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Elected officials and residents expressed concerns over how SEPTA cuts could impact students, seniors and commuters who live in the suburbs.
The Pennsylvania House of Representatives rejected two budget bills passed by the state Senate, prolonging a budget impasse that has persisted for over 40 days.
Pennsylvania's Senate on Tuesday advanced a $47.6 billion state budget for 2025-26 that holds spending flat, as well as a two-year, $1.2 billion transportation plan opposed ...
Update: This story is no longer being updated. Get live updates on the latest efforts to reach a deal on SEPTA funding here. With SEPTA’s deadline to secure funding to avoid a “transit death spiral” ...
SEPTA cannot pause massive service cuts in the wake of the Senate’s passage of legislation to use money designated for ...
With Pennsylvania lawmakers unable to compromise on stop-gaps to solve SEPTA funding, will service continue in Delaware?
As Pennsylvania’s budget impasse continues, elected officials involved in negotiations have repeatedly said talks are ...
Pennsylvania’s GOP-controlled Senate also advanced a $47.6 billion state budget for 2025-26 that holds spending flat, but ...
Six weeks after the constitutionally mandated June 30 deadline to pass it, SEPTA announced last week that it will have to cut ...
House Democrats on Wednesday spiked budget and mass transit funding bills that passed the Senate a day earlier, leaving no end in sight to the state’s six-week budget impasse. The state Senate on ...
A Pennsylvania House committee voted down a bill the Republican-controlled Senate passed to infuse new funding into SEPTA.
Members of the Republican-led Senate voted to amend House Bill 257 to use $300 million in the public transit trust fund to address operational needs, instead of leaning on sales tax increases proposed ...