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The projected end of PA's big budget surplus

Plus, syringe services in PA, by the numbers.

This is The Investigator, a free weekly newsletter with the top news from across Pennsylvania.
A weekly newsletter by Spotlight PA, an independent, nonpartisan newsroom producing investigative journalism for Pennsylvania.



August 15, 2024 | spotlightpa.org
RUNNING DRY
Pennsylvania's budget surplus could be gone by next year without cuts or a sudden revenue windfall, a state watchdog warns.

Heightened spending, tax cuts, and revenue projections have the Independent Fiscal Office flagging the possible exhaustion of the General Fund surplus by the next fiscal year.

That scenario could force lawmakers to tap into the $7 billion rainy day fund.

Also this week, 50 school districts with serious property tax burdens will receive an extra $32 million as part of a sweeping effort to overhaul education funding in this year’s budget.

Finally, more than a half million dollars in taxpayer money is missing from a Centre County township, and local officials say it might have been misappropriated.
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» How Pennsylvanians are helping their older neighbors age comfortably

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Syringe services in Pa., by the numbers

About a year ago, Spotlight PA and WESA started looking into a conflicting part of Pennsylvania's opioid windfall. 

The multibillion-dollar settlements that attorneys general reached with drug companies say expanding syringe services should be a priority for the money. But those programs are widely considered illegal in most of Pennsylvania under our drug paraphernalia law.

Supporters say these programs help connect people with treatment and make communities safer by reducing the presence of discarded needles. Some lawmakers in Harrisburg have raised concerns that the programs condone illegal drug use or fail to make communities safer.

Here are the figures that stand out from the coverage, and what they show. Ed Mahon, Spotlight PA

1 Republican lawmaker who voted in favor of a syringe services legalization bill during a committee vote in February. That lawmaker, state Rep. Jim Rigby of Cambria County, has talked about how serving as a police chief influenced his position.

“They don’t prepare you to go tell a mother and father their child is dead from an overdose,” he told Spotlight PA. “... If we save one, that’s a start, so I’m ready to make that start.”

The bill, which passed out of committee with unanimous Democratic support, awaits action in the full state House.

3 — Pennsylvania counties (Cambria, Crawford, and Luzerne) flagged in a nationwide assessment of communities potentially vulnerable to the rapid spread of HIV and to new or continuing high rates of hepatitis C infections among people who inject drugs.

5 times — how much more likely new users of a needle exchange were to enter drug treatment, compared to similar individuals who had never used an exchange, according to a widely cited 2000 study.

8 times — how many more improperly disposed of syringes researchers found during walkthroughs in a city without needle and syringe programs, compared to a city with them, according to a 2012 study cited by the CDC.

38 — states that explicitly or implicitly authorize syringe services through statute or regulation, according to a survey last year from the Legislative Analysis and Public Policy Association, a nonprofit group that researches laws nationwide. Pennsylvania is not one of them.

$150,000 — how much opioid settlement funding was pulled from a nonprofit in Western Pennsylvania late last year based on concerns over syringe services. 

1992 — the year then-Mayor Ed Rendell, a Democrat, issued an executive order to allow syringe services in Philadelphia.

2008 – the year Allegheny County Council adopted a needle exchange ordinance.

$325,000 — how much opioid settlement money Allegheny County reported dedicating to supporting “access to sterile syringes and other safer drug use supplies,” as of the end of last year.

🤔 NEXT QUESTION: Are you on top of the news? Prove it with the latest edition of the Great PA News Quiz: Storm damage, ballot access, local taxes, and world series
WEEKLY RUNDOWN

» AP: Man accused of voting in 2 states faces federal charges

» CAP-STAR: Reading could ban ghost guns after court ruling

» CENTER SQUARE: Complaint claims union dues funded campaign

» INQUIRER: Chinese fentanyl company comes up in US Senate race

» MORNING CALL: Senior services at risk without state funding

» NY TIMES: Kelly says he warned Trump campaign about Butler site

» PENNLIVE: Ex-com. OK’d millions to tourism bureau as it paid his wife

» SUN-GAZETTE: County will pursue murder charges in overdose cases

» TRIBLIVE: Rustic Ridge community still waiting for answers

» WHYY: Philly schools add 800 hires PA faces teacher shortages

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THE RIDDLER
Send your answers to riddler@spotlightpa.org.

NO CROWDING (Case No. 269): Four men were fishing in a boat on a lake. The boat turned over and all four men sank to the bottom of the lake. Yet, not one single man got wet. How? 
 
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