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Governor Rendell's Budget Cuts
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Budget Cuts - continued
Déjà Vu, All Over Again: How Did We Get
Here?
As of December, the state's revenue deficit exceeded $250 million. The Rendell Administration is estimating that the Commonwealth will end the 2009-10 fiscal year in June with a $450 million revenue shortfall. Last month, the Governor proposed to address the growing deficit through $170 million in budget cuts, $50 million in unused prior-year funds, and gaming license fees from the addition of table games to casinos. The Governor said that those actions will produce a $124 million year-end surplus. However, in the first half of the fiscal year, revenue collections are below even cautious estimates for 2009-10 and below collections in 2008-09. As more than half of all tax receipts come in during the second half of the fiscal year, the deficit could grow at a faster pace between January and June. That, together with questions about the timeliness of gaming revenues, suggests that the defect could grow and that the reserves will turn into permanent cuts. Notable Cuts: - In agencies under the Governor's jurisdiction, general state government operations were cut between 1% and 1.8% ($8.3 million, in total, cut). - More than one-third of the announced cuts are within the Department of Public Welfare Total cuts: $54 million or 0.6% of the agency's 2009-10 budget
Environmental Conservation and Protection programs continue to be cut:
Many programs whose funding was hard fought in the 2009-10 budget negotiations see further cuts and, in some cases, elimination:
As the national economy claws its way toward recovery, tax revenues in Pennsylvania and other states are likely to take longer to recover. Keeping an eye on spending is important, but the Commonwealth needs to take a balanced approach to resolving the problem. Cuts alone are not the answer. The state has other options that could help fill the growing funding gap, including closing corporate tax loopholes, enacting a severance tax on natural gas, or joining the other 49 states in the union that levy an excise tax on smokeless tobacco. These measures would raise needed revenues, protect our health and environment, and increase tax fairness. ![]() |
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