(Harrisburg) -- The top housing official in the Obama administration is singling out Pennsylvania cities where federal programs stand to benefit struggling neighborhoods. Religious clergy, city council members, and state lawmakers gathered to discuss problems common to Pennsylvania’s older cities, boroughs and townships. Joining them was U.S. Housing and Urban Development Secretary, Shaun Donovan, who insists the federal government has a role to play in ailing neighborhoods. He says a program launched in July to rehabilitate financially struggling cities across the country has begun in one Pennsylvania city. "It’s a pilot initiative, which will help six distressed places, including Chester, tackle their toughest problems," he says. "Under the creative leadership of Butler, Chester's already partnered with Widener University to redevelop the city’s downtown." City leaders in the coalition, known as Building One Pennsylvania, echoed concerns of state lawmakers, who have just begun the policy debate over how to fix the state’s Act 47 program for financially distressed mid-size cities. They pointed to the growth of the middle class in suburbs, the shrinking tax base in their towns and the resulting deterioration of city infrastructure.











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I'm a former QA employee and my experience with deregulation has been job loss!
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