Pennsylvania Stands Alone: Only US State Without Budget After 100 Days as Schools Miss $3.76 Billion
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Pennsylvania stands alone as the only US state without a 2025-26 budget more than 100 days past deadline, forcing all 500 school districts to wait on $3.76 billion in unpaid state funding while the partisan deadlock between the Democratic House and Republican Senate leaves 1.7 million students facing service cuts, program eliminations, and schools borrowing money at 4.5% interest just to keep operating.
TL;DR
Pennsylvania is the only US state without a 2025-26 budget after 100+ days.
School districts have missed $3.76 billion in state payments through September.
Districts are borrowing millions at 4.5% interest just to operate.
The typical district keeps only 87 days of reserves—now exceeded.
House Democrats passed compromise budget but Senate Republicans won't vote.
1.7 million students face service cuts and program eliminations.
Mental health programs, foster care, and county services also affected.
The National Outlier Nobody Talks About
Pennsylvania has become the only state in America unable to pass a 2025-26 fiscal year budget, leaving all 500 school districts waiting on $3.76 billion in unpaid state funding as the partisan deadlock reached 100 days on October 8, 2025. While every other state successfully completed their budgets by summer, Pennsylvania’s gridlock between the Democratic House and Republican Senate has forced school districts to drain reserves, borrow money at 4.5% interest rates, and prepare for service cuts that will directly impact 1.7 million students across the Commonwealth.
Pennsylvania’s budget crisis isn’t just late—it’s unprecedented in 2025. All 49 other US states passed their fiscal year budgets on time, making Pennsylvania’s failure an exceptional governance breakdown rather than typical partisan squabbling. The June 30 deadline came and went, followed by July, August, and September without resolution.
As of late September, Pennsylvania school districts have missed three full monthly payments totaling $3.76 billion in expected state subsidies for basic education, special education, transportation, and other critical services. This figure continues to grow by hundreds of millions of dollars each month the impasse continues, with total impact across all affected entities—counties, nonprofits, social services—likely exceeding $5 billion.
The typical Pennsylvania school district keeps only 87 days of operating expenses in reserve. September 25 marked exactly the 87th day of the fiscal year without a budget, meaning many districts have now exhausted their savings entirely and must choose between borrowing money or cutting services.
When Schools Become Borrowers: The Real Cost of Political Dysfunction
School districts across Pennsylvania are being forced into difficult financial decisions with real costs. Lancaster School District approved a $35 million loan. River Valley School District in Indiana County borrowed $5 million. Districts taking these emergency loans face 4.5% interest rates with no guarantee the state will reimburse their borrowing costs—meaning local taxpayers will absorb hundreds of thousands of dollars in interest charges caused by state dysfunction.
The Pennsylvania Coalition Against Domestic Violence discovered their authorized $5.8 million loan would cost $260,000 in interest, making it financially untenable and forcing potential service cuts instead. Meanwhile, the state’s mental health crisis deepens: suicide ranks as the second-leading cause of death for children ages 10-14 and third for teens 15-18, yet the programs designed to help them face funding uncertainty.
Pittsburgh Public Schools alone is missing $50.6 million in expected state payments and projects it could run out of money entirely by mid-October. The district has applied for a $28.7 million state advance, but CFO Ron Joseph warns that relying on reserves is unsustainable. Across Allegheny County, 43 school districts are collectively waiting on $210 million.
State Treasurer Stacy Garrity, the leading Republican gubernatorial candidate, announced a $500 million short-term loan program in September to provide relief to entities affected by the impasse. However, the program sparked immediate controversy. Garrity’s loans are available only to county governments and Head Start providers—not school districts, despite schools being the largest affected group. Critics also questioned whether the Treasurer’s office even has legal authority to make loans rather than investments. Initially offering loans at 4.5% interest, the program proved too expensive for many providers.
Author Quote"
This isn’t partisan gridlock—it’s a complete abandonment of governing responsibility. When Pennsylvania stands alone among all 50 states as the only one unable to pass a budget, we’re not looking at political differences, we’re witnessing systemic dysfunction that treats 1.7 million students as collateral damage in an ideological battle. No child should have their education held hostage while adults play political games.
"
Laura LurnsLearning Success Expert
How the MSM Has Misled
Multiple Sources: "Tensions ran high with lawmakers from both parties" — This false equivalence framing presents the crisis as typical partisan brinksmanship when Pennsylvania is literally the ONLY state in America without a budget. The "both sides" narrative obscures that the House has passed multiple compromise budgets while the Senate refuses to vote.
CSV Headline: "$1.75 billion in missed state payments" — This significantly understates the crisis. By late September, school districts alone had missed $3.76 billion, more than double the headline figure, with total impact across all entities exceeding $5 billion and growing monthly.
News Coverage: Most headlines focus on "100 days" without explaining Pennsylvania is the ONLY state nationwide without a budget. All 49 other states passed budgets on time, making this an exceptional governance failure rather than normal delay. This critical context is routinely buried or omitted.
Administration Statements: "Negotiations are continuing and dialogue is respectful and productive" — These optimistic official statements contradict reality: Pennsylvania stands alone nationally, the Senate has met only 32 times in 246 days, and private Capitol sources now predict no deal until December. These statements deflect criticism rather than reflect truth.
Treasurer Coverage: Media presented Garrity's $500M loan program as helpful relief without adequately explaining it's politically selective (excludes school districts despite them being most affected), legally questionable (Treasurer may lack lending authority), and shifts interest costs to taxpayers unless separate legislation passes.
Partisan Deadlock: When Compromise Becomes Impossible
The budget impasse centers on a fundamental disagreement about Pennsylvania’s fiscal future. Gov. Josh Shapiro originally proposed a $51.5 billion budget in February—up from $48.3 billion the previous year—to account for rising Medicaid costs and continued aid for underfunded school districts.
State Senate Republicans, emboldened by an increasingly conservative membership, insist on flat funding at current levels: $47.6 billion. They argue any additional spending endangers Pennsylvania’s long-term fiscal health, despite the state having almost $11 billion in cash reserves (though these reserves have shrunk as spending has outpaced revenue in recent years).
House Democrats have compromised repeatedly, bringing their proposal down from $51.6 billion to $50.6 billion to $50.3 billion—the version they passed 105-98 on the 100th day of the impasse. Three Republicans joined all Democrats in support. But Senate Republicans won’t schedule a vote, with Senate Majority Leader Joe Pittman saying the chamber wouldn’t return “until there is a reasonable proposal to put in front of members of our caucus.” The Senate has met only 32 times in the 246 days since the budget was introduced.
Senate President Pro Tempore Kim Ward claimed Democrats want “their tax increase,” though neither Gov. Shapiro nor House Democrats have proposed broad tax hikes like sales or income increases. Both sides support limited new revenue from regulating recreational cannabis or slot-like skill games, but Senate Republicans face deep internal divisions on these proposals.
This isn’t Pennsylvania’s first budget crisis—it’s part of a troubling pattern. Twelve of the last 25 Pennsylvania budgets have been late. The previous major impasse in 2015 lasted nine months under then-Gov. Tom Wolf, and county officials say they still haven’t fully recovered from that financial disruption. Private Capitol sources told reporters they now expect no budget deal until December at the earliest.
Key Takeaways:
1
Pennsylvania is the only state without a budget: All 49 other US states successfully passed their 2025-26 budgets on time, making Pennsylvania's 100+ day impasse an unprecedented governance failure rather than typical partisan gridlock.
2
$3.76 billion in missed school payments: Pennsylvania school districts have missed three full monthly payments totaling $3.76 billion through September, with the total growing by hundreds of millions monthly across all affected entities including counties and nonprofits.
3
Districts exhausting reserves and borrowing millions: The typical Pennsylvania district keeps only 87 days of expenses in reserve—the impasse exceeded this threshold September 25, forcing districts to borrow at 4.5% interest rates with Lancaster taking $35M loans and River Valley $5M.
Beyond Schools: The Cascading Crisis Across Pennsylvania
While education funding dominates headlines, the budget impasse affects far more than schools. Pennsylvania’s 67 counties are bracing for missed payments funding mental and behavioral health services, child protective services, intellectual disability supports, drug and alcohol treatment, and homeless assistance.
Armstrong County stopped reimbursements to families providing foster care, closed senior centers, and froze hiring. Westmoreland County announced employee furloughs and park closures. Counties face a stark choice: raise property taxes, cut critical services, or both. Small businesses like S&S Pools and Spas near Scranton, which provides brine tanks to PennDOT for winter road clearing, are owed tens of thousands of dollars.
College students face delayed financial aid through the PA State Grant Program, which typically provides more than 100,000 students an average of $2,000 per semester. Ariana Little, a senior education major at Drexel juggling a part-time job with teaching requirements, said the impasse has “rearranged my whole entire life this year.”
Even after a budget passes, it will take at least four weeks for state payments to begin flowing again—meaning the damage will extend well into November at the earliest. Pennsylvania School Boards Association CEO Nathan Mains captured the absurdity: “Imagine trying to plan your own personal budget without a complete picture of your income, or trying to pay all of your bills without as much as 70% of your income. That’s the position school districts find themselves in.”
For 1.7 million Pennsylvania students returning to schools this fall, the uncertainty continues. Districts are preparing for October service cuts, program eliminations, and hiring freezes. Mental health programs hang in the balance. Teachers wonder if their paychecks are secure. And every day the impasse continues, the borrowed millions grow more expensive and the path back to fiscal stability grows more difficult.
Author Quote"
The real scandal isn’t just the $3.76 billion in missed payments—it’s that districts are being forced to borrow money at commercial interest rates to provide services the state is legally obligated to fund. Pennsylvania taxpayers will end up paying twice: once for education and again for the interest costs caused by their own government’s failure. This is fiscal malpractice masquerading as fiscal conservatism.
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Pennsylvania’s budget crisis exposes a fundamental truth about public education funding: when political dysfunction becomes normalized, children pay the price. The fact that 12 of the last 25 budgets have been late reveals this isn’t an aberration—it’s a feature of a broken system. Districts shouldn’t need emergency loans to provide basic services the state is constitutionally obligated to fund. Students shouldn’t wonder if their mental health programs or special education supports will survive political brinksmanship. And taxpayers shouldn’t pay interest on borrowing caused by their own government’s failure to govern. Real educational leadership means ensuring every child has the resources they need to succeed, regardless of political ideology or fiscal philosophy. Want to learn how evidence-based approaches can transform student outcomes even during funding crises? Explore our All Access Program for proven strategies that work no matter what challenges your district faces.
References
Spotlight PA: PA budget impasse delays $2.5B in school funding - Read Article
Spotlight PA: PA budget impasse hits 100 days - Read Article
Pennsylvania Capital-Star: School districts and counties warn of program cuts - Read Article
PSEA: School districts miss payment from state - Read Article
Pennsylvania School Boards Association CEO Nathan Mains - 717-506-2450
Pennsylvania Department of Education - Governor Shapiro Press Office
Pittsburgh Public Schools CFO Ron Joseph
County Commissioners Association of Pennsylvania Executive Director Kyle Kopko
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