by Christin Brown | Septiembre 27, 2018 | News Releases
Septiembre offers an opportunity to learn about spinal cord injuries, recognize the daily challenges encountered by injured people and acknowledge their achievements
PHILADELPHIA, PA, Septiembre 27, 2018 – The Pennsylvania Senate unanimously adopted a resolution introduced by Sen. Christine Tartaglione this week recognizing Septiembre as National Spinal Cord Injury Awareness Month in the Commonwealth.
“More than 300,000 Americans are living with spinal cord injuries, including 40,000 military veterans and thousands of Pennsylvanians,” Tartaglione said. “Every 48 minutes, another American becomes paralyzed from a spinal cord injury. That means there will be close to 12,000 new spinal cord injury patients in the United States this year.”
“This month offers us the opportunity to learn about spinal cord injuries, recognize the daily challenges encountered by injured people and acknowledge the achievements of those Americans living with spinal cord injuries.”
Senator Tartaglione has overcome many challenges since she injured her own spine in a 2003 boating accident and has been one of the leading advocates in the Pennsylvania legislature for people with spinal cord injuries, as well as those with other physical and intellectual challenges. She was a leading force in the creation of Pennsylvania’s Office for People with Disabilities, which serves as one-stop resource for information about supportive services available to people facing physical and intellectual challenges.
First designated by the U.S. Senate in 2013, National Spinal Cord Injury Awareness Month enables advocates to highlight recent medical breakthroughs and to share the urgent need for new treatments to reduce, reverse and prevent paralysis.
“Every person with a spinal cord injury deserves the chance for a better quality of life,” Tartaglione said.
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Si desea más información sobre este tema, póngase en contacto con William Kenny en el 215-533-0440 o por correo electrónico en William.Kenny@pasenate.com.
by Christin Brown | Septiembre 26, 2018 | News Releases
The event coincides with National Disability Employment Awareness Month and will feature many exhibitors offering information about accessibility products and services.
HARRISBURG, PA, Septiembre 26, 2018 – Sen. Christine Tartaglione invites the community to the Pennsylvania Capitol on Miércoles, Oct. 3, to learn about a multitude of resources available to persons with disabilities. Tartaglione’s annual Disability Awareness Day will be held in the Main Rotunda from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and feature many exhibitors offering information about accessibility products and services.
Disability Employment Awareness Day coincides with National Disability Employment Awareness Month throughout Octubre. This month-long national campaign raises awareness about disability employment issues and honors the many contributions of workers with disabilities. The observance further promotes positive employment outcomes for people with disabilities and endeavors to expand ideas about what youths with disabilities can achieve when they receive encouragement and support for their ambitions.
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If you would like more information about this topic, please contact William Kenny at 215-533-0440 or email at william.kenny@pasenate.com.
by Christin Brown | Septiembre 25, 2018 | News Releases
PHILADELPHIA, PA, Septiembre 25, 2018 – State Sen. Christine Tartaglione invites older Philadelphians and their primary caregivers to the first of her three annual Senior Expos this Jueves at the Mayfair Community Center from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. The Expo will offer free health screenings and information about a multitude of senior programs and services offered by dozens of public agencies and private providers. Topics will include healthcare, housing, financial services and crime prevention. This annual series of events will continue Jueves, Oct. 4, at St. Anne’s Rectory PAL Center; then on Jueves, Oct. 11, at Fox Chase Recreation Center.
Jueves, Sept. 27: Mayfair Community Center, 2990 Saint Vincent St.
Jueves, Oct. 4: St. Anne’s Rectory-PAL Center, 2328 E. Lehigh Ave.
Jueves, Oct. 11: Fox Chase Recreation Center, 7901 Ridgeway St.
For Information (public): Call 215-533-0440 or 215-291-4653 (Spanish).
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Si desea más información sobre este tema, póngase en contacto con William Kenny en el 215-533-0440 o por correo electrónico en William.Kenny@pasenate.com.
by Christin Brown | Agosto 23, 2018 | News Releases
Music, face painting, police horses and the senator’s back-to-school backpack giveaway made it a special occasion for hundreds of children and their caregivers.
PHILADELPHIA, PA, Agosto 23, 2018 – Sunshine and smiling children highlighted the third and final round of state Sen. Christine Tartaglione’s annual Community Picnic series today as hundreds of youngsters and their caregivers flocked to Fox Chase Recreation Center for an event that has quickly become one of the most popular attractions on the local summer calendar.
Now in its second year at Fox Chase, the gathering carried the momentum built through Senator Tartaglione’s previous two Community Picnics on Aug. 2 at Fairhill Square Park and Aug. 16 at Wissinoming Park. DJ music, free refreshments, face painting, Philadelphia police horses, gift basket raffles and a variety of vendors kept visitors entertained and informed throughout the morning and early afternoon. The excitement peaked when Senator Tartaglione handed out free backpacks and back-to-school supplies to attending children.
All told, the senator distributed 250 backpacks to the young learners at Fox Chase, and about 1,100 at all three picnics combined.
“This never would have been possible without the support of many generous donors and community partners,” Senator Tartaglione said. “These Community Picnics bring together businesses, non-profit organizations and public agencies for a common goal – to advocate for the education of our children. It’s very reassuring and satisfying to know that the picnics get bigger and bigger each year with many new partners and a lot more public attention.”
With the 2018-19 school year mere days away for many local children, the opportunity to get a head start on back-to-school shopping was a big attraction for their caregivers, as was the opportunity to spend a mild late summer day in park-like surroundings.
“I like to teach kids about giving back and I think this was a way for kids to see that when you give to your community, how good things come back to you,” said Marie Louissaint, counselor at Early Learning Children’s Academy of Rising Sun Avenue. “They were excited, especially when they saw the mounted police officers and the face painting. The fire truck was really big with the little ones. Now they have a fresh start (on the school year), a nice new beginning.”
Kids weren’t the only ones to benefit. Fun and games aside, many of the older folks found some time to gather valuable information about a plethora of topics, such as home health care, assistive technologies for the disabled, adult daycare and rehabilitation, insurance and registering to vote.
Many of the same presenters are also scheduled to participate in Senator Tartaglione’s upcoming Senior Expos, an annual series of events to be held on Sept. 27 at Mayfair Community Center (2990 Saint Vincent St.), Oct. 4 at St. Ann’s Rectory PAL (2328 E. Lehigh Ave.) and Oct. 11 at Fox Chase Rec Center (7901 Ridgeway St.). All Senior Expos will be from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Call Senator Tartaglione’s district offices at 215-533-0440 or 215-291-4653 for information.
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Si desea más información sobre este tema, póngase en contacto con William Kenny en el 215-533-0440 o por correo electrónico en William.Kenny@pasenate.com.
by Christin Brown | Agosto 17, 2018 | News Releases
Music, face painting, police horses and the senator’s back-to-school backpack giveaway made it a special occasion for hundreds of children and their caregivers.
PHILADELPHIA, PA, Agosto 17, 2018 – State Sen. Christine Tartaglione’s annual Community Picnic was a smash hit with the hundreds of children and caregivers who converged at Wissinoming Park yesterday to delight in free music, soft pretzels, water ice, face painting and the senator’s popular back-to-scbool backpack giveaway. About 500 school children walked away wearing new school bags on their shoulders and smiles on their faces.
The event was the second of Tartaglione’s three Community Picnics scheduled this month in her 2nd Senate District. On Aug. 2, the senator handed out more than 300 backpacks to children at Fairhill Square Park in North Philadelphia. The third picnic will be held on Jueves, Aug. 23, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., at Fox Chase Recreation Center, 7901 Ridgeway St. It is free to attend and open to the public.
“Agosto has become one of my favorite times of the year because it gives me the chance to meet so many beautiful children while helping their families ease the costs of getting a valuable education,” Senator Tartaglione said. “If we can give each child a backpack filled with school supplies, that’s one less cost their caregivers will have to bear. This is a real group effort that brings together our business sponsors, community organizations, recreation centers and day care centers for a day of summer fun.”
Yesterday’s event featured many longtime partners and some popular new ones. Attendees enjoyed refreshing water ice and soft pretzels and had their faces painted like their favorite superheroes. Senator Tartaglione raffled off gift baskets and basketballs before the children lined up for the big backpack giveaway.
The newly renovated Wissinoming Park provided the ideal backdrop on a hot and steamy day as many visitors cooled off beneath towering shade trees or in the water spray-ground.
“I welcome everyone to join us again next week. It’s a great chance to meet new friends and enjoy the summer one more time before the new school year!” Senator Tartaglione said.
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Si desea más información sobre este tema, póngase en contacto con William Kenny en el 215-533-0440 o por correo electrónico en William.Kenny@pasenate.com.
por Christin Brown | 28 de junio de 2018 | Salario mínimo, Comunicados de prensa
FILADELFIA, PA, 28 de junio de 2018 - La senadora estatal Christine Tartaglione aplaudió la firma hoy del gobernador Tom Wolf de una orden ejecutiva que eleva el salario mínimo para los empleados y contratistas estatales a un nivel que coincide con las disposiciones de la legislación presentada por Tartaglione en el Senado a principios de este año. La orden ejecutiva eleva el salario mínimo de los empleados y contratistas del Estado a 12 dólares por hora a partir del 1 de julio, e instituye incrementos anuales que elevarán el salario mínimo a 15 dólares en 2024. A partir de entonces, el salario mínimo estará vinculado a los ajustes anuales del coste de la vida.
El senador Tartaglione emitió la siguiente declaración en relación con la orden ejecutiva:
La orden ejecutiva del gobernador Wolf representa un gran paso adelante para los empleados y contratistas del Estado, y para la causa de unos salarios justos y sostenibles en toda la Commonwealth. Como hemos visto a través de muchos acontecimientos nacionales recientes, los trabajadores han sido atacados por las fuerzas que tratan de sofocar su voz colectiva y su poder para negociar salarios dignos, planes de salud, pensiones y condiciones de trabajo.
Ayer mismo, el Tribunal Supremo de Estados Unidos anuló un precedente de 40 años que permitía a los sindicatos del sector público financiar la defensa de los trabajadores mediante cuotas justas. Y la Junta Nacional de Relaciones Laborales modificó recientemente sus normas para permitir a los empresarios despojar a los trabajadores del derecho a resolver sus quejas ante un tribunal.
El gobierno federal no ha subido el salario mínimo en todo el país desde 2009, y Pensilvania no lo ha hecho en más de una década. A 7,25 dólares la hora, un trabajador a tiempo completo ganaría unos 15.000 dólares al año. Eso está por debajo del nivel federal de pobreza para un hogar de dos personas. Según la National Low Income Housing Coalition, no hay ningún estado del país en el que un trabajador a tiempo completo con el salario mínimo pueda permitirse pagar el alquiler de un modesto apartamento de dos dormitorios.
A la inversa, unos salarios más altos impulsan la economía y reducen la rotación de personal porque los trabajadores también son consumidores. Así que cuando ganan más dinero, tienden a gastar más y las empresas se benefician.
Por eso presenté el proyecto de ley 1044 del Senado a principios de este año, para que los empresarios no tengan la opción de pagar a los trabajadores menos de un salario digno. Hoy, la orden ejecutiva del gobernador Wolf hace una declaración audaz de que Pensilvania se preocupa por las familias trabajadoras y reconoce el papel vital que una clase media vibrante desempeña en una economía sana y sostenible.
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Si desea más información sobre este tema, póngase en contacto con William Kenny en el 215-533-0440 o por correo electrónico en William.Kenny@pasenate.com.
by Christin Brown | Junio 22, 2018 | News Releases
HARRISBURG, PA, Junio 22, 2018 – State Sen. Christine Tartaglione applauded today’s early passage of a Fiscal Year 2018-19 budget that includes new investments in workforce development, education, health care and social justice. The Senate voted, 47-2, in support of the budget (HB 2121) previously passed by the Pennsylvania House. The budget now awaits Gov. Tom Wolf’s signature.
“This budget is an example of the great things we can accomplish when we work together in a bi-partisan way to create programs that benefit all Pennsylvanians,” Tartaglione said. “As minority chairman of the Senate Labor and Industry Committee, I am especially proud of the workforce development initiatives, such as expanded apprenticeships and partnerships that involve labor organizations, vocational training facilities and the business community. These measures will help more young people find good careers that pay family-sustaining wages and benefits and will help the Commonwealth identify and satisfy its changing workforce needs.”
The approved budget includes a $30 million increase in the allocation for career and technical education through the PA SMART initiative. It also includes a new $7 million apprenticeship training program and a $3 million increase to industry partnerships, both through PA SMART, as well as a $3 million increase for combatting the Spotted Lanternfly infestation that threatens our agriculture industry.
Also today, the Senate unanimously approved the creation of the Keystone Scholars Grant Program through the passage of the omnibus Fiscal Code bill (HB 1929). The Keystone Scholars Grant Program will apply to every child born in Pennsylvania on or after Jan. 1, 2019. Upon receiving notice of a child’s birth, the Treasury Department will set aside $100 in a separate account that will be available to the child once they reach age 18 and enroll in a qualifying institution of higher education or a vocational or technical school. The student would be able to collect the $100, as well as investment earnings attributed to the account.
“This Keystone Scholars Grant Program makes an important statement about our commitment to improving education opportunities for future generations of Pennsylvanians,” Tartaglione said. “As each child grows, this funding will grow and will provide them with another incentive to pursue post-secondary education or job training.”
During a busy day at the Capitol, Senator Tartaglione also joined members of the Philadelphia delegations in both the Senate and House, as well as other leaders in the General Assembly, to announce the House’s passage of a $60 million school and community anti-violence package. The legislation originated in the Senate as SB 1142 and sets aside $7.5 million for community anti-violence programs. In addition, municipalities, institutions of higher education, community-based organizations and other entities will be able to apply for funds to support anti-violence initiatives.
The Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency will administer the grants through a School Safety and Security Committee. The objective is to reduce violence in schools by addressing it at the community level.
“This level of funding is unprecedented,” Tartaglione said. “Hopefully, this will become a watershed moment in our Commonwealth’s fight against violence in our schools and communities, particularly gun violence. I hope what we’ve accomplished today will usher in a new era of cooperation in the General Assembly on this critical issue.”
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Si desea más información sobre este tema, póngase en contacto con William Kenny en el 215-533-0440 o por correo electrónico en William.Kenny@pasenate.com.
by Christin Brown | Junio 12, 2018 | News Releases
HARRISBURG, PA, Junio 12, 2018 – The Pennsylvania Senate voted 46-3 yesterday to approve an amendment by Sen. Christine Tartaglione that would level the playing field for Magisterial District Justice candidates in elections involving an incumbent and one or more non-incumbents.
Under the amended version of Senate Bill 299, incumbent MDJs seeking re-election would no longer be required to collect at least 100 voter signatures to secure a place on the ballot. Instead, they would need only to file a certificate of nomination. But if the incumbent chooses that route, then he or she would be prohibited from challenging the legitimacy of the signatures collected by other hopeful candidates.
“Allowing a sitting Magisterial District Justice to simply submit a certificate of nomination for re-election, as opposed to collecting the 100 signatures, while requiring non-incumbent candidates to collect the requisite number of signatures is unfair,” Sen. Tartaglione said. “My amendment is simple and will level the playing field. It would allow a sitting Justice to submit a certificate of nomination but would prohibit the sitting Justice from challenging any signatures on the opponent’s petition.”
Magisterial District Justices, also known as magistrates, are the judicial system’s first level throughout most of Pennsylvania, excluding Philadelphia where Municipal Court judges serve a similar role. There are more than 500 Magisterial Districts across the state. MDJs preside over hearings involving low-level criminal offenses as well as preliminary hearings for more serious offenses. They further handle low-level civil cases and can preside over weddings, among other duties.
Under state law, MDJs must remain non-political except when running for re-election. Their terms last for six years. Current law requires all candidates for the position to collect at least 100 petition signatures to secure a ballot position. Supporters of the original SB 299, which Sen. Richard Alloway introduced on Abril 9, contend that the non-political nature of the position places incumbents at a disadvantage because non-incumbents are free to build their political support regardless of the election calendar.
Sen. Tartaglione’s amendment strikes a fair balance in that it would ease the political obligation of the incumbent while ensuring that incumbents cannot benefit from unequal treatment under election law.
With the Senate’s approval, SB 299 moves to the House for consideration.
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Si desea más información sobre este tema, póngase en contacto con William Kenny en el 215-533-0440 o por correo electrónico en William.Kenny@pasenate.com.
by Christin Brown | Junio 8, 2018 | News Releases
Two new Senate bills would amend Pennsylvania’s 1959 Equal Pay Law and help women earn the same as their male counterparts for comparable work
HARRISBURG, PA, Junio 6, 2018 – State Sen. Christine Tartaglione joined Gov. Tom Wolf, other elected officials and women’s advocates at the Capitol today to announce an executive order and new legislation that seek to eradicate Pennsylvania’s gender pay gap.
Pennsylvania’s working women collect just 79 cents for every dollar that their male counterparts make based on median annual earnings, ranking the Commonwealth 29th among U.S. states according to the American Association of University Women. Nationally, women make about 80 cents for every dollar that men make.
“In 1959, the Pennsylvania legislature passed a law to correct the gender pay gap, yet here we are, almost 60 years later, and women are still getting short-changed,” Sen. Tartaglione said. “Women with the same education, training, skills and job responsibilities as their male counterparts should be paid the same. But that’s still not happening.”
Sen. Tartaglione’s Senate Bill 1200 focuses on several key areas of Pennsylvania’s existing Equal Pay Law. It would broaden the definition of “wages” to include other forms of compensation such as salary, fringe benefits and other wage supplements. It would also broaden the concept of “comparable work” to encompass factors including skill, effort, responsibility and working conditions, while eliminating job title as a potential factor in pay differential.
Further, SB 1200 would require employers to defend pay differentials based on bona fide seniority or merit systems, or systems that measure quantity or quality of production or sales.
It would expand the powers of the state’s Department of Labor and Industry and Attorney General to pursue unpaid wages and damages claims on behalf of employees individually or as a group. The bill would extend the statute of limitations from two years to three years in cases where an employer willfully violates the Equal Pay Law.
Sen. Schwank’s companion bill would make it unlawful for an employer to make an employee sign a waiver preventing the employee from discussing his or her wages, and would make it unlawful for the employer to require a prospective employee to disclose past wages as a condition of the hiring process. Sen. Schwank’s bill prohibits employers from relying a prospective employee’s earnings history to determine the wages offered to the prospect, unless the prospect offers wage history information to negotiate a higher wage.
Also, Sen. Schwank’s bill bans employers from contracting with employees to avoid compliance with the Equal Pay Law, while creating whistleblower and retaliation protections to protect employees who report violations of the Law. The bill includes provisions for victims to recover unpaid wages and damages.
Gov. Wolf endorsed both new Senate bills and issued an executive order mandating pay equality for state employees.
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Si desea más información sobre este tema, póngase en contacto con William Kenny en el 215-533-0440 o por correo electrónico en William.Kenny@pasenate.com.
by Christin Brown | Mayo 29, 2018 | News Releases
Senator Tartaglione encourages residents and businesses to share their opinions of PECO Energy’s proposed 3.2 percent rate increase
PHILADELPHIA, PA, Mayo 29, 2018 – Constituents from state Sen. Christine Tartaglione’s 2nd District and from throughout the Philadelphia region will have a chance to comment publicly on PECO Energy’s latest proposed rate increase during a Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission hearing on Junio 14 at 6 p.m. at Kingdom Life Christian Center, also known as the Devon Theater, in the Mayfair section of Northeast Philadelphia.
What: Public Utility Commission Public Input Hearing on Proposed PECO Rate Increase
When: Jueves, Junio 14, 2018, 6 p.m.
Where: Kingdom Life Christian Center (Devon Theater), 6325 Frankford Ave., Phila., PA 19135
Who: PECO ratepayers, including residents and businesses, will be able to testify for the record about the impact a rate increase would have on them and their overall opinions of a rate increase. They may also submit printed testimony.
The hearing will be the last of five that the PUC has scheduled to gather public input on PECO’s requested electric rate hike. The utility company filed its new rate request on Marzo 29, prompting the Commonwealth’s Office of Consumer Advocate to file a formal complaint. The PUC has suspended the proposed rate increase pending a thorough investigation of PECO’s request.
A key part of that investigation includes five public input hearings to be held throughout the Philadelphia region when constituents will have an opportunity to express their views on the proposed rate hike. Constituents may testify in person and/or by submitting printed testimony. In addition to representing consumer interests at the hearings, the Consumer Advocate will review PECO’s filings, including costs and expenses claimed by the company, its revenue requirements, operating and maintenance expenses, income tax expense and quality of service. PUC’s Office of Administrative Law Judge will review the evidence and issue a final decision on the rate increase request.
If the increase is granted, PECO has said it will recover an estimated annual increase in electric distribution rates of $81.9 million, which would be a 6.7 percent increase over present distribution revenues. The rate hike would result in a 2.2 percent increase in PECO’s total revenues. Under the proposal, a residential customer who uses 700 kilowatt hours per month would see their total electric bill increase by $3.28 a month (3.2 percent) to $105.93. PECO also proposes to increase the monthly residential customer charge from $8.45 to $12.50. The new rates would go into effect on Jan. 1, 2019.
PECO last received approval for a rate increase in Diciembre 2015 when customers saw a four percent hike. The company provides electricity to about 1.6 million customers in Bucks, Chester, Delaware, Montgomery, Philadelphia and York counties.
Members of the public are welcome to attend the hearings and provide comments. Testimony will become part of the record on which the PUC will issue its final decision. Those wishing to testify are encouraged, but not required, to prepare their statements beforehand and to bring several copies, including two for the court reporter (stenographer) and several copies for the administrative law judges and other participants. The parties may ask a commenter to explain or clarify their testimony.
Anyone with special needs may call the PUC Scheduling Office AT LEAST FIVE BUSINESS DAYS IN ADVANCE of the hearing at 717-787-1399 to arrange accommodations. For the hearing impaired, the AT&T Relay Service number is 1-800-654-5988.
Those who require a language interpreter should call the PUC Scheduling Office AT LEAST 10 BUSINESS DAYS IN ADVANCE at 717-787-1399 to submit a request.
Visit www.puc.pa.gov for more information about the ratemaking process and additional hearing dates and locations.
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Si desea más información sobre este tema, póngase en contacto con William Kenny en el 215-533-0440 o por correo electrónico en William.Kenny@pasenate.com.
by Christin Brown | Mayo 8, 2018 | News Releases
New projects include sidewalks and bus stops along Roosevelt Boulevard, along with a traffic safety zone around Cramp Elementary School
PHILADELPHIA, PA, Mayo 8, 2018 – Residents of state Sen. Christine Tartaglione’s 2nd District will benefit from two new major transportation and pedestrian safety projects announced by Gov. Tom Wolf and PennDOT Secretary Leslie S. Richards today in Harrisburg.
The projects are among 82 approved by the administration statewide through the Surface Transportation Block Grant program Set-Aside and Transportation Alternatives Set-Aside, representing a combined investment of $66.8 million.
“These initiatives will improve the lives of people throughout Pennsylvania and in the 2nd district,” Sen. Tartaglione said. “One project will support public transportation and pedestrian safety along one of Philadelphia’s busiest traffic corridors, Roosevelt Boulevard, while the other will protect children and their families as they travel to and from Cramp Elementary School in my district.”
The administration awarded $1 million to the City of Philadelphia to construct six sidewalk segments for pedestrian improvements along SEPTA’s Direct Bus route, and to prepare sites for Direct Bus stations. The Direct Bus route serves Roosevelt Boulevard between Frankford Transportation Center in the 2nd district and the Neshaminy Mall in Bensalem Township, offering an efficient and reliable travel option with frequent service and fewer stops.
The Direct Bus route took effect on Febrero 25, 2018, and includes a fleet of 60 buses easily recognizable by their distinct branding, including a bright green color scheme and large “D” logo.
Meanwhile, the City was also awarded $995,000 to establish a school slow zone at William Cramp Elementary School in the Fairhill neighborhood. The zone will consist of traffic calming interventions to reduce vehicle speeds, promote safety and advance the city’s commitment to eliminating all traffic deaths, an initiative known as Vision Zero.
Cramp serves children in kindergarten through fifth grade. Students there are taught in a supportive educational environment that meets their individual needs and desires, with special emphasis on reading, math, science and technology in all content areas. The school strives to teach character development skills that enable children to assume their roles as productive citizens in a technological and global society.
“Building for the future includes improving access to a variety of transportation options and these investments will promote safety and mobility for communities across Pennsylvania,” Gov. Wolf said.
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Si desea más información sobre este tema, póngase en contacto con William Kenny en el 215-533-0440 o por correo electrónico en William.Kenny@pasenate.com.
by Christin Brown | Abril 26, 2018 | News Releases
Public libraries have until Junio 15 to apply for up to $750,000 in funding.
PHILADELPHIA, PA, Abril 26, 2018 – State Sen. Christine Tartaglione wishes to remind public libraries and their supporters that the application period is open for the 2018 Keystone Recreation, Park and Conservation Fund Grants for Public Libraries program.
Keystone grants are competitive grants of up to $750,000 that may be used for planning, acquisition, construction and rehabilitation of public libraries. Each grant must be matched dollar-for-dollar by the library’s municipality. To be eligible, the sponsoring municipality and the library’s board must jointly prepare and submit an application. Their matching funds must be on-hand at the time of application.
Applications are due to the Office of Commonwealth Libraries by Junio 15 and are available via statelibrary.pa.gov and by following the “For Libraries,” “Subsidies and Grants” and “Keystone” links. Applicants should be notified by early Septiembre if they have been awarded a grant.
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Si desea más información sobre este tema, póngase en contacto con William Kenny en el 215-533-0440 o por correo electrónico en William.Kenny@pasenate.com.
by Christin Brown | Abril 13, 2018 | News Releases
MossRehab hosted the Jueves evening reception to open its annual All About Art exhibition featuring works by professional artists with physical and cognitive disabilities.
ELKINS PARK, PA, Abril 13, 2018 – State Sen. Christine Tartaglione took her first steps in 18 months on Jueves evening as she helped MossRehab honor two of her fellow patients while opening the facility’s annual All About Art exhibition, featuring dozens of works by professional artists with physical disabilities.

Senator Tartaglione has required the use of a wheelchair since she injured her spine in a 2003 boating accident, but she reached a major milestone in her rehabilitation when she walked to a podium with the assistance of the ReWalk exoskeleton and presented Empowerment Awards to fellow Moss patients Alysse Einbender and Jack Cavanaugh.
“I want to thank Doctor (Alberto) Esquenazi and I want to thank Moss. You’ve given me my life back,” Sen. Tartaglione said. “I’ve been sitting in that chair for 15 years and I can’t tell you what it feels like to be able to stand here today and have some air.”
Dozens of MossRehab patients and staff joined their families and friends to pay tribute to the senator and the Empowerment Award recipients. New, original paintings, photographs, sculpture, jewelry and other forms of artwork adorned the walls of the rehab facility for the reception and ceremony. The artwork will be on display through Mayo 30 and is available for purchase.
Senator Tartaglione shared her distressing, yet inspirational story with the assembled guests. She was injured at the Jersey Shore in 2003 while on a small fishing boat. A much larger vessel approached at a high rate of speed and jarred her boat, causing the senator to crash to the deck. She broke her spine and lost feeling in her lower extremities.
“And just like that, my life changed,” she said. “I went through so many stages. I pitied myself. I was angry. But I finally realized that God wanted me to be an advocate for physically challenged people because I am in a place where I can do that. And I intend to do that.”
Seven years later, after extensive rehab and with the assistance of a brace and a walker, she was able to walk to her seat in the Pennsylvania Senate chamber for the first and only time to date. In Octubre 2016, she rose to her feet once again to demonstrate the innovative ReWalk device at Moss. The unit is designed to allow the user broad freedom of movement to including sitting, standing, walking, turning and navigating stairs. While enhancing a user’s mobility for practical daily use, it is also a rehabilitative tool, assisting in physical training and therapy.
Unfortunately, while training on the device, Senator Tartaglione suffered a fall and broke both bones in her lower leg.
“When you have a spinal cord injury and you sustain a fracture, it takes a long time for it to heal,” Dr. Esquenazi said. “So we had to nurture the injury all of this time.”
Senator Tartaglione was still hospitalized with her leg fractures when Moss received delivery of the next generation ReWalk device. The unit sat in Doctor Esquenazi’s office as the senator continued her rigorous recovery and rehab regimen.
“Every time I went, he had me do the training to straighten out my legs and my abdomen,” Sen. Tartaglione said. “And I kept saying, ‘Please, just let me try the ReWalk. Please, just let me try it,’ And he would say, ‘In good time.’ ”
That time finally came on Abril 5, when the senator tested the new ReWalk for the first time. One week later, she used the device to walk from the rear of an auditorium to the front podium, where she spoke of two other Moss patients who are using their personal experiences to help others. The Empowerment Awards recognize current or past patients who have demonstrated extraordinary tenacity during their rehabilitation, the achievement of goals beyond expected outcomes, a commitment to serve others with disabilities and a commitment to support MossRehab.
Alysse Einbender suffered a spinal injury that resulted in paralysis to both legs and an inability to ambulate. But she has returned to work as a landscape architect while raising her two sons. She was the first person in the United States to test ReWalk. She is a member of the MossRehab Advisory Board and project manager for All About Art. She is co-director of the United Spinal Association of Philadelphia and volunteers for organizations that help individuals with disabilities.
Jack Cavanaugh sustained a severe brain injury over four years ago. Since then, the former track and cross country runner for Cardinal O’Hara High School has worked to regain his abilities, including speech and the ability to run and ride a bike. During his recovery, he learned how to surf and now volunteers for Moss’ annual They Will Surf Again event. He also volunteers while continuing to receive services at Moss’ Elkins Park facility. He has returned to college and is a member of a fraternity based on his academic success.
MossRehab’s Main Campus is at 60 Township Line Road, Elkins Park, PA 19027. For information on the All About Art exhibition, including opportunities to purchase art, visit mossrehab.com/all-about-art/
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Si desea más información sobre este tema, póngase en contacto con William Kenny en el 215-533-0440 o por correo electrónico en William.Kenny@pasenate.com.
by Christin Brown | Abril 12, 2018 | News Releases
The senator partnered with PA Treasurer Joe Torsella to help folks with tax returns, unclaimed property searches and financial benefits programs.
PHILADELPHIA, PA – Abril 12, 2018 – State Sen. Christine Tartaglione joined PA Treasurer Joe Torsella and the Campaign for Working Families Inc. on Martes to provide a myriad of personal financial services to dozens of constituents at her Financial Freedom for Working Families event.
“In today’s economic environment with rising costs and stagnant wages, working people should try to take advantage of every opportunity to get ahead,” Senator Tartaglione said. “Through this program, Treasurer Torsella and I were able to connect residents of the 2nd Senate District and the Philadelphia area with the free financial resources available to them.”
About a dozen visitors were already on hand when the four-hour event kicked off at 10 a.m. And response to the program grew as the hours progressed. Volunteer CWF tax professionals prepared 2017 income tax returns for many visitors, while other patrons took advantage of the state treasurer’s unclaimed property search services. One constituent found the hidden proceeds from an old blue-chip stock transaction, while another found savings in a long-forgotten bank account. Others claimed old, uncashed paychecks and unused retail credits or gift cards.
Those wishing to search for unclaimed property on their own can do so anytime by visiting the website PATreasury.gov and following the “Unclaimed Property” link on the “Programs” menu. Make sure to use the official PA Treasury site. The home page URL address must contain the “.gov” domain.
In addition to those services, Senator Tartaglione’s staff helped many constituents prepare their rent and property tax rebate forms and their home-heating assistance (LIHEAP) applications. The extended deadline for LIHEAP applications is Abril 13. All LIHEAP applications must be filed by then. The rent and property tax rebate application process is ongoing.
Contact Senator Tartaglione’s district offices at 215-533-0440 (1061 Bridge St.) or 215-291-4653 (400 W. Allegheny Ave.) for information about state-related financial programs.
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Si desea más información sobre este tema, póngase en contacto con William Kenny en el 215-533-0440 o por correo electrónico en William.Kenny@pasenate.com.
by Christin Brown | Abril 12, 2018 | News Releases
Op-ed By Christine M. Tartaglione
In Febrero, I introduced legislation in the Pennsylvania Senate to give the state’s low-wage earners a much needed and long overdue raise this year, next year and for years to come based on a consistent, predictable and sustainable schedule for both workers and employers.
Pennsylvania hasn’t raised its standard minimum wage ($7.25 an hour) since 2006 or its minimum wage for restaurant servers, bartenders and other tip-earners ($2.83), the so-called subminimum wage, in more than two decades. My Senate Bill 1044 and Sen. Art Haywood’s companion legislation, SB 1045, would lift hundreds of thousands of workers out of poverty-level wages, putting more spending power in the pockets of consumers while protecting business and employment across the Commonwealth.
On Marzo 21, the Philadelphia Inquirer, Daily News and Philly.com printed a guest commentary submitted by a Maine man who identifies himself as a $28 an hour waiter and founder of a new “employee advocacy” group that purports to protect tip-earners’ rights while fighting against “union-aligned interests that want to upend our industry.” The group recently branded itself Restaurant Workers of America, not to be confused with the Restaurant Workers Association, which supports the kind of measures that I and Sen. Haywood have proposed.
The author, Joshua Chaisson, and his organization – which has at least two restaurant proprietors on its six-person board – has fought to preserve the hourly wage discrepancies endured by most tip-earners, arguing that wage equality will actually cost tip-earners money. In his column, he attempted to discredit my legislation and a long-established workers’ advocacy non-profit, the Restaurant Opportunities Centers (ROC), using unsubstantiated personal anecdotes and his distorted application of selected facts.
But in his zeal to misrepresent verifiable data and legitimate academic research while repeatedly sourcing management-side blogs and anecdotal commentaries, the author ignored the elephant in the room: based on his own statements, he clearly is NOT a typical restaurant server and does not understand the professional and financial difficulties encountered by Pennsylvania’s 230,000 tip-earning hospitality industry workers.
While he says he makes $28 an hour, tip-earners nationally have a median wage including tips of about $10.22, according to a 2014 Economic Policy Institute study. Half of them earn less than $10.22. By comparison, hourly workers in general have a median wage of $16.48 nationally.
That means in one year, the median tipped worker makes just $21,257 – barely above the federal poverty level for a family of three – based on a 40-hour work week. Incidentally, all workers can thank labor unions for standardizing the 40-hour week almost 80 years ago.
The same EPI report, co-authored by a Ph.D. and labor economist from the University of California along with a Georgetown-educated public policy researcher, further provides stunning data about the working poor, including those in the hospitality industry, which accounts for about 577,000 Pennsylvania jobs (tipped and non-tipped employees). Almost 13 percent of tipped workers live in poverty, nearly twice as many non-tipped workers (6.5 percent), while about 46 percent of tipped workers and their families rely on public benefits, compared to 35.5 percent for non-tipped workers. That means our wage structure for tipped workers places an unnecessary burden on all taxpayers.
Furthermore, according to 2017 U.S. Department of Labor data, 11.1 percent of people who work in the “food service and drinking places” sector of the hospitality industry make below the federal minimum wage, compared with just 0.6 percent for all other private-sector industries combined. Food service and drinking place workers comprise one-tenth of all private sector workers, but account for two-thirds of all workers who earn less than minimum wage.
So no, Mr. Chaisson, my legislation would NOT “actually lead to a pay cut” for restaurant servers. And no, it is not “rare” for tip-earners to come up short of prevailing minimum wage even with tips included, as he callously claimed. Likewise, tip-earners cannot rely solely on their employers to make up the difference in such instances, although business owners are legally required to do so.
Just last month, the New York Times reported that the U.S. Department of Labor found 84 percent of full-service restaurants it investigated between 2010 and 2012 had violated labor laws, including but not limited to tip violations. And a 2012 study by the aforementioned Restaurant Opportunities Centers, along with the Philadelphia Restaurant Industry Coalition, found that 58 percent of workers surveyed around the city claimed they have experienced overtime wage violations, while 40 percent claimed they worked “off the clock” without getting paid. The survey also found that 10 percent said management took a share of their tips.
Another pillar of Mr. Chaisson’s argument is that businesses couldn’t bear the brunt of paying fair hourly wages, that they’d fail financially and close at the expense of countless lost jobs. Indeed, the “tip credit” law has allowed restauranteurs and bar owners to avoid paying prevailing hourly wages for years. In a set-up unique to the industry and to the United States, gratuities count as wages even when they never (or should never) pass through the pockets of the employer.
While it may be true that restaurants operate on razor-thin profit margins, generally three to five percent, it also may be true that about 60 percent of all restaurants fail within their first three years of existence. Both statistics appear in a restaurant management blog post that Mr. Chaisson cited in his column. Therefore, it should have come as no surprise that a bunch of allegedly popular restaurants closed their doors in New York State after the enactment of a statewide tipped-wage increase in 2016. It also should have come as no surprise if restauranteurs blamed the wage increase rather than their own business models.
Another one of Mr. Chaisson’s sources, an anti-Andrew Cuomo opinion piece in Forbes, acknowledges that even with those New York restaurant closures, employment in the state’s full-service restaurant industry STILL grew in 2016. It grew at a slower rate than previous years, but grew nonetheless.
Out on the West Coast, there’s additional research available involving the impact of minimum wage increases on California’s Bay Area. In his column, Mr. Chaisson relies upon another blog post from a conservative-leaning thinktank, the Washington Policy Center, to interpret the results of a 2017 Harvard Business School study.
Chaisson hangs his hat on a conclusion that higher minimum wages resulted in an increase in restaurant closures in the region. What he didn’t report in his own column was that the study looked at localized wage hikes, not those enacted on a statewide level – as would be the case with my legislation. The Harvard study only reinforces the need for minimum wage uniformity, not like we see in Pennsylvania where all six of our bordering states are among 29 across the nation with higher minimum wages than we have.
Another interesting conclusion emerged from the Harvard study, which was aptly titled “Survival of the Fittest”: minimum wage increases had negligible impact on highly regarded restaurants but had a much higher impact on those businesses rated poorly by their own customers. This again begs the question, are they really closing because of the minimum wage or are they failing to meet the demands of their own markets?
Ominously, Mr. Chaisson’s column issues a stern warning to Pennsylvania legislators to “take note of what happened in Maine” last year when, he says, thousands of restaurant servers pressured lawmakers to reverse a minimum wage increase for tip-earners after 55 percent of voters had endorsed the raise in a statewide referendum. In the Maine House, 110 members voted for the repeal while 37 voted against. While it may make for compelling news fodder that a relatively small portion of an 80,000-strong workforce could have such a decisive impact, the fact remains that Mainers support raising the minimum wage and so do I.
by Christin Brown | Abril 6, 2018 | News Releases
During a news conference at Temple University, Tartaglione highlighted new legislation to expand the protections of PA’s Human Relations Act.
PHILADELPHIA, PA, Abril 6, 2018 – State Sen. Christine Tartaglione yesterday announced new legislation that proposes to add sexual orientation and gender expression as protected classes under Pennsylvania’s Human Relations Act, while expanding the act’s worker protections to include non-employee contractors and unpaid interns.
Sen. Tartaglione’s bill is part of a package of legislation authored by Senate and House Democrats and supported by Gov. Wolf. The governor and legislators announced their initiative at Temple University’s Liacouras Center.
Sen. Tartaglione’s comments appear below:
“Thank you to the Governor, my legislative colleagues and all the public officials who have gathered here to mark this important occasion. Also thank you to the advocates who are fighting on the front lines to prevent sexual harassment and to help victims when sexual harassment does occur.
Believe me, sexual harassment does occur more often than we think and more often than it’s reported.
The focus of my legislation – my part of the package – is to make sure that victims of sexual harassment in the workplace feel empowered to report these incidents and that the law is fully inclusive of the many different people who suffer sexual harassment.
I want workers to understand the protections available to them. I want the reporting process to be easier. I want to protect victims from retaliation by their employer when they do report it.
As we’ve said, this is a BIG problem with many facets. Often, workplace sexual harassment coincides with other discriminatory behavior by a boss or employer. And the victim may be part of more than one protected class – such as age, gender, race, national origin or religion. But consider this for context: in the last six years, the Human Relations Commission has resolved more than 14,500 cases of all types. Among those, more than 12 thousand – that’s 83 percent – involved the workplace.
That’s probably only the tip of the iceberg. For one thing, current law doesn’t classify sexual orientation or gender expression as a protected class. So, if a boss harasses a subordinate because the worker happens to be gay, Pennsylvania’s Human Relations Act may not apply. My bill would add sexual orientation and gender expression as protected classes.
Likewise, current state law doesn’t explicitly protect unpaid interns or independent contractors. This loophole can help an employer avoid accountability not on the merits of a case, but on a technicality. My bill adds those protections for interns and contractors who, for all practical purposes, are employed.
Right now, you may be asking: What’s the advantage of giving a victim access to the Human Relations process? Why can’t the victim just file a civil lawsuit or criminal complaint?
It’s true that federal law mirrors Pennsylvania’s Human Relations Act in many instances. The jurisdictions overlap. But state law gives victims access to potentially faster, sustainable resolutions that satisfy all parties. The PHRC conducts independent, impartial investigations and offers mediation with penalties. If that doesn’t work, violators can be forced to pay uncapped damages. So it’s usually in their best interest to cooperate.
In closing, I’d like to reinforce that this package is just a starting point for meaningful legislative action. We want to do more research on workplace sexual harassment and gather as much information as possible so we can advance prevention and education while continuing to protect victims.”
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Si desea más información sobre este tema, póngase en contacto con William Kenny en el 215-533-0440 o por correo electrónico en William.Kenny@pasenate.com.
by Christin Brown | Abril 3, 2018 | News Releases
Harrisburg — Abril 3, 2017 — Sen. Christine M. Tartaglione (D-Philadelphia) said that nearly $1 million in PAsmart Initiative Grants were awarded to various pre-apprenticeship and registered apprenticeship programs in Philadelphia.
“These grants are incredibly important in our community because they train well-qualified candidates for long-term family sustaining jobs,” Tartaglione said.
The Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry awarded the grants through Local Workforce Development Boards (LWDBs).
The grant recipients in Philadelphia include:
- District 1199c – $85,000 pre-apprenticeship/apprenticeship grant and $50,000 capacity building grant;
- International Association of Heat and Frost Insulators and Allied Workers Local #14 – $75,000 pre-apprenticeship/apprenticeship grant;
- International Association of Sheet Metal Workers Local Union 19 – $62,000 pre-apprenticeship/apprenticeship grant and $45,495 capacity building grant;
- International Union of Operating Engineers Local 542 – $45,495 capacity building grant;
- JEVS Human Services – $99,956.60 pre-apprenticeship/apprenticeship grant and $49,996 building capacity grant;
- Philadelphia Carpenters JATC – $50,000 capacity building grant.
Tartaglione has been working to ensure that Pennsylvanians have access to quality jobs and that workers are fairly compensated. The senator is the prime sponsor of Senate Bill 1044 which would raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2024.
“There is nothing more important to me than my community – and a skilled, well qualified workforce employed in quality jobs helps create a stable, prosperous community,” Tartaglione said.
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by Christin Brown | Marzo 29, 2018 | News Releases
Abril de 2018 será el Mes de la Concienciación sobre la Agresión Sexual en toda la Commonwealth.
HARRISBURG, PA, 29 de marzo de 2018 - El Senado de Pensilvania aprobó por unanimidad una resolución autoría de la senadora Christine Tartaglione esta semana declarando abril de 2018 como el Mes de Concientización sobre el Asalto Sexual en toda la Commonwealth. En sus comentarios del 26 de marzo desde el pleno del Senado, Tartaglione describió el asalto sexual y la violencia como una "epidemia generalizada que nos afecta a todos."
"Casi una de cada cinco mujeres y uno de cada 71 hombres en Estados Unidos han sufrido una violación o un intento de violación alguna vez en su vida", dijo el senador Tartaglione. "Además, el 44 por ciento de las mujeres y el 23 por ciento de los hombres han experimentado otras formas de violencia sexual durante sus vidas, incluyendo la coerción sexual, el contacto sexual no deseado y otras experiencias sexuales sin contacto."
El tema de la celebración de este año es "Haz oír tu voz", un lema que reconoce y refleja el floreciente movimiento #MeToo. La senadora Tartaglione animó a las supervivientes a hablar de sus experiencias y a buscar ayuda para superar el trauma de por vida que supone una agresión sexual. También habló de la necesidad de que las comunidades se eduquen en materia de prevención.
He aquí el texto íntegro de las observaciones del Senador Tartaglione:
"Hoy ofrezco esta resolución para concienciar sobre un tema importante en el estado, el Mes de Concienciación sobre la Agresión Sexual. La agresión sexual es una epidemia generalizada que nos afecta a todos. Casi una de cada cinco mujeres y uno de cada 71 hombres en los Estados Unidos han sufrido violación o intento de violación en algún momento de sus vidas. Además, el 44% de las mujeres y el 23% de los hombres han sufrido otras formas de violencia sexual a lo largo de su vida, como coacción sexual, contacto sexual no deseado y otras experiencias sexuales sin contacto.
"Del 20% de las mujeres y el 1,7% de los hombres que han sufrido agresiones sexuales a lo largo de su vida, casi el 80% de las mujeres fueron agredidas antes de los 25 años, y el 40% de ellas sufrieron su primera violación entre los 11 y los 17 años. Y el 28 por ciento de los hombres fueron violados por primera vez antes de cumplir los 10 años.
"Tenemos que actuar ya para poner fin a esta violencia. Todos tenemos la responsabilidad de ayudar a prevenir las agresiones sexuales. Debemos trabajar juntos para educar a nuestras comunidades sobre la prevención de las agresiones sexuales. Cuanto más hablemos de las agresiones sexuales y más se eduque a la gente al respecto, más posibilidades tendremos de prevenirlas. Cada uno de nosotros puede marcar la diferencia en la vida de alguien enseñando a la gente a reconocer los signos de abuso sexual y qué hacer cuando alguien es agredido.
"Por lo tanto, pido a mis colegas apoyo para combatir la violencia sexual, tomar medidas para prevenirla y ayudar a los supervivientes a buscar asesoramiento para superar el trauma de por vida resultante de una agresión sexual. Gracias a organizaciones como Pennsylvania Coalition Against Rape, estos esfuerzos ya están en marcha. El tema de este año es "Haz oír tu voz", que anima a todas las personas a alzar su voz contra la violencia sexual en todas sus formas y a encontrar maneras de prevenirla en nuestras comunidades."
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Si desea más información sobre este tema, póngase en contacto con William Kenny en el 215-533-0440 o por correo electrónico en William.Kenny@pasenate.com.
by Christin Brown | Marzo 28, 2018 | News Releases
Free tax return help, unclaimed property search, rent/property tax rebate applications and Earned Income Tax Credit help will be available from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
PHILADELPHIA, PA – Marzo 28, 2018 – State Sen. Christine Tartaglione invites the community to visit her Bridge Street district office on Abril 10 to take advantage of a free Financial Freedom for Working Families event. The senator will partner with PA State Treasurer Joe Torsella and the Campaign for Working Families Inc. to “Show YOU the Money!”
There will be free income tax return preparation available, along with unclaimed property search, rent and property tax rebate application preparation and Earned Income Tax Credit assistance. Visitors can also open a PA 529 College Savings Plan with a waiver of the usual $50 enrollment fee. The event will occur at 1061 Bridge St. from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
“In today’s economic environment with rising costs and stagnant wages, working people should try to take advantage of every opportunity to get ahead,” Senator Tartaglione said. “Through this program, Treasurer Torsella and I want to connect Pennsylvanians, especially those in the 2nd Senatorial District, with the free financial resources available to them.”
This event is the final installment of a six-stop, month-long statewide tour. No appointment is necessary. Visitors will be served in the order in which they arrive. Spanish language service will be available.
Campaign for Working Families Inc. will provide tax return preparation services for filers reporting less than $54,000 income. The federal deadline to file is Abril 17 this year. Filers must bring the following documents: social security cards for the filer and all dependents, valid state-issued photo ID or driver’s license, all 2017 income documents (W-2 and 1099 forms), a voided check if you wish to receive your return as a direct deposit, any child care co-pay statements with provider’s Social Security information or EIN, any education credit form 1098-T, last year’s tax return, health insurance form 1095-A (if applicable) and identity theft protection PIN (if applicable).
Those applying for EITC must bring photo ID, proof of income and their social security number. Those seeking an unclaimed property search must bring photo ID and proof of residency such as a utility bill. Those opening a PA 529 account must bring a bank account number and routing number or voided check, along with the birthdate and social security number of the child/student beneficiary.
Visit PASenate.com/FinancialFreedom or call 215-533-0440 for more information.
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Si desea más información sobre este tema, póngase en contacto con William Kenny en el 215-533-0440 o por correo electrónico en William.Kenny@pasenate.com.
by Christin Brown | Febrero 9, 2018 | News Releases
The funding will reduce conflicts between pedestrians and motor vehicles near Adams and Summerdale avenues.
HARRISBURG, PA, Febrero 9, 2018 – State Sen. Christine Tartaglione has secured a $1.1 million Pennsylvania transportation grant to fund pedestrian safety improvements where Adams and Summerdale avenues intersect with Roosevelt Boulevard in Northeast Philadelphia.
The $1,113,612 PennDOT Multimodal Transportation Fund grant was among 45 highway, bridge, bike/pedestrian and ports/waterways projects selected by the state agency in 22 Pennsylvania counties. The grants were chosen from among 222 applications and total $41.5 million in statewide investment.
“Roosevelt Boulevard has long held a terrible reputation as one of the nation’s most dangerous roads for pedestrians and motorists. And that reputation is well-deserved,” Senator Tartaglione said. “We must do all we can to protect pedestrians as they cross this major highway.”
Designed and constructed just over a century ago, Roosevelt Boulevard is 300 feet wide and carries U.S. Route 1 from Ninth Street in Philadelphia’s Hunting Park neighborhood to the Philadelphia-Bucks County border in the Far Northeast. At the Adams/Summerdale intersection, the highway serves about 78,000 cars, trucks and busses a day while bisecting a dense residential neighborhood featuring homes, retail stores, parks, a hospital, a school, a playground and a cemetery. Summerdale Avenue intersects with the Boulevard from the northeast, while Adams Avenue intersects with the Boulevard from the southeast.
In its grant application, the City of Philadelphia’s Streets Department cited its plan to “improve the intersection geometry in the southwest corner of Adams/Summerdale avenues and Roosevelt Boulevard in order to mitigate the conflict point between pedestrians and vehicles.” Last Noviembre, Senator Tartaglione secured a $500,000 Commonwealth Financing Authority grant for the Streets Department in support of the same roadway safety initiative.
In awarding Multimodal Transportation Fund grants, PennDOT considered safety benefits, regional economic conditions, technical and financial feasibility, job creation, energy efficiency and operational sustainability.
The Multimodal Transportation Fund was created by the Pennsylvania legislature in Act 89 of 2013, Pennsylvania’s far-reaching transportation funding plan. Act 89 enabled transit, aviation, rail freight and pedestrian/bicycle modes of transportation to obtain dedicated sources of funds for the first time, placing the modes on firmer footing for future initiatives.
PennDOT will open a new round of Multimodal Transportation Fund applications on Feb. 26, 2018, with applications due on Marzo 30, 2018. Visit www.penndot.gov and click on “Multimodal Transportation,” then “Projects & Programs” for information.
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Si desea más información sobre este tema, póngase en contacto con William Kenny en el 215-533-0440 o por correo electrónico en William.Kenny@pasenate.com.
por Christin Brown | 6 de febrero de 2018 | Salario mínimo, Comunicados de prensa
HARRISBURG, PA, 6 de febrero de 2018 - La senadora Christine Tartaglione aplaudió el compromiso del gobernador Tom Wolf de destinar 100 millones de dólares a programas de desarrollo de la fuerza laboral, así como su apoyo al aumento del salario mínimo de Pensilvania en la propuesta de presupuesto para el año fiscal 2019 que el gobernador entregó hoy a una sesión conjunta de la Asamblea General.
Tartaglione se siente además animado por la intención del gobernador de acabar con la laguna del impuesto de sociedades de Delaware; su plan para ampliar el acceso al tratamiento y la prevención del abuso de sustancias; su renovado esfuerzo por exigir a los municipios que dependen exclusivamente de la Policía Estatal de Pensilvania que paguen por esos servicios; así como su llamamiento a una mayor inversión estatal en servicios a domicilio y comunitarios para personas con discapacidad intelectual y trastornos del espectro autista.
"Me alegro de que el gobernador Wolf comparta mi convicción de que Pensilvania debe mejorar su competitividad económica desarrollando nuestra mano de obra con programas como la educación y la formación, el aprendizaje y las asociaciones industriales, así como obligando a los empresarios a pagar a los trabajadores salarios justos y dignos".
"Ayer mismo anuncié mi patrocinio del proyecto de ley 1044 del Senado para aumentar el salario mínimo de Pensilvania de 7,25 dólares la hora a 15 dólares en los próximos seis años. No hemos subido nuestro salario mínimo desde 2006. Todos los estados vecinos de Pensilvania y 28 estados de todo el país tienen un salario mínimo más alto que el nuestro. Aumentar el salario mínimo hará de Pensilvania un lugar más atractivo para que los trabajadores críen a sus familias y mejorará la economía al poner más dinero en manos de los consumidores."
Durante su discurso sobre el presupuesto y en un resumen más detallado de su plan distribuido a través de la Oficina del Presupuesto, Wolf propuso aumentar el salario mínimo de 7,25 a 12 dólares la hora este año.
Wolf también esbozó una inversión de 50 millones de dólares para mejorar el acceso de los estudiantes y trabajadores de Pensilvania a la educación, la formación y los programas de preparación profesional; y 25 millones de dólares para aumentar la educación relacionada con STEM y las ciencias de la computación en los programas K-12 y postsecundarios. El plan presupuestario invierte además 7 millones de dólares en aprendizaje y formación basada en el trabajo, junto con 3 millones de dólares para asociaciones entre empresarios y proveedores públicos de mano de obra.
"Son cuestiones que llevo tiempo intentando impulsar", dijo el senador Tartaglione.
Del mismo modo, el senador Tartaglione apoya el renovado esfuerzo del gobernador por cerrar la "laguna de Delaware". Se trata de la ley que permite a las empresas con sede en Pensilvania establecer sociedades holding en la vecina Delaware, donde sus beneficios no están sujetos al impuesto de sociedades.
"A todos los efectos, estas empresas tienen su sede en Pensilvania. Ocupan terrenos aquí y hacen negocios aquí. Deberían pagar su parte justa de impuestos de sociedades para apoyar la infraestructura y los servicios que les permiten tener éxito aquí."
Exigir a los municipios que paguen por la cobertura local de la Policía Estatal es otra propuesta de Wolf que tendría un impacto positivo en las perspectivas fiscales de Pensilvania, según el senador Tartaglione. El senador apoya además el plan del gobernador para asignar un adicional de $ 74 millones a los servicios para las personas con discapacidad intelectual y autismo, incluyendo $ 16 millones para proporcionar 965 personas con apoyos y servicios que les permitan seguir viviendo en sus hogares y comunidades después de cumplir 21 años y ya no califican para el sistema de educación especial.
En la lucha en curso contra el abuso de sustancias, en concreto el trastorno por consumo de opiáceos, el gobernador tiene previsto movilizar 26,5 millones de dólares de fondos federales para complementar los esfuerzos actuales del estado para ampliar y mantener el acceso a los servicios de tratamiento. Wolf también propone una asignación estatal de 4,5 millones de dólares para la formación de proveedores de tratamiento a domicilio y otros 2 millones de dólares para ampliar los tribunales de tratamiento de drogas acreditados.
"La adicción a los opiáceos y las muertes relacionadas con ellos han alcanzado niveles catastróficos y constituyen una crisis de salud pública", declaró el senador Tartaglione. "Debemos destinar importantes recursos de forma estratégica y meditada en respuesta a esta emergencia".
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Si desea más información sobre este tema, póngase en contacto con William Kenny en el 215-533-0440 o por correo electrónico en William.Kenny@pasenate.com.
por Christin Brown | 5 de febrero de 2018 | Salario mínimo, Comunicados de prensa
Legisladores y defensores de los trabajadores renuevan su llamamiento en favor de salarios justos y sostenibles.
HARRISBURG, PA, 5 de febrero de 2018 - La senadora estatal Christine Tartaglione anunció hoy la legislación recientemente presentada que propone aumentar el salario mínimo de Pensilvania, estancado desde hace mucho tiempo. Rodeada de colegas de la Asamblea General, otros defensores de los trabajadores y miembros de Raise the Wage PA, Tartaglione anunció los detalles del Proyecto de Ley del Senado 1044 que impactaría a millones de residentes de Pensilvania con bajos salarios.
"Durante demasiado tiempo, muchos ciudadanos de Pensilvania han tenido que arreglárselas con demasiado poco", dijo el senador Tartaglione. "Lamentablemente, Pensilvania no ha aumentado su salario mínimo desde 2006 y el gobierno federal no ha aumentado el salario mínimo desde 2009. Por eso estamos hoy aquí, para defender de nuevo el aumento del salario mínimo."
La senadora Tartaglione ha estado al frente de la cuestión del salario mínimo a lo largo de sus 24 años en el Senado. Negoció el último aumento del salario mínimo en Pensilvania en 2006. Pero desde entonces, Pensilvania se ha quedado atrás. Los seis estados vecinos tienen salarios mínimos por encima del nivel federal de 7,25 dólares, al igual que 28 estados de todo el país. Pero Pensilvania no.
Del mismo modo, los trabajadores que reciben propinas en Pensilvania llevan sin subir el salario mínimo desde 1998. Según la ley, solo tienen derecho a 2,83 dólares la hora.
"Con el salario mínimo actual, un trabajador que trabaje 40 horas semanales sólo gana unos 15.000 dólares al año", declaró el senador Tartaglione. "Eso está por debajo del nivel federal de pobreza para un hogar de dos personas. Y en Pensilvania, califica al trabajador para cobrar cupones de alimentos. Y eso es inaceptable".
El proyecto de ley de Tartaglione en el Senado acompaña a una ley similar presentada en la Cámara de Pensilvania por la diputada Patty Kim. De acuerdo con el proyecto de ley, el salario mínimo aumentaría a 12 dólares la hora inmediatamente (9 dólares para los trabajadores con propinas), y luego aumentaría progresivamente hasta 15 dólares en 2024 (12 dólares para los trabajadores con propinas). Después de 2024, el salario mínimo aumentaría automáticamente cada año en función de un ajuste por el coste de la vida.
El senador señaló que el coste de la vida ha aumentado drásticamente desde la última vez que Pensilvania subió su salario mínimo. El coste de una barra de pan ha pasado de 97 céntimos a unos 2,50 dólares. Un galón de leche ha pasado de unos 3,25 dólares a más de 4. Una docena de huevos ha subido de alrededor de un dólar a 2,65 dólares.
"El salario mínimo no es una limosna. Se trata de dar una mano", dijo el senador Tartaglione.
El senador Art Haywood, copatrocinador del SB 1044, se unió al senador Tartaglione en la conferencia de prensa de hoy en el Capitolio. Haywood es el principal patrocinador del SB 1045, que se sumaría a la legislación de Tartaglione mediante el aumento gradual del salario mínimo con propinas para que coincida con el salario mínimo sin propinas durante tres años a partir de 2025. El proyecto de ley de Haywood, que fue copatrocinado por Tartaglione, también eliminaría una disposición de la ley estatal que impide a los municipios aumentar sus salarios mínimos locales por encima del mínimo estatal.
El líder de la mayoría en el Senado, Jay Costa, John Meyerson, de Raise the Wage PA, la reverenda Sandra L. Strauss, del Consejo de Iglesias de Pensilvania, Mark Price, del Keystone Research Center, y John Traynor, propietario del Harrisburg Midtown Arts Center, también se unieron al senador Tartaglione en el anuncio de hoy.
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Si desea más información sobre este tema, póngase en contacto con William Kenny en el 215-533-0440 o por correo electrónico en William.Kenny@pasenate.com.
by Christin Brown | Febrero 1, 2018 | News Releases
PHILADELPHIA, PA, Febrero 1, 2018 – State Sen. Christine Tartaglione today delivered substantial support in the fight against cancer as she visited Fox Chase Cancer Center in Northeast Philadelphia to present officials there with a $500,000 Pennsylvania Redevelopment Assistance Capital Program grant to advance the expansion of FCCC’s Infusion Center.
The Infusion Center is where Fox Chase patients receive chemotherapy, non-chemotherapy infusions, hydration and blood product transfusions. As part of an $8.2 million expansion, Fox Chase will double the Infusion Center’s floor space to 21,500 square feet and increase its patient capacity from 36 infusion chairs to 60. The larger, less crowded footprint will improve the overall patient experience by delivering it in an aesthetically pleasing setting that promotes privacy, safety and efficiency.
“The war on cancer is one of the most daunting scientific, financial and public policy challenges of our time,” Sen. Tartaglione said. “Last year, more than 600,000 Americans died from cancer, which is the nation’s second-leading cause of death. In Pennsylvania, there were 28,000 deaths, the fifth-most among U.S. states. But there is great hope. The national mortality rate has declined by at least 25 percent since the early 1990s, which is why we must keep the momentum going. Or, as Vice President Joe Biden said one year ago when he launched The Cancer Moonshot, ‘Now is the time to double-down in our fight against cancer.’”
Fox Chase Cancer Center, part of the Temple University Health System, with its commitment to clinical excellence, research expertise and community health, was one of the first facilities in the country to earn a full comprehensive cancer center designation from the National Cancer Institute, which is the federal government’s principal agency for cancer research and training. The center diagnoses and treats every kind of cancer (except pediatrics) and offers patients state-of-the-art and best practice treatments as well as clinical trials.
“Today marks an exciting development in our institution as we prepare to expand our infusion center, and we welcome State Senator Christine Tartaglione as a representative of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,” said Richard I. Fisher, MD, president & CEO of Fox Chase Cancer Center. “This support will allow us to continue to expand what we do for the benefit of our patients and our community.”
In its existing configuration, the Infusion Center serves about 2,200 patients per month. Administration of chemotherapy is by far the largest service line and revenue generator for the Center, comprising more than half of total outpatient revenues. The current infusion space frequently reaches capacity during peak times.
The expansion plan will extend its footprint from 10,460 square feet to 21,500 while expanding capacity from 36 chairs to 60. It will improve patient experience while preserving and growing Fox Chase’s market share in the delivery of chemotherapy. As a leading employer and healthcare provider in the Greater Philadelphia region, Fox Chase Cancer Center generates significant revenue, opportunity and services for local citizens.
Fox Chase expects to implement the Infusion Center expansion in three phases with design plans to be approved in Junio 2018 and construction to begin in Septiembre 2018.
The Redevelopment Assistance Capital Program (RACP) is a Commonwealth grant program administered by the Office of the Budget for the acquisition and construction of regional economic, cultural, civic, recreational and historical improvement projects. RACP projects are authorized in the Redevelopment Assistance section of a Capital Budget Itemization Act, have a regional or multi-jurisdictional impact, and generate substantial increases or maintain current levels of employment, tax revenues, or other measures of economic activity.
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Si desea más información sobre este tema, póngase en contacto con William Kenny en el 215-533-0440 o por correo electrónico en William.Kenny@pasenate.com.
by Christin Brown | Enero 18, 2018 | News Releases
Frankford Pause will offer flexible open space for social gatherings, public performances, art displays and casual reflection
PHILADELPHIA, PA, Enero 18, 2018 – State Sen. Christine M. Tartaglione (D-2nd dist.) today presented a $100,000 Pennsylvania Commonwealth Financing Authority grant that will enable the Frankford Community Development Corporation to convert a formerly vacant lot into a permanent “pause” park in the heart of the Frankford Avenue business district.

State Rep. Jason Dawkins, Frankford CDC Commercial Corridor Manager Ileana Garcia, Frankford CDC Executive Director Kimberly Washington, Esq., and state Sen. Christine Tartaglione
Frankford Pause is an innovative land reuse project conceived in 2014 by the FCDC in collaboration with the Philadelphia City Planning Commission’s Destination Frankford arts-based initiative. The vision is to create a unique outdoor venue as a hub of community activity with flexible space for social gatherings, public performances, art displays and casual reflection. The pause park is next to FCDC’s headquarters in the recently renovated Daral Building at 4667 Paul St.
“Frankford is a threatened neighborhood in many ways due to socio-economic factors such as the decline of traditional manufacturing industries and loss of family-sustaining jobs,” Senator Tartaglione said. “But the neighborhood is filled with opportunities for investment and growth thanks to the commitment of the people who live and work there. I’m thrilled to contribute to its renaissance. The pause park will beautify Frankford Avenue, bring people together for community events and attract new businesses to the area.”
Tartaglione and state Rep. Jason Dawkins visited the park site today and delivered a $100,000 check to FCDC Executive Director Kimberly Washington, Esq.
“The real hope is that we get people to reinvest around Frankford Avenue and bring people back to the avenue,” Washington said. “Over the years, Frankford’s been neglected. Right now I’d call it an emerging neighborhood. It sits on the cusp of gentrifying neighborhoods just to the south of us. Frankford has a real opportunity to stabilize the neighborhood by bringing in small businesses and creating jobs so people from the neighborhood can really take advantage and stay in the neighborhood.”
The park project is part of FCDC’s broader revitalization effort known as Reimagining Margaret & Orthodox, which includes business façade improvements, streetscaping and reducing blight. Frankford Pause is the former site of a diner that caught fire and was demolished years ago, Washington said. People then began using it as an illegal dumping ground.
The City of Philadelphia took ownership of the site. FCDC leases it from the Department of Public Property.

Washington and Tartaglione chat about the new Frankford Pause park
Late last year, FCDC completed a preliminary construction phase including the installation of planter beds, planter decks and a performance stage, as well as distinctive pink strips on the walls of adjoining buildings. The final build will include overhead lighting that will synchronize with environmental sounds such as passing Elevated trains.
FCDC co-hosted two community planting days last Octubre with the Frankford Garden Club, Frankford Friends School, Tookany/Tacony-Frankford Watershed Partnership and Pennsylvania Horticultural Society.
“Kids were really engaged and the ladies from the garden club were really glad to teach kids about gardening,” Washington said. “The kids were very excited about that.”
Next spring, FCDC will launch a pilot program of events to study how people from the community want to use and interact with the space.
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Si desea más información sobre este tema, póngase en contacto con William Kenny en el 215-533-0440 o por correo electrónico en William.Kenny@pasenate.com.
by Christin Brown | Enero 10, 2018 | News Releases
Globe Dye Works, en Frankford, ofrece oficinas, estudios, talleres y viviendas a artistas, artesanos y fabricantes.
FILADELFIA, PA, 10 de enero de 2018 - La senadora estatal Christine Tartaglione (D-2nd dist.) ha presentado hoy una subvención de capital de Pensilvania de 1 millón de dólares que permitirá a una antigua fábrica de bobinado y teñido de hilo en la sección Frankford de Filadelfia continuar su revitalización como un espacio de trabajo versátil para artistas, artesanos y fabricantes. Globe Dye Works recibió la subvención del Programa de Asistencia a la Reurbanización a finales del mes pasado.
"Globe Dye Works es un excelente ejemplo del gran potencial comercial, a menudo oculto, que existe en muchas de las propiedades industriales más antiguas e infrautilizadas de Filadelfia", ha declarado el senador Tartaglione. "En 2007, un grupo de inversores compró esta reliquia en gran parte olvidada del gran pasado manufacturero de Frankford. En una década, el lugar ha renacido como una próspera comunidad de empresas modernas, creativas y generadoras de ingresos."
Globe Dye Works ocupa 11 edificios interconectados en un campus de 1,7 acres en el 4500 de Worth St. Construida a mediados y finales del siglo XIX, la antigua fábrica textil ofrece 145.000 pies cuadrados de espacio alquilable para oficinas y estudios. Entre los inquilinos actuales figuran pintores, fotógrafos, diseñadores florales, un ebanista, un alfarero, constructores de barcos, un escultor en metal, un corredor de automóviles clásicos, un artista del tatuaje, una cremería, un fabricante de guacamole, un tostador de café y un servicio de catering, entre otros muchos usuarios. Hay más de 30 inquilinos comerciales, incluidos 19 que también viven en la propiedad. El código de zonificación de 2012 de la ciudad permite el uso mixto.
Siete socios son los propietarios. Los copropietarios Peter Kelly, Charlie Abdo, Mark Gallini y Matt Pappajohn se unieron hoy al senador Tartaglione y al representante estatal Jason Dawkins (D-179º distrito) para la entrega del cheque.
"Esta subvención es exactamente lo que la comunidad necesita", dijo Dawkins. "Permite a Globe Dye Works crear un centro comunitario tanto para los residentes como para los empresarios. Siempre nos entusiasma invertir en proyectos que dan prioridad a las pequeñas empresas y a la comunidad. Además, este poder económico permitirá a los miembros de la comunidad tener el asiento en la mesa que se merecen. Especialmente cuando se trata de asuntos relacionados con el desarrollo".
La subvención del RACP apoyará la fase final de la restauración de Globe Dye, incluida la ampliación del espacio para eventos especiales y la remodelación de los espacios de oficinas y fabricación. Según Kelly, ya se ha remodelado alrededor del 80% del espacio.
"Ahora tenemos una gran variedad de inquilinos", afirma Kelly. "Hemos celebrado aquí dos bodas en las que todos los servicios corrieron a cargo de inquilinos de Globe".
Fundada en 1865, Globe Dye Works enrolló, tiñó y blanqueó hilo durante 140 años hasta que sus antiguos propietarios, la familia Greenwood, cerraron sus puertas en 2005. Dos años después, Globe Development Group LP compró la propiedad por 675.000 dólares y empezó a convertirla en una nueva configuración con unidades individuales de alquiler de entre 500 y 15.000 pies cuadrados. La ciudad de Filadelfia ha evaluado el valor de mercado de la propiedad en casi 2 millones de dólares para 2018.
Tookany/Tacony-Frankford Watershed Partnership es una organización de defensa del medio ambiente sin ánimo de lucro que se instaló en Globe en mayo de 2013. El organismo apoya la conservación y restauración de una cuenca que se extiende desde el noreste de Filadelfia hasta los suburbios del condado de Montgomery.
"(Globe Dye) ha cambiado realmente nuestra relación con el Parque (Tacony Creek) y el barrio", dijo la Directora Ejecutiva de TTF, Julie Slavet. "Nos consideramos parte de Frankford".
El Programa Capital de Ayuda a la Reurbanización es un programa de subvenciones de la Commonwealth administrado por la Oficina Presupuestaria del Gobernador Wolf para la adquisición y construcción de proyectos regionales de mejora económica, cultural, cívica, recreativa e histórica. Los proyectos RACP se autorizan en la sección de Ayuda a la Reurbanización de una Ley de Partidas Presupuestarias de Capital, tienen un impacto regional o multijurisdiccional y generan aumentos sustanciales o mantienen los niveles actuales de empleo, ingresos fiscales u otras medidas de actividad económica.
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Si desea más información sobre este tema, póngase en contacto con William Kenny en el 215-533-0440 o por correo electrónico en William.Kenny@pasenate.com.