Government and society
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Constitutional framework
Under the constitution of 1968—Pennsylvania’s fourth since becoming a state—and its subsequent amendments, the executive branch consists of the governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general, auditor general, state treasurer, and governor’s cabinet. The secretary of state and the secretary of education are appointed by the governor, subject to Senate approval.
The governor is elected for a four-year term and may be reelected for one additional term. Among the main powers of the governor are broad veto power over bills passed in the legislature (General Assembly), including a line-item veto for appropriations bills, and the right to return bills to the Assembly for reconsideration. The General Assembly consists of a Senate of 50 members and a House of Representatives of 203 members. Senators are elected for four-year terms and representatives for two-year terms.
A unified judicial system comprises the Supreme Court, Superior Court, Commonwealth Court, county courts, and a system of lower courts. The seven justices of the Supreme Court are elected for 10-year terms; justices of the peace and of the municipal and traffic courts of Philadelphia are elected for 6-year terms.
Under the constitution, the General Assembly provides rules and regulations for local governments. A major responsibility in this regard is to classify all municipalities—such as cities, boroughs, counties, and townships—by population size. All Assembly regulations must be uniform throughout each class, and no community can secure preferential treatment. Philadelphia is the state’s only first-class city and may have special legislation. Pittsburgh and Scranton are classified as second-class cities. The rest of Pennsylvania’s cities are designated as third-class. Smaller cities have various governmental forms, while boroughs have elected councils and mayors with limited powers. A 1968 constitutional amendment permitted municipalities to choose home rule.
Between the Civil War and the 1920s, state government was, with a few exceptions in the late 19th century, controlled by the Republican Party. The state government became a seat of “boss rule.” This party domination was broken in the 1930s, and since then the governor and General Assembly have been about evenly divided between Republicans and Democrats. Pennsylvania generally exhibits the characteristic American pattern of rural conservatism and urban liberalism, although locally such labels may bear no relationship to particular parties.
Health and welfare
The government provides most of the funds for public social services in Pennsylvania. Since the creation of such programs at the time of Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal in the 1930s, social services have expanded greatly.
In the late 20th century the provision of better health service to all people at all ages became a goal at both private and governmental levels. The resulting rapid growth of health services and of the share they took of both personal and state income became of great concern to individual citizens as well as to policy makers. At the turn of the 21st century, health services employed about one-tenth of the workforce, and health care was increasingly available throughout the state. A significant development was that of hospitals specializing in orthopedic and mental care and the treatment of specific problems such as drug and alcohol abuse. Social services provided by the state include child protection, drug and alcohol rehabilitation, geriatric care, and help for victims of domestic violence.
Education
The educational system is administered through public school districts that provide teachers, textbooks, laboratory materials, and physical equipment. Funds are secured from the state and local communities through taxes and bond issues. Private schools are largely supported by tuition. The state department of education establishes statewide standards for teacher certification and curricula and apportions money to the local school districts.
Pennsylvania has more than 100 four-year colleges and universities in addition to numerous two-year colleges. Philadelphia is a major centre of medical education, while Pittsburgh’s Carnegie Mellon University—formed in 1967 by the merger of the Carnegie Institute of Technology (founded in 1900 as the Carnegie Technical School) and the Mellon Institute (1913)—makes that city a centre of science and engineering studies. Pennsylvania State University (or Penn State; 1855), in University Park, is the state land-grant institution; it has many branch campuses throughout the state. Temple University (1884), in Philadelphia, the University of Pittsburgh (1787), and Lincoln University (1854) are also state-supported. There are also more than 50 private colleges and universities in Pennsylvania. Of these the University of Pennsylvania (1740), in Philadelphia, an Ivy League school, is one of the most distinguished. In 1765 it began the first institution for the study of medicine in the state. Today, the university’s Wharton School is recognized for its leadership in business education, and its renowned Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology (also known as the Penn Museum) sponsors archaeological expeditions throughout the world.
Other schools with major reputations are Bryn Mawr College (1880), one of the Seven Sisters schools; Haverford College (1833) and Swarthmore College (1864), which are Quaker schools; and Villanova University (1842), a Roman Catholic institution—all near Philadelphia. Dating from the 18th century are Dickinson College (1773), in Carlisle; Franklin and Marshall College (1787), in Lancaster; and Washington and Jefferson College (1787), in Washington. Carlisle was the site of the Carlisle Indian Industrial School from 1879 to 1918; the facility became the home of the U.S. Army War College in 1951.