Levittown, PA|News|
Survey: Pennsylvanians Want Better Roads, Don’t Want to Pay for Them
A 2011 report said fully funding transportation infrastructure projects would cost the average driver about $2.50 per week.

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.
A 2011 report said fully funding transportation infrastructure projects would cost the average driver about $2.50 per week.

A WINNING BET: Pennsylvania officials say the state will end up with $50 million in new revenues for next year’s budget from the lottery privatization deal.
Here are the most popular local stories from Patch during the week.
Pennsylvania remains one of only two states where the government operates a monopoly on liquor sales.
Pennies on the Dollar: The Pennsylvania Turnpike spends more money on debt than on maintenance.
THE BRITISH ARE COMING: Pennsylvania senators interview Camelot Global Services about its plans to take over operation of the Pennsylvania Lottery.
The National Weather Service forecast calls for sleet and rain Tuesday night into Wednesday in Bucks and Montgomery, with snow accumulation into the Lehigh Valley and farther north.
Corrections Secretary John Wetzel said Pennsylvania will save $23 million from the closure of two older prisons and the opening of a newer facility
Officials from utility companies across Pennsylvania got a pat on the back from the PUC for their response to Sandy.
WHO’S THE WINNER: Should Pennsylvania privatize the state lottery?
Here are the most popular local stories from Patch during the week.
Find the cheapest gas in the Doylestown area.
TURNPIKE: Drivers are paying more to use the Pennsylvania Turnpike, but the executives charged with running the highway are spending those toll dollars on expensive meals and hotel rooms, without accountability or transparency.
Find the cheapest gas in Hatboro and Horsham.
This chart from AFSCME Council 13 says that keeping the Pennsylvania Lottery state-run can generate at least $1.5 billion more in profits than Camelot’s proposal.