Wednesday, December 17, 2025

PJM Electricity Auction Prices Again At Cap Imposed By Gov. Shapiro’s Lawsuit Settlement, Without It Prices Would Be 59% Higher Driven By A.I. Data Center Demand; Grid Reliability Now Questioned

On December 17, the
PJM Interconnection announced the capacity electricity auction prices again hit the $333 MW/day market cap imposed by Gov. Shapiro’s lawsuit settlement for securing 134,479 MW of electric generation for delivery in 2027-28.

Without the cap, the price would have been at least 58.8% higher at $529 MW/day driving electricity bills even higher.

Electricity demand has surged driven primarily by A.I. data centers, while generators have failed to bring new energy resources online fast enough. 

As a result, capacity prices have skyrocketed. 

PJM’s 2025–26 auction, held in July 2024, resulted in costs of $14.7 billion, an increase of more than 800 percent from the prior year. 

The subsequent auction, held in July 2025, drove costs even higher — reaching $16.1 billion.

This December auction had a clearing price total of $16.4 billion.

"This auction leaves no doubt that data centers’ demand for electricity continues to far outstrip new supply, and the solution will require concerted action involving PJM, its stakeholders, state and federal partners, and the data center industry itself,” said Stu Bresler, Executive Vice President – Market Services and Strategy, who becomes chief operating officer on Jan. 7.

Gov. Shapiro said in a statement-- “I sued PJM because it is unacceptable for them to do nothing as consumers pay sky-high utility bills while getting nothing in return.

“My Administration has once again stopped billions of dollars in unnecessary and unjustified energy price hikes from being passed on to families and businesses.

“ PJM needs real reform and they are running out of time to protect consumers from their inaction. 

“My Administration will continue  to build more energy generation right here in the Commonwealth and push PJM to fix its broken process so we can lower costs, strengthen reliability, and keep more money in the pockets of Pennsylvanians.”

This is the last auction subject to the market cap settlement agreement.

On December 3, Gov. Shapiro and five other governors in the PJM service territory wrote to the PJM Board urging them to immediately extend the market price cap agreement for one further auction to be held in June 2026 to allow time for additional reforms to be adopted.  Read more here.

Results Do Not Meet Reliability Standard

PJM said the capacity of the resources procured in the auction, plus Fixed Resource Required resources, is short of PJM’s reliability requirement by 6,623 MW, meaning that the committed supply is less than what would be required to meet the one-event-in-10-year reliability standard of a 20% reserve margin. 

This does not necessarily mean, however, that the PJM system will be unable to serve load reliability in the delivery year. 

PJM continues to hold a reserve margin of 14.8%, and there are several mitigating factors that could improve the reliability picture for the system in the 2027/2028 Delivery Year.

5,100 MW Of 5,250 MW Of New Demand Is Data Centers

PJM said the forecast peak load for the 2027/2028 Delivery Year is approximately 5,250 MW higher than the forecast used for the 2026/2027 capacity auction. 

Nearly 5,100 MW of that increase is attributable to data center demand.

Energy Mix

The cleared resource mix in this auction includes: 43% natural gas, 21% nuclear, 20% coal, 5% demand response, 4% hydro, 2% wind, 2% oil and 1% solar, according to PJM.

The auction cleared 774 MW  of new generation and generation uprates. 

The total amount of supply in the PJM service area increased from 196,650 MW to 200,994 MW, or an increase in the total amount of supply by 4,344 MW installed capacity

Click Here for the PJM announcement.

Reactions

Tom Rutigliano, Natural Resources Defense Council, said "Summer 2027 will be the first time in PJM’s history it expects to not have enough power to reliably meet demand because of new data center forecasts and the ongoing risk of fossil fuel generators failing during winter storms. 

"Data centers are applying to connect to the grid much faster than the grid can keep up. Right now, PJM and its member utilities are promising power they simply don’t have.

“Most troubling is that there was only 956 MW of new supply, even though this was the third year of very high prices. That’s less than a 1% increase in supply. 

"Delays in building transmission, supply chain issues, barriers to siting new renewables, and PJM’s interconnection queue have combined to leave the region locked up and simply unable to build power plants. We’re throwing money in a hole right now.

“PJM must take action to protect the public from cost and reliability impacts by requiring new data centers that want to connect to the grid bring their own capacity. 

"Otherwise, electricity bills will continue to rise and reliability will suffer. Worse, nearly all of the billions of dollars that customers will be charged will go to existing power plants, not to new supply and transmission infrastructure PJM desperately needs.”

The Reliable Grid Project issued this statement--

“Developers are literally waiting in line to build the energy projects states need, but PJM is really struggling to get this new supply connected to the grid quickly enough,” said Jon Gordon, Director, Advanced Energy United. “Reforms are in the works, but don’t go far enough, and in the meantime, some energy projects have been languishing in the PJM queue for four or five years.”

Nikhil Kumar, Program Director at GridLab, warned that these factors are creating a "perfect storm" of increased demand and limited supply, leading to higher costs for consumers and potential reliability risks.

“Data centers are being built at a pace that far outstrips the ability of the system to balance supply and demand,” said Clara Summers, Consumers for a Better Grid Campaign Manager, Citizens Utility Board of Illinois (CUB). “This auction result underscores the urgent need for reforms to ensure affordability and reliability across PJM.”

“While the price cap has provided short-term relief, it’s clear that PJM’s interconnection process is broken,” said Kumar. “Texas has demonstrated that adding energy resources like solar, wind, and batteries can significantly reduce grid risks and costs. PJM must act quickly to implement reforms and bring energy projects online to address the growing demand.”

The Clean Power PA Coalition said-- “The latest PJM capacity auction signals still more electric bill increases ahead for millions of Pennsylvanians. 

“Even with Governor Shapiro’s effective intervention to cap PJM auction prices, electric bills will increase yet again with this auction. 

“This will come after most Pennsylvanians were hit with annual electric bill increases of more than $100 this past year, with price hikes ranging from 12% to 27%.

“What’s worse, those higher prices don’t necessarily mean there will be enough capacity to meet demand during periods of extreme weather during 2027-28, which could increase the risk of blackouts. 

“The backlogged PJM process to approve new energy sources to the grid, especially many backlogged cheap, clean energy projects awaiting approval, means that PJM is not keeping up with the rapidly growing demand for electricity, driven largely by huge data centers. 

“This failure to bring new energy online quickly enough, combined with PJM’s outmoded design for purchasing energy and its failure to build out more electric transmission, is driving up prices for all of us.

“The auction price cap that Governor Shapiro successfully negotiated with PJM a year ago was intended to give PJM time to institute long-term solutions. 

“Over that period, PJM has accomplished little to address the underlying problems that are driving up prices. Unless extended, the next auction will take place this summer without adequate cost protections for electric bill customers.

“PJM must act with urgency to put an end to these outrageous electric bill hikes. For starters, it must remove barriers to cheap, clean, and reliable clean energy by quickly clearing its huge backlog of new energy projects waiting to connect to the grid.  

“It must continue reforming its process for purchasing energy to ensure that people are not overpaying for their electricity. 

“Finally, it must improve its transmission planning to more quickly build out more long-range transmission lines.”

Resource Links - Energy Affordability:

-- PUC: Most PA Electric Utility Consumers To See 3.7% To 10.6% Increase In Electricity Prices During The Next 3 Months Starting Dec. 1  [PaEN] 

-- Morning Call - Elizabeth Deornellas: How A.I. Data Centers Are Driving Up The Cost Of Electricity And What Grid Operators Can Do [PDF of Article]

-- Scranton Times - Chris Kelly Opinion: PPL Proposed 7% Rate Hike A.I. Data Center Driven  [PDF of Article

-- PA Capital-Star: Energy Market Watchers See Electric Bills In PA, Other States Rising As A.I. Data Center Demand Continues 

-- PaGasSwitch.com: Natural Gas Costs Increased From 9.26% to 57.5% Over The Last Year For Natural Gas Utility Customers Not Shopping For A Fuel Supplier  [PaEN] 

-- Post-Gazette - Anya Litvak: PUC Approves Columbia Gas Rate Increase - 13th Since 2008

-- PUC Highlights Ways Natural Gas Customers Can Manage Winter Energy Use, Costs, Explore Energy Affordability Options  [PaEN] 

-- PUC Publishes Updates To Low-Income Natural Gas, Electric Utility Usage Reduction Program Regulations  [PaEN]

-- PUC Chairman Highlights 'Extraordinary Challenges' Pennsylvania Families Are Facing This Winter With Energy Bills And His Appreciation For Groups Providing Assistance  [PaEN]

-- Post-Gazette - Anya Litvak: What’s Important In Affordable Energy?  A Conversation With A Carnegie Mellon Energy Justice Professor

-- Data Center Stampede Trampling PA Ratepayers Part I:  PA Utility Law Project - Utility Terminations Up 30% Already; Prioritize Existing Loads; Centers Need To Help Pay For Utility Assistance  [PaEN] 

-- Data Center Stampede Trampling PA Ratepayers Part II: PA Consumer Advocate - PUC Should Set Conditions For Centers To Be Served By The Grid; Set Power Curtailment Priorities [PaEN]

-- Data Center Stampede Trampling PA Ratepayers Part III:  PJM Market Monitor - Data Centers Have Cost Existing Ratepayers $16.6 Billion Already; Centers Should Bring Their Own Power Generation To Prevent More Large Price Spikes  [PaEN] 

-- PJM Electric Auction Impacts: 1 In 5 PA Households Report Problems Now Paying Energy Bills; Electric Utility Shutoffs Up 38.1% So Far This Year  [PaEN] 

-- PJM Electricity Auction: PJM Lost 2.8 Gigawatts Of Power Due To Reduced Reliability Rating Of Natural Gas Power Plants; Could Gain 12.2 Gigawatts By Increasing Reliability From Less Than 75% Now To An Achievable 90%  [PaEN] 

Resource Links - Who Pays:

-- PUC Invites Comments On Proposed Model Tariff To Balance A.I. Data Center Growth And Ratepayer Protection  [PaEN]

-- PUC Commissioners Agree On Need To ‘Get It Right’ On Reforming Grid Connection Process For Solar, Renewable, All Energy Sources To Protect Consumers, Grid Reliability  [PaEN]

-- Post-Gazette - Anya Litvak: PUC Proposes Special Treatment For A.I. Data Center Power Connections To Contain The Cost Burden On Existing Ratepayers [PDF of Article]

-- WESA - Rachel McDevitt: PJM Grid Operator Covering PA Failing To Plan For Responsible A.I. Data Center Load Growth, Observers Say

-- PJM Market Monitor Files Complaint With FERC Saying PJM Is Proposing To Allow A.I. Data Centers To Connect To Grid That It Cannot Reliably Serve, Will Require Blackouts To Maintain Service  [PaEN]

-- NRDC: PJM Grid Members Fail To Recommend Any Of 12 Proposals To Prevent Existing Electric Ratepayers From Bearing The Costs, Reliability Risk Of Soaring A.I. Data Center Energy Demand  [PaEN] 

-- On The Eve Of New PJM Capacity Auction: Gov. Shapiro, 5 Other Governors Say PJM's Efforts To Deal With A.I. Data Center Demands Have Failed; Urge 'Decisive Action' To Avoid 'Extraordinarily’ High Prices  [PaEN] 

-- PA Capital-Star: Shapiro Urges FERC To Consider Consumer, State Regulator, Power Company Comments On A.I. Data Centers Connecting To PJM Grid Proposed By PJM’s Market Monitor To Protect Reliability, Affordability

-- The Center Square: Consensus For Soaring A.I. Data Center Power Demands Still Elusive Among PJM Members

-- PA Capital-Star: PJM Grid Operator Weighs Proposals To Manage A.I. Data Center Impact On Electricity Affordability And Reliability 

-- WITF/LancasterOnline: Mild Forecast For PA Winter Heating Bills In Peril As Natural Gas Prices Surge

-- PUC Directs Staff To Develop Rule On Winter Terminations, Payment Arrangements, Other Consumer Protections

Resource Links - Grid Reliability:

-- North American Electric Reliability Corp: Electric Grid At Elevated Risk Of Insufficient Energy Supplies During Extreme Weather Due To Rising A.I. Data Center Demands, 'Precarious' Natural Gas Supplies  [PaEN] 

-- Utility Dive: North American Electric Reliability Corp: Winter Peak Demand Is Rising Faster Than Resource Additions

-- Reuters: US A.I. Data Center Demand Raising Power Risks This Winter, NERC Says

-- Bloomberg: US Faces Winter Blackout Risks From A.I. Data Centers’ Power Needs, NERC Says

Related Articles This Week:

-- Pennsylvania BRIGHT Expands Statewide To Remove Barriers To Bringing Affordable Solar Energy To PA Homeowners Left Out Of Transition To Clean Energy Options  [PaEN] 

NewsClips:

-- Bloomberg: Latest PJM Power Auction Set To Deepen Affordability Concerns

-- KSDK: A.I. Data Centers Are Sucking Illinois’ Power Grid Dry, Official Report Warns [PJM Service Area]

-- PJM Outlines Long-Term Electric Transmission Plan In FERC Filing 

-- Morning Call/Inquirer: Poll: How Pennsylvanians Feel About A.I. Data Centers: 70% Concerned About Water Use; 71% Concerned About Electricity Use 

-- Altoona Mirror: Groups Urge Shapiro To Dial Back Support For A.I. Data Centers [PDF of Article]

-- Bloomberg: New York Utility Says Queue For A.I. Data Center Power Users Has Tripled

-- Post-Gazette: President’s Order To Block State Regulation Of A.I. An ‘Abuse Of Power,’ State Democratic Sen. Costa Says

-- WITF: Republican Attorney General Dave Sunday Says He’ll Defend State A.I. Laws From President’s Administration

-- PA Capital-Star: PA’s Republican Attorney General, Lawmakers Contend With President’s Order Blocking A.I. Regulations

[Posted: December 17, 2025]  PA Environment Digest

USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service Announces Jan. 15 Deadline To Apply For Major Conservation Assistance Program, Including Regenerative Pilot Program

On December 17, the USDA
Natural Resources Conservation Service established a national Jan. 15, 2026, batching deadline for the first funding round of key conservation programs. 

This national batching date ensures producers have a clear, consistent timeline for participating in Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP), Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP), Agricultural Conservation Easement Program (ACEP), and Agricultural Management Assistance (AMA). 

This includes NRCS’ new Regenerative Pilot Program, which provides targeted Farmer First assistance through EQIP and CSP.

In Pennsylvania, the Regional Conservation Partnership Program (RCPP) will also follow the January 15, 2026, batching deadline.

“The NRCS team continues its commitment to Pennsylvania’s producers — advancing conservation, strengthening service delivery, and keeping our promise to the men and women who feed and fuel our nation,” said NRCS State Conservationist Denise Coleman.

NRCS programs are continuous sign-up programs, but due to the government shutdown, the agency is implementing an initial national batching period to ensure producers have access to funding and support.

Updated NRCS Program Timelines

-- All NRCS conservation programs remain continuous sign-up.

-- Farmers and ranchers have until 15, 2026, to apply for the first batching period.

-- National and State Conservation Innovation Grants (CIG) will follow later in the year.

-- PL-566 and Emergency Watershed Protection (EWP) opportunities remain open for sponsors based on available funding.

Programs with a January 15, 2026, batching period deadline include:

-- Agricultural Conservation Easement Program (ACEP)

-- Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP)

-- Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP)

-- Agricultural Management Assistance Program (AMA)

-- Regional Conservation Partnership Program (RCPP)

-- New NRCS Regenerative Pilot Program (EQIP & CSP)

Click Here for the NRCS announcement.

For more information, please visit USDA NRCS-PA webpage or contact your local USDA Service Center.

[Posted: December 17, 2025]  PA Environment Digest

Wednesday PA Environment & Energy Articles - NewsClips: 12.17.25

“The people have a right to clean air, pure water, and to the preservation of the natural, scenic, historic and esthetic values of the environment. Pennsylvania's public natural resources are the common property of all the people, including generations yet to come. As trustee of these resources, the Commonwealth shall conserve and maintain them for the benefit of all the people.”

-- Article I, Section 27 Pennsylvania Constitution  [It’s Not A Suggestion]


Senate Voting Schedule

January 6, 26, 27, 28

February 2, 3 (Governor’s Budget Address), 4

Budget hearings will be held February 23-26, and March 2

March 16, 17, 18, 23, 24, 25

April 20, 21, 22

May 4, 5, 6

June 1, 2, 3, 8, 9, 10, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 29, 30

-- Committee Schedule


House Voting Schedule 2025

December 17

-- Committee Schedule


House Voting Schedule 2026

January 6 (NV), 26, 27, 28

February 2, 3 (Governor's Budget Address, 4

Budget hearings will be held February 23-26, and March 2

March. 23, 24, 25

April 13, 14, 15, 27, 28, 29

May 4, 5, 6

June 1, 2, 3, 8, 9, 10, 15, 16, 17, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30

September 28, 29, 30

October 5, 6, 7, 19, 20, 21

November 9, 10


TODAY’s Calendar Of Events 


TODAY 10:00: House Environmental and Natural Resource Protection Committee meets to consider House Bill 1116 (Pugh-R-Luzerne) requires DEP to conduct a study of PFAS ‘Forever Chemicals’ in biosolids;  House Resolution 66 (Pielli-D-Chester) directs the Legislative Budget and Finance Committee to conduct a study and issue a report on wild native terrestrial invertebrate management; House Resolution 352 (Ciresi-D-Montgomery) directs the Joint State Government Commission to conduct a study on litter law enforcement and provide recommendations.  Room 205 Ryan Building. 10:00 a.m.  Click Here to watch online.


TODAY 10:00: DEP Hearing On Air Quality Permit For The PEI Power LLC Natural Gas Power Plant In Lackawanna County. DEP Northeast Regional Office, Wilkes-Barre.  10:00 a.m.  Read more here.


TODAY 10:00: DEP hearing on a revised Title V Air Quality Permit for the Portland Power, LLC 400 MW power plant in Upper Mount Bethel Township, Northampton County hoping to attract an A.I. data center project. DEP Northeast Regional Office, Wilkes-Barre. 10:00 a.m.  Read more here.


TODAY 10:00: DEP Hearing On Air Quality Permit For Ecopax LLC Facility In Forks Twp., Northampton County. DEP Northeast Regional Office, Wilkes-Barre.  10:00 a.m.  Read more here.


TODAY 10:00:  DEP hearing on a revised Title V Air Quality Permit for the Surteco North America facility in West Brunswick Township, Schuylkill County. DEP Northeast Regional Office, Wilkes-Barre.  10:00 a.m. Read more here.


TODAY Noon: Virtual. PA Organization For Watersheds & Rivers To Host Webinar Showcasing Collaborative Community Watershed Organization Capacity Building Successes.  Noon to 1:30 p.m.


TODAY Noon: Virtual. Penn State Extension Hosts Advice From The Woods - Ask Our Experts! Webinar, Noon to 1:00 p.m.


TODAY 6:30: Virtual. Penn State Extension: Forest Farming - Maple Syrup Webinar.  6:30 to 8:00 p.m.


December 18-- Virtual/In-Person.  DEP Sewage Advisory Committee meetings on Chapter 71-73 proposed on-lot septic system regulation changes.  Boyertown Community Ambulance Service Building, 2 East 2nd Street, Boyertown, Berks County. 9:00 a.m. Contact: Tomisa Kiskadden at tkiskadden@pa.gov or (814) 332-6677.  (formal notice)


December 18-- Virtual. Penn State Extension Hosts Webinar On Fireflies In Pennsylvania.  11:00 a.m. to 12:15 p.m.


-- Kensington Teens Win $17,000 Grant To Turn Trash-Filled, Empty Lot Into Public Garden To Prevent Dumping In Philadelphia  [PaEN]


-- Unionville H.S. Rowing Club Finds New Home With Chester Water Authority On The Octoraro Reservoir; Student Service Projects Help Protect Reservoir  [PaEN]


-- Pennsylvania BRIGHT Expands Statewide To Remove Barriers To Bringing Affordable Solar Energy To PA Homeowners Left Out Of Transition To Clean Energy Options  [PaEN] 


-- PJM Outlines Long-Term Electric Transmission Plan In FERC Filing 


-- Post-Gazette Guest Essay: Pennsylvania Energy Will Make America Affordable Again - By US Secretary Of Commerce Howard Lutnick


-- PennLive Guest Essay: Gov. Shapiro’s Exit From RGGI Is Smart, Balanced Leadership - By Michael Nutter, Fmr Mayor Of Philadelphia, Co-Chair Leadership Council Of Natural Allies for a Clean Future [RGGI Never Implemented in PA]


-- Inquirer - Frank Kummer: Gilbertsville Montgomery County School In Shadow Of Toxic Boyertown Landfill Finds PFAS ‘Forever Chemicals’ In Its Water


-- WHYY: Philadelphia Water Department Wants To Know Whether Your Drinking Water Pipes Are Lead-Free


-- Fish & Boat Commission Grant Funding Available To Improve Watersheds In York, Lancaster Counties  [PaEN]


-- WHYY: Road Sale Remains In PA, NJ, DE Waterways Months After Winter Storms, According To New Stroud Water Research Center Data


-- Inquirer: How Pennsylvania Farms 720,000 Christmas Trees A Year


-- Penn State Extension Ag Conservation News: Funding For Sustainable Farming; Launch Your Ag Conservation Journey At The PA Farm Show


-- Penn State Extension Feb. 13 Webinar On Making Cover Crops Pay - How Regenified Certification Works  [PaEN]


-- Penn State Extension In-Person Southeast PA Green Industry Conference March 5 In Montgomery County  [PaEN]


-- Penn State Extension March 16 Webinar On Elm Zigzag Sawfly Update - Frontiers Of Forest Health  [PaEN]


-- Educators Invited To Southwest PA Environmental Literacy Coalition Online Meeting Jan. 6  [PaEN] 


-- DCNR Completes Upgrades To Point State Park Fountain In Pittsburgh Ahead Of NFL Draft


-- Morning Call: Hundreds Of Snow Geese Dead At Northampton County Quarry, Suspected Victims Of Bird Flu 


-- Erie Times - Brian Whipkey: About 400 Dead Snow Geese Found In Northampton County Quarry, Avian Influenza Suspected


A.I. /Data Centers


-- TribLive: Springdale Council Approves A.I. Data Center 5 - 2 Despite Resident Resistance, But Feared Doomed Legal Battle With Developers If Rejected In Allegheny County  


-- WESA - Rachel McDevitt: Springdale Hyperscale A.I. Data Center Gets Green Light In Allegheny County


-- Post-Gazette: Over Residents’ Concerns, Springdale Council Votes Yes On A.I. Data Center In Allegheny County


-- Morning Call: First Review Of Air Products A.I. Data Center Site Plan Has Lots Of Details Missing: ‘A Spaghetti-On-The Wall Proposal’  [PDF of Article]


-- Morning Call: A.I. Data Center Company Bought An Industrial Park In Upper Macungie Twp., Lehigh County For $175 Million, Plans 100 MW Power Expansion  [PDF of Article]


-- Scranton Times Chris Kelly Opinion: Welcome To ‘Data Center Valley’ - 84 A.I. Data Center Structures Proposed In Lackawanna County [PDF of Article]


-- LancasterOnline: Lancaster City Fire Dept. Making Plans For A.I. Data Center Battery Fires, Based On Experiences In Virginia [PDF of Article]


-- KSDK: A.I. Data Centers Are Sucking Illinois’ Power Grid Dry, Official Report Warns [PJM Service Area]


Today’s Oil & Gas Violations


-- Today’s Violations: DEP: BB Mulvaney failed to comply with order cleaning up multiple spills at a conventional oil and gas well site in Richhill Township, Greene County for 595 days and counting. DEP says this well is abandoned.  Read more here.


-- Today’s Violations: DEP: Thomas & Jean Thurma failed to clean up multiple spills at TWO  conventional oil and gas wells in Cecil Township, Washington County for 331 days and counting. Read more here.


International/National Impacts On PA Natural Gas

[Energy Independence Means Renewables]


-- Public Citizen: President’s LNG Gas Energy Export Policy Costs Households $12 Billion In First 9 Months Of 2025


Other States/National


-- WHYY: Delaware City Refinery Failed To Immediately Report Accurate Butane Emissions


Federal Administration


-- Inquirer: PA, NJ, DE Among States Suing President’s Administration Again Over Withholding Billions In Electric Vehicle Charging Funds


-- Chesapeake Bay Journal: ‘PERMIT’ Bill In US House Could Weaken EPA Enforcement Of Chesapeake Bay Cleanup


PA Politics - Everything Is Connected

-- PennLive: Shapiro Doesn’t Need Pennsylvania Society, And More Takeaways From PA’s Weekend In NYC

-- Inquirer: It’s An Open Secret Some Private Charter Schools Push Out Kids With Behavioral Problems, Philly Principals Say

-- Spotlight PA: Mental Health Care Workers Face Too Many Needs And Not enough Money On The Front Line Of PA’s Self-Made Crisis

-- PennLive: PA Gaming Board Warns Casinos Against Prediction Market Apps, Wants State To Tax Sports Trades

-- Republican Herald: Cybersecurity Threat Forces Minersville School District To Shutdown Computers, Close Its Schools Tuesday

-- Post-Gazette: PA Republican Congressman Toasts Final Approval Of Bill To Get Whole Milk Aback In Schools

-- WITF: US Education Secretary Meets With PA Legislators To Discuss Potential Closure Of US Dept. Of Education 

-- TribLive/AP: Republican US House Speaker Rebuffs Efforts To Address Soaring Health Insurance Premiums 

-- TribLive/Morning Call: VP Vance Touts President’s Record On Economy During Lehigh Valley Visit Amid Voter Concerns 

-- WITF: In Allentown, VP Vance Says Economy Is Improving, Blames Hardships On Biden

-- AP: US Gained 64,000 Jobs In November, Lost 105,000 Jobs In October As Unemployment Rises To 4.6%, Highest Since 2021

-- Republican Herald Editorial: President’s Comments On Death Of Rob Reiner Lack Empathy, Necessary Leadership

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[Posted: December 17, 2025]  PA Environment Digest

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