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Wolf seeks higher taxes for schools, tax revamp

Gov. Tom Wolf, center, speaks Tuesday with Speaker of the House of Representatives, Rep. Mike Turzai, R-Allegheny, left, and Lt. Gov. Michael Stack after Wolf delivered his budget address for the 2015-16 fiscal year to a joint session of the Pennsylvania House and Senate.
GOP criticizes spending boost

HARRISBURG — In an ambitious first budget plan, Gov. Tom Wolf on Tuesday proposed more than $4 billion in higher state taxes on income, sales and natural gas drilling to support a huge injection of money into schools and property tax cuts as part of an overhaul of the way public education is funded.

Wolf, a Democrat, is also asking a circumspect Republican-controlled Legislature to cut corporate taxes by hundreds of millions of dollars, borrow more than $4 billion to refinance pension debt and inject new money into business loans, clean energy subsidies and water and sewer system projects.

All told, new aid for education, plus money to reduce school property taxes, would amount to more than $4 billion.

Saddled with nearly $4 billion in projected deficits and rising costs in the budget year that starts July 1, Wolf said his plans would put the state on sound financial footing after three credit downgrades last year.

Top Democrats applauded it. But the Legislature’s Republican leaders quickly brushed off the nearly $5 billion in increased state spending as effectively dead on arrival — one called the size “historic” — although they said they may eventually find common ground on cutting pension costs and school property taxes.

Wolf said his budget would make the tax system fairer, improve public schools hit by recent cutbacks in state aid and foster a more vigorous business environment that produces more good-paying jobs.

The total tax burden on average middle-class homeowners would drop by 13 percent under his plan, Wolf said.

“It includes Democratic ideas, Republican ideas and clearly ideas that exist beyond party lines,” Wolf told a joint session of the Legislature. “It is rooted in the values of fairness, inclusion and common sense. ... But above all, it recognizes that Pennsylvania will not improve until we rebuild the middle class.”

Pennsylvania, Wolf said, stands at a crossroads, with an education crisis and bottom-of-the-nation rankings in job growth and creditworthiness.

“The reality is, times have changed, and ideas that may have worked in the past simply aren’t working anymore,” Wolf said. “Our budget should be as bold and ambitious as Pennsylvania has been over the past 300 years.”

If passed, it would represent the biggest revamp in state taxation in decades. Republicans showed little enthusiasm for any of it.

Wolf’s proposal for a two-year, $12 billion tax increase would damage the middle class and economy, Senate President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati, R-Jefferson, said.

“I don’t think Pennsylvanians voted for that,” Scarnati said.

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