On November 21, 2013 Philly Speaks Out held a forum at Temple University for gubernatorial candidates. It was a non-partisan event, not a debate. Gov. Corbett was invited but did not attend. The moderator was Rev. Mark Tyler of Mother Bethel AME Church. Rev. Tyler is a founding member of POWER, one of the sponsoring organizations.
In addition to POWER the even was sponsored by: 1199C/AFSCME, 32BJ SEIU, AFSCME DC 47, Action United, Fight for Philly, PA Working Families, PASNAP, PCAPS, and SEIU Healthcare PA
Candidates attending:
Former DEP Secretary John Hanger
State Treasurer Rob McCord (campaign site: www.robmccord.com)
Former DEP Secretary Katie McGinty
Congresswoman Allyson Schwartz
Former Revenue Secretary Tom Wolf
I did not attend in person but watched the webcast of the event. These are my rough notes from the forum. It is not intended as a transcript. As always, I apologize in advance for any errors or misconceptions. Interested readers are encouraged to visit candidates' website for further information on the candidates' views and policies. A few personal observations are given at the end.
Instructions for candidates:
3 minutes each to answer questions.
Please don’t thank us – go right to the issues. Introduces candidates. Corbett invited but did not respond. [blogger’s
note: on the last question candidates
were only given 2 minutes to respond]
Four issues, first testimony from audience, then framing of
comments, followed by candidates’ responses.
[note: I did not take notes
during the audience testimonies as it was primarily personal stories]
First issue:
Education
Q: 1) Reversing
problems requires bold leadership and policy changes, “equitable” funding
formula, 2) increase revenue for public education and social services, cut
corporate tax loopholes, drilling, 3) charter school accountability, 4) invest
in schools not prisons, and 5) abolish the School Reform Commission. Will you support these items and what will
your agenda be?
Schwartz: Pleased to
be here, not pleased that Corbett is absent.
Not a surprise; he has been absent on our values. PA has great resources yet Corbett has led us
to 49th place in job creation.
We cannot be a great state without leadership, vision, and a commitment
to the state. I have high goals, high
expectations, and have always found a way to move forward. We have to start with public education. My mother was an immigrant. She arrived here alone at age 16, and was
sent to Philadelphia because the city had great public schools. She graduated from Girls High and went to
Temple but could not afford to finish.
My sons went to Central High School, a public school in
Philadelphia. As governor I would make
public education a priority. I would
support your agenda, abolish the SRC, rein in charters, fair funding, pre-school
and full-day kindergarten. Invest in
public education; invest in the future.
Wolf: I am from York
County. How can we allow this
(references tweet from parent about no school librarian) to happen. Tom Corbett has taken education off the front
burner, off the stove. I love learning,
and have a PhD from MIT. Daughters got a
great education in York County. We are
all in this together. Public education
is a shared enterprise. As governor if
we are going to have a bright future we must have great schools. We need fair and equitable funding, tax
shale, universal pre-k, charter accountability, good education equals good
jobs, connect higher education with worlds of work. As an employer I understand we must have an
educated workforce.
McCord: The most
important thing for me to highlight is education, not just as policy but it is
personal. Think of a single parent who
has a job but a bad job, mistreated by her employer but wants a good future for
her kids – that is my mom’s story. She
went through a bad divorce when I was four.
I went from being a slow reader to a scholarship at Harvard. Some have a poverty of purpose. This is the #1 reason I am running. Tom Corbett took $1 billion from the
schools. We need to review the funding
system, fully fund higher education, repair the 529 plan, fund community
colleges, allow unions to provide associates degrees, fully fund early
childhood education. Yield for decades.
Hanger: Nothing wrong
with public education but the governor is trying to privatize it. I will stop this cold. I arrived in the US at age 12 from
Ireland. Public schools prepared
me. We must attack poverty to prepare
people for education. As a law graduate
I worked with low income families. Start
with charters, not preparing poor kids, stealing money from public
education. We need to shut down poorly
performing charters, including almost all cyber charters. It is an attack on unions to attack public
schools. I will abolish the SRC. We need fair funding. The real problem is the governor trying to
privatize public schools.
McGinty: One morning
in September I was having coffee, reading the paper and saw the beautiful face
of 12 year old LaPortia. She died from
asthma attack on a day when the school nurse wasn’t there. She was the same age as one of my kids. This is not the best for our kids. Problem to solve. Our kids deserve better. Put the spotlight on what is working. Pennsylvania is 4th in reading, 8th
in math. Taking a wrecking ball to
public education is not right. Put a tax
in place to restore money to public education, fair formula, English language
learning, property tax, reform charters so no double dipping. Start early Head Start, pre-day, full day
kindergarten, small classes. Let
teachers teach and students learn.
Second issue:
Retirement security. PA has 4th
oldest population in the US. There are
fewer employer retirement plans.
Q: 1) protecting
pensions for public employees, 2) retirement benefits available to all
workers. California is offering plans
all works can join. [blogger’s note,
this is the Secure Choice Retirement Savings Program] Working Families plan.
McGinty: Yes I will
support this. I am the 9th of
10 kids, dad was a Philadelphia police officer for 35 years. He died last year at 94, and never asked any
of us for a penny. He had a
pension. No one gave him anything; he
earned that pension. We must insist on
these kinds of benefits, make retirement affordable, make health care
affordable, can’t have property taxes go through the roof. The Commonwealth is not paying for public
education, leaving it to be supported by property taxes.
Hanger: Anyone who
has a pension has a legal guarantee that it will be paid. I will not let pension funds be raided. Many in the private sector are not organized
or part of a union, and have no pension or retirement. As a legal services attorney I saw retired
people living on social security. We
need better jobs with higher income while working. Jobs don’t pay for bills today let alone
retirement. Rich are getting a bigger
piece; you are getting a smaller piece.
Raise minimum wage, stand with unions, help people join unions, so we
don’t have to choose between heat, food and medicine.
Schwartz: We need a
Pennsylvania committed to hard work and achievement, that’s what built the
great state we are. I hope to live to
retire and reflect on a fulfilling job.
Retirement is under threat.
Pennsylvania does have one of the largest senior populations. Social security and Medicare are under
threat. In DC I have led the fight
against privatizing social security.
Imagine if we invested in Wall Street in the recession. We have work to do and I will keep working
towards that. Need to meet our
obligations to retirees.
McCord: If retirement
and pensions are the issue I’m your guy.
No one in Pennsylvania has spent more time studying this than I
have. Proud defender of defined benefit
plans. Unions defend defined benefits,
not just for members but for all. Proud
of how often I have fought back against Tom Corbett. Defined benefits are more efficient that
401Ks. Defined contribution associations
say otherwise. We need to embrace the
plan in California. It is a “pay me now
or pay me later” world. We can imitate
the 529 plan. Retirement is a woman’s issue
– women are three times more likely to drop into poverty in retirement. [he mentioned a woman in relation to the
California plan but I can’t get the spelling right to find the correct person]
Wolf: I’m an FDR
Democrat. We do not have a pension problem. This is something we share. In my company I work to make sure employees
[missed this]. Lottery is part of the
Department of Revenue, $1 million goes to help the elderly. I worked to improve the lottery. It went to property tax rebates, prescription
drugs. We need to protect public
pensions. Overall compensation
issue. If we want good public employees
we must compete with the private sector.
Health care. I have a 90 year old
mom and 91 year old dad. We need to
ensure all is done to see that all Pennsylvanians have retirement.
Third issue: Jobs
Question: Good jobs,
raising the minimum wage from $7.25 to $10.10, like slaves asking Pharoah for
straw to make bricks. End payday
lending. Guaranteed sick days. All people receiving tax money must pay
workers (including subcontractors) a living wage. Shift from corporate benefits to public
education
McCord: Everything in
the governor’s race relates to jobs. If
we end defined benefits we lose as 90% of that money is spent in
Pennsylvania. Of course we need to
increase the minimum wage, increases the wealth of the middle class, need sick
days, that an efficient thing to do, protect prevailing wage. We can trust safety and quality of
well-trained Pennsylvania workers paid prevailing wage. End payday loans. Everything is about true economic
security. Reasonable wage. Good benefits. Protected workplace.
Schwartz: If we want
to build a prosperous economy in Pennsylvania, steel, railroads, hard work and
innovations, new cures the envy of the world.
Unions spread wages to workers, building industry, prosperity,
innovation. Rebuild Pennsylvania
economy, rebuild and re-grow middle class, cannot succeed without a middle
class. Increase minimum wage, fair pay
for women, prevailing wages, sick leave, use carrot and stick. If public money is given to corporations we
must push them to pay fair wages and benefits.
Use all natural resource to benefit all, use money for education, grow
economic opportunities across the state.
McGinty: Jobs. I’m here to apply for a job. As Secretary of Environmental Protection I
wanted to create new good jobs. We need
clean energy and environment. Let’s
bring these jobs. We were #1 in bringing
solar and wind jobs, good jobs, pay, benefits.
Choosing between the environment and jobs is a false choice, as is
saying wanting a good job risks your current job. To grow the economy we have to put money in
people’s pockets. Living wage. Increase minimum wage, index it to
inflation. Right to organize. Invest in the US. Job training and skills development
programs. These were cut and we need to
restore them. Families need to be able
to afford education. Colleges need to keep
costs under control. Public projects –
jobs going to Pennsylvanians.
Wolf: I’ve created
good jobs. Only PhD forklift operator in
York County. Bought my company, build it
into one of the biggest in its field in the country. Distributed 20 – 30% annually in profits to
employees. Sick days, living wages. First thing we have to do is invest in
education. We need an educated
workforce. Recognize we can compete,
even in manufacturing. We can compete on
price and quality.
Hanger: More jobs and
better jobs need community organization.
If we want paid sick days we need to mobilize. It begins with education, 20,000 educators
lost their jobs. Expand Medicaid. We could have four billion going to our
hospitals, good paying jobs. Green
energy. Create solar and wind jobs. I know how to create these jobs. People have trouble getting a job because of
unfair convictions. We are arresting too
many people for having a joint in their pocket.
We should legalize marijuana.
Stop arresting African American men at five times the rate we arrest whites. That’s how we get schools to jails.
Issue: Health care
Question: 1)
expansion of Medicaid, 2) invest in family health care and maternity care, 3)
stop corporatization of health care, 4) ensure quality care, and 5) ensure long
term care
Wolf: This has become
about politics and it shouldn’t be. The
governor is trying to destroy the president’s health care plan. We absolutely need to expand Medicaid. It is bad for the economy not to have
universal health care.
McGinty: Some issues
are hard but when the federal government offers you $4 billion to give citizens
health care the only answer is yes.
Increase availability and affordability yes. All issues on human dignity.
Schwartz: Hard to
talk about health care in 2 minutes. Personal to all of us. The governor turned down opportunities, not
federal money but our money.
Unacceptable. Take the money and
use it to benefit Pennsylvania. We have
great hospitals, medical schools and nurses.
If you doubt I can do this remember my work on CHIP which became a
national mode. Let’s get it done.
Hanger: Wrong for
people in our state not to have health care.
It is a human right. Yes to
Medicaid expansion but not enough. We
need single payer health care. My wife
is a physician, trained in Philadelphia, and opened a community practice. We need to include mental health treatment
and addiction treatment. My son
committed suicide at age 23 from depression.
McCord: Human rights,
social justice, human dignity, also about efficiency. Ridiculous not to take Medicaid
expansion. Your movement is fighting a
company town program. [missed something
here]. Use new technology, associates
degrees, cut costs, seniors able to stay in their homes. Repair middle class.
Personal observations: The candidates were very gracious. In my opinion far too much time was taken up with announcements from the sponsoring organizations and individual comments ["testimonies"] from the audience. There were a few hecklers in the crowd and at one point two people got onstage with a banner offering their views on a political issue. The forum stopped for a few minutes while they were escorted off stage. Of the candidates Rob McCord was the only one to step away from the podium. Each time he got up to answer the questions he would take the microphone and stand next to it instead of behind it. He is clearly an experienced and enthusiastic speaker.
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