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[quote="Guest"]The state has not passed their 2009-2010 which was supposed to be effective in July. If a budget agreement is not met, many services across the state will be impacted until the budget is resolved. This is not a decision by Philadelphia to closing the libraries. [b]Pennsylvania governor ready to veto budget plan[/b] By Jon Hurdle Reuters Saturday, September 12, 2009 3:10 PM HARRISBURG, Pennsylvania (Reuters) - Pennsylvania Governor Ed Rendell said on Saturday he is ready to veto a bipartisan budget plan proposed by lawmakers to end a 10-week deadlock because it is out of balance and contains cuts to education and healthcare spending. Rendell said the $27.9 billion plan, announced on Friday by three of Pennsylvania's four legislative caucuses, contains unrealistic revenue assumptions, and would lead to a budget deficit of more than $1 billion by fiscal 2010-2011. The Democratic governor, who argues the budget cannot be balanced without additional revenue, is at loggerheads with Republican and some Democratic lawmakers who refuse to accept higher taxes and insist the budget can meet a legal requirement for balance through spending cuts alone. "This is an unworkable plan based on numbers that don't balance out," Rendell said, quoting state House Republican Leader Sam Smith, whose caucus has not signed on to the plan. "He is dead right." Pennsylvania is the only U.S. state that has yet to agree a budget for the 2009-2010 fiscal year that began on July 1. Like other U.S. states, Pennsylvania has suffered a sharp fall in tax revenue during the recession, and has to fill a projected $3.2 billion deficit to balance its budget this year. Since July 1, the state has halted around $13 billion in funding for schools, social services and other agencies because of the budget stalemate, forcing some school districts to borrow to make up the shortfall. Rendell on August 5 signed a partial budget that allowed employees to be paid but stopped most other state spending until a budget deal can be reached. At a rare weekend news conference, Rendell said the latest plan failed to meet his preconditions for a budget that was balanced in the current and next fiscal years, and contained no further cuts to health and education spending. He said the "three-caucus" plan contains $147 million in cuts to education that he would not accept, and assumes an additional $247 million in education funding from federal stimulus money that made no allowance for the end of that funding after two years. The plan makes an over-optimistic estimate for economic growth, and assumes twice as much revenue from natural gas leases as expected by his administration, the governor said. He attacked a projection of $100 million in revenue from taxing some gaming as "ludicrous." Erik Arneson, a spokesman for the majority Senate Republicans, said lawmakers who authored the plan stood by their figures. "We are very confident in the budget and the revenue projections," he said. "The governor feels upset and angry because he wants higher taxes." (Editing by Mohammad Zargham) [b]Plan C Information URGENT MESSAGE TO ALL PHILADELPHIANS [/b] We deeply regret to inform you that due to the lack of State budget authority, the City of Philadelphia may no longer have the funds to provide a full range of critical services, severely impacting our residents, businesses and visitors. Beginning October 2, without State approval to resolve our funding crisis, the City will be forced to cease operations at all Libraries, Recreation Centers and Fairmount Park. Curbside trash collection will be reduced from every week to every other week. For an updated listing of possible changes to City services, click here. Please continue to check this site for updates as we monitor this very difficult situation. If you have additional questions about changes to any city service, please contact Philly311 by dialing "3-1-1" from your phone between the hours of 8 am and 8 pm or email us at philly311@phila.gov[/quote]
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Guest
Posted: Sun, Sep 27 2009, 12:06 am EDT
Post subject: Re: More on the library
Great Digital International Children's Library, just press the READ THIS BOOK above the book picture to get to the all the free books. Great if your child also can speak multi-languages
http://en.childrenslibrary.org/
Quote:
The mission of the International Children's Digital Library Foundation (ICDL Foundation) is to support the world's children in becoming effective members of the global community - who exhibit tolerance and respect for diverse cultures, languages and ideas -- by making the best in children's literature available online free of charge. The Foundation pursues its vision by building a digital library of outstanding children's books from around the world and supporting communities of children and adults in exploring and using this literature through innovative technology designed in close partnership with children for children.
Guest
Posted: Tue, Sep 22 2009, 2:18 pm EDT
Post subject: Re: More on the library
Quote:
of course with "Green Energy", the "con" party will look at the short-term costs, while the "pro" party will look at the long-term impact.
BOTH of these factors should be looked at by anyone before deciding whether they will be "pro" or "con".
Guest
Posted: Tue, Sep 22 2009, 11:37 am EDT
Post subject: Re: More on the library
By the way, did you see that tonight there is a program at Cranbury Public Library on this very topic:
Solar Power Seminar presented by 4BestSolar
When:
Tue, Sep 22, 2009 7:00 PM - Tue, Sep 22, 2009 8:00 PM
Where:
Cranbury Public Library
Map
During this free informational seminar, you will learn how new solar incentives will pay for your system. Become informed about the 30% federal tax refund off the cost of a solar based system as well as up to $17,500 in NJ State rebate. Moving to a solar powered system can also increase you home value without a rise in property tax, while earning credits as your utility meter runs backwards! Attend this free seminar to learn even more.
Guest
Posted: Tue, Sep 22 2009, 11:02 am EDT
Post subject: Re: More on the library- solar pannels?
me wrote:
Guest wrote:
why?
I think Guest was thinking about color green.
Need to know the savings on electric bills vs. the costs of installation and maintenance.
of course with "Green Energy", the "con" party will look at the short-term costs, while the "pro" party will look at the long-term impact.
Maybe we can get a wind-turbine where the old water tower was, and additional solar panels on the ballfield. Already have a fence up.
me
Posted: Tue, Sep 22 2009, 9:07 am EDT
Post subject: Re: More on the library- solar pannels?
Guest wrote:
why?
I think Guest was thinking about color green.
Need to know the savings on electric bills vs. the costs of installation and maintenance.
Guest
Posted: Tue, Sep 22 2009, 8:07 am EDT
Post subject: Re: More on the library- solar pannels?
why?
Guest
Posted: Tue, Sep 22 2009, 7:43 am EDT
Post subject: Re: More on the library
Instead of a library, can we get solar panels on top of the school?
Guest
Posted: Tue, Sep 22 2009, 1:04 am EDT
Post subject: Re: More on the library
Philadelphia Free Library System saved!
A massive letter-writing and email campaign has saved Philadelphia's Free Library System from closure, just days before it was scheduled to shut forever:
Just minutes ago, the Pennsylvania State senate passed bill 1828 by a vote of 32 to 17. For all of you who have been following the saga over the city's budget crisis, this is indeed the legislation that was needed for the City of Philadelphia to avoid the "Doomsday" Plan C budget scenario, which would have resulted in the layoff of 3,000 city employees and forced the closing of all libraries.
We are enormously grateful to everyone who advocated on our behalf. More than 2,000 letters to state legislators were collected from our libraries, and countless others made calls and sent emails underscoring how important public libraries are to the economic, educational and social life of our city. We also thank our incredible library staff, who despite the threat of imminent layoffs continued to provide excellent service to the thousands of people who use one of the 54 libraries in our system.
Breaking News - Legislation to keep libraries open passes! (via Consumerist)
Jay T.
Posted: Wed, Sep 16 2009, 7:18 pm EDT
Post subject: Re: More on the library
Off topic, I know. I'm a Dan Brown fan and my wife was kind enough to buy the book for me the first day it went on sale. I have to say this book is excellent. I'm about half way done with it already. If you liked his other books this one will not disappoint.
Guest
Posted: Wed, Sep 16 2009, 4:29 pm EDT
Post subject: Re: More on the library
Dan Brown (author of Da Vinci Code) his new book's digital version on Kindle is outselling Hardcover for now. So its an indicator of how books will be consumed in the not tooo distant future as bigger iphones, laptops and even other eReaders are still in its infancy but gaining fast as the preferred reading medium.
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13506_3-10354453-17.html?tag=newsEditorsPicksArea.0
Guest
Posted: Tue, Sep 15 2009, 8:06 pm EDT
Post subject: Re: More on the library
Either one. I have the same TV I have had the last 10 years, the same car since 2003. I have a savings account and little credit card debt. I have a mortgage, but no home equity line. My wife says I am frugal, I say I am cheap. Yet, we save little money each year since 2006 actually when our taxes jumped.
Funny enough though the town and state think I am rich and if I had adhered to their standards of spending I could have bought a new TV and Car. As my taxes went up over 8,000 since 2006, my sewer bill went from 84 to 240 this quarter and I have not had a raise in 2 years. So apparently while I am trying to save the town is treating me like daddy warbucks. So what if I have less money, the town dictates spending and I have to comply or leave my home. However, if I am trying to save and get concerned about town and state spending because it's putting me and a lot of others in the danger zone I am an evil conservative.
So if you worry about your income or spending your an evil conservative. If you're a liberal then you have to enjoy spending regardless of the harm it does to you personally and doesn't matter if you control it or not. If you're an evil conservative you hate COAH. If you're a liberal you have to love COAH regardless of what it does to our town. According to those standards which is what was stated above about anal rentative conservatives then even the most ardent liberals I know in town are evil conservatives because they are concerned about their money and town spending and they oppose COAH.
Although, I would gladly change my tune if someone would give me a job with so much money that I don't care where it goes.
Guest
Posted: Tue, Sep 15 2009, 7:54 pm EDT
Post subject: Re: More on the library
Guest wrote:
...last I checked I wasn't throwing money away on the new plasma TV, the new car, or the other items that would be great to have because I want to live within my means. So if being cost concious means I am conservative and being liberal then by definition is the exact opposite, sign me up.
For which one? The TV or the new car?
Guest
Posted: Tue, Sep 15 2009, 6:10 pm EDT
Post subject: Re: More on the library
What's up with the random post, Joe? Hittin' the bottle early today?
Guest
Posted: Tue, Sep 15 2009, 6:09 pm EDT
Post subject: Re: More on the library
So to ensure I understand you correctly, you'd rather have a TC like we have today then that is all Democrat and costing us big time. So we shouldn't worry about our money? We shouldn't worry about ballfields, large sewer bills, no planning. And you'd rather have a state like we have today run by liberals who want COAH, consolidation, are making us the 50th worst state for business which costs us jobs? Because the only way out of this mess is to vote for conservatives.
You're bashing conservatives, but last I checked I wasn't throwing money away on the new plasma TV, the new car, or the other items that would be great to have because I want to live within my means. So if being cost concious means I am conservative and being liberal then by definition is the exact opposite, sign me up.
joe the plumber
Posted: Tue, Sep 15 2009, 5:55 pm EDT
Post subject: Re: More on the library
Fed up wrote:
I gave this message board one more chance today. This is my last visit -- all I ever see are angry conservatives (no offense to rational conservatives) ranting about taxes and their opposition to change of any sort. Why such vitriol? I thought this board might provide me with more information about my town. Instead it's just a bunch of angry jerks pontificating on every given subject. Enjoy arguing with one another, folks.
Thats what it means to be a conservative.
An anally retentive, grumpy, old fart who would squeeze the buffalo off the nickel. It's always the ones with money who complain the most about money.
Ever notice that.
publius
Posted: Tue, Sep 15 2009, 5:52 pm EDT
Post subject: Re: More on the library
I've told you before. Just have the library get a bunch of Kindles and then we can burn the books for heat!