Harrisburg — Gov. Josh Shapiro signed a $50.8 billion Pennsylvania state budget on Sunday after the General Assembly passed the spending plan nearly two weeks after the June 30 deadline; the measure includes historic investments in K‑12 education, a pension boost for retired school and emergency workers, workforce development expansion, and preserves an approximately $8 billion rainy day fund. This week lawmakers from Berks County and statewide offered mixed reactions: Democrats highlighted bipartisan agreement and education funding increases, while some raised concerns about transparency and delayed policy items; Governing.com and officials noted the deal was hashed out in weeks of closed‑door talks, and implementation and oversight steps are now under way.
Prepared by Lauren Mitchell and reviewed by editorial team.
This new budget impacts your wallet and community. It boosts pensions for retired school and emergency workers. It also expands workforce development and K-12 education. Check your local school district's website for potential changes.
The $50.8 billion budget was passed late but includes historic investments. Some lawmakers are concerned about transparency due to closed-door talks. Stay informed by following local news coverage. Worth forwarding if you know a retired school or emergency worker.
Public schools, retirees receiving pension boosts, workforce development programs, and infrastructure contractors benefit from increased funding and preserved reserves in the enacted budget.
Advocacy priorities such as a minimum wage increase, expanded mass transit funding, and affordable housing measures experienced delays or were left unresolved in the final budget agreement.
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Pennsylvania Legislature Approves $50.8B State Budget
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