SELINSGROVE — State government must reduce taxes and become fiscally responsible to help keep businesses like L/B Water Service in Selinsgrove thriving, says Tom Corbett, state attorney general and Republican gubernatorial candidate.
Pennsylvania has the resources and the people to be No. 1 in the nation in job creation, Corbett said, but that starts with good government leaders.
During a tour Friday, Corbett praised the Selinsgrove company for its business practices, including buying many products manufactured in Pennsylvania.
The company began in 1970 with a single salesman working out of a construction company office.
L/B now has seven locations and more than 100 employees.
“The next governor has to create an economic climate to allow business to grow,” Corbett said.
Gov. Ed Rendell’s administration only stifled them, he said.
Under Rendell, taxes have been raised, and spending and the state debt have increased by 40 percent, he said.
“One of the central problems of Harrisburg isn’t a revenue problem,” Corbett said. “It’s a spending problem.”
Jobs lost under Rendell’s leadership now total 237,000, and unemployment in Pennsylvania is at 9.2 percent — the worst since the 1980s. The state also ranks at the top in the nation for taxing businesses.
Corbett said he has signed a “no-tax pledge.”
“My opponent has not done that, and I don’t believe he will,” he said of Allegheny County Executive Dan Onorato, the Democratic candidate for governor.
Corbett also plans to reduce regulations that stifle business growth, while also recognizing the importance of protecting the environment. It’s the private sector, he added, that does the most to boost the economy.
Corbett supports tax reform, such as reducing the corporate net income tax, which is the second-highest in the nation; repealing the estate tax and removing the net operating loss cap. He also supports regulatory and legal reforms.
Corbett’s touts fiscal discipline, limited government and free enterprise.
Choices will be made, he promised Friday, to develop a “common-sense budget” in which the revenue at least equals spending.
Referencing the state Department of Welfare, Corbett said the Medicaid department admitted to a 3 percent to 4 percent error rate, meaning about $3 million to $4 million was given to people who didn’t deserve it.
A separate audit by Jack Wagner, state auditor general, revealed a 14 percent error rate, Corbett said.
Corbett’s spokesman, Kevin Harley, said the candidate also supports reducing the number of unnecessary cars in the state fleet and doing what he has done as the attorney general.
The attorney general’s office, Harley said, is smaller than it was when Corbett took office, is facing a hiring freeze and several offices have been closed.
News
Corbett praises Valley firm
He vows to help businesses thrive
- News
-
-
Masked robber hits McClure bank
McCLURE — Police said a man with a handgun entered the MCS bank at 1 E. Specht St. just after 9 a.m., Tuesday and demanded money from a teller before making off with an undisclosed amount of cash.
-
Union County deputy excels at academy
LEWISBURG — Feel safer, Union County: A deputy sheriff received the Michael VanKuren Memorial Award for Defensive Tactics during his recent graduation from the Pennsylvania Deputy Sheriff’s Academy.
-
Shoch too good to lose, Point supervisors say
NORTHUMBERLAND — Point Township Supervisors Randy Yoxheimer and Montie Peters credit attorney Rick Shoch with helping them weather difficult years as they fended off a slew of lawsuits from developers, disgruntled former employees and residents.
-
Two firemen face trial in arsons
DANVILLE — A firefighter said “it kind of hit me hard” after two fellow firemen were charged with setting fires in Montour and Northumberland counties and calling in false alarms in Union County.
-
Lewisburg high school back on drawing board
LEWISBURG — The Lewisburg Area School District is moving forward with a flexible version of its master facilities plan with the possibility that construction, including a new Lewisburg Area High School, could begin as soon as 2015 or as late as 2018.
-
Storms knock out power to more than 700 this afternoon
SUNBURY - More than 700 homes and businesses lost electrical service this afternoon when a line of heavy thunderstorms rolled through the region.
-
Masked gunman robs McClure bank
McCLURE - Police said a man displaying a handgun entered the MCS bank in Mcclure Borough just after 9 a.m., Tuesday and demanded money from a teller before making off with an undisclosed amount of cash.
-
'To Do': Carnival
MILTON -The Lions Carnival held from 6 to 9 p.m. May 30 at Brown Avenue Park.
-
Electronic fingerprinting soon needed to provide long-term elder care
HARRISBURG — The Pennsylvania Department of Aging will soon begin using an electronic fingerprinting process to screen people applying to work in a long-term care facility or home health care agency.
-
Buggy driver falls asleep in Lancaster County; collides with bus
NEW PROVIDENCE — Pennsylvania State Police say the 15-year-old driver of a horse and buggy fell asleep at the reins and collided with a school bus.
-
17-year-old New Columbia boy in critical condition after Sunday crash
WATSONTOWN -- State police said a 17-year-old New Columbia boy is in the hospital in critical condition after the car he was driving crossed the center line on Route 405 and slammed into an oncoming car.
-
60 and Counting
The singer John Prine wrote these lines in a song titled ‘The Late John Garfield Blues: “An old man sleeps with his conscience at night. Young kids sleep with their dreams.”
- More News Headlines
-



