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For Immediate
Release
6/20/07
CONTACT:
Dave Atkinson
(717) 787-6535
Senator
Armstrong - Floor Remarks - Senate Budget Passage
 
The budget before us well reflects the interests of
Pennsylvania taxpayers and the fiscal constraints facing our
Commonwealth.
This budget sets state spending at slightly more than $27
billion, a conservative 2.7% increase. This uncommonly low
level of spending erases the prospect of any tax increase
this year. And it prevents creating a deficit that would
require a tax increase next year.
To accomplish this, we have taken a tough approach to
spending. This package comes in at 1% lower than what the
Governor sought to spend. Costly new or expanded programs
are nowhere to be found. There are cuts made in selected
programs and personnel lines. This budget forgoes the
traditional restoration of items the Governor refused to
fund. And it is absent legislative discretionary money.
But in terms of the core functions of state government, we
have in key places directed additional resources. The story
of this budget is what it includes, as much as what it does
not. It includes significant increases for basic and
special education. It includes necessary and deserved COLAs
for MH/MR and human services workers. It includes funding
for child welfare. It includes money to help prevent
health-care-related infections. It is not a heartless
budget, by any means. It is a responsible budget, by every
measure. For veterans, for seniors, for farmers, for
families, for children, commitments made in the past are
commitments kept under this plan.
If the Governor disagrees with some of the reductions we
have made, his suggestions on alternative reductions are
welcome. But there is a cautionary note needed here.
Earlier this year, the Appropriations Committee held a
special hearing on the proposed education budget. The
Education Secretary was pushing hard for a series of new
programs and spending increases, and he was asked what of
the old stuff could be cut to compensate. The answer
quickly came back – not a nickel was dispensable. No
Pennsylvanian believes every single dollar is vital and well
spent, in education or any other area of state effort.
Maybe the Governor has a good idea in the Pre-K Counts. But
to pay for it, something else would have to be reduced or
eliminated, and there have been no volunteers offered up.
To tap one-time sources, such as the Rainy Day Fund, would
set up a deficit and tax increase trap for next year. We
cannot agree to that.
Protecting every dollar of spending from previous budgets,
giving big ticket increases to big programs, and constantly
adding new programs, this is the traditional recipe for
growing state government and sparking tax increases. We
have approached the business of budgeting differently this
year, and we have produced a budget far different from the
standard spending-driven state budget.
There are things each of us would like to add to the budget,
for our districts or for favorable causes. But the economic
reality does not change – we cannot begin to afford to pack
in all the spending wishes out there. To try would mean
increasing taxes, infuriating taxpayers, and knocking
another hole in the state economy. We are pledged not to do
that.
I want to acknowledge the terrific cooperation from
Republicans and Democrats in the Senate in negotiating and
shaping this budget. The commentators too easily chalk up
budget differences to partisanship. So far, that is simply
not true in the state Senate.
This document will not be encouraging to the groups seeking
additional state funding for a variety of purposes. But it
will be greatly encouraging to the taxpayers who have long
wanted to see fiscal restraint be a reality, not just
rhetoric.
By our action today, we keep alive the opportunity for
putting a responsible, restrained, and realistic state
budget in place by the deadline.
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