Levittown, PA|News|
Governor’s Budget Plans Falls Flat with House Dems
This next budget could bring big changes to Pennsylvania – if lawmakers are convinced of Gov. Tom Corbett’s vision.

I spent a good part of my adult life leaving the Lehigh Valley. I've lived and worked in Turkey, China and England, but the Valley seems to be my center of gravity. After graduating from William Allen High School and Kutztown University, I went to graduate school at Emerson College in Boston and then City University in London. Traveling abroad changed me in many ways, especially in how I think of other cultures and my own. But it also made me homesick. After more than a decade of working as a teacher and journalist overseas, I returned home, to Allentown. Since then, I've been a journalism teacher and an editor for community newspapers. And now with Patch, it's clear there's no place like home.
This next budget could bring big changes to Pennsylvania – if lawmakers are convinced of Gov. Tom Corbett’s vision.

Film production in Pennsylvania can get tax credits if they spend 60 percent of their budget in the state.
Pennsylvania spends nearly $5.5 billion on basic education subsidies to school districts, but some say the dollars should be sorted differently.
Pennsylvania received 563 reports of teacher misconduct in 2012, more than double the average 250 complaints it received in the previous three years.
Pennsylvania State Sen. Mike Folmer, R-Lebanon, says public dollars should “follow the student” in basic and higher education.
Republicans nationwide are proposing to change the electoral college system, but the plans aren’t holding much water while the party is attacked for its motivations.
Pennsylvania’s Insurance Commissioner, told lawmakers in the state House that the cost of health insurance for young people may double in coming years.
Pennsylvania lawmakers descended into Harrisburg once again this week to hammer over details of the proposed 2013-2014 spending plan, but most fireworks happened while discussing the administration’s lofty policy-change proposals.
Find the cheapest gas in Hatboro and Horsham.
Pennsylvania’s two public pension systems are a combined $41 billion in the red.
Pennsylvania State Rep. John Taylor, R-Philadelphia, holds the key to the future of the liquor privatization plan.
Right now, candidates for political office in Pennsylvania can mail in campaign finance reports, or file electronically.
Tableleaf: Pennsylvania has its own private brand of wine that has made more than $7 million since it was put on the shelves in 2011.
Prevailing wage laws drive up the cost of public projects, but unions favor them because they provide higher pay for workers.
House Majority Leader Mike Turzai will introduce a bill on March 4 to shut the state liquor stores in favor of private retailers.
It's free to look. Check out these open house events in Bensalem, Levittown and Lower Southampton.