold, asbestos, and lead that are hazardous to the health of students, young people, and teachers. We can fix our educational facilities, create jobs, and prioritize the recovery of both our economy and our schools in the process.”

Under the state constitution, Pennsylvania’s annual budget must be passed by June 30.

“The renovation of schools has been deferred for far too long,” said Sen. Art Haywood, who represents schools in both Philadelphia and Montgomery counties. Now is the time to clear the asbestos, mold, lead, and water. We must fix poor ventilation and other hazardous conditions.”

Sen. Tim Kearney gathered community leaders outside Penn Wood High School in Lansdowne.

“We cannot send our children into schools with overcrowded classrooms and broken heating, and expect them to thrive,” he said. “How can students succeed when their schools are failing? Thanks to a historic investment from the American Rescue Plan, we have a real opportunity to deliver on our promise to Pennsylvania’s children by giving schools the resources they need.”

Sen. Anthony Hardy Williams, who represents Southwest Philadelphia and parts of Delaware County, said students exposed to the neglect of their schools can have that reflected in their performance.

“We must invest money that is readily into school buildings across Pennsylvania. It is appalling that we continue to allow students to sit in classrooms, walk hallways, and drink from water fountains that may be contaminated with lead, asbestos, and numerous other dangerous toxins,” he said.  “How can we expect students to care about their education if they don’t feel like we are committing and investing to them and their learning environment? We need to fund our facilities and invest now in the students of Pennsylvania.”

Sen. John Kane, who spent decades as a union plumber, said he has seen first-hand the materials once used routinely on large building projects.

“I’m from the construction industry – I spent four decades there,” he said. “There are materials in these buildings that we have learned are dangerous and need to be replaced. And the longer we go without doing that, the more we’re putting our students, our teachers, and our school administrators at risk. It’s that simple. It’s time we all do our jobs to right this wrong.”

Sen. Sharif Street, whose North Philadelphia district is one of the least wealthy in Pennsylvania, said education funding is at the root of economic disparity.

“There has never been a better opportunity to fully and equally fund education in Pennsylvania. With $3 Billion in unprecedented budget surpluses, there is no greater priority than making sure our kids have the resources they need to succeed in rural and urban districts,” he said. “Property taxes, new business and even where people choose to start a family are all linked to education funding. Investing in our students will allow us to grow our economy, population and the next the next generation of Pennsylvania.”

Sen. Nikil Saval, also representing portions of Philadelphia, highlighted the opportunity presented by this year’s budget.

“Healthy communities, in which people of all ages have what they need to thrive, do not exist without healthy schools,” said Saval. “COVID has laid bare the dire conditions of school buildings throughout the state, but organizers, teachers, school administrators, parents, and children have fought long and hard to call attention to the urgent need to repair and update the crumbling infrastructure. We have an incredible opportunity, right now, to respond to their calls.” 

The newest member of the Pennsylvania Senate Democratic Caucus, Senator Marty Flynn, joined the press event from Scranton and represents portions of Lackawanna, Luzerne and Monroe counties.

“Now, more than ever, COVID-19 has shown the need for removing all known health hazards from our classrooms as well as providing proper ventilation systems. An unhealthy learning environment leads to overcrowded classrooms and long-term health issues for students and educators. Our six neighboring states all have existing programs to deal with health and safety hazards in their public school buildings. There is no reason Pennsylvanians can’t move to protect our students in the same way,” said Senator Marty Flynn. “In the past, opponents of fair funding have claimed that more money for broken schools means less money for other schools.  The ARP funding eliminates that excuse.  The money is there. We have an opportunity to do the right thing now.”

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Sens. Costa, Hughes Respond to Gov. Wolf’s 2021-22 Budget Proposal

HARRISBURG — February 3, 2021 — Pennsylvania Senate Democratic Leader Jay Costa (D-Allegheny) and Democratic Chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee Vincent Hughes (D-Philadelphia/Montgomery) jointly responded to Gov. Tom Wolf’s 2021-22 Budget Address with a statement Wednesday afternoon.

The senators expressed support for the broad goals and the priorities announced in the $37.84 billion proposal, adding that the proposal is a good starting point to finding long-term solutions to Pennsylvania’s structural deficit. Sens. Costa and Hughes praised the proposal’s emphasis on raising the minimum wage, increasing funding for basic education with greater focus on equity, as well as reducing taxes on low-and middle-income families.

“There are some laudable goals outlined here by our governor and many of the investments reflect requests we have seen from constituents across the state,” Sen. Costa said. “Our schools need increased funding, local governments need more assistance to handle COVID 19, and the workforce development programs proposed have the potential to get many Pennsylvanians back on the job. This is a good starting point, and we look forward to the budget hearing process and negotiations with our colleagues across the aisle and in the House to get a final budget that funds critical programs and meets our needs in this unique time.”

The proposed budget would maintain funding for human services and higher education, while also increasing funding for environmental initiatives, infrastructure repairs and improvements, and workforce development efforts across the commonwealth. Other areas of priority in the budget proposal include bolstering the commonwealth’s inventory essential health supplies and $8.5 million for four city and six county health departments to help fight and recover from the COVID-19 pandemic.

“The governor’s proposal to finally and immediately deal with the issue of equal funding of our K-12 schools, is welcome and deserves broad based support, especially since he makes sure that no student is penalized for this aggressive commitment to equity and adequacy,” Sen Hughes said. “His $1 billion commitment to clean and repair broken and toxic schools, along with his commitment to free and affordable college for Pennsylvania students are welcome policy goals that the Senate Democratic Caucus has long championed. And his desire to do all of this in a way that reduces taxes on low- and middle-income families is certainly the right way to go. This is a good direction, and we welcome the introduction of these significant policy goals as the first step in the upcoming budget and policy conversation.” 

The senators believe it is critical the General Assembly develops solutions to the structural deficits the Commonwealth has faced for the past 10 years and failed to address because of a lack of cooperation from Republicans in the House and Senate. Additionally, it is still not clear what the state can expect from the federal government with regard to COVID relief packages. 

The Senate Democratic caucus is most encouraged by investments in the following programs for the 2021-22 budget include:

Basic Education:

  • Full funding of public schools through the Fair Funding Formula
  • $1.35 billion increase to basic education funding
  • $1 billion in Redevelopment Assistance Capital Program (RACP) grants to address school infrastructure needs in PA
  • $200 million for special education
  • Releases up to $36 million for additional scholarship to students under the Education Improvement Tax Credit and Opportunity Scholarship Tax Credit Programs) 
  • $25 million for Pre-K Counts
  • $11 million increase for Early intervention programs
  • $5 million for the Head Start Supplemental Program
  • Charter School reform for $229 million in savings to school districts
  • Sets cyber charter tuition rates at $9,500 per student
  • Push for $45,000 minimum salary per year for teachers

Higher Education:

  • $199 million for free and affordable college through the Nellie Bly Tuition Program
  • Level funding for higher education

Workforce Development:

  • Proposes minimum wage increase to $12 per hour on July 1, 2021, with a path to $15 per hour
  • Tax deductions for low- and middle-income families
  • Provide $3 billion to workers and businesses to stabilize the economy and recover from the COVID-19 pandemic through the Back to Work PA plan
  • Improves food security and supports farmers by investing $1 million in the Pennsylvania Agriculture Surplus System (PASS)

Human Services:

  • Directs $87 million in federal funding to Child Care Works base rates and create a more stable business environment for child care facilities while improving equal access to child care services 
  • $8.3 million to help county and municipal health departments fight COVID-19
  • 13.8 million to provide home and community-based services to 100 individuals with disabilities on waiting list and provide services through the Community Living Waiver to 732 individuals on waiting list
  • Additional $1 million to fund legal services for low-income individuals and families, an issue the caucus has pushed for and will continue to fight for in future budgets
  • $1.25 million for 20 Community Hospital Integration Projects Program (CHIPP) to help reduce state hospital populations
  • $1 million to reduce the number of children and youth in out-of-home placements triggered by homelessness, housing instability, or inadequate housing

Budget hearings are set to begin in March. For more information on the 2021-21 Budget, visit PASenate.com/budget.

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Senate Democrats Hail New Basic Education Funding Formula

Harrisburg, June 18, 2015 − Senate Democratic Leader Jay Costa (D-Allegheny), Sens. Andy Dinniman (D-Chester) and Rob Teplitz (D-Dauphin/Perry) who serve as members of the Basic Education Funding Commission (BEFC) today hailed the new proposed statewide education funding formula as a responsible, predicable and equitable approach that would improve education for all students.

The formula, which the commission is recommending to be used to distribute basic education funding from the state to local school districts, was unveiled and unanimously adopted at a commission meeting this morning in Harrisburg. The proposal still has to be approved by the General Assembly.

The senators said the plan would address the wide inequity in education resources that hold back students from the poorest districts.

The formula contains five factors that reflect the actual costs of educating children in various economic circumstances: poverty, poverty concentration, English language learners, charter school enrollment, and district size. Local tax effort and tax capacity are also included, as is a determination of relative wealth of a district based on median income.

Pennsylvania is only one of three states that have no funding formula for public schools and has the distinction of having the most inequitable spending for poor students in the country.

The commission did exemplary work in crafting a new funding formula that is meaningful and substantive, Costa said. The commission was able to cut through politics, regional bias and complex issues to produce a funding structure that, if fully funded, will help students, parents, teachers, administrators and taxpayers.

Dinniman said he is pleased with the new funding formula but its success is totally dependent on the General Assembly providing sufficient dollars to ensure that all students have an equal opportunity to be educated to the top of the curriculum.

The goal is to improve performance statewide and eliminate funding disparities that plague student development by removing funding impediments so state funding is equitably distributed, said Dinniman, who serves as the Senate Democratic Education Chair, said. For too long, Pennsylvania school children and taxpayers have had to overcome funding challenges which were created in Harrisburg.

The new funding formula will rectify the imbalance and equitably spread funding.

Teplitz, who is a member of the Senate Education and Appropriations committees, praised the commissions process of developing a fair formula that was crafted in a bipartisan, open, and inclusive way. Its equally important to ensure that basic education is also properly funded, he said.

The formula that was developed by the commission on a bipartisan basis addresses funding equity, but we also must ensure that our schools are also adequately funded. If we want all kids to have access to a quality public education, we must not only divide up the pie more fairly, but also increase the size of the pie itself, said Teplitz. Being a member of this commission was a tremendous experience and I look forward to continuing to fight for our children.

Recognizing the need to develop a predictable, fair, and equitable education funding formula, the General Assembly passed Act 51 in 2014 that created the commission. BEFC has 15 members, including 12 legislative appointees and 3 cabinet officials. Costa, Teplitz and Dinniman are the current Democratic appointees. Sen. Matt Smith (D-Allegheny) served as a member of the committee until his announced departure from the Senate.

The senators said the formula represents a fair and equitable way to disburse education dollars for funding public education. The poorest 25 percent of districts will be getting an average of four times more from the formula than the richest 25 percent of districts.

Costa said because the formula was developed on a bipartisan basis with input from the administration, he was hopeful that the formula would be supported by increased education funding in the upcoming state budget.

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Contact: Stacey Witalec
Telephone: 717 877-2997
Email: switalec@pasenate.com

Costa Comments on Gov. Wolf’s Severance Tax Proposal

Harrisburg – Feb. 11, 2015 – State Sen. Jay Costa (D-Allegheny) issued the following statement concerning Gov. Tom Wolf’s plan to use a new proposed 5 percent gas severance tax to renew Pennsylvania’s investment in public education. The governor unveiled the plan today at an event in Thorndale.

“The governor has made a responsible and balanced proposal to tax the shale industry to help fund education. The connection between the proposed severance tax and educational investments makes sense. The new tax will provide resources that will help reverse the devastating impact of the $1 billion in education cuts made by the Corbett administration that have plagued the education community.

“Investing in education and meeting the needs of schools, students and taxpayers requires new resources. Using the proceeds of a reasonable tax on shale drilling is a policy option that should be explored in detail by lawmakers.

“Pennsylvania’s current impact fee is insufficient and does not help schools and taxpayers. Governor Wolf’s proposed Pennsylvania Education Reinvestment Act is the correct, balanced approach that will generate additional revenues from the Marcellus industry. This reasonable proposal will allow Pennsylvania gas to be competitive in the market and will not overburden the industry.”

According to the governor’s office, the new severance tax proposal is modeled on the West Virginia approach. Wolf’s plan would continue to make payments to impacted communities and they would be held harmless. The plan also includes exemptions for certain wells and protections for property owners who lease land for exploration.

Senate Democrats Deride Gov’s Budget as Election-Year Pandering

Harrisburg, February 4, 2014 – Senate Democratic leaders today called Gov. Tom Corbett’s 2014-15 budget proposal election-year pandering and woefully lacking on multiple levels.

“The governor really needs to stop promising and start delivering for Pennsylvania.” Senate Democratic Leader Sen. Jay Costa (D-Allegheny) said today following the budget address. “Today’s budget presentation was election –year political pandering that doesn’t move Pennsylvania forward. It simply backfills and covers over problems that the governor created over the last three years.

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“While it is a step forward that the governor has started to focus on priorities such as education with his $241 million block grant, it is still not good enough because schools are still struggling to deal with the governor’s previous $1 billion cut in education.”

The governor presented his $29.4 billion General Fund spending plan before a joint session of the General Assembly.

In the speech, the governor outlined his plan which is a 3.3 percent increase over the current year spending. The budget is balanced through the use of more than $1.1 billion in one-time funding options and shifts.

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He called for a new education block grant that would be distributed by a funding formula based on student count, aid ratio, poverty and English proficiency.

Gov. Corbett’s plan also includes $429 million more for the Department of Public Welfare – although a lion’s share of this funding is due to a declining share of federal dollars for Medical Assistance — and an increase of $78 million for corrections. The governor also called for lowering the pension collars from 4.5 percent to 2.25 percent. This would reduce state pension payments by $170 million and school pension payments by $130 million.

Costa said that Corbett’s previous $1 billion in education cuts, failure to detail a job creation strategy, inability fix the holes created in the social safety net and his stubborn refusal to expand Medicaid are coming back to haunt him.

Senate Democrats said that the governor’s new found attention to key issues was insufficient given the lack of leadership over the last three years.

“Senate Democrats have offered a host of solutions including a new $300 million investment strategy for education, and the PA Works job-creation plan and we will support the governor if he expands Medicaid, hikes the minimum wage and puts real dollars into human services programs,” Costa said.

Costa said that it has taken the governor three years, repeated calls by Senate Democrats and a tough re-election fight to see that education needs more funding. He said that recognizing these problems and responsible solutions “shouldn’t have taken so long, been so difficult or include an unbalanced distribution formula.”

Senate Democratic Whip Sen. Anthony H. Williams (D-Philadelphia/Delaware) said the governor’s new proposals were too little, too late.

Williams said the troubling jobs deficit of 180,000, the bottom-ten ranking in job creation, and the state’s poor fiscal health, illustrate the glaring gap in the governor’s understanding of the needs of the citizens.

“Every surrounding state that has increased minimum wage has increased their jobs. New York state alone grew 10,000 jobs – and they increased the minimum wage,” Williams said. “They did it not in the government sector, but in the private economy.”

Williams said that while other surrounding states are dealing with budget surpluses, Pennsylvania is still dealing with deficits.

“The governor can’t blame the previous administration for his continued budget troubles,” Williams said. “The fiscal problems faced by the taxpayers of Pennsylvania are the result of failed Corbett administration policies, period. Both sides have talked repeatedly about extending their hands on key issues, and I’m ready to finally see the handshake that moves Pennsylvania forward.”

Sen. Vincent J. Hughes, (D-Philadelphia/Montgomery) who serves as the Senate Democratic Appropriations Committee chair, said today that Pennsylvania has a long road ahead to recover from the damage done by ill-conceived Corbett administration policies especially as they relate to schools, health care, safety-net investments and jobs.

“The governor still doesn’t get it. He has slashed business taxes by $1.2 billion, cut education dollars by $1 billion and simply refused to address key issues such as job creation, Medicaid expansion, human service funding and the minimum wage,” Hughes said. “The presentation today was an election year budget that demonstrates the governor’s inability to properly identify policy priorities.

“Pennsylvania would have been better served by this governor if he agreed to expand Medicaid to help a half-million Pennsylvanians, invest long-term in a balanced education funding plan, put more of an emphasis on programs that create jobs and help our most vulnerable,” Hughes said.

Hughes said that Senate Democrats have crafted solutions to budget issues and a savings plan of more than $1.1 billion that can be used to make key, long-term investments in schools, health care, human services and jobs. Democrats have also endorsed an increase in the minimum wage, Hughes said.

The Senate Appropriations Committee will hold budget hearings over the next several weeks to examine the budget proposal in detail.

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