PITTSBURGH: Democratic gubernatorial nominee Dan Onorato announced his support today for a proposed Public Integrity Commission that would serve as an independent, non-partisan body to investigate ethical abuses across state government.
The proposal for a Public Integrity Commission, which would replace the existing Ethics Commission, was announced this morning by a bipartisan group of House members. The 7-member commission would come from a list of names nominated by law school deans, district attorneys and reform groups, and the commission would have broad investigative powers.
“Reform must be a priority for the next Governor,” Onorato said. “It will take an outsider to lead the call for reforming Harrisburg and I am the only candidate in this race who is not part of the broken system.”
Onorato supports a Constitution Convention focused on reforming government and he released his plan to reform Harrisburg last fall, which includes:
· Cutting the size and the cost of the Legislature, and enacting term limits;
· Eliminating per diems, WAMS and the leadership’s slush fund;
· Making the budget process work on-time and with complete transparency – and permanently docking the
Governor and Legislature’s pay for each day if it is ever late;
· Putting limits on campaign contributions; and
· Stopping gerrymandering of legislative districts.
As Allegheny County Executive, Onorato already has a record of reforming government to save taxpayers money and to make the region a place where businesses want to invest and create jobs. Under Onorato’s leadership, Allegheny County consolidated six unnecessary elected positions, cut waste and patronage and made government more efficient. Running the state’s second-largest county, Onorato has enacted six consecutive balanced budgets – each one passing on time and never increasing property taxes.
Speaking of one reform initiative this Spring, Republican gubernatorial nominee Tom Corbett dismissed the role of leadership from the Governor, saying: “The Legislature is going to have to take care of its own house.” [Scranton Times-Tribune, April 4, 2010] And his campaign spokesman has bemoaned the fact that “reform can be difficult to bring about.” [Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, May 2, 2010]
Earlier in the campaign, Corbett responded to one questionnaire by indicating that he “disagrees” that “the number of terms someone can serve in the state legislature should be limited,” noting that “legislative term limits would have the ultimate effect of depriving the voters of an option to return an effective legislator to represent their interests.” [Commonwealth Foundation]
But after Onorato emphasized the importance of reform, Corbett changed his stance. As the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette noted just a week later: “Brian Nutt said Mr. Corbett is willing to discuss term limits and a smaller legislature…” [June 2, 2010]
“I know what needs to be done and how to do it because I have already reformed government in Allegheny County,” said Onorato. “I have a proven commitment to reform and to providing the leadership to get it done.”
January 27, 2010
Dan Onorato Says Philadelphia Decision to Suspend Reassessments Shows Statewide Property Tax System is Broken
Democratic Gubernatorial Candidate Pledges to Fix System if Elected
PHILADELPHIA: Democratic gubernatorial candidate Dan Onorato said today that Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter's decision to put a 2-year stop to property tax reassessments is proof that Pennsylvania's assessment system is broken and needs a statewide solution.
"I have spent years standing up for Allegheny County's homeowners to stop back-door property tax hikes through reassessment," Onorato said. “As Governor, I will do the same for all Pennsylvanians by enacting a statewide fix to our broken property tax system.”
Onorato said that Pennsylvania is one of the only states in the nation where assessment is fully controlled by counties and disparities from one county to another are allowed to fester -- threatening families' economic security and hurting economic and community development.
“Pennsylvania's over-reliance on property taxes hurts our homeowners as well as the quality of education in our schools. That is why I believe we must continue to implement the Legislature's Costing-Out Report to increase the state share of school funding, while simultaneously addressing the broken property tax assessment system,” Onorato said.
"I applaud Mayor Nutter's actions to protect Philadelphia homeowners from unfair and inaccurate reassessment,” closed Onorato. “The residents of all 67 Pennsylvania counties deserve a state law that ensures reassessments are fair, accurate and necessary -- especially during these tough economic times."