Best use of tax dollars: Welfare or bridge repairs?
By cutting welfare programs by just 10 percent, the state could save $1 billion a year. That money could be put to other uses, such as repairing the state's deteriorating bridges.
That plan is being floated by state Rep. Daryl Metcalfe, a Republican from western Pennsylvania. It's a lot easier than leasing the Pennsylvania Turnpike to a foreign company for the next 75 years or tolling Interstate 80, two proposals Gov. Ed Rendell has backed to find enough money to repair the state's bridges and highways.
Metcalf criticized the Rendell administration for not doing enough to rein in the Department of Public Welfare's spending, according to The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
"We are here to present our drunk-with-power, spend-a-holic governor with a legitimate zero-growth budgetary solution that does not involve excessive spending, increased debt, higher taxes, or recklessly . . . leasing the Pennsylvania Turnpike to a foreign entity," Metcalfe told reporter Tom Barnes, who covered the Tuesday press conference.
Read the full story at the Post-Gazette Web site here.
Read "Tax credits and stupid Hollywood movies" at POLICY BLOG.
Labels: Pennsylvania Legislature, Reform, Rendell, Taxes
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