From the AP at forbes.com
Pa. schools, governments feel the economic misery
By MARK SCOLFORO Associated Press 10.15.08, 5:19 PM ET
HARRISBURG, Pa. -
Less money is coming in, investments are being hammered and loans - when available - are likely to become more expensive.
While that describes the household finances of many Pennsylvania families these days, the same set of daunting challenges faces local governments across the state.
"We're feeling it," said Aurel Arndt, general manager of the Lehigh County Authority, which provides water and sewer services. "Our new revenues have essentially flattened, and that's a reflection of the fact that there are very few customer additions to the system."
The authority appears likely to increase sewer bills next year to close its budget gap, Arndt said. Other local governmental entities - school districts, townships, boroughs, cities and counties - are looking at service cuts, employee reductions or tax increases.
Officials are in the early stages of budget planning for 2009, and many assume the slowdown will reduce local income tax collections, increase delinquencies and fuel demand for police and social services.
The state may not be able to do much to help out. Its tax collections for 2008-09 were hundreds of millions dollars shy of projections just in the first quarter of the budget year.
Gov. Ed Rendell on Sept. 16 ordered state agencies to look for ways to cut 4.25 percent from their discretionary appropriations - although public safety, health and education were given smaller amounts to cut. The administration is still working out the details, but counties are worried about how that austerity will affect their own budgets.
"It's a killer," said Doug Hill, executive director of the County Commissioners Association of Pennsylvania. "The bottom line is, obviously it comes from somewhere, so we anticipate at best further pressure."
The Pennsylvania Department of Transportation estimates that the motor license fund's payments to municipalities will be down $7 million to $10 million next year. That may be a small drop-off for a $332 million fund, but officials said the most recent comparable situation was the energy crisis of the mid-1970s.
Pension funds, which are closely tied to the stock market, loom as another major problem. At the end of June - before Wall Street turned from bad to worse - the state's $63 billion public school retirement system said investments had lost nearly 3 percent in the prior year.
That is bad news for local school districts that have to pump tax money into the fund when investments fall short. Last year's losses increased the much-dreaded 2012-13 pension contribution spike up from 11.2 percent of payroll to an estimated 16.3 percent, and the stock market's decline since June 30 can only have made that worse.
Municipal pensions also are feeling the pinch. In Cambria County, chief clerk Mike Gelles said Wednesday the county's pension fund lost about $42 million since the start of the year, or 24 percent. Layoffs, service cuts and millions in additional contributions from county taxpayers are considered likely.
"The markets turn around, it may have less of an impact, but at this point in time, with the numbers we're looking at, we have to plan for the worst," Gelles said.
The worldwide credit crunch is expected to soon increase the economic misery for Harrisburg property owners, who could end up paying much higher trash collection bills because their city authority has had difficulty refinancing debt tied to an ill-starred incinerator project.
Market conditions were a factor in a decision by the state's Commonwealth Financing Agency to delay - at least temporarily - the issuance of $800 million in bonds that were approved by the Legislature this summer.
That money is designed to help water and sewer plants comply with the Chesapeake Bay cleanup program, but it has tight deadlines. About 60 larger plants along the Susquehanna River watershed must finish construction in 2012.
"We are hearing some of our folks are postponing projects because the bond market is so bad," said John W. Brosious, deputy director of the Pennsylvania Municipal Authorities Association. "Unfortunately, those with Chesapeake Bay permits will not have that much flexibility to wait too long to start."
If there is a silver lining, it's that the heavy season for school district borrowing comes during the summer, leaving time for the credit markets to recover.
"Any districts who are trying to issue new bonds are probably finding extreme difficulty in the short term," said Dave Davare, director of research services for the Pennsylvania School Boards Association.
State revenues are considered a generally reliable indicator of what is happening to less-closely-tracked local taxes, and the Revenue Department says that, from July to September, they were 4.7 percent below what was anticipated.
Thursday, October 16, 2008
Effort mounts to stop teacher strikes
From the Intelligencer
Effort mounts to stop teacher strikes
By RICH PIETRAS, The Intelligencer
Jill Basile is determined to get teacher strikes struck down. And it appears she has found a brother in arms for her battle, and perhaps a small army.
Basile, a 42-year-old resident of Harleysville, hosted a town hall meeting Monday night for more than two hours at the Indian Crest Public Library in Telford to discuss teacher strikes, and teachers unions — a hot topic considering current labor unrest in the Souderton Area School District.
“I suffered through a school strike when I was at Neshaminy (High School) that lasted two-and-half months when I was a freshman,” Basile said. “I swore after that, I would never let my children go through something like that ... it was horrible.”
And she seems to be sticking to her promise, because Basile has a first-grade daughter in the Souderton Area School District who was forced out of school early in September. And although the strike ended after 13 days, it appears the determined mother of two is just getting started.
The guest speaker for the event was Simon Campbell, a grass roots activist opposed to teachers' right to strike in Pennsylvania.
He is also the president of StopTeacherStrikes Inc., whose Web site provides information on everything from how many school districts are at immediate risk of a strike, to the commonwealth's constitution, which Simon believes makes teacher strikes illegal.
Expecting only 30 people to show up, Basile was surprised to see 60 people fill the meeting room of the library. She was also thrilled to have Campbell come on board. Campbell, 41, who hails from England, settled in Pennsylvania in 2004 and has three children in the Pennsbury School District. It was Simon's exposure to a teachers strike there in the fall of 2005 that inspired him to form StopTeacherStrikes in March 2006. The unpaid volunteer has championed the cause of strike-free education and voluntary unionism ever since.
“I'd never even heard of a teachers strike until I moved to the states,” Simon said in front of a mixed crowd of parents and students as well as a couple of school board members. “I couldn't believe such a thing was allowed.”
A big part of the evening was devoted to the discussion of the Strike Free Education Act, House Bill 1369, which Simon and Basile wholeheartedly support.
Although the bill will not be signed into law this year, Simon, who turned the meeting into a mini civics lesson, urged the audience to do whatever it could to ensure the bill will pass and add Pennsylvania to the other 37 states that ban teacher strikes.
Basile said she believes that every side has been heard in the Souderton dispute but the residents.
“Where are the children's rights?” Basile asked. “The unions are running our education system, not us.”
Ernie Rosato, 46, Upper Salford, who has a child attending Souderton Area High School, also felt empowered after the meeting and hoped others felt the same way.
“We have a choice as a community to make a stand,” Rosato said. “It's time the community takes back what's really ours by telling the school board that strike should not be allowed and ask them to put their thoughts together on House Bill 1369.”
Effort mounts to stop teacher strikes
By RICH PIETRAS, The Intelligencer
Jill Basile is determined to get teacher strikes struck down. And it appears she has found a brother in arms for her battle, and perhaps a small army.
Basile, a 42-year-old resident of Harleysville, hosted a town hall meeting Monday night for more than two hours at the Indian Crest Public Library in Telford to discuss teacher strikes, and teachers unions — a hot topic considering current labor unrest in the Souderton Area School District.
“I suffered through a school strike when I was at Neshaminy (High School) that lasted two-and-half months when I was a freshman,” Basile said. “I swore after that, I would never let my children go through something like that ... it was horrible.”
And she seems to be sticking to her promise, because Basile has a first-grade daughter in the Souderton Area School District who was forced out of school early in September. And although the strike ended after 13 days, it appears the determined mother of two is just getting started.
The guest speaker for the event was Simon Campbell, a grass roots activist opposed to teachers' right to strike in Pennsylvania.
He is also the president of StopTeacherStrikes Inc., whose Web site provides information on everything from how many school districts are at immediate risk of a strike, to the commonwealth's constitution, which Simon believes makes teacher strikes illegal.
Expecting only 30 people to show up, Basile was surprised to see 60 people fill the meeting room of the library. She was also thrilled to have Campbell come on board. Campbell, 41, who hails from England, settled in Pennsylvania in 2004 and has three children in the Pennsbury School District. It was Simon's exposure to a teachers strike there in the fall of 2005 that inspired him to form StopTeacherStrikes in March 2006. The unpaid volunteer has championed the cause of strike-free education and voluntary unionism ever since.
“I'd never even heard of a teachers strike until I moved to the states,” Simon said in front of a mixed crowd of parents and students as well as a couple of school board members. “I couldn't believe such a thing was allowed.”
A big part of the evening was devoted to the discussion of the Strike Free Education Act, House Bill 1369, which Simon and Basile wholeheartedly support.
Although the bill will not be signed into law this year, Simon, who turned the meeting into a mini civics lesson, urged the audience to do whatever it could to ensure the bill will pass and add Pennsylvania to the other 37 states that ban teacher strikes.
Basile said she believes that every side has been heard in the Souderton dispute but the residents.
“Where are the children's rights?” Basile asked. “The unions are running our education system, not us.”
Ernie Rosato, 46, Upper Salford, who has a child attending Souderton Area High School, also felt empowered after the meeting and hoped others felt the same way.
“We have a choice as a community to make a stand,” Rosato said. “It's time the community takes back what's really ours by telling the school board that strike should not be allowed and ask them to put their thoughts together on House Bill 1369.”
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