That said, Corbett inherited the fiscal plight facing Growing Greener. Trash-dumping fees meant to recharge the fund were diverted to cover debt service in recent years. Former Gov. Ed Rendell was a proponent of Growing Greener but left office without reaching a deal with lawmakers on added funding.
The new governor's no-tax pledge, however, has put the state in a bind. In order to free up the trash-tipping fees for new projects to preserve open space, perform stream and other watershed cleanups, and reclaim brownfield sites in urban communities, new revenues would have to be found - all without raising anyone's taxes, according to Corbett's governing philosophy.
Fortunately, a coalition representing 250 organizations and government entities - the Renew Growing Greener Coalition - is keeping up public pressure to push the envelope in tax-averse Harrisburg.
Despite Corbett's pledge, the most obvious solution would be to join every other state that has a natural-gas industry and impose a tax on the drillers exploring the huge Marcellus Shale formation.
In February, state Rep. Greg Vitali (D., Delaware) offered a sensible plan that would impose a gas extraction tax and devote a third of the revenue to Growing Greener. Significantly, Senate President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati (R., Jefferson) has offered support for that concept and may offer a majority-party plan on a shale tax.
With or without a tax on drillers, Corbett's state Department of Environmental Protection must crack down on any threat to watersheds. But imposing a shale tax that funds the open-space and cleanup efforts of Growing Greener would be a smart strategy to preserve the livability of communities across the state.