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Secret accounts found as corruption case delayed

Plus, bills would expand where public notices can be published beyond newspapers.

This is The Investigator, a free weekly newsletter with the top news from across Pennsylvania.
A weekly newsletter by Spotlight PA, an independent, nonpartisan newsroom producing investigative journalism for Pennsylvania.



July 11, 2024 | spotlightpa.org
CASE DELAYS

A federal judge has repeatedly granted delays in the case of a former public official accused of corruption as the Pennsylvania city he once ran and allegedly fleeced grapples with the fallout and a nearly $1 million budget deficit.

Last November, federal authorities charged Herm Suplizio, DuBois’ ex-city manager, and his former secretary, Roberta Shaffer, with felony conspiracy and federal program theft. Since then, the case — which was launched by the Pennsylvania Office of Attorney General — has largely gone silent, Spotlight PA reports.

At the same time, a new slate of city officials had to tackle the scandal’s fallout and unwelcome surprises, including a dozen secret bank accounts.

Also this week, Pennsylvania's budget still isn't done. One of the reasons behind the delay? A disagreement over education funding, specifically the metric to use to measure student poverty

Finally, lawmakers are advancing a bill that would cement the timelines for resolving post-election legal battles and prevent delays in finalizing the state’s electoral votes.

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📭 HOW WE CARE

There are more than a million unpaid caregivers in Pennsylvania fulfilling vital and complex health care roles for loved ones, often with no training and few resources. You may be one. You may know one. Data show many of us will become one.

Spotlight PA's newest weekly newsletter, How We Care, provides original reporting, guidance, and resources to empower home as well as professional caregivers across Pennsylvania. Sign up here.

📅 UPCOMING EVENTS

ROCKY WATERS: Join us Thursday, July 18 from 6-7 p.m. ET on Zoom for a live panel on Pennsylvania’s private water industry, how it is regulated, and how communities are affected when service is subpar. Register for the event here and submit your questions to events@spotlightpa.org.

VIA SPOTLIGHT PA

» How a ‘life-changing’ subsidy gave a child care worker more time with family

» What you need to know about Pa.’s slow elder abuse investigations

Bills would expand where public notices can be published beyond newspapers

As newspapers print less frequently in some communities and close in others, local government groups want the legislature to change a state law that requires municipalities to publish public notices in a community’s paper of record. 

Two bills introduced in the state House and Senate would allow digital public notices. Both are strongly opposed by the organization that lobbies for Pennsylvania’s newspapers.

Public notices are legal advertisements that detail the workings of government agencies. They share information about annual budgets, bids for supplies and services, ordinances, and meeting and hearing logistics. Mandatory legal notices ensure basic government transparency and allow residents to participate in the decision-making process. 

But the decline of newspapers has complicated local governments’ administrative responsibilities, said Ron Grutza, senior director of regulatory affairs at the Pennsylvania State Association of Boroughs.

Grutza wants state lawmakers to update the 1976 law to allow counties, municipalities, municipal authorities, and school districts more options for where they can place advertisements, such as on their own websites or a newspaper’s.

Title 45, which governs advertising requirements, is “a 20th century law,” Grutza told Spotlight PA. His organization is among a list of statewide associations representing municipal governing bodies that support the change.

Local governing bodies across the commonwealth could also potentially save tens of millions of dollars using websites rather than newspapers, Dave Sanko, executive director of the Pennsylvania State Association of Township Supervisors, told Spotlight PA. 

A 2006 Penn State study pegged annual savings at $23 million a year — a number that could be higher now, a PSATS spokesperson said. 

Proponents argue that the internet reaches more people than traditional media nowadays, and local governments that don’t have websites would be incentivized to create them, which could improve transparency for the public. 

A survey of 600 Pennsylvania voters commissioned by the Pennsylvania NewsMedia Association in 2022 found more than 90% of them answered yes when asked whether they favored state law requiring public notices being published in print editions of local newspapers.

The association, of which Spotlight PA is a member, lobbies for newspapers in the commonwealth. Legislative Affairs Director Barbara Hough Huesken said newspapers are independent third parties that serve as a one-stop shop for the public to find the information they need. 

Newspapers should remain the primary destination for public notices, considering the lack of reliable broadband access in parts of Pennsylvania, Huesken said. 

The two bills could be joined by a third. State Sen. Ryan Aument (R., Lancaster) said in a December memo that he plans to introduce legislation directing a committee to study the cost of public notices. An up-to-date look into the ways the public are informed and the impact legal advertisements have on newspaper revenue is necessary to address the issue, a spokesperson for Aument told Spotlight PA. The bill could be introduced in the fall.

Whether those proposals have a chance to reach the governor’s desk remains unclear. The current bills have not been considered by the committees they were referred to, indicating there may not be an appetite to make such a change. Min Xian, Spotlight PA

🤔 NEXT QUESTION: Are you on top of the news? Prove it with the latest edition of the Great PA News Quiz: Biden questions, Capitol cybercrime, and Shapiro rolls out the welcome signs
WEEKLY RUNDOWN

» AP: Chesapeake Bay health gets best grade in decades

» CITY & STATE: 10 bills passed by PA lawmakers this budget cycle 

» LNP: Liquor control board must refund 'special order' fees

» INQUIRER: Mass email threats and weekend evacuation of Capitol 

» TRIBLIVE: Small private colleges across Pa. close their doors

» WITF: Pa. restarts plan to upgrade voter registration system

» WPXI: Pennsylvania expands access to telemedicine 

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THE RIDDLER
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MYSTERY RULE (Case No. 264)
If 123=0, 4235=0, 656=2, 5390=2, 8890=6, 1001=2, 19235=1, what does 123456789 equal?
 
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