Current:Home > FinancePennsylvania expands public records requirements over Penn State, Temple, Lincoln and Pitt -WorldMoney
Pennsylvania expands public records requirements over Penn State, Temple, Lincoln and Pitt
View
Date:2025-04-12 20:46:05
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Several leading Pennsylvania universities that receive millions of dollars in state aid must publicly disclose more records about their finances, employment and operations, under legislation signed Thursday by Gov. Josh Shapiro.
Shapiro, a Democrat, signed the bill a day after it passed the Senate unanimously.
For years, lawmakers have sought to expand public disclosure requirements over Pennsylvania’s four state-related universities: the University of Pittsburgh and Temple, Lincoln and Penn State universities.
The schools supported the bill that passed.
Under it, the universities will be required to publish various pieces of information about their finances, employment and operations. Some of it they already voluntarily produce, such as open meeting minutes from their boards of trustees, enrollment and staff employment figures.
In addition, the universities will be required to list the salaries of all officers and directors, as well as up to the 200 highest-paid employees, plus faculty salary ranges. They will have to report detailed financial information for each academic and administrative support unit and any enterprise that is funded by tuition or taxpayer money, plus detailed information about classification of employees and course credits.
The schools also will have to publish information about each contract exceeding $5,000 online and submit it to the governor’s office and Legislature.
The four universities, referred to as “state-related universities,” are not state-owned, but receive hundreds of millions in taxpayer dollars that support in-state tuition and operations.
The bill passed on the same day lawmakers resolved a partisan fight over the hundreds of millions of dollars in annual aid the state sends to the four schools.
Lincoln University received a $3 million increase after it kept tuition flat for the 2023-24 school year. The other three schools increased tuition, stiffening Republican opposition to giving them an increase. Shapiro signed the $603 million in aid into law Thursday.
The universities are otherwise exempt from Pennsylvania’s open records law that covers state agencies, including the state-owned universities in the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education.
veryGood! (48112)
Related
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Run, Don’t Walk to Anthropologie to Save an Extra 40% off Their Sale Full of Cute Summer Dresses & More
- 'Greatest fans in the world': Phillies supporters turn Baltimore into playoff atmosphere
- Edmonton Oilers are searching for answers down 3-0 in the Stanley Cup Final
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Taylor Swift says Eras Tour will end in December
- Explosions heard as Maine police deal with armed individual
- Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark is perfect man as conference pursues selling naming rights
- Grammy nominee Teddy Swims on love, growth and embracing change
- Here are the most and least affordable major cities in the world
Ranking
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- On Father’s Day, this LGBTQ+ couple celebrates the friend who helped make their family dream reality
- NBA great Jerry West wasn't just the logo. He was an ally for Black players
- Does chlorine damage hair? Here’s how to protect your hair this swim season.
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- 'Predator catchers' cover the USA, live-streaming their brand of vigilante justice
- Some hawking stem cells say they can treat almost anything. They can’t
- A man died after falling into a manure tanker at a New York farm. A second man who tried to help also fell in and died.
Recommendation
Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
'It was just awful': 66-year-old woman fatally struck by police truck on South Carolina beach
German police shoot to death an Afghan man who killed a compatriot, then attacked soccer fans
Waffle House servers are getting a raise — to $3 an hour
Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
Was this Tiger Woods' last US Open? Legend uncertain about future after missing cut
Mama June's Daughter Jessica Chubbs Shannon Wants Brother-In-Law to Be Possible Sperm Donor
UFL championship game: Odds, how to watch Birmingham Stallions vs. San Antonio Brahmas