As Harrisburg exits receivership, a bid to leave Act 47, too
Pennsylvania’s capital city is poised to exit state receivership at the end of the week, after more than two years under the watchful eye of state officials seeking to deliver it from hundreds of millions of dollars in debt.
This story was first published by partner station WITF in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
Pennsylvania’s capital city is poised to exit state receivership at the end of the week, after more than two years under the watchful eye of state officials seeking to deliver it from hundreds of millions of dollars in debt.
Earlier this week, a state judge ruled the city has emerged from fiscal emergency as the result of a bond deal to unload its most oppressive debt and a plan to balance the city’s budget for at least the next few years. Harrisburg remains in the state’s Act 47 program for financially distressed municipalities. Mayor Eric Papenfuse said the state receiver’s team has put the city on a path to leave that program, too.
“I think it is absolutely achievable. I certainly hope and expect it to be within my first term,” said Papenfuse. “And I think that will be another milestone of almost unprecedented proportions for a third class city like Harrisburg to emerge.”
Harrisburg entered state receivership upon passage of a state law in 2011 empowering the governor to declare a fiscal emergency in the city and put a court-approved person in charge of its recovery.
At the time, the law’s author, former Republican state Sen. Jeffrey Piccola of Dauphin County, said it gave some teeth to the state’s Act 47 program. On Wednesday, Gov. Corbett agreed the law was instrumental in spurring Harrisburg’s fiscal recovery.
“I think we’ve set somewhat of a template of how we can go through this process and hopefully get these cities out of Act 47 as we work on trying to grow their economy and deal with the issues that they’re facing,” said Gov. Corbett. But he added that he doesn’t think state receivership is the missing tool for other cities still in Act 47.
Neither does Harrisburg’s receiver, William Lynch, a retired Air Force major general. Lynch said he doesn’t favor the “concept” of state takeover to bring cities out of Act 47, adding that Harrisburg’s debt situation was unique – tied up in multiple refinancing of a trash incinerator, among other things. Other cities in Act 47 face different challenges – namely, underfunded municipal pension obligations.
Across the state on Wednesday, municipal pensions were the subject of a press conference called by Pittsburgh Mayor Bill Peduto and state Auditor General Eugene DePasquale. They’re calling on state lawmakers to help municipalities address unfunded pension liabilities. DePasquale said that, taken together, Pennsylvania’s municipal unfunded obligations amount to $6.7 billion.
“Pittsburgh, Scranton, Johnstown, New Castle, and others – all of those are [Act} 47 communities, and all of those have significant pension liabilities,” said Fred Reddig, who oversees the Act 47 program from within the state’s Department of Community and Economic Development.
By contrast, Harrisburg’s pension fund is relatively sound, Reddig said.
Six boroughs have emerged from Act 47, but no city of Harrisburg’s size has ever left the program after entering it. “It’s possible,” Reddig said, when asked if the capital city could wipe its hands clean of the program anytime soon. “I’m saying, the next four years – it is possible, yes.”
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