Pennsylvania Poised for Political Drama, Economic Shifts, and Community Transformation in 2026
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In government and politics, the state legislature buzzes with activity. Recent House bills include Rep. Frank Burns' proposal for a constitutional right to carry, Rep. Jeanne McNeill's pet shop-kennel reforms, and Rep. David Rowe's push to repeal the Individual Net Income Tax Act, per the Pennsylvania General Assembly site. Sen. Gene Yaw reflects on 2025 wins like repealing the RGGI electricity tax and securing millions for infrastructure, education, public safety, and flood recovery from Tropical Storm Debby, including $250,000 for Crary Hose Company's new fire station. Governor Shapiro's administration touts $900 million more in public school investments, per his office's video recap.
Economically, Yaw helped land Bass Pro Shops for Muncy Township, set to employ 150 by January 2027, alongside $9.5 million in Neighborhood Assistance Program funds and $85 million for broadband expansion. Yet, Pennsylvania's State System of Higher Education raised tuition by $139 per semester for the first time in years, signaling fiscal pressures, according to AOL reports.
Community-wise, funding bolsters Mifflinburg Police with body cameras and license plate readers, while Pennsylvania College of Technology upgrades labs for veterans. Philadelphia advances infrastructure like a new guard house at Malvern Avenue.
Weather has been brisk: Snow squalls from an Arctic cold front dumped over 2 inches in 30 minutes in Hughesville on New Year's Day, per Live Storms Media. Pittsburgh saw light snow into early 2026 with less than half an inch accumulation and teens for lows, as Pittsburgh's Action News 4 forecasts cold persisting through the weekend before a thaw.
Looking Ahead: Watch Yaw's 2026 push for energy reliability, mental health access in rural areas, PFAS firefighting foam bans, and small business tax relief, plus Pennsylvania's high-profile political battles.
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