Note: This article was last updated in 2013. Click here for more recent information on state budgets and finances. |
Pennsylvania's Gov. Tom Corbett signed the $27.65 billion fiscal year 2013 state budget into law on June 30, 2012, with minutes to spare before the start of the fiscal year.[1] Neither the legislature nor the governor proposed increasing taxes.[2]
The enacted budget can be accessed here.
Highlights of the budget included:
The fiscal year 2013 budget, which increased spending over fiscal year 2012, included the following additional spending:[1]
Category | Spending | % Increase over fiscal year 2012 |
---|---|---|
School employee pensions | $856 million | 43 |
Payments on state debt | $1.1 billion | 5 |
Judiciary | $308 million | 3 |
Public school instruction and operations | $5.4 billion | 0.9 |
Public school pupil transportation | $542 million | 0.7 |
Department of Public Welfare | $10.6 billion | 0.5 |
The governor wanted a $500 million cushion, but the legislature's proposed budget provided only half of that.[4]
On June 5, 2012, Republican legislative leaders presented the governor with a $27.6 billion spending plan that spent half a billion dollars more than his initial proposal, which included restoring funding to public education, higher education, and social services.[1]
On May 9, 2012, the Senate approved a $27.7 billion fiscal year 2013 budget. It erased many cuts proposed by Gov. Tom Corbett and in fact increased spending by approximately $500 million over fiscal year 2012. It included the governor's proposals for a $275 million business-tax cut and the elimination of the $150 million temporary cash-assistance program for poor adults.[5]
The Senate plan also restored funding to higher education, a portion of cuts to social service programs and adds $100 million dollars to K-12 basic education funding. The Senate planned to use some better-than-expected revenue collections to pay for the extra portions of its budget.[2]
Gov. Tom Corbett released his proposed $27.13 billion fiscal year 2013 state budget on February 7, 2012. It lowered spending less than a tenth of a percentage point from fiscal year 2012, when the state budget was $27.16 billion. The governor proposed steep cuts to higher education, but did not raise taxes.[6] The higher education cuts included 30 percent cuts in state aid to state-related universities like Penn State, Temple and Pitt, and 20 percent cuts for the state-owned universities, but largely level funds for community colleges and public schools.[7]
Basic education funding for K-12 would have increased from $5.3 billion to $5.4 billion, although pre-K and Head Start funding would be cut, as would $100 million in accountability block grants to schools.[6]
The governor's proposed budget reducced the state vehicle fleet by 1,200 vehicles.[8]
Other highlights of the proposed budget included:
Gov. Corbett also proposed an overhaul of the state's prisons that was estimated to save more than $263 million over five years.[1]
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