Wolf: My Budget Makes Historic Investments In Education; Takes Steps to Rebuild the Middle Class

HARRISBURG – Gov. Tom Wolf has unveiled his 2015-16 budget proposal that makes historic investments in education while taking concrete steps toward rebuilding the middle class.

Wolf’s budget restores cuts to basic education with a four-year commitment to increase funding by $2 billion while cutting property taxes paid by the average homeowner by 50 percent and reducing the total tax burden on average, middle-class families.

Wolf’s budget also helps grow jobs in Pennsylvania by cutting the corporate net income tax by 50 percent and making strategic investments in job creation through programs like the Made in Pennsylvania manufacturing tax credit.

“My budget rebuilds the middle class in Pennsylvania starting with three priorities: jobs that pay, schools that teach and government that works,” said Wolf. “Pennsylvania can have a bright future, but we cannot simply do the same things over and over and hope for different results.

“My plan balances the state budget, cuts taxes to create jobs with good middle-class wages, makes historic investments in education to prepare our kids for the jobs of tomorrow and reduces the total tax burden on the average middle-class homeowner. We need to think differently and do things differently. It’s time for bold change.”

“We all know the challenges Pennsylvania faces. We are staring at a $2.3 billion budget deficit, we are near the bottom of the country in job growth, our state’s credit ratings have been in decline and our schools are struggling. These are bipartisan challenges and they require bipartisan solutions. My budget incorporates many Republican and Democratic ideas to move Pennsylvania forward.”

Jobs That Pay

Wolf has a plan to create jobs and get the economy back on track.

Pennsylvania As An Energy Leader

Developing the Workforce

Schools That Teach

Wolf’s budget makes historic investments in education while eliminating the deficit and ending the commonwealth’s endless year after year fiscal crises.  Wolf’s budget restores cuts to basic education with a four-year commitment to increase funding by $2 billion.

Reforming Charter Schools

Tax relief for the middle class

Government That Works

Wolf’s budget cuts costs and makes government more efficient

Pension Reform That Works

Doing Right By Our Seniors

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