New PA Budget Gets Schwank’s Vote of No

HARRISBURG, June 30, 2014 – Because it fails to address Pennsylvania’s real issues – like property tax reform and taxing Marcellus Shale companies – state Sen. Sen. Judy Schwank today voted “no” on Pennsylvania’s $29.1 billion 2014-2015 budget.

“We have worked hard in Harrisburg to help Republicans and Gov. Tom Corbett understand that Pennsylvania is deeper in its financial quagmire because of the policies of the past four years,” Schwank, the Democratic chair of the Senate Agriculture & Rural Affairs Committee said.

“Pennsylvanians, unlike Marcellus Shale companies that are reaping billions of dollars in profits taking natural gas from beneath our earth, are struggling. Yet we can’t even agree to a small tax on the gas Marcellus Shale companies extract because Republicans and the governor are only interested in protecting them,” Sen. Schwank said. “Pennsylvania is the only state not to tax the natural gas that is being pulled from our ground.”

Had Pennsylvania levied a 5 percent severance tax on gas drillers, as Senate Democrats proposed in March, Schwank said the tax would have generated $700 million in new revenue to improve education, better protect the environment and spark new economic development.

Coupled with the $400 million that also would have flowed to the commonwealth under Medicaid expansion, most of the state’s $1.5 billion deficit would have been painlessly covered and 500,000 residents, including 23,000 veterans, would finally have received health care insurance.

“Instead, our $1.5 billion Corbett deficit has been ‘covered’ by inflated projections and deep cuts to essential economic development, environmental protection and job creation programs.  And, no new funding streams mean we will have less ability to offset fiscal shortfalls if projections fall short, as some are anticipating could happen by early 2015 to the tune of $2.5 billion.

“Billions of dollars are being squandered by the commonwealth. This should be money we can invest with to offset education funding shortfalls that schools districts continue to pass on to local taxpayers through higher property taxes.

“School property tax bills are being mailed out now and I am painfully aware the effect this is having on residents, particularly seniors and those on fixed incomes,” Sen. Schwank said.

“The window is closing on the chance for us to deliver true property tax relief to our homeowners, but the General Assembly has some time to address this critical issue before the 2013-14 session ends later this year,” she said.

While Democrats in the Senate and House have been vocal about what they believe needs to be done to right Pennsylvania’s financial ship, Schwank said they were invited late to budget talks.

“If all parties would have been at the table, perhaps a consensus could have been found to find real solutions. Instead, partisan politics took center stage to the detriment of our commonwealth and our residents,” the senator said.

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Schwank to Propose Bill to Help Low-Income Women With Children

HARRISBURG, June 3, 2014 – To encourage low-income families with children to enter and stay in the work force, Sen. Judy Schwank today said she will introduce legislation excluding a larger share of their earnings in determining eligibility for state Temporary Assistance to Needy Families, or TANF, benefits.

Sen. Schwank’s proposal would increase the earned-income disregard, the share of earnings that would not be counted in determining TANF eligibility, to 75 percent from 50 percent.

States receive federal TANF block grants to cover food, shelter, utilities, and non-medical expenses. Recipients generally cannot collect benefits longer than five years in a lifetime.

“TANF provides a maximum of $403 for a family of three,” Schwank said this morning during a press conference announcing additional issues on which the legislative Women’s Health Caucus will focus. “This is an amount that hasn’t changed for 25 years, and is less than a third of the poverty level for a single parent with one child.”

Schwank is a co-chair of the caucus, which rolled out its second phase of legislation under the “Pennsylvania Agenda for Women’s Health” banner to help improve the lives of women, children and all workers in Pennsylvania.

The new proposals would also:

  • Curb political interference in medical decisions;
  • Establish a Women Veterans Health Care Task Force to identify and address gaps in health care for women veterans;
  • Address deep poverty among women with children by directing a study of the impact of minor income increases on eligibility for important, income-based services and programs;
  • Ensure that fair retirement security is provided for widows of state and municipal employees; and
  • Protect all workers from sexual harassment by extending the provisions against sexual harassment to small and large employers.

“We need to recognize … the peculiar health needs that women veterans have. We need to ensure that mothers can work their way up from poverty for themselves and their children without having to deal with sexual harassment at work or the risk of losing bare-bones public support,” Sen. Schwank said.

“We need to make sure that medical information and services are dictated not by political considerations or others that put the beliefs of certain faiths ahead of others but are only based on medical appropriateness,” she said.

“For the good of women in Pennsylvania, for the good of their children, and for the good of our community, women deserve equal consideration and treatment in Pennsylvania,” the senator concluded.

Members of the Women’s Health Caucus who spoke during the press conference today included co-chairman and Rep. Dan Frankel (D-Allegheny), Rep. Mike Schlossberg (D-Lehigh), Rep. Michelle Brownlee (D-Philadelphia), Rep. Steve Santarsiero (D-Bucks), and Sen. Mike Stack (D-Philadelphia).

The group unveiled the first phase of its agenda in December.

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Sen. Schwank Says $1.25M Heading to Berks County Recycling Programs

HARRISBURG, May 6, 2014 – More Berks County residents will be able to recycle more of their consumer waste with the awarding of $1.25 million from Pennsylvania’s Municipal Waste Planning, Recycling and Waste Reduction Act.

“Since Act 101 was implemented in 1988, the commonwealth has awarded millions to help residents in the 11th Senatorial District and throughout the state keep more paper, plastic, metal, and glass out of our landfills,” Sen. Schwank said today. “While many Berks Countians recycle now, this 54th round of recycling grants from the state will help us increase our efforts to protect our environment.”

Grant funding is used by municipalities to develop and implement recycling programs.

Projects can range from the operation of compost facilities and web-based recycling programs to the addition of recycling capacity and the development of educational materials to encourage more people to not throw recyclable goods into the trash.

“Agriculture is a vital industry in Berks County. Losing it to landfills would be a shame and unnecessary,” Schwank said. “I’m pleased that 10 of our communities will benefit with this latest round of funding.”

Act 101 mandates recycling in municipalities with more than 10,000 residents. Municipalities with 5,000 to 10,000 people and have a population density greater than 300 people per square mile must also recycle.

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Editor’s Note: The list of Berks County communities receiving Act 101 grants follows:

 

APPLICANT                                     PROJECT                                                                 $$$

Berks County Recycling                 Recycling Center                                                     $109,849

Bern Township                                   Leaf waste, curbside recycling                          $64,171

Cumru Township                                Leaf waste collection                                            $247,565

Exeter Township                                Leaf waste, curbside recycling                         $99,004

Kutztown Borough                             Recycling center, leaf waste collection        $250,000

Maidencreek Township                    Curbside, educational recycling programs    $89,887

Mount Penn Borough                         Curbside, leaf waste recycling programs    $69,983

Topton Borough                                 Curbside, leaf waste recycling programs     $101,281

Wernersville Borough                      Leaf waste program                                              $121,852

Wyomissing Borough                        Curbside, leaf waste recycling programs    $98,987

Sen. Schwank Says Action Needed Now to Combat Heroin Use in Schools

HARRISBURG, May 5, 2014 – In response to the arrests today of 13 mostly underage Berks County residents by Pennsylvania State Police, state Sen. Judy Schwank issued the following statement:

“I am grateful for the excellent investigative work of the Berks County District Attorney’s office and state police, but the arrest today of more than a dozen of our children underscores an already underscored problem.

“Ten of the 13 people charged in this latest drug raid were younger than 21. If the charges are upheld, that will mean these students are taking drugs into our schools or they are buying them there. This has always been a problem but the growing presence of heroin as a drug of choice means we must do more to re-wage our war on drugs.

“Our children, people like the ones who have been charged today with possession of heroin, cocaine and marijuana, are dying in alarming numbers. This cannot happen.

“As I have emphasized, we need to do much more to make sure families are more aware of the danger signs of drug abuse, especially heroin, and they must know that police officers are searching longer and harder to stop this growing – but preventable – problem.

“Action must also be taken in the General Assembly. There are legislative options before us to consider. If they need to be improved or changed, we should do that. Our silence is complicity. We must not be complicit as our kids, grandkids, nieces and nephews succumb to heroin’s deadly grip.

“The arrests this morning are important but the continued vigilance of the entire community is needed to stem the tide on prescription drug/heroin abuse. We can’t let our guard down.”

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Berks County Veterans Programs Awarded $37k in Grants, Sen. Schwank Announces

HARRISBURG, March 25, 2014 – Two Berks County organizations that work to help veterans have been awarded a total of $37,000 in grants from the Pennsylvania Department of Military and Veterans Affairs, state Sen. Judy Schwank announced today.

The Berks County Department of Veterans Affairs is receiving $27,000 for its “Berks County Veterans Affairs Roadshow,” and the Berks Counseling Center is receiving $10,000 for its “Helping Hands” program.

“These important grants will help us better help returning soldiers who might need this assistance,” Schwank said. “What’s great about these awards is the money is coming from Pennsylvania motorists; people who want to help our veterans.”

The inaugural grant awards are through the DMVA’s new Pennsylvania Veterans’ Trust Fund, which is funded by the $3 donations that people voluntarily make when they apply for or renew their driver’s license and photo IDs or renew their motor vehicle registrations. Money is also generated through the sale of “Honoring Our Veterans” license plates.

Berks County DVA and the Berks Counseling Center are two of the 10 organizations across the commonwealth that are receiving the new grants.

“The money for the Berks County DVA will help its roadshow conduct outreach workshops, educational events and increase awareness of available services,” the senator said. “The money for Berks Counseling Center will provide supportive services for veterans and their families.

“The award of these grants shows how small contributions can add up to making a big difference. In this instance, the money is helping the women and men who have fought to protect our freedoms and now need our help to re-acclimate as civilians,” Schwank said.

To learn more about the Veterans’ Trust Fund, visit www.vtf.state.pa.us.

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Schwank’s ‘Revenge Porn’ Legislation Heading to House

HARRISBURG, Jan. 28, 2014 – The Pennsylvania Senate today unanimously approved state Sen. Judy Schwank’s bill to criminalize so-called “revenge porn,” and it did so as the young woman who sparked initiatives across the country to change state laws stood almost literally by the Berks County Democratic lawmaker’s side.

Allyson Pereira was 16 years old when her ex-boyfriend published a photo of her naked body online. The unauthorized photograph went viral and Pereira quickly became the victim of harassment by her classmates. Her family’s northern New Jersey home was also vandalized, and her story led New Jersey to become the first state to make the act a crime.

Pereira was in Harrisburg coincidentally on Tuesday to express her support for Schwank’s proposal, which the Pennsylvania chapter of the ACLU has agreed does not present First Amendment issues. Prosecutors, victims and other constitutional advocates have also endorsed the effort.

“Ally is a victim of intimate partner harassment,” Schwank said in introducing Pereira to the Senate. “At 16 years old, school can be tough enough, but instead of backing down, Ally spoke out, fought back and helped to encourage states like Pennsylvania to write new laws punishing those who would intentionally hurt others.

“I am grateful for the Senate’s quick work on my bill and I am looking forward to the House of Representative’s diligent consideration so we can get this bill to the governor and into law to protect people,” Schwank said.

Under Schwank’s proposal, people who commit the offense of Intimate Partner Harassment would be subject to a penalty of up to five years in prison and a $10,000 fine if the case involves a victim who is a minor. It would carry a penalty of up to two years and a $5,000 fine if the victim is an adult.

A person who with no legitimate purpose and without consent exposes to a third person a photograph or similar image of the offender’s intimate partner nude or explicitly engaged in a sexual act, with the intent to harass, annoy or alarm him or her, would commit the crime of intimate partner harassment.

If the House and the governor approve Schwank’s SB 1167, Pennsylvania will join California and New Jersey in making it a crime to post unwanted pictures of former partners without their consent. Similar bills have been proposed and are being considered in a number of other states, including New York and Delaware.

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Sens. Schwank, Blake Team Up to Help Struggling PA Cities

HARRISBURG, Jan. 15, 2014 – To improve performance and brighten the economic future for more of Pennsylvania’s struggling cities, state Sens. Judy Schwank (D-Berks) and John Blake (D-Lackawanna) today introduced legislation to expand a new program designed to drive significant economic development and bring people back to cities.

The City Revitalization and Improvement Zone program became law last summer when a more limited version of the proposal was incorporated into the commonwealth’s tax code.

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Forty-five of the state’s 53 third-class cities, including Scranton and Harrisburg, were immediately precluded from consideration under that version. Reading was one of eight cities that remained eligible for the program but was shut out of participation after the Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development selected Lancaster and Bethlehem for inaugural CRIZ involvement.

“We are happy that Lancaster and Bethlehem were selected and are on their way to reaping the benefits of the CRIZ program. However, there are too many cities like Scranton, Reading and Erie that need and can use this, and they should have that ability now,” Schwank said during a Capitol Rotunda press conference.

Blake called the City Revitalization and Improvement Zone program a “critical tool” that cities need to stir strong community revitalization and spark significant economic development.

“The state must be a better partner with our cities in fostering investment, stabilizing our local tax bases, and sparking economic growth and infrastructure investment. The CRIZ program can serve to revitalize Scranton, Reading and our other small cities without adverse impact on the state General Fund,” Blake said.

Under their proposal, DCED would award 15 City Revitalization and Improvement Zones between now and 2016. Bethlehem and Lancaster would be included in that total but spots would open for other communities based on population and other criteria.

After 2016, the state would add two cities every year to CRIZ, regardless of population. This is the current requirement under state law.

There would also be five pilot programs for boroughs and townships of at least 7,000 people, compared to just one under the current language. Additionally, Act 47 communities would receive priority status if they applied for CRIZ participation.

The CRIZ program was modeled after a Neighborhood Improvement Zone initiative that has proven to be an economic development marvel in downtown Allentown.

“Giving more cities the power of a CRIZ designation will bring new investment in local economies because it will target the problems that caused their financial suffering and eliminated the features that once made them vibrant,” Blake said. “CRIZ will redevelop eligible vacant, blighted and abandoned properties into commercial, exhibition, hospitality, conference, retail community or other mixed-use purpose facilities that residents will be proud of for years to come.”

“Reading, Scranton and other cities will still have to step up to the plate to qualify for CRIZ designations if this bill is adopted,” Schwank said. “Hopefully, we will give them that opportunity in time to help them.”

Properly managed, the senators said City Revitalization and Improvement Zones will not burden the commonwealth’s budget.

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New Special Education Funding Formula Wins Sen. Schwank’s Approval

HARRISBURG, Dec. 12, 2013 – State Sen. Judy Schwank said today she is pleased with a special commission’s recommendation to change Pennsylvania’s formula for financing special education.

The Special Education Funding Reform Commission released a long-awaited report Wednesday saying if Pennsylvania changes the way it calculates its special education payments, it will make the system more accurate, easier to use, and better distribute limited public dollars to students who need it most.

“We began our work in June to find a better formula, and we have found one that pays better attention to the needs of our special students in Berks County and beyond,” said Schwank, a member of the commission.

“Unlike a class of 5th graders or sophomores or 1st graders, special education students can have very varied needs and learning abilities and the commonwealth’s outdated funding formula has failed to understand this, leaving some schools without the resources they need to be effective,” she said.

Some 270,000 children with disabilities are educated in Pennsylvania’s special education system. That’s one of every 6.5 students.

Pennsylvania provides about $1 billion annually to districts for special education services. Most of the special education budget, however, is derived from property taxes and other local sources.

The new formula recommended by the commission factors the low, moderate, or high needs of students who will receive state investments. It also considers community differences: poverty, property tax levels, and rural and small district conditions.

Since 1991, the commonwealth has distributed its special education line item amongst districts based on a census formula. This means money is going to schools based on a formula that includes population calculations and the assumption that 15 percent of all students have mild disabilities and 1 percent of them are severely disabled.

“I learned a long time ago that it is never good to assume, so the time is now for us to replace the census formula with our new recommendation for funding special education in Pennsylvania. This is the right thing to do for taxpayers. More importantly, it’s the right thing to do for our very special special education students,” Schwank said.

Children who are considered for special education services live with impairments like hearing or vision loss, traumatic brain injuries, learning disabilities, autism, or emotional disturbance.

“History has proven that our special education children who learn in schools with adequate resources enjoy academic achievement that at least mirrors the average academic achievement for all students,” the senator said.

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Sen. Schwank Unveils Legislation to Stop Intimate Partner Harassment

HARRISBURG, Dec. 11, 2013 – Legislation introduced today by state Sen. Judy Schwank would make online posting of naked or sexually explicit images of former intimate partners a crime in Pennsylvania.

The bill would make the offense a third-degree felony if the victim is a minor, carrying a penalty of up to seven years in prison.  Otherwise, the crime would be a second-degree misdemeanor and carry a penalty of up to two years in prison. Fines could also be imposed.

“This is a growing problem around the country that has caused serious problems for its victims, ” Schwank said. “We need to stop it, and to do that, we need to make sure Pennsylvania officials have the tools to prosecute it.”

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So far, California and New Jersey are the only other states to have adopted laws making it a crime, although they take significantly different approaches. A number of other states, including New York and Delaware, also are in the process of considering laws.

With Schwank’s proposal, a person commits the crime of intimate partner harassment by exposing a photograph, film, videotape or similar recording of an intimate partner to a third party for no legitimate purpose and with the intent to harass, annoy or alarm the person depicted. The picture or video must be of a person who is nude or explicitly engaged in a sexual act.

It would not be a criminal offense if the person depicted in a photo or video consents to the release of the material.

“This is a new form of abuse,” Schwank said. “It can hurt the victims and their families, and it can even affect their employers.”

Schwank’s proposal has the support of the Pennsylvania District Attorney Association, the Pennsylvania Coalition Against Domestic Violence and the Pennsylvania Coalition Against Rape, which participated in its development.  The Pennsylvania chapter of the ACLU also worked with Schwank and is neutral on the bill, agreeing that it does not present First Amendment issues that have troubled other states’ proposals.

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Application Window Now Open to Help Berks County Schools Be Safer

HARRISBURG, Oct. 28, 2013 – In the wake of the one-year anniversary of the unforgettable and deadly shooting rampage at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut, the Pennsylvania Department of Education is accepting applications for grants of up to $25,000 for schools in Berks County and throughout Pennsylvania to help make their classrooms and hallways safer, Sen. Judy Schwank said today.

“We live every day hoping nothing as tragic as Sandy Hook will ever be repeated,” said Sen. Schwank. “But the thing that’s better to do than just hope is to plan and take steps to prevent a nightmare from happening in our schools.

“I encourage schools in Berks County to strongly consider this opportunity and apply for a grant to better underscore the ‘safe’ in safe schools.”

The application deadline for the targeted grants is Dec. 6.

The Department of Education’s Office for Safe Schools says the money can be used for a variety of initiatives, including conflict resolution and dispute management; violence prevention curricula; classroom management; and the development of comprehensive, district-wide school safety and violence prevention plans.

Grants will be paid through the state’s E-grant system.

“An ounce of prevention, a moment of preparedness; we must move forward in our schools to be as sure as we can be that arrangements have been made to keep our kids safe,” Schwank said. “Hoping it doesn’t happen isn’t good enough.”

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Schwank Announces $140k in Grants for the Arts in Berks County

HARRISBURG, Sept. 26, 2013 – Eighteen arts organizations in Berks County will share more than $140,000 in grants from the PA Council on the Arts, Sen. Judy Schwank announced today.

“Berks County is a great place for people with artistic talent; an eye for the beautiful, an ear for the magical, and a touch for the sensual,” Schwank said. “The state investments we make every year in the arts are a vital part of making sure Berks County and all of Pennsylvania enjoys a better quality of life.”

The 18 grant awards:

Arts and Activities Alliance: Studio B, Boyertown — $2,003

Berks Arts Council, Reading $21,812

Berks Bards Inc., Reading — $748

Berks Community Television, Reading — $5,185

Berks Youth Chorus, Reading — $3,397

Clay on Main, Oley – $2,003

Community School of Music and the Arts Inc., Reading — $2,953

Foundation for the Reading Public Museum, Reading — $24,660

GoogleWorks Center for the Arts, Reading — $26,165

KU Presents!, Kutztown — $4,708

Mifflin Community Library, Shillington — $1,496

Miller Center for the Arts, Reading — $3,036

New Arts Program Inc., Kutztown — $2,003

Our Town Foundation, Hamburg — $2,003

Reading Choral Society, Reading — $2,003

Reading Musical Foundation, Reading — $9,144

Reading Symphony Orchestra, Reading — $18,544

Yocum Institute for Arts Education, Reading — $8,955

 

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Schwank Delivers Answers, Tips for Berks County Seniors Worried About Becoming Victims of Crime

LEESPORT, Sept. 12, 2013 – With elder abuse a growing problem, Sen. Judy Schwank and top prosecutors from Berks County and the state today provided tips for staying safe to a packed house of senior citizens at Bern Evangelical Lutheran Church.

“With the third highest percentage of senior citizens in the country, we need to take steps every day to make sure our grandparents, friends and neighbors are not falling victim to scam artists and crooks,” Schwank said during her Senior Crime Prevention Seminar.

“In some parts of Pennsylvania, elder abuse is more of a problem than child abuse,” she said.

Berks County District Attorney John T. Adams, Berks County First Assistant District Attorney Theresa Johnson, and state Attorney General Senior Public Protection Community Liaison Dave Shallcross helped 125 seniors who attended the seminar identify con artists who are trying to steal their money or property or physically hurt them.

Statistically, senior citizens often fall prey to identity theft, and charities, telemarketing and sweepstakes fraud. But they are also victims of sexual and psychological abuse and neglect.

Pennsylvania’s fastest growing population is residents who are 85 years old and older.

The attorney general’s office and the Berks County District Attorney’s office have elder abuse units that investigate crimes against senior citizens.

Berks County’s elder abuse unit offers tips on its web page, as does the attorney general’s office. Sen. Schwank’s office can also help by calling 610-929-2151.

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Schwank, PLCB Award $ 150,000 in Grants to Kutztown Borough, Area Colleges, Wyomissing Police Department for Alcohol Abuse Prevention

KUTZTOWN, Sept. 3, 2013 – Sen. Judy Schwank and the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board announced today that three local colleges, Kutztown Borough, and the Wyomissing Police Department will share a combined $150,000 to help minors avoid the temptation of underage drinking and alcohol abuse.

Kutztown University is receiving $40,000 for the program while Kutztown Borough is getting a $36,615 grant. The PLCB’s grant to Albright College is for $27,254.  Wyomissing Borough Police Department will receive $24,478.  Penn State-Berks is getting $20,065.

“Television commercials and internet ads make it look like drinking is a cool thing to do, but when alcohol is consumed irresponsibly and illegally, the results are costly, tragic and sometimes deadly,” Schwank said.

The PLCB’s Bureau of Alcohol Education will pay the grants over a two-year period.

One-hundred-and-fifteen organizations applied for a share of the board’s $2.1 million program. Kutztown’s borough and university, the Wyomissing Borough Police Department, as well as Albright and PSU-Berks are five of the 61 entities that won funding.

“There is a responsibility that comes with drinking alcohol,” Schwank said. “With the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board’s investments, we are taking positive steps to make sure everyone understands this expectation. And, we are working to make sure that our young adults who are not yet legally allowed to consume beer, wine and liquor wait until they are 21 to do so.”

With this newest round of funding, the PLCB has invested more than $10 million to more than 250 schools, colleges, law enforcement departments and community organizations throughout Pennsylvania since 1999.

Officials from Kutztown Borough and its police department, Kutztown University, the PLCB, Albright College, Penn State Berks Campus, the Reading Police Department, and the Wyomissing Borough Police Department joined Schwank at today’s press conference.
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Two Schwank Measures Boosting PA Cities, Emergency Responders Now Law

HARRISBURG, Aug. 19, 2013 – Sen. Judy Schwank’s legislative efforts to help struggling Pennsylvania cities and cash-strapped emergency responders bore fruit today as a bill she worked to make significant, positive change was signed into law by the governor.

House Bill 465, the state’s tax code, creates City Revitalization and Improvement Zones in Pennsylvania. Sen. Schwank successfully led the effort to make the zones available to more Pennsylvania communities, including Reading, Lancaster, York and Bethlehem.

“There are many cities the size of Reading that were not covered under the initial proposal,” Schwank (D-Berks) said. “I worked to make sure they had the option to participate in a new program that could provide significant economic development and a way out for cities struggling with declining property values, job loss and escalating crime.”

City Revitalization and Improvement Zones, or CRIZs, will be funded with public bonds issued by a local municipal authority. The bond payments will be covered by local and state tax revenue raised within the zone.

Schwank’s change opened the program to all cities with populations exceeding 30,000 and it includes one pilot zone in a borough or township.

Up to two cities a year could join the program beginning in 2016. However, two cities and the borough/township pilot could establish zones sooner now that the law has been signed and implemented.

“We have significant work to do to help Pennsylvania’s great cities and towns return to prominence. City Revitalization and Improvement Zones happened because of bipartisan support and the collective belief that this new economic development tool will make a difference,” Schwank said.

CRIZ guidelines will be published by Oct. 31.

Another significant part of HB 465 creates a property transfer tax exemption for fire departments and other emergency response companies when they merge or consolidate.

The senator worked with Rep. Ryan Mackenzie (R-Berks) on the proposal after the Barto, Bally and Bechtelsville fire companies merged to form the Eastern Berks Fire Department (Company 97) and were slapped with a $17,000 transfer tax bill after deeding their stations to the new company.

Schwank said emergency responders working to become better stewards of precious financial resources should not be penalized after they take action to improve accountability and performance.

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