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PA Governor Wants Federal Aid He Doesn’t Need

Then President-elect Barack Obama (C) and Vice President-elect Joe Biden (R) listen as Gov. Ed Rendell (D-PA) delivers his opening remarks during a National Governors Association meeting at Congress Hall in Philadelphia on December 2, 2008.

Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell sees a federal stimulus package and bailout of the states as both a fix to Pennsylvania’s current budget crunch and as a tool to revitalize the economy. Pennsylvania faces a revenue shortfall of $2.3 billion, according to Rendell’s latest guestimate. His proposed fix relies on $450 million from a federal stimulus package. However, a look at recent Pennsylvania spending shows why a federal bailout of the states is bad policy.

Under Governor Rendell, Pennsylvania state spending increased 35.8%, well exceeding the rate of inflation of 17.4%. In Government on a Diet: Spending Tips 2008, a report released last year, the Commonwealth Foundation identified billions in potential spending reductions.

While Governor Rendell has cut $500 million from the current state budget through freezing new hires and other measures, the revised budget still represents a 2.3% increase over 2007-08. It would be hard to argue he has “cut spending to the bone.” In fact, even after these cuts, the Commonwealth Foundation found about $1.4 billion in wasteful spending.

While Governor Rendell is now encouraging spending restraint and threatening layoffs for state workers, he continues to practice “do as I say, not as I do” politics. Rendell recently created a new position for a former lawmaker and political ally, and continues to celebrate pork projects like grants to snowmobile clubs, a tourism website about a groundhog in a car accident, and millions in grants for agriculture and tourism and for the “President’s House” project.

A federal bailout of the states only rewards the misuse of taxpayers’ money in states like Pennsylvania.

Nathan A. Benefield is Director of Policy Research with the Commonwealth Foundation.

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