Capital Report

Pennsylvania State Capitol building in Harrisburg. Photo: Shutterstock

Following is a listing of executive and legislative action for the week of Jan. 14. Both houses of the General Assembly were in recess at press time, with members of the Pennsylvania Senate and state House of Representatives scheduled to return to session Jan. 28.

Criminal Justice



Auditor General Eugene DePasquale on Jan. 17 announced his plan to produce a special report on the benefits to society and savings to taxpayers resulting from criminal justice reform.

He said Pennsylvania government is facing rising prison costs—50 percent from 2006 to 2015, from $1.6 billion to $2.4 billion—and has the highest incarceration rate in the northeastern United States, with an imprisoned population of about 47,000. DePasquale said his office will examine whether sentencing non-violent offenders to prison is putting a strain on the correctional system and driving extra costs to taxpayers.

“Nearly 70 percent of prison sentences are handed out for misdemeanor crimes, which means more than 30,000 people who committed low-level, usually non-violent crimes are clogging our prisons,” DePasquale said. “Prison time should be reserved for more serious offenders and those who pose a threat to society.”

DePasquale said his office will also explore topics including plans to explore including the availability of legal counsel for all defendants; whether reforms are needed to the Board of Pardons or its processes, and the role that cash bail plays in keeping people incarcerated unnecessarily before trial.

The auditor general’s special report on criminal justice reform is expected to be completed by fall.

Higher Education



Daniel Greenstein, a former leader with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, was formally sworn in Jan. 16 as the fifth chancellor of Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education, which governs the 14 state-owned and -operated universities.

In his “State of the System” address after the ceremony, Greenstein called for greater use of public-private partnerships and more sharing among the campuses, with students on any campus being able to take any course offered across the system, according to media reports.

Greenstein, has been on the job since Sept. 4, said his goal was “fundamental transformation and redesign” of the higher education system. He said sharing faculty, staff and students would be more cost-efficient and offer a broader range of choices to students.

Wolf, speaking at the ceremony, said Greenstein would deliver “a new vision of our public universities.”

Greenstein came to Pennsylvania after leading the postsecondary success strategy at the Gates Foundation, helping other higher education leaders to raise educational-attainment levels and to promote economic mobility. Before joining the foundation, he was vice provost for academic planning and programs for the University of California system.

The state university system serves nearly 100,000 students, 90 percent of whom are Pennsylvania residents. It has struggled over the past decade with decreasing enrollment and reductions in state funding.